Writing & Poetry
More stories from Sri Chinmoy's students.
The Peace Run visits Oxford
Tejvan Pettinger Oxford, United Kingdom
Meditation: Touching The Infinite
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
Why run 3100 miles?
Smarana Puntigam Vienna, Austria
If a little meditation can give you this kind of experience...
Pragya Gerig Nuremberg, Germany
Reflections on meditation
Janaka Spence Edinburgh, United Kingdom
The spiritual life is normal to me
Shankara Smith London, United Kingdom
Breaking the world record for the longest game of hopscotch
Pipasa Glass & Jamini Young Seattle, United States
The day when everything began
Bhagavantee Paul Salzburg, Austria
Learning to love songs ever more
Patanga Cordeiro São Paulo, Brazil
In the Whirlwind of Life
Pradeep Hoogakker The Hague, Netherlands
Is it unspiritual to care about winning?
Tejvan Pettinger Oxford, United KingdomSuggested videos
interviews with Sri Chinmoy's students
No prior experience needed
Samalya Schafer Berlin, Germany
Where the finite connects to the Infinite
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
Sri Chinmoy's vision of the Peace Run
Harita Davies New York, United States
My well-scheduled day
Jayasalini Abramovskikh Moscow, Russia
Meditation functions with Sri Chinmoy
Kokila Chamberlain Bristol, United Kingdom
Breaking Guinness records
Ashrita Furman New York, United States
So here you are half a planet away from your home, sitting on a slab of stone in the warm afternoon sun with these epiphanies rolling about inside your head. My brown cap shades my eyes. A good place to meditate, obey the grey stone and watch the mind. I recall an image from long ago, the mind likened to a buffalo that wants to eat the rice plants (sense objects that give immediate pleasure but subequent pain), the one who knows and watches as the owner of the buffalo. The buffalo is allowed to roam free, but you watch over the buffalo and shout when it comes too close to the rice plants – if it is stubborn and will not obey you, you hit it and send it away with your stick. "He who watches over his mind will escape the snares of Mara."