The most formative of the books I read in middle school and early high school was, of course, Harry Potter. People have ranted and raved about the series left and right - a money ploy! stupid plot! pagan worship! and thus. Harry Potter, of the many books I've read, was the series I could escape in. Each time I re-read a book, I'd find more and more little details - it was fascinating. Everyone who knows me well realizes I enjoy the movies as well. We each can have our minor quibbles about what the directors left in and left out, but I thoroughly enjoyed Half-Blood Prince last night. It was a fabulous movie, not necessarily 100% at all on the basis of the book. Acting has improved significantly and it was also a pretty funny movie, too! I laughed a majority of the time.
Re-reading HBP, I definitely saw its connection to Vedanta, as geeky as I am. Promptly emailed into the CHYK group... They probably think I'm weird, but.. sigh.
Let me take an example.. page 384,, Apparition class:Cool.When I read that again, looking at it differently, it reminded me a little of mumukshutvam, or the "burning desire for liberation," as our acharyas put it. Limitations from what? Limitations from the body, in the case of Harry and his friends, but the limitations on happiness for us.
- To Apparate, or to basically teleport from one spot to another for those unfamiliar with the series, the students must master Destination, Determination, and Deliberation.
- "Step one: fix your mind firmly upon the desired destination," said Twycross. "Step two, focus your determination to occupy the visualized space! Let your yearning to enter it flood from your mind to every particle of your body!"
- "Splinching, or the separation of random body parts," said Wilkie Twycross dispassionately, "occurs when the mind is insufficiently determined. You must concentrate continuously upon your destination, and move, without haste, but with deliberation, thus."
Chapter Twenty-Six (The Cave), where Harry and Dumbledore go after a Horcrux is also a good illustration of the Guru-shishya relationship and how they support each other. Also Chapter Twenty-Three (Horcruxes) does a great job presenting Voldemort's fear of death (release from the physical form) and Dumbledore's patient explanation on the power of Love.... All very relevent topics, I think! It's pretty awesome what you can see in books and it continues to baffle me why groups ban such books which actually have a great message.
There is so much I would like to or could write... but maybe another time.
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