How can we find pleasure that lasts?
Krsna this sound is transcendental. Krsna means
the highest pleasure. Each of us, every living being, seeks pleasure. But we do
not know how to seek pleasure perfectly. With a materialistic concept of life,
we are frustrated at every step in satisfying our desire for pleasure, because
we have no information regarding the real level on which to have real pleasure.
For the last few weeks we have been learning that we are not this body; we are
consciousness. Not exactly consciousness, for consciousness is actually the
symptom of our real identity: we are pure soul, now merged within this material
body. Modern material science lays no stress on this; therefore, the scientists
are sometimes misled in their understanding of spirit soul. But spirit soul is
a fact, which anyone can understand by the presence of consciousness. Any child
can understand that consciousness is the symptom of the spirit soul.
Even after the destruction of this body, our consciousness is not
destroyed. Rather, our consciousness is transferred to another type of body and
again makes us aware of the material conception of life. That is also described
in the Bhagavad-gita. At the time of death, if our consciousness
is pure, we can be sure that our next life will not be material our next life
will be spiritual. If our consciousness is not pure at the point of death,
then, after leaving this body, we shall have to take another material body.
That is the process which is going on. That is nature's law.
The material body has two divisions: the subtle body and the gross
body. Just as we may cover ourselves with a shirt and coat, so the pure soul is
covered by the "shirt and coat" of the subtle and gross bodies. Our
bones, blood, flesh, and our different senses (like our eyes, ears, and skin)
make up our gross body; and our mind, intelligence, and false ego make up our
subtle body. False ego means the misconception that I am matter, that I am a
product of this material world. This misconception makes me localized. For
example, because I have taken my birth in India, I think myself Indian. Because
I have taken my birth in America, I think myself American. But, as pure soul, I
am neither Indian nor American. I am pure soul. These others are designations.
American, or Indian, or German, or Englishman; cat or dog, or bee or bat, man
or wife: all these are designations. In spiritual consciousness we become free
from all such designations. That freedom is achieved when we are constantly in
touch with the supreme spirit, Krsna.
The International Society for Krishna Consciousness is simply
intended to keep us in constant touch with Krsna. Krsna can be in constant
companionship with us because He is omnipotent. Therefore, He can be fully in
touch with us by His words. His words and He are not different. That is
omnipotence. Omnipotence means that everything relating to Him has the same
potency. For example, here in this material world, if we are thirsty and we
want water, simply repeating "water, water, water, water," will not
satisfy our thirst, because this word does not have the same potency as water
itself. We require the water in substance. Then our thirst will be satisfied.
But in the transcendental, absolute world, there is no such difference. Krsna's
name, Krsna's quality, Krsna's word everything is Krsna and provides the same
satisfaction.
Some people argue that Arjuna was talking with Krsna because Krsna
was present before him whereas in my case Krsna is not present, so how can I
get directions? But that is not a fact. Krsna is present by His words the Bhagavad-gita. In
India, when we speak on the Bhagavad-gita or Srimad-Bhagavatam, we
regularly perform worship with flowers, or with other paraphernalia, as is
required for worshiping. In the Sikh religion also, although they have no form
of the Deity, they worship the bookGrantha Sahab. Perhaps some of
you are acquainted with this Sikh community. They worship this Grantha. Similarly,
the Muslims worship the Koran. Similarly, in the Christian world, the Bible is
worshiped. It is a fact that Lord Jesus Christ is present by his words. Krsna
is also present by His words.
These personalities, either God or the Son of God, who come from
the transcendental world, keep their transcendental identities without being
contaminated by the material world. That is their omnipotence. We are in the
habit of saying that God is omnipotent. Omnipotence means that He is not
different from His name, from His quality, from His pastimes, from His
instruction. Therefore, the discussion of Bhagavad-gita is as
good as discussion with Krsna Himself.
Krsna is seated in your heart, and in my heart too. Isvarah
sarva-bhutanam hrd-dese 'rjuna tisthati (Bg. 18.61). God is situated
in everyone's heart. God is not away from us. He is present. He is so friendly
that He remains with us in our repeated change of births. He is waiting to see
when we shall turn to Him. He is so kind that though we may forget Him, He
never forgets us. Although a son may forget his father, a father never forgets
his son. Similarly, God, the original father of everything, everybody, all
living entities, will never forsake us. We may have different bodies, but they
are our shirt-coats. That has nothing to do with our real identity. Our real
identity is pure soul, and that pure soul is part and parcel of the Supreme
Lord. There are 8,400,000 species of life. Even the biologist and the
anthropologist cannot calculate this accurately, but from authoritative,
revealed scripture we get this information. Human beings represent 400,000
species, and there are 8,000,000 other species. But Krsna, the Supreme Lord,
claims that all of them, whether beast, man, snake, god, semi-god, demigod
anything whatever all of them are, in reality. His sons.
