Guest guest Posted January 18, 2006 Report Share Posted January 18, 2006 The cycle of “kaama” ------------------- “kaama” breeds “kaama”, Desire begets more Desire. In much the same way as we know bacteria to be the most productive farmer of more bacteria, Vedanta tells us that “kaama” too ploughs, plants, harvests, feeds upon and multiplies its own self in an endless cycle of mutation and proliferation. The Bhagavath-gita is one of the earliest Vedantic texts to explain the cyclical, self-perpetuating nature of “kaama”. In 2 succinct verses the Gita dealt with both the etiology and pathology of human “kaama”. “dhyAyathO vishyAnpumsah: sanghasthEshUpajAyathE I sanghAthsamjAyathE kAmah:kAmAth-krOdhO’bhijAyathEII (B.Gita II.62) “krOdhAdh-bhavati sammOhah: sammOhAth-smriti-vibhramah: smriti-bhramshAdh buddhi nAshO buddhinAshAth pranashyathi II (B.Gita II.63) (meaning): “To a man obsessed with objects of sensory Pleasure, there arises attachment to them; from such attachment arises desire, and from desire arises anger. From anger arises delusion; from delusion, the loss of sensibility; from loss of sensibility, the impairment of moral discrimination; and with moral discrimination impaired, total degradation of personality becomes a certainty”. ************** In theory, “kaama” is known to be single distinct or discrete human passion. It is commonly associated with the erotic urge in Man. But actually “kaama” is a pandemic emotional state not limited to sexuality alone. It is more a chronic syndrome of human emotions revealed in a variety of human behavior. It is really a cycle of several emotional states each overlapping the other and kept perpetually in motion through self-generated momentum. "Kaama" is a sort of ferris-wheel of desires, geared by complex human urges going forwards and backwards, many times over and over again, taking the human mind along with it on a roller-coaster journey through life. “Kaama” is not an emotional flash-point in the life of a man. It is more like a slow and chronic wasting disease caused by a deadly, invisible parasite. *************** The Vedantic theory behind the psychology of “kaama” is a very simple and elegant one. But it is also a mordant and accurate commentary on the universal human condition. Let us quickly summarize the theory: (a) The root of “kaama”, says the Gita, lies not in a person’s mind. It lies in the myriad objects of delight and pleasure that abound in the world. They generate or arouse a variety of tantalizing sensations and titillating impressions by invading a person's senses. The invasion then takes complete possession of the Mind. Once the Mind is overpowered “kaama” gradually paralyzes the Will. Once the human Will goes into coma, “kAma” manifests itself as deep, raging and uncontrollable appetite for promiscuous self-gratification. This selfish appetite must be whetted no matter what. It is a compulsion. And the only way to do so is indulgence, at any cost. This is precisely the way that man’s state of attachment (or enchantment, beguilement, inebriation, enamor etc.) is ushered in. In plain and simple language, “kaama” is abject human bondage to the Pleasure-Principle of life. It is precisely such indulgence in “kaama” that modern Consumerism, the Faith that today rules the entire world, lustily cheers and promotes. “Have a good time”, “Feel good”, “Just do it!”, “Life is for enjoyment! Have fun!”, “Chill out! It’s Saturday night out!” etc. are just a few of the oft-broadcasted messages constantly dinned into our collective sub-conscious by the “high-priests of Consumerism” viz.: the advertising and mass-communication media. Through alluring market-place promotions and seductive slogans, refined and perfected as creative art-form over several decades of the last century, these “high-priests of marketing” have achieved truly fantastic success throughout the world in their mission to apotheosize commonplace commercial jingles, glorifying the “Feel good factor” or the “’Have-fun’ habit” in life, into sacred mantras of abiding faith for peoples of the world. ***************** (b) “krOdha”: Not all sensual appetites can be whetted at all times. Many of our desires cannot be satisfied so easily. Un-fulfilled “kaama” inevitably leads to “krOdha” i.e. frustrated Desire or longing that is accompanied by feelings of anger, resentment, impatience, deprivation and disenfranchisement in life. If there is so much anger and hatred around the world today, it is chiefly because people are unable to satisfy many of their deepest desires in life, big and small. While the Consumerist faith does indeed inspire everyone with the dazzling promise of “Fun-in-life” Ideal, it cannot, however, provide everyone with the necessary means to attain it. And it is precisely that yawning gap between inspiration and realization, between desire and fulfillment that is the source of all anger, resentment, frustration and self-loathing amongst people in the world. ***************** © “mOha”: When desires (“kaama”) in life are not sated, disappointment builds up. When the steam of disappointment swells, the engine of Anger (“krOdha”) cranks up. Pent-up anger in a person invariably leads to “mOha”, an unhinged mental state where he/she gets increasingly out-of-touch with reality. When one loses touch with reality, one begins to suffer rapid loss of capacity for right-thinking and right-resolution. (In modern clinical psychology this state of mind is usually associated with the condition called “severe manic depression” which, in most cases, is traced to mental disorders caused by deep-seated, pent-up anger and disappointment with oneself for not being able to fulfill desires). Perverse attitudes then quickly begin to seep into one’s personality, deeply warping and corroding one’s sense of life-values. ******************* (d) “lObha”: A mind so deeply afflicted with “mOha”, Vedanta tells us, is soon overtaken by yet another feeling that comes rolling along quickly on the syndromic cycle of “kaama”. This one is called “lObha” –- greed, unbridled lust, avarice. Lust within Man’s heart represents the final triumph of human Desire over human Will. It