1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

  • Upload
    gdv82

  • View
    217

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    1/13

    HOW TO HAVE JOY OUT OF LIFE

    Written by

    J P Vaswani

    We had an earthquake, several years ago. Everyone was shaken. Pandemonium prevailed.

    Some ran out of their houses: some shrieked in terror: some fainted. Some grabbed their

    jewellery boxes. There was one dear Sister Shanti (Spiritual child of Sadhu Vaswani)

    who was serene and unperturbed.

    Were you not afraid? she was asked.

    No she answered. I felt happy to know that I have a God who can shake the world!

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    2/13

    There spoke a person who had the joy of life in full measure.

    There is an amusing little incident in the life of St. Augustine. A man stood in the marketplace where crowds had gathered from the countryside to purchase things which they

    would take to their villages and sell to village-folk for a profit. A man came forward and

    said at the top of his voice: - Come to me and I shall read your minds!

    The people gathered around him and, closing his eyes for a brief moment, he said with an

    air of a prophet: - All of you are thinking of buying cheap and selling them at a higher

    rate. All of you are thinking of making profits.

    The people said: - He is right! He is right!

    He was not right! said St. Augustine when the incident was related him. He was not right

    because there were many who did not have anything to buy or sell. But if he had said, all of

    you want to have the joy of life, all of you want to be happy (omnis vos beati esse vultis),

    he would have been right!

    True it is, that everyone wants to have the joy of life, everyone wants to be happy. Sincethe dawn of civilization, man has searched for happiness. The search has continued down

    the long corridor of time. Man has discovered that pleasure leads to pain, riches vanish,

    fame is fleeting, success is an illusion. How, then, is man to be happy? How is he to have

    the true joy of life?

    There is a story told us concerning three men. They were in quest of happiness? Where is

    happiness? they asked. What is the secret of happiness? How may man have the true joy

    of life?

    The first man felt that happiness abided in pleasure. There is joy only where there is

    pleasure. He pursued a life of pleasure. He was a wealthy man. He built for himself a

    wonderful palace and filled it with treasures of art. He lived a life of ease and luxury, ate

    rich foods and drank the choicest wines. To his court came wise men from different parts

    of the world, for he enjoyed their discourse. To his palace came great painters, musicians,

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    3/13

    artists. His library contained the best and most beautiful books in the literatures of the

    world. He met the worlds prettiest women, and the pleasure-seeking luxury of his home

    became a legend.

    As a young man, he found life supremely interesting: but as he grew older, he discoveredthat within every pleasure was a seed of pain, that life given to mere pursuit of pleasure

    was full of boredom. As he was about to pass away, he confessed that despite pleasures

    and luxuries, his life was empty to the core. It was a life not worth living. He had not

    found the true joy of life. He had not found happiness.

    Sometime ago, a young man met me. His father had died, four years earlier, leaving twenty

    lacs of rupees to the young, and immatured boy. He took to a life of luxury and softness.

    He gambled: he speculated: he ran after women: he took to wine. Wherever he went, he

    was followed by a group of friends who treated him as a prince. Within three years all hismoney was spent through. He incurred debts. He had to sell his beautiful mansion, his

    stereos, his T.V. sets, his cars, everything that he owned. He became penniless. No one

    cared to look at him. This young man, who was followed by adoring friends wherever he

    went, now felt all alone in this spacious, star- lit world. There is no one to whom I can go,

    he said to me with tears in his eyes. I am all alone! I have not a roof where under to hide

    my head. My health is utterly broken. I want to commit suicide! In many cases, a life of

    pleasure-seeking leads to suicide. Pleasure does not lead to happiness. Sooner or later man

    realizes that there is no real, abiding joy in a life of pleasure.

    Who was brought up in luxury more than Prince Siddhartha who, later, became the Buddha,

    and showed to millions the way to true, abiding happiness? He was a son of King

    Sudhodhana. The king built for his son three palaces in which the prince lived during

    summer, winter and the rainy seasons. He had everything that the world could give. But

    within his heart there awoke, again and again, the question: - Where is true, abiding

    happiness!

    Gautama was married to one of the most charming girls in the realm, - Princess

    Yashodhara. A son was born to them. Gautama named him, Rahula. The word means,fetter. Gautama said: This son is a fetter: I want to be free! I want to set out in the

    quest of happiness. Where is real, abiding happiness? Where is the true joy of life?

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    4/13

    In the dark of the night, when all were asleep, Gautama quietly slipped out of the palace.