The father gives the seed, and the mother receives the seed. The
body is then formed, according to the mother's body. And when the body is
completely formed, it comes out either from cats, from dogs, or from man. That
is the process of generation. The father gives the seed, and it is emulsified
with two kinds of secretion in the womb of the mother, and on the first night
the body is formed just like a pea. Then, gradually, it develops. There are
nine holes that develop: two ears, two eyes, nostrils, a mouth, a navel, a
penis, and an anus.
According to his last karma, or action, one gets this body to
enjoy, or to suffer. That is the process of birth and death. And after
finishing this life, again one dies, and again one enters into the womb of some
mother. Another type of body then comes out. This is the process of
reincarnation.
We should be very diligent as to how we can discontinue this
process of repeated birth and death and change of body. That is the prerogative
of the human form of life. We can stop this process of repeated birth and
death. We can get our actual spiritual form again and be blissful and full of
knowledge and have eternal life. That is the purpose of evolution. We should
not miss this. The entire process of liberation begins just as we have now
begun this chanting and hearing. I wish to point out that this chanting of the
holy name of God (Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare Hare Rama,
Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare) and hearing the truths of the Gita is
as good as bodily association with Krsna. That is stated in the Gita. This
process is calledkirtana. Even if one does not understand the
language, still, just by hearing, he acquires some piety. His assets lead him
to a pious life, even if he does not understand it has such power.
There are two topics concerning Krsna. Two kinds of topics,
actually. One topic is this Bhagavad-gita. It is spoken by Krsna.
And the other topic concerning Krsna is Srimad-Bhagavatam. That
is spoken about Krsna. So there are two types ofKrsna-katha (topics),
and both of them are equally potent because they are connected with Krsna.
Because the Bhagavad-gita is spoken on the
Battlefield of Kuruksetra, some people have asked what we have to do with the
battlefield. We have nothing to do with any battlefield. We are after knowledge
of the spiritual sphere. Then, why should we bother about this battlefield?
Because Krsna is on the battlefield, and therefore the whole battlefield has
become Krsna-ized. Just as when an electric current is passed into some metal,
the whole metal becomes surcharged with electricity, so too, when Krsna is
interested in some matter, that matter becomes Krsna-ized. Otherwise, there
wouldn't be any need at all of talking about the Battlefield of Kuruksetra.
That is His omnipotence.
We have accumulated many inauspicious things within our hearts due
to our material contamination during the course of many, many births. Many,
many births not only this birth, but past births as well. So, when we search
into our hearts with the Krsna-katha, then the contamination
we have accumulated will be washed off. Our hearts will be cleansed of all
rubbish. And, as soon as all the rubbish is cleared off, then we are situated
in pure consciousness.
It is very difficult to eradicate all the false designations from
oneself. For example, I am Indian. It is not very easy to immediately think
that I am not Indian, but pure soul. Similarly, it is not a very easy task for
anyone to end his identification with these bodily designations. But still, if
we continue hearing the Krsna-katha, it will be very easy.
Make an experiment. Make an experiment to see how easily you'll be able to free
yourself from all these designations. Of course, it is not possible to clear
out the rubbish from the mind all of a sudden, but by hearing Krsna-katha we
are immediately aware that the influence of the material nature becomes
slackened.
The material nature is working in three modes goodness, passion,
and ignorance. Ignorance is hopeless life. Passion is materialistic. One who is
influenced by the mode of passion wants this false enjoyment of material
existence. Because he does not know the truth, he wants to squeeze out the
energy of the body just to enjoy this matter. That is called the mode of
passion. As for those in the mode of ignorance, they have neither passion nor
goodness. They are in the deepest darkness of life. Situated in the mode of
goodness, we can understand, at least theoretically, what I am, what this world
is, what God is, and what our interrelationship is. This is the mode of
goodness.
By hearing Krsna-katha, we will be freed from the
stages of ignorance and passion. We will be situated in the mode of goodness.
At least we'll have the real knowledge knowledge of what we are. Ignorance is
like the animal existence. The animal's life is full of suffering, but the
animal does not know that he is suffering. Take the case of a hog. Oh, how
miserable his life is: living in a filthy place, eating stools, and always
unclean. Yet the hog is very happy by eating stools, and having constant sexual
intercourse with the she-hog and just getting fat. The hog gets very fat,
because of the spirit of enjoyment which is there although, for him, it is
sensual enjoyment.
We should not be like the hog, falsely thinking that we are very
happy. Working hard all day and night, then having some sex life we think that
in this way we are very happy. But this is not happiness. This has been
described in the Bhagavatam as a hog's happiness. Man's
happiness is when he is situated in the mode of goodness. Then he can
understand what true happiness is.
