Tag Archives: W.Q.Judge

June 2010 AQ: Rig-Veda On Gambling

Dear Friends

A correspondent recently wrote about the challenges so many around the globe are facing, one of which is the medical mystery of why the number of adults and children with mental illness has skyrocketed over the past fifty years:

“There are now more than four million people in the United States who receive a government disability check because of a mental illness, and the number continues to soar… What is going on?”

As students of philosophy and psychology – which in ancient times were one – we strive to fit ourselves to be able to read the hearts of man… and to be able to heal and help them.  It is the road so many of the Great Sages have taken, to practice the healing arts in both physical medicine and also of the source of many of our physical and mental woes, which lie in the soul.  They are healers of mind, soul and body.

Our correspondent suggests the reason for these mental troubles is answered in H.P.Blavatsky’s prediction that, with the end of the Age of Pisces in 1900 (one of the cycles that is “historic and not very long, but very occult, lasting about 2,155 solar years”), would come a period when:

“psychologists will have some extra work to do,  and the psychic idiosyncrasies of humanity will enter on a great change.”  (from The Esoteric Character of the Gospels by H.P.Blavatsky)

So as the dawn of the new sign of Aquarius leads us to ‘new places’ mentally and psychologically, the lead story in this edition looks at one of the perennial battles man must face, the compulsion and addiction of “the gambler”.  In one sense gambling has been the trade mark of 20th c. consumer society, of hoping and pretending the future will never call upon us.  Karma is either a compassionate healer (if we listen) or stern Nemesis to those who consistently refuse.  Having resolved to ‘listen’ the question becomes “What we can do individually - and for our neighbours collectively - to give the 21st c. a new direction and a brighter aspect?”  Perhaps the best way is by teaching the Law of Compassion, Karma, the “law of laws” – after all, isn’t that how we learnt to listen, cutting as short as we can ours and other’s further suffering?

And isn’t this the best reason for us to continue in the search for answers – until we have reached that state where we see the truth and are empowered by it to help others?

In connection with these ideas, we should also announce the commencement of  the YahooGroup “E-THEOSOPHY” which was founded on 7th July 2010, one of its aims being to examine similar questions, such as:

“How to create better mechanisms for the transition towards a civilization actually based on the principle of universal brotherhood.” 

To join it just email lutbr@terra.com.br - the details and aims are in last month’s AQ – link below:

http://aquariantheosophist.com/2010/05/17/may-2010-aq-new-e-group-for-study-and-research/

Bon courage. Read on, practice the way as best you can, abandoning all personal attachments to the results…

Living a Simple Life ……………………………………….2
‘Artificial life’ breakthrough …………………………….3
The Necessity to Form a United Consciousness …..5
ULT letter 2010 …………………………………………….6
Avaaz Victory saves Whales …………………………….6
Open Letter to Adyar on WQJ Case ……………………7
Your old laptop is needed! ……………………………….7
WQJ & The Adyar TS in London UK ……………………7
WISDOM IN ACTION ……………………………………….8
Druid reduces accidents from 6 to zero ………………8

 The AQ Editors

Click to download PDF of magazine

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Rig-Veda On Gambling

The following excellent remarks are probably the oldest in the world upon the vice of gambling.  They are found in Rig Veda, X 34.  It is admitted that these Vedic hymns are anterior to the time of Homer and Hesiod.

The Hindus claim an antiquity for them which carries us back thousands upon thousands of years prior to the oldest date allowed by European Orientalists. Those who have a theosophical acquaintance with the Vedas will incline to the estimate of the Hindus, inasmuch as European opinion is constantly altering on the subject, and besides has not had quite a century of experience in which to form itself. Muir says these hymns were composed certainly 1,000 years before our era, but that is too ridiculously low an estimate and will have ere long to be revised upon further proofs and discoveries. The present hymn is given as showing what was then thought of gambling.

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“THE tumbling airborne products  of the great Vibhidaka tree delight me as they continue to roll upon the diceboard. The exciting dice seem to me like a draught of the soma-plant growing on Mount Miyavat. My wife never quarrelled with me nor despised me; she was kind to me and to my friends. But I for the sake of the partial dice have spurned my devoted spouse. My mother-in-law detests me, my wife rejects me. In my need I find no comforter.

