The Eight Worldly Conditions
Venerable Narada Mahathera
Vicissitudes of Life (Atthalokadhamma)
This ill-balanced world
is not absolutely rosy. Nor is it totally thorny. The rose is soft, beautiful
and fragrant. But the stem on which it grows is full of thorns. What is rosy is
rosy; what is thorny is thorny. Because of the rose one will not meddle with
the thorns nor will one disparage the rose on account of the thorns.
To an optimist this world
is absolutely rosy; to a pessimist this world is absolutely thorny. But to a
realist this world is neither absolutely rosy nor absolutely thorny. It abounds
with beautiful roses and prickly thorns as well, from a realistic standpoint.
An understanding person
will not be infatuated by the beauty of the rose but will view it as it is.
Knowing well the nature of the thorns, he will view them as they are and will
take the precaution not to be wounded.
Like the pendulum that
perpetually turns to the right and left, four desirable and undesirable
conditions prevail in this world which everyone, without exception, must
perforce face in the course of one's lifetime.
They are gain (làbha) and
loss (alàbha), fame (yasa) and defame (ayasa), praise
(pasaÑsà) and blame (nindà), happiness (sukha) and pain (dukkha).
GAIN and LOSS
Business men, as a rule,
are subject to both gain (làbha) and loss (alàbha). It is quite
natural to be complacent in obtaining a gain or a profit. In itself there is
nothing wrong. Such righteous or unrighteous profits produce some pleasure which
average men seek. Without pleasurable moments, though temporary, life would not
be worth living. In this competitive and chaotic world rarely do people enjoy
some kind of happiness which gladdens their hearts. Such happiness, though
material, does conduce to health and longevity.
The problem arises in
case of loss. Profits one can bear smilingly but not so the losses. More often
than not they lead to mental derangement and sometimes to suicide when the
losses are unbearable. It is under such adverse circumstances that one should
exhibit moral courage and maintain a balanced mind. All have ups and downs
while battling with life. One should always be prepared for the losses in
particular. Then there will be less disappointment.
When something is stolen
naturally one feels sad. But by becoming sad one would not be able to retrieve
the loss. One should think that someone had benefited thereby though
unrighteously. May he be well and happy!
Or one can console
oneself thinking:-- "It's only a minor loss." One may even adopt a
highly philosophical attitude "there is nothing to be called Me or
Mine."
In the time of the Buddha
once a noble lady was offering food to the Venerable Sàriputta and some monks.
While serving them she received a note stating that her husband and all her
sons who had gone to settle a dispute were waylaid and killed. Without getting
upset, calmly she kept the note in her waist-pouch and served the monks as if
nothing had happened. A maid, who was carrying a pot of ghee to offer to the
monks, inadvertently slipped and broke the pot of ghee. Thinking that the lady
would naturally feel sorry over the loss, Venerable Sàriputta consoled her,
saying that all breakable things are bound to break. The wise lady unperturbly
remarked -- "Bhante, what is this trivial loss? I have just received a
note stating that my husband and sons were killed by some assassins. I placed
it in my pouch without losing my balance. I am serving you all despite the
loss."
Such valour on the part
of courageous women is highly commendable.
Once the Buddha went
seeking alms in a village. Owing to the intervention of Màra the Evil One, the
Buddha did not obtain any food. When Màra questioned the Buddha rather
sarcastically whether He was hungry or not, the Buddha solemnly explained the
mental attitude of those who are free from Impediments, and replied:--
"Ah, happily do we live, we who have no Impediments. Feeders of joy shall
we be even as the gods of the Radiant Realm."
On another occasion the
Buddha and His disciples observed vassa (rainy period) in a village at
the invitation of a brahmin, who, however, completely forgot his duty to attend
to the needs of the Buddha and the Sangha. Throughout a period of three months,
although Venerable Moggallàna volunteered to obtain food by his psychic powers,
the Buddha, making no complaint, was contented with the fodder of horses
offered by a horse-dealer.