In our daily routine, if we hear this Krsna-katha, the
result will be that all the dirty things in the heart, accumulated life after
life, will be cleared out. As a matter of fact, we will see that we are no
longer in ignorance or in passion, but are situated in the mode of goodness.
What is that position?
We will find ourselves joyful in every circumstance of life. We
will never feel morose. In the Bhagavad-gita we find that this
is our brahma-bhuta (highest stage of goodness) situation.
The Vedas teach us that we are not this matter. We are
Brahman.Aham brahmasmi. Lord Sankaracarya preached this gospel to
the world. We are not this matter; we are Brahman, spirit. When spiritual
realization is actually accomplished, then our symptoms will change. What are
those symptoms? When one is situated in his own spiritual consciousness, then
he will have no hankering and no lamentation. Lamentation is for loss, and
hankering is for gain. Two diseases characterize this material world. What we
do not possess, we hanker after: "If I get these things I'll be happy. I
have no money, but if I get a million dollars, then I'll be happy." When
we actually have a million dollars, somehow it will be lost, and we'll cry,
"Oh, I have lost it!" So the second disease is lamentation. When we
hanker for earning, that is a kind of distress. And when we suffer loss, that
is also distress. But if we are situated in brahma-bhuta, we
will neither lament nor will we hanker. We will view equally everyone and
everything. Even if we are situated in the midst of fiery turbulence, we will
not be disturbed. That is the mode of goodness.
Bhagavatam means "the science of God." If we persevere in the
science of God, we will be situated in the brahma-bhuta status.
From that brahma-bhuta status, we have to work, for work is
recommended here. So long as we have this material body, we have to work. We
cannot stop working; it is not possible. But we have to adopt the tactics of
yoga, and in this way, even by doing some ordinary work which by destiny or
circumstances we are put into, there is no harm. Suppose that, in one's own
occupation, one must speak a lie or his business can't go on. Lying is not a
very good thing, so one concludes that the business is not based on very moral
principles and one should therefore give it up. In the Bhagavad-gita, however,
we find instruction not to give it up. Even if we are put in such circumstances
that our livelihood cannot go on without some unfair practice, we should not
give it up. But we should try to make it purified. How is it purified? We
should not take the fruitive result of our work. That is meant for God.
Sukrta means
pious activities. And duskrta means impious activities. On the
material level we can be pious or impious. Either we are performing some pious
activities, or we are performing some impious activities or we have a mixture,
pious and impious. Lord Krsna advises that we should act with knowledge of, or
devotion to, the Supreme. What does that knowledge mean? It means that I am the
part and parcel of the supreme consciousness, or that I am not this body. If I
identify myself as an American, as an Indian, or this or that, then I am on the
material plane. We should identify ourselves as neither Americans nor Indians,
but as pure consciousness. I am a subordinate consciousness of the supreme
consciousness; in other words, I am the servant of God. God is the supreme
consciousness, and I am His servant. So, for our present understanding,
subordinate means servant.
We don't ordinarily carry out the work of a servant in
relationship to God. Nobody wants to be a servant, but everyone wants to be the
master, because to become a servant is not a very palatable thing. But to
become the servant of God is not exactly like this. Sometimes the servant of
God becomes the master of God. The real position of the living entity is to be
the servant of God, but in the Bhagavad-gita we can see that
the master, Krsna, became the servant of Arjuna. Arjuna is sitting in the
chariot, and Krsna is his driver. Arjuna is not the owner of the chariot, but
in the spiritual relationship we should not cling to the concept of the
material relationship. Although the whole relationship, just as we have
experience of it in this world, is there in the spiritual world, that
relationship is not contaminated by matter. Therefore, it is pure and
transcendental. It is of a different nature. As we become advanced in the
spiritual conception of life, we can understand what the actual position in the
spiritual, transcendental world is.
Here the Lord instructs us in buddhi-yoga. Buddhi-yoga means
that we have full consciousness of not being this body; if I act with this
understanding, then I'm not body I am consciousness. That is a fact. Now, if we
act on the level of consciousness, then we can overcome the fruitive result of
good work or bad work. It is a transcendental stage.
It means that we are acting on another's account on the Supreme's
account. We are not liable to loss or gain. When there is gain, we should not
be puffed up. We should think, "This gain is for the Lord." And when
there is loss, we should know that this is not our responsibility. It is God's
work His. Then we will be happy. This we have to practice: everything on
account of the Supreme. This transcendental nature we have to develop. This is
the trick of doing work under these present circumstances. As soon as we work
on the level of bodily consciousness, we become bound by the reaction of our
work. But when we work through spiritual consciousness, we are not bound either
by pious activities or by vicious activities. That is the technique.
