This slim volume challenges readers to discover their place in the universe. In it, teacher, author, and spiritual leader Gangaji offers the radical invitation to: Examine one's own life.Choose to wake up from the trance of who you think you are and experience the truth of who you really are.Resolve not to go back into the trance by turning away from that essential experience of waking up.Freshly inquire anew as thoughts or feelings of separation arise.
Gangaji's invitation is radical in part because it is not based upon a particular philosophy or religion. There are no prescribed practices or rituals, unless one considers self-inquiry or self-observation a practice. Most radically, it calls into question the very structure of who we've believed ourselves to be. Who you are is not separate from God or Love or Truth or Freedom or Peace or Silence, whatever one chooses to call it.
Therefore, there is nothing you have to do to "get there." No merit to be earned. Who you are is already here, has always been and will always be. The invitation in this book is to wake up and be Yourself.
""My life is given to what I have received, which is the truth of living peace, fresh fulfillment. My life is given to serving that truth, that fulfillment in you.""
A beautiful, compact book that addresses "who one is."
Gangaji talks about vigilance in discovering the truth of one being. She touches on the entrapments of mind, the "telling of stories", and how the mind has a way of grossly and subtly attempting to "know" that which is unknowable, unimaginable, cannot be thought, forgotten, or remembered.
This powerful text conveys with clarity the subtle games and strategies we as humans play to try and "understand" truth. Gangaji cuts right through these games with this book confirming that we are already "That." All it takes is the resolve to stop.
Here's an excerpt where she describes meeting her teacher, Papaji, in India:
"It was very good for my Western mind to be stopped in that way, and I can remember the subtlety of then attempting to make myself over to fit the new image. I stopped wearing all makeup. I didn't look in mirrors. I liked the new humbleness and wanted to be finished with all Western ideals. One day Papaji looked at me and said, "Why don't you fix yourself up?" He saw so clearly how I was attempting to grasp an image of truth and to look like that image. Then I saw that I had done that all my life. When a certain era would come in, I would attempt to fit into the image of that era, whether it was to look like a hippie, or to look spiritual, or to look like an intellectual--all the time knowing it was not quite the truth. Truth cannot be "looked like." It is wherever you are, in whatever form. It wears no lipstick and it wears bright-red lipstick. It wears no clothes, and it is clothed in golden robes.
Attempts to model truth are continual entrapments of the mind, which knows only images, concepts, and ideas. When we speak of freedom, we are speaking of what is inherently free from any image, concept, or idea. That is who you are. However you have imagined yourself in the past, whatever you hope you will become in the future, this is who you are already. You can immediately discover this by discovering what has never been touched by any of it. Truth is alive within you right now. There is nothing you have to do to get it. Since it is who you are, you are in this moment fully capable of realizing the inherent truth of your being. All that is required is to give up every notion of who you are for one instant."
*end*
Here she explains how the arrogance of the human mind is to think it knows itself or to attempt to "achieve" what it already is. In this attempt, the truth of what we already are is overlooked.
Her message is simple and clear: All that is required, most paradoxically, is to stop for one instance the searching, achieving, imagining, knowing, conceptualizing, running towards, running away from, doing, etc... and directly experience the boundlessness of Being.
I have looked forward to the opportunity of writing a review of my dear teachers book, FREEDOM AND RESOLVE. Gangaji found me, some 28 years ago, in a small rental property I shared with my six year old son. He and I were growing up together, living a good life. One day, on the television, a blond woman showed up and changed everything. She told me the truth....the truth that set me free. I have been lucky enough to sit with her many times since, and I can tell you honestly, I hear her voice in this book.....(and it's not the Audible edition). Take the time to risk a life changing read, and enjoy this precious window into the Truth of my teacher and her teachers.
This was a perfect companion to a vacation on the beach where one can inhale the ocean and hear Gangaji's words in the sound of the waves, feel each word resonating - short-to-the-point quotes about what IS and what appears...
A simple, small book that try to capture the essence of truth and freedom. It takes time to assimilate the truth of this small book. What is truth and how to be awakened from it? Guess it takes effort and time. Even now, I have no idea what is truth and how to be free from all thoughts. We should have own freedom.
When she said no one is lost. It turned me away. I already knew where the book was heading. Then she say find yourself and wake up, well if you are not lost why find yourself and wake up. She is teaching people to stay asleep but putting it in pretty words to fool someone. I don't know if it is unintentional or intentional; I hope it is unintentional. I don't like this book. It was well written but not something I would teach someone. People are lost. I see so many lost souls a day. I am a lightworker and empath. I was once lost. Arm yourselves with knowledge and wisdom fore you will need both to survive. People can learn the wrong things which is why you need wisdom. Wisdom can only be attained from one who knows all, God. You may not like Him. You may think you are a god but at the end of the day there is one higher than you that you must answer to.