Visàkhà, the Buddha's
chief female lay disciple, used to frequent the monastery to attend to the
needs of the Buddha and the Sangha decked with a very valuable outer garment.
On entering the monastery, she used to remove it and give it to the maid for
safe custody. Once the maid inadvertently left it in the temple and returned
home. Venerable Œnanda, noticing it, kept it in a safe place to be given to
Visàkhà when she visited the monastery. Visàkhà discovering the loss advised
the maid to look for it but not to take it back in case any Bhikkhu had touched
it. On inquiry the maid understood that Venerable Œnanda had kept it in safe custody.
Returning home, she reported the matter.
Visàkhà visited the
monastery and inquired of the Buddha what meritorious act should she perform
with the money obtained by selling the costly garment. The Buddha advised her
to build a monastery for the benefit of the Sangha. As there was nobody
to buy the garment because of its high cost, she herself bought it and built a
monastery and offered it to the Sangha. After the offering, she expressed her
gratitude to the maid, saying:-- "If you had not inadvertently left my
garment, I would not have got an opportunity to perform this meritorious act.
Please share the merit."
Instead of grieving over
the temporary loss and reprimanding the maid for her carelessness she thanked
her for granting an opportunity for service.
The exemplary attitude of
cultured Visàkhà is a memorable lesson to all those who are quickly irritated
over the misdoings of helpless servants.
Losses one must try to
bear cheerfully with manly vigour. Unexpectedly one confronts them, very often in
groups and not singly. One must face them with equanimity (upekkhà) and
think it is an opportunity to practise that sublime virtue.
FAME and DEFAME
Fame (yasa) and
defame (ayasa) are another pair of inevitable worldly conditions that
confront us in the course of our daily lives.
Fame we welcome, defame
we dislike. Fame gladdens our mind, defame disheartens us. We desire to become
famous. We long to see our names and pictures appear in the papers. We are
greatly pleased when our activities, however insignificant, are given
publicity. Sometimes we seek undue publicity too.
To see their picture in a
magazine some are ready to pay any amount. To obtain an honour some are prepared
to offer any bribe or give a fat donation to the party in power. For the sake
of publicity some exhibit their generosity by giving alms to one hundred monks
and even more, but they may be totally indifferent to the sufferings of the
poor and the needy in the neighbourhood. One may charge and punish a starving
person who, to appease his hunger, were to steal a coconut in his garden, but
would not hesitate to present thousand coconuts to get a good name.
These are human
frailties.
Most people do even a
good action with an ulterior motive. Selfless persons who act disinterestedly
are rare in this world. Even if the motive is not very praiseworthy, those who
do any good are to be congratulated on having done a beneficial act. Most
worldlings have something up their sleeves. Well, who is hundred percent good?
How many are perfectly pure in their motives? How many are absolutely
altruistic?
We need not hunt after
fame. If we are worthy of fame, it will come to us unsought. The bee will be
attracted to the flower, laden with honey. The flower however, does not invite
the bee.
True indeed, we feel
naturally happy, nay extremely happy, when our fame is spread far and wide. But
we must realize that fame, honour and glory only lead to the grave. They vanish
in thin air. Empty words are they, though pleasing to the ear.
What about defame? It is
not palatable either to the ear or mind. We are undoubtedly perturbed when
unkind defamatory words pierce our ears. The pain of mind is still greater when
the so-called report is unjust and absolutely false.
Normally it takes years
to erect a magnificent building. In a minute or two, with modern devastating
weapons, it could easily be demolished. Sometimes it takes years or a lifetime
to build up a good reputation. In no long time the hard-earned good name can be
ruined. Nobody is exempt from the devasting remark beginning with the infamous
"but". Yes, he is very good, he does this and that, but... His whole
good record is blackened by the so-called "but". You may live the
life of a Buddha, but you will not be exempt from criticism, attacks and
insults.
The Buddha was the most
famous and the most maligned religious teacher in His time.
