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Ramblings in Everyday Philosophy Full Post View | List View

I live more inside my mind than outside. Dreams, ideas, opinions, etc make my world. Here are some peeks into my world.

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With regards,
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Monday June 1, 2009 - 12:58pm (IST) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
How to Lead a Purposeful Life
I talked to the children of the Summer Camp conducted by Ramakrishna Math, Ulsoor, Bangalore (www.ramakrishnamath.in). Here is an outline of the talk.

The topic has four significant words. We can understand each of them one by one.

Life - What is life? This question was asked once to Swami Vivekananda. He replied that life was struggle against forces that try to put the organism down. This gives us a deep insight. Life is a struggle. We live as long as we struggle. If we stop struggling, we will stop living. Every moment the body is fighting against germs and disorders that are trying to destroy it. Same is true with the mind also. Every life struggles to Exist, Express and Enjoy. There are forces from within and from outside that are constantly trying to suppress these. Every moment every life form tries to establish its individuality. Without these problems, there is no life. We should face problems in life. If we succumb to them, that will be death. The body might continue to live, but we may be dead in other aspects of life like cultural, intellectual, moral and spiritual. We need to keep struggling against forces external and internal. This is life.

Lead - What is leading a life? How is it different from merely living? The direction of our life is governed by two factors - Preyas (likes and dislikes) and Shreyas (right and wrong). Animals don't have a concept of right and wrong. They live as per their likes and dislikes. Human beings should lead a life based on right and wrong. There may be things that are right but not very pleasant. Nevertheless we should follow them and continue to stick to them. There may be things that are wrong but pleasant. But we should abstain from them. If we don't, then we are not living life as human beings but as animals. To live as human beings, we should lead our lives based on right and wrong, irrespective of likes and dislikes.

Purposeful - What is the purpose of life? Is there a purpose of life that can lead us till our last breath. Some children may think "to become a doctor" or "to become a teacher" is their aim in life. But after that, what? Does life become aimless? These are all means. The purpose of life is to "Be Good and Do Good". This is a purpose that is applicable today, tomorrow and till our last day. "To be a doctor", "to be a teacher" are all means to "do good". That is the real purpose. We should not lose the purpose in pursuit of the means. The purpose is to "Be Good and Do Good".

Why should we "Be Good and Do Good"? What will happen if we are not so? Being good and doing good will give us peace of mind. Without peace of mind, we will not enjoy what we achieve in life.

Once there was a king and his minister. The king said, "Peace of mind is more important than material comforts." The minister disagreed. The king became angry and said, "Tomorrow morning you will be hanged. You can go home now." The minister went home sadly. Soon a messenger came from the king with a letter from the king. It said, "I am very sorry that I gave an order to hang you tomorrow. But I cannot change that now. As a compensation, you are welcome to the palace to live a life of royal comforts today." A request from the king is as good as a command. So reluctantly the minister went to the palace. He was taken on a big elephant. He was given a royal welcome at the palace. A royal lunch with several dishes was waiting for him. After lunch, he was given the royal bed to take rest. In the evening, there was a great music and dance program arranged specially for the minister. There was a great dinner too and in the night also, a great bedroom was given for the minister in the palace. In the morning the king came to meet the minister in the room. The king asked, "I hope you enjoyed the royal treatment given to you yesterday." The minister replied, "When I am going to be hanged the next day, how can I enjoy? The welcome was uninteresting. The food was tasteless. I could not sleep. I did not have the mind to hear or see the music and dance. With great difficulty I sat through the performance." The king replied, "Now tell me. Isn't peace of mind more important than material comforts? Without peace of mind, you cannot enjoy anything even if you are in their midst. I created this drama only to make you understand this. You will not be hanged. You can go home now, freshen up and come to the palace for your regular duties."

This peace of mind can come only by being good and doing good. Also, we live a normal life based on the assumption that the people around us are good. Without that faith, we cannot live. When we go in a bus, we sit peacefully only because we believe that the vehicle is in good condition, the driver is not drunk, he is not sleeping and the other vehicles and drivers on the road are also in good condition. Without this faith, we cannot travel by a bus. Similarly, when we buy something from a shop, we believe in its quality and quantity. The entire world runs on faith. If people do not follow "Be Good and Do Good", the entire world will be a chaos. To maintain the order in the world, it is the duty of each one of us to "Be Good and Do Good".

