Be Free
LEARN TO FEEL YOURSELF in other bodies,
to know that we are all one. Throw all
other nonsense to the winds. Spit out your
actions, good or bad, and never think of them
again. What is done is done. Throw off
superstition. Have no weakness even in the
face of death. Do not repent, do not brood
over past deeds, and do not remember your
good deeds; be azad (free). The weak, the
fearful, the ignorant will never reach Atman.
You cannot undo, the effect must come, face
it, but be careful never to do the same thing
again. Give up the burden of all deeds to the
Lord; give all, both good and bad. Do not
keep the good and give only the bad. God helps those who do not help themselves.
When you have acquired the feeling of
non-attachment, there will then be neither
good nor evil for you. It is only selfishness
that causes the difference between good and
evil. It is a very hard thing to understand,
but you will come to learn in time that
nothing in the universe has power over you
until you allow it to exercise such a power.
Nothing has power over the Self of man,
until the Self becomes a fool and loses
independence. So, by non-attachment you
overcome and deny the power of anything
to act upon you. It is very easy to say that
nothing has the right to act upon you until
you allow it to do so; but what is the true
sign of the man who…is neither happy nor
unhappy when acted upon by the external
world? The sign is that good or ill fortune
causes no change in his mind: in all conditions
he continues to remain the same.
All these things which we call causes of
misery and evil, we shall laugh at when we
arrive at that wonderful state of equality, that
sameness. This is what is called in Vedanta attaining to freedom. The sign of approaching
that freedom is more and more of this
sameness and equality. In misery and
happiness the same, in success and defeat
the same—such a mind is nearing that state
of freedom .
He who has succeeded in attaching or
detaching his mind to or from the centres at
will has succeeded in Pratyahara, which
means, “gathering towards,” checking the
outgoing powers of the mind, freeing it from
the thraldom of the senses. When we can
do this, we shall really possess character;
then alone we shall have taken a long step
towards freedom; before that we are mere
machines.
The sage wants liberty; he finds that
sense-objects are all vain and that there is
no end to pleasures and pains. How many
rich people in the world want to find fresh
pleasures! All pleasures are old, and they
want new ones. Do you not see how many
foolish things they are inventing every day,
just to titillate the nerves for a moment, and
that done, how there comes a reaction? The majority of people are just like a flock of
sheep. If the leading sheep falls into a ditch,
all the rest follow and break their necks. In
the same way, what one leading member of
a society does, all the others do, without
thinking what they are doing. When a man
begins to see the vanity of worldly things,
he will feel he ought not to be thus played
upon or borne along by nature. That is
slavery. If a man has a few kind words said
to him, he begins to smile, and when he
hears a few harsh words, he begins to weep.
He is a slave to a bit of bread, to a breath of
air; a slave to dress, a slave to patriotism, to
country, to name, and to fame. He is thus in
the midst of slavery and the real man has
become buried within, through his bondage.
What you call man is a slave. When one
realises all this slavery, then comes the desire
to be free; an intense desire comes. If a piece
of burning charcoal be placed on a man’s
head, see how he struggles to throw it off.
Similar will be the struggle for freedom of a
man who really understands that he is a slave
of nature.
Be free, and then have any number of
personalities you like. Then we will play like
the actor who comes upon the stage and plays
the part of a beggar. Contrast him with the
actual beggar walking in the streets. The
scene is, perhaps, the same in both cases, the
words are, perhaps, the same, but yet what
difference! The one enjoys his beggary while
the other is suffering misery from it. And
what makes this difference? the one is free
and the other is bound. The actor knows his
beggary is not true, but that he has assumed
it for play, while the real beggar thinks that
it is his too familiar state and that he has to
bear it whether he wills it or not. This is the
law. So long as we have no knowledge of
our real nature, we are beggars, jostled about
by every force in nature; and made slaves of
by everything in nature; we cry all over the
world for help, but help never comes to us;
we cry to imaginary beings, and yet it never
comes. But still we hope help will come, and
thus in weeping, wailing, and hoping, one
life is passed, and the same play goes on and
on.

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