Man in Search of Happiness

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Man in Search of Happiness*

Swami Paratparananda

*Article published by the “Vedanta for East and West” magazine - issue 159

Desire for happiness is innate in all beings. Man is no exception to the rule. If we
analyse well our actions we will find that moved by this desire we acquire certain objects
and avoid certain others, become intimate with some persons and eschew the company
of certain others; in short, we avoid things disagreeable and seek pleasant ones with the idea
of attaining happiness. This search for happiness has been the motive power behind all
man's efforts, as much in the field temporal as in the spiritual. All his discoveries in the
realm of science are with this end in view. If, today, man is anxious to get supremacy over the
natural forces and subjugate them to serve his needs, it is for this purpose alone. If, in the
past or even in the present, some few give up the path trodden by the vast majority of
mankind, and avoid mundane pursuits, and retire to a forest or withdraw into themselves,
that also is because of their search for eternal happiness.
But the idea of happiness differs according to the taste and the inner development of
each individual. The majority of mankind is satisfied with or finds happiness in the
gratification of the senses. This world, with its gross objects, is all that they are interested in.
In the 'Katha Upanishad', Yama describes very aptly the mentality of such people: "Living
in the midst of transient objects, these ignorant people, considering themselves wise and of
firm resolution, go round and round, just as the blind led by the blind. To the erring and
the intoxicated with wealth the hereafter is imperceptible; thinking that this world is all
that exists, they again and again come under my sway."1 Such people surround themselves
with objects that are pleasant but impermanent; yet they believe these things to be
everlasting and changeless. And the very fact that they have been able to possess them,
engenders in their mind a high opinion of themselves as capable and wise persons. Thus
drunk with the wine of wealth and power they wander about in this world with no other
higher end in view. To such people, who judge everything by their sense perceptions,
the hereafter is a myth, since it cannot be grasped by the senses. So, believing that this is
the only world that they are sure of, they immerse themselves in pleasures, acquire what
they can and, as a result, they are dragged again and again here.
Sri Ramakrishna divides men into four types, viz., the bound, the seekers after
liberation, the liberated and the ever-free. He illustrates this division by an example:
"Suppose a net has been cast into a lake to catch fish. Some fish are so clever that they
are never caught in the net. They are like the ever-free. But most of the fish are entangled
in the net. Some of them try to free themselves from it, and they are like those who seek
liberation. But not all the fish that struggle succeed. A few do jump out of the net,
making a big splash in the water. Then the fisherman shout, 'Look! There goes a big
one!' But most of the fish caught in the net cannot escape, nor do they make any effort to
get out. On the contrary, they burrow into the mud with the net in their mouths and lie
there quietly, thinking, 'We need not fear any more; we are quite safe here.' But the poor
things do not know that the fisherman will drag them out with the net. These are like the
men bound to the world."2
Again, speaking about happiness, Sri Ramakrishna said that there were three
types—vishayananda, pleasure one gets in the satisfaction of the senses; bhajanananda,
happiness one derives out of the spiritual practices, and brahmananda, the bliss that one
attains on realization of Brahman or God. The last one cannot be measured or compared
to any other happiness; it cannot even be imagined. The Upanishads have tried to give
an inkling of its vastness in various ways. For example, in the 'Taittirya' we come across
a passage where the happiness of the different types of beings, beginning from man to
Brahma, the Creator, is described and compared. Then it goes on to state that even the
bliss of the Creator is nothing compared to that which one gets on realizing Brahman. In
another Upanishad we read that the whole creation is sustained by an infinitesimal
fraction of this bliss, matrena upajivanti. Now the question arises: "If this were so, why
does man, an intelligent being, a being endowed with the faculty of thinking and
discriminating, run after the petty and worthless things of the world neglecting such a
mine of bliss which is his birthright?" There are two answers to this question: (1) that
many do not know about the existence of such a kind of bliss and as such do not seek it; and
(2) that many though aware of its existence find it difficult to overcome the pull of the
outward going senses.
The 'Katha Upanishad' beautifully describes this: "The Self-existing Lord
harmed the senses creating them with the tendency to go outward; therefore they
perceive only the objects outside and not the Atman which dwells inside. But one of
steady mind and firm determination perceives the dwelling Atman by turning away the
eyes with the object of attaining Immortality."3 Here the eyes represent all the other
senses also. It is only when the senses are turned away from their objects that the mind
can fix itself on the Self. What happens otherwise is stated in the next verse of the same
Upanishad. "Men of little intelligence impelled by their desires fall in the snares of
wide-spread death."4 That is to say, they repeatedly become subject to birth, disease, old
age and death. So a discriminating person does not see any happiness in sense contacts. He
perceives the momentariness of them all and the thirst they create in him for more and
more enjoyment. Also, he finds that there is no real happiness in them. The taste of a
delicious dish is no more felt when that morsel leaves the tongue, thus demonstrating the
transitoriness of the sense pleasures. Therefore, persons of discrimination do not pray for
anything here in this world of impermanent things.
