Celebrate Labor Day with Meditation

Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj

 

August 31, 2019

Labor Day, celebrated in America on the first Monday in September, is a day to honor workers who contribute to society. The day is celebrated as a holiday with various festivities and as a day of rest. Giving most people a day off, it provides a good chance to rejuvenate ourselves.

One of the best ways to relax and refresh ourselves is through meditation. Sitting in silence and focusing on the treasures within provides inner festivities which bring benefits to our body, mind, and soul.

While there are outer parades on Labor Day, meditation provides us some time to enjoy the inner parades of Lights and Music within. These are not just visual and auditory experiences, but this contact with the inner Light and Sound brings peace, happiness, and bliss.

The inner joy they provide is so fulfilling that we carry it with us throughout the rest of our day when we engage in daily activities. Meditation makes us so peaceful and calm that we spread that to others wherever we go.

As we celebrate Labor Day without, we can also enjoy celebrating Labor Day within, by sitting in meditation for some time. Then, this holiday will refresh us inside and out.

article Rajinder meditation end

 

About the author Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj

Follow Sant Rajinder Singh Ji on Facebook  |  YouTube Instagram

More Messages

Trust in God

Trust in God

The beauty of God’s unseen hand is that sometimes we actively pray for help and receive it. But there are many times when we do not even ask for help, and help comes anyway.

Meditation is an Effortless Effort

Meditation is an Effortless Effort

When we meditate, we should pray to God to show us and give us whatever God thinks is best for us. We should sit lovingly as if we were an empty cup that is open so God can pour divine Nectar into us.

Nonviolence in Thought

Nonviolence in Thought

Nonviolence is an important virtue we must inculcate to grow spiritually. It requires that we not injure any living creature either in thought, word, or deed. When it comes to violence in thought, criticizing others is one of the most common forms.