    He became a wandering mendicant. In his heart was the question: What is the secret of

    happiness?

    Happiness, true happiness, is not in a life of pleasure. This is the discovery made by thefirst man in the story. The second realized that pleasure was transient, ephemeral,

    transitory. Pleasure is like a bubble that bursts. It is an illusion, and it is unsatisfying. He

    felt convinced within him that happiness could be found only by withdrawing into oneself,

    avoiding the world, its trials and tribulations, and retiring into absolute solitude. He

    became a hermit who had nothing to do with the world. No one could reach him: he sought

    the company of no one. He, too, missed happiness. For life without human companionship is

    barren as the sands of a desert. The hermits way is not the road to the life abundant, - a

    life of joy and happiness.

    The third man in the story avoided the two extremes. He did not embrace pleasure to the

    exclusion of everything else. He did not cut himself off from the world realizing that

    where there is no battle, there can be no victory. He devoted his life to duty, - the duty of

    his daily task, the duty he owed to his family, his community, to humanity and to brother

    birds and animals. For he realised that creation is one family. Birds and animals are mans

    younger brothers and sisters in the one family of creation.

    He did his duty by everyone. He gave his love to everyone. He loved God and he loved every

    child of God. He loved, also, trees and flowers, rivers and rocks, stars and streams. Heloved birds and animals, ants and insects. And he had the true joy of life. He made the

    great discovery that when your heart is full of love, your life is full of joy.

    He did not turn away from pleasures: he enjoyed as many simple pleasures as his life would

    allow. And every day, he spent some time in silence, in solitude. He went apart from men

    and, in silence, communed with the Wonder of the Ages, the Wonder that is radiant in the

    sun, the moon, the stars, in every atom and in the atman within. Every day, he spent

    sometime in silence and sought to understand the meaning of the mystery of the endless

    adventure of existence.

    Thus he lived, and when he was about to pass away, he said: I die a happy man! Those

    that were around him said: He was truly a happy man!

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    5/13

    The lesson is so obvious that it is superfluous to emphasise it. Yet men and women the

    world over have failed to take the lesson to heart. Some restlessness pursue unsatisfying

    pleasures: others, disillusioned by life, seek comfort in solitude. Very few tread the path

    between the two extremes, devoting their lives to a noble aim, a great ideal.

    Very few do this and so life seems to have lost its flavour, and an ever-increasing number

    of young men and women complain: Life is not worth living! We seem to be entering into

    an age of gloom. It is true, science is advancing. We have reached a zenith of technological

    brilliance. Man stands on a planet of limitless promise. He has probed the secrets of the

    atom, the depths of the sea. He has unravelled the mysteries of his own mind and body.

    Yet is he unaware of his real being and purpose. He is faced by a terrible loneliness, and

    his mind is filled with a thousand fears which he cannot name.

    The great historian, Arnold Toynbee, was a man gifted with many insights. He said that,with the rise of the industrial civilization, man has received many benefits, but for them

    he has had to pay a terrible price. That price is peace of mind. As we have grown in

    material and technical know-how, peace of mind has declined. Industrial civilization has

    come to stay: we cannot, at this stage, abandon it. But we must find out a way so that,

    living in this computer age; we may find new happiness and a new ability to get real

    enjoyment of life.

    How may we do that? How may we get the true joy of life? So let me pass on to you some

    practical suggestions which are not merely to be heard but to the put into practice.Suggestions which are not put into practice are like a bottle of medicine lying on the table.

    It is only when you drink it that it can have any effect on your system.

    A friend of mine was indifferent in health. To him I gave some powders to be taken thrice

    a day. He met me after few days and I enquired about his health. It is just the same, he

    answered. When I asked him, Did you take the powders? he said: They are in my

    pocket! Medicine that is in your pocket will have no effect on your health. Likewise,

    suggestions which are not put into practice will not yield results.

    PRACTICALE SUGGESTION No. 1 is a very simple one. If you wish to have joy of life,

    keep away from all joy-killers. One of them is hate. Let there be no feeling of hatred in

    your heart.

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    6/13

    A man met me. His face was black as coal, as he said to me: There is a fire burning within

    me. The flames will not be quenched, until I have shot the man who caused my fathers

    death. There you are. Hatred is a fire. So long as the fire burns within you, you cannot

    have joy of life. And as the Buddha said: Hatred ceaseth not by hatred, hatred ceaseth

    by love! When a thought of hatred comes to you, trample it under-foot and breathe out a

    thought of love and good-will.

