Friday, November 22, 2013

Reflections on Karma, Suffereing and Evil



The Wisdom of the Overself
Paul Brunton



Chapter IX: The Shadows of Evil and Suffering
  
All apparent evil is not real evil. Who has not known someone who has been turned from a wrong course by sickness ? The same hardship which weakens one man’s virtue strengthens another’s.

We must begin to admit with Eckhart, however grudgingly, that: “The swiftest horse that bears us to perfection is suffering.”

A man may be suffering what is really good for him and yet he will weep, as though it were really bad for him! Too much good fortune has already ruined too many good men. All experience tends to educate the intelligence and discipline the emotions. Consequently if suffering brings men back to the blessed life that transcends it, then if only for that reason and to that extent its existence is justified.

… the universe could not be manifested without manifesting the pairs of opposites, such as light and darkness or life and death. This duality is inevitably inherent in its very structure. Consequently it is an inevitable accompaniment of our own human existence too. In the physical body pleasurable nerve- reactions lure us on to eat and sustain its existence, but painful reactions are equally provided for to repel us from drinking poisonous acids , for example. It is useless therefore in a body built on opposing tensions to expect that we shall be so fortunate as to experience only one of them— that is the pleasurable one—during a lifetime.

To look for impossible one-sided perfections is to invite disappointment. Just as the forces of winter wither the foliage of trees but are not therefore evil forces, so the destructive element in Nature withers the forms of individuals, nations, civilizations and continents when they have outserved their utility and the appropriate time of disintegration arrives. This is not to be taken as a victory for evil powers but as a manifestation of one side out of a pair of opposites. 

It would be senseless to ask for a world free from suffering. Imagine what would happen to a hand accidentally put into a fire if there were no nervous system to provide the owner of the hand with a warning signal of pain. It would be altogether destroyed and its use lost forever. Here the pain of being burnt, severe though it be, would really act as a disguised friend if it persuaded the owner to withdraw his hand from the fire. So far as suffering protects physical life, it possesses a justifiable place in the universal scheme of things.

Plato has even pointed out that it is a misfortune to a man who has deserved punishment to escape from it. After all, the punishment may awaken him to the recognition that wrong has been done and thus purify his character. Again, it is through pain that man’s cruelty and pride and lust may best be broken, for they are hardly amenable to correction by mere words. The pain inflicted on a swollen sense of ‘I’ for example by karmic compensatory working is not really punishment any more than is the pain inflicted by a surgeon who opens an abscess with his knife.

The coils of karma which entwine themselves around the wrong-doer are primarily there as a natural consequence of his own acts, not as a fiat of punishment. Time is educating and developing him to perceive the right. When he has the humility to face the responsibility for his own past errors, he may see how many of his troubles were self-earned. Where he cannot trace the cause to his present personality, he must needs believe it to lie in his previous ones.

Nobody likes to impose a discipline upon himself and that is why everybody has to submit to a discipline imposed by karma. Hence pain and suffering come to us principally through the operations of karma. Their seeds may have been sown during the present life and not necessarily during a past one.

The first error which most people make when accepting the tenet of karma is to postpone its operation to future reincarnations. The truth is that the consequences of our acts come to us if they can in the same birth as when they are committed. If we think of karma as being something whose fruits are to be borne in some remote future existence, we think of it wrongly. For every moment we are shaping the history of the next moment, every month we are fashioning the form of the month which shall follow it. No day stands isolated and alone.

Karma is a continuous process and does not work by postponement. It is indeed incorrect to regard it as a kind of post-mortem judge! But it is often not possible to work out these consequences in terms of the particular circumstances of this birth. In such cases— and in such alone— do we experience the consequences in subsequent births.

… although whilst evil endures we must accept the fact of its existence as the price to be paid for the self-limiting of an emanation from the Infinite into the finite, we need not therefore complacently tolerate its activity .

Because we believe that karma operates to bring about sometimes approximate, sometimes adequate justice in the end, we must not therefore for example stand indolently aside from aggressive wrong-doing in passive trust to its operation. For karma needs to utilize instruments and its effects do not spring miraculously out of the air. Hence we must not shirk if we are called upon to co-operate with its intended educative effect, to work with its intuited operations and to set those causes into motion through which its reactions may be produced.

… we weaken ourself and injure truth if we believe that all events are unalterably fixed, that our external lives are unchangeably pre-ordained and that there is nothing we can do to improve the situations in which we find ourself.

It is true that we are compelled to move within the circumstances we have created in the past and the conditions we have inherited in the present, but it is also true that we are quite free to modify them.

Freedom exists at the heart of man, that is in his Overself. Fate exists on the surface-life of man, that is in his personality. And as man himself is a compound of both these beings, neither the absolute fatalist nor the absolute free-will position is wholly correct and his external life must also be a compound of freedom and fate.

No man however evolved he may be has entire control over his life but then he is not entirely enslaved to it either. No action is entirely free nor entirely fated; all are of this mixed double character.

… all those elements of heredity, education, experience, karma (both collective and personal), freewill and environment conspire together to fashion both the outer form and inner texture of the life which we have to live. We sew the tapestry of our own destiny but the thread we use is of a kind, a colour and quality forced upon us by our own past thoughts and acts. In short, our existence has a semi-independent, semi-predestined character.

The materialists paint a terrible picture of the universe as a vast prison where man’s fate, thoughts and acts are wholly determined by his physical environment. The ignorant among Orientals live in a locked-up world where man paces helplessly to and fro— a prisoner to divine predestination.

Karma refutes both these dreary contentions and assigns to man sufficient freedom to shape himself and his surroundings. By his own development the individual affects or enriches his environment, helps or hinders Nature, and the reverse is also true.

Karma does not say that we must stand waiting like ragged beggars before the door of fate. Our past freewill is the source of our present fate, as our present one will be the source of our future fate . Consequently the most powerful factor of the two is our own will. There is therefore no room either for foggy fatalism or over-confidence. No man can escape his own responsibility in the matter of shaping his internal outlook and external environment by laying the blame on something or someone else.

Every man should study his mistakes in action and ascertain their source in himself. Let him frankly admit his partial responsibility at least and set out to make what amends he can. This is painful but it is better than continuing to dwell in illusions from which severe checks or sustained disappointments may later bring him down to earth. For once a thought-series or deed is strong enough, its karmic resultant is as inevitable as a picture on an exposed photographic film.

When karmic force has attained a certain impetus its onward movement can no longer be stopped although it may be modified. This is why it is a philosophic maxim to nip undesirable growths in the bud and thus extinguish karmic energies before they become inexorably decisive.

A thought which has not attained a certain fullness of growth and strength, will not yield karmic consequences. The importance of nipping off wrong thoughts at the time of their arising is thus indicated. The way to fight a bad tendency in oneself or a bad movement in a nation is to check it during the early stages before it has gathered momentum. For it is easier to scotch it at the start when it is relatively weak than later when it is relatively strong.

Nevertheless the philosophic student must understand that if he should fiercely resist karma’s decrees at some times, it is also right that he should bow resignedly to them at other times. For if he has not learnt the lesson of letting go when it is wise to let go, then every mistaken effort of his fingers to hold on against those decrees will only bring him further and needless pain. He should not rebel against them blindly. How to comprehend which course is to be taken is something which he has to deduce for himself. No book can tell him this but his intuition checked by reason or his reason illumined by intuition, may do so.

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