This is letter to my son Shreesh , give your comment
Hi Shreesh,
After reading your mail, I want to emphasize one thing above all — can you guess what it is? Talking to seniors, experienced, or successful people only helps when our mind is calm and receptive.
As Mummy must have told you, she wanted to go to the hills again, but she cancelled her second trip. I feel she still wants to go but isn’t doing it because of the guilt of not being at RimpyScan. This is exactly the point — receptivity.
Advice is like water. Our mind is the ground. If the ground is dry and ready, the water seeps in. But if the ground is already damp or muddy, even the purest water won’t purify it. So, how do we make the mind calm and receptive?
For me, it’s through books. These days, Motivational Interviewing is helping. Interestingly, I don’t even prepare for class with this book — I prefer to read and discuss it in class. Even Mummy is attending these classes with me.
My best guess is: to be calm, we must first truly want calmness. It must become the most important goal. Then, every day, catch even the slightest slipping of your mind. Don’t try to stop the fall — you can’t. Just catch it gently and laugh at yourself. That’s all.
Today, I heard Siddhant and Mummy talking about you and chemistry. Siddhant had something important to say. He felt that if you don’t like chemistry, then computer coding could be the magic key for your brain to grow.
I agree, but also feel that books and subjects are just tools to go deeper. Real magic happens only when the brain is ready to be touched by consciousness — that divine fragment within us. The mind is like soil. Ideas from others are like dry sand — useful, but not seeds. The seed comes from within, from that still place in us.
So yes, talk to all kinds of people, learn from everyone — but always protect your inner peace. Never let anyone’s thoughts disturb your clarity.
As J. Krishnamurti said, “Stop trying to become something. Just be with what is.” That’s how you prepare your brain to receive the divine. People like Krishna, Buddha — they didn’t just beat death; they brought life and divinity into a broken world.
I loved the story of King Janak. After death, he first had to spend a few minutes in hell due to a minor karma. But his calm presence made even hell feel peaceful. When he chose to stay there, they had to turn it into a temporary heaven. It may be a story, but its message is profound.
Use your RBS like a lion roaming the jungle. You don’t need to become a lion — you already are one. Just protect that truth within you.
Read for joy. Talk to listen. Sleep to feel refreshed.
And when you face trouble — go inside, notice the slipping of the mind, and help it gently.
Love you daily,
Papa ❤️