The more we give up palliatives, the more we seek curatives by
Chaitanya Charan Das Based on Bhagavad Gita Chapter 18
Palliatives are medicines that alleviate pain without
treating its root cause, whereas curatives address the root cause. Patients who
take palliatives don’t feel the need for curatives, because they become numbed
to the pain.
We are all like patients in material existence, being
infected by the disease of misdirected desires. Though we are eternal spiritual
beings, we desire to enjoy temporary material things. The temporariness of
material things, frustrating as it is, is meant to push us towards seeking the
eternal.
Though bhakti opens the doors to perfection for everyone,
not everyone wants to walk through the opened door.
The pleasure we get from temporary things is like a
palliative – it deludes us into thinking that everything is ok while death
keeps creeping on us relentlessly. In contrast, the fulfillment we get from
eternal things, ultimately from our devotional relationship with Krishna, is
like the curative – it raises our consciousness above the material body, which
is where death can exercise its destructive power.
Those who renounce the world are like patients who stop all
palliatives. The Bhagavad-gita (18.49) states that the renounced gradually
attain life’s supreme perfection. Thankfully, the path to perfection is not
restricted only to such renunciates. The Gita (18.56) declares that all of us,
whatever our vocation, can attain the supreme destination by practicing
bhakti-yoga.
Though bhakti opens the doors to perfection for everyone,
not everyone wants to walk through the opened door. We too won’t get much
impetus for walking through it if we, while externally practicing bhakti,
internally seek relief in worldly things. Instead if we minimize seeking such
illusory shelters and maximize seeking shelter in Krishna, our journey towards
him becomes sweeter and swifter: sweeter because Krishna’s reciprocation with
us by manifesting in our heart grants sublime fulfillment, and swifter because
we feel driven doubly by the absence of the palliatives and the potency of the
curative.
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