The intellect requires to be fairly purified to
assimilate spiritual ideas or to sustain the spiritual way of life. An impure
mind will not be able to support a life of refined ideals, and will actually
rebel against and criticize it.
When after diligent Niyata Karma (duties) and fiery Prayaschitta
Karma (expiatory actions), our Karma
gets reduced and some degree of purity of mind is attained, the eyelid over the
“Eye of Knowledge” gradually lifts up and we begin to get a glimmer of the most
important turning point in spiritual life – “Recognition that sense pleasures
are riddled with pain.”
This is the step that finally pulls the mind
away from Maya’s external glitter and draws it inwards towards the
ever-luminous Self.
Sufficient amount of purity is needed to
recognize this fact. An impure mind cannot see it. The cleaning out of Karma is mainly to render our minds
sufficiently pure to recognize this truth about life:
“Worldly pleasures are evanescent and fleeting.
They carry with them no hope of lasting happiness. An ounce of happiness is
drenched with tons of sorrow.”
He had come to the turning point in his life. He
was only thirty-six years of age when the call came to him strongly to renounce
worldly life for something unimaginably higher. Out of the inner realization of
today's sadhana panchaka instruction,
Swami Sivananda was born, and the whole creation bowed in gratitude to God
for giving such a saint to the world of spiritual seekers.
The Defects in Pleasurable Objects:
i) Dullness of Mind: A bout of pleasure is
followed by enormous dullness of mind.
Rich foods and overeating bring on dullness and
lethargy. It is the same with every other form of sensual indulgence. Notice
how little a good student eats, because he wants to be alert to study.
ii) Objects are Infinite: The objects of the
world are infinite; and so logically we need infinite time to enjoy them. We
cannot have them all in one lifetime. We need many lives to enjoy all that we
desire. This really means there is no end to worldly life. It is a never-ending
chase from one object to the next.
iii) Objects are Impermanent: Even when we get
some pleasure it is not lasting. The objects are all impermanent, so the
pleasure from them is also impermanent.
iv) Pleasures Enslave: Since the pleasure from
an object is impermanent, we need to obtain it again and again in order to
satisfy our desire. This means we become slaves of the object of pleasure. Our
mind is not free, but is locked to the objects we desire.
v) Pleasures Scatter Our Attention: Every
pleasure we are attached to takes away a slice of our attention. With mounting
pleasures, our attention becomes completely scattered. Our energy follows our
attention and gets dissipated into numerous channels.
This leads to stress and tiredness. There is no
energy left for the spiritual journey.
vi) Pleasures Get Intensified: In addition to
enslaving us to the objects, the pleasure itself needs to intensify in order to
satisfy us. We need stronger and stronger doses of it to obtain full
satisfaction. We are thus addicted to pleasure as an alcoholic is addicted to
alcohol – we need more and more to satisfy ourselves. In the end we are totally
demoralized by our addiction to pleasure.
Defect is in seeking
pleasure from objects, not in the objects
In Yoga sutra, a verse says, pleasures and pains are caused by
the manifestation of these vrittis of the mind which have been
designated as afflictions, or klesas. Avidya, asmita, raga, dvesa, abhinivesa –
this fivefold complex of affliction is the cause of the various sufferings that
we undergo in life, as well as the various joys that we experience.
Thus, the objects as they are
cannot be regarded as sources of pleasure because the same object can act
adversely or positively, as the case may be, in respect of different
individuals. What one likes immensely, the other may dislike
wholeheartedly for various reasons.
While ‘like’ is the background of
a pleasurable experience in respect of an object, ‘dislike’ is the opposite
thereof, so the moment we dislike an object, it ceases to be a source of
pleasure.
Therefore, the pain is not in
the objects, the pain is in seeking pleasure from the objects, caused by Kleshas and vasanas.
We are embarking on the “Nirvana Shatakam” session where, we come
to learn, know and ultimately experience the truth that anything other than me,
the pure essence, is but an object and I am not anything other than me, I am
not even my mind, my intellect, my memory, my ego.
When I come to realize that I am
not all the objects at all and I am beyond all of them, I am pure
consciousness, I am Pure Bliss, then I no more seek pleasures from any thing in
this world and therefore, no pain can touch me!!
Love.