How - For any work to be properly accomplished, three questions have to be answered - What, Why and How. What we get by answering these questions are called "Jnaana Shakti", "Iccha Shakti" and "Kriya Shakti". In English they are termed as "Head, Heart and Hand", respectively. These three should come together to do any work. We saw that the purpose of life is to "Be Good and Do Good". That answers the "What". We also discussed "Why" we should "Be Good and Do Good". Next comes the question "How".

The statement "Be Good, Do Good" has been more elaborately presented by Swami Vivekananda as the motto of the Ramakrishna Mission - "aatmano mokshaartam, jagat hitaaya cha" - "For the freedom of the self and for the good of the world". The first part means in simple terms - "Be Good". The second part means "Do Good". In the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna calls the first part as "Tapas". He deals with the second part as two aspects - "Yagna" and "Daana". There are several verses in the Gita that talk about these three "Yagna", "Daana" and "Tapas" in great detail.

Everyone of us takes so much from the world and society. We need air to breathe, water to drink, food to eat, clothes to wear, place to live, etc. All these are provided by various objects and people in the world. This debt is called "Runa". Paying them back with gratitude is called "Yagna". There are five kinds of "runa"s described in the scriptures. Our debt to the natural world of air, water, earth, etc is called Deva runa. We should not waste resources. We should plant more trees and take care of the environment. We should not create pollution. These are the ways to pay back Deva runa. We take so much from other plants and animals for food, clothing, etc. This is called Bhuta runa. We should take care of the plants and animals in the world with respect and treat them with kindness. This the way to pay this back. We take services from different people in the society like farmers, masons, tailors, etc. This is called Manushya runa. We should pay them their dues and treat them with gratitude and kindness. We should do social service to uplift the under privileged. This is the way to repay this. Our parents and ancestors have given us this human body. We are indebted to them for that. This is called Pitru runa. We should take care of our parents, grand parents and all elders in the society. Similarly, we should take care of children. We should care for orphans and old people who have no one to take care of them. These are the ways to pay back Pitru runa. We have got our human culture in the forms of science, arts, technology, religion, philosophy, etc. Without this rich cultural heritage, we are no different from animals. We are indebted to our teachers and the great people who lived before us. This debt is called Rishi runa. We should learn well and donate to people and institutions who are developing and spreading knowledge. We should respect our teachers. We should also develop knowledge and pass on to others. These are the ways to pay back the Rishi runa. This five kinds of paying back is called Yagna. It should be done with gratitude as a duty without expecting any further returns. For children, studying well and being obedient to the parents and teachers is itself a great Yagna.

We should give more than what we take. We should consume less and contribute more. We should help people who need help and will not be able to help us back. We should do this with humility with due respect to the other person. This is called Daana. For children, not to demand too much from parents and to help them in their work is a good way to start. Help your friends and support them in their weak moments. This is a good beginning to do Daana.

If we follow these two - Yagna and Daana - we will be able to follow the purpose "Do Good".

"Tapas" means austerity or discipline. Being conscious and in voluntary control of what we think and do is called Tapas. Krishna talks about several kinds of Tapas. To start with, we can consider one of them now and try to make it a part of our life. Krishna describes five disciplines as "Vaak tapas" - "discipline of speech". They are:
anudvegakaram - Non-violent - We should talk softly without using harsh words.
satyam - Truthful - This is the greatest discipline. We should avoid telling lies under all conditions.
priyam - Pleasant - We should tell only that is pleasant. We should avoid telling unpleasant truths.
hitam - Useful - We should avoid all useless and harmful talk.
swaadhyaayam - Study - We should read good books. We should be selective in TV programs and movies so that we watch only things that will help us to grow.
Following these five disciplines, we will be able to follow the purpose "Be Good".

