The document discusses accepting what cannot be changed and moving forward without sorrow. It provides examples like spilled milk cannot be unspilled, a grown child cannot regrow, and the dead cannot be revived. The commentary explains this essence comes from the Vedas and those aware of the Vedas understand the past is past and do not linger in sorrow but instead accept what has occurred and cannot be altered.
The document discusses accepting what cannot be changed and moving forward without sorrow. It provides examples like spilled milk cannot be unspilled, a grown child cannot regrow, and the dead cannot be revived. The commentary explains this essence comes from the Vedas and those aware of the Vedas understand the past is past and do not linger in sorrow but instead accept what has occurred and cannot be altered.
The document discusses accepting what cannot be changed and moving forward without sorrow. It provides examples like spilled milk cannot be unspilled, a grown child cannot regrow, and the dead cannot be revived. The commentary explains this essence comes from the Vedas and those aware of the Vedas understand the past is past and do not linger in sorrow but instead accept what has occurred and cannot be altered.
The document discusses accepting what cannot be changed and moving forward without sorrow. It provides examples like spilled milk cannot be unspilled, a grown child cannot regrow, and the dead cannot be revived. The commentary explains this essence comes from the Vedas and those aware of the Vedas understand the past is past and do not linger in sorrow but instead accept what has occurred and cannot be altered.
Once a task is done, there is no re-doing it. Once a seed sprouts, there is no re-sprouting for that seed. Once a child grows up, there is no re-growing for that child. Similarly, there is no death to the already dead. When these concepts are accepted, why not the fact that there is no sorrow for that which has already passed. When there is no option of un-doing or re-doing, what is the purpose of sulking in sorrow! Those that are aware of the Vedas, clearly know and understand that this is an essence from the Vedas directly. They accept the past as past and leave the sorrow behind as well. Again, it is not worth crying over spilt milk.