Swamy Vivekananda's Karma Yoga
Karma-Yoga
CHAPTER
I
KARMA IN ITS EFFECT ON CHARACTER
The
word Karma is derived from the Sanskrit Kri, to do; all action is Karma.
Technically, this word also means the effects of actions. In connection with
metaphysics, it sometimes means the effects, of which our past actions were the
causes. But in Karma-Yoga we have simply to do with the word Karma as meaning
work. The goal of mankind is knowledge. That is the one ideal placed before us
by Eastern philosophy. Pleasure is not the goal of man, but knowledge. Pleasure
and happiness come to an end. It is a mistake to suppose that pleasure is the
goal. The cause of all the miseries we have in the world is that men foolishly
think pleasure to be the ideal to strive for. After a time man finds that it is
not happiness, but knowledge, towards which he is going, and that both pleasure
and pain are great teachers, and that he learns as much from evil as from good.
As pleasure and pain pass before his soul they have upon it different pictures,
and the result of these combined impressions is what is called man's "character".
If you take the character of any man, it really is but the aggregate of
tendencies, the sum total of the bent of his mind; you will find that misery
and happiness are equal factors in the formation of that character. Good and
evil have an equal share in moulding character, and in some instances misery is
a greater teacher than happiness. In studying the great characters the world
has produced, I dare say, in the vast majority of cases, it would be found that
it was misery that taught more than happiness, it was poverty that taught more
than wealth, it was blows that brought out their inner fire more than praise.
Now
this knowledge, again, is inherent in man. No knowledge comes from outside; it
is all inside. What we say a man "knows", should, in strict
psychological language, be what he "discovers" or
"unveils"; what a man "learns" is really what he
"discovers", by taking the cover off his own soul, which is a mine of
infinite knowledge.
We
say Newton discovered gravitation. Was it sitting anywhere in a corner waiting
for him? It was in his own mind; the time came and he found it out. All
knowledge that the world has ever received comes from the mind; the infinite
library of the universe is in your own mind. The external world is simply the
suggestion, the occasion, which sets you to study your own mind, but the object
of your study is always your own mind. The falling of an apple gave the
suggestion to Newton, and he studied his own mind. He rearranged all the
previous links of thought in his mind and discovered a new link among them,
which we call the law of gravitation. It was not in the apple nor in anything
in the centre of the earth.
All
knowledge, therefore, secular or spiritual, is in the human mind. In many cases
it is not discovered, but remains covered, and when the covering is being
slowly taken off, we say, "We are learning," and the advance of
knowledge is made by the advance of this process of uncovering. The man from
whom this veil is being lifted is the more knowing man, the man upon whom it
lies thick is ignorant, and the man from whom it has entirely gone is
all-knowing, omniscient. There have been omniscient men, and, I believe, there
will be yet; and that there will be myriads of them in the cycles to come. Like
fire in a piece of flint, knowledge exists in the mind; suggestion is the
friction which brings it out. So with all our feelings and action — our tears
and our smiles, our joys and our griefs, our weeping and our laughter, our
curses and our blessings, our praises and our blames — every one of these
we may find, if we calmly study our own selves, to have been brought out from
within ourselves by so many blows. The result is what we are. All these blows
taken together are called Karma — work, action. Every mental and physical blow
that is given to the soul, by which, as it were, fire is struck from it, and by
which its own power and knowledge are discovered, is Karma, this word being
used in its widest sense. Thus we are all doing Karma all the time. I am
talking to you: that is Karma. You are listening: that is Karma. We breathe:
that is Karma. We walk: Karma. Everything we do, physical or mental, is Karma,
and it leaves its marks on us.
There
are certain works which are, as it were, the aggregate, the sum total, of a
large number of smaller works. If we stand near the seashore and hear the waves
dashing against the shingle, we think it is such a great noise, and yet we know
that one wave is really composed of millions and millions of minute waves. Each
one of these is making a noise, and yet we do not catch it; it is only when
they become the big aggregate that we hear. Similarly, every pulsation of the
heart is work. Certain kinds of work we feel and they become tangible to us;
they are, at the same time, the aggregate of a number of small works. If you
really want to judge of the character of a man, look not at his great
performances. Every fool may become a hero at one time or another. Watch a man
do his most common actions; those are indeed the things which will tell you the
real character of a great man. Great occasions rouse even the lowest of human
beings to some kind of greatness, but he alone is the really great man whose
character is great always, the same wherever he be.
Karma
in its effect on character is the most tremendous power that man has to deal
with. Man is, as it were, a centre, and is attracting all the powers of the
universe towards himself, and in this centre is fusing them all and again
sending them off in a big current. Such a centre is the real man
— the almighty, the omniscient — and he draws the whole universe towards him.
Good and bad, misery and happiness, all are running towards him and clinging
round him; and out of them he fashions the mighty stream of tendency called
character and throws it outwards. As he has the power of drawing in anything,
so has he the power of throwing it out.