But what great pains and afflictions one has got to undergo to aquire even these
perishable and changing things! There is a Sanskrit verse which depicts how wretched
becomes the life of a person given to infatuation of wealth: "It is with great pains that one
earns money, more painful still is the labour and anxiety in preserving what is earned,
and still more miserable one feels when one has to spend what one has accumulated. Fie
on such wealth which is the source of misery." It may be asked: "How can we live if we
do not earn money ?" What is depreciated here is not money itself but an inordinate
attachment to it, which makes man its slave. The lure of wealth is such that one gets lost in
its pursuit and the more one possesses, the more one hankers; and to acquire it
one stoops to any means with the result that one loses all human feelings in its mad pursuit.
Now, do we really enjoy the pleasures? Bhartrihari in his 'Vairagyashatakam'
says: "We did not enjoy the pleasures, on the contrary, we ourselves were eaten up in the
process."5 That is to say, in the endless anxiety in seeking these pleasures our energy
itself gets sapped and we are left only with the hankerings for them without the strength
to enjoy. Thus mocked, as it were, we suffer more than we could enjoy in seeking the
pleasures of the senses. Sri Krishna says in the 'Bhagavad Gita': "Whatsoever enjoyment
is produced out of contact with the outside world is only a source of misery. It has a
beginning and an end, therefore a wise man, oh son of Kunti, does not revel in it."6 But
such is the veiling power of the Great Illusion, that people forget their difficulties and
sufferings and run after the very same pleasures which they have proved a hundred times
to be insubstantial, pain-giving and deceptive. Sri Ramakrishna describes their condition
with great pathos: "The bound creatures, entangled in worldliness, will not come to their
senses at all. They suffer so much misery and agony, they face so many dangers, and yet
they will not wake up. The camel loves to eat thorny bushes. The more it eats the thorns
the more the blood gushes from its mouth. Still it must eat thorny plants and will never
give them up. The man of worldly nature suffers so much sorrow and affliction, but he
forgets it all in a few days and begins his old life over again."7
We have seen how to a person of discrimination the worldly pleasures are but an
empty show, uncertainty and impermanence being all their worth. The same is also true
of name and fame, scholarship and ability to expound the Scriptures. These cannot give
man everlasting happiness, though he may find some satisfaction in them for some time.
This is made clear in the dialogue between Narada and Sanatkumara which occurs in the
'Chandogya Upanishad'. Once Narada approached Sanatkumara and requested the sage to
teach him. Sanatkumara asked him to narrate what he already knew. Narada then gave a
long list of subjects which he had studied, beginning from the Rig Veda to astronomy and
fine arts, and added: "Revered Sir, I am only a knower of words and rituals but not a
knower of Atman. I have heard from preceptors like you that a knower of Atman goes
beyond this ocean of sorrow, but as I have not attained the knowledge of Atman I am in
a state of grief. Be merciful and take me across this ocean."8
If scholarship alone were sufficient to attain everlasting happiness, then Narada
with his vast knowledge should have been most happy, but he was not. He felt he lacked
something which was the essence of felicity. Where then lies happiness, true and
changeless? In the knowledge of the Atman, in the realization of God or Brahman. It is
not merely theoretical knowledge or book knowledge that Narada refers to, when he
says: Shrutam hyeva me bhagavaddrishebhyah, tarati shokamatmavit iti, "I have indeed
heard from preceptors like you that the knower of Atman goes beyond all sorrow," but to
the direct experience of Brahman or Atman. The Rishis of olden times, who sought that
Infinite Bliss, attained it after strenuous efforts; and theirs was a different type of life, of
strict brahmacharya, and control of the senses. However, they did not say that they were
the only ones capable of reaching that state. One the contrary, they called upon one and all,
nay even those who resided in the celestial regions to try and obtain their birthright,
Immortality. For example, in the 'Shvetashvatara Upanishad ' the Rishi declares: "Hear
ye all, the sons of Immortality, and even ye that inhabit the celestial regions, I have
known the Eternal Purusha, who is beyond darkness and shines like the brilliant sun.
Only knowing Him one goes beyond death. There is no other way to cross this ocean of
transmigration."9
The Upanishads are full of passages that indicate the depth and vastness of the
bliss of Brahman: a bliss which is unalloyed, which can be experienced even here, in this
world, provided the person who seeks it, lives his or her life according to the standard set
by the Rishis, who had attained Brahman.
