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Buddha at the Gas Pump

347. Ganga Mira

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Rick Archer

Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy, Spirituality, Society & Culture

4.7695 Ratings

🗓️ 23 May 2016

⏱️ 102 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Geneviève De Coux was born in 1947 in Namur, Belgium during her parents’ holidays. The family lived in the Belgian Congo. Geneviève and her brother enjoyed an idyllic childhood until 1960, the year of the Congo’s independence. The family emigrated to Belgium. Their paradise was lost. Geneviève found herself in Brussels, this radical change of scenery stoked the fire of her ontological search and she found refuge in art. In 1968 during her second year at the university while studying her philosophy paper, she stumbled upon a saying of Socrates which hit her straight in the heart: “Know thyself”! Realising that this was precisely what she had always been looking for, she instantly dropped her studies and set out for India by road in search of a living Socrates or Buddha. On reaching the Himalayan foot-hills, she led a meditative and ascetic life by the Ganges in Rishikesh, waiting to meet her master. The locals called her Mira because of her devoted renunciation. At the end of 1968, in circumstances well worthy of Indian mythology, she met a man with whom she had an awakening experience. He left the following day without Mira knowing anything about him, neither his name nor his address. The one certainty was that finally she had found her master. To give herself the best chance of seeing him again, she decided to live at the exact spot of their meeting. For eight months she waited for him and meditated under a little tree on the banks of the Ganga river. One day, her master, H.W.L.Poonja, a disciple of Ramana Maharishi, came back for her. She became his disciple and wife and started to travel with him. In 1971, H.W.L Poonja was invited to give Satsang in Europe and Mira accompanied him. Their daughter Mukti was born in 1972 and the little family went on travelling the world. For the education of her daughter Mira returned to Belgium. In 1990, H.W.L Poonja, also called Papaji, settled permanently in Lucknow where he gave Satsang every day until he passed away in 1997. In 1998, Mira was invited to give satsang, which she continues giving to this day all over the world. She decided to call herself Ganga. In 2004 Ganga Mira moved to Portugal. She lives near the wild ocean of the Algarve with her daughter Mukti and her grand-children, Arun and Satya, and gives satsang four times a week. Website: gangamirasatsang.com Transcript of this interview Interview conducted 5/21/2016 YouTube Video Chapters: 00:00:00 - Introduction to Buddha at the Gas Pump and Ganga Meera's Background 00:03:27 - The Fascinating Journey to India 00:06:40 - Living Under the Tree 00:09:23 - The Power of Meeting the Master 00:12:41 - Increasing the Intensity of the Fire 00:17:07 - Remaining Connected to Papaji 00:20:24 - The Shift from Seeking to Adventure 00:24:10 - The Relationship between Awakening and Thoughtlessness 00:28:01 - The Disappearance of the Concept "I am real" 00:32:04 - The Essence of Satsang 00:35:46 - The Mechanics of Satsang 00:39:42 - Falling in love with liberation 00:43:07 - Probing the Power of YouTube 00:46:49 - The Meaning of "Just Keep Quiet" 00:50:33 - The Concept of Enlightenment versus the Real Enlightenment 00:54:15 - The Dangers of Comparison 00:57:20 - Everything is Perfect 00:59:47 - The State of Seeking and the Purpose of Satsang 01:02:48 - The Role of Devotion in Spirituality 01:06:03 - Stages of Spiritual Development 01:09:25 - The Teaching and Non-Teaching Sages 01:12:57 - Awakening in Different Temperaments 01:16:16 - The Illusion of Sattva and the Importance of Satsang 01:18:43 - The Concept of Awakening from Extreme Suffering 01:21:50 - The Absence of Separation 01:24:49 - Satsang in Portugal 01:28:24 - Misunderstandings and Compassion 01:32:04 - Beyond the Doer 01:35:31 - Demystifying the Sense of "I" 01:39:28 - The Power of Pointers and Indications 01:42:23 - Various Announcements

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The

0:07.0

The Welcome to Buddha at the gas pump. My name is Rick Archer. Buddha at the gas pump is an ongoing

0:30.5

series of interviews with spiritually awakening people. We've done about 345 of them so far, and if this is new to you, you could go to

0:40.2

backgap.com and you'll see all the previous ones archived and categorized under the past

0:45.2

interviews menu. This is made possible by the support of appreciative donors, so if you have

0:51.9

been donating, we thank you for that, and if you'd like to, there's a PayPal button on the right-hand side of the site.

0:57.0

My guest today is Gangamira.

1:00.0

Gangamira was born Genevieve de Kuk in Belgium in 1947.

1:06.0

In 1968, during her second year at the university while studying philosophy, she stumbled

1:11.8

upon the saying of Socrates, which actually was written in the Temple of Apollo at Delphi,

1:17.8

but Socrates and Plato and others quoted it, which hit her straight in the heart.

1:21.4

And that saying was, know thyself.

1:24.8

Realizing that this was precisely what she had always been looking for, she instantly dropped

1:28.4

her studies and set out for India by road in search of a living Socrates or Buddha.

1:35.0

On reaching the Himalayan foothills, she led a meditative and ascetic life by the Ganges in Rishikes

1:40.5

waiting to meet her master.

1:42.4

The locals called her Mira because of her devoted renunciation.

1:46.0

At the end of 1968, in circumstances well worthy of Indian mythology, what you're going to talk about a little bit,

1:52.0

she met a man with whom she had an awakening experience. He left the following day without Mira knowing anything about him, neither his name nor his address.

2:01.6

The one's certainty was that finally she had found her master.

2:06.6

To give herself the best chance of seeing him again, she decided to live at the exact spot of their meeting.

2:11.6

For eight months, she waited for him and meditated under a little tree on the banks of the Ganga River.

...

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