“I cannot discover what is the enjoyment of the gambler any more than I can perceive what is the happiness of a worn-out hack horse. Others pay court to the wife of the man whose wealth is coveted by the impetuous dice. His father, mother, brothers cry out: “We know nothing of him; take him away bound!”

“When I resolve not to be tormented by them because I am abandon

ed by my friends who withdraw from me, yet as soon as the brown dice, when they are thrown, make a rattling sound I hasten to their rendezvous like a woman to her paramour. The gamester comes to the assembly glowing in body, asking himself “Shall I win?”

A 4,500 year old die found in excavations at a Harappan period site

A 4,500 year old die found in excavations at a Harappan period site (near the Indus Valley), perhaps similar to the ones made from the nut of the Vibhidaka tree?

“The dice inflame his desire by making over his winnings to his opponent. Hooking, piercing, deceitful, vexatious, delighting to torment, the dice dispense transient gifts and again ruin the winner; they appear to the gambler covered with honey. Their troop of fifty-three disports itself, itself disposing men’s destinies like the God Savatri whose ordinances never fail. They bow not before the wrath of the fiercest. The king himself makes obeisance to them. They roll downward, they bound upward. Having no hands they overcome him who has. These celestial coals when thrown on the dice-board scorch the heart though cold themselves.

“The destitute wife of the gamester is distressed, and so too is the mother of a son who goes she knows not whither. In debt and seeking after money the gambler approaches with trepidation the houses of other people at night. It vexes the gamester to see his own wife and then to observe the wives and happy homes of others.

“In the morning he yokes the brown horses – the dice; by the time when the fire goes out he has sunk into a degraded wretch. He who is the general of your board, the first king of your troop, to him I stretch forth my ten fingers to the east in reverence. I do not reject wealth, but I declare that which is right when I say: 

“Never play with dice; practice husbandry; rejoice in thy prosperity, 

esteeming it sufficient. Be satisfied with thy cattle and thy wife, the god advises.

“O dice, be friendly to us and no more bewitch us powerfully with your influence. 

Let your wrath and hostility abate: let others than we be subject to the fetters

of the brown ones, the dice.””

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[Original article by W.Q.Judge, Path, July 1893]

Click to download PDF of magazine

http://aquariantheosophist.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/8-jun-2010-aquarian-theosophist-v1.pdf

April AQ – The Tao of not Judging

Dear Readers
 
This month’s AQ starts with a short tale sent in by a reader on the tendency to judge things by their appearance - I hope you’ll enjoy it as much as we did.
Page 2 has a report on the ‘Justice for Judge’ campaign;
Page 6 some news and pictures of the new Haiti ULT Lodge;
Page 7 is H.P.Blavatsky on ‘Magic’ and finally sharing page 10 with RC’s reflections on W.Q.Judge is a brief piece on the new British deputy prime minister Nick Clegg’s connection to H.P.Blavatsky!
 
Happy reading,
 
The AQ Editors
 
 
 
[update 16th May - a reader has commented that this tale was written by Master Chuang (Zhuanzi), the early Taoist, not Lao Tzu.]
 

The Tao of not Judging 

 
It happened in the time of Lao Tzu. And he liked the story very much.

An old and very poor man lived in a village. But even the emperor envied him his white horse.  He was offered large sums of money to sell it, but he always responded: 

“This horse is not really a horse. He is like a man to me.  And who on the earth could sell a man, a friend?  Tell me!”  Though he was so very poor he didn’t sell the horse. 

One morning the horse disappeared from the stable.  All the men from the village gathered saying to the man:  “You poor old fool!  We knew that the horse will be stolen.  It would be better to sell it.  What a misfortune!” 

But the old man responded: “Why such a hurry?  Why couldn’t you just say:  ”There’s no horse in the stable?”  That is the fact; but if it is a misfortune or blessing – I do not know – because it is just a small piece.  Who knows what is going to happen next?” 

