Anti Aging-Tat Wale Baba
What gave Tat Wale Baba his
youthfulness and stopped his aging at mid-life?
Perhaps research done on long-term
meditators provides a hint. According to a study published in the International Journal of Neuroscience 16 (1): 5358, 1982, the longer people had been meditating
the lower their biological age became as compared with their chronological age
(as measured by blood pressure, and visual and auditory performance). As a
group, long-term meditators who had been practicing the Transcendental
Meditation technique for more than 5 years were physiologically 12 years
younger than their chronological age. Short-term Transcendental Meditators were
physiologically 5 years younger than their chronological age. The study
controlled for the effects of diet and exercise.
Another study, which researched
elderly meditators, was published in the Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology 57(6): 950-964, (1989). It reported
that people in their eighties showed a marked improvement rather than
deterioration in their mental and physical health and well-being over a three
year period of practicing Transcendental Meditation. Benefits for the
meditating elderly included: reversal of aging; increased longevity; increased cognitive
flexibility (including increased learning ability and greater perceptual
flexibility); increased word fluency; improvements in self-reported measures of
behavioural flexibility and aging; greater sense of well-being; improved mental
health; and reduction of blood pressure to more ideal levels.
Since Tat Wale Baba was an advanced
meditator who spent most of his time in extended deep meditation, this may
explain how he retained his youthfulness.
Tat Wale Baba was born of spiritual
parents who were middle-class farmers in Punjab, India. Tat Wale Baba received
little formal education, spending most of his early childhood assisting his
parents with farm work. At about the age of eight or nine years Tat Wale Baba's
innate spiritual nature led him to begin meditating. This he did ardently
whenever time permitted between chores. As he grew into his teenage years Tat
Wale Baba took on a mesomorphic stature. Because of his physical prowess his
friends encouraged him to join the Army, which he did. He did not like military
life. Therefore, after just two months of military service he left and sought
the reclusive, sadhu life-style for himself. His search for a guru to guide him
was fulfilled when he met Sri Jagannath Dasji at Ayodhya. This guru named him Sri
Mahavir Dash Ji. However, later, when Tat Wale Baba started wearing jute people
called him Tat Wale, meaning "one who wears jute." The sobriquet
stuck.
Tat Wale Baba lived at the ashram with
his guru for about three months during which time he was initiated into Raja
Yoga. He then left in search of a reclusive retreat for himself. He was
intuitively led to Manikut mountain where he came upon an old, emaciated man
with very long gata (hair) living in a secluded cave. Tat Wale Baba approached
the man and was invited to sit and talk. At the conclusion of their talk the
old man left saying that his time was finished, and that he was going to the
Himalayas to take mahasamadhi. He left the cave for Tat Wale Baba to occupy.
The cave was conveniently located near
a fresh water spring. Tat Wale Baba lived off kandamulo leaves and roots, and
fruits he found in the ambient forest. He preferred spending time in long
meditations instead of doing asanas. His schedule of meditating was from 2:00
a.m. until 10:00 a.m. From 10:00 a.m. until noon he would eat and rest. Then,
from noon until 4:00 p.m. he would again meditate. He would exercise for about
two hours, until 6:00 p.m. For exercise he usually took long walks of about ten
kilometres, collected firewood, and worked hard at expanding the dimensions of
his cave.
People coming into the forest to
gather leaves and sticks for sale in Rishikesh occasionally spotted Tat Wale
Baba emerging from his retreat. Word soon spread that a yogi was taking long
periods of silence in a cave. As a result, pilgrims began to come by the
hundreds to try to visit Tat Wale Baba. Because of the demand for his time he
altered his schedule to include some visitor time.
Tat Wale Baba had a cobra for a pet.
He regularly fed it milk from a cup. The cobra liked to stay in the cave where Tat
Wale Baba meditated. Tat Wale Baba is said to have contacted the King of the
Cobras and asked that no cobra harm any of the people passing through the
nearby jungle foothills. It is said that there have been no accounts of people
being bitten by cobras in the area since then.
Tat Wale Baba was credited with
performing miracles. There were three couples that could not bear children.
Each couple came to see Tat Wale Baba, and from his blessings each had a child
born to them. He also gave pilgrims darshan, performed healings, and gave
spiritual guidance. Further, Tat Wale Baba predicted his own death. He said
that he would be shot to death. He said that a rogue, who was very jealous of
him, and living nearby in the forest, would sneak up and shoot him in the back.
He told this to his closest disciple on June 22, 1971, several years before he
took his mahasamadhi. Also, just two days before he was shot, Tat Wale Baba
reminded his disciple of this prediction.
On December 2, 1974, as he went to
take his bath at 4:00 a.m., Sri Tat Wale Baba was murdered by a crazy gunman.
He was killed by a man operating a small ashram near Tat Wale Baba’s cave.
No known records exist of Tat Wale
Baba’s age.
It was March 30, 1969. The Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi's ashram was located on a hill overlooking the Ganges, just about a
kilometre below the retreat of Tat Wale Baba. News quickly spread that Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi had invited "the wise man of the mountains," Tat Wale
Baba, to come visit us that afternoon.
By mid-afternoon several ochre-robed
men made their way toward the lecture hall. Along with them was Tat Wale Baba,
a muscular golden-brown-skinned Adonis. Also walking along with them were Maharishi’s
course participants. Tat Wale Baba's features were much like that of an
American Indian. He was naked except for an ochre loin cloth which was held
around his waist with a brass chain. His black braided hair flowed down his
back and was so long that, were it not carried by an attendant, it would have
trailed along the ground. He exuded a radiant aura as he took a majestic
cross-legged position on a small platform that was covered with a deerskin. Maharishi
and the others took their seats and we all waited anxiously to hear Sri Tat
Wale Baba speak. Tat Wale Baba began his discourse in unstrained, forceful
Hindi, and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi translated.
As he spoke I saw a dynamic, youthful
man who appeared no older than in his mid-thirties, yet he was said to be about
120 years old. The exact date of Tat Wale Baba's birth is not known.
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