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Archive for April, 2007

Funnest Nrsmha Prayers EVER!

Every morning is most Hare Krishna temples, we sing the Nrsmha Prayers (Nri-sim-ha). The bhajan is pretty mellow usually, but I came across a wonderful version of it awhile back. It’s done by Visnujana Swami and was recorded in the mid 70’s.

Here are the lyrics and the translation:

namas te narasimhaya
prahladahlada-dayine
hiranyakasipor vaksah-
sila-tanka-nakhalaye

I offer my obeisances to Lord Narasimha who gives joy to Prahlada Maharaja
and whose nails are like chisels on the stonelike chest of the demon Hiranyakasipu.

ito nrsimhah parato nrsimho
yato yato yami tato nrsimhah
bahir nrsimho hrdaye nrsimho
nrsimham adim saranam prapadye


Lord Nrsimha is here and also there. Wherever I go Lord Nrsimha is there.
He is in the heart and is outside as well. I surrender to Lord Nrsimha,
the origin of all things and the supreme refuge.

tava kara-kamala-vare nakham adbhuta-srngam
dalita-hiranyakasipu-tanu-bhrngam
kesava dhrta-narahari-rupa jaya jagadisa hare

O Kesava! O Lord of the universe!
O Lord Hari, who have assumed the form of half-man, half-lion!
All glories to You! Just as one can easily crush a wasp between one’s fingernails,
so in the same way the body of the wasplike demon Hiranyakasipu has been ripped apart
by the wonderful pointed nails on Your beautiful lotus hands.

And here is the song:

Click to download!

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The Advent of Lord Nrsmhadeva! (Now with Audio!)

Today is the appearance day of Lord Nrsmhadeva. For those readers who aren’t devotees, this could take a bit of explaining. Nrsmhadeva (pronounced “nri-sim-ha-dayv” or sometimes [incorrectly] “nr-shring-ga-dave”) is the incarnation of God’s anger at one of His devotees being abused.

Click here to download the audio of this lecture.

Below is the story of this advent as told by Ravindra Svarupa dasa way back in 1994. I recorded this myself at a Sunday Feast.

Enjoy!

“Whenever and where ever there is a decline in religious practice, O descendant of Bharata [Arjuna], and a predominant rise of irreligion – at that time I descend Myself.” Bhagavad-gita 4.7

At the very beginning of the universe there were two big demons born of Kasyapa and Diti. They were called Hiranyakasa and Hiranyakasipu. They were brothers. Hiranyaksa was after gold and he minded all the gold out of the earth and disturbed the floating condition of the earth so it fell own into the ocean at the bottom of the universe called the Garba Ocean. And Lord Vishnu descended as Varaha. He took the form of a boar. You know how a boar has tusks and they root up things in dirty places. So because the world was at the bottom of an ocean, the vast cosmic ocean at the bottom of the universe, and in the mud at the bottom of that, He dove down and brought the earth up. And then engaged in single combat with Hiranyaksa and killed him.

So Hiranyakasipu says, “Vishnu killed my brother, I’m going to get Him.” As I said, there are very powerful demons. Hiranyakasipu wanted to become powerful so he performed very severe austeritires. His austerity was that he stood on the tip of his toes with his hands raised for thousands of years. This is happening on another planet by the way, the life span in those days and on those planets was much much longer than ours. He stayed there for so long that an anthill grew up about his body, completely buried by and anthill. And the ants and the other insects completely ate his body, there was nothing left but his skeleton. Yet, because he developed mystic power, he was staying alive in the marrow of his bones. He had preserved his life force in the marrow of his bones; there was nothing else there. And he was so powerful that even though his body was reduced to a skeleton, fire was coming out of his head and it was causing all kinds of cosmic disturbances in the universe. So much so that Lord Brahma [not Krishna, Brahma was the first created entity, directed by Lord Vishnu, he creates all life forms in the universe and rules the mode of passion.] finally came down to see what was the disturbance. And he found this anthill with this light emitting from it, cleared away the dirt and there was Hiranyakasipu, at least his skeleton. So Brahma has a pot with some water in it, he sprinkled that water on him and gave him a new form; it supplied the rest of his body with beautiful youth.