    There was a man who led an evil life: his wife and children sought comfort at Beloved

    Dadas satsang. One day, the man came to Beloved Dada and shook his fist at him and said:

    If you only knew how much I hate you!

    Beloved Dada looked lovingly at the man and said to him: If you only knew how much I love

    you!

    What was there in Beloved Dadas words! The man came and fell at his feet and, with tears

    in his eyes, begged forgiveness. His life was changed. He turned away from his evil ways.

    He accompanied his wife and children, every evening, to the satsang.

    When Jesus was crucified, he prayed for his persecutors. There he stood on the Cross:

    nail after nail was struck into his hands, his feet, his throat. Blood flowed out of his

    gentle, pure body a body that had never caused harm to anyone. And on his lips was the

    prayer: Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!

    Rishi Dayanand had been poisoned by his cook, Jagannath. He had been bribed to kill his

    great master. On his death-bed, Rishi Dayanand called Jagannath and said to h im: Here is

    money for your ticket to Nepal. Escape, before my disciples find out what you have done,

    else they may tear your body into pieces.

    Such is the witness of all the great ones of humanity. They have met hatred with love and

    shown that the true joy of life is in loving. If you would be truly happy, love one another.Meet hatred with love and forgiveness.

    One of the joy-killer is hatred. Another is resentment. So long as we have feelings of

    resentment within us, we do not, - cannot, - get joy of life. Our daily life is full of little

    irritations which cause resentment: this is what keeps us away from the true joy of life.

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    7/13

    Yet another joy-killer is fear. It has been rightly said, there is no medicine for fear. The

    ancient Vedic Rishi prayed: May I be fearless of the friend, fearless of the foe; fearless

    of the known, fearless of the unknown; may our nights be without fear, our days without

    fear! When fear gripped the mind of Buddha, he said, I never stood still, nor sat nor laydown until, pacing to and fro, I had mastered that fear and terror. To have real joy of

    life, we must develop the spirit of courage. What is it that rescues man in all danger?

    Yuddhishtira was asked. And he answered: Courage! It is courage that comes to the

    rescue of man in all types of danger. So it is that Cervantes said: He who loses wealth

    loses much; he who loses a friend loses more, but he that who loses his courage loses all.

    Put an end to the joy-killers. Give them no place in your mind and heart. If you get no joy

    out of life, sure as the sun rises in the East, there is some joy-killer lurking somewhere in

    your sub consciousness. A man, with a cavity in one of his teeth, came to a dentist. As thedentist cleaned the cavity, the end of his drill broke off. He was sure every little piece of

    metal was removed from the patients mouth. About three years later, the man began to

    complain of a pain in his neck. The doctors could not find anything. About six years later,

    he complained about a pain in the shoulder, and again the doctors could not find anything.

    About twelve years later, the man complained of a pain in the arm and, this time, the X-

    rays revealed a small foreign substance, which proved to be a tiny fragment of the

    dentists drill, which had been causing him pain for twelve years. Similarly, a man may have

    some fear, hatred, jealousy, envy, resentment lurking in his consciousness. If he does not

    get joy out of life, he must find out and eliminate the joy-killer, - howsoever tiny it be, -

    that he carries about with himself in his consciousness.Practical Suggestion No. 2.

    One of the worst of all the joy-killers is the habit of thinking and talking negatively. I

    read of a businessman who carries a card in his pocket. On the card were written the

    words: I shall not speak any negative words today. I shall not think any negative thoughts

    today. The business man takes a new card every morning and writes the words afresh. He

    has been doing this daily for about a year and, as a result, he says, my conversation isalmost cleared of negative s. Before I started this practice, I spoke negatively about

    almost everything, - and I found that there was no fun in life. Today, life is so much full of

    joy that sometimes feel that I may burst.

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    8/13

    Life is full of joy to the man who thinks positively and speaks positively. Many of us are in

    the habit of thinking negative thoughts. We exaggerate misfortunes which may never

    come to us at all.

    There is the amusing story of a man and his wife who set out to visit a friend, whose housewas some miles distant from their own. On the way, they remembered that they would

    have to cross a bridge which was very old and was considered unsafe. The woman began to

    worry about it.

    What shall we do about that bridge? she asked her husband. I shall never dare to go

    over it, and there is no boat that can take us across the river.

    Oh, said the man, I never thought of the bridge. It is most unsafe to cross it. Supposeit should give way while we are on it! We should be drowned!