Sri Shankara in his 'Vivekachudamani' warns us: "He who makes the pampering
of the body the main object of his life and yet aspires to realize the Atman,
is like that ignorant fool who mistakenly taking hold of the crocodile, thinking it to be a
log of wood, tries to cross the river."10 That is to say, one who wants to realize God or
Atman, has to abstain from sensual indulgence. Knowledge of Brahman and the
pleasures of the senses, being poles apart, cannot be experienced at one and the same
time. The 'Bhagavata' says: "What acquisition or enjoyment can please a man while death
is near? Certainly they are not pleasing to him. It is like offering grass to an animal that is
being dragged away for slaughter."11 In another place it recommends: "Having after
many births obtained this extremely rare human body, which, though frail, yet serves as a
vehicle for man's supreme welfare, a person of discrimination should earnestly strive for
Liberation, before the body, which is always subject to death, happens to fall off; for
sense enjoyment can be experienced in any body."12 Man alone, endowed with the
faculty of discrimination, is equipped to overcome the lure of the senses. In the ordinary
human being this faculty is dormant, so he is attracted by the tangible gains he can make,
and the palpable and pleasant objects he can grasp and enjoy. As the 'Katha Upanishad'
says: "The good and the pleasant approach man. The man of intelligence having analysed
them, separates the two and selects the good in preference to the pleasant, while the man
of little intelligence opts for the delightful with a view to the growth and protection (of the
body etc.)."13 The distinction between these two types of objects is discernible only to a
wise man who has the patience to consider their importance or unimportance as also the
fruits they will yield; while the ordinary person misled by the immediate gains loses sight
of the goal of life.
But such indeed must be the immensity of the Bliss that one obtains on reaching
God, or realizing one's own Self, that very few, who experience it, come back to tell
the world about it. Sri Ramakrishna illustrates this point by means of a parable: "Once
four friends, in the course of a walk saw a place enclosed by a high wall. They all
became eager to know what was inside. Three of them, one after the other, climbed the wall,
saw the place, burst into loud laughter and dropped to the other side. These three could
not give any information about what was inside. Only the fourth man came back and told
people about it. He is like those who.retain their bodies, even after attaining Brahmajnana, in
order to teach others."14 Such is the charm of that state that when a person reaches it he
forgets everything else and the world with all its kaleidoscopic pictures appears to him
as the mere ashes of the crematorium. Any doubts that may have existed in his mind
regarding the eternity of the Reality and the transitoriness of this world disappear for ever.
But we have to work hard to retain it, otherwise, even if per chance we attain
it, we will not be able to bear its impact.
An incident that occurred in the life of Sri Ramakrishna will explain this fact.
Mathuranath Biswas, a son-in-law of Rani Rasmani, once requested the Master to make
him experience bhava samadhi. Sri Ramakrishna tried to dissuade him but he would not
listen. On the contrary, he insisted that the Master bless him with that state. At last when
all arguments failed to convince Mathur, Sri Ramakrishna said: "Well, I shall tell Mother
and She will do whatever She pleases." In a few days Mathur had his wish fulfilled, but
he found it impossible to think of anything except God; he could not turn his mind
towards his worldly duties. This frightened Mathur so much that he sent for Sri
Ramakrishna and when the Master arrived narrated his experience, the difficult situation
in which he found himself, and pleaded with the Master to take back that state. Thus we
see that unless a person equips himself properly, by purifying his mind, controlling his
senses, etc., he will not be able to contain this limitless bliss, which comes with the
realization of the Divine.
We mentioned earlier that immortal bliss is our birthright and that the whole of
the creation lives by a fraction of this bliss of Brahman; also, that one of the reasons why
all men do not strive to attain it was because of their ignorance about its existence.
Similar things sometimes happen in this world: for example, due to freaks of destiny
children of rich parents may get lost and may never come to know of their parentage or
heredity; or, one may bury his treasure when in great danger of losing one's life and run
away from the place in great hurry and when the danger passes return to the place to
recover it, but being unable to locate the exact spot, walk over the treasure once and
again. The 'Chandogya Upanishad' gives a similar analogy: "Just as people who do not
know the region, walk over and over again the treasure hidden underground and never
find it, even so, all these creatures here, though they go daily into the world of Brahman,
do not discover It, for they are carried away by the untrue."15 Their desires for impermanent
objects mislead them. The world of Brahman spoken of here is that of our real nature,
into which we enter when in deep sleep; when neither the distractions of the waking state
nor those of the dream world present themselves. Nevertheless, there remains the ignorance
due to the inherent desires for things mundane. True happiness can be had only when these
desires along with their roots are removed from the mind.
