Skip to main content

LETTING GO OF "THE SMALL" to ACHIEVE "THE BIG"

"The main thing is to keep the main thing as the main thing."

Here are few musings from the books of Radhanath Swami. Simple, little stories but with profound meanings that can permanently alter our consciousness if we allow them to.

The first is a story from his memoir, "The Journey Home". During his travels in the Himalayas, he reached the holy city of Rishikesh. There, he took a month-long vow to fast and meditate on a rock in the Ganges to receive enlightenment. After successfully completing his month-long vow and being blessed with deep spiritual wisdom, he decided to break his fast with the one rupee coin some pilgrim had donated him. Remembering, a peanut vendor that he used to see on his way to the Ganges, he decided to buy some peanuts and give himself a feast. When the shopkeeper saw one rupee, his eyes lit up and he made a large shopping bag of old newspapers and filled it with peanuts. As Radhanath Swami walked along the jungle path to his cave, rejoicing at the prospect of enjoying the peanuts, he came face to face with a huge brown monkey who blocked his path.

Growling, baring his pointed teeth and staring with piercing green eyes, he at once sprang on Radhanath and in one motion, seized the bag of peanuts, swiftly kicking Radhanath on his chest to catapult away. Gasping, Radhanath Swami stumbled back a few steps. Seeing some of the peanuts fallen on the ground during the scuffle, he thought, "Well, at least these will suffice to break my fast." As he stooped to pick them up, another monkey leaped from a tree, scooped every peanut and disappeared with nothing left for Radhanath Swami expect an important treasure of wisdom. In life there is no loss; even a so called loss can be a gain, if we are willing to see the hidden lesson beneath the unpleasant packaging. As he was walking to his cave with his stomach rumbling, he reflected, "Compared to the treasure of spiritual experience, worldly acquisition is like peanuts. People lie, cry and die for a few of these peanuts. They struggle for a handful. Wars are raged over them. But at any moment, a monkey, another's greed or the inevitable march of time may plunder from us our cherished peanuts."

Isn't this such a profound piece of wisdom - to not loose our spiritual treasure for the cheap, worldly, insignificant pleasures. As the wise Chankaya Pandit warned us - "Don't exchange the permanent for the impermanent, for you will be left with none". Somehow the nature of our conditioned mind is to interpret inessentials as essentials and essentials as inessentials. Therefore, we need to be regularly reminded of the true purpose of life and what is truly essential by regularly reading scriptures and hearing from saints. Just like a car, if not steered goes off the road similarly if we don't regularly steer our spiritual life, we will go off track and meet with a spiritual accident.
Radhanath Swami in his second book called "The Journey Within", gives another brilliant analogy of a crane which was spoken by great saint of South India named Anantacharya. Anantacharya explains how a spiritualist should be like a crane. What is the characteristic of a crane? A crane stands on one leg, completely focused on the water as if it as a Yogi. What is it meditating on? Definitely, not on God but on a fish? But on which fish? Not on the small and little ones but on the big and huge ones. It allows the smaller fishes to pass by and waits patiently for the big fish. As soon as it sees the big fish, it plunges head-on and catches it at once. What is the learning for all of us? The learning is that a spiritualist too allows small, petty pleasures of this world to pass by and waits patiently, being completely focused on a achieving the big fish of spiritual bliss. His priorities are very clear and doesn't compromise on his standard of happiness. He is expert in the art of letting of "the small" to achieve "the big".

- Achyut Gopal Das

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

GAINING by GIVING - WINNING by SERVING

"Life is like a game of tennis - in order to win, you have to serve well." For two consecutive years, 2011 and 2012, we organised a contest for the school children across Goa called Gita Champions League (Henceforth referred to as GCL). We had a massive success with 3800 children participating the first year and 8600 children participating the second year. But, all this didn't come easily, we had to literally slog it out. Well, for that matter nothing wonderful comes easily, does it! THE BURDEN OF LOVE I took up GCL or rather GCL came to me at a time when I was going through intense personal struggles on literally every front - physically, mentally and institutionally. Yes, I was desperately praying for a service that could literally pull me out of the quagmire of my problems. I have always believed and witnessed the power of service. Service has always saved me in difficult times. The only reason, I am intact in my spiritual life despite the numerous challenges is beca

GOOD TO EXPECT BAD

Mosquitoes are something that bother me and very often as an unconscious reflex action and many times as a conscious action, I catch myself killing many of them. This is just one of the many sins and offenses I commit, mentally, verbally and physically. How can I then not expect any reactions for these actions of mine. Why should I pray for a life of no difficulties. Rather, I should be praying to God to give me my quota of reactions so that I learn my lessons quickly and rectify my offensive and sinful mentality.  The Srimad-bhagvatam mentions the episode of King Pariksit garlanding Shamika Rsi with a dead snake due to being afflicted with unbearable hunger and anger which is very unusual of the tolerant and saintly King. What is commendable is his thought process as soon as he commits this offense.  The Srimad-bhagvatam 1.19.1-3 mentions it in this way - "While returning home, King Parīkṣit felt that the act he had committed against the faultless and pow

EVERYTHING COMES IN A CIRCLE

"Life is a full circle. Everything comes back the way it is handled." - Elsie Mathew Once, I was drinking some fruit juice in a stainless steel glass in our ashram. I had to leave for some place in a hurry. I left the glass thinking that someone would wash it. I came back after two days and saw that the glass was there in the exact place I had kept it, as if waiting for me. The irony is that not only I had to wash it personally but it took me more time and energy because by now the juice particles got dry and stuck to the glass. I had to do a lot of scrubbing. I realised the fallacy of procrastination. If I had washed it as soon I had drunk the juice, the job would have been accomplished in seconds. Small incidences like this have happened time and again, teaching me that in life everything comes in a circle. What goes around, comes around. That's the law of karma in action. We can't avoid responsibilities in life - what we are supposed to do, we will have to do - t