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It has one of many highest flights of the Vedanta. When the Vyadha completed his teaching, the Sannyasin felt amazed. He explained, "Why are you in that human anatomy? With such information as yours why have you been in a Vyadha's body, and doing such dirty, unpleasant work?" "My son," responded the Vyadha, "no duty is ugly, number duty is impure. My delivery put me in these circumstances and environments. In my boyhood I discovered the trade;I am indifferent, and I make an effort to do my job well. I try to accomplish my work as a, and I try to accomplish all I can to create my mother and father happy. I neither know your Yoga, nor have I become a, nor did I go out of the world right into a forest; nevertheless, all that you have heard and observed has come to me through the unattached doing of the work which belongs to my position."

There is a in India, a great Yogi, among the most wonderful men I have ever observed in my entire life. He is a strange person, he will not show any one; if you ask him a question he will not answer. It's too much for him to use up the positioning of a teacher, he will maybe not do it. In the event that you ask a question, and await some days, in the course of conversation the subject, and wonderful light will be brought up by him will he place onto it. I was told by him once the solution of work, "Let the conclusion and the means be joined in to one." When you're doing any work, do not think of such a thing beyond. Do it as worship, as the best worship, and give your whole life to it for the full time being. Thus, in the tale, the Vyadha and the person did their work with cheerfulness and complete - heartedness; and the result was that they become illuminated, clearly showing that the appropriate performance of the responsibilities of any station in life, without attachment to results, leads us to the highest realisation of the perfection of the heart.

It is the worker who is attached to benefits that grumbles about the nature of the obligation which has fallen to his lot; to the unattached worker all duties are equally great, and form efficient tools with which selfishness and sensuality could be killed, and the independence of the soul secured. We're all more likely to think too highly of ourselves. Our responsibilities are dependant on our deserts to a bigger extent than we are prepared to give. Competition rouses jealousy, and it kills the kindliness of the heart. To the grumbler all jobs are distasteful; nothing will ever meet him, and his lifetime is bound to prove a deep failing. Let's work on, being ever ready to set our shoulders to the wheel, and doing as we go whatever happens to be our duty. Then certainly will we see the Light!

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