Abide in This Good Company poster: delphiyes length: 05:05 date added: January 31, 2009 event date: July 9, 1988 views: 886; views this month: 29; views this week: 5
Adi Da clarifies the Supreme Advantage of simply abiding in the Good Company of the Realizer.
Adi Da Samraj answers a question about the limitations of using concepts to understand terms such as "there is only the one" or "we are all one". He speaks about using the mind to try to create order as a delusion in the conditional domain.
Adi Da Samraj recites the final section of His Lion Sutra (which is now published in Part 15 of The Aletheon). He calls on the reader to transcend the "disease of separation and seeking" that is the egoic self, and to "Swoon in Consciousness Itself."
This book is the most concise presentation of Adi Da's "Radical" Argument: "Seeking and attaining are a Total loss, and loss itself is the Only discovery of gain" and a direct and uncompromising invitation to self-transcendence and Divine Self-Realization.
poster: AdidamPodcasts length: 10:25 date added: October 5, 2010 event date: April 1986 listens: 1560; listens this month: 48; listens this week: 5
In this historical recording from April, 1986, Adi Da Samraj recites the final section of His Love-Ananda Gita (now called The Lion Sutra and published in Part 15 of The Aletheon). In it, Adi Da communicates His most "radical" transcendental teaching regarding true renunciation of the egoic motive of separation and Realization of the Divine Self-Condition.
Adidam Is the Seventh Stage Way poster: delphiyes length: 37:07 date added: September 1, 2012 event date: September 23, 2004 views: 510; views this month: 40; views this week: 11
An excerpt from Avatar Adi Da's remarkable Discourse of September 23, 2004, in which He describes, in technical detail, the distinctive qualities of His Reality-Revelation in the context of the Ashtavakra Gita and the Great Tradition altogether.
In this part (Part Five), Adi Da clarifies why the seventh stage of life is unique, and describes the profound moment in His Avataric process that occurred at Ruchira Dham Hermitage (on Lopez Island, Washington) in April, 2000.
The full DVD of this talk (3.5 hours long) is available from The Dawn Horse Press here.
After Death, Mind Makes You poster: delphiyes length: 15:26 date added: October 19, 2012 event date: December 12, 1988 views: 446; views this month: 31; views this week: 7
Adi Da speaks of the condition after death in which mind determines one's circumstance, without the limitations of the body, brain and unconsciousness. He recommends that devotees direct their attention to sadhana so that the purification process gives one wisdom that frees one from karmic limitations.
This talk is published as "After Death, Mind Makes You", in the book, Easy Death.
After Death Mind Makes You poster: AdiDaVideos length: 15:23 date added: January 21, 2013 event date: December 12, 1988 views: 204; views this month: 30; views this week: 7
In a sobering discourse, Adi Da speaks of the condition after death in which mind determines one's circumstance, without the limitations of the body, brain and unconsciousness. He addresses the fact that where one's attention is fixed during life affects attention and destiny after life. He recommends that devotees direct their attention to sadhana so that the purification process gives one wisdom that frees one from karmic limitations.
This talk is published as "After Death, Mind Makes You", in the book, Easy Death.
poster: AdidamPodcasts length: 25:21 date added: March 17, 2012 listens: 565; listens this month: 23; listens this week: 3
In this discourse Adi Da calls us to understand the doctrines and spiritual attainments of humankind not as separate traditions or paths but as a whole: a single "Great Tradition". He also urges humankind to transcend merely belief-based religious myths, dogma, and "religious provincialism" which only support egoic separation and conflict.
poster: 25nomind length: 09:01 date added: October 29, 2010 event date: 1976 views: 1563; views this month: 43; views this week: 9
Adi Da talks about doing practice as a seeker vs. practice as a lover, a non-separate participant. Sadhana is not about separating out from life (including emotional-sexual relationships), but rather fully engaging it in its mystery and its fully polarized play. The "men's tent" and "women's tent" are only places to consider the play, not places to live apart from (or escape) the play. The loved one may change form as practice evolves, but the primary form of participation in it remains being a lover.
poster: 25nomind length: 09:01 date added: October 29, 2010 event date: 1976 views: 1138; views this month: 27; views this week: 9
Adi Da talks about doing practice as a seeker vs. practice as a lover, a non-separate participant. Sadhana is not about separating out from life (including emotional-sexual relationships), but rather fully engaging it in its mystery and its fully polarized play. The "men's tent" and "women's tent" are only places to consider the play, not places to live apart from (or escape) the play. The loved one may change form as practice evolves, but the primary form of participation in it remains being a lover.
poster: 25nomind length: 09:01 date added: October 29, 2010 event date: 1976 views: 1179; views this month: 36; views this week: 8
Adi Da talks about doing practice as a seeker vs. practice as a lover, a non-separate participant. Sadhana is not about separating out from life (including emotional-sexual relationships), but rather fully engaging it in its mystery and its fully polarized play. The "men's tent" and "women's tent" are only places to consider the play, not places to live apart from (or escape) the play. The loved one may change form as practice evolves, but the primary form of participation in it remains being a lover.
poster: 25nomind length: 09:06 date added: October 29, 2010 event date: 1976 views: 1051; views this month: 23; views this week: 6
Adi Da talks about doing practice as a seeker vs. practice as a lover, a non-separate participant. Sadhana is not about separating out from life (including emotional-sexual relationships), but rather fully engaging it in its mystery and its fully polarized play. The "men's tent" and "women's tent" are only places to consider the play, not places to live apart from (or escape) the play. The loved one may change form as practice evolves, but the primary form of participation in it remains being a lover.
poster: 25nomind length: 09:01 date added: October 29, 2010 views: 1120; views this month: 24; views this week: 4
Adi Da talks about doing practice as a seeker vs. practice as a lover, a non-separate participant. Sadhana is not about separating out from life (including emotional-sexual relationships), but rather fully engaging it in its mystery and its fully polarized play. The "men's tent" and "women's tent" are only places to consider the play, not places to live apart from (or escape) the play. The loved one may change form as practice evolves, but the primary form of participation in it remains being a lover.
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