The Three Types of Discipline of the Bhagavadgita - 3. Swami Krishnananda

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21/01/2020
(Spoken on September 18th, 1974.)
Post-3.
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1.

Though there are millions of cells in our body, all different from one another, and though each thought of the mind may be said to be different from other thoughts, and every limb can be separated from every other limb, our consciousness does not feel this isolated location of the parts of the personality.

We are a total, we are a whole, we are a completeness. This is an inviolable law of consciousness operating in every person right from childhood up to old age, even up to the event of death.
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2.

Now, the Bhagavadgita expects us to discipline ourselves in the sense that these faculties of the human individual should be harmonised so that they do not war among themselves internally.

#What is this war that is likely to take place within ourselves?

This war is what is called psychological aberration, a subject for study in abnormal psychology. Psychological problems are generally the consequence of a war that takes place internally between or among the faculties in the subjective individual.

#How can a war take place inside our own personality when we are one single complete compact individual?
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3.

To give an instance of this predicament or possibility, there can be a war between the understanding and the feeling, and then you will be an unhappy person at home though you may be a dignified public person outside. Your social status and the rational capacities may make you, or at least appear to make you, a noble individual of an elevated status in the eye of the public. You may be a big person or a big gun, as they say, in the eyes of the world, but privately you may be a miserable person at home.

This is a phenomenon which is not unknown to people. Most people are privately unhappy though publicly big, rich, well to do and powerful. There can be political power which one may wield, social status and public esteem; all can go simultaneously, hand-in-hand with internal agony and sorrow which one suffers privately in one’s own abode.

#Why should this happen?

It is because while your intellect, your reason, your public capacity works in a particular direction, your emotion works in a different direction altogether.
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4.

Love and hatred may be said to be emotional functions, though as an intelligent, cultured, educated person, you may be convinced that love and hatred are not worthwhile characters. You must be an impartial being.

This is the philosophical conclusion which your reason may come to, but your emotion will have a grudge of its own against certain aspects of life and an affection for certain other aspects.
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To be continued ....


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