Acting proactively means acting according to our principles
and purposes in both actions we initiate as well as the ways we respond to
events. Acting reactively means to let our actions be determined by our mind’s
fancies of the world’s fancies.
To understand the difference, consider the metaphor of
boaters facing a storm. If boaters have a destination they are determined to
reach, then even if the storm constrains them to change course, they will as
soon as the storm abates get back on course. If, on the other hand, they have
no clear destination or no determination to reach there, they will drift
whichever way the winds push them.
Being fully proactive requires rising beyond the influence
of the modes that impel us towards reactive behavior, acting as if programmed
by our conditionings.
Gita wisdom compares the material world to an ocean, wherein
storms of desires can drive us off-course at any moment. Reactive people are
driven by nature’s mode of passion, wherein, as the Bhagavad-gita (14.12)
indicates, insatiable desires keep them flitting from one thing to the next.
People in ignorance are even more reactive, with their reactions characterized
by confusion, inaction and overall illusion (14.13).
People in goodness are proactive – the Gita (14.11)
indicates that their senses are illumined with knowledge, implying that they
know how to thoughtfully process the inputs coming from their senses and
intelligently respond to them. Of course, being fully proactive requires rising
beyond the influence of the modes that impel us towards reactive behavior,
acting as if programmed by our conditionings. So only those who are
transcendental, who can see the actions, perceptions and emotions triggered in
the world and in the mind as the result of the modes (14.19), can be fully
proactive.
Such a vision centers not on the rejection of the whole
world and its stimuli as illusion but on learning to love the transcendental
Lord and letting the desire to serve him shape all our choices.
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