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The
spiritual concept of work is the great theme of the Bhagavadgita, which is
another subject. The whole theme of the Bhagavadgita is how we can conduct our
activity in the sense of a transmutation of all its values into spiritual
worship. Actually, service is not service done to anybody else - that term 'else'
must be removed from the sentence; it is service done to a larger area of one's
own self. This idea can be planted in one's own mind by doing service of any
kind, whether it is service of Guru, service of mankind, or work even in an
office without laying too much emphasis on the salary aspect, etc. If the
administration is well managed, the salary will come of its own accord - you
need not cry for it; and this universe is a well-managed organization. It is
not a political system which requires amendment of laws and regulations
constantly. Everything is systematically ordained, and therefore you need not
have any doubt in your mind whether you gain anything at all by doing service
in this manner. When you serve your own larger self, which becomes largest when
it is a service done to the universe as a whole, virtually you are serving God,
because the largest self is God. And it is an expanded form of your own
self - this is the point to be borne in mind. This has to be borne in mind again
and again because of the fact that this is the subject of the Upanishads.
So
this dirt of the mind, so-called, the Mala or the impurity that compels the
mind to move in the direction of sense objects, this dirt can be scrubbed off
by work, hard work, service, labour - let it be, but done in the spirit of a
service done to a larger self of one's own self. Then work becomes worship and
Karma becomes Karma Yoga.
A
discipline of this kind was instituted in earlier days when it was obligatory
on the part of students to serve their Masters and learn under their tutelage.
Narada, a master in all the arts and sciences conceivable by the human mind,
went humbly to the great divine sage Sanatkumara, as we have recorded in the
Chhandogya Upanishad. "I am unhappy, Great Master." "What have you learned
already, Narada?" "All the things in the world, all the sciences, astronomy,
physics, psychology, axiology, aesthetics, ethics, civics, astrology,
economics, politics, religions, philosophy - there is nothing that I do not know.
But I have no peace of mind."
The
great master said, "All this that you have learned is only a word; you have not
gone to the depths of things - the Atman has not been studied. You have only
collected words, names, information about the outer structure of things, the
name and the form complex of things has been made available to you by your
studies that you have enumerated just now, as a series of learnings."
Likewise
in the Upanishads we have instances of great seekers humbly moving towards
sages and saints for the purpose of making themselves fit to receive this
knowledge. Even after achieving considerable success in purifying the mind of
this dross of the tendency of the mind to move in the direction of objects of
sense, by duty, by service, unselfish work, the mind will refuse to concentrate
on this subject. It has, as I mentioned, very fleeting ideas, one is this that
I have been enumerating just now.
The
other is incapacity to fix itself on anything for a long time. You try to think
of something for a long time, continuously - let us see what happens. Go on
looking at this tree and thinking this tree only and nothing else, after a few
minutes you will think of another tree nearby. You will think of the mountain
in front. You will look at the river; you will look at all the buildings, and
people moving about. Distraction is another malady of the mind. How will
consciousness rest itself in its pure subjectivity which is the Atman if this
fickleness continues for a long time and then makes it impossible for one to be
aware of anything other than what it outside?
But
there is a greater danger, namely, the inability to know why this discipline is
to be undergone at all. What for is all this study, Sir, finally? What do I
gain? You bring a business mentality once again - what do I gain by way of
profit? The mind of the human being is made in such a way that it will not
undertake any kind of work, project or activity unless it is told that
something will follow. This is exactly what the Bhagavadgita has condemned - you
should not expect anything to follow from the pure subjectivity aspect of the
work because that which follows, as it were, is a futurity which you are trying
to inject into the presence. You are creating a conflict between the present
and the future. Naturally there is a difference between the present and the
future when you think of the future possibility of the attainment or obtaining
an objective far ahead in time as a fruit accruing to the work that you are at
this moment doing at the present. But the Atman is a present, it is not a
future.