To summarize, life is a struggle. We should lead our lives based on "good and bad" and not based on "likes and dislikes". The purpose of life is to "Be Good and Do Good" as elaborated as "Yagna, Daana and Tapas".
What is higher?
Today morning I attended an Ashtaavadhaanam program. It is a program in which the performer displays great intellectual skill by answering different questions by experts in different fields simultaneously. The scholarship, memory, creativity and intellect exhibited by the person performing the avadhaanam and the people who put questions to him was astounding. In fact it was a shuddering experience for me. As I stepped out of the venue, I was reeling under what I witnessed. What I saw was an Ashtaavadhaanam - answering eight questioners. One of the people who participated as a questioner was a Shataavadhaani - one who has performed a program with a hundred questioners. My head reeled just to think of it.

As I was driving back home from the program, I was comparing everything and everyone I saw with what I had witnessed. I saw some beautiful girls. Their beauty was dust compared to the minds of the people in the program. I passed by towering shopping malls showing off vulgar wealth. They were all very small compared to the intellectual acheivements that I saw an hour back. I passed by the office of the Police Commissioner. It occured to me that even the Prime Minister of the country was nothing in front of those intellectual giants.

Then I started thinking was there anything greater that the intellectual achievements? I remembered that the avadhaani composed a verse depicting shrungaara (eroticisim). In one moment, the entire edifice came crashing down. I saw that renunciation was much much higher than all the intellectual achievements. I saw that a world renouncing monk, though be may not be physically handsome or wealthy or powerful or intelligent, was much greater than anyone else.

Then I went to a small shop to buy some things. I thought about the honesty of the simple unlettered shopkeeper. An honest shopkeeper though unlettered is much superior to a vain scholar. Even with all learning and intelligence if a scholar is not honest or is proud, then he is nothing. Moral value is higher than great learning. Moral values are based on renunciation. Blessed is the person who has the renunciation, irrespective of anything else. If a person has renunciation, he is great even if he has nothing else. If a person does not have renunciation, he is dust even if he has all the wealth or learning in the world.

Tags: culture, human, materialism, life, mind, renunciation, value
Saturday May 23, 2009 - 03:06pm (IST) Permanent Link | 2 Comments
Value of Life
Under the premises of Ramakrishna Vivekananda Ashrama, Hubli, I gave a talk in two colleges in Hubli as a part of the National Youth Day (Swami Vivekananda Jayanti) Celebrations. Here is an outline of the talk.




One of my relatives had a surgery. The old lady recovered slowly from the surgery with a lot of loving support from near and dear ones. After fully recovering and coming back home, what did she do? She spent her time complaining, worrying, watching TV serials, etc. Is this what she has come back for, as if from death itself?

The very fact that we are hale and healthy is itself a great blessing. But what value do we give to it?

Every 3.6 seconds, one person in the world dies of hunger.
80% of people in the world have not heard a dial tone on a phone.
If you are in India and you have used internet, you are better than 95%.

Having all this privilege, are we using it well?

What is a good life? What is an ideal life? What is the purpose of life?

Is it pleasures? Is it wealth? Is it name and fame?

Even after getting all these, would we be happy and satisfied?

If you go and ask Abhishek Bachchan or Aishwarya Rai, can they touch their heart and say "I am the happiest person"? Most number of divorces are in Bollywood, who are the "dream kings" and "dream queens" of the common man.

What is happening to Anil Ambani and Mukesh Ambani? They are quarreling over wealth. If that amount of wealth cannot give satisfaction, can it ever?

The most powerful people in the society like ministers and presidents are the people who need the most amount of security. And what happened to Indra Gandhi? Her security guards assassinated her.

This is the nature of the world.

Who can tell at the death bed, as the sage of a Upanishad says

dhanyoham, dhanyoham, tridhanyoham
kartavam kritam
jnaatavyam jnaatam
praaptavyam praaptam

I am fortunate, I am fortunate, I am thrice fortunate.
I have done what is to be done.
I have known what is to be known.
I have attained what is to be attained.