Great men are often not
known; even if they are known, they are misknown.
Some antagonists of the
Buddha spread a rumour that a woman used to spend the night in the monastery.
Foiled in this base attempt, they spread a false rumour amongst the populace
that the Buddha and His disciples murdered that very woman and hid her corpse
in the rubbish-heap of withered flowers within the monastery. When His historic
mission met with success and when many sought ordination under Him, His
adversaries maligned Him, saying that He was robbing the mothers of their sons,
depriving wives of their husbands, and that He was obstructing the progress of
the nation. Failing in all these attempts to ruin His noble character, His own
cousin and a jealous disciple of His, attempted to kill him by hurling a rock
from above.
Being a Buddha, He could
not be killed.
If such be the sad fate
of faultless, pure Buddhas, what can be the state of ordinary mortals?
The higher you climb a
hill, the more conspicuous you become and much smaller in the eyes of others.
Your back is revealed but your front is hidden. The fault-finding world
exhibits your shortcomings and misdoings but hides your salient virtues. The
winnowing fan ejects the husks but retains the grains: the strainer, on the
contrary, retains the gross remnants but drains out the sweet juice. The
cultured take the subtle and remove the gross; the uncultured retain the gross
and reject the subtle.
When you are
misrepresented, deliberately or undeliberately unjustly reported, as Epictetus
advises, it is wise to think or say -- "O, by his slight acquaintanceship
and little knowledge of myself I am slightly criticised. But if I am known
better, more serious and much greater would be the accusations against
me."
It is needless to waste
time in correcting the false reports unless circumstances compel you to
necessitate a clarification. The enemy is gratified when he sees that you are
hurt. That is what he actually expects. If you are indifferent, such
misrepresentations will fall on deaf cars.
In seeing the faults of
others, we should behave like a blind person.
In hearing unjust
criticism of others, we should behave like a deaf person.
In speaking ill of
others, we should behave like a dumb person.
It is not possible to put
a stop to false accusations, reports and rumours.
The world is full of
thorns and pebbles. It is impossible to remove them. But if we have to walk in
spite of such obstacles, instead of trying to remove them, which is impossible,
it is advisable to wear a pair of slippers and walk harmlessly.
The Dhamma teaches:
Be like a lion that trembles
not at sounds.
Be like the wind that does not cling to the meshes of a net.
Be like a lotus that is not contaminated by the mud from which it springs up.
Wander alone like a rhinoceros.
Being the king of the
forest, lions are fearless. By nature they are not frightened by the roaring of
other animals. In this world we may hear adverse reports, false accusations,
degrading remarks of uncurbed tongues. Like a lion, we should not even listen
to them. Like the boomerang they will end where they began.
Dogs bark, caravans
peacefully move on.
We are living in a muddy
world. Numerous are the lotuses that spring therefrom. Without being
contaminated by the mud, they adorn the world. Like lotuses we should try to
lead blameless noble lives unmindful of the mud that may be thrown at us.
We should expect mud to
be thrown at us instead of roses. Then there will be no disappointment.
Though difficult we
should try to cultivate non-attachment.
Alone we come, alone we
go.
Non-attachment is
happiness in this world.
Unmindful of the
poisonous darts of uncurbed tongues alone we should wander serving others to
the best of our ability.
It is rather strange that
great men have been slandered, vilified, poisoned, crucified, or shot.
Great Socrates was
poisoned. Noble Jesus Christ was ruthlessly crucified. Harmless Mahatma Gandhi
was shot.
Well, is it dangerous to
be too good?
Yes, during their
lifetime they are criticised, attacked and killed. After death they are deified
and honoured.
Great men are indifferent
to fame or defame. They are not upset when they are criticised or maligned for
they work not for fame or name. They are indifferent whether others recognise
their services or not. "To work they have the right but not to the fruit
thereof."
PRAISE and BLAME
Praise (pasamsà) and
blame (nindà) are two more worldly conditions that affect mankind. It is
natural to be elated when praised and to be depressed when blamed.
