Sri Sri Thakur on Vegetarian Food Habit

Hygiene is that what is conducive to one's existence and growth. It should be our duty to see in everything as to what keeps one's existence and growth in tact. Tested truth in this respect should be alluring to us. We should observe and practice it in our day to day life as long as we wish to live. We should not mind to hold on to it irrespective of the country it is discovered and tested retaining our specific instinctive trait in tact.

What harm if one procures one's nutritive value from the non-vegetarian diet? I had such impressions in my childhood days. So I experimented with fish-eating. What I found was at least for a couple of week following eating of fish, my finer visions remained obscured. It hampered concentration of mind. Really what little I knew. I began to think like that. It was better to follow the teachings of those Great Masters who on had the basis of their realization recommended vegetarian diet as Ideal food. I had also noticed, vegetarians were not so vitally affected by any diseases as in the case of non-vegetarians. Human system as well as animal belonged to the same category. In many respects we are all alike. Of course individual distinctive characteristics- wise exception was there. But it was a fact that animal diet was not easily digestive. Because animal diet generated toxin in the body which irritated the nervous system. It reduced human capacity for tolerance. What ever may be the cause the more one's nervous system was incapacitated and unbalanced, the more one fell victim to ego, anger, violence and intolerance. Man had acquired plenty of knowledge, yet he was far behind. He had yet to learn and accomplish a lot. We could not comprehend this because we did not have such finer vision. Our body was the result of a long accumulated accomplishment of our ancestors. That which guided this body towards further perfection was Dharma. Instinct and libido within it were the prime capital. Gifted with these resources, one should be God-centric.

Non-vegetarian diet can never be natural diet. It may be called a distorted taste. The agonized felling and suffering of an animal when it is killed, is as good as of a human being too. How strange is it that merely to satisfy our palate, we do not hesitate in the least to kill an animal of flesh and blood, exactly like ours? I feel each animal is an undeveloped human being. It is really astonishing that we are scared when a human being is sacrificed but do not react at all when an animal is killed. If our sensitivity is so badly stained with passion, it tends to become heartless and unsympathetic, then in the interest of our complexes if need be, we will not hesitate to assault on human being too. So I say better not to eat non-vegetarian food. Let them (animal) enjoy their little days. They have weal and woes, they also want their own good, they also posses mind of their own, why shall we cause pain to them? As far as I know vegetarian food is good both for body and mind as well.

Apart from milk, one can get plenty of protein from boiled dal, pasted sesamum and pasted nuts also. Instead of drinking so much of tea, if one take a cup of milk and sips it, is better. It extends one's life span. But take care that one should take the quantity as much as one can digest easily.

Instead of throwing away the water with which you have washed your rice, it is better to prepare other food with it (water). It is not good for health to press out excess water from the boiled rice. Add salt to your curry just before bringing it down. Do not do it earlier, so that its food value is spoiled. Don't spoil the natural sugar of the vegetables putting sugar in to it.

I think there is hardly any food as nutritious as Havisyanna (Sacred Rice). It consists of sunned rice, green plantain, pasted dal, pasted sesamum, ghee, milk, banana, etc. I feel, it makes up for all kinds of deficiencies. It is also good to eat some fresh fruits and vegetables. But see that fresh fruits and vegetables should not be taken with Havisyanna while observing for the sake of penance. I feel, if one labors hard, practices Holy Name, regularly, enjoys peace of mind and is able to digest simple rice and dal, can absorb enough nutrition from it also. I also feel, instead of costly tonics, if one can digest panchamrits (five kinds of nectars) such as milk curd, ghee, honey and sugar, gives better result. If all these ingredients are pure, it is likely to digest easily.

-Sri Sri Thakur

Failure need not be weakness; to fail to try is weakness.

A man found a cocoon of a butterfly. One day a small opening appeared. He sat and watched the butterfly for several hours as it struggled to force its body through that little hole. Then it seemed to stop making any progress. It appeared as if it had gotten as far as it could, and it could go no further.

So the man decided to help the butterfly. He took a pair of scissors and snipped off the remaining bit of the cocoon. The butterfly then emerged easily. But it had a swollen body and small, shriveled wings.

The man continued to watch the butterfly because he expected that, at any moment, the wings would enlarge and expand to be able to support the body, which would contract in time. Neither happened! In fact, the butterfly spent the rest of its life crawling around with a swollen body and shriveled wings. It never was able to fly.

What the man, in his kindness and haste, did not understand was that the restricting cocoon and the struggle required for the butterfly to get through the tiny opening were God's way of forcing fluid from the body of the butterfly into its wings so that it would be ready for flight once it achieved its freedom fom the cocoon.

Sometimes struggles are exactly what we need in our lives. If God allowed us to go through our lives without any obstacles, it would cripple us.

We would not be as strong as what we could have been. We could never fly!

'Failure need not be weakness; to fail to try is weakness. If, despite your all-out effort in anything, you fail to succeed, no harm; carry on; don't stop!' -- Sri Sri Thakur Anukulchandra.

Food Prostitution

Sanat Ghosh and his mother asked Sri Sri Thakur about the habit of some of their family members eating in restaurants frequently.

Sri Sri Thakur in reply said : This is utterly disgusting. I feel like calling this (eating in restaurants) food prostitution. So many variety of germs, causing diseases like tuberculosis, can spread from restaurants.

[Ref : Alochona Prosonge; Vol 20; P13]

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