The
reason or the rationale behind this study, this activity, is something beyond
reason itself. The reason behind the need for study for the nature of the
nature of the Atman - you have to say this reason is super-rational. What can be
more important than your own self? Is any burden of material value superior to
your own existence? Has the world any meaning minus you? Let your existence be
isolated completely. You will find that the world will stand as a series of
zeros or ciphers unless there is a single stroke of a figure that makes sense
and which is the Atman who does things.
There
is a screen covering the consciousness of this pure subjectivity in
oneself - that screen is called Avarana, the third defect of the mind.
Dross - physical impurity, is removed by Karma Yoga or performance of unselfish
action. The fickleness of the mind is subdued by Upasana or devout worship. And
Avanara or the veil is removed by Jnana or wisdom of life. The
Bhagavadgita is a standard gospel on the art of Karma Yoga, unselfish spiritual
activity. The Epics and the Puranas highlight the path of devotion, Bhakti or
Upasana, love of God. Upanishads deal with Jnana or wisdom of the
ultimate reality.
So,
this teaching that is going to be imparted to you is not to be taken as a
diversion from the ordinary regime of life, but a very serious matter which
will polish your personality, chasten your individuality and make you a perfect
individual, not only in your own self but also in human society. The teaching
in academy of this kind is a spiritual discipline, it is not just intellectual
information.
So
I have told you something briefly about the nature of Karma Yoga or unselfish
action, performance of duty for duty's sake, as a standard method laid down
before us by the ancient master for cleansing the mind of all dross of
extraneous desires in the direction of objects of sense; and Upasana is the
love of God that you evince in your own self by daily worship performed in
whatever way you would like to carry on.
When
you conceive the Supreme Being, you have in the beginning a spatio-temporal
imagination of that Being. God is very big, very large, very far away, very
great, adorable; you offer your prostrations to that Almighty as something
lovable. Even the Upanishads sometimes refers to the Supreme Absolute as the
most lovable. Vanam means adorable; that Being is the most adorable. That thing
which you call God, that thing which pulls your attention in its own direction,
that which is the ultimate reality of things, that which is the Self of the
cosmos, is the most magnificent, beloved, lovable, beautiful, most essential of
all beings. And one who loves this Ultimate Being as the most lovable, is loved
by the whole world. You attract things towards yourself because you are
attracted towards that which is everywhere. This is the best way of making
friends in this world. You need not read Dale Carnegie and all that. If you are
attracted towards that which is everywhere wholly and souly, the entire world
will be attracted towards you as a natural consequence of the attraction that
you feel towards that Ultimate Reality. This is how you can honestly love it,
if you want to be loved by others. How can you expect love from anybody if you
yourself have no love for that which is the essence of all things?
Worship
or Upasana is conducted in many ways, by ritualistic methods, as we have it
done in temples or on alters in one's own house, by Japa or recitation of the
Divine Name, by Japa Sadhana, by prayer which is offered in the form of actual
articulation of voice or even mentally, or study of scriptures. All these
constitute part of Upasana, adoration, the feeling of love for that which is
supremely divine.
All
this process will have to be carried on for a considerable period of time in
order that the fickleness of the mind may be subdued. Otherwise, if you give
scant attention to this difficulty in the mind, you will find that you will not
be able to appreciate the methodology prescribed in the Upanishads for the
realization of the Atman. You will not only not be able to do this, you will
also have a difficulty in even knowing why this meditation is carried on at
all. Because many people honestly feel or may feel a difficulty in knowing what
will happen to them after attaining God. Everybody knows that one has to attain
God, but what will happen to you afterwards? You cannot answer this question
easily because you have still a defective understanding of what you are, and
therefore there is a defect persisting even in your attempt to know what will
happen to you at that time. However, by protracted practice of Upasana, by
worship, by Japa Sadhana, by Svadhya, by Jnana, and your own notion of God
whatever that notion may be, the fickleness of the mind comes down. It will be
attentive afterwards.
