DEFEAT THE DEFEATIST MINDSET
27/07
9:13 PM] FRIEND: Morale / energy at a low this last week..things not working
out work. ….need a good objective review of where my career is.
[28/07 9:45 AM] Sanjay rao chaganti: Hi, was thinking of an appropriate response and then this message came through earlier today. This was his talk at the Bihar School of Yoga which I find myself connected to...
[28/07 9:46 AM] Sanjay rao chaganti: Address by His Excellency Dr A.J.P. Abdul Kalam,
[28/07 9:45 AM] Sanjay rao chaganti: Hi, was thinking of an appropriate response and then this message came through earlier today. This was his talk at the Bihar School of Yoga which I find myself connected to...
[28/07 9:46 AM] Sanjay rao chaganti: Address by His Excellency Dr A.J.P. Abdul Kalam,
President
of the Republic of India
Namaskara,
good morning to all of you, to Swami Dharmashakti, Swami Niranjanananda, Swami
Satyasangananda and, of course, venerable Swami Sivananda, whom I always
cherish in my memory.
Friends,
what can I tell you? You are in Bihar Yoga Bharati, which creates a beautiful
body and mind. I admire the great founders of this organization, and so I would
like to thank the Almighty for giving the people of India such a beautiful
place in which they can dream, think and transform themselves into enlightened
citizens.
I want
to tell you about an important incident that happened in my life in 1958. Some
of you will have read about it in Wings of Fire. But for the young people here
who have not come across the book, I thought I would repeat it.
When I
was a young boy, I dreamt that I would fly. I had a fantastic teacher,
Sivasubramania Iyer, who gave me the idea that I must take to science and do
something connected with flight. So I went into aeronautical engineering and
graduated in 1957, a long time ago.
I
wanted to become a pilot. That was my dream. I applied to the Air Force and was
asked to attend an interview with the Air Force Selection Board at Dehra Dhun.
So I travelled all the way from my home in the island town of Rameshwaram, in
the south of India, across the sea, from Mandabam to Chennai, from Chennai to
Delhi, from Delhi to Dehra Dhun. It was the first time I had seen the whole of
India, this beautiful land of different cultures.
The
grown-ups and the swamis know what happened in the interview, but I'll describe
it for the young people present. In four days you had to do all sorts of
things: run,do gymnastics, attend interviews and group discussions. Out of
twenty-five applicants, eight were to be selected. After four days of difficult
tasks, nine were selected. I was the ninth, but they wanted only eight. I was
told I had a good chance because normally one fellow would not pass the medical
exam. However, for some reason, by God's grace, all the eight got through the
medical, and so I was not selected.
I was
very dejected, so I decided to take a bus to Delhi via Rishikesh and Haridwar.
That was the route I selected. I started from Dehra Dhun in the early morning.
When I arrived in Rishikesh, suddenly the beautiful vista of the Ganges
appeared in front of me, that crystal clear water coming from the Himalayas. I
felt like taking a bath, even though it was November. After bathing in the
Ganges, I was putting on my dhoti, when I looked over at the opposite
riverbank. There I saw the most beautiful, happy building.
Automatically
I was attracted to that building, which was Swami Sivananda's ashram. Swami
Sivananda was sitting on a pedestal giving satsang to hundreds of people. I was
sitting in the very last row.
After
his discourse on the Bhagavad Gita, normally he would randomly select two people
from the crowd for an interview. I was one of the two selected. I don't know
what made him select me. He called me to his chamber, then he looked at me and
said in Tamil, “What's your name?” “Abdul Kalam,” I replied. “Why are you sad,“
he asked. This great one, this chosen one, this godly person, knew of my
sorrow! I replied, “Swamiji, I will tell you the facts. I had come from an
interview with the Air Force Selection Board and I was not selected to be a
pilot.”
Swami
Sivananda looked at me. I was such a small fellow in front of him. Then he
opened the Bhagavad Gita at the eleventh chapter, Vishwaroopa darshan, in which
Lord Krishna appears in front of Arjuna in all His forms. When Arjuna tells
Krishna he is afraid of fighting in the Kurukshetra war, Krishna tells him,
“Defeat the defeatist tendency.” That is a great message. Swami Sivananda asked
me to repeat the statement “Defeat the defeatist tendency” three times. I
repeated it three times and I was cheered up. He then gave me twenty of his
books published in Tamil and English. It was such a great experience.
So,
friends, I will never forget this incident in my life. I am now in the
seventy-second orbit of the sun, which means my age is seventy-one. One orbit
around the sun takes one year, so I have completed seventy-one orbits. Swami
Sivananda's mantra: “Defeat the defeatist tendency” is always with me and that
great philosophy and advice which Lord Krishna gave to Arjuna always comes to
me whenever I'm in trouble.
I wish
you all the best. God bless you
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