    Or suppose, said his wife, you step on the rotten plank and break your leg, who would

    take care of me and the children?

    I dont know said the man, what would become of us, if I broke a leg. Perhaps, we should

    all starve to death.

    And so it went on. Both of them kept on worrying, imaging all sort of misfortunes would

    happen to them, until they reached the bridge, and found that a new bridge had already

    been built, and they crossed over in safely.

    Practical suggestion No. 3.

    If you would have joy of life, fill your heart with love love of God, love of your fellow-men, love of brother birds and animals, love of nature, love of yourself. Where there is

    love there is joy. If there is one thing India and the nations need today to come out of the

    dark night in which we find ourselves, it is a resurgence of love.

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    9/13

    I read of a dying miner, trapped in a coal-mine. Before he died, he scribbled a few words

    to his wife. He wrote: I love you more than you will ever know. Take care of the children

    and raise them to love and serve the Lord. I am holding on to the hem of His garment, and

    there is no fear in my heart. I die a happy man! When rescue workers reached the victim,

    eight days after the accident, they found the note attached to his safety-lamp.

    The brief message, written in a dark, underground death-chamber, is an eloquent tribute

    to the miner. The miner knew how to get joy not only out of life but even out of death. So,

    even in those harrowing circumstances, he could write: I die a happy man! His heart was

    filled with the love of God, the love of his family, the love of his fellow-beings. Wherever

    there is love, there is joy, - happiness and fun.

    We often feel there is fun in teasing others. There were some labourers engaged in the

    work of construction of a building. They had taken off their shoes. The students wished tohave some fun. So they took away the shoes of the labourers and hid them behind bushes.

    They thought it would be fun to watch the labourers search their lost shoes. Beloved Dada

    learnt of this, and he said to the students: Come, I shall show you how to have better

    fun.

    He asked the students to keep the shoes in their original places and insert a rupee coin in

    every shoe. Then, Beloved Dada said to them, watch the faces of the workers when they

    wear the shoes, and you will have the greatest joy of life.

    The students followed the directions. When the labourers came and found rupee-coin in

    their torn, tattered shoes, they could not believe their eyes. They felt astonished beyond

    words. As the students watched the happy faces of the workers, they said to each other:

    Surely, there is greater fun in loving, in giving, than in teasing.

    Practical Suggestion No. 4.

    If you would have real joy of life, dont remain idle for a single moment. Keep yourself busy

    all time. Two centuries ago, William Cowper said, Absence of occupation is not rest; a mind

    quite vacant is a mind distressed!

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    10/13

    Keep yourself active. The best and noblest of all action is to bring comfort to the

    comfortless, joy into the lives of the sorrowing, struggling ones. The happiness we give to

    others comes back to us. Happiness moves in a circle. The happiness that moves out of us

    flows back into us.

    A doctor related to me an incident which I cannot easily forget. He was called to see a

    pale, sad, seventeen year old girl. A number of physicians had examined her and unable to

    arrive at a diagnosis, had said that she was a psychological patient. When my doctor-friend

    saw her, she lay on a sofa in a small room which was filled with silk tapestries. Her eyes

    were half-closed, her head was bowed and she was pale like a marble statue.

    The doctor easily guessed her sickness. She suffered in her gilded cage because she had

    never gone out to give happiness to those in need. The doctor asked her to get ready to go

    out with him and her father.

    With you? asked the girl. Where?

    In an undertone, the doctor said to her: That is my secret. I can tell you that it is for

    your good and that of your father.

    The girl got ready and the doctor took her and her father to a quarter where poor peoplelived. They took with themselves many things in cash and kind. At the first house which

    they visited, the doctor had to help her to keep her balance, as she walked. At the second,

    she went ahead of the doctor. At the third, she almost ran. When the children kissed her

    hand the poor women thanked her, both she and her father cried for joy. That outing

    seemed short to her. And everyday, she searched for those whom she could make happy.

    She attained health, joy and happiness, which were not found in her palatial home but in

    the broken cottages of the poor to whom she gave the service of her generous heart.

    Those of you who are frustrated with life, who feels unwanted, useless and bored, try thissame medicine, and there will be no end of real joy for you.

    Beloved Dada said to us:

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    11/13

    Did you see him on the road?

    Did you leave him with the load?

    On the road of life are many who carry loads on their weak shoulders: and the loads are

    not merely physical. As you bear the loads of others, you will find that your hearts are

    filled with a wondrous feeling of happiness and joy.

