So there cannot be anyone without suffering. That is not possible. There are three kinds of suffering: adhyātmika, adhibhautika, adhidaivika. Adhyātmika means pertaining to the body and mind. "I have got headache today. I have got some pain here in the back. My mind is not very much settled up today. I cannot talk with you." These kind of sufferings are called adhyātmika, pertaining to the body and the mind.
Adhyatmika means pertaining to the body and mind. "I have got headache today. I have got some pain here in the back. My mind is not very much settled up today. I cannot talk with you.": Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:01, 28 September 2023
Expressions researched:
"Adhyātmika means pertaining to the body and mind"
|"I have got headache today. I have got some pain here in the back. My mind is not very much settled up today. I cannot talk with you"
Lectures
Srimad-Bhagavatam Lectures
There are three kinds of suffering: adhyātmika, adhibhautika, adhidaivika. Adhyātmika means pertaining to the body and mind. "I have got headache today. I have got some pain here in the back. My mind is not very much settled up today. I cannot talk with you."
Categories:
- Adhyatmika
- Meaning of Sanskrit Words
- Pertaining
- Body and Mind
- I Have Got (Prabhupada)
- Headache
- Today
- Some
- Pain
- Here
- Back
- My Mind
- Is Not
- Very Much
- Settle Up
- Cannot
- Talk
- With
- Prabhupada Speaks - Lectures, 1966 - 1977
- Prabhupada Speaks - Lectures, 1974
- Prabhupada Speaks - Lectures, Srimad-Bhagavatam
- Prabhupada Speaks - in India, Bombay