36. Accumulation Of Good Samskaras1
- Human life is full of various
samskaras. Innumerable actions are being continually done by
us; there is really no end to them. Even if we take a
superficial look and count the activities done during twenty
four hours of a day - eating, drinking, sitting, walking, working,
writing, speaking, reading - they would make a long list. Besides
these, in the life there are various dreams, sentiments and
perceptions like love and hate, honour and insult, joy and
sorrow. All these make their impact on the mind and shape a
man's personality and behaviour. Therefore, if somebody asks me
to define life, I would say that life means an aggregate of
accumulated samskaras.
- Samskaras are good as well
as bad, and both of them influence human life. We hardly
remember our childhood days. Samskaras from the former
births are so completely erased that one wonders whether one had
any previous birth at all. When we cannot remember even the
childhood days, why talk of previous births? Let us, therefore,
leave them aside and think only of this birth. Here also it is
not that only those actions which we remember had taken place.
Countless activities and the acquisition of information and
know-how of a great many things is continually taking place. In
the end, most of them get erased leaving behind only a few
samskaras. If we try to recollect at bed-time all that
we did during the day, we fail to do so. Only the most prominent
incidents come back before the mind's eye. For example, if we
had a serious quarrel, we remember only that at night. That
quarrel is the only thing in the day that is carried forward
from that day in the account book of our life. Important and
conspicuous events leave strong impressions; the rest fade away.
When we write a diary, we note therein only a few important
things. When we review the week, we note even less. While
reviewing the month, only the most important happenings during
the month are remembered. Many of those happenings too are
omitted while reviewing the year. Thus very few things remain in
memory, and they form the samskaras. Most of the
innumerable actions and much of what we have learnt ultimately
fade away leaving only a small residue in the mind. Those
actions and the information and know-how have done their work
and disappeared. Only a few samskaras remain, and these
samskaras are our capital. That is our net gain from the
business of living. A trader keeps daily, monthly and annual
accounts of income and expenditure and arrives at the figure of
profit or loss. It is exactly the same with life. Addition and
deletion of samskaras goes on throughout the life,
resulting finally in a small net balance. When the end of life
comes near, the self begins to think of the gains in life.
Looking back, it finds that these gains are few. This does not
mean that all that one did and all that one learnt have proved
to be futile. They have certainly done their work. There could
be thousands of transactions in a trader's business, but a
single final figure of either profit or loss is the net result.
If there is a loss, his heart sinks. If there is a profit, he is happy.
- We too are in a similar position.
If at the time of death the mind craves for food, it is a clear
indication of having spent the entire life in indulging the
palate. Craving for food is then the only 'achievement'
in life; it is the only capital that has been accumulated in
this life. If a mother thinks of her child at the time of death,
it shows that her attachment to her child is the strongest
samskara she has acquired in her life; whatever else she did
was secondary. In arithmetic there are problems of fractions
where addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of big
figures ultimately result in a small figure or even zero.
Likewise, the entire life of man is an arithmetical exercise
wherein addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of
numerous samskaras goes on continuously and finally one
strong samskara remains. That is the final answer of the
equation of life. The thought that arises at the last moment in
this life is the essence of the whole of one's life; it
signifies what has been gained in this life.
This essence should be sweet; the last
moment should be happy. A person should experience inner peace and
fulfillment at the time of death. It is for this that one should
endeavour throughout one's life. All is well that ends well. We
should fix the mind on this final answer while solving the problem
of life. We should plan the life with this aim in view. In a
mathematical exercise, we have to keep the problem in mind and
employ the appropriate method to solve it. Our life should be
oriented in such a way that, at the last moment we will have the
samskara we want. Day and night, our whole attention should be
turned in that direction.
37. Living With The Awareness Of Death
-
The Eighth Chapter puts forward a
thesis that the thought uppermost in the mind at the time of death
prevails over others in the next birth. When we start on a
journey, we carry some provisions with us to sustain us on our
journey. The thought uppermost in the mind at the time of death,
which is the essence of what has been earned in this life, is
the provision with which we start our journey in the next birth.
