With little more than one week left here in Halifax and the Maritimes of Canada, we are trying to fit in as much book distribution and chanting as we can, weather permitting. Aside from the weather, the only other thing that tends to get in the way is the mind.
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Archive for the “Traveling Sankirtan” CategoryThis afternoon we went to Cole Harbour District High School to do a program with a friend of ours who we met last spring. She is a high school teacher, and is pioneering a yoga program within the Halifax Regional School Board. Read the rest of this entry »Tags: high school yoga, recipe, video gamesMost of our ashrams and temples around the world conduct a large program on Sundays commonly called the ‘Sunday Feast.’ It consists of a philosophical discussion, group mantra meditation or kirtan, and a sanctified vegetarian dinner called prasadam. Read the rest of this entry »Tags: camping, kirtan, recipe, sunday, vegetarianOn Friday we drove out of Vancouver about an hour to Stawamus Provincial Park. Keith, Cory, and I hiked up about 750 m to the highest peak in the area. It took about 3 hours. It was steep. There were chains and iron ladders at some spots. Along the way we met Chris who was hiking bare foot. Initially I was thinking, boy this guy is austere! Read the rest of this entry »Tags: consciousness, fearlessness, mantra meditation, self realizationToday I called India to speak to one of my monk friends. He lives in an ashram where there are another 140 monks, Read the rest of this entry »Tags: affection, ashram, happy family, yogaI just finished writing two letters, one to my brother and another for my sister. We have been so busy travelling and helping with festivals that I haven’t taken the time to contact them. As I was writing the letters I was reminded of a favorite author of mine who recently passed away. J.D. Salinger’s writings inspired me to search for a more personal understanding of the Absolute Truth, and to investigate the inner corridors of my own spiritual identity. Read the rest of this entry »Tags: appreciation, J.D. Salinger, personal, Srila PrabhupadaThe drive from Halifax to Toronto usually takes around 20 hours of driving. Recently, we made this voyage in a whopping 34 hours. Here’s why… Read the rest of this entry » 12 July 2010 Listening to others when they are speaking is a great way to learn. I was distributing books Thursday, 8 July, and met an author from New Glasgow. The working-title of his new book is Are you listening, or waiting to talk? In his youth, his father had correctively asked him this question. He meant it to control his son’s urge to speak. His tendency was that as soon as he got a chance, he would say something and interrupt his father. It is a common tendency that causes us to sometimes miss the opportunity to listen and benefit by hearing the experience of others. Read the rest of this entry » At midday, we walked the path beside the river in New Glasgow, over the bridge and to the main street. There is no difference between Prabhupada and his books, and our mission was to give Prabhupada’s association to the town’s people. When, in late January, we had come to celebrate Lord Nityananda’s appearance, we had also tried to go out on book distribution. The day we went out, snow was blowing in our faces. Some of us paced up and down the town’s main street, trying to stop people and give them a book. In an hour we had distributed thirty-seven books to those who were braving the cold with us. The experience was really extraordinary because we were not thinking that so many books could be distributed. New Glasgow’s population is considerably smaller than that of Halifax, and we distributed more books that hour than we had in an entire day back in the city. New Glasgow became a memorable place to distribute. Read the rest of this entry »Tags: bhagavad-gita, book distribution, new glasgow |
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