is the critical state of mind a person reaches when he or she becomes utterly insensitive to moral imperatives in life. The eternal ethical question in Life, whether the “End justifies the Means”, becomes utterly irrelevant to him/her. The End as represented in the object/objects of personal desire, by whatever means realized, becomes supreme goal in life. It is the moment when the person begins to believe with all the conviction at his command that Pleasure -- “kaama” – indeed is absolute ideal in itself, justifying and overriding any Means. The great Tamil saint of India “Tirumangai AzhwAr” who led a life of excess before he changed ways and became a God-realized soul (“AzhwAn”), sang of the many ways in which he wasted away his youthful days while in search of the pleasures yielded in “kaama”. In the very first poem of his great collection of mystical Tamil outpourings called “peria-tirumOzhi”, the AzhwAr spoke in heart-rending verses of the “lObha”, or lust, that had gripped him in the days of youthful folly. “venRiyE vENdi veezhporut_kirangi* vERkaNaar kalaviyE karudhi* nNinRavaa nNillaa neNYchinaiyudaiyEn* en_seygEn?” (“peria-tirumOzhi” 1.1.4) (meaning): “I stooped to the lowest ways, went everywhere and did the grossest things, Oh! just to slake my gross appetites!” The Bhagavath-Gita too described such a state of mind described by Tirumangai-AzhwAr, seized as his was by “lObha”, in one apothegmatic “shlOka”: “lobhaH pravR^ittiraarambhaH karmaNaamashamaH spR^ihaa .. rajasyetaani jaayante vivR^iddhe bharatarshhabha .. B.Gita 14\.12.. “O chief of the Bhâratas, when there is a surge in the symptoms of great attachment, what follows then is frenzied activity, intense endeavor, an uncontrollable lust and hankering.” ************* (e) Whenever “lObha”, lust, is satisfied, feelings of extreme exultation follow. When Desire’s triumph over Will is completed, it cannot help indulging in a bit of gloating, a bit of self-congratulation and vainglory. A person then usually turns arrogant, haughty and conceited. This new transformation of personality is what is called “madha”. When “kaama” preens its feathers one may easily recognize its colors to be the signs of “madha”. Once again, in the soul-stirring words of Tirumangai-AzhwAr are eloquently described the state of a mind that is gripped by “madha”: “kaLvanEnaanEn padiRuseidhiruppEn* kaNdavaa dhirithanNdhEnElum*” 1.1.5 (meaning):”I became a dissolute tyrant! I always had my way, come what may! I’d brook no obstacle standing in the way! I went wherever Pleasure led me, and none dared stop me!” ************** (f) “mAtsarya”: Those who are vainglorious i.e. they that are in the grip of “madha”, often slip into envy, “mAtsarya”. The vainglorious are always jealous of those they perceive to be their superiors. They simply cannot rest content with their lot but constantly covet the power and prestige of those more exalted than themselves. This is another form of extreme “kaama”, and what in the modern day is often recognized as “overweening ambition” in a person. The ancient Greeks had another special name for it –- they called it “hubris”. It is, in fact, a very advanced form of the rabid human affliction called “keeping-up-with-the-Joneses” syndrome. This sort of ambition is an extremely pathological form of “kaama” --- the sort that does not let a person rest content with satisfying one’s own desires but urges him/her on to adopt the desires of others too as one’s very own, and makes them slaves of those too! Tirumangai-AzhwAr beautifully captured the mood of one who has simply lost his mind to “mAtsarya”: “kaRRilEn kalaigaL aimbulan karudhum* karutthuLE thirutthinEn manatthai* peRRilEn adhanaal pEdhaiyEn nNanmai* perunNilatthaar uyirkellaam*” 1.1.8 (meaning): “Oh! What a moral illiterate I was, and abject slave to my wild senses that led me everywhere chasing one desire after another after another!” ************** (g) “bhaya”: By the time a man has traversed the cycle of the full spectrum of feelings of “kaama” --- beginning with attachment, “kaama”, “krOdha”, “mOha”, “lObha”, “madha” and “mAtsarya” --- it is certain his whole personality has been severely ravaged. The mind is ripe and ready then to be possessed now by Fear, “bhaya”. “Bhaya” manifests itself in personal behavior characterized by deep insecurities, restiveness, a nagging but nameless sense of loss etc. When a man is afflicted with such “bhaya” he fears that his deepest desires may not get fulfilled before the curtains drop on his lifetime. His greatest fear --- dark fear hidden deep within the cavern of the human sub-conscious –-- is he may simply pass away from this world before having experienced all of its alluring delights and seductive pleasures. To him hell itself is nothing but untimely death befalling him before the burning thirst for Pleasure has been fully slaked. It is precisely this sort of “kaama” that is known to often afflict some persons in the twilight of their lives when, knowing that their time on earth is nearing its end, they suddenly turn berserk and go all out to enjoy to the very hilt, in a sort of mad binge, all the sensual pleasures they had probably denied themselves earlier, and all with a vengeance or gusto quite unbecoming of their age. It is in that fateful moment that "bhaya" and "kaama" come together in a tight coital embrace, and when the cycle of “kaama” too gets a fresh lease of momentum, and signalling, as it were, the birth of another desire inside the human heart.... ************* And so, indeed, revolves the great inexorable cycle of life called “kaama”, where man's desires endlessly mutate and multiply, all in an endless stream of cosmic continuum... And wherein Man is but mere hapless, enmeshed cog. It is from falling into such a terrible “cycle of “kaama”” that the “aaypAdi” girls of the TiruppAvai too sought protection from God Almighty when they sang their immortal call of prayer, “maRRai nam kaamangaL maaRRu”. (to be continued) Regards, dAsan, Sudarshan Send instant messages to your online friends http://in.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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