When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
'Having' means wanting to possess, to make things mine. In contrast is
'being'alive and in direct relatedness with society, nature and
the whole world. It is time we chose whether we want to be, or to have
In that ever delightful
cartoon strip Blondie, husband Dagwood wonders how humanity 'survived
LBP'. Asked what that meant, he says: "Life Before Pizza". The
past week, I have been strongly tempted to divide my own journalistic
life as BLP (Before Life
Positive) and after. The 'LP' therein does not so much refer to
the magazine as to the very concept of looking at life in a positive way.
It also
refers to the magazine inasmuch as the train of thought began with Life
Positive's August
cover story on the Dalai
Lama. In a mere four page interview
he has packed so much of the perennial wisdom about life
and the secret of happy living that a whole fortnight of reading it
again and again convinced me that life indeed has to be looked at only
in LP or non-LP terms.
The perpetual
radiator of karuna (compassion) and happiness,
the Dalai Lama stresses the need to shed negative feelings and attitudes.
He talks of India as a civilizational guru and how Indians badly need
to 'Indianize' themselves, how Godliness is possible without a God and
how the right-wrong, moral-amoral divide is artificial; and how things
in the universe do not subject themselves to the human categorization
of good and bad, right and wrong. Nature is; a plant, tree or a mountain
just is.
Which brings
me to a point of argument with the Dalai Lama. To drive out negative
attitudes and sentiments, we need to define what is negative and as
in some photographs of humans, the negative is way better than the positive.
The power of positive
thinking assumes thought in the first place, it being positive in
the next and having power because of that. I am inclined to think that
the power of thinking is invariably both positive and negative. In one
of my future columns I intend writing on the power of negative thinking
for humanity's own good.
The human
dilemma is not the old Hamletian one of "to be or not to be"
or of positive versus negative feelings and attitudes. When I decided
to leave journalism two years agopre-empting the profession from
leaving mea kind elder gifted me an Erich
Fromm classic To Have or To Be. He wrote under the title
that I could answer that question. "You HAVE it in you to BE."
The height of presumptuousness!
The book
itself tries to pose the question as a modern dilemma, though our ancientsthe
Upanishads, the Buddha, Christ, Guru Nanak, Ramakrishnahave
all answered it. The trouble is that they did not HAVE cars, cell phones,
TV sets, computers and the like. It was easier to Be then, than now.
Or so it appears.
On the
face of it, it seems absurd to talk of 'having' versus 'being' as alternatives.
To have is a normal function of our life. To live we need to be, and
to enjoy life we need to have things. We live in a world where possession
marks out levels of living: not only must we have, we need to have more
and more. The very basis of being is having. If you have nothing, you
are nothing.
Yet, the masters
of yore and the scriptures disagree. Ishopanishad
begins and develops the idea that the whole universe is the abode of the
Lord and whatever one enjoys is what He has renounced. "So, don't
run after earthly possessions." The Buddha preached the same idea.
So did Jesus: "For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but
whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall save it. For what is man
advantaged if he gained the whole world and lose himself, or cast away."
Marx too equated luxury with poverty as a cardinal sin, setting the goal
for humanity at 'being much', rather than 'having much'.
Far from
being an absurdity, the distinction between having and being is the
most crucial problem of life. Fromm finds in this distinction the civilizational
difference between the West and the East. Two poems, one by the English
poet Alfred Tennyson and the other by the famed Japanese haiku
poet, Basho, are quoted by Fromm to explain the difference. The poems
relate to the poets' reaction to a flower each sees while on a walk.
Here's
what Tennyson says:
Flower
in a crannied wall,
I pluck you out of
The crannies
I hold you here, root
And all, in my hand
Little flowerbut if
I could understand
What you are, root and
All, and all in all
I should know what
God and man is.
Basho's
haiku is:
When
I look carefully
I see the nazuna blooming
By the hedge.
A simple instance
of looking at a flower and it reveals a civilizational chasm! Tennyson
reacts to the flower by wanting to have it. He "plucks (it) root
and all" to speculate about the flower's nature from which he hopes
to gain an insight into the nature of God and man. In the process, the
flower itself is killed, solely as a result of his interest. Here we see
the quintessence of Western science and modernismseeking the truth
by extinguishing life, the guinea-pig approach to everything.
All Basho
does is to "look carefully" to "see" it. His interest
in the flower is not casual. He wants to 'see' it, to be one with it
and to let it live. Tennyson needed to have it to understand people
and nature; Basho knows and understands.
The message
of the Gita,
the entire story of the Ramayana, the avatar of Krishna, the love of
Radha, Meera and Andal for Him, the life of Guru Nanak and Ramakrishna,
everything in our way of life (once, that is) explained and emphasized
the difference between having and being. No longer so. Today the civilizational
gap between the West and the East has been closed; the difference between
having and being in our lives is between life focused on living beings
and society based on things. The having-mode of existence has become
universal and our understanding of life and nature is derived in terms
of Tennyson's flower and not Basho's nazuna.
This is
reflected in a subtle change of idiom. The focus on having is markedly
visible in the growing use of nouns, an emphasis on things and materials,
and not on verbs (activity). In ordinary conversations one could note
this shift in emphasis when an activity expressible as a verbI
am, I love, I desire, I hateis expressed in terms of 'having'.
We no longer say my head aches; we say: "I have a headache".
We do not say: "I cannot sleep"; we say: "I have insomnia."
We say: "I have had a happy marriage" rather than "I
am happily married". Activities and processes are now expressed
as possessions. Even love is expressed as "I have great love for
you"it's my possession rather than a feeling towards you.
So, that's
the difference. Having means wanting to own, to possess, to make things
mine. In contrast is the being mode: being alive and being in authentic
relatedness with society, nature and the whole world. The dilemma posed
by Hamlet"to be or not to be" is not an existential
poser offering alternatives between life and death. If that were the
aim, Hamlet would have said "to be or to not be". The dilemma
is between being and not being. Great minds of the East, the Buddha,
Sankara, Ramakrishna to Mahatma Gandhi and the Dalai Lama, never faced
this dilemma.
One great
western mind, which grasped the spirit of this difference, was the German
poet-philosopher Goethe. The Faust is a dramatic description of
the conflict between 'being' (represented by Dr Faust) and 'having' (the
evil Mephistopheles). Coincidentally, a poem by Goethe on the same flower-situation.
It runs:
I saw
in the shade
A little flower stand
Bright life the stars
like beautiful eyes
I wanted to pluck it
But it said sweetly
"Is it to wilt
That I must be broken?"
I took it out
With all its roots
Carried it to the garden
At the pretty house
And planted it again
In a quiet place
Now it ever spreads
And blossoms forth.