What is the personality type of Ramana Maharshi? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Ramana Maharshi from Hinduism and what is the personality traits.
Ramana Maharshi personality type is INFJ, which is one of the rarest personality types in the world. But can you really trust the internet?
There are so many people who claim to have experienced this or that, but no one can prove it.
What is the evidence for the existence of what is called the “ultimate reality”?
The only evidence I can give is my understanding of the experience.
What was the experience you had when you “saw” the ultimate reality?
I was in my bed, lying down, and then I felt as if the light was shining inside my head. I felt that I had to get up and sit down somewhere else. And then I was outside. It was a very beautiful place, very green. And then I was inside a room, and I noticed that there was a book on a table, and I noticed the title of the book. And then a dog came into the room. A beautiful white dog, and I knew that it was called “Ramprasad”, and I knew that it was a very good dog. And then I saw a man, and he was also dressed in white.
Ramana Maharshi (30 December 1879 – 14 April 1950) was an Indian Hindu sage and jivanmukta (liberated being). He was born in Tiruchuli, Tamil Nadu, India. In 1895, an attraction to the sacred hill Arunachala and the 63 Nayanmars was aroused in him, and in 1896, at the age of 16, he had a "death-experience" where he became aware of a "current" or "force" (avesam) which he recognized as his true "I" or "self", and which he later identified with "the personal God, or Iswara", that is, Shiva. This resulted in a state that he later described as "the state of mind of Iswara or the jnani". Six weeks later he left his uncle's home in Madurai, and journeyed to the holy mountain Arunachala, in Tiruvannamalai, where he took on the role of a sannyasin (though not formally initiated), and remained for the rest of his life. He attracted devotees that regarded him as an avatar and came to him for darshan ("the sight of God").