Prayers and Blessings
Pasayadan
Sung by the music ensemble in Gurudev Siddha Peeth.
© Ⓟ 2017 SYDA Foundation®. All rights reserved. Please do not copy, record, or distribute.
This painting of Jnaneshvar Maharaj’s samadhi shrine, in Alandi, Maharashtra, India, was created by the artist Ashesha Conroy.
Pasayadan, which means “gift of divine grace,” is the title given to the last nine verses of the commentary on Shri Bhagavad Gita written by the thirteenth-century poet-saint Jnaneshvar Maharaj.
Pasayadan is a beautiful prayer, in which Jnaneshvar Maharaj invokes his Guru’s blessings for the upliftment and benefit of all people. He prays for the sun of righteousness to shine brightly, bringing peace and harmony to the world.
Jnaneshvar Maharaj is one of the most revered saints in India. He gave the knowledge and wisdom of Shri Bhagavad Gita to many people by writing his commentary, called Jnaneshvari, in Marathi, the language of the people of the state of Maharashtra. He was only fifteen years old when he undertook writing Jnaneshvari, and he took samadhi at the age of twenty-one.
Oregon, United States
What a gift—so uplifting!
Modiin, Israel
I believe that I can practice bringing my highest self to any situation.
Illinois, United States
I am grateful to the Siddha Yoga path for reminding me about my responsibilities as a human being on this planet.
Montreal, Canada
Thank you so much, Gurumayi, for your loving guidance.
Pune, India
My thirteen-year-old daughter was with me, and she wanted to contribute to the unified offering Siddha Yogis are making together in their prayers for peace in the world. She waved a candle as she listened to the beautiful words of the Pasayadan prayer. Her intention was powerful to behold.
Afterward, I was suffused with gratitude to Gurumayi for her guidance regarding the value of prayer and intention. To be able to offer the world something of such huge significance from the heart of our own home is something I am very grateful for. The goodness emanating from this experience is still tangible.
South Yarra, Australia
But I was inspired to hear about Gurumayi describing the solution as a challenge for a change in the human heart and for all of us, all of humanity, to realize our oneness. I understand we can embrace the qualities of “brotherhood, love, and perfect steadiness of mind” that Baba wrote about in the Evening Arati, and we can radiate light and send prayers and blessings to the world.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for your love and for your inspiration.
Ohio, USA
We forget that we are all manifestations of the Self, and from this lack of humility and other aspects of the ego, conflict arises and endures.
I have come to understand that our thoughts, beliefs, and opinions are gifts from the divine Self, to be used for the upliftment of humanity—and never to harm others.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
This morning I found the following definition online: "An omen is a phenomenon that is believed to foretell the future, often signifying the advent of change. People in the ancient times believed that omens lie with a divine message from their gods." And an illustration showed that a rainbow was sometimes considered an omen.
I feel that Gurumayi is asking us, through our simple daily behavior and our smiles, to be a living message from the divine, a message of hope and a portent of change for the good.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Thank you, Gurumayi!
Shree Muktananda Ashram
I’m Italian, my husband is French. His family lives in France. When we received the information about the events in Paris, we were enormously touched in our hearts. Immediately we wondered: "What can we do?"
Then the answer came: we can offer our prayers and blessings. Thank you, Gurumayi, for this great, great teaching!
Torino, Italy
Thank you, Gurumayi, for guiding us at all times with your wisdom and love.
Katzenbach, Germany
As I reflected on the meaning, this phrase connected all the teachings I had heard that day. It affirmed for me that my sadhana has a real impact on everyone I meet, and ultimately on humanity. I understood it to be a sacred mission to convey blessings to everyone I see wherever I am, in whatever way I can, and to all humanity. If I maintain that awareness in my daily life, I will never doubt the power of prayer, infused by Guru’s grace, to uplift humanity.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for the fresh new meaning you have given to my life.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Many beautiful teachings during the Prayers and to “be a good omen” for others. Only with steadiness of mind can I truly and consciously listen to people. Only with steadiness of mind can I really offer kindness, strength, love, and support to people.
My heart is bursting with gratitude.
a Siddha Yoga Swami
Later, after we chanted and offered blessings to the world, Swami Ishwarananda read, at Gurumayi’s request, Baba’s prayer that ends with:
May brotherhood, love, and perfect steadiness of mind always prevail in the world.
Once again, I experienced and understood that, ultimately, what matters most in our lives is cultivating and sharing love and doing our best to ensure that every human heart is uplifted, experiences peace, and is united in a spirit of kindness and compassion for ourselves, each other, and the world around us.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
My action point now is: rather than closing myself to others in such times, I will put into practice Gurumayi’s teaching and offer my best to the world in whichever way is appropriate, even if it’s as simple as a genuine smile or kind words.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for showing us that we have the power to uplift others—and, by the same token, ourselves.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
New York, USA
Thank you, Gurumayi, for teaching me that I have the power to give blessings.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
That evening, we chanted a powerful and resounding Om Namo Bhagavate Muktanandaya. We could feel all the blessings, prayers, and intentions we were invited to formulate for ourselves and those who needed them. One visiting sevite later said she saw an aerial view of Paris with the Eiffel Tower, and that the energy of the chant was descending on the city with its healing light. I could feel compassion and strength building, and then the joy of being alive and able to chant with fellow devotees to our beloved Baba, Gurumayi, and Bade Baba.
