When you live in close proximity with the same people for a period of
time, you slowly get to know everything about them. Sometimes you see
them beautiful, sometimes angry, magnanimous, or petty – everyone’s
drama unfolds in front of you. You know how they think and feel.
Consequently, you may become hugely opinionated about each individual.
With Bhogi Pongal coming up, this is a
time of the year where you are supposed to burn all this old baggage.
From Dakshinayana, or the southern run, the sun is shifting to the
northern run – from sadhana pada, we are shifting to kaivalya pada.
That means it is time to harvest. If you want to harvest, first you
have to cut down the crop. Whatever opinions, ideas, and conclusions you
may have about other people and about yourself – now is the time to
drop them.
Everyone has the possibility to flower into a beautiful
being. The more opinions, ideas, conclusions, and prejudices you have,
the bigger the distance between you and that possibility. Allow yourself
and everyone else a fresh start.
There is a beautiful incident in the
Ramayana. Previously, many unfortunate events had happened in Rama’s
life. He got cheated out of his kingdom, had to retreat into the jungle,
and lived a hard life. Then, his wife got kidnapped by Ravana. Out of
love and concern for her, he walked all the way down south, gathered an
army, crossed over to Sri Lanka, waged a war, defeated Ravana in battle,
and slayed him.
As you know, Ravana had ten heads. Rama
had to cut off all the ten to finally kill Ravana. With the battle won,
Rama said, “I want to go to the Himalayas and do penance, because I have
committed a great sin. I have killed someone who was a great devotee of
Shiva, a phenomenal scholar, a great king, a generous man.” The others
were shocked. Lakshmana, his brother, said, “What are you talking about?
He kidnapped your wife.” But Rama said, “Out of his ten heads,
there was one that had great wisdom, piety, and devotion. I regret
cutting off that head.”
Everyone has ten or more heads. One day,
your head is full of greed, another day full of jealously, hatred, love,
lust, beauty, or ugliness. Or you go through everything in one day. If
you see someone in a moment of jealousy, you conclude he is a jealous
person. If you see someone in a moment of greed, you conclude he is a
greedy person. But actually, at different times, different heads are
working in everyone. Everyone has at least one head of love, beauty,
generosity, or compassion. The mistake people make is that, instead of
identifying a quality, they condemn the individual.
What Rama was trying to say that no matter
what horrible things Ravana had done, there was one aspect of him that
was a tremendous possibility. Just follow this fundamental principle –
if you see something wrong in someone, condemn that, not the person. If
you bring this wisdom into your life, you will be free of baggage. When
you do this to others, the same will happen to you.
Someone once said, “Love is a thing that
happens between a man and woman who do not know each other.” That is
true only if you live a frivolous, judgmental life – a life without
wisdom. Otherwise, the more you get to know someone, the more love and
compassion should arise. When you know all their struggles, you know
they are as human as you are.
Rama did penance for having killed a man who had kidnapped his wife and
had done many other terrible things. Still, Rama identified this one
head that was beautiful about him. This is a man of great wisdom, which
is why he is worshipped. He failed in many aspects of his life, but his
failures never altered his wisdom and quality. No matter what life did
to him, he stayed above that.
Remember Rama’s example
throughout the year. If you are sensible enough to identify the quality
rather than condemn the person, before Guru Purnima comes and we shift
to Dakshinayana, or the southern run of the sun, you should have reaped a
rich harvest. A rose plant has more thorns than roses, but we still
call it a rose plant because we recognize its beauty. A mango tree has
more leaves than mangoes, but we still call it a mango tree because we
recognize the sweetness of its fruits.
Every human being has at least one drop of
sweetness in them. Why don’t we see this? Please do this with everyone
around you – try to recognize that one drop of sweetness in even those
people who you otherwise consider to be horrible. Only if you recognize
it in others, it will reflect in you. On the other hand, if you see
terrible things in other people, that is what will reflect in you. This
does not mean you should become blind to everything. You see the leaves
in the tree; you see the thorns in the rose bush – but you acknowledge
the flower and the fruit. That is all you need to do. Let’s make this
happen.
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