Amidst praise and blame, the
Buddha says, the wise do not exhibit either elation or depression. Like a solid
rock that is not shaken by the wind they remain unmoved.
Praise, if worthy, is
pleasing to the ears; if unworthy, as in the case of flattery, though pleasing,
it is deceptive. But they are all sounds which have no effect if they do not
reach our ears.
From a worldly standpoint
a word of praise goes a long way. By praising a little a favour can easily be
obtained. One word of merited praise is sufficient to attract an audience
before one speaks. If, at the outset, a speaker praises the audience, he will
have attentive ears. If he criticises the audience at the outset, the response
will not be satisfactory.
The cultured do not
resort to flattery nor do they wish to be flattered by others. The praiseworthy
they praise without any jealousy. The blame worthy they blame not
contemp-tuously but out of compassion with the object of reforming them.
Great men are highly
praised by the great and small who know them well though they are utterly
indifferent to such praise.
Many who knew the Buddha
intimately extolled the virtues of the Buddha in their own way. One Upàli, a
millionaire, a new convert, praised the Buddha, enumerating hundred virtues ex
tempore. Nine sterling virtues of the Buddha that were current in His time
are still being recited by His followers, looking at His image. They are a
subject of meditation to the devout. Those well-merited virtues are still a
great inspiration to His followers.
What about blame"
The Buddha says:--
"They who speak much
are blamed. They who speak a little are blamed. They who are silent are also
blamed. In this world there is none who is not blamed."
Blame seems to be a
universal legacy to mankind.
The majority of the
people in the world, remarks the Buddha, are ill-disciplined. Like an elephant
in the battle-field that endures all arrows shot at him, even so, the Buddha
says, do I suffer all insults.
The deluded and the
wicked are prone to seek only the ugliness in others but not the good and
beautiful.
None, except the Buddha,
is hundred percent good. Nobody is hundred percent bad either. There is evil in
the best of us. There is good in the worst of us. He who silences himself like
a cracked gong when attacked, insulted and abused, he, I say, the Buddha
exhorts, is in the presence of Nibbàna although he has not yet attained
Nibbàna.
One may work with the
best of motives. But the outside world very often misconstrues him and will
impute motives never even dreamt of.
One may serve and help
others to the best of one's ability sometimes by incurring debt or selling
one's articles or property to save a friend in trouble. But later, the
deluded world is so constituted that those very persons whom one has helped
will find fault with him, blackmail him, blemish his good character and will
rejoice in his downfall.
In the Jàtaka stories it
is stated that Guttila the musician taught everything he knew to his pupil
without a closed fist, but the ungrateful man he was, he unsuccessfully tried
to compete with his teacher and ruin him.
Devadatta, a pupil and
cousin of the Buddha who had developed psychic powers, not only tried to
discredit the Buddha but also made an unsuccessful attempt to crush Him to
death by hurling a rock from above while He was pacing up and down below.
On one occasion
the Buddha was invited by a brahmin for alms to his house. As He was invited,
the Buddha visited his house. Instead of entertaining Him, he poured forth a
torrent of abuse with the filthiest of words.
The Buddha politely
inquired:-
"Do visitors come to
your house good brahmin?"
"Yes", he
replied.
"What do you do when
they come?"
"Oh, we prepare a
sumptuous feast."
"If they fail to
turn up, please?"
"Why, we gladly
partake of it."
"Well, good brahmin,
you have invited me for alms and entertained me with abuse. I accept nothing.
Please take it
back."
The Buddha did not
retaliate, but politely gave back what the brahmin gave Him. Retaliate not, the
Buddha exhorts. Vengeance will be met with vengeance. Force will be met with
force. Bombs will be met with bombs. "Hatreds do not cease through
hatreds, but through love alone they cease" is a noble utterance of the
Buddha.
There was no religious
teacher so highly praised and so severely criticised, reviled and blamed like
the Buddha. Such is the fate of great men.