So he said to Hiranyakasipu, “What do you want?”

And he says, “I want to be immortal, I never want to die.”

And Brahma said, “It can’t be done, I live the length of this universe, when the universe if over with, I die.”

“Okay then grant me that I not die by any human, or god, or animal.”

Brahma said, “That’s done.”

Grant me that I will not be killed on the sea, on the air, in the air, or on the land. Grant me then that I will not be killed during the day or during the night.”

“Fine.”

So I this way he made all these restrictions and then he thought, “Well, now I’ve done it, I’ve become immortal, nobody can get me.”

After receiving these benedictions and a brand new, strong, healthy, youthful body, Hiranyakasipu then put his plan into action. And he began a campaign of terror and war against the demigods. This is giant interplanetary warfare. And gradually, as I said, the demons live on these lower planets, and he got his forces up to the upper planets and began to conquer the upper planets where the devatas [demigods] dwell. And finally he had vanquished even Indra, who is the commander in chief of the devatas. They al went into hiding and exile. And Hiranyakasipu and the other demons, they ran the universe.

Hitler and Stalin, these are the tiny Hiranyakasipus of the day. This Hiranyakasipu, he was vicious, he was really nasty. Everyone was terrified. It is said that when Hiranyakasipu was running the universe, it was running even better in many ways than it was under Indra because everyone was so terrorized. Just like when Mussolini the dictator came into power in Italy at first he was welcomed because for the first time in history, the train in Italy ran on time. It was like, if a train was late “pow!” There were draconian measures taken.

So in this way Hiranyakasipu was running things. His name, by the way, Hiranya mean gold, and kasipu means pillow or soft bedding. So he was after these two things: wealth and sex. They were his predilection. But he had all those things.

Hiranyakasipu had a son. His son was Prahlad. What happened was that during one of their campaigns against the devatas, the wife of Hiranyakasipu was captured by the devatas. Somehow or another they took her as hostage. And she was pregnant; the son in her womb was the son of Hiranyakasipu.

First the devatas said, “You know, we should kill this child in her womb immediately, when he gets out, he’s going to be so dangerous – he is the son of Hiranyakasipu, let’s kill him now.”

But Narada Muni, the sage Amman the devatas, came and said, “No, no, don’t’ do that, just give her [Hiranyakasipu's wife] to my care, and you wont have to worry about her son, he’ll be a great devotee.” And so while Hiranyakasipu’s wife was being held by the devatas, Narada Muni instructed her in dharma, Vedic Literature, love of God. The child in her womb was already so powerful that he heard those instructions, so therefore when he was born he was a devotee, and he went back to Hiranyakasipu.

So he grew up and did he cause trouble! Because he was . . . well when he went to school, you can imagine this school, the school for the demons, right, it’s what they teach you there. This school for the demons. He would preach Krishna consciousness to the children. When the teachers were out of the room he’s get them to chant “Hare Krishna.” This was a big, big problem. And so Hiranyakasipu found out about this and got on the teacher’s case, and he said, “Do you know what you’ve done? Our son has become contaminated by the enemy. Enemy forces must have snuck in disguise and been preaching and contaminated my son.”

He was very, very envious of his son. So he tried to kill him. He did various things. He threw him off of a cliff, and he landed like a feather. He had him trampled by elephants, and the elephants weaved around him. He put him in a pit of snakes, and the snakes wouldn’t bite him. He had people going at him with tridents and the tridents wouldn’t pierce his skin. He fed him poison, and the poison was ineffective. So he realized his son was powerful. He became a little frightened.

So then he [Hiranyakasipu] said, “Well, I’ll take it easy, I’ll send him back to school we’ll wait till Sukracarya, the father of the two teachers, comes. He can work on him and we’ll really straighten the kid out. We’ll take it a little easy with him.” Actually he was thinking, “this is a very powerful boy. I can’t hill him.” It was very frustrating, here’s the Hitler of the universe, and he can’t kill this little boy.