And people laughed at the man.  They knew that he was somehow weird.  But – in  two weeks, one evening, all at once the horse returned.  So, it wasn’t stolen.  It just escaped into the wilderness.  And that was not all. It was accompanied with twelve new wild horses… 

Chuang Tzu dreaming of a butterfly (or a butterfly dreaming of Chuang Tzu)

Chuang Tzu dreaming of a butterfly (or a butterfly dreaming of Chuang Tzu)

People gathered again, saying: “You were right, old man. It was not a misfortune but a blessing!” 

And the old man responded: ”You are judging again!  Just say: the horse is back… who knows is it a blessing or not?  That is just a small part, you are reading only a word from the whole sentence – how can you judge the whole book?”  People didn’t respond anything, but deep inside, they were sure that the old man was wrong.  But there were twelve more horses given to him – out of nothing! 

The old man had an only son who started to train all those wild horses.  In one week he fell of the horse and both his legs were broken. 

The people gathered again judging:  ”You were right again!  It was a misfortune.  The only son you have can not use his legs any more.  And he was the only hope of your old age.  Now you are more poor then ever.” 

Lao Tzu portrait

Lao Tzu portrait

Old man responded:  ”You seemed to be obsessed by judging.  Do not walk too far. 
Say just that my son had broken his legs.  None can tell if that was a misfortune or a blessing.   Life takes place in small pieces and we can never know.” 

Click to download PDF of magazine 

Continue reading

Oct 09 AQ: A Quiet Revolution

Dear Readers

There is a quiet revolution going on in our engagement with schools.  The difference one knowledgeable person – a retired School Principal – can make to the life chances of hundreds of pupils is extraordinary.  It’s inspired, careful work.  Read about it on page 1.

‘Qualifications for Chelaship’ starts on page 2, on “the power of the Adepts over forces of nature… and their goodness and their solicitude for the welfare of the race”.

There’s lots more inside: on growing wheatgrass, the dangers of MSG in our diet and an announcement from a new study group in Toronto Canada – have a look inside and spread the word.

Grateful thanks to you all for your contributions and making the AQ what it is.  Why not do a little propaganda of your own – if you feel like it, print it off and pass it around.

The Editors

 

Click to read the PDF

 
 

A Quiet Revolution 

by Ann Colburn, “Once Upon a School” http://onceuponaschool.org/stories/232

[An inspiring account of how one person’s work can affect the life chances of many pupils in the critical teenage years at school.  Ed]

I have always been dismayed by the discrepancy between the poor educational opportunities of low-income students in the inner-city in contrast to that of affluent students in private education…

One of the biggest problems for students in inner-city schools is setting goals for after graduation and making a practical plan for reaching those goals.

Far too many students do not make it to graduation and the result is a huge pool of under-educated young people, too many of whom end up stuck in poverty in dead-end jobs or in jail.  I wanted to help inner-city students dream a positive future and create a viable plan to achieve their goals.

What we did

The director of the Academy of Finance (AOF) at Manual Arts High School noticed my work with a few of his students who had been chosen for the One Voice Scholars program. 

He asked if I would be willing to work with his whole class of seniors to enable them to reach goals similar to the One Voice scholars.

He offered me class time in his block schedule to work with the entire class and encouraged me to meet with students one on one to create a plan tailored to each student’s dreams, needs and individual situation.

Manual Arts High School, 4131 S Vermont Ave a few blocks from the ULT in LA, USA.

Manual Arts High School, 4131 S Vermont Ave a few blocks from the ULT in LA, USA.

Each year for the seven years I have worked with the program, I have expanded my understanding of how to help these students succeed. I now reach out to students beginning in 9th grade to help them to see that college and a better life is in their future…

In the larger school, fewer than half of entering freshmen graduate. Of those who do graduate only 15% or so go to college. In the AOF program, 99% graduate and 90% go on to college.

The remaining students enroll in trade programs. One or two have gone into the military.  We have not had to find much funding for our college program, since it is run by volunteers …

In general the AOF students fund-raise constantly for better classroom equipment, textbooks, desks and even a culminating senior trip to Washington DC.

~ End ~

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