There
was a knock at the gate. A sadhu with
kindly eyes stares at us. He had snow-white beard, a typical well-established
mendicant’s beard. And his hair was also pure snow-white. It was very
surprising to find him looking with a certain familiarity. And there was a twinkling
mischief in his eyes, a pleasant teasing as if he knew all about me and I hadn’t
any clue about him. For sure, he knew who I am but I had hardly any clue about
his identity.
My
brother puts up a challenge for me to find out who this great sadhu is. I kept on staring at his face.
But I couldn't tell who he was. And then my brother tells me he’s Rakesh. I
nearly jumped out of ceiling. At the mention of Rakesh the faded signs of a
once familiar face began to emerge out of the little space that was not covered
by facial hair and his long mendicant hair locks. I could now make out yes this
was Rakesh. It was a massive surprise, big enough to rattle my nerves. Even wildest
imagination about him as a sadhu was impossible.
After all, he used to be a normal boy. He was interested in physical exercises
in the akhara. A not too vocal boy he
had a very nice stocky and strong physique. I couldn't make out how come he has
turned out to be an ascetic.
Since
I hadn't met him for the last 15 years or so, it was very difficult for me to
find out any logic into his becoming an aesthetic. He looked a perfect elderly
sage even though Rakesh is a few years my junior. There was kindness in his
eyes and his prematurely snow-white beard and orange robe were enough to make you
feel that he belongs to that class of ascetics are not mere careerists, who are
genuinely on the path of self-exploration leading to ultimate realization. Just
after interacting with him for 15 or 20 minutes, I could make out that he is a
genuine Seeker.
Rakesh
used to be an average student, unassuming, without having any urgency to show
off his talent or skill of any type. He hadn't have any big visions or dreams.
Even the villagers hadn't too much expectations from him. Just like any other
boy, you can say. His rocky story went like this. He was doing well as a
transporter; he was earning decent bucks. You can say that he was going well
and economically was well off, so there was hardly any financial problem. There
wasn't any family problem either in his small, happy unit. And he was
physically very strong as I have already told you.
But then
his body revolted against him. There was a serious problem with his back. His
spine would get locked up, a kind of dislocation where the facet joint of the
lower vertebrae slips over the one above it. His body would get jammed, leaving
him immobile and he had to lie on bed for months at end. The doctor told him that
even a surgery stood very slim chance of curing him completely. There was a big
risk and he might get worse than earlier. So they won't recommend the surgical
procedure. In that way he kept on lying on bed. His life now meant precautions,
painful injections, no physical work. And when the symptoms aggravated he would
be bedridden. He even got bedsores one time. It was horrible, he told me. He
got fed up with life. It was the same body that he felt so proud of, it was the
same body that he used to put up into physical exercise routines to hone it, it
was the same body that he used to feed so lovingly with all the nutrition and
now it was failing him. The medical science was also helpless before this
condition.
He
went into depression as one can imagine and there were a lot of questions
staring in his face in the league of ‘Why me?’. It shook the foundations of his
faith in life itself. One day he found himself running into the cremation
ground at midnight. He was losing the fervor of life. There was a fire still
burning on a pyre and he put up the hot ashes on his forehead and yelled to all
the evil spirits to come and challenge and fight with him. He knew that he was
losing his sanity. His mind had at last given up after facing chronic physical
problems. He told me that he was feeling so helpless that he was yelling and
crying in the cremation ground at midnight. Then some soft whisper chimed in
his suffering soul. It asked him to go to Haridwar and bathe in mother Ganga. His
inner voice assured him that it will help him. That night itself he left for Haridwar.
He stayed there for a fortnight, bathing in mother Ganga, simply enjoying the
positive wives of the place. The hot lava and inner turmoil and agony cooled
off in the holy waters over a fortnight. Now he could think with reason and logic
and regained some balance.
Again
a soft whisper told him to take sanyas lifelong
and become an aesthetic full time. A complete U-turn in life for a completely different
destination. He took diksha from a
guru belonging to Gorakhnath sect. The Guru mantra very soon catapulted him
into a full-grown sadhu in just a few
years. You can imagine the power of Guru Mantra if somebody is very diligent and
honest about it in meditation and tapasya.
He was ready, the divine spark of devotion burned the stuck up karmas and the energy
knots inside his body opened up for a free flow within three or four years. He rose
quite tremendously on the path of spirituality. I could feel those spiritual vibes,
a scent of purity and love, emanating from him.
When
he came to meet me, he was on the 63rd day of his fasting. He was just having
water, tea and smoking beedies, just
these three things; imagine surviving on these three things for 63 days and
still he was energetic, he was playful, he was joking, in fact I couldn't see
any trace of fatigue or signs of sickness about him. Rakesh joked like a little
boy that the doctor had told him not to lift a weight above 5 kg, not to walk
more than a kilometer at a stretch and take every damn precaution in order to keep
his spine out of danger. Now after meditations on guru mantra and tapasya as per Gorakhnath sect, Rakesh
was in a position that just on water, tea and smoking beedies he could walk on a pilgrimage to a distance of 300 km, carrying
a bag weighing almost 20 kg on his back just in order to challenge the medical diagnostics.
