Sunday, June 4, 2017

Introduction to Vedas and Vedanta - Part 22

Vairagya 


Running away from life is cowardice, retiring to a jungle, non-appreciation of things around and about us, denial of bare necessities of body - these are not vairagya.


As a result of one's discriminative capacity (viveka), when one differentiates between the real and the unreal in the world outside or in the world within, all false values automatically drop off.  

When once a thing is understood to be full of bitterness, pain and imperfection, rare is the man who will continue to court it.

Thus, vairagya born out of viveka is what is called as detachment.

The author (in his teens) interacted with a sanyasi while he was in mathura. The sanyasi was from west and had opted for sanyas and was staying in Brindavan in an ashram. He was young and energetic. 

Author asked him one question- "If you ever happen to like a girl and want to marry her, what would you do"?

The answer was- "I shall leave this sanyas and marry the girl".

The reason for narrating this incident is not to undermine that sanyasi but to drive home one point strongly.

If the sanyas is taken up out of differentiating between real and unreal and out of a strong conviction to discard this world and take up spiritual sadhana and evolve spiritually to realize SELF, then the possibility of marrying would have never ever been there for that westerner turned sanyasi.

We see girls / woman belonging to different religions embracing Christianity / Buddhism, becoming nun or a Buddhist monk etc. The reason for such a change in few cases, if enquired, would be more often failure in love or any such thing. 

This running away from life and taking up as nun / monk is not born out of viveka, an unshakable conviction to leave the material world and to take the spiritual path.

How Vairagya Dawns 

Note how Vairagya arises in the mind. The transitory and perishable nature of all things creates a sort of disgust in all minds and, in proportion to the depth and subtlety of nature, this reaction from the world works more or less powerfully in the mind of every individual. 

An irresistible feeling arises in our mind, viz., that the finite can never satisfy the Infinite within us, that the changing and perishable cannot satisfy the changeless and deathless nature of ours. 

More on the subject in next post.

Love.







Sri Sri Ravi Shankar