Every trial is a teacher by Chaitanya Charan Das Based on
Bhagavad Gita Chapter 18
In life, we all go through various trials. A trial seems
especially trying is when it appears pointless, when it seems as if that trial
is causing us trouble without serving any purpose.
For example, when a soldier fighting on a battlefield
becomes wounded or succumbs, that wound is celebrated as heroic or that death
is celebrated as martyrdom. But if that soldier dies in an accident even before
reaching the battlefield, then that death seems so pointless and purposeless.
Similarly, when we feel that our problems serve no purpose,
we find them agonizing, mortifying, frustrating. Thankfully, Gita wisdom helps
us understand that no problem is pointless, for every trial is a teacher. TheBhagavad-gita (18.61) states that the Supreme Lord directs the wanderings of
all living beings. So whatever happens to us is ultimately sanctioned by him.
And he is our greatest well-wisher. Whatever happens by his sanction happens to
further the ultimate purpose of our existence: our spiritual evolution towards
eternal love.
The trials we face in life may seem meaningless at the
material level of reality, but the material level isn’t the only level of our
existence. Far from it, it is actually the secondary level of existence, for we
are primarily spiritual beings who are secondarily encased in temporary
material bodies that exist circumstantially at the material level of reality.
In our essential spiritual existence, we delight eternally
in love for the all-attractive supreme person, the source of unending pleasure,
Krishna. We can learn to love him by practicing bhakti-yoga, but we need
impetus to turn away from worldly pleasures and take up such practice. Trials
often forcefully remind us of the hollowness of the world’s promises and
inspire us to seek Krishna’s love, thereby spurring our spiritual evolution.
Thus trials act as teachers if we just learn to learn from them.
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