Prahlad [Hiranyakasipu's son] went to school some more, and he did the same kind of stuff, chanting “Hare Krishna,” the kids all becoming devotees. It was unacceptable, politically incorrect! So he wanted to see how his son was doing, so he asked, “what is the best things you’ve learned from your teachers?” He put him on his lap and asked him.

And of course when he thought of his teacher, he thought of his real teacher, Narada Muni. So he said, “The thing that I have learned is that the best thing in life is to worship Lord Vishnu in different ways, sravanam, kirtanam, sishnoh, smaranam, pada-sevanam, arcanam, vandanam, dasyam, atma-nivedanam, and sakhyam-nivedanam – is to worship Lord Vishnu by hearing, by chanting, remembering, by offering prayers, and so on, the different prosseses.”

At that point Hiranyakasipu blew up, “Where is the Vishnu or your?! Where is He? I want to kill Him!”

And Prahlad said, “Father,” he’s just a little kid, you know, “Father, Lord Vishnu is everywhere.”

“Is He?” He said. They were right on the porch of his palace. “Is he there in that pillar?”

“Yes father.”

“Well then, I’ll kill Him!” And he took out his sword, ran at this pillar and swung at it. Just as his sword was about to hit that pillar, there was a sound. And the sound was like it was coming from every atom, all over. It was the roar of a lion,

“Rrrrrrrrraaaaaaaaarrrrrrr!!!!!!”

Everyone’s hair stood on end. You could hear this coming form every direction. And that pillar, it shattered, it burst open and there confronting Hiranyakasipu was Nrsimha. An unimaginable being to him, half man, half lion, fierce mane, huge teeth. And mad as anything. Really, really angry. It was an incarnation of the Lord’s anger. Anger at the way Hiranyakasipu was dealing with devotee who never raised a finger to protect himself when he tried to kill him in so many ways. And here he was again tormenting and torturing. Nrsimhadeva couldn’t stand it any more; He was going to redress the balance.
Here was somebody that no body could kill [Hiranyakasipu], the demigods were cowering in different places. And suddenly there was this incredible being like this. And so first Hiranyakasipu sent his solders to attack Nrsimhadeva. It was like a cat with a mouse, He’d just pick them up and throw them here and there. He had manifested multiple arms. So finally Hiranyakasipu went in himself. So after playing with him for awhile, Nrsimhadeva laid him across His lap and He disemboweled him with His claws. We don’t see this today, but when lions kill their prey, that’s what they do, they reach their claw up in the belly, pull the bellies open, and pull out the intestines, and then the animal is dead. That’s what He did. And actually, He garlanded Himself, wrapped Hiranyakasipu’s intestines around His neck. It was a gory scene. But very realistic. This is Nrsimha, half man, half lion.

So in this way, Hiranyakasipu was destroyed by Lord Vishnu in the Nrsimha incarnation. It was just at dusk. He said, “I will not be killed by day or by night.” And if fact, you couldn’t say it was day, you couldn’t say it was night. He said, “I do not want to be killed on the inside or on the outside.” This pillar was right in the entranceway, you couldn’t say it was inside, you couldn’t say it was outside. That’s where Nrsimhadeva was situated when He killed him. He said, “I don’t want to be killed on land, or sea, or air.” Well, he was killed on the lap of Lord Vishnu. “Not by man or beast.” Well, what was He? Was He a man? Was He an animal? You couldn’t say. “And not by any man-made or god-made weapon.” No, he was killed by the nails of the Lord. In that way he expired.

And so then the demigods all appeared, they came out of hiding. The word got out that, my god, the tyrant; the beast Hiranyakasipu was dead. They all came out of hiding. And at that point He was like an enraged lion. Nobody could pacify Him. They all, trembling, went forward to offer prayers to Nrsimhadeva, and He wouldn’t calm down. They were terrified. So finally they sent Prahlad forward, and Prahlad offered prayers. Nrsimhadeva became pacified. Remember when his father had asked for a benediction from Brahma? Nrsimhadeva asked Prahlad, “What benediction would you like?”

