In a world that constantly urges individuals to try, achieve and maintain control on every aspect of life, the concept of surrender often feels upside down and frightening. The society teaches people to hold their goals, relationships, identity and even their pain and suffering tightly.
However, a quiet, transformative power exists in surrender – a one that does not cause defeat, but for peace. When contact is made conscious and spiritually, letting go is no harm; This is a liberation.
Air Atman in Ravi – Ambassador and spiritual leader of Khushi shared the hidden bliss of surrender and peace.
Many people try to manage their lives, control people and predict future. The inherent unpredictory of life, marked by changes beyond human understanding, marked by loss and challenges, often leads to resistance. This resistance creates a sense of stress, anxiety and disconnection.
Through the path of spirituality, individuals find out that they are not only their bodies, brains or ego. Instead, they are the soul – the unique spark of life, soul, or important force that animates the physical form.
Spiritual teachings emphasize that life is governed by karma, due to the size of one’s actions and the law of influence. Circumstances arising in life by previous deeds. Understanding that all deeds and divine laws are revealed, it suggests that a constant effort to control life is often tedious and meaningless. To surrender to divine desire, align with the natural flow of life rather than resisting one. It promotes acceptance, peace, peace, peace, and finally, with gratitude to the divine.
Most of the people who are sticking are contained in the ego – the part of themselves that wants verification, success and control. Ego thrives on fear and isolation. The surrender represents the task of loosening the grip of the ego and returning to someone’s real nature: the soul, which is already complete, peaceful, and a part of the divine, the supreme immortal power (SIP). Reflected the need to prove yourself or be right allows a redistribution of a cool pleasure for all efforts. Within spirituality, surrender is often the key to change – an entrance to dialogue with deep prayers, meditation and divine. By issuing individual agenda, a divine time opens the flow of grace and guidance with unpredictable blessings and supreme power.
There is a hidden joy in letting go – no because the future is fixed, but because now there is no need to know it, there is faith in divine will. This trust, which is described as total dependence and unconditional surrender for the Almighty, is one of the most free experiences. This is the place where faith becomes tangible. Faith, which means complete assurance in the heart, allows individuals to be conducted and carried out by a supreme power even amidst uncertainty and adversity. This subtle is yet to be generated by the powerful bliss more than to relax more than itself, knowing that no one moves alone. All this stems from releasing the need to find out. Through surrender, peace is found – and with peace it realizes that life is nothing, but has been embraced and felt. The final purpose of life is self-attainment and, through it, divine feeling.
Spiritual surrender is not inactive; This is an active option to rely on more than itself – the supreme immortal power called God. In spirituality, a change in faith from surrender fear, from greedy to openness, is leading to peace in life. Peace is not about avoiding pain or bypassing emotions; Rather, it is about being fully present, whatever is generated, without decisions.
Finally, surrender is not a unique phenomenon, but a constant, moment-to-moment practice. This includes the desire to soften, to release and choose confidence, when it is difficult to maintain trust and faith. Surrender between a storm may appear as a deep breath, a whisper prayer of acceptance, or a cool decision to force and allow. On the spiritual path, the surrender decreases about abandoning the world and accepting the intense truth of everything more life, death, deeds, and in between about self-interview and attainment. Finally, surrender means to come home in someone’s true house: Divya. In that sacred return, an unbreakable peace is found – one that the world can neither give nor carries nor take it.