Battling over our choices refers to struggling to make the
right choice while staying in the face of temptation.
Choosing our battles refers to deciding which temptation to
face and which to flee.
Suppose we have trouble resisting the temptation to access
inappropriate sites on the net. Then battling over our choices would refer to
having unfiltered Internet access and straining to restrict our net surfing.
Choosing our battles would refer to deciding that such a battle is unnecessary
and restricting our net access using an Internet filter. Such restriction is a
contemporary application of
Avoiding avoidable danger is not cowardice – it is common
sense.
the time-honored cultural principle of restricting free
mixing between the genders to minimize the possibility of wrongdoing,
accidental or intentional. The Bhagavad-gita (02.58) recommends such a
safety-first approach by urging us to withdraw our senses from the sense
objects, as a tortoise withdraws its limbs within its strong shell.
Of course, we can’t always choose our battles; some
temptations may come upon us unavoidably, forcing us to fight against them. But
in our war against temptation, more often than not, we get disheartened because
we thrust ourselves into battles we don’t need to fight and then get battered.
Avoiding avoidable danger is not cowardice – it is common
sense. While walking, we don’t walk in the middle of a road and struggle to
evade vehicles; we walk on the footpath and do something productive, maybe
converse with a friend.
From the point of spiritual productivity, we don’t grow in
our devotion just by saying no to temptation; we grow by saying yes to Krishna.
And we can’t say yes to him wholeheartedly if half of our heart is constantly
considering the option of saying yes to temptation. Best to not leave that
option open so that we can more easily choose the best option: Krishna.
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