Renunciation
Bhakthi and
the attitude of surrender that is its final fruits will give
you great courage to meet any emergency; such courage is what
is called Renunciation. The story of Mohajith is a good example
of this highest type of detachment.
Mohajith,
the Prince, went to a Sage in the forest and sought guidance
in the spiritual path. The sage asked him whether he had conquered
attachment as his name indicated. The Prince said that not
only he, but every one in his kingdom had! So the Sage started
to test the truth of this claim.
The sage took the Prince’s robes, soaked them in blood
and hastened to the Palace Gate with the gruesome story of
the murder of the Prince by some ruffians in the jungle. The
maid whom he met refused to hurry with the news to the Royal
apartments because she said, “He was born, he died;
what is the special urgency of this news that I should interrupt
my regular routine and run to the King and Queen?”
When at last he got an audience and was able to communicate
the sad news to the father, he sat unruffled, whispering to
himself, “The bird flew off the tree on which it had
alighted to take rest.” The Raani too was unmoved. She
told the sage that this Earth is a caravanserai, where men
come and stay for the night and when dawn breaks, one by one,
they tramp their different ways. Kith and kin are the words
we use for the attachment to the travellers cultivated in
the caravanserai during the short term of acquaintance.
The wife of the “dead” Prince was also unaffected;
she said, “Husband and wife are like two pieces of wood
drifting down a flooded river; they float near each other
for some time and when some current comes between, they are
parted: each must move on to the sea at its own rate and in
its own time. There is no need to grieve over the parting
of the two; it is in the very nature of Nature that it should
be so.”
The sage was overjoyed to see this steady
and sincere Vairaagya (dispassion)
in the rulers and the ruled. He came back to the forest and
told the Prince that while he was away, a hostile army had
invaded his Kingdom and slain the entire royal family and
captured his Kingdom and enslaved his subjects. He took the
news calmly and said, “All this is bubble, impermanent,
flimsy. Let it go the way of the bubble. Guide me to reach
the Infinite, the Imperishable.”
Such courage comes out of the Grace of the Lord; it needs
generations of learning and struggle. Meanwhile, you must
start with the first step, the cleansing of the mind and the
cultivation of virtue. Even if you do not start with that
step, at least do not laugh at those who do, and discourage
them. Do at least this much!
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