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  Opinion   Oped  27 Jan 2018  Mystic Mantra: Salvation comes from tolerance

Mystic Mantra: Salvation comes from tolerance

Sadguru Rameshji is a modern age spiritual guru and founder of Poorna Ananda, a centre for spiritual evolution and joyful living. Visit www.poornaananda.org
Published : Jan 27, 2018, 4:43 am IST
Updated : Jan 27, 2018, 4:43 am IST

Favorable and unfavorable situations are the result of our previous birth karmas and hence should be borne with equanimity.

Feeling extremely happy in favorable situations and feeling extremely sad or reacting negatively in unfavorable situations becomes the cause for new karma and binds us further into the clutches of karma.
 Feeling extremely happy in favorable situations and feeling extremely sad or reacting negatively in unfavorable situations becomes the cause for new karma and binds us further into the clutches of karma.

Feeling of Equanimity (Neutality, Equilibrium) in situations of loss and profit, favorable and unfavorable, victory and defeat, birth and death leads to salvation.

Feeling extremely happy in favorable situations and feeling extremely sad or reacting negatively in unfavorable situations becomes the cause for new karma and binds us further into the clutches of karma.

Favorable and unfavorable situations are the result of our previous birth karmas and hence should be borne with equanimity. When they are borne with equanimity then those karmas gets extinguished from our lives but when we react negatively or fascinatingly or with excessive attachment and fondness, then new karmas spring up. These new karmas again become the cause for our rebirth.

As per Hindu mythology, there is a story of a Brahmin and Romal rishi (a seer). The Brahmin was a pious person and devoted to God. One day due to some action of Brahmin, the rishi got angry and he cursed the Brahmin that he will be born as a crow in his next birth (Crow is considered to be the lowest of all species).  Brahmin did not get perturbed nor reacted negatively to this curse and continued to be respectful to the seer. Realising his mistake, rishi blessed the Brahmin saying that, even as a crow you will serve lord Rama in the next birth and would become one of his favorite devotee  and get liberated too. This Brahmin, who took birth as crow was very respectfully known as “Kakabhushundi” during Lord Rama’s era.

There are couple of lessons which could be learned from this story:

To not react negatively in  adverse and unfavorable conditions such as when getting scolded, being criticised, being blamed for no fault, adverse remarks, being pointed out for mistakes, when cheated, betrayed etc. Instead, learn to accept them as part and parcel of destiny (the result of previous birth karmas).

Continue to perform good and pious deeds, even in most adverse conditions, with a feeling that those painful karmas from the destiny are getting exhausted

Know that one day all those people who gave you pain and suffering will realise their mistakes and would rectify the same on their own. An effort to make others realise their mistake generally does not work well and rather complicates the situation.

Eventually you will get blessed by the lord by staying neutral and feeling of equanimity because equanimity is the virtue of God, it is His nature and by adopting that virtue we attract His grace.

Tags: hindu mythology, neutality