Later, I joined a group of Siddha Yogis from France who’d gathered at the Durga statue with a few Indian devotees. We chanted Hymn to Mahalakshmi three times, invoking her strength, love, and protection. We chanted a capella and in unison, very focused, in a rhythm and tone which were easeful and filled with devotion. We concluded with the Om purnamadah mantras, which remind us of the abiding perfection in this world. We sat in an enveloping and sweet silence.
We then came forward for darshan and pradakshina of the Durga statue. There was a sense of completion: we had prayed and offered together, and now it was time to let go, to trust, and to move on—to go even deeper into the Pilgrimage to the Heart.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for your love and protection!
France
Thank you, Gurumayi, for enabling us to strengthen our good qualities and for teaching us how to harness the power of our good energies and prayers in service to the world.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
As we chanted, I felt a tremendous power of light and grace rising up from the sound of the mantras in the Temple and enveloping the world in a blanket of protection.
a Siddha Yoga Swami
I was so happy and grateful to receive this teaching. I can practice bringing my best self to all situations in my life, no matter how I personally feel at the time. I can work toward being a good omen in the many facets of my life: offering a smile as I pass someone in the hallway, sharing an insight with friends, giving a listening ear to my husband, even if I’m tired. I can even be a good omen to myself as I look in the mirror each morning!
Through this practice of being a good omen every day, the light and love I bring into my days will join all the light and love of all of us who are bringing our best selves forward. In the end, all there will be is love. Yes! All there will be is love and goodness in this world.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for opening my eyes to how the small choices I make in my day can help create a world of goodness, sweetness, and love. I am forever grateful.
New York, USA
Tonight, as I put a rose on my puja, I paid attention to a feeling that arose: not to remove the thorns, but to leave them on, to remind me that though thorns are there, nothing can diminish the lasting memory of the fragrance and the beauty of the rose. Nor can the grace that protects us all—and by which we too offer our light—ever fail to spread.
I am most fortunate to be connected with Siddha Yogis around the world, who share their heartfelt blessings and insights through this website.
Thank you, dear Gurumayi.
California, USA
Later in the morning, while in the satsang in the Temple, I remembered the dream as we were offering blessings from our hearts out to the world.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Shree Muktananda Ashram
a staff member in Shree Muktananda Ashram
Gurumayi shared her conviction that all good people can, and must, step forward in each moment, in small yet significant ways, to fill the space around us with their goodness and love so that there is no room for demons and enemies to enter that space, including our own mind.
I could feel how Gurumayi was being so present with us: with all her devotees, and all people everywhere, as well as with all the animals and our beautiful natural world. And I was filled with gratitude to Gurumayi, our jagadguru—a Guru for the world.
As we gathered the energy from singing Pasayadan and chanting the mantra, Gurumayi invited us to stand for the Arati. She explained that the sound of shaking rattles and beating drums dispels negative energy. As the Arati built, Gurumayi began clapping rhythmically and powerfully.
It felt to me that Gurumayi’s conviction, compassion, power, and humility were calling forth these same qualities in everyone, as we offered our golden prayers and blessings to the world.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
It steadies my own heart to read these shares, and they assist me in focusing my own intention and blessings. In challenging times like these, the heart can quiver in the recognition of tragedy. The shares then become like the light from the lighthouse: they illumine the direction, the way home—to the Heart. Thank you.
New York, USA
I didn’t know, until I viewed the Siddha Yoga path website the next morning, that the beautiful verses of the Arati and the prayers that ask for joy, love, and happiness for everyone were very much needed at this time.
I’m very grateful for all of the shares that have been posted on the website, bringing Gurumayi’s teachings to us on this occasion. They lead me to understand that my morning worship and my other spiritual practices are not just for me. They can help to uplift those around me and the whole world. And they inspire me to keep going.
Sydney, Australia
We each had a powerful image that represented the ways we were seeing how people and animals were receiving inner and outer support—such as mantra-filled rays of pure goodness reaching every creature in every corner of the universe. The nine-year-old child who was a part of this gathering shared how she was sending her blessings to God, and then God would direct them to all those who needed them. She said this with such conviction and brightness! I was deeply moved and grateful for the ways that children are growing up on the Siddha Yoga path, with such clarity about their prayers and blessings being received and benefiting the world.
With all my heart, I thank Gurumayi for teaching every seeker that, no matter who we are and where we are, we each have the power to make a difference in the world and for the world.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
As the sound of the drum became stronger, I felt as if the drum were inside me. Then I had the distinct impression that—on another plane with which I was not so familiar—it was actually the whole Temple with all of us within it that was traveling and bringing blessings to the world. This feeling of the whole Temple moving through space lasted until the drum stopped.
I felt gratitude for the love and light that Gurumayi brings to the world and for the fact that I can support her work by living her teachings and maintaining a positive state of mind.