And Prahlad said, “For myself, I don’t’ need anything. I’ve fully satisfied, I have You in my heart, I’m Your eternal servant, there is nothing more I need. But I’m worried about all these people who are like my father and engaged in material life. And think that sense gratification is the be-all, end-all of existence. For them I am worried, please will you grant my father liberation?”

So this was his prayer, this is a Vaisnava [worshiper of Vishnu]. For himself he has no worries, but he cares for everybody.

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Sprung from Cages and a veggie potluck!

For anyone interested, I put up the new “Sprung from Cages” homepage. Just go to littleblackstar.com and you’ll see. Thoughts?

The page has four Springsteen references in it. Yeah, I wasn’t content with just the title being a Springsteen reference. Nope. I went all out.

“Sprung from Cages” comes from the song “Born to Run.” “You ain’t a beauty, but hey you’re alright” is one of my favorite Springsteen lines ever. It’s from “Thunder Road.” “I went out for a rid, and I never went back” is from “Hungry Heart.” There’s a sort of hidden reference as an “alt” tag. That’s “suicide machine” which is also from “Born to Run.”

The Southern Leg (which needs a name – Civil Wargasm is probably not the best thing in the world) has had a few changes to it. I added a day or two to the North Carolina/Virginia to see some other battlefields. I’m pretty geeky.

And speaking of geeky, I went to a vegetarian pot luck at Rick’s house this afternoon. Saw some old friends and met some new folks. And i got to talk about my trip a bit (Rick brought it up). It was a good time with great food and some rather crass banter, mostly between this gal Sage and myself.

It’s weird talking about the trip, because no matter how I explain it, it doesn’t seem interesting or sensible. Well, it’s definitely not sensible. But it’s weird to talk about it. I guess I mostly just talk about it here. It’s not easy to explain it. It’s four different trips, yet kind of all one trip and I’m not leaving for a bit. And I’m not coming back. It’s kind of neat, in a way. They were more interested in the actual trip than the idea that I’m never coming back. I like that.

Anyway, that was my day. Not really exciting, but check out the page anyway, ok?

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Ekadasi – Eric’s Hare Krishna Song of the Fortnight!

Today is Ekadasi and I’ve got another kirtana for you! Last week’s was the bonus track from the Shelter CD. It was the first kirtana that I ever heard.

This one, however, is from an old ISKCON tape. I came across this one early on. Probably early 1994. I had heard the kirtana on the Shelter CD and was stoked. The kirtanas at the Philly temple’s Sunday feast were rocking. Some of the best kirtanas I’ve ever been in.

So I wandered into the gift shop after the feast one evening and was looking around for things to buy. I picked up some posters, a bead bag, a book or two and wanted some music. I wanted to somehow bottle these kirtanas.

I asked the devotee running the gift shop, “I want the tape with the most intense kirtana you’ve ever heard.” She thought for a minute and suggested the Ratha-yatra tape. Paramananda (Porcell to all the old folks out there), who was with me, agreed. Telling me that this one kirtana on the tape was very literally insane.

He was right. On the three hour drive home, I listened to this tape over and over. It kept me awake and more than likely kept me alive.

It starts slowly. Almost like a soft bhajana. I’m not sure who is singing, Visnujana Swami, maybe Acyutananda Swami. But it’s really sweet. This was recorded during a Ratha-yatra, the festival where we pull carts carrying a deity of Krishna through the city streets. It’s by far my favorite festival. And here you can almost picture the devotees slowly starting off, swaying and dancing on the streets, around the carts.

But then it picks up. More devotees enter the kirtana, more devotees are pulling the carts. The drumming and the dancing grow more intense, building to its inevitable conclusion… well, not conclusion, these things are cyclical. They build to pitched insanity and quickly calm down, only to build once again with more energy and more intensity than before. It’s something that you have to experience for yourself to really get.

But here it is, the second kirtana (aside from the live ones) I’ve ever heard.

