Vedanta Texts
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Facing Fear (Abhaya Vidya)
Humanity's Final Frontier. A Deep Reflection on the nature of fear and the Means to fear It...
Vedanta Madhuryam, My Dearest Sweet Self
The near and dear do bring some cheer in life, but costs dear, also bring a lot of fears and tears and will in time disappear. However, there is one and only one thing which is the nearest, the most beloved, the very source of happiness, which never leaves us and is completely free! It is the undotted 'I', my very own dearest Self. It is 'my own sweet home', the only one I truly own.
Vedanta introduces this ever sweet Self to me and makes me truly Self-centred, and that is its beauty and fascination. Empowered by Self-knowledge Arjuna became victorious, Buddha became Enlightened and Swami Chinmayananda became loved and revered.
Vedant Madhuryam - My Dearest Sweet Self is one more beautiful composition of Swami Tejomayananda, himself a Master exponent of Vedanta. The verses and the commentary give us a taste of the sweetness of Vedanta and compelling reasons why we should study it. Why wait for the twilight years of life, when you can be happy here and now.
Vivekachudamani - Word for Word Meaning
Vivekachudamani - Word for word meaning & Gramatical Analysis, and Translation. Vivekacudamani, the Crest Jewel of Viveka, the ability to discriminate, analyse and abide in the supreme Reality, is one of the masterpieces by Bhagavan di Sankaracarya. The best of his prakarana-granthas, this text is in the form of questions asked by a disciple and the answers provided by the preceptor. Viveka is to discriminate between the Real and the unreal, Eternal and non-eternal, Brahman and the world.
The content is highly philosophical, that of Advaita-vedanta; yet the verses have intrinsic poetic qualities and a rhythm that make it easy to be memorised. Many figures of speech are scattered through the free- flowing mellifluous language of Sri Adi Sankaracarya.
This book contains each verse of Vivekacudamani (1-581) with the original Sanskrit verse, anvaya (prose-order), vrtta, word for word meaning with grammatical analysis, and free-flowing translation. Pages 528
Vivekachudamani verses and meaning
Adi Shankara's Vivekachudamani. Workbook compiled by Pranipata Chaitanya. Devanagari Text, Transliteration, Word-for word meaning, and a lucid English translation. Full size paper of 498 pages Xerox copied bound Volume book.