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Realisation Beyond Expectation

  • Writer: SatSri SSB
    SatSri SSB
  • 7 days ago
  • 2 min read

A realised person should never be approached with expectations, because expectation itself is a misunderstanding. When one expects solutions, miracles, answers, guidance, or benefits from a realised person, he is approaching from the wrong level.


Anyone may approach a realised person for "Nothing" and those who approach him sincerely receive only one thing, which is peace. Nothing else is required, and nothing else is given.


A realised person has no concern for the past or the future. He does not attempt to analyse what was or predict what will become. In fact, he is not concerned with his own past or future either. Past and future belong to the mind. A realised person lives beyond the mind.


Nothing is given, yet peace is received.
Nothing is given, yet peace is received.

He need not be a wise man who knows everything, because knowing belongs to the realm of knowledge. A realised person does not live in knowledge; he lives in Nothing. This Nothingness is not emptiness or ignorance, but the total absence of mental content. Because of this Nothingness, peace exists in him abundantly and permanently.


A realised person is realised for himself, not for society. He does not exist to reform the world, guide humanity, or serve any mission, because realisation is not a social responsibility but a personal state. For him, the Self is more important than anything else, and the Self is God. When the Self is realised, nothing outside remains important.


He is not for the world; he is for Himself. Yet, just as a tree gives shade without intention, anyone who approaches a realised person with sincerity experiences peace, not because the realised person gives it deliberately, but because peace is his natural state.


He cannot give wealth, solutions, success, or answers. He can only offer peace, because peace is the only thing that is fully available in him. Peace is the ultimate need of human beings; without it, life becomes difficult, and the afterlife, too, remains disturbed because the inner state at the moment of death is carried forward.


Therefore, a realised person becomes an unavoidable presence in human life, not by force, preaching, or influence, but because he embodies what every human being ultimately seeks. He stands as silent proof that peace is possible, and that is enough.

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