How many of the so-called successful people in life whom we admire that can say this? Death can come at anytime. So, unless you are able to tell this at every moment of your life, you cannot say this at the time of death. If this fulfilment is not there, can we call such a life as a success? Kena Upanishad calls a life in which a person has not attempted to reach this state of fulfilment as "mahati vinashti" - a great calamity.

Let us try a small exercise.

If you were to die in the next 15 minutes, how would you spend it?
Would you call up to your near and dear ones?
Would you go and make that apology that you wanted to make to your ex-friend that you kept postponing?
Would you just go and enjoy a nice meal?
Would you just go for a walk?
Would you spend the 15 minutes in fear and repentance?

Now let us modify this exercise.
If you were to die exactly 15 days from now. What will you do? How would you spend the rest of the days?
Think.

Now let us try another exercise.
Suppose you are allowed to change one thing that you did in your life, what would you like to change?

These exercises will tell you about the quality of the life you are living.

The first step in being a human being is to lead a conscious life.
Animals live. Human beings lead a life.

This quality is called Braahmanatva in the Vedas. Unless we live a disciplined introspective life, we won't even know what we want and what we get.

Now, the question is how to live a good life?

"Don't live a beggarly life. Live like a King."




Once there was a fakir who used to sit outside a mosque everyday. People used to put coins into his bowl. The king saw him everyday. One day he asked the fakir to come to his palace as he wanted to give something to the fakir. The fakir went to the palace. At that time, the king was in his prayer room and was asked to wait. The fakir could overhear the king praying. The king was saying, "Oh God. Give me a lot of wealth. Make my army strong so that no one can rob my wealth. Give me a lot of pleasures. Give me good health to enjoy my wealth and pleasures. Give me long life. ..." When the fakir heard this, he started to leave. The noticed it and came hurriedly and asked the fakir why he was leaving. The fakir said, "I thought you were a king. Now I know you are a beggar. I don't want to take anything from a beggar." Outwardly one is the king and the other is a beggar. But internally, it is the other way round.

Most of us are beggars. We keep knocking doors without begging bowl. We are begging for pleasures, wealth, security, peace, happiness, emotional support, etc. But alas, we never get what we seek. Even what we think are given to us is snatched away soon. Gita says "anityam asukham lokam". This world is transient. This world is a sorrowful place.

If we want to live here, we have the choice to live like a King instead of like a beggar.

What does it mean? Don't be a consumer of the world. Be a contributor.

You cannot be a controller. You can only be a contributor.
Gita says "karman yeva adhikaaraste maa phaleshu kadaachana"
You have the right only to contribute to a situation. The result will depend on so many factors. So you cannot control the result. But you can contribute to the result. What you do will contribute only to 10% of the result. But if you don't put that 10%, the chance of success is 0%. But remember, it is only 10%.

You may have written an exam very well. But the person who corrects might have had a quarrel with his wife and you may get poor marks. There are just too many external factors. Don't depend on the results.

Don't look at the world, its people and situations as consumables. Some people always keep complaining. "Traffic is bad. Road is bad. It is cold. It is hot. People are bad. There is so much corruption. There is so much violence. ..." We call them complain boxes.

Be sensitive to the environment. Be aware of poverty, corruption, violence, etc. But, respond in a contributory corrective action if possible. But don't complain. There is a popular prayer.
Oh Lord,
Give me the strength to change what I can change.
Give me the strength to forebear what I cannot change.
Give me the wisdom to know the difference.

Gita says "aagamaa payino anityastaam titikshashva bharata"
Things come and go. They are anyway transient. Just forebear them.

What you can do, you have to do. "maa sangostva akarmani". Don't resort to inaction. Whatever is your duty in a given situation, you have to do. That is the worship of the Lord.
Gita says "svakarmanaa tam abhyarchya"

The Vedas, when describing the duties of varnas and ashramas, never talk about rights. Only duties. Duties of a student, householder, retired person, monk, teacher, trader, soldier, etc. Vedas talk about duties, duties and duties only. Expectation is always the nature of beggars. Just doing what is to be done is the nature of a King.

In his entire life, Rama never talked about his rights. He always talked only about his duties. So did Krishna. He did not do anything for himself. Everything that he did was for others.

