Consequences
Verse 2.63
Translation
From
anger arises delusion, and from delusion, bewilderment of memory. When memory
is bewildered, intelligence is lost, and when intelligence is lost, one falls
down again into the material pool.
1.
When anger takes over the better side of us, we are in total
delusion.
2.
We feel disoriented, completely confused and unsure as to
what is going through our minds.
3.
We lose our capacity to use our intelligence diligently and
end up doing things we shouldn’t do.
4.
This results in our final fall down to a point of no
recovery.
Solution
Each of us might have our own way of
controlling anger like going for a walk, reading a book, listening to music or
just remaining silent. Each of these
techniques might be working very well for us. But do they work all the time? That
is something known only to the individual exercising those techniques.
Although these options may work at
times, they are not foolproof. This is because we are trying to exercise the
techniques after anger has taken over our intelligence, basically to suppress
the emotion rather than stopping it from arising in the first place. The reason
that these options are not faultless is because we try to fight our senses
singlehandedly.
We pretty much
underestimate the power of our senses. Krishna says that the senses are so strong and impetuous that
they forcibly carry away the mind even of a man of discrimination who is
endeavoring to control them – verse 2.60. And that even one
roaming sense is enough to sway our intelligence – verse 2.67.
Our senses are responsible for our incessant
flow of desires and we have to remain undisturbed, just as an ocean, which is
ever still even when the rivers flow into it.
In fact, Arjuna asks this very same
question to Krishna,
‘Why do we still commit sinful acts
as if engaged by force?’
Krishna answers that the root cause of
this problem is lust or desire alone, which when unsatisfied, turns
into anger. This is stated beautifully in the following verse:
Verse 3.37
Translation
It is
lust only, Arjuna, which is born of contact with the material modes of passion
and later transformed into wrath, and which is the all-devouring, sinful enemy
of this world.
Lust is our eternal enemy that can
never be satisfied. Our senses are responsible for our incessant flow of
desires. This being the cause of wrath, we have to understand where lust
actually resides within this human body and then how to curb it.
Verse 3.40 of the Bhagavad Gita explains that the residential quarters of lust are our
senses, mind and intelligence.
Now that we have identified our true
enemy, we have to look at ways to conquer this very powerful enemy in the form
of lust, and the good news is that we don’t have to do it all alone.
Verse 6.35
asamsayam maha-baho
mano durnigraham calam
abhyasena tu kaunteya
vairagyena ca grhyate
mano durnigraham calam
abhyasena tu kaunteya
vairagyena ca grhyate
Translation
O mighty-armed son of Kunti, it is
undoubtedly very difficult to curb the restless mind, but it is possible by
constant practice and by detachment.
Krishna
advises us to do that by-
Ø Regulating our senses by
engaging them in the service of the Lord. Or at least withdraw our senses when
they should not be used – remember the example of the tortoise we spoke about
in the introduction? Withdrawing our senses can be very difficult, given our
mind does the job of all our senses singlehandedly - at times by imagining and
concocting things. Therefore,
Ø We must endeavour to steady
our minds by deliberate spiritual
intelligence – Verse 3.43 - evaḿ buddhehparaḿ buddhvā saḿstabhyātmānam ātmanā.
Thus
knowing oneself to be transcendental to material senses, mind and intelligence,
one should control the lower self by the higher self and thus--by
spiritual strength, conquer this insatiable enemy known as lust.
Ø Spiritual strength is the only way to conquer
this eternal enemy. Therefore it is absolutely
essential that each and every one of us look at ways to develop this strength
which lies dormant within us.
And unless
we curb lust, it is next to impossible to conquer anger which is simply a
manifestation of unsatisfied desires.
In
the posts to come, we will talk about how we can develop our spiritual strength
by developing a higher taste.
regarding solution: since root cause is kama - from external senses or internal mind (the sixth sense), these senses can only controlled when one accepts Krishna as supreme (mat paraha - 2.61) and experiences the superior bliss of Krishna consciousness (Param Drushtva - 2.59) to sensory/worldly pleasures. This is repeated in 2.62 if one meditates on krishna (instead of Dhayaato Vishayan) worldly kamas will reduce and hence chance for Krodha.
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