All that
which falls within the purview of the five senses is known as the empirical. As
these senses – of smell, taste, sight, touch and hearing – are the preceptors
of pleasure and pain, it goes without saying that advancements in empirical
science have been resulting in ever-increasing means to heighten both pleasure
as well as pain.
If we
devote just a few moments to look at our own such sensations from a third party
point of view, we would conclude that these sensations are in fact being
referred to our own ego, the sense of “I” ness. If this were not so then the
same objects would have produced the same sensation in everybody and in equal
degree. Thus, the ego is the traceable birthplace of all desires and also reason
for the relentless but futile struggle to satisfy them.
The
question is; who in reality is struggling in such a futile manner? If this is
my body and this is my mind, then who is the real ‘I’? The wise call it Atman.
It is always the Atman that wants to experience reality in all creation. It is
always ego or ahamkara, the ruler of body and mind that always short-changes
the Atman in the process. In other words, the ego domain forces an
identification of the real self with body and mind.
So
strong is the grip of ahamkara that even in death it remains attached to the
karmana-sharira or casual body along with all unfulfilled desires. In due
course the soul is reborn in another bodily form and there ensues yet another
round of struggle to appease the ahamkara through the agency of available sense
apparatus.
We can
thus further conclude that in essence, the inequality amongst not just humans
but across all creatures is simply the inequality in the latent and manifest
desires, both good and bad along with the apparatus and opportunity made
available by divinity to satisfy the same.
As far
as humans are concerned, we see that the apparatus is misused since opportunity
is greatly misconstrued. The high level of “I” ness or ahamkara inevitably
makes us oblivious to our individually inherent differences in deservedness
which we were born with. Leading too much distress and disharmony.
IN view
of these underlying facts, all external efforts towards precipitating “peace”
and “mutual brotherhood” will come to naught as the individual mind is
distraught, being full of unfulfilled desires, having their roots in the
subconscious, in the form of innumerable polarities. Experiencing the
commonality amongst all, realizing that outer differences manifest as a result
of differences in karmic past and finding an easy way to progressively free
oneself from these deep-set differences would in reality pave the way towards
attaining these noble goals.
Fortunately,
animation of Atman into body and mind takes place due to the grace of prana
shakti, the dynamic principle of Mother Nature.
If mind,
which is forever engaged in desire-satisfying activities, dictated by the ego,
merges into prana shakti, this divinely intelligent force which is our own
higher dynamic aspect, finds its way into the hither to untraversed
subconscious, which is the storehouse of all hidden, unfulfilled desires.
Prana
shakti then neutralizes one by one, through precipitation of various autonomous
yoga kriyas, all the hidden polarities which represent unfulfilled desires. As
self-purification takes place, one can progressively experience Universal
Brotherhood in its real aspect.
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