In his book, ‘The Practice of Immortality’, spiritual leader
Ishan Shivanand talks about the need to go in inwards and link up with the
divine energy for mental peace and happiness
By Shevlin Sebastian
In spiritual leader Ishan Shivanand’s book, ‘The Practice of
Immortality’, opposite the contents page is a quote from the Bhagwad
Gita:
‘The Spirit is neither born nor does it die at any time. It
does not come into being or cease to exist. It is unborn, eternal, permanent
and primeval. The Spirit is not destroyed when the body is destroyed.’
And this quote sets the tone of the book. In the
introduction, Ishan tells a story: ‘Two birds perch on the same tree,
inseparable companions. One bird eats the fruit, while the other looks on. The
first bird is our finite self, feeding on the pleasures and pains of its deeds,
consuming all the anxiety, the stress, the overwhelm of this life. The second
bird is our immortal, infinite self, silently and serenely watching it
all.’
Ishan added, ‘The universe within us. All people already
possess immortality within themselves — most are just unaware of it. I am
setting out to wake them from their slumber.’
Ishan belonged to a long line of yogis. He spent the first
20 years of his life in an ashram. One day, his guru told him a parable:
Glass can either be a mirror or a window. ‘When you look in
a mirror, you see only a reflection of yourself; when you look at a window, you
see through it to the beauty and infinity of the universe around you. A mirror
is painted black on one side; a window is pure, unobscured. To change a mirror
into glass, you must purify it, removing the paint.’
Ishan was initiated into the spiritual life as a child by
his father, Dr. Avdhoot Shivanand, the noted yogic guru in a monastery in the
deserts of Rajasthan, near the Aravalli mountains.
Interestingly, and with a sense of humour, Ishan said that
when people come to know he was a monk, they regarded him either as a healer or
an oddity. Some people asked bizarre questions: Can you fly? Do you fart
rainbows?
As he grew older, Ishan came to a realisation. ‘There are
only two kinds of people,’ he wrote. “The ones who have already realised the
god within, and the ones who have the potential to realise the god within.
One of the pivotal moments of his childhood occurred when a
flood destroyed their ashram. Father and son moved to the suburb of Dwarka in
New Delhi. Dr. Avdhoot was building an ashram in a swamp. In this swamp, the
locals threw their garbage and defecated into it. It was near the airport. So,
the roar of planes flying in and out was incessant. And because of railway
tracks nearby, trains thundered past all the time. Apart from all this, car
horns blared constantly. Children shouted. Couples fought and screamed at each
other. Ishan found it difficult to adjust after the tranquility of the ashram
in Rajasthan.
This is how he described it: ‘Humans are a little like
sponges. We assimilate the energies that are around us. I would witness people
who were angry, and, somehow, I would feel their anger, too.’
So, how to reclaim mental calmness? Ishan’s way was to
recite mantras. He said that is the surest way to connect with divine energy.
‘Mantras are the gateway to the supreme power,’ he wrote.
Incidentally, after every chapter, Ishan offered a
meditation practice:
Here are a couple:
No. 1
Sit comfortably, relax your body, and focus on a memory of
gratitude.
Feel the positive thoughts and emotions of that
memory.
Gently embrace and accept its energy, allowing it to
flow into the past from the present.
No. 2
Sit comfortably, relax your body, and meditate on the
sun.
Imagine the sun as a friend, embodying all the positivity,
divinity, and strength you need.
Inhale for a count of three, feeling the sun’s light flow
into your head and through your entire body.
Exhale for a count of three, releasing everything from your
body through your head and into the sun.
One, two, three — inhale deeply, three-two-one — exhale
fully.
Repeat this cycle for ten minutes, keeping your breath as
deep as possible.
Ishan confirmed the problem with humanity is ego.
He wrote: ‘Ego does not allow us to see what is obvious. In
his book, The Gift Of Fear, American security specialist Gavin de Becker
wrote: “Your intuition exists, in part, to help you stay safe — to recognise
when something isn’t right and to guide you away from danger.” But the avidya,
the ego, has a trick up its sleeve: it speaks so loudly that it drowns out the
inner voice of your intuition.’
And because of the constant strictures from society, people
ignore their inner voice and follow the dictates of others.
Ishan learned to activate the prana, the life-force energy
that animates all human beings, with the help of a teacher, Mashe, who was a
master of kalaripayattu.
As he grew up, Ishan came to a realisation about his life
journey. He would help people to go from avidya to vidya, to move from lack of
knowledge to knowledge. ‘My job was to clean people’s minds,’ he wrote. ‘Once
the mind was habitable, a person’s higher self could take over.’
Yet Ishan’s path has been unconventional. He has engaged
deeply with the world even while he nurtured a rich inner life of meditation.
He has deftly maintained a link between outer action and inner
stillness.
So, he is married with a boy and a girl. In Washington, you
can see Ishan in a tuxedo; in Mauritius, he conducts his ‘Yoga for Immortals’
mental wellness programme for athletes; In the Himalayas, you can see Ishan
swimming in a lake; he prays at the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya; he travels the
Atlantic Ocean by ship; and he meditates on a frozen lake near the Arctic
Circle.
In one photo on Instagram, Ishan is on his knees with folded
palms seeking blessings from enlightened master Mahant Swami Maharaj of the
Swaminarayan Sanstha, the proponent of Sanathan Dharma, which has its
headquarters in Ahmedabad.
Over his maroon monk dress, Ishan had put on a sleeveless
waist jacket, which showed his bulging biceps. The Mahant Swami Maharaj looked
at his muscles and said, “Ladka Balwan Che (the boy is strong).” All the swamis
present along with Ishan started laughing. Then a very senior swami said, “A
strong body and mind are needed for the work Ishan has chosen to do.”
The Mahant Swami Maharajji gazed at Ishan with compassion in
his eyes and said, “You will succeed. I bless you.”
One can see Ishan doing weightlifting, practicing target
shooting, hitting the bull’s-eye, and enjoying video games in a mall. With a
thick salt and pepper beard, and a ready smile, he gives the impression of
being in this world and not being in it as well. Apart from being a spiritual
leader, he is an international public speaker and a performance enhancement
coach.
The yogi has earned a Doctorate of Philosophy in Humanities
from the United Graduate College and Seminary International in Kampala,
Uganda.
This book is a reminder of the spiritual life that many of
us are missing at this point. From early morning until late at night, we
constantly distract ourselves with Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube
videos. And in this empty activity, we have forgotten there is a divine energy
within us.
This has also resulted in a grave psychological breakdown
all over the world. People turn to drugs, alcohol, sex, power, fame, and
fleeting relationships to fill the void within. But Ishan says, the simple
answer but very difficult to implement is the path of meditation and inner
awakening.
He says the only way is the way inward. As Lord Buddha and
Jesus Christ said thousands of years ago, ‘Know Thy Self.’ Through the book,
you can get an idea of how to travel into the soul, and connect with the
Divine.
It is a timeless path to reclaiming your life!
(Published in kitaab.org, Singapore)
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