As per medical science all this would have left him a crippled man. He had just
returned from pilgrimage, on the 63rd day of his 101 day fast, and here
he was laughing and telling his story with full innocent vigor.
I
could see the pride in his eyes and rightly so. He is the chief protagonist of
his story, a maker of his own destiny, a keeper of his life in his own hands
instead of surrendering it to the doctors. He decided to chart out a separate
course for himself instead of getting daunted by the diagnosis where an
injection would cost 60,000 rupees and bedsores awaited to define his life in
terms of pain and suffering. There was a time when once the situation
aggravated he had to take bed rest for two or three months at a stretch and bed
sores would eat into his sense of dignity, giving him immense agony,
helplessness and pain. Now he was a free man floating around on the fuel of
spirituality, fueled by the blessings of his Guru, strengthened by the meditating
powers that gave him unbelievable amount of energy even though he hadn't eaten
anything solid for more than two months.
So the almost crippled Rakesh was gone and
here was a joyful, merrymaking, kindly, pious sadhu rechristened Bhootnath by his guru. When you become a true
spiritualist you start grabbing the traces of ultimate truth that are cascading
around in each particle of energy swarming around you and for that you need not
be a well-educated person, you need not be a well-versed person in scriptures.
Life itself is such a big teacher. It makes you a perfect knower of things. I
have read thousands of books and Bhootnath has hardly read a few dozen books in
his life and that too without much attachment in his heart for the habit of
reading. But when we started talking on various topics, of course belonging to
the domain of spirituality, I could see that the path of self-seeking gives one
so many mysterious avenues of knowing things from very fresh perspectives,
almost from hidden sources. He seemed to know all without reading or hearing
the kind of stuff the novices like yours truly use on the path of true
knowledge.
It
was wonderful to talk to him on various topics. He told me about his numerous experiences.
He had reached up to a level where he had clearly enjoyed out-of-body
experiences where his consciousness could see the material body lying on the
ground and could recognize and feel that duality. It's expected from anybody
who is on the path of spirituality to feel very close to nature. Bhootnath feels
very close to Mother Nature. He had recently undertaken a plantation drive and
was eagerly looking forward to get some help in his mission of making Mother
Earth green. He stayed with me for more than two hours and it was a treat to be
with him, this entirely reformatted man. If I compare his former self to the
present Avatar, it is unbelievable to even think of this transformation. Is it
the same Rakesh who used to appear so normal in most of the things that the
village boys enjoy while they are growing up in the bucolic, free environment? But
now it wasn’t Rakesh anymore. He is Bhootnath now, so wise and a perfect ascetic.
Bhootnath
was oozing with a kind of imposing elegance, which anyone on the path of
spirituality can feel. It was wonderful to see him having a cup of tea, a glass
of water; it was a treat to watch him smoking beedies. It was like a bird has gone out of the cage and was now
enjoying free flights in the limitless expanses of the sky. He walks on foot
most of the time. He says his stick is his main companion, his sole support
apart from his guru's blessings and his Guru mantra. His saffron cloth bag his
entire possession.
I
asked him did he miss the village driving him to come to the village. He told
me the reason for his recent visit was his mother, mai he called her, just like he would call any woman mai on earth. He somehow came to know
about her blood cancer. He said even though I’m an ascetic I cannot forget that
she is my mai, she's the one who gave
me this body. I'm eternally obliged to her. In the hairy spools of detachment, I
could feel very feeble, sadly pining notes of affection that would somehow
identify a special mai from all the mais around. And what is wrong in that?
Love comes in multiple layers. A mother is a mother forever even for an ascetic.
Bhoothnath
was planning to take this special mai
to Himachal for Ayurvedic treatment. She would be very happy to see all the
open nature around her; maybe at least this much I can do for her. He said this
in a very loving, soft, gentle tone, as if he was now father and mother both to
all the worldly sufferers like us.
As I
saw him off at the gate, it was such a soothing side to see him walking on his
path, slowly putting his stick in front with each step and the village dogs
barking at the stranger. He moved as if this meeting with me didn’t carry any
leftovers with him. As an ascetic you become a stranger in your own village.
Most of the people in the village won't recognize him if they come face to face
with him because the robes, big beard, long locks of hair have completely redefined
Rakesh, sorry Bhootnath.
He
is in a different league altogether. He has a genuine smile, a smile of
kindness, forgiveness. I sincerely believe and I'm 100% sure about it that he
will go very far on the path of spirituality. He may even attain ultimate liberation
in this lifetime only. I could see it on his forehead. It was wonderful to meet
this spiritualist. Nonetheless, it was a big surprise to me. I do hope to meet
him sometime because I miss those positive vibes, the fragrance of his
spirituality, the scent of selfless seeking. Who won't like to meet such
people?
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