We begin a new day with the previous day's gains in hand. Death
is like a long sleep, after which we begin a new life with the
gains of the previous birth. End of this life is the beginning
of the next one. Hence one must always be aware of the
inevitability of death, while conducting oneself in this life.
- This is necessary also to enable
us to face the dread of death and find ways and means to counter
it. There is a story from the life of Saint Eknath. A gentleman
once asked him, "Sir, your life is so simple and
pure. Why ours is not so? You never lose your temper or quarrel
with anybody. How serene, pure and kind-hearted you are!"
Eknath said, "Leave me out for the time being. Let me tell you that I have come to know
something about you. You are going to die after seven days."
Who would disbelieve Eknath? Only seven days of life left! The
gentleman rushed to his home. He could think of nothing else. He
started entrusting his affairs to others and making preparations
for the end. He was taken ill and got confined to bed. Six days
passed. On the seventh day, Eknath went to him and enquired,
"How are you?" The man replied, "Sir, I am about to leave this world."
Eknath asked, "Well, how many sins have you committed in the last six days? How many evil thoughts
crossed your mind?" The gentleman replied, "Sir, where was the
time for that? Death was always there before my eyes."
Eknath said, "Now you know the reason why the lives of people like me are sinless."
How can the mind entertain evil thoughts when death is standing
before you, ready to pounce on you like a tiger? Even for
committing sin, the mind has to be relaxed. Constant awareness of
death is the means to be free from sin. If death is staring in
the face, who can muster up courage to commit sin?
- But man always evades the thought of death. The French philosopher Pascal has written a book titled
'Pensees' (Thoughts). It contains his stray thoughts. He observes therein
that although death is always looking over our shoulders, we
continually try to forget it; how to live with the awareness of
death in the mind is never our concern. Man detests even the very
mention of the word 'death'. If somebody utters this word while taking meals, he is
immediately admonished. Nevertheless, we are continually moving
towards death. Once you board a train to Mumbai, it is bound to
take you there even if you just keep sitting. The moment we are
born, we have booked a ticket to the destination of death.
Whether we run or keep sitting, death is bound to come. Whether
you think of it or not, you cannot avoid it. Whatever else may
be uncertain, death is certain. The sun sets everyday, taking
away a portion from our life. Life is continually being gnawed
at. It is continually withering away. Still man takes no notice
of it. Jnanadeva exclaims,
'कौतुक
दिसतसे'
(How curious!). He wonders how man could be so thoughtless and unperturbed in such
a situation. Man is so frightened of death that he cannot even
bear the thought of it, and tries to evade it like an ostrich
burying its head in the sand. Soldiers going to the front, play,
dance or sing or smoke to forget death. Pascal wonders how they
lose themselves in eating and drinking, singing and dancing in
order to forget death even when they see death everywhere.
- We are all like those soldiers. We
try to keep a smiling face, apply creams to hide wrinkles, dye
our greying hair. We are ceaselessly trying to brush aside the
thought of death even though it is just around the corner. We
talk about anything but death. Ask a boy who has done his
matriculation about his future plans. He will reply,
"Don't ask me now; I have joined college just now."
If you put the same question next year, he will reply,
"Let the second year of college pass. I shall think of the future
thereafter."
So it goes on.
But should not one think of the future in advance? One should plan the
next step beforehand; otherwise one will land oneself in a
ditch. But the student shirks this task. The education that the
poor fellow receives is so full of darkness that he has little
idea of what is in store for him. He refuses to visualize the
future, since he sees only darkness ahead. But there is no
escape from the future; it is bound to catch him by the neck.
- The Professor of logic teaches in
the college, "Man
is mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal."
Why does he not give his own example? The Professor too is
mortal. But he would not say,
"All men are mortal. Therefore I, the Professor, am mortal and dear
students, you too are mortal."
He gives the example of Socrates, since Socrates is already dead
and is not there to protest howsoever we use his name! Students
and teachers talk of the mortality of Socrates, but conveniently
keep mum about their own. Perhaps they feel that they are fully
secure from death.