Man
works with various motives. There cannot be work without motive. Some people
want to get fame, and they work for fame. Others want money, and they work for
money. Others want to have power, and they work for power. Others want to
get to heaven, and they work for the same. Others want to leave a name when
they die, as they do in China, where no man gets a title until he is dead; and
that is a better way, after all, than with us. When a man does something very
good there, they give a title of nobility to his father, who is dead, or to his
grandfather. Some people work for that. Some of the followers of certain
Mohammedan sects work all their lives to have a big tomb built for them when
they die. I know sects among whom, as soon as a child is born, a tomb is
prepared for it; that is among them the most important work a man has to do,
and the bigger and the finer the tomb, the better off the man is supposed to
be. Others work as a penance; do all sorts of wicked things, then erect a
temple, or give something to the priests to buy them off and obtain from them a
passport to heaven. They think that this kind of beneficence will clear them
and they will go scot-free in spite of their sinfulness. Such are some of the
various motives for work.
Work
for work's sake. There are some who are really the salt of the earth in every
country and who work for work's sake, who do not care for name, or fame, or
even to go to heaven. They work just because good will come of it. There are
others who do good to the poor and help mankind from still higher motives,
because they believe in doing good and love good. The motive for name and fame
seldom brings immediate results, as a rule; they come to us when we are old and
have almost done with life. If a man works without any selfish motive in view,
does he not gain anything? Yes, he gains the highest. Unselfishness is more
paying, only people have not the patience to practice it. It is more paying
from the point of view of health also. Love, truth, and unselfishness are not
merely moral figures of speech, but they form our highest ideal, because in
them lies such a manifestation of power. In the first place, a man who
can work for five days, or even for five minutes, without any selfish
motive whatever, without thinking of future, of heaven, of punishment, or
anything of the kind, has in him the capacity to become a powerful moral giant.
It is hard to do it, but in the heart of our hearts we know its value, and the
good it brings. It is the greatest manifestation of power — this tremendous
restraint; self-restraint is a manifestation of greater power than all outgoing
action. A carriage with four horses may rush down a hill unrestrained, or the
coachman may curb the horses. Which is the greater manifestation of power, to
let them go or to hold them? A cannonball flying through the air goes a long
distance and falls. Another is cut short in its flight by striking against a
wall, and the impact generates intense heat. All outgoing energy following a
selfish motive is frittered away; it will not cause power to return to you; but
if restrained, it will result in development of power. This self-control will
tend to produce a mighty will, a character which makes a Christ or a Buddha.
Foolish men do not know this secret; they nevertheless want to rule mankind.
Even a fool may rule the whole world if he works and waits. Let him wait a few
years, restrain that foolish idea of governing; and when that idea is wholly
gone, he will be a power in the world. The majority of us cannot see beyond a
few years, just as some animals cannot see beyond a few steps. Just a little
narrow circle — that is our world. We have not the patience to look beyond, and
thus become immoral and wicked. This is our weakness, our powerlessness.
Even
the lowest forms of work are not to be despised. Let the man, who knows no
better, work for selfish ends, for name and fame; but everyone should always
try to get towards higher and higher motives and to understand them. "To
work we have the right, but not to the fruits thereof:" Leave the fruits
alone. Why care for results? If you wish to help a man, never think what that
man's attitude should be towards you. If you want to do a great or a good
work, do not trouble to think what the result will be.
There
arises a difficult question in this ideal of work. Intense activity is
necessary; we must always work. We cannot live a minute without work. What then
becomes of rest? Here is one side of the life-struggle — work, in which we are
whirled rapidly round. And here is the other — that of calm, retiring
renunciation: everything is peaceful around, there is very little of noise and
show, only nature with her animals and flowers and mountains. Neither of them
is a perfect picture. A man used to solitude, if brought in contact with the surging
whirlpool of the world, will be crushed by it; just as the fish that lives in
the deep sea water, as soon as it is brought to the surface, breaks into
pieces, deprived of the weight of water on it that had kept it together. Can a
man who has been used to the turmoil and the rush of life live at ease if he
comes to a quiet place? He suffers and perchance may lose his mind. The ideal
man is he who, in the midst of the greatest silence and solitude, finds the
intensest activity, and in the midst of the intensest activity finds the
silence and solitude of the desert. He has learnt the secret of restraint, he
has controlled himself. He goes through the streets of a big city with all its
traffic, and his mind is as calm as if he were in a cave, where not a sound
could reach him; and he is intensely working all the time. That is the ideal of
Karma-Yoga, and if you have attained to that you have really learnt the secret
of work.
But
we have to begin from the beginning, to take up the works as they come to us
and slowly make ourselves more unselfish every day. We must do the work and
find out the motive power that prompts us; and, almost without exception, in
the first years, we shall find that our motives are always selfish; but
gradually this selfishness will melt by persistence, till at last will
come the time when we shall be able to do really unselfish work. We may all
hope that some day or other, as we struggle through the paths of life, there
will come a time when we shall become perfectly unselfish; and the moment we
attain to that, all our powers will be concentrated, and the knowledge which is
ours will be manifest.
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