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Ramakrishna Paramahamsa lived in Dakshineshwar, few miles away from Calcutta. People coming from Calcutta had to cross the river Ganga by boat to reach Dakshnieshwar. Once, one of the devotees came to visit Sri Ramakrishna in Dakshineshwar. He reported to Ramakrishna that in the boat a person was talking too lightly about the master. That person had talked ill of Ramakrishna, but the devotee had kept quiet. Hearing this, Ramakrishna told that devotee “It was wrong that you kept quiet. You should have opposed.” Many devotees were present there when he made this statement.
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa lived in Dakshineshwar, few miles away from Calcutta. People coming from Calcutta had to cross the river Ganga by boat to reach Dakshnieshwar. Once, one of the devotees came to visit Sri Ramakrishna in Dakshineshwar. He reported to Ramakrishna that in the boat a person was talking too lightly about the master. That person had talked ill of Ramakrishna, but the devotee had kept quiet. Hearing this, Ramakrishna told that devotee “It was wrong that you kept quiet. You should have opposed.” Many devotees were present there when he made this statement.
After a few days, a similar
incident repeated. Another devotee told Ramakrishna that a person was talking
ill of the master in the boat. But now, this devotee had thrashed the person for
doing that. He reported the incident and the ‘punishment’ he gave to that
person proudly to Ramakrishna. But surprisingly Ramakrishna now scolded this
devotee for engaging in violence. The devotee said “But on that day, to that
devotee, you told that it was wrong to have kept quiet. Remembering that I
punished him for his mistake”. For this Ramakrishna just replied “That instruction
was meant for him alone. It was correct for him to oppose and fight. But it is
not correct for you to do the same. You should have kept quiet and controlled
your rage.”
This incident looks peculiar,
and may seem illogical. Was Sri Ramakrishna himself confused? Was he speaking
irrationally just for bossing over his devotees? If we look at Vivekananda’s
works carefully, the reason behind the above incident becomes evident. We may
have to refer back to the post ‘The Story of Mastery’. The same concept of the
Gunas will be elaborated here.
There is a tendency in the
world to look at only two aspects – work and laziness, doing and not doing. When
someone irritates us, we usually do one of the two – get angry but keep quiet,
or burst out and fight against it. But if we notice carefully, we often kept
quiet out of fear, not due to inclination for peace. We kept quiet because the
opponent was too strong. We opted out of the battle because we were scared of
loss. But then we try to decorate it with forgiveness “Ahh, let him do whatever
he wants, poor man”. That means there is a third possibility – keeping quiet
out of choice – real forgiveness – which has the same symptoms of fear and not
acting. But only we will know whether our inactivity was out of fear or out of
love/forgiveness. Our real colors will come out when the opponent is weaker
than us. We will then see ourselves pouncing on the opponent and fighting for
an easy victory! Where has our forgiveness gone now? When we know that we can
easily punish, all our punishing attitude comes out in full force. Real
forgiveness has to be shown when we have the courage and capacity to punish.
That is the real test. When opponent is weaker or in a lower position than us
(our children, our subordinates in office etc), we always punish. And when the
opponent is stronger or superior (boss in office, an aggressive neighbor etc),
we always do not punish and crib inside. In the latter situations we sometimes
hide our inability with the mask of forgiveness. We hide one extreme (fear)
with the other extreme (forgiveness) because both have similar symptoms and no
one else will know.
Extremes often have similar
symptoms (Swami Vivekananda). Radio waves and Gamma rays – both are invisible.
But are they similar? Infrasound and Ultrasound – both are not audible. But are
they similar? They are the extremes of the their spectrums. Radio waves are
least energetic whereas Gamma rays are highly intense. Visibility comes only in
an intermediate range of VIBGYOR light. Infrasound is least energetic and
Ultrasound is very intense. Audibility comes only in an intermediate range of
normal sound. Invisibility and inaudibility were common symptoms of both the
extremes.