Click to download!

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Down the Shore (adding the fourth leg)

After making the Southern Leg of the tour longer by about a week, I realized that it was the first of the legs. There’s not much chance to get used to traveling when you have to do it for 24 days straight. So I moved it to August. Yeah, riding in the deep south in August is going to be hot, but could be worse. I think.

I then created another leg I’m calling “Down the Shore.” Here it is:

downtheshore5002.jpg
*Day One – Easton, PA
*Day Two – Asbury Park, NJ
*Day Three – Seaside Heights, NJ
*Day Four – Ocean City, NJ
*Day Five – Rehoboth, DE
*Day Six – Ocean City, MD
*Day Seven – Bel Air, MD
*Day Eight – Home

It’s a quick eight day jaunt. This will probably be my first trip and will probably happen in May or early June.

My Northern Leg will happen a week or so after this one.

This is the last leg that I’ll be adding. There is, of course, the five days at Gettysburg that happen from June 30 – July 4. But I’m not counting that as a larger trip. It was going to be part of the southern leg, but since I moved it to August, it’s not happening that way.

Is it not smart to do the Southern Leg in August?

Oh, and I’m almost set on a name (thanks to Calder). “The Went Out for a Ride and I Never Came Back Tour” It’s from the Springsteen song “Hungry Heart.” I’m still not convinced that “The You’re Not a Beauty, but Hey You’re Alright Tour” isn’t more fitting. It’s funny. I think I’ll use one as the main title and use the other somewhere on the page. I don’t know yet. We shall see.
I haven’t figured out the exact dates of any of this (except the last leg).

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Naming of names (for the trip)…

I’ve been kicking around the idea of naming this trip (this cluster of trips) this summer/fall. My first choice was “The Hello I Must Be Going Tour.” You know, after the Groucho Marx song. PJ called his the Ramble. Which was partly named after his scooter (called Ramblin’ Man – after the Hank Williams song) and partly from: “Roaming Around My Beloved Land, Exploring.”

Anyway, I was going to name it after the Groucho song since That’s sort of how the whole trip will be, “Hello, I must be going.” But then I  thought of the roots for this trip, what really got me wanting to take off and leave home. That was The Boss. Yep, Springsteen. So I decided that a line from a Springsteen song should also serve as the name for my trip. But which line? Which song?

So far, I’ve come up with “The You Ain’t a Beauty, But Hey You’re Alright Tour.” I like long names. And it’s one of my favorite lines. It’s from “Thunder Road,” a song about trying to convince a girl to leave town with you. No, “You ain’t a beauty, but hey you’re alright” may not be the cleverest way to convince a gal to do something, and by the end of the song, we still don’t know if he won her over (I’m betting not).

Before and after that, I poured over Springsteen songs trying to find the perfect line. I found tons of great lines if I were traveling with someone else. But I’m not. And that realization combined with a couple of hours of doing nothing but reading Springsteen lyrics got me kind of down and lonely.

Most of Springsteen’s songs about leaving town are about leaving town with someone (or just not being able to leave town at all – which kind of disqualifies them as a good idea to use for a trip during which I’m leaving town).  I’m leaving town by myself and I’m not all that into treating my scooter as a human being. Though “You ain’t a beauty, but hey you’re alright” does indeed fit the description.

Another thought is “The Wide Open Country in My Eyes Tour,” from the song “No Surrender“.  The song is one hell of an anthem and possibly the best cut on the last true Bruce Springsteen album (which could use a kick ass remastering job, if you ask me).

I thought of “The Promised Land” of course. That song probably fits the whole mood of the trip best. Actually, that song is probably the thing most responsible for me wanting to leave.

And it’s not like there are tons of folks out there with reels of Springsteen songs in their heads who could help with this. Maybe Calder, but he doesn’t read my blog.  Ugh… I’ll think of something.

Also working on a new leg. Short trip “down the shore.” More on that later.

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If you really loved me….

You’d get me this…

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The Nebraska Demos. Seriously. C’mon!

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