NATIVE CHARM
INSTINCT FOR POSSESSION
Some forms of life have a natural instinct for accumulating things. We thus see even ants seeking to accumulate grains or tiny bits of sugar . Even rats do gather. Bees collect honey, but man steals it and makes money out of it. But birds, lions and other wild animals, elephants do not accumulate. They live from day to day. But they are attached to their places. Ramana Maharshi used to point to the monkeys visiting the Asramam and advise his devotees who tried to drive them away that it is they ( men) who invaded the place of the monkeys and now attempted to drive them away. He would say that the monkeys were the real sanyasis: they had no place to stay ( they did not build a nest or den), they slept on any tree they found, they ate what they got- did not save anything for the morrow! They are our natural teachers.
Bhagavan feeding a monkey devotee. He was fond of animals. He always addressed them as 'he' or 'she' and never as it. He had observed the monkeys closely and knew how they lived under their 'king' and how their society was organised.
Photo copyright of Sri Ramanasramam. Thanks.
Though animals like dogs, tigers and lions, deer and elephants do not save any food for the morrow, they are constantly in search of food, except when they rest after eating. Thus, their situation too is not idealistic.
So, Avadhuta Dattatreya took the python as one of his 24 gurus. It just lies in its lair, where it is, and accepts whatever food it happens to get there , without stirring from its place. This episode is described in the Bhagavatam, Canto 11. Sages take this as the ideal state of absolute dependence on God.
Picture of the Indian python. From the San Diego Zoo, USA.
By Tigerpython (Own work) [GFDL (CC BY-SA 3.0 creative commons via wikipedia commons.)
Pattinathar Swamigal says the same thing, explicitly:
இருக்குமிடந்தேடியென்பசிக்கேயன்ன முருக்கமுடன்கொண்டுவந்தாலுண்பேன் - பெருக்க வழைத்தாலும்போகேனரனேயென்றேக மிளைத்தாலும்போகேனினி. | 5 |
Christ said the same things in his Sermon on the Mount.
Matthew 5.6
25 Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?
26 Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?
27 Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
28 And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin:
29 And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
30 Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to day is, and to morrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?
31 Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
32 (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek:) for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things.
33 But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.
34 Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
King James version. public domain.
Yet, how many care for such teachings?Man at the pinnacle of creation is the most covetous of the whole lot. There is no limit to how much he would accumulate. The Isa Upanishad, the first of our top ten, reminds us the whole creation belongs to God and we should not take more than what is necessary for our survival. We mug up the mantra, and ignore its message.
And just what are the things we desire? In the olden days ( say about 60 years ago) our homes were simple. We had no furniture in the European sense or style. A grandfather may have an easy chair or coir cot to sleep on. We all slept on mats on the floor. No room was earmarked as the bedroom.Our elderly ladies who observed "aacharam" would lie down on the bare floor to steal a quick nap during the day, keeping their own hands or a small wooden block as the pillow- no hint of ease or comfort. But we are more advanced, and we have stuffed every room with many items. Every room is marked for some purpose- bedroom, study, drawing room etc. And so much space is occupied by dead
things, and men complain of shortage of living space!What are the things we accumulate in the house? As youngsters, we had dreams- influenced by films and advertisements. We thought more things would make us happier- this was the American style. Then one could acquire furniture of various styles- this would make us modern! And the more fashion conscious among us could go in for the branded clothes or shoes or anything. Yet a stage came invariably when the clutter annoyed us, and suddenly we realised what a waste of money it had all been over things, and what a waste of time pursuing the money to purchase the things! Our great friend Shailendra observed this in his own simple but elegant manner:
Kisi ko hare hare note ka nasha hai
Kisi ko suit boot coat ka nasha hai
Some are intoxicated about fresh currency notes. Some are mad after fashionable clothes- suit, boot, coat.
(Everyone is after something)
Yet, what happens in the end?
Albelae armaanon ka toofan lekar laaye
Naadaan sau baras ka saaman lekar laaye
Aur dhool udhatha chala jaayere
Ik aayae, ik jaayae musafir.
Duniya ik sarai re....