- In this way, people everywhere are
continually making deliberate efforts to forget death. But does
that ward off death? It makes its presence felt when someone
dear to us passes away. But still man does not think of death
fearlessly and summon courage to overcome its challenge. A deer
chased by a tiger finally gets exhausted, although it is swift
and agile. Death in the form of the tiger continues to pursue
it. Imagine the condition of that poor creature. It cannot look
at the tiger. It closes its eyes and buries its antlers and face
in the ground and helplessly waits for death. We too cannot dare
to look at death. But howsoever we may try, it is bound to
pounce on us.
- And when death finally comes, man
begins to take stock of what he has in balance at the end of his
life. A dull and lazy student in the examination hall just looks
here and there and whiles away his time. Dear chap, is Saraswati,
the Goddess of knowledge, going to come down from heaven to
write answers for you? He keeps the answer-book blank or at
best scribbles a few lines and submits it when the time is up.
Our condition is no different. But, keeping in mind that life
ultimately ends in death, we must constantly practice throughout
our life the means by which we can make the last moment pure,
sacred and happy. From this very moment, we should be concerned
with having the best of the samskaras. But who cares? On
the contrary, we are constantly training ourselves in bad ways;
we are constantly teaching our sense-organs to behave in a
perverse and wayward fashion. The mind must be trained in a
different way. It should be led to what is good and should be
encouraged to get absorbed in it. The moment we realise that we
have erred, we should start taking corrective steps. Once we
realise that we have made a mistake, should we go on repeating
it? The moment you come to realise your error is the moment of
your rebirth. It should mark a new beginning in your life. Look
at it as the dawn of your new life. You are now truly awake. Now
you should critically examine your life day and night. You
should become alert lest you should slip again; lest you should
go back to practising bad ways.
- A few years ago, I had gone to
meet my grandmother. She had grown quite old. She would say,
"Vinya, I don't
remember things these days. I go to fetch the ghee but
return empty-handed."
But she could vividly describe an incident about her gold
ornaments that had occurred fifty years ago. She could not
remember what had happened before five minutes, but the strong
samskara imprinted on the mind fifty years ago was still
fresh. What could the reason be? She must have narrated the
incident again and again. Hence it clung to her memory and
became a part of her being. I said to myself,
"O God! Let grandma not remember her ornaments at least at the
time of death!"
38. 'Ever Absorbed In That'
-
How could something that is
practised day and night not stick to us? Do not delude yourself
by the story of Ajamila2.
To all appearances he was a sinner, but there was an
undercurrent of virtue in his life. It surfaced at the moment of
death. Do not, therefore, delude yourself by imagining that you
could continue your sinful ways and still the Name of the Lord
will be on your lips at the last moment. The mind has to be
trained and disciplined by strenuous practice right since
childhood. It has to be carefully ensured that good samskaras
are imprinted on the mind one-by-one. Never have a careless
and casual attitude. Do not ask, for example, why one should
always get up early in the morning. If you give free rein to
your mind, you are bound to be caught in a snare. Then good
samskaras would surely elude you. Just like wealth and
knowledge, samskaras have to be acquired bit-by-bit
without wasting a moment. Therefore, see to it that the
samskara that is imprinted on the mind at every moment is
good. If you utter a foul word, a bad samskara will be
immediately imprinted on your mind. Every act of ours is like
the stroke of a chisel that shapes the block of stone of our life.
Even if the day passes off well, evil thoughts surface in
dreams. It is not that only recent thoughts surface in
dreams; bad samskaras, imprinted on the mind
inadvertently, may surface any time. Hence one must be ever
vigilant even over little things. A drowning man clutches even
at a straw. We are drowning in the ocean of samsara.
Utterance of a few good words too can prove to be the life-line
to save us. No good deed is ever wasted; it will save you.
Therefore, even the slightest of bad samskaras should be
prevented. Always strive not to see anything that could leave a
bad samskara, never give an ear to abuse and revilement
and keep the speech free from foulness. If you are so conscious
and alert, you will invariably be rewarded at the last moment.