In a public assembly a
vile woman named Cincà feigning pregnancy, maligned the Buddha. With a smiling
face the Buddha patiently endured the insult and the Buddha's innocence was
proved.
The Buddha was accused of
murdering a woman assisted by His disciples. Non-Buddhists severely criticised
the Buddha and His Disciples to such an extent that the Venerable Œnanda
appealed to the Buddha to leave for another village.
-- "How, Œnanda, if
those villagers also abuse us?"
-- "Well then, Lord,
we will proceed to another village."
-- "Then Œnanda, the
whole of India will have no place for us. Be patient. These abuses will
automatically cease."
Màgandiyà, a lady of the
harem, had a grudge against the Buddha for speaking ill of her attractive
figure when her father, through ignorance, wished to give her in marriage to
the Buddha. She hired drunkards to insult the Buddha in public. With perfect
equanimity the Buddha endured the insults. But Màgandiyà had to suffer for her
misdemeanour.
Insults are the common
lot of humanity. The more you work and the greater you become, the more are you
subject to insult and humiliation.
Jesus Christ was
insulted, humiliated and crucified.
Socrates was insulted by
his own wife. Whenever he went out to help others his intolerant wife used to
scold him. One day as she was unwell she failed to perform her unruly task.
Socrates left home on that day with a sad face. His friends inquired why he was
sad. He replied that his wife did not scold him on that day as she was unwell.
"Well, you ought to
be happy for not getting that unwelcome scolding," remarked his friends.
"Oh no! When she
scolds me I get an opportunity to practise patience. Today I missed it. That is
the reason why I am sad," answered the philosopher.
These are memorable
lessons for all.
When insulted we should
think that we are being given an opportunity to practise patience. Instead of
being offended, we should be grateful to our adversaries.
HAPPINESS and PAIN
Happiness (sukha) and
pain (dukkha) are the last pair of opposites. They are the most powerful
factors that affect mankind. What can be endured with ease is sukha (happiness),
what is difficult to bear is dukkha (pain). Ordinary happiness is the
gratification of a desire. No sooner is the desired thing gained than we desire
some other kind of happiness. So insatiate are our selfish desires. The
enjoyment of sensual pleasures is the highest and only happiness to an average
person. There is no doubt a momentary happiness in the anticipation,
gratification and recollection of such material pleasures highly priced by the
sensualist, but they are illusory and temporary.
Can material possessions give
one genuine happiness?
If so, millionaires would
not think of committing suicide. In a certain country which has reached the
zenith of material progress about ten percent suffer from mental diseases. Why
should it be so if material possessions alone can give genuine happiness?
Can dominion over the
whole world produce true happiness?
Alexander, who
triumphantly marched to India, conquering the lands on the way, sighed for not
having more pieces of earth to conquer.
Are Emperors and Kings
who wear crowns always happy?
Very often the lives of
statesmen who wield power are at stake. The pathetic cases of Mahatma Gandhi
and J. F. Kennedy are illustrative examples.
Real happiness is found
within, and is not to be defined in terms of wealth, power, honours or
conquests.
If such worldly
possessions are forcibly or unjustly obtained, or are misdirected, or even
viewed with attachment, they will be a source of pain and sorrow for the
possessors. What is happiness to one may not be happiness to another. What is
meat and drink to one may be poison to another.
The Buddha enumerates
four kinds of happiness for a layman.
They are the happiness of
possession (atthi sukha), namely, health, wealth, longevity, beauty,
joy, property, strength, children, etc.
The second source of
happiness is derived by the enjoyment of such possessions (bhoga sukha). Ordinary
men and women wish to enjoy themselves. The Buddha does not advise all to
renounce their worldly pleasures and retire to solitude.
The enjoyment of wealth
lies not only in using it for ourselves but also in giving it for the welfare
of others. What we eat is only temporary. What we preserve we leave and go.
What we give we take with us. We are remembered for ever by the good deeds we
have done with our worldly possessions.