Man has deluded himself by his attachment to the body considering it to be his
true nature. However, if he analyses clearly he will find that he is neither the body nor the
senses, nor even the mind, but something else. Let is see how this conclusion can be
arrived at. If man were only the body then in sleep, when he is not conscious of it, he
should cease to exist. But this does not happen; it is the same man who went to sleep that
comes out of it. If he were to be the mind only, then in deep sleep he should cease to be,
for even the mind does not function then, but that too does not happen. So we are forced to
conclude that man is not only a psycho-physical being but something more. The
consciousness that this psycho-physical being reflects, which gives it its identity, is not
its own but of the Indwelling Spirit, which is called Atman in Sanskrit. The Hindu
Scriptures say that It is of the nature of Sat, Chit and Ananda, i.e., Existence, Knowledge,
Bliss Absolute. When this Self is realized in Its purest form it is identical with Brahman,
from whom the whole creation has emanated, in whom it exists and unto whom it will
return. The Upanishads are emphatic and unambiguous in their proclamation: "That
which is Infinite is only bliss; there is no happiness in the limited; in the Infinite alone is
Bliss, so one should inquire about the Infinite alone."16 In this word "limited" used by
the Upanishad is included everything that is not Brahman, even the highest heavens.
These heavens are places of enjoyments and subject to destruction as is everything
else that is created; besides, the pleasures one enjoys in these regions engender fresh
desires. And desire means misery, and never has misery been seen to generate bliss in this
world.
So the 'Kathopanishad' declares: "The eternal bliss belongs to those wise ones
who see that One Lord,— who pervades everything, is independent, and who manifests
Himself in diverse forms,—residing in their hearts, and to none else. To those wise ones
alone belong the eternal peace who perceive that Lord—who is the Eternal amongst the
ephemeral, who is the Consciousness of all that is conscious, who is the One Dispenser of
the fruits of actions of the many—as residing within their own hearts, and to none else."17
When can we realize this Atman, or in what state do we become completely
blissful? This Atman is realized in that state when one does not see a second being, does
not hear a second, does not know a second thing, that is to say, when everything in this
world which exist as name and form, gets merged into that One. In other words when one
realizes his or her identity with Brahman; when one disidentifies oneself from the body,
the senses and the mind, or, as Swami Vivekananda used to say, when we dehypnotize
ourselves.
How can the Atman be realized? The Scriptures say: "It should be heard,
cogitated upon, and then meditated upon."18 It should be heard from a competent person,
the acharya, because he only can expound the meaning of the Scriptural texts
authentically; he can only show us the right 'path. The Shruti itself states: "When the Self
is spoken of by an inferior person It cannot be adequately known, for It is thought of
variously. But when taught by one who has become identified with It, there remains
no doubt with regard to It."19 After hearing from a competent person one must try to
ruminate over what one has heard and then meditate upon the Atman as taught by the
teacher.
What does one achieve when one realizes the Atman, the Eternal Being? Once
this realization is ours, the scriptures say that we shall see that Eternal Being, our own
Atman, manifest everywhere and all delusion and all misery will vanish. The 'Bhagavad
Gita says: "Attaining which one does not consider there is anything higher to be attained
and established in which one is not moved even by the greatest of sorrows."20
However, it must be made clear that this bliss is not attained only by those who
tread the path of Knowledge but can also be experienced by those who follow the path of
bhakti. They too experience that unlimited bliss in the proximity of their Chosen Ideal. A
devotee of the Divine Mother, like Ramprasad, ever immersed in bliss, sang and danced in
Her name and remained ever free. In the fullness of his heart he sang: "A person who has
for his Mother, the Blissful One does he live in sorrow! The Divine Mother keeps him happy
in this world and the next." Saints all over India who worshipped God with forms attained
such a blissful state. It is not the exclusive property of any sect or class of society.
Everyone, wherever he be placed can strive for it. In this respect the assurance given by Sri
Krishna is very heartening: "If even the most wicked person worships Me with one-
pointed devotion, he should be regarded as pious, because he has rightly resolved. Soon he
does become righteous and attains eternal peace; know it for certain, oh son of Kunti,
that My devotee is never destroyed."21
References
1.'Katha Upanishad' I.ii.5&6
2.'Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna', Translated by Swami Nikhilananda, published by Ramakrishna Vivekananda Centre
of New York, Edition 1942, pp. 86-87
3.'Katha Upanishad' II.i.l
4.Ibid II.1.2
5'Vairagyashatakam' 7
6.'Bhagavad Gita', V.22
7.'Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna', p.165
8.'Chandogya Upanishad', Vll.i. 1-3
9.'Shevetashvatara Upanishad' II.5 & III.8
10.'Vivekachudamani' 86
11.Bhagavata'XI.v.20
12.Ibid.Xl.iv. 29
13.'Katha Up'. I.ii.2
14.'Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna', p.268
15.'Ch. Up'. VIII.iii.2
16.Ibid.VII,xxivi.l
17.'Katha Up'. II.ii.l2&13
18.'Br. Up'. II.iv.5.
19.'Katha Up'. I.ii.8
20.'Bhagavad Gita'. VI.22
21.Ibid IX.30,31

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