Many people think that immoral behavior is ok as long as no
one catches them. For example, people from culturally conservative families may
think that drinking alcohol is ok as long as their family doesn’t find out. Or
with the increasing perception of drinking as a matter of personal preference,
not moral principle, they may feel that no one will catch or question them.
Utilitarian redefinition of morality from action to
perception doesn’t change the inexorable mechanisms of our inner world.
Such people consciously or subconsciously redefine morality
– not as “doing the right thing”, but as “maintaining the right image, whatever
one does.” But their utilitarian redefinition of morality from action to
perception doesn’t change the inexorable mechanisms of our inner world.
Whenever we do an action repeatedly, every iteration reinforces the mental
track for doing it, thereby impelling us to do it again and again. That’s how
what starts as a casual titillation (“I enjoy drinking”) can end up as an
irresistible addiction (I can’t live without drinking”). Thus people become
caught by their sins.
The Bhagavad-gita (16.12) indicates that those who give
themselves up to inner inimical drives such as lust and anger are bound by
hundreds of noose-like desires. These desires act like tough, tight cords that
bind their consciousness to their addiction. These bonds, though invisible,
function like prisoner’s shackles. They restrict the addicts’ mental freedom,
relentlessly dragging their thoughts to their addiction.
Understanding that our choices are self-perpetuating helps
us realize that our personal growth depends not on perception but on
purification – not on how we look in the world’s eyes, but on how we are in our
own heart. This realization inspires us to purify ourselves by practicing
bhakti-yoga. When we thus relish higher inner satisfaction, we can resist lower
pleasures, thereby breaking free from addiction. Complete purification begets
everlasting freedom.
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