Not falling into debt (ananasukha)
is another source of happiness. If we are contented with what we have and
if we are economical, we need not be in debt to any one. Debtors live in mental
agony and are under obligation to their creditors. Though poor, when debt free,
you feel relieved and are mentally happy.
Leading a blameless life (anavajjasukha)
is one of the best sources of happiness for a layman. A blameless person is
a blessing to himself and to others. He is admired by all and feels happier,
being affected by the peaceful vibrations of others. It should be stated
however that it is very, very difficult to get a good name from all. The
noble-minded persons are concerned only with a blameless life and are
indifferent to external approbation. The majority in this world delight
themselves in enjoying pleasures while some others seek delight in renouncing
them. Non-attachment or the transcending of material pleasures is happiness to
the spiritual. Nibbànic bliss, which is a bliss of relief from suffering, is
the highest form of happiness.
Ordinary happiness we
welcome, but not its opposite -- pain, which is rather difficult to endure.
Pain or suffering comes
in different guises.
We suffer when we are
subject to old age which is natural. With equanimity we have to bear the
sufferings of old age.
More painful than
sufferings due to old age are sufferings caused by disease, which, if
chronic, we feel that death is preferable. Even the slightest toothache or
headache is sometimes unbearable.
When we are subject to
disease, without being worried, we should be able to bear it at any
cost. Well, we must console ourselves thinking that we have escaped from a
still more serious disease.
Very often we are
separated from our near and dear ones. Such separation causes great pain of
mind. We should understand that all association must end with separation. Here
is a good opportunity to practise equanimity.
More often than not we
are compelled to be united with the unpleasant which we detest. We should be
able to bear them. Perhaps we are reaping the effects of our own Kamma, past or
present. We should try to accommodate ourselves to the new situation or try to
overcome the obstacle by some means or other.
Even the Buddha, a
perfect being, who has destroyed all defilements, had to endure physical
suffering caused by disease and accidents.
The Buddha was constantly
subject to headache. His last illness caused Him much physical suffering. As a
result of Devadatta's hurling a rock to kill Him, His foot was wounded by a
splinter which necessitated an operation. Sometimes He was compelled to starve.
At times He had to be contented with horse-fodder. Due to the disobedience of
His own pupils, He was compelled to retire to a forest for three months. In the
forest, on a couch of leaves spread on rough ground, facing piercing cool
winds, He slept with perfect equanimity. Amidst pain and happiness He lived
with a balanced mind. Death is the greatest sorrow we are compelled to face in
the course of our wanderings in samsàra. Sometimes, death comes not
singly but in numbers which may even cause insanity.
Patàcàrà lost her near
and dear ones -- parents, husband, brother and two children -- and she went
mad. The Buddha consoled her.
Kisà Gotami lost her only
infant, and she went in search of a remedy for her dead son, carrying the
corpse. She approached the Buddha and asked for a remedy.
"Well, sister, can
you bring some mustard seed?"
"Certainly,
Lord!"
"But, sister, it
should be from a house where no one has died."
Mustard seeds she found,
but not a place where death had not visited.
She understood the nature
of life.
When a mother was
questioned why she did not weep over the tragic death of her only son, she
replied; "Uninvited he came, uninformed he went. As he came, so he went.
Why should we weep? What avails weeping?"
As fruits fall from a
tree -- tender, ripe or old -- even so we die in our infancy, in the prime of
manhood or even in old age.
The sun rises in the East
only to set in the West.
Flowers bloom in the
morning to fade in the evening.
Inevitable death, which
comes to all without exception, we have to face with perfect equanimity.
"Just as the earth
whate'er is thrown
Upon her, whether sweet or foul,
Indifferent is to all alike,
No hatred shows, nor amity,
So likewise he in good or ill,
Must even-balanced ever be."
The Buddha says:--
When touched by worldly
conditions the mind of an Arahant never wavers.
Amidst gain and loss,
fame and defame, praise and blame, happiness and pain, let us try to maintain a
balanced mind.
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