This is the way to live life King-style. Swami Vivekananda says "They alone live who live for others. The rest are more dead than alive."

You will only get failure and disappointment if you live a beggarly life.
As Swami Sastranandaji says in his song, "janmagalu kale kaledu dhukkamidi meerutide"
"Birth after birth will pass and only sorrow will be left for you."

Now, you may ask, "By being a giver in life, what do I get?"

You get wisdom. Wisdom gives you peace and satisfaction.
That is exactly is Karma Yoga. "Do your duty, don't expect the results".
The immediate question is "How can we do anything without expecting the results?"
What Karma Yoga says is "Don't work for immediate results. Work for long term development." An example is "Don't study to pass an exam. Study to gain knowledge."

Slowly your concept of development will raise higher and higher. What is development at one level of understanding will automatically become result from a higher standpoint and you will have a higher concept as development.

Academic knowledge will become the result and personality development will become the actual development. From a still higher point of view, even personality development will be found to be only a short term result. You will seek moral development. At the highest point, even moral development will be seen as a short term result and real spiritual knowledge will be found to be the real development.

This growth will happen naturally. At every point you should give more importance to development than to results, inline with your perception and understanding. You will grow.

There will be success and failure in life. But you should not miss the lesson in both. That is Karma Yoga.

Gita says:
na iha abhikrama naashosti pratyavaayo na vidyate
svalpam api asya dharmasya traayate mahato bhayaat

Normal action has a few defects. There is loss of effort when the action cannot be completed. If a farmer plants seeds but does not water the plants or remove the weeds, he does not get the results. There is the chance of counter results. If a patient is allergic to a medicine, the medicine that was supposed to cure him can kill him. The results are not guaranteed because any action only contributes to a small percentage of the result. When done for development, these defects do not come. To whatever extent the work is done, that amount of internal development happens. There is no negative development. It is always positive. As long as the person is vigilant, the development is guaranteed. This karma yoga will save from the great fear of death.

People are afraid of death because of unfulfilled desires at the time of death. It is desire and regret that makes death painful. By following this Karma Yoga, a person can attain to the state of no desires and so can become free from the fear of death.

This is not possible if you are a consumer. It is possible only if you are a contributor.

This has been beautifully put by Swamiji in the motto he designed for the Ramakrishna Math. "aatmano mokshaartham jagat hitaaya ca" "For the liberation of the individual and for the welfare of the world". Work in the world. Contribute to the world. This will give you self-development, which will lead you to the final liberation.

Life is precious. Live life like a King and not like a beggar.






Checklist
For a few weeks, I had gone into a state of forgetfulness of the Truth and got into a state of delusion and depression. Thanks to good counseling by the HR manager in our office I got back to normal.

To make sure that I don't get into such a state again, I prepared a checklist. At any moment, even if one of these questions has an answer "Yes", then I am in trouble again.

1. If God appears before me this moment, do I have anything to ask from Him?

2. If I were to die in the next 15 minutes, is there anything that I wish to do?

3. Is there any incident in my life or in the world that I wish it never happened?

4. Is there anyone in the world who is happier than me?

Here is a sort of daily checklist that I can run through at the end of the day.

5. Did I ever wish I be like someone else today?

6. Did I want to possess something or wish I don't lose something?

7. Did I wish someone did something differently?

8. Did I feel bored, frustrated, anxious or afraid?

9. Was I violent in thought, word or deed?

10. Did any of my action or inaction deny anyone of their legitimate right to fulfil a desire?

11. Did I seek or pursue any object for the gratification of senses?

12. Did I do anything for myself (other than regular day-to-day duties like brushing the teeth, taking bath, going to work, etc.)?

13. Did I judge a person instead of a person's action?

14. Did I wish someone think something about me?

15. Did I feel anyone is a competitor to me or make someone feel I am a competitor to him?

I hope this checklist keeps me in place.

Tags: happiness, life, mind, philosophy, realization, renunciation, spirituality, truth, yoga, vedanta
Wednesday December 10, 2008 - 08:44pm (IST) Permanent Link | 2 Comments

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