Similarly, keeping quiet and
inactivity are the symptoms – but it may belong to either of the extreme –
fear/escapism or love/forgiveness. Only we will know where we actually are. Reacting
to the situation and fighting back is the intermediate and visible range. The
lower extreme is Tamas (inertia), intermediate range is Rajas (dynamism) and
the upper extreme is Sattva (controlled activity). Tamas and Sattva,
superficially, have similar symptoms. But they are opposite extremes of the
spectrum. It is better to be in Rajas than Tamas. It is better to hit back
instead of keeping quiet out of fear and inability. But it is still better to
forgive than hit back. Sattva is better than Rajas. But a person in Tamas often
portrays that he is in Sattva. He often tries to mask his inability with fake
forgiveness/disinterest. That is why Swami Vivekananda proclaimed “I respect a
wretched sinner who is strong rather than a seemingly virtuous person who is
weak.” We can earn the quality of forgiveness only if we first earn the courage
to punish. Else it is only a dummy forgiveness driven by fear. We can ensure
that we are in Sattva only if we have crossed Rajas. All Vivekananda’s
exhortations are to provoke Rajas, because he noticed that India had moved into
a state of slumber in the name of Religion and spirituality. All were acting to
be Sattvik although in reality all were in Tamas.
Now we may understand the incident
quoted in the beginning. The first devotee, probably kept quiet out of fear and
inability to argue back. So for him Rajas was the need, he had to develop
courage and come out of Tamas. He kept quiet only out of fear, but he was all
the time burning inside. So it was hypocrisy. A real forgiver will not burn
inside. It is better to react instead of constantly burning inside. So the
first devotee has to shatter his Tamas. Whereas the second devotee very well
had the mental and physical strength to fight back. So, it was an opportunity
for him to develop an even better quality – forgiveness. Since he is sure that
he is in Rajas and capable of acting, he should use opportunities to invoke
forgiveness rather than boost Rajas further. Once Tamas is shattered, the next
step is to control and moderate Rajas and promote Sattva. This is the simple
message of the Gita as well.
Arjuna was about to flee from
battle out of depression, not out of any love or compassion. He was in Tamas
not Sattva. He saw Bhishma and Drona among the opponents and went into
depression. But the same Arjuna would have jumped up and commenced the fight if
Krishna had stopped the chariot in front of Duryodhana or Karna. His Rajas
would have immediately burst up. If he was so forgiving and compassionate, he
would have done it long ago and not even come for battle. So followed Krishna’s
teachings shattering Arjuna’s Tamas and making him what is right, to fight,
instead of taking shelter under fake Sattva.
Vivekananda met one tribal man
in a forest once. The man asked Vivekananda about attaining God. Vivekananda
asked him “Do you know to lie?” for which he said ‘No’. Vivekananda then said
“You first learn how to lie. Only then you can become eligible for
Self-Realization”. A stone is a stone and it cannot think. But a Yogi in
meditation does not think out of choice and freewill, not compelled as in the
case of a stone. There is a world of a difference.
In today’s world there is a
big addiction to Rajas. It is obviously better than Tamas, but certainly not
the end. That is why Sanyasis and saints have been misunderstood as lazy
beggars. Many of them may really be hiding their laziness under saffron robes.
But Sanyasa itself is not laziness. Physics cannot become bad just because of a
few bad physicists. True Sanyasa is the other extreme of the spectrum. They
have the capacity for any dynamic activity, but they have found a better state
– Sattva. Controlling a mad horse requires more effort than getting tossed on
its back and lying “I am controlling this horse.” Rajas, at some point or the
other, makes us its slave. We lose control of the acceleration and we forget
how to put breaks. Mind thinks and thinks, but we do not know how to switch it
off. Getting a hold of the mad horse (mind) is Sattva. So, Sattva is intense
activity, even more than Rajas. But superficial symptoms make it looks like the
lower extreme of Tamas. A controlled horse looks very peaceful and stationary.
But only the rider knows how much effort he has put to tame it.
Buddha shook the whole
world with Sattva. He did that which even emperors could not achieve. If he had
continued his life as the King, he could probably have conquered 2-3 kingdoms,
with violence. But now, he has won over the hearts of billions, without a
single drop of blood being spilled. In Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahamsa
Yogananda praises his Guru Yukteshwara Giri – “My Guru could have easily become
an emperor or a warrior and shaken the world with his valor. But he chose to
take up the tougher job – fighting and slaying the ego”
So, in summary, when we choose
inactivity/forgiveness/disinterest etc, we have to be sure that it is out of
Sattva and not Tamas. Only we will know what it really is. Everyday, we get
plenty of opportunities to either shatter Tamas or control Rajas. Whenever you see
a mistake from somebody, and you know that you can freely react and easily get
away with it, then that is the time to practice control. That does not mean you
keep quiet and not utter a word. That person should be made aware of his
mistake clearly. That person should know that you have noticed his mistake but
still are choosing not to scold him. This, when repeated several times, changes
people. Their own guilt transforms them.
