Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Purification step by step

The first step seems to be that as I show my seriousness in Krishna Consciousness, my defects are revealed to me gradually. The recent events where I wrote an arrogant email to the temple, and exhibited false humility in the email as well as with Gurudeva when he said he was proud of me, is now revealed to me. I was not aware of the problem. Now I am aware - yes, I am envious. I have envy. I am not humble. I hanker for respect. I cannot handle not being respected.

I hanker for gratifying my lust. I have no attraction for Krishna's Names. I am most fallen. I am drowning in this conditioned state - with fumes of poison enveloping me, and I have no antidote to this poison. I am asleep under the influence of this poison, and there is no hope save Gaura Chandra. Only He can save me if He so desires.

I need the fruit of love of God. I must chant offenselessly. When I receive that pure love for Krishna, I will be able to give up my anarthas and surrender. Without love, surrender is not possible. And Shri Chaitanya is so merciful, that He is giving this love even to the lowest among mankind. He is not discriminating.

When will the day come, that I will cringe and beg genuinely for pure love? When will I serve the great Vaishnavas with humility and please them? When will they give me pure love for Krishna by becoming pleased with me? When will that day come?

I am struggling with rising early. My sadhana is so weak. If a storm comes, I wonder how I will be able to maintain my sadhana at that time, if it is so weak during peaceful times?

My interactions with other devotees are full of anger and sarcasm. How will I rectify this flaw in me? I cannot do it without the help of Shri Krishna Chaitanya. I pray and beg that I may develop the good qualities required to serve Him. I pray that I may be enthusiastic to serve and purify myself. I pray that I may be able to develop humility and tolerate all disrespect, while offering all respect to others.

I pray that I can be serious and not fool around so much, wasting time on facebook, with gossip and politics... It is such a waste of time. I hope I can move away from wasting time and apply the teaching: Anukulyasya sankalpa, pratikulyasya varjanam.

 I am so fallen and lost. I have low strength. I am a fool. And I yet think myself very intelligent and better than others. When will this envy leave my heart? When will my heart be spotlessly clean?

Thursday, June 09, 2016

Arrogance Timidity and Honesty

http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2006/02/the-three-bears-arrogance-timidity-honesty/

The Three Bears: Arrogance, Timidity, and Honesty

Arrogance (too hot)

Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. – Proverbs 16:18
Arrogance is overbearing pride that attempts to juxtapose others as inferior to yourself. Although this quality is considered honorable among Klingons, it tends to annoy human beings.
Arrogance makes genuine socialization difficult because it paints others into a competitive position. By treating others as inferior to yourself, you invite them to respond to your opening move with a reactive countermove. Most likely they’ll either react submissively or challenge your authority with an aggressive stance of their own. Arrogance treats socialization as a competition rather than a cooperative endeavor. It reduces us to baser animal-like behavior instead of more conscious human behavior.

Timidity (too cold)

To be modest in speaking truth is hypocrisy. – Kahlil Gibran
In the sense I’m using it here, timidity is a sense of self-denial to the point of being false. I’m stretching the definition a bit, so think of this as excessive self-effacement or overly submissive modesty.
As opposed to arrogance which creates an overinflated self-imagine, timidity yields an underinflated one. While genuine modesty and humility are typically seen as admirable qualities, when taken to the extreme, they have just as much potential to inhibit intelligent socialization as arrogance. By painting others as superior to you, once again you compel them to react to your opening move with a countermove, which could involve taking advantage of your submissiveness with an attempt at dominance, or it may involve them becoming even more submissive in an attempt to prop up your apparently weak self-esteem. On the other hand, excessive timidity could even be viewed as a form of arrogance, such as if Leonardo da Vinci were to describe the Mona Lisa as, “just a side project I whipped up over the weekend.”

Honesty (just right)

Where is there dignity unless there is honesty? – Cicero
Honesty occupies a thin line between arrogance and timidity, and in my experience honesty is indeed the best policy. The form of honesty I’m referring to here is the kind that really matters. Don’t confuse it with the socially polite custom of excuse-making to turn down an insignificant invitation.
No matter how carefully you choose your words, it’s virtually guaranteed you’ll fall on one side of perfect honesty or the other. Do your best anyway. People will not always react the way you’d like, but that’s largely out of your control. Take responsibility for your own words, and do your best to speak the truth. Neither be so arrogant as to think you have complete control over others’ reactions nor so timid as to think you have none. People will react in accordance with their own biases, which may not agree with yours. That is not a failing in your communication; it is merely a part of human existence that must be accepted.
A breakthrough in my own social growth occurred when I learned the importance of balancing the two sides of human communication. I learned to assume 100% responsibility for my own words while allowing others to retain 100% responsibility for their response. Being responsible means being truthful, regardless of the receiver. I find that this not only serves me well, but it also serves the best interests of those with whom I communicate.
Honesty serves your own self interest because it keeps your understanding of reality from becoming too corrupted by inaccuracy. Arrogance and timidity are both lies which introduce errors into your self-image. It is like feeding a computer inaccurate data. The software may still function, but it will produce erroneous output. Hence the expression, “Garbage in, garbage out.” Arrogance and timidity both produce garbage input, making it impossible for you to produce intelligent output. The practical result is that you become stuck, and your growth rate slows to a crawl. Inaccurate feedback can have extremely negative personal and professional consequences. It can serve to turn an otherwise capable person into a suicidal wreck, or it can place a criminal in charge of a Fortune 500 company.
If you want to accelerate your rate of personal growth, work on becoming as honest as possible, both with yourself and others. The more honest you become, the more accurate will be your model of reality. And this will dramatically improve the success rate of your decisions and actions. Overconfidence and underconfidence are equally problematic, so strive for accuracy instead.
Honesty also serves others well because it reflects their own nature back to them. An honest person functions like a good mirror. Imagine a real mirror such as you might find in your bathroom. If your hair is messy, your mirror will reflect it. As you brush your hair, the mirror gives you immediate and accurate feedback on your progress, allowing you to make subtle corrections to your strokes and thereby achieve the desired result of a well-groomed head. But what if your mirror produces an inaccurate reflection? It would take you much longer to brush your hair, and you might not achieve the desired outcome at all. Consequently, you’d frequently suffer bad hair days. Your relationship to personal growth is no different. With too much inaccurate feedback (both from yourself and others), you’ll suffer the equivalent of a bad hair day, meaning that even though you may take a lot of strokes, your efforts will largely be wasted.
My wife is possibly the most honest person I’ve ever met. Her ability to reflect back to me who I really am has served my own growth immeasurably. If I’m not living up to my potential, she gives me a gentle kick in my complacency (I call it whining). If I’m becoming too overconfident, she takes me down a notch. If she were to err on the side of feeding my arrogance or timidity, it would compound my errors instead of correcting them.

Simply be honest, and let others react as they will

Consider the statement, “I am eligible to join Mensa.” Some people will react to this statement neutrally (“Okay”) or positively (“Congratulations”), but others will respond negatively (“Oh, you think you’re better than me, do you?”), claiming that it’s arrogant or boastful to say such a thing. The reality, however, is that this is simply a statement of fact. Mensa is open to anyone who