We experience diverse emotions in
our lives, but in essence we either refer them as good or bad. We all prefer
more of good and less or none of bad. But it’s a simple fact of life to a
discerning individual that these emotions are not in the objects sought or the
emotions perceived or the thoughts thought. Else, the same object would give
happiness to all. What is ironic is the same object or situation evokes
different perception depending on the perceiver’s state of mind.
The sun, the wind by itself is not
good or bad. They merely are acting according to their swabhava (nature). A
warm sun in icy winter is refreshing while a scorching sun in hot summer is not
as welcoming. The woolen clothes that kept us warm in winter becomes an
uncomfortable burden in summer. It is evident that the woollen clothes did not
have the capacity to produce happiness. If that be the case with objects, how
about actions? Some thug trying to cut another person with a knife is a crime
and very undesirable, but a skilled surgeon making a judgement call to amputate
a limb to save the life of a person is laudable. Killing another person is a
heinous crime, but thanks to our selfless soldiers and their bravery in killing
the intruding enemy, we are safe.
So how does one evaluate good or
bad? The most common explanation given is, if it helps more it is good. This
again is subject to the same situation we observed earlier. The context seems
to dictate everything, or is it?
Our understanding gets murkier when
we consider the web of human interactions. A doctor wants more patients, while
we all seek good health. A coffin maker wants more deaths, whilst we all seek
longer life. Employer wants more profits, which means less expenses while the
employee wants more income, which is registered as more expense in employer’s
accounting system. Customer wants a good deal while the shopkeeper wants higher
profit margin. Which is good? Which is bad?
Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa’s camel story
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa explained the
highest vedantic concepts in very simple parables and stories. One such parable
I read as a child is fresh on my mind and continues to guide me.
There was once a caravan of camels
going through a desert. One traveler gets lost from the caravan. As dusk was
approaching rapidly, the traveler took inventory of his supplies. He had
everything except firewood. As he was pondering, his camel’s foot got stuck
with something. He alighted and started to dig through the sand. To his delight
he found big bundles of firewood. The desert sand had apparently covered the
supplies from an earlier caravan. His excitement grew no limits as he found
more and more. He spent the night thankfully. Next morning as he got ready, he
thought just like his life got saved, some other lost traveler can find this
hidden treasure. Thinking thus, he left some firewood, knowing pretty well it
might get covered by sand.
Few months later, another lost
traveler gets his camel’s foot caught in something in the sand. He was in the
similar situation as our former traveler, ready with all supplies but firewood.
The thankful traveler spent the night in anticipation of joining his caravan
the next day. As he was about to depart, he wondered, what would have happened
if his camel’s foot got hurt more seriously. He shuddered to even think about
being lost in the desert. He spent the next several minutes picking all the
pieces of buried wood. He thought if he carried them all, the next traveler
will not get his camel’s foot hurt.
Now who amongst the two did the correct
thing? Who did the more correct one? This kind of dilemma arises only when two
good things are involved. When we are confronted with such a choice, it is
better to choose the higher path.
In other words the concept of good
and bad is not always thrust from outside. Telling lies is definitely not a
good character, but if the lie is going to save some innocent’s life, the same
lie becomes a truth. We come across this situation again and again in Ramayana
and Mahabharatha where we are suggested to take the higher path.
One of the ancient Tamil texts,
Purananooru, written by Kaniyan Poonkundranar puts it concisely as:
தீதும்
நன்றும்
பிறர்
தர
வாரா
Theedhum nandrum pirar
thara vaara
Good or bad, it doesn't come from
others.
So it appears that our attitude towards
the object, situation, emotions, thoughts make all the difference. We have seen
in the earlier articles that our attachment to a specific outcome creates an
expectation of what is good and bad. If it meets or exceeds the expectation, we
find it good and anything contrary is bad.
Wayne Dyer captured this idea in his
quote:
Change
the way you look at things, and the things you look at change.
Modern science explains for every
particle, there is an anti particle, for instance electron and positron, proton
and antiproton. Good and evil are born of the same source. In the Abrahamic
traditions, this almost amounts to blasphemy, but all dharmic religions have a
blurry line between good and bad. The interesting thing is even self-help
authors and new age gurus have accepted this mindset.
One of Napolean Hill’s famous quote is
“Every adversity, every failure, every heartache carries with it the seed of an
equal or greater benefit.” This quote has inspired many people to move
forward in their life. So is the adversity a good thing or bad thing then? If
friction is bad, then we cannot walk, drive or fly. A predatory animal eats a
prey, is that good or bad. If all prey are saved won’t the predator starve to
death, but without predator, prey populations also do not regulate in nature.
One Village, Two conflicting
reports
The way we see the world is a
reflection of our own mind. To elucidate this, let me share a story from
Mahabharata. (This story I have read only from secondary sources). Once
Duryodhana confronted Krishna and said that he needs to treat him and
Yudhishtra the same, as both are equally qualified and equally related.
Duryodhana also wondered why the masses consider Yudhishtra as favorite. To
help dispel this doubt, Krishna sent both of them to a village and give him a
report about the nature of people by the end of the day.
Duryodhana, eager to showcase his
superiority, comes back first. He reports to Krishna that everyone in that
village was bad. He came back so that he can show his smartness to Krishna,
else he would have smashed the entire village before reporting. As Krishna was
smiling at this report, Yudhishtra entered with a beaming smile. He reported to
Krishna that he had hastened his return to report and sought HIS permission to
return. He informed a puzzled Krishna that the entire village was populated
with Mahatmas (great souls). Everyone was devout and dharmic. There is so much
peace and prosperity in the village on account of everyone following dharma.
One village, two conflicting
reports. How is this possible? Were all the people really that bad or really
good? Perhaps, Truth as we can understand is somewhere in the middle. Both
Yudhishtra and Duryodhana saw their internal mind structure in the external
world. This story showcases the fact that goodness and badness is a reflection
of our mind. Attitude is one aspect of our mindset which deals with the world.
In other words, the nature of our
mind, if more Saatvic, sees the world as good. If the mental composition is
more Rajasic or worse still Tamasic, it sees everything as bad. But rearranging
our mental composition gives us the opportunity to evolve or devolve. Ratnakar,
a robber, became Valmiki. How can one increase Sattva guna? This we will see in
detail some other time.
Om Tat Sat
U r right....the good or bad is decided on the attitude of a person..... if the attitude is correct then the act will be automatically good...we can't define good or bad just like that...like same act done by different people is taken in different way...but nicely brought out..
ReplyDeleteThanks Muni Raman. Two groups of people lose track of this subtlety. Purely materialistic person, caught in the web of his desires and attachment is unable to see that Good and Bad is just a mindset. Second group is that which believes in rigid definitions of good and bad. It is very evident in orthodox Abrahamic communities, as they attempt to follow their religious edicts, despite the hypocrisy in their implementation.
ReplyDeleteVery good article.
ReplyDelete