New York, USA
Suddenly, it seemed to me that an enormous stream of grace was emanating from Bade Baba’s murti. My heart felt like a prism that was spreading my prayers and this enormous stream of grace in all directions.
Thank you, Bade Baba, for giving me this experience of the power of praying. Thank you, Gurumayi, for teaching again and again about the importance of praying and sending blessings for the upliftment of humanity.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Following the chant, Gurumayi spoke about how we have a responsibility to spread our good energy and be good omens in this world. I understood that I could be "a good omen" by extending kindness, good will, courtesy, and respect through my thoughts, words, and actions. By doing so, I can contribute to creating a future of goodness for the world. Every action, no matter how small, makes a difference. Every person has a role to play. I can do my part!
Shree Muktananda Ashram
O Lord, you are the protector of the helpless.
My honor is in your hands.
She reminded us that this bhajan had been sung in 2000, during performances of The Golden Tales—a series of plays in which children visiting Shree Muktananda Ashram had enacted the lives of saints.
In the context of recent world events, the association of this bhajan with the image of the children performing the plays was very poignant. I felt this poignancy earlier in the satsang as well, when Gurumayi spoke of the beauty of the world—mentioning particularly the beauty of our children—as a counterweight to the forces at work in the events in Paris. She said that the planet Earth is too beautiful for the dark thinking of those who cause such suffering, and that our children need to be able to sing and dance in the beauty of the world.
For me, that beauty was manifest in the satsang, like a powerful light penetrating the darkness of recent events in the world.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Arizona, USA
Gurumayi said that at times like these, it is so important to hold on to experiences of grace, moments of goodness. Gurumayi shared a story she had heard of a Siddha Yogi in Paris whose inner voice prompted her to leave a public building just moments before the bomb blast. Participants in the satsang shared other stories of how Parisians are helping one another, and how people all over the world are sending their love and praying for peace.
As I listened to Gurumayi’s words and to these stories of goodness, I experienced so strongly how the natural impulse of the heart is to open, to love, and to give. And that by giving our love, giving our best, offering the Siddha Yoga practices, we are spreading the power of goodness and beauty throughout the world. We are truly contributing to the peace for which we so fervently pray.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
We all sat quietly waiting for the satsang to begin as the Siddha Yoga mantra, Om Namah Shivaya, played softly in the background. Although I felt sad due to the events in Paris, I was also remembering the satsang with Gurumayi a few days ago on Bali Pratipada when Gurumayi brought our attention to the Siddha Yoga teaching that blessings are present under all conditions—in rain and in sunshine.
As I wondered how to see the blessings in situations like these, I recalled the events of September 11, 2001, in New York City and elsewhere, and how they became a catalyst to bring people together.
When Gurumayi spoke, she emphasized the oneness of all humanity, and I realized that situations like this do remind us that we are all one. Each heart feels the loss, each heart desires to support. After the satsang, we were invited to go to the Bhagavan Nityananda Temple to chant. I thought, "How fortunate we are on the Siddha Yoga path, that we have a powerful mantra that conveys blessings to the whole world." I am so grateful that through the grace of the Siddha Yoga Gurus, by repeating this mantra wherever I am, I can offer blessings to everyone, everywhere.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
Participants shared that in Paris people have been opening their doors to all those who were wandering the streets as a result of the disruptions caused by the attacks. Similarly, people in New York have been housing French travelers who were unable to get back home due to cancelled flights. Helping others proceeds on all fronts, and comes naturally in the recognition of shared vulnerability.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
I understood from Gurumayi’s words that clear-sighted recognition of global vulnerability and faith in survival, hope, peace, and togetherness go hand in hand; clear-sightedness gives the faith traction and depth and provides us with genuine consolation.
Shree Muktananda Ashram
I was so grateful to attend the Prayers and Blessings Satsang yesterday in the Bhagavan Nityananda Temple. Bade Baba, stately and resplendent, was dressed in shimmering gold. A Temple sevite, in a gold and yellow sari, had the appearance of an angel. Her movements were so graceful and tender as she tended the oil lamps in front of Bade Baba, keeping the flames bright.
As we began to chant Om Namah Shivaya, I felt immense love and bliss, which I envisioned flowing across the ocean to France. After singing Pasayadan, we were asked to shake handheld drums, which we were told are specifically intended for dispelling darkness. I felt as if the vibration of these drums was piercing my heart, like a flaming arrow. With this came an immense upwelling within me of power, strength, and courage, which seemed to merge with all of the powerful intentions of the others. Our voices had become a beacon of light for humanity. I felt such confidence that our prayers were strong and would create tangible results.
Gurumayi spoke of how important it is to have a steadfast mind during these times, to speak up if something is not right, to become an omen of goodness. I felt that this was our dharma. I understood Gurumayi to be telling us not to cry for ourselves, in our daily struggles. And if we do cry, we must let the tears of our hearts be for all of humanity.
Thank you, Gurumayi, for this beautiful teaching of dharma and experience of empowerment.
Connecticut, USA