We bring with us glorious ( big,vain) dreams , like a typhoon. And accumulate silly things required for a hundred years. And when we leave, we just raise the dust!
One traveller comes, one leaves, this world is like a very shallow earthen vessel.
Poet Shailendra. Picture taken from https://shankerdaskesrilashailendra.worldpress.com.
This has been the message of all Indian sages and saints. Pattinathar, one of the great Tamil saints saw the lines inscribed on a slip : "Not even a needle with a broken head accompanies one when he leaves the world".# [Note] And this made him renounce the world instantly. Later, he sang:
பிறக்கும்பொழுது கொடுவந்த தில்லை, பிறந்து மண்மேல்
இறக்கும்பொழுது கொடுபோவ தில்லை; இடைநடுவில்
குறிக்குமிச் செல்வஞ் சிவன் தந்ததென்று கொடுக்கறியாது
இறக்குங் குலாமருக் கென்சொல்லுவேன் ? கச்சியேகம்பனே ! 7
இறக்கும்பொழுது கொடுபோவ தில்லை; இடைநடுவில்
குறிக்குமிச் செல்வஞ் சிவன் தந்ததென்று கொடுக்கறியாது
இறக்குங் குலாமருக் கென்சொல்லுவேன் ? கச்சியேகம்பனே ! 7
Image from the cover of the book of the works of Pattinathar, published by Palaniappa Bros. Copyright position not known. Gratefully acknowledged.
Arunagirinatha, our great Master, said it even more tellingly. He sang:
வையிற் கதிர்வடி வேலோனை வாழ்த்தி வறிஞர்க்கென்றும்
நொய்யிற் பிளவள வேனும் பகிர்மின்க ணுங்கட்கிங்ஙன்
வெய்யிற் கொதுங்க வுதவா உடம்பின் வெறுநிழல்போற்
கையிற் பொருளு முதவாது காணுங் கடைவழிக்கே. ... 18
நொய்யிற் பிளவள வேனும் பகிர்மின்க ணுங்கட்கிங்ஙன்
வெய்யிற் கொதுங்க வுதவா உடம்பின் வெறுநிழல்போற்
கையிற் பொருளு முதவாது காணுங் கடைவழிக்கே. ... 18
Picture from murugan.org. thanks.
Vaiyir kadir vadi velonai vaazhthi varijnarkenrum
Noyyir pilavalaveum pagirmingal nungat ingan
Veyyir kodunga vudava vudambin veru nizhal pol
Kaiyir porulum udavadu kaanum kadiavashikke.
Just as your own shadow does not provide you shade against the sun, your own wealth will not avail you on your last journey. So, help poor people in the name of God, and share with them even the equivalent of a broken grain of rice.
And such acts of charity need not be big,grand affairs. They can be very small in scale, but significant in effect. Saint Tirumular, another great Jnani of the Tamil land, sang:
யாவர்க்கு மாம்இறை வற்குஒரு பச்சிலை
யாவர்க்கு மாம்பசு வுக்கொரு வாயுறை
யாவர்க்கு மாம் உண்ணும் போதொரு கைப்பிடி
யாவர்க்கு மாம்பிறர்க்கு இன்னுரை தானே.
And such acts of charity need not be big,grand affairs. They can be very small in scale, but significant in effect. Saint Tirumular, another great Jnani of the Tamil land, sang:
யாவர்க்கு மாம்இறை வற்குஒரு பச்சிலை
யாவர்க்கு மாம்பசு வுக்கொரு வாயுறை
யாவர்க்கு மாம் உண்ணும் போதொரு கைப்பிடி
யாவர்க்கு மாம்பிறர்க்கு இன்னுரை தானே.
Everyone can offer a green leaf to God. Everyone can offer a handful of grass to the cow. Every one can share a handful of food when he eats. And everyone can speak sweet words to others!
புண்ணியம் செய்வார்க்குப் பூவுண்டு நீருண்டு
அண்ணல் அதுகண்டு அருள்புரி யாநிற்கும்
அண்ணல் அதுகண்டு அருள்புரி யாநிற்கும்
One can earn merit by offering God water and flower. The
Lord is pleased (even with that) and confers his blessings.