Manisinah this word is very significant. Manisi means
"thoughtful." Unless one is thoughtful, he cannot understand that he
is not this body. But if one is a little thoughtful he can understand,
"Oh, I am not this body. I am consciousness." Sometimes, in our
leisure time, we can see, "Oh, this is my finger, and this is my hand.
This is my ear, and this is my nose. Everything is mine, but what am I, what am
I?" I am feeling that this is mine, and that I am. Simply a little thought
is required. Everything is mine my eyes, my finger, my hand. My, my, my, and
what is the I? The I is that consciousness, in which I am thinking, "This
is mine."
Now, if I am not this body, then why should I act for this body? I
should act for myself. Then, how can I work for myself? What is my position? I
am consciousness. But what kind of consciousness? Subordinate consciousness I
am part of the supreme consciousness. Then, what will my activities be? My
activities will be under the guidance of the supreme consciousness, just as in
the office, the managing director is the supreme consciousness. For example, in
the office everyone is working under the direction of the manager; therefore,
they have no responsibility. They have only to discharge their duties. Either
pious or impious duties never mind. In the military line, too, the order of the
captain or the commander is there. The soldier has to execute it. He does not
consider whether it is pious or impious. That does not matter. He simply has to
act; then he is a real soldier. He acts in that way and he gets his reward. He
gets title and honor. He doesn't care. The commander says, "Just go and
kill the enemy," and he is rewarded. Do you think that by killing one gets
reward? No it is for the duty discharged.
Similarly, here the situation is that Krsna is instructing Arjuna.
Krsna is the supreme consciousness. I am consciousness, the part and parcel of
the supreme consciousness. So my duty is to act according to that supreme
consciousness. For example, I consider my hand as a part of my body. Now, it is
moving in its own way. "As I want, let my hand be moved. Let my legs be
moved. Let my eyes be opened and see." So, I am dictating, and these parts
are working. Similarly, we are parts and parcels of the Supreme. When we train
ourselves to act in accordance with supreme consciousness, then we become
transcendental to all these pious or impious activities. That is the technique.
What will the result of this technique be? We become free from the bondage of
birth and death. No more birth and death.
Modern scientists and philosophers do not think about these four
things: birth, death, disease, and old age. They set them aside. "Oh, let
us be happy. Let us enjoy this life." But human life is meant for finding
a solution to this bondage of birth, death, disease, and old age. If any
civilization has not found a solution to these four problems, then that is not
a human civilization. Human civilization is meant for finding a solution to
these things.
So here in the Bhagavad-gita, the Lord
says, karma-jam buddhi-yukta hi. Karma-jam means whenever
there is action there will be some reaction. If one acts in badness, there will
be a bad reaction. But reaction, either good or bad, is, in the higher sense,
all suffering. Suppose that by good action I get a good birth, fine bodily
features, and a good education. All these good things I may have, but that does
not mean that I am free from material pains. The material pains are birth,
death, old age, and disease. Even if I am a rich man, a beautiful man, an
educated man, born in an aristocratic family, and so on, I still cannot avoid
death, old age, and disease.
So, we must not be concerned with pious activities or impious
activities. We must be concerned with transcendental activities only. That will
save us from this bondage of birth, death, old age, and disease. That should be
our aim in life. We should not be hankering after good or bad things. For
example, suppose one is suffering from some disease. He is lying in bed,
eating, passing nature's call uncomfortably, and taking bitter medicines. He
always has to be kept clean by the nurses; otherwise there is an obnoxious
smell. While he is lying in this condition some friends come to him and ask how
he is feeling. "Yes, I am feeling well." What is this
"well"? Lying in bed uncomfortably, taking bitter medicine, and
unable to move! Yet despite all these inconveniences he says, "I am
well." Similarly, in our material conception of life, if we think, "I
am happy," that is foolishness. There is no happiness in material life. It
is impossible to have happiness here. In this condition, we do not know the
meaning of happiness. That's why this very word is used, manisinah"thoughtful."
We seek happiness by some extraneous, artificial means, but how
long does it last? It will not endure. We again come back to sorrow. Suppose,
by intoxication, we feel happy. That is not our actual happiness. Suppose I am
made unconscious by chloroform, and I don't feel the pain of an operation. That
does not mean that I am not having an operation. This is artificial. Real
pleasure, real life, exists.
As Sri Krsna commands in the Bhagavad-gita, the
thoughtful give up the reaction of work, being situated on the level of pure
consciousness. The result is that this bondage of birth and death, disease, and
old age comes to an end. This end is in union with the true identity, Krsna,
the reservoir of pleasure and eternal bliss. There, indeed, is the true
happiness for which we are intended.
CHANT
HARE KRISHNA MAHA MANTRA
AND
BE HAPPY……FOREVER
No comments:
Post a Comment