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Dhira means one who is not disturbed. That requires training. In great dangerous position, one is not disturbed, that is not ordinary thing: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 18:39, 10 February 2024

Expressions researched:
"dhīra means one who is not disturbed. That requires training. In great dangerous position, one is not disturbed, that is not ordinary thing"

Lectures

Srimad-Bhagavatam Lectures

So dhīra . . . dhīra means one who is not disturbed. That requires training. In great dangerous position, one is not disturbed, that is not ordinary thing. Therefore the word has been used, dhīra. Dhīra and adhīra.

So actually that is the fact. But still, why a man becomes aggrieved when the body is lost? That is explained here, that sneha-moha, illusion of affection. Actually, there is nothing to be aggrieved. Tathā dehāntara-prāptir dhīras tatra na muhyati (BG 2.13). Dhīra, those who are sober, they are not bewildered. Sober man knows that "My this relative, my father or my brother, my grandfather, his death means he is changing this body. He is going to another body. He is not dead."

So dhīra . . . dhīra means one who is not disturbed. That requires training. In great dangerous position, one is not disturbed, that is not ordinary thing. Therefore the word has been used, dhīra. Dhīra and adhīra. There are two classes of men. Dhīra means acts very conscientiously, without being disturbed by the external factors. I have explained several times the dhīra. The example of dhīra is given in the Kumāra-sambhava poetry by Kālidāsa. We had our syllabus studying Kumāra-sambhava in our I.A. class in college. So there the example, Kālidāsa is giving example: the dhīra is Lord Śiva. Just see.

The story is when Lord Śiva lost his wife in the dakṣa-yajña . . . Dākṣāyaṇī, daughter of Mahārāja Dakṣa, became the wife of Lord Śiva. And because Lord Śiva sometimes by chance did not show any good respect to Dakṣa, so there was misunderstanding between the son-in-law and father-in-law, and the episode ended that Dākṣāyaṇī, the wife of Lord Śiva, gave her life. His (her) father was very much angry upon the son-in-law. So she wanted to mitigate the misunderstanding, but her father was very stubborn. So at last she said: "My dear father, you are thinking of Lord Śiva, my husband, as ordinary man, and you have become so angry. So this is due . . . you are thinking that I am your daughter. So all right, I have got this body from you. I am returning you." So she immediately died.