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Do you really know what you want most in life? Even if you have all the success, fame and money you want,
and the good health to enjoy it – are you happy and fulfilled? Why is it that we all find ourselves seeking
something more from life – all the time? Ramesh points out that each one of us, at some time or the other,
has a taste of what that is: an uninterrupted experience of peace and harmony. He also shows how we can
achieve this constant repose in our ordinary, hectic, daily living. This is what the seeking – most
evidently, the spiritual seeking – is all about.
Thus, Ramesh raises a very basic question: Why should anyone seek 'enlightenment' or 'Self-realization'?
A simple examination of one's personal experience will reveal that what usually disrupts the peace and
harmony in life is a thought about something we think we – or someone else – should or shouldn't have
done. Hence, a massive load of guilt and shame for oneself, or hatred and malice for the other, is
perpetuated. Without a lot of arduous effort – work, discipline, sacrifice, sadhana – without outside
assistance, but simply by investigating one's own experience, it is possible to get relief from this
bondage. What mystics have said for ages, is viewed from the perspective of modern living: that actions
are 'happenings' and not something done by someone. This understanding is what actually contributes to
and helps us in discovering the state of equanimity and peace which we most ardently seek.
Ramesh has written over 20 books, and discusses the Indian philosophy of Advaita daily in Bombay, with
visitors from around the world. The basic concept is that "all there is, is Consciousness"; all
actions are happenings, the functioning of the Primal Energy, and not the doing by anyone. Ramesh
frames the concepts in the context of daily living, speaking from his experience as a bank president
and a family man.
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