You shall become the master of life and death.
- To inculcate good and pure
samskaras, one must always ruminate over noble thoughts. Let
the hands be busy in doing pure and good deeds. Remembrance of
God within and performance of swadharma without, hands
engaged in service and vikarma in the mind - all this
should continue day in and day out, without any lapse. Look at
Gandhiji. He spins every day on his charkha (spinning
wheel). He insists that everybody should spin daily. Why? Will
it not do if we spin for the cloth we need whenever it suits us?
But then that spinning would be a worldly activity done for a
practical purpose, whereas there is spirituality in daily
spinning. It reflects an urge to do something for the country.
That yarn daily links us to Daridranarayan - God in the
form of the poor. Daily spinning is an affirmation of one's
fellowship with Daridranarayan.
- If a doctor prescribes medicine to
be taken daily in particular doses, but we gulp it down all at
once, will it serve the purpose? It will be plain stupidity.
The body should be restored to health through daily samskara
of the medicine. The same holds good for life. Take the
example of gradual abhishek3on
the idol of Lord Shiva. It is my favourite illustration. I used
to watch it everyday when I was a child. Two buckets of water
might be trickling down drop by drop over the idol during twenty
four hours. Why not
pour two bucketfuls of water all at once on the idol? I got the
reply to this at that time itself. Water must not be poured at
once; it should trickle down drop by drop uninterruptedly. That
is what makes it an act of worship. There should be a continuous
flow of the same samskaras twenty four hours a day, every
day, every year; even throughout the cycle of births and deaths.
Each moment and each hour, each day and each night, each month
and each year - even in each birth, the same samskara
should be there. The divine stream of good samskaras
should flow in this way throughout our lives without
interruption. Then only we can reach our destination and hoist
our flag there. The stream of samskaras must flow in one
single direction only. If the rainwater falling on a hill-top
flows down the hill in several different directions, it does not
form a river; but if it flows in one single direction, it
becomes a stream which gradually grows in size, eventually
becoming a river that finally reaches the sea. Water which takes
one single direction reaches the sea while that which takes many
directions soon dries up and is lost. This also happens in the
case of good samskaras. If they come and go, of what use
are they? Only when the stream of good samskaras flows
continually through life in one single direction, then death
will be found to be a source of supreme bliss. A trekker who
does not unduly linger in the way, does not yield to the
temptations in the way and continues to walk along the path,
doggedly reaches the mountain-top, throws down all the load on
his back and experiences the fresh breeze blowing there. The joy
that he experiences is beyond the imagination of others.
39. 'Day And Night, The Fight Goes On'
- In short, death will be a matter
of joy when there is continuous performance of swadharma
outside while inwardly the mind is being purified through
devotion etc., when the streams of vikarama and karma
flow within and without. That is why the Lord says,
'म्हणूनि
सगळा काळ मज आठव झुंज तूं'4
('Remember Me all the time and fight'). He also refers to one who is 'ever
absorbed in that' - 'सदा
त्यांत चि रंगला ।'5
When love for the Lord pervades your whole being, when your whole
life is informed with that love, you will then always rejoice in
things sacred. Evil urges and tendencies would never appear
before you. Noble resolves and noble thoughts would germinate in
the mind and good deeds would follow naturally and effortlessly.
- It is true that good deeds become
natural when one always remembers the Lord. But the Lord's
command is to keep on striving. Saint Tukaram says,
'रात्री
दिवस आम्हां युध्दाचा प्रसंग ।'
'अंतर्बाह्य
जग आणि मन ।।'
('Day and night, we are required to fight with the world without and
the mind within.')
This conflict is going on relentlessly. It is not that you will
win every battle. One has to persevere till the end to win the
war. It is the final result of the war that counts. During the
war we shall succeed and fail many a times. But failure is no
cause for dejection. When a stone breaks at the twentieth blow,
it does not mean that the previous nineteen blows had been in
vain. In fact, they were preparing ground for the success of the
twentieth blow.
