Scribblings

Time and Space

Time is the most important, significant tool in the world. It is rarest of the rare. Once it passes no one nothing can bring it back. Time, in due course, can give everything and also take away everything. The only thing time can’t give back is the time itself. In that aspect, Time too is helpless. When one synchronizes with Time then he is said to be in Union with God. For Time is God. In Srimad Bhagavad Gita, Lord said: Kalah kalayataham. This is significant. The Time has a set of typical indications like one can’t get more than a moment at a time. The second moment doesn’t come unless the first moment is exhausted no matter who he is, a Yogi, a scientist or a Mahayogi. Everyone on this earth is a mortal. Everyone’s life is a calculated one. One can’t exist more than that stipulated moment. That is predestined. Nobody can escape it. The Lord has also said:“Ahameba akshyah kalo” means “I am the endless time.” God is eternal, ever flowing from time immemorial so is Time.

Everything transforms from one to another. Change comes in every object. Everything is an event in this world. Event means the ‘Kriya’. Nothing is stagnant in this Universe. Everuthing. Even what we see as stagnant, unmovable they are also moving. ‘Jagat’ means ‘to be in motion.’ The scientists know that everything moves in this world. The atoms inside a solid thing move. Thus there is constant movement inside the mountains, in trees, in every fixed objetcs. Everything changes except the change itself. Change is only constant. One can’t enter same water twice. Everything is under the flowof ‘Kriya’. And everything perishes in this Kriya, sooner or later only Time is an exception. That is why Time is also accepted as God. Again, everything needs time to undergo this change. So nothing can happen without Time. Time is only indispensable. Time helps in changing but does not change.

As one needs space to sit. One has to occupy some space i.e Akaash. Without space nothing can stay except Space. Space doesnot require space. Likewise Time does need Time. The great Scientist Einstein created a concept by taking both Time and Space into account. This is an old concept in India. The great Yogis of India have declared that Time and Space are not two. They are One. Einstein said: Time and Space are two dimensions. Space has three dimensions: Length, Breadth and Depth. Time is the fourth dimension. Time is also synonymous with Change. Every thing that is created transforms like Lie transforms into death, creating multiple transformation. Every limb organ of a human body transforms in to something other: from which it has come. Everything goes back to its root. Time is required both for creation and destruction. In life as well as in death. Simple but profound.

Everything dies, perishes, except time. So Time is also synonymous with Death. Because as Life, death is also eternal, ever flowing, engulfing. No one can go against this flow. Everyone is running towards death. Every moment is taking us closer towards our death. Death is nothing but a flow, another means of creation. Time is both Life and Death. When we synchronize with Time, we synchronize with our inner selves; with that eternal flow; with life and death; with God as a whole.

About the author

Biswajit Mishra

The year was 1962. Politically a very important year for India. As well as for the war that took place between China and India, in which India had a surrogated defeat. Many events had followed that year quickly one after another. Every incident that followed had some significance in one way or other. India’s economy was pushed back to a few decades. It was probably the biggest blunder of a decision after the decision of partition that took place in the year 1947 when India gained its freedom on the midnight of 15 August 1947. Destiny does not work according to one’s requirement. It works on its own principles whether you accept it or not. And it leads. It is the sum total of all the actions of a human being for many lives. The year 1962 has much other significance too. India lost the war with China but Daman and Diu, the last foreign-occupied territory of India, was integrated into India. This was the year when Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru was elected de facto Prime Minister of India. Thus it was a year of learning and teaching lessons.

In such a year of diversified occurrences of turbulence and achievement, I was born on Savitri Amabasya i.e. on the New moon day named after a pious lady called Savitri. Those who are acquainted with Indian spirituality or those who follow Indian tradition would know about Savitri Mahakavya, a very famous and a legendary epic poem which remain unfinished with 24,000 lines by Shri Aurobindo, an Indian philosopher, yogi, guru, poet, a nationalist and a spiritual reformer.

In any case, till today, the Savitri Amavasya is considered a very pious day for the women of India and they perform a specific puja (worship) with deep austerity for the sake of their husbands. In any case, the birth was not normal. The Medical Science had not developed much in India during the early 60’s and I was told that I took a long time to come out from my mother’s womb (an 11month child, they say). In any case, both I and my mother survived and I was born a healthy child.

My first remembrance of myself is very unconventional. I remember a question that bothered me from my early childhood. I always thought I have a father who is responsible for my birth, and my father has also a father who is responsible for his birth. So forth so on. Then who was the father of the first person who took birth on this earth? And who created the earth? If it was God, then who created God? Then something will start rolling inside me, making me restless. I remember I must be about 5 years old. It normally happened in the evenings after I come back home from the playground. I must be studying in 1st or 2nd grade.

Now when I look back, I think, the query must have started long back… may be from many lives of the past… nobody knows… nobody will ever know… the episodes which started in the early childhood… stopped suddenly, I don’t remember when. It was good. Because whenever that question came I was so much disturbed that I thought I would go crazy. I had completely forgotten about that for many years until I was about 25 when it came back to me again in completely different circumstances. To know that we have to go a few years back when I was 10 or 12 years old. That was the time when I was introduced to Swami Vivekananda. I was in school and we were given 10 paise for pocket expenses. 10 paisa was a big amount back then, I used to have to have good snacks with the money. One day while passing through a small roadside bookshop I saw a book Titled: “Thus Spake Vivekananda”. The photo on the front page attracted me a lot. And coincidentally the cost of the book was 10 paisa! I bought the book by skipping my snack. It was a very interesting book. That was my first book apart from study lessons. With the passage of time, I found many other titles like, “Thus Spake Shri Ramakrishna” “Thus Spake Shri Krishna” and similar ones. Those short books were very interesting for me, and I read almost every single book available in that series. And thus without my knowing, I had put my first step into the world of spirituality.

To be continued…

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