Fighting Stress-Vedanta style!
The SMS promising a ‘stress-full
to successful life’ proved to be irresistible. I dutifully forwarded it to many
friends whom I considered spiritually-inclined. Last time, I went to Jaya Row’s
lecture at Kamani & took some friends along, there were complaints that
what began on a loftier note ended up with a whimper. While her readings of Bhagwad Gita made a lot of sense to
lesser mortals in the mundane world, the whole exercise turned into a marketing
exercise to sell seminars, CDs, books & DVDs toward the end. Therefore, no
wonder a reply from a younger colleague stated that she, ‘instinctive and spontaneous
as she was’, could no longer adapt to Jaya Row’s ‘corporate culture’.
Nonetheless, I made it to the venue with fewer and newer friends, assuring
myself during Ms. Mudgal rendition of beautiful bhajans that the event at least gave us an excuse to meet &
discuss what she taught.
Jaya Row began with
evolutionary terminology stating how homeostatic mammals progressed to human’s
mental statis (it went over my head!) to elucidate how Vedantic Samam or equanimity was the ultimate key
to success, happiness & growth. The state of equilibrium or calmness isn’t
inactivity but one leading to an intense, vibrant action. Mental agitation, on
the contrary, is caused by our inherent negativity toward one and all, resultant
desires to rid ourselves from them but making ourselves all the more attached
& finally stressed in the process. Row is fond of marital references to
spouse, mother in law as targets of our ire & manages to strike a chord
& draw an instinctive applause from the audience.
Stress was, however, defined
as an ‘internal phenomenon’ implying thereby that we end up with it when we
become reactive and fault-finding to people or situations around us and
therefore its cure also lay inside us. Switching to a vocabulary suited to the
young (the auditorium is usually full of bald, graying heads whose life-game may
already be in the mandatory Overs) and pleading with them to move from being
enumerators to denominators, she explained how our uncontrollable mind
overwhelms the intellect we are blessed with to cause agony and stress.
Therefore, what we need is an overpowering intellect to keep us calm &
serene when life becomes topsy-turvy & turbulent and take it head-on.
Sportingly, she gave the example of Tennis legend, Billie Jean King while my mind
meandered to Michel Jackson’s number by the same name. It did prove her point
about minding our mind!
Poor intellect leads to a
spate of desires. If fulfilled, they lead to a state of delusion, blind pursuit
of wealth & power, leading to envy & arrogance. My thoughts turn to
Durga, the young, valiant civil servant at the receiving end of politicians in
UP. Row, however, spreads the net wider claiming politicians will always be ‘corrupt’
& Indians, ‘indisciplined’. She pointed out how affluent parents, for want
of time, shower gifts and gadgets rather than love upon their children these
days. When the desires are unfulfilled, it prevents enjoyment of what we have,
destroys relationships out of envy and even compromises values as we choose
unethical ways to get what we desire so strongly. Ch. II, verses 62-63 of Bhagwad Gita begin to ring in my mind
where man’s degradation to destruction is traced from attachment, desire,
anger, infatuation, loss of memory & reason to ultimate ruin. Jaya Row’s
views are essentially rooted in Bhagwad
Gita, which she crafts well to meet the needs of varied audience.
What is the cure, then? We
need to rekindle the ‘higher self’ within us. Desire things by all means; but don’t
crave for them. A flow-chart on the screen explains how ‘Desire management’
leads to relief, reducing them to comfort and using intellect to define them
saves us from these ‘weapons of mass distraction & destruction’. The
ultimate aim is to integrate mind, body & intellect to realize eternal
bliss in the form Atman.
Jaya Row gesticulates angrily
to the young lady in waiting why she isn’t on the mike to announce what happens next while she tries
to convey that Row has yet to finish with the last slide dealing with ‘Take Home
Points’. Stress confronts us at strange times!