- To feel dejected means to lose
faith in God. God is always there to support and protect you.
Have faith in Him. To develop self-confidence in a child, the
mother lets him wander here and there, but she keeps watch. She
does not let him fall. If he starts tottering, she is there to
lift him up in her arms. God too is watching you. He holds in
His hands the string of your life's kite. Sometimes He pulls it
taut while sometimes He lets it loose; but be assured that He
Himself is holding the string in His hands. To teach swimming in
a river, one end of a rope is tied to a tree on the bank and the
other end is tied to the learner's
waist, and then he is thrown into the water. Trainers are there
in the river to take care of him. The novice struggles initially
but, in the end, masters the art of swimming. God teaches us the
art of living in this way.
40. Uttarayan And Dakshinayan
- So, if you continue striving day
and night with all the resources of the body and the mind at
your command with faith in the Lord, the last moment will be
extremely happy. You will have all the gods - that is, divine
powers - on your side when the hour of death comes. This has been
said at the end of this Chapter using a metaphor. Understand
this metaphor properly. If at the time of one's
death fire is burning, the sun is shining, the moon is waxing
and there is a beautiful and cloudless sky of Uttarayan
(six months of the northern course of the sun), then one unites
with the Brahman. But if at that time there is dense
smoke, there is darkness within and without, the moon is waning
and there is a cloudy and dull sky of Dakshinayan (six
months of the southern course of the sun), he again gets caught
in the cycle of births and deaths.
- This metaphor is puzzling to many.
It tells that the grace of the gods of fire (Agni), sun, moon
and sky are necessary for a holy death. Fire symbolises karma
and yajna - work and sacrifice. The sacrificial fire must
be burning even at the time of death. Justice Ranade used to
say, "Blessed is the death which comes while one is performing one's duties. I
shall be happy to die while reading, writing or doing something."
This is what the burning of sacrificial fire means. Working till
the last breath signifies the grace of Agni, the god of fire.
Grace of the sun-god keeps the intellect bright and radiant till
the end. Grace of the moon is indicated by the growth of pure
and sacred feelings in the heart at the time of death, as the
moon is the god of the heart. Sacred feelings like love,
devotion, enthusiasm, altruism, compassion etc. should wax and
grow to fullness in the mind like the moon in the bright half of
the month. The grace of the sky means having the heart
completely free from the clouds of attachment. Gandhijionce
said, "I am always talking of the spinning wheel. I consider it sacred.
But I must not have attachment even to it at the last moment. He
who led me to the spinning wheel is fully capable of taking its
care. Now the spinning wheel has been taken up by many leading
figures. I should now cease to worry about it and be ready to
meet the Lord." Uttarayan thus means freedom of the heart from the clouds
of attachment.
- If death comes when a man's body
is engaged in service till the last breath, pure sentiments have
grown to fullness, there is no trace of attachment in the heart
and intellect is sharp and radiant, he becomes one with God. To
have such a supremely auspicious end, one must ever be alert and
continue to strive day and night. No impure and evil samskara
should be permitted in the mind even for a single moment. One
must pray constantly to the Lord to have the necessary strength
to achieve this. Again and again, one should remember His Name
and meditate over His nature and essence.
(10.4.32)
References:
- Samskaras mean the imprints of actions, associations and experiences that remain indelibly engraved on our mind and mould our behaviour, personality and our world-view.
- Ajamila led a life full of sin. At the time of death, he called his son Narayan (which is also a name of Lord Vishnu). Lord Vishnu, hearing his name, rushed to Ajamila and redeemed him.
- Ceremonial bathing of the Lord's idol. In the temples of Lord Shiva, a pot having a hole at the bottom is hung over the idol of the Lord. It is filled with water. Water trickles down drop by drop on the idol and bathes it uninterruptedly.
- Gita 8.7
- 'Thinking of whatever state a man in the end casts his mortal frame aside, to that state does he accede, being ever absorbed in the thought
thereof' - Gita 8.6
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