This is what Lord Krishna said in the Gita:
पत्रं पुष्पं फलं तोयं यो मे भक्त्या प्रयच्छति |
तदहं भक्त्युपहृतमश्नामि प्रयतात्मन: || 26||
तदहं भक्त्युपहृतमश्नामि प्रयतात्मन: || 26||
patraṁ puṣhpaṁ phalaṁ toyaṁ yo me bhaktyā prayachchhati
tadahaṁ bhaktyupahṛitam aśhnāmi prayatātmanaḥ 9.26
tadahaṁ bhaktyupahṛitam aśhnāmi prayatātmanaḥ 9.26
Whoever with devotion offers Me a leaf, a flower,a fruit, or water,that I accept - that devout gift of the pure-minded.
National Portraits Gallery, London.
Shakespeare taught us how to live simply and enjoy grandly:
Who doth ambition shun
And loves to live in the sun,
Seeking the food he eats
And pleased with what he gets,
Come hither, come hither, come hither
Here shall he see no enemy
But winter and rough weather.
Is it that man is not allowed to accumulate anything? No.Man can accumulate knowledge- without end, pursue learning all his life! It does not harm anyone, and one's accumulation does not lesson the chances of another! In fact, a learned man may help many others to become learned, like a lamp can light many more.
An ancient Tamil poem called "Naaladiyar" - 'Four Liners' tells us that we should always look at those who are poorer than us and feel happy that we are wealthier. But we should always look at the more learned, and feel how poor are we before them in knowledge!
Worldly sciences teach us to accumulate wealth- tireless striving stretching its arms ever towards more accumulation. And Sages teach us to strive for wisdom and devotion.. Thus Christ:
32“Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.
33Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys.
34For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
33Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys.
34For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
Luke,12.
Christ told a wealthy person who wanted to follow him to first go, sell his possessions and distribute the money among the poor, and then come to him.
The Rich Young Man
…20The young man said to Him, "All these things I have kept; what am I still lacking?"21Jesus said to him, "If you wish to be complete, go and sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me."
22But when the young man heard this statement, he went away grieving; for he was one who owned much property.…
…20The young man said to Him, "All these things I have kept; what am I still lacking?"21Jesus said to him, "If you wish to be complete, go and sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me."
22But when the young man heard this statement, he went away grieving; for he was one who owned much property.…
Matthew 19:21
( Today's Christian evangelists ask us to wish for another car, TV, house and may be even a different wife or husband because, well, 'there is more where it comes from'.)
[ I have provided the quotations from the New Testament because churches in India are trying to convert, promising riches to people in the name of their religion, while the Lord Jesus Christ asked people to renounce and follow him.]
Describing those who are dear to Him in the Gita, Lord Krishna counts among them:
तुल्यनिन्दास्तुतिर्मौनी सन्तुष्टो येन केनचित् ।
अनिकेतः स्थिरमतिर्भक्तिमान्मे प्रियो नरः ॥ 12.19
Santushto yena kenachit
Aniketa: stitarmatir
Bhaktimaan mae priyo nara:
One to whom censure and praise are equal, who is silent, content with anything, homeless, and steady-minded, full of devotion- that man is dear to Me.
Image from ISKCON. Thanks.
NOTE:
PATTINATHAR used this line in two of his poems later:
NOTE:
PATTINATHAR used this line in two of his poems later:
.Addressing his own mind, he exclaims: Think of and praise the lotus feet of the Lord and spend your time. What is the use of the wealth which is not good for anything in the world? What is the use of all the wealth that is kept buried? In the end, not even a needle with the broken head will accompany you on the last journey. The inner teaching of the Veda is that we must give up attachment to women and wealth (possessions.) Have you not understood this teaching of the Sadguru? One gets enlightenment, as a result of the merits of the previous births. Then one understands that not even a broken needle will accompany one on the last journey.
| ||||
. | ||||
. | ||||
. | ||||
vudambin verunizhal pol
kaiyir
No comments:
Post a Comment