After
having sufficiently undergone this discipline by which the distraction of the
mind is subdued and also the impulse towards sense objects is curbed, you can
become a good student of the Upanishadic philosophy.
In
the Upanishads, three disciplines are mentioned which are equivalent to what I
mentioned to you as Karma, Bhakti and Jnana, namely sacrifice, austerity, and
Gurupasakti, approaching a master for teaching. Sacrifice in ancient Vedic
terminology meant, of course, the offering of holy oblations in sacred fire,
but sacrifice may also mean offering mentally anything that you would like to
dedicate to God. There can be externally performed sacrifice or Yajna, or a
mentally conceived Yajna or sacrifice. You can be charitable by a gesture
outside, or you can be charitable in your own feeling. A charitable feeling is
more important than a charitable gesture. I am not trying to dilate upon the
subject of sacrifice now, as many of you may know what it actually means, and
also as it is not the main subject of our study.
Austerity
is very important. Tapas is the pre-eminent prescription of the Upanishads for
self-control, which means actually the inhibition or abstraction of the
tendency of the mind to move towards things other than the self. Austerity or
Tapas can be performed or carried on gradually by systematic adoption of
graduated methods. The first thing you can do in your life towards performance
of austerity is avoidance of luxury and go-lucky attitude. Have or keep with
you only those things which are necessary for you, and don't keep those things
which are not essential for a reasonably comfortable existence. This is the
first step that you can take in austerity. Something is necessary for you under
certain given conditions, okay, granted. But more than that you need not ask
for. Eating, sleeping and comforts of any kind have to be within the limit of
the exigency that you feel under the conditions that you are living, for the
work that you are doing, etc, etc, and beyond the limit you need not go. This
is the first step that you may take towards austerity.
Austerity
is physical, verbal and mental. You have to be restrained not only in your
physical appurtenances but also in the words that you speak and the acts that
you do. That is, it should not cause any kind of disharmony, incongruity in the
atmosphere, and towards that end you may manipulate and adjust yourself ably
for being a humane individual, a good person, in the sense that your presence
does not cause conflict with anyone. In eating and in other well-known comforts
of life, you maintain a minimum to the extent that it is absolutely
essential. Here also a note of caution has to be exercised, namely,
austerity does not mean torture of the body, nor does it mean indulgence. The
path of the spirit is a via media; the golden mean is the path of spirituality.
We
have the well-known incident often cited by people in connection with the event
that took place in the life of Buddha, or perhaps it is also connected with
Raja Janaka's life. Some angels were playing a stringed instrument and they
were saying, "Tune not the sitar too high nor too low. If the string of the
sitar is tuned too high, it will not give music, it may even snap. If it is too
low, it will make a dull humming sound, it will not give music." Neither this
extreme nor that extreme is the path of the spirit. Any kind of suffering is to
be avoided. Over-indulgence also is to be avoided. Therefore, austerity is also
a cautious exercise of one's demeanor in respect of one's own self as well as
in respect of others.
So
the Upanishad prescribes sacrifice, Yajna, as one method or means of
self-discipline, and the other method being austerity, self-control.
Self-control is actually taking all necessary steps available for oneself to
enable the mind to fix its attention on the root of its own existence, the Self
that is behind the mind, the real you that is so valuable to you. When it is a
question of yourself, you would like to abandon everything else for the sake of
yourself, meaning thereby that the importance that you attach to yourself, for
some reason or other, surpasses the importance that one feels to anything else
in the world.
So,
sacrifice and austerity; and then you have the most important teaching again,
the third one, study under a teacher, a competent master who has trodden the
path, who knows the pitfalls, who knows the difficulties, who acts like a
physician with you. With these methods the dirt of the mind is scrubbed off,
the fickleness is brought down, and the veil covering the Atman is lifted
gradually, and the light of the sun of the Pure Spirit will shed its radiance
automatically from within one's own self; knowledge will arise from within you.
This is why it is said when you know yourself, you know everything. Know
thyself and be free. Atmanam vidhi.
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