Image from Lucy's album
Please Note: This is Part 1 of a 2-part post
Why don’t I eat a balanced diet when I know it is good for me?
Why don’t I eat organic food when I know it is good for me?
Why don’t I learn to enjoy my own company when I
know that it is good for me instead of constantly seeking the company of other
people or things?
Why don’t I exercise daily when I know that it is good for me?
Why don’t I do work that truly inspires me when I know that it is
good for me?
Why don’t I spend time in meditation daily when I know
that it is good for me?
Do you sometimes find yourself asking these rather inconvenient
and disturbing questions? If so, what is
your response?
Let me take a guess. I
suspect it would be one or more of the following:
·
You mentally grimace and then return to what you’d
been doing or find something else that might absorb you more fully so your mind
doesn’t stray to these kinds of troublesome thoughts
·
You chastise yourself for not doing what you ‘should’
do and continue on as usual
·
You think of reasons why you’re not doing them,
for example:
You don’t have enough time.
You don’t know how.
You don’t think you’ll succeed.
It’s too hard.
You’re not entirely convinced that they’re good for you anyway.
You don’t think it’s that urgent,
perhaps when you’re older or retired or when the kids have grown up or…
·
You reason with your mind that these
propositions are not necessarily true, for example:
Aunt Milly never ate organic food and she lived till 99.
Grandad never exercised and he seemed fit.
I can’t afford to do the work I really like because there’s no money
(or not enough money for the lifestyle I want) in it
Well, I’ve tried meditation before and I just couldn’t do it. Besides, it’s not for everyone.
What’s wrong with seeking company?
If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it. Right?
But, if you’re willing to explore
the question a little further (and this will mean suspending your current ways
of thinking and beliefs), then let’s keep going.
Urgency
If you knew that your house was
about to be hit by a tidal wave and that the water it brought inland would
leave your house flooded for days, what would you do?
You’d vacate in a hurry, wouldn’t
you? And you’d try to salvage whatever
you could in the little time that you had.
And if there wasn’t any time or if you didn’t believe that there was,
you’d leave empty handed, wouldn’t you?
That kind of behavior reflects
your sense
of urgency. You know there’s
little or no time. You’ve got to act
fast. Super fast.
Urgency is one thing that we lack or
fail to have an appreciation for when it comes to choosing to do the things
that we know are good for us.
Why?
Why don’t we have a sense of urgency when it comes to these choices?
Here are the reasons in dot point which
I shall elaborate on individually later:
·
Intangibility
·
Ignorance
·
Delusion
For now, I’d like to take a brief
but necessary detour.
Vedanta
In the ancient Indian spiritual
tradition, there is well developed system of inquiry into the discovery of Self-Knowledge
which can also be understood as Liberation (freedom from
suffering in all its forms). It
is known as Vedanta.
Some of its more notable students
are Ramakrishna, Aurobindo,
Anandamayi Ma, Nityananda, and Neem Karoli Baba, several of whom brought
their wisdom and presence to the west.
Deepak Chopra is also a student of Vedanta.
One of the teachings (and subject
of inquiry) in Vedanta is that limited
action towards a limited goal can only provide limited benefits.
As an example, completing a course
of study is a limited goal. The actions
that are taken toward such a goal can only be limited i.e. certain amounts of
study within certain amounts of time will help us achieve such a goal.
The benefits that we gain are
correspondingly limited – we have a limited amount of new information which we are
able to use in a limited number of ways and which may benefit a limited number
of people.
Now, Vedanta contrasts
this and almost every kind of goal we have in life (examples of which are mentioned in the list of
questions that I posed right at the start of this post) with the goal of
self-knowledge which is a limitless goal.
Why is this a limitless goal?
Because the self is limitless and
knowledge about the self is limitless. Additionally,
the benefits of such a limitless goal are also limitless.
(Think about the implications of this in relation to your desire for freedom, peace, joy, creativity...)
The question that I did not ask
right at the start and which is probably the most important of all is:
Why don’t I give my time and energy to the discovery of myself, to Self
knowledge, when I know that it is good for me?
Put another way,
Why don’t I give my time and energy to dispelling my ignorance of my
Self, my true nature, which will effectively eliminate all my suffering when I know
that it is good for me?
The reasons are, as I stated above,
to do with:
·
Intangibility
·
Ignorance
·
Delusion
Now let me explain each one.
INTANGIBILITY
Knowledge about myself, my true nature,
is intangible. It cannot be measured or evaluated by our
systems of measurement. And unlike some other
forms of ‘knowledge’, it does not seem to
have a monetary or practical value and thus no tangible reward.
In the world that we live in where
money is necessary for our survival, self-knowledge does not have
currency. It is an indulgence that few
can afford.
IGNORANCE
We do not really understand what
self-knowledge is and that is understandable.
How could we when we don’t have it!
Neither do we understand the
nature and extent of our Ignorance.
Now this is important because it is this Ignorance that gives
rise to our suffering in all its forms – from the irritation of an insect
bite to the existential loneliness or hopelessness into whose pits we may fall from time to time.
Self-knowledge is the only antidote to
our Ignorance.
DELUSION
We live with the delusion that
·
This physical/material world is the only ‘real’ world and the only one that ‘really’
matters
·
We do not
need Self-knowledge
·
Our suffering is the result of not having enough
or the right kinds of limited goals
(please refer above to what is meant by limited goals and examples of them)
·
Security and pleasures (‘aartha’ and ‘kama’
respectively in Vedanta) are the most important and meaningful goals in our
lives
·
Is fed
by one form of limited goal or another or treated/relieved
by one kind of prescription or another whether psychological, intellectual,
medical or physical
·
Self-knowledge (whatever that is) is hard to pursue and can never reward us
with the kinds of security and pleasures that we seek. On the contrary it will deny us these very
things, leaving us with a sense of nihilism
·
We have time
to pursue Self-knowledge…when we have accomplished all the other limited goals
in life
Part 2 will follow in due course. Watch this space J

I've been conditioned over the years to believe that self-centeredness is a selfish and undesirable attribute. One should think of others needs before my own. K
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment. Perhaps you could explain how this post has challenged (or confirmed) your conditioning/beliefs?
ReplyDelete