    Practical Suggestion No. 5.

    See the good in everyone. There is not a man on earth who does not have some good in him,

    which you and I will do well to emulate. See the good in others: be blind to their faults.The great Prophet of Iran, Bahaullah said, If a man has nine virtues and one fault, think

    of his nine virtues, forget his one fault; and if a man has nine faults and one virtue, think

    of his one virtue, forget his nine faults.

    There is a beautiful story told us concerning the boyhood days of Yudhishthira, the King

    of Indraprastha, who passed through many vicissitudes of life, faced many storms, but was

    always contented and happy. To him life was always full of joy. Duryodhana, the Kaurava

    prince, even at the height of his power and glory, did not feel happy. There always was

    something which he lacked, and his cup of joy was never full. During their boyhood days,both of them studied in the Ashrama of Dronacharya.

    One day, Dronacharya said to Yudhishthira: Go into the town and meet different types of

    people. When you return in the evening, tell me who was the worst of all the persons whom

    you met.

    Then, calling Duryodhana to himself, Dronacharya said, Duryodhana, my child, go into the

    town and meet as many people as you can, then come and tell me in the evening who was thebest and noblest of men that you met.

    Yudhishthira and Duryodhana entered the city. They met a number of people, young and

    old. They met men belonging to different walks of life. In the evening as Yudhishthira met

    his teacher, he said to him: Sir, I met many people. But everyone that I met there was

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    12/13

    something which I lacked. I have returned with the feeling that I am the worst of all

    persons. Everyone that I met was superior to me in one respect or the other. And

    Duryodhana said to the teacher: Sir, whomsoever I met had some fault or failing, some

    weakness or imperfection which I did not have. I have returned fully convinced that there

    is no one better or nobler than I am.

    Practical Suggestion No. 6.

    In everything that you do, pour the best that is in you. Whatever be the task that you are

    handling, pour into it the best of which you are capable. The smallest duty not done or

    badly done leaves a lack or a blemish on the whole worlds work. The great Arabian poet

    said, Are you an artisan, a mason, a house-builder? Are you helping in building a house? Do

    it in the consciousness that your Beloved will occupy the house some day. Are you a weaver

    working on the loom? Weave your cloth in the consciousness that your Beloved will wear itsome day! There you have the secret of true work, - work which will never be a drudgery

    but always a source of joy.

    Practical Suggestion No. 7.

    Be a master, not a slave. Be a master over circumstances, passions, desires and animal

    appetites. Therefore, learn self-control. Develop self-discipline. The man who is a slave to

    his desires and appetites soon finds that life becomes a burden. Do not allow yourself to

    be ruled or defeated by those things of which you should always be a master.

    Practical Suggestion No. 8.

    Let go, let go, let God! If you are frustrated, disappointed, hurt, unhappy, if you find that,in spite of putting forth your best efforts, you have failed, then let me say this to you:

    Let go, let go, let God! Let go of everything. Let God take charge of all your affairs! If

    only you can do this, you will find miracles happen in your life.

  • 7/29/2019 1838how to Have Joy Out of Life

    13/13

    Begin right now to repeat the words: - Let go, let go, let God! As you continue to repeat

    this mystic formula, either silently or audibly, it will open the way for the flow of divine

    power, and you will be blessed.

    A man fell seriously ill. The best of doctors could do nothing to help him recover. His wife

    wept, shed tears, prayed to Lord. There was no answer. The mans condition became, more

    and more, critical. Then some one suggested to the wife: Let go, let go, let God!

    What do you mean? she asked.

    Let go your husband, she was told. Do not cling to him. He does not belong to you. He

    belongs to God. Surrender him to the Lord and let Him do what He will.

    The wife followed the advice and soon her husbands recovery began. Today, he is hale and

    hearty.

    Do you find yourself in a difficult situation? Are you passing through a period of storm?

    Are you in financial trouble, almost on the verge of bankruptcy? Are you filled with

    apprehensions in regard to some situations? Then let go, let go, let God! You will not be

    disappointed. You will find frustrations and fears dissolving. You will find tension and

    unhappiness vanishing. You will see limitations washed away and new opportunities open.

    God will work through you to bring your highest good into visible expression in your life.

    Letting go permits divine ideas to flow, divine light to shine, divine power to work, divine

    order and rightness to bless your mind, body and affairs.

    For more inspirational stories, please visit

    http://vasukimahal.blogspot.com

    http://vasukimahal.blogspot.com/http://vasukimahal.blogspot.com/