Similarly, whenever you see a
mistake from somebody, and you know that you cannot get away easily with
revolting, but still you know for sure that the person is wrong, then it is the
time to practice Rajas. It is better to revolt and point out the mistakes
bravely, no matter who it is, rather than seeing wrong in front our face and
keeping quiet out of fear or out of some linked desires (e.g. If I talk against
the boss, he may get bad impression on me) in the name of being diplomatic. If
mistakes are pointed out with logic, fearlessness and smartness, it again
transforms people. Even if it does not, what is the use of the material benefit
which is gained by losing our own true Self? As we saw in ‘Hide and Seek’, we
lose our own true Self to gain a material benefit, which is in turn meant to
bring pleasure to the Self? Isn’t this a paradox?
This way, when practiced with
many small incidents over a long time, mind moves towards calmness and
positivity. Later, when really a powerful opponent does a mistake, you will be
keeping quiet out of real forgiveness, not out of fear. The final state is same
as the initial state. Some years back you might have kept quiet out of fear.
Even now you are keeping quiet. But now the attitude is in the other extreme of
the spectrum. From fear it has moved to compassion. This is a strength and
freedom like no other. You will now be free, not bound to react and fight.
There is nothing irritating you from within. You really and truly forgive,
forget and the move on. And this state is very conducive to Self-Enquiry.
Nothing from outside bothers you like before. So, you now have nothing to think
about apart from wondering about ‘Who Am I’!
If we do not cross Rajas, and
give up activity, there will be a guilt bugging from within. “Am I doing it out
of laziness? What will others think about me?”. If there is guilt, then it
automatically means than Rajas is not yet crossed fully. An inactive person in
Sattva does not feel slightest of the guilt nor does he care for others
comments. Because he is dead sure that his inactivity is not out of laziness. He
knows the intense activity that is going on within him. He does not require
certification from the world that he is not lazy. Self-certification is the
only certificate that has to be attained.
We sometimes think that it is
easy to just sit and eat whole day. But is it really? Even a retired old man
cannot sit idly. Although the entire family asks him to just relax, he wants to
be doing something or the other. He may say “Why to sit idle? Let me do some
useful work” – this is just a dialogue hiding his inability to control the
mind. He also wants the world to think that “Even at this age he does
something”. Finally it is slavery to action and recognition that is making him
act, not choice. If there is no work possible by him, he will only begin to
feel depressed and useless. Because from within he has not moved to Sattva,
mind is still accelerating like a car with no brakes. Even when there is
absolutely no need to act, he cannot keep quiet. And world says spiritual
practice is for old age?! If anything is for old age, it is everything except
spirituality!
Shattering of Tamas and overcoming of Rajas can only be done in young age. You will get thousands of opportunities to shatter Tamas and control Rajas only in your youth. And after continuous battling, you can be sure that you are keeping quiet out of choice and not compulsion only in your young age, when you really have the capacity to act vigorously. Only then, in your old age, you will be free of any kind of depression. You will then really relax your retirement, in Self-enquiry and spiritual contemplation. Because you no more think that ‘action’ (Rajas) is the greatest thing. You have really controlled the mad horse and it is tamed. You have tasted Sattva. You know the difference between sleeping and meditation, which superficially look similar to onlookers. You know the intense enquiry that is going on within. You no more look for certification from the world “He works even at his old age”. You are no more guilty for sitting and contemplating whole day. Because you have that one certification which matters – Self-Certification.
Shattering of Tamas and overcoming of Rajas can only be done in young age. You will get thousands of opportunities to shatter Tamas and control Rajas only in your youth. And after continuous battling, you can be sure that you are keeping quiet out of choice and not compulsion only in your young age, when you really have the capacity to act vigorously. Only then, in your old age, you will be free of any kind of depression. You will then really relax your retirement, in Self-enquiry and spiritual contemplation. Because you no more think that ‘action’ (Rajas) is the greatest thing. You have really controlled the mad horse and it is tamed. You have tasted Sattva. You know the difference between sleeping and meditation, which superficially look similar to onlookers. You know the intense enquiry that is going on within. You no more look for certification from the world “He works even at his old age”. You are no more guilty for sitting and contemplating whole day. Because you have that one certification which matters – Self-Certification.
Very nice! The earlier the better cannot be more true...
ReplyDeleteVery inspiring post! Thanks for giving this perspective on our typical attitudes of pseudo-diplomacy or aggressivness. Very well explained.
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