Another
visitor, who said that he was from Sri Aurobindo’s Ashram, asked
Bhagavan: “But we see pain in the world. A man is hungry. It is a
physical reality. It is very real to him. Are we to call it a dream and
remain unmoved by his pain?”
Bhagavan: From the point of view
of jnana or the reality, the pain you speak of is certainly a dream, as
is the world of which the pain is an infinitesimal part. In the dream
also you yourself feel hunger. You see others suffering hunger. You feed
yourself and, moved by pity, feed the others that you find suffering
from hunger. So long as the dream lasted, all those pains were quite as
real as you now think the pain you see in the world to be. It was only
when you woke up that you discovered that the pain in the dream was
unreal. You might have eaten to the full and gone to sleep. You dream
that you work hard and long in the hot sun all day, are tired and hungry
and want to eat a lot. Then you get up and find
your
stomach is full and you have not stirred out of your bed. But all this
is not to say that while you are in the dream you can act as if the pain
you feel there is not real. The hunger in the dream has to be assuaged
by the food in the dream. The fellow beings you found in the dream so
hungry had to be provided with food in that dream. You can never mix up
the two states, the dream and the waking state. Till you reach the state
of jnana and thus wake out of this maya, you must do social service by
relieving suffering whenever you see it. But even then you must do it,
as we are told, without ahamkara, i.e., without the sense “I am the
doer,” but feeling, “I am the Lord’s tool.” Similarly one must not be
conceited, “I am helping a man below me. He needs help. I am in a
position to help. I am superior and he inferior.” But you must help the
man as a means of worshipping God in that man. All such service too is
for the Self, not for anybody else.You are not helping anybody else, but
only yourself.
Mr. T.P. Ramachandra Aiyar said in this
connection, “There is the classic example of Abraham Lincoln, who helped
a pig to get out of a ditch and in the process had himself and his
clothes dirtied. When questioned why he took so much trouble, he
replied, ‘I did it to put an end not so much to the pig’s trouble, as to
my own pain in seeing the poor thing struggle to get out of the
ditch’.”
Mr. T.P. Ramachandra Aiyar said in this connection, “There is the classic example of Abraham Lincoln, who helped a pig to get out of a ditch and in the process had himself and his clothes dirtied. When questioned why he took so much trouble, he replied, ‘I did it to put an end not so much to the pig’s trouble, as to my own pain in seeing the poor thing struggle to get out of the ditch’.”
No comments:
Post a Comment