The war against lust is a war of attrition by Chaitanya Charan Das Based on Bhagavad
Gita Chapter 05
A war of attrition refers to a war in which victory requires
wearing out the opponent. As spiritual seekers, we need to wage war against
lust, the formidable illusory force that traps us in material consciousness.
However, due to our many sexual indulgences in this and
previous lives, lust has entrenched itself deeply inside us. So, destroying all
its inner traces is nearly impossible. And even if we could, it can still barge
in at any moment from the many sexually suggestive or explicit stimuli in the
outer world. Therefore, for winning the inner war, we can’t bank on eradicating
lust.
Tolerating lust doesn’t mean that we tolerate lust’s making
us act sinfully; it means that we tolerate lust’s inner presence without acting
sinfully.
The Bhagavad-gita (05.23) recommends a more realistic
strategy – lifelong tolerance. Tolerating lust doesn’t mean that we tolerate
lust’s making us act sinfully; it means
that we tolerate lust’s inner presence without acting sinfully. This implies that
we endure lusty thoughts, that may come from outside or inside, without
succumbing to improper actions.
Tolerating lust thus requires attrition warfare – we need to
wear lust out without being worn out by it. The prospect of having to battle
lust lifelong may seem demanding and disheartening. Thankfully however, the
fight becomes easier when we optimize our nourishment and minimize lust’s
nourishment. We get nourished by remembering and serving Krishna because such
devotional service grants spiritual fulfillment, thereby providing strength to
resist sensual pleasures. Lust gets nourished whenever we succumb to sexual
indulgence; so, conversely, each time we resist temptation, we weaken lust. We
automatically resist temptation when we keep ourselves busy in bhakti-yoga.
Pertinently, this verse concludes that those thus engaged
are fixed in yoga (yuktah) and are happy (sukhi). This indicates that when we
fight the war of attrition with the proper strategy of positive yogic
engagement, we find fulfillment during the war itself, what to speak of on
attaining victory.
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