Always so precious teachings. Lucky people we are. 🙏 Pranam Babaji. 🙏
@jyotichauhan6679Ай бұрын
Pranams Baba maharaj ji
@karthickramadas5060Ай бұрын
Pranaams to Lotus feet of Babaji 💐
@drhardikjoshiАй бұрын
Thank you so much swamiji... thanks to recording team also
@anjnawalia2807Ай бұрын
🙇🏻♀️🌺
@tarotsimbolosdesanacion4589Ай бұрын
Thank you babaji for saving me from samsara. Plese bless me to always improve my meditation practise. To do it more and more and better and better.
@agypsyroverКүн бұрын
Thank you for this, is anyone able to give the mantra that is taught for chanting in the mornings and is it before or after meditation? Many thanks,
@SRBYMissionКүн бұрын
Hi @agypsyrover, here is a video of the chants that Babaji performs every morning. It includes the Hanuman Chalisa and other slokas. There have been some additions to this more recently, but this video includes the majority of what Babaji currently chants: kzbin.info/www/bejne/aqu7l3efma1ga8k
@akashdeepbhardwaj1482Ай бұрын
Please share the link and allow me can I join please . Request . Regards
@extemporaneous454528 күн бұрын
Thank you for answering that question about Draupadi being a very rude, ill-bred woman. Despite having been raised as a princess, she did not have the common courtesy to help a guest who had fallen in her house, but instead mocked him for no wrong on his part, that is for his father having been born blind. She was mocking not Dhuryodan, but also her husbands' uncle, showing lack of respect to an elder. Which woman does that? Even a village peasant woman wouldn't be so coarse. I have often wondered why she wasn't made to apologize to Dhuryodan by her husbands. All through the Mahabharata, she never accepted responsibility once, just always screaming and shouting that she had been wronged. Now you have cleared it up that he didn't bring it up with them, or with the elders. However, looking at it another way, it would seem petty for a man to complain about a woman's behaviour. But then, it was a better option that he could have exercised than disrobing her. It was strange that Lord Krishna, who was supposed to know everything about everything, didn't once tell her, before the dice game incident, that she was wrong and should apologize. He went round advising everyone about everything, but never once told Draupadi to check herself. All in all, the Mahabharata is a very badly written morality fable. No princess who became a queen would exhibit such behaviour.