Other Spiritual Connections

U. G. Krishnamurti

U. G. Krishnamurti was the first avadhuta I encountered, and the first being that made a lasting and irrevocable impact on me. Though my spiritual search probably began a year after he died in 2007, I discovered his videos only after I had been reading J. Krishnamurti’s books. The main thing that struck me about him was his palpable fearlessness and authenticity. At that time, still not knowing anything about spiritual matters, I said: ‘Whatever he has, that is it—that is what I want.’

When my path came full circle and I could finally grasp the space that he talking and acting from, I wrote the book Nothing to Understand: U.G. Krishnamurti & The Avadhuta Path of Total Dissolution. U. G. was an iconoclastic avadhuta who was not, on the surface, connected with the Datta Tradition. However, surface matters have no importance in this Tradition. U. G. roared the truths of the natural path, the Datta Path, maybe better and louder than anyone else. His very existence is a benchmark for authenticity, naturalness and honesty.

Lakshmana Swamy & Mathru Shri Sarada

In my early twenties, I was craving for an uninterrupted period of time to sit and be in silence. I originally planned to travel to the Himalayas, but after reading the book No Mind—I Am The Self about the lives and teachings of Lakshmana Swami & Mathru Shri Sarada, I decided to travel south to Tiruvannamalai, home of Arunachala and Ramana Maharshi’s ashram.

These two masters were known for living reclusive lifestyles, and at that time it was still possible to meditate in front of the gate of their compound for an hour in the morning. I did this for a few months without meeting them. Then, I had two dreams on two consecutive nights. In the first dream, Lakshmana Swami was lying on a sofa looking ill. I had tears in my eyes and so did he. He blessed me by putting his hand on my hand. The second night, Mathru Shri Sarada gave me a golden key. Mohanji later told me that this key represented the supreme consciousness. Later, when I was leaving the morning meditation at their gate, I felt another subtle gate close behind me, signalling that what needed to be done was done. From this point onwards, various new dimensions began to open within my experience of life. Lakshmana Swami left the body at age 100. Around the same time, the light of awakening dawned for me. I still feel a tremendous sense of gratitude to these two great wonderful beings!

The Nyingma Tradition

I had always been drawn to a handful of masters from the Tibetan Buddhist Nyingma Tradition. These masters included Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Chatral Rinpoche, Dudjom Rinpoche and, of course, Guru Padmasambhava himself. This connection intensified after I awakened to the natural state and began reading the books of Thinley Norbu Rinpoche and Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche.

The dzogchen teachings of Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche had perhaps the profoundest impact on me. I discovered that in dzogchen, awakening is actually taken as the starting point rather than the end of the path. In that tradition, awakening is seen as the point when a door opens and you can start training in the natural state. Reading Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche’s words every day, in a relaxed and joyful way, helped me to become more and more anchored in that state. These days my own way of guiding people in natural meditation is based more so on the Tibetan Buddhist Traditions of the Kagyu and Nyingma rather than any Indian School.

My connection to this Tradition and with Tulku Urgyen was also communicated to me through a beautiful dream I once had. In the dream, Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche took a piece of paper and simply wrote ‘ripga’ on it and gave it to me. In dzogchen, ‘rigpa’ means ‘the view’ or the truly natural perception of existence itself. I still feel a deep sense of connection and gratitude to these great dzogchen yogis, who codified the process of moving from awakened to perfectly enlightened, from yogihood to siddhahood, better than anyone else. 

Mawlana Sheikh Nazim

I wrote my first three books whilst living abroad. When I moved back to the UK around 2021, I wanted to go back to school, get a good job and start living life quietly and normally. Somehow, my plans collapsed and Mawlana Sheikh Nazim, a Sufi master who left the body in 2014, entered my life in a subtle but explosive form.
I remember seeing a picture of this great Sheikh two years prior to this. At that time, I felt some kind of fear or trepidation when I looked at the picture. Fast-forward a few years, I randomly started watching videos of him online and listening to him chanting. Whenever I would do this, I would begin uncontrollably weeping, my heart would swell with love and I would be covered in goosebumps. During these times, I would begin to feel his presence with me in the room in a subtle form. Sometimes, I would even hear knocks on the windows or walls to signal his arrival. This was a tremendous period of heart expansion, where I really discovered the depth of love present within existence.

Later, I began to sit and meditate with his picture in front of me. Whenever I would do this, his mouth would shift into a smile and sometimes I would see the faces of different Sufi masters, perhaps from his lineage, being superimposed over his face. During these times, he would tell me different things about my connection to him and also about my future life in this world. At one point, he told me to sit facing a certain direction, and then he gave me a name in Arabic and told me that he had given me baya (initiation into his tradition). When I asked him if I should become a Sufi, he told me that my destiny in this life would be to represent the Datta Tradition and that I should go to meet Mohanji. When I went to visit his dargah, one man randomly gave me a mala.

I always feel the presence of this unfathomably great master with me as a guiding hand and a fatherly figure. No other spiritual figure has invoked as much pure love in me as him. Tears still come to my eyes when I hear him chant or watch his videos.

Shiva Prabhakara Siddha Yogi

After meeting Mohanji, I later went to stay at his house/ashram for some time in Bangalore, India. In that house, there is an extremely powerful shrine room, which contains pictures of many masters and deities. One such picture on the right wall is of the great avadhuta, Shiva Prabhkara Siddha Yogi, who was known to have lived for hundreds and hundreds of years (the story of how Mohanji received this picture is told in the book BABA: Mohanji and Masters). When I saw this picture, I felt a tremendous sense of magnetic attraction to him. I even put his picture as the background/screensaver on my phone.

One night, when I was looking at this picture, I heard him ask me to come to see him in the shrine room. When I sat down and focused on his picture, I first saw his eyes turn to Mohanji’s eyes, and then his face turned to Mohanji’s face. Then the face turned to Shirdi Sai Baba’s face, and after that, I saw around 30-40 different distinct faces being superimposed over the top of Yogiji’s face. He then told me that he had transferred a part of his consciousness to me and that he was ‘coming with me’.

After this experience, I haven’t had any communion experiences with masters and neither do I receive any telepathic communications. Though I am grateful for all of these beautiful experiences, I don’t place any importance on having visions or hearing things. For all I know, all these experiences could have been hallucinations. For me, the point of this path is to be free and totally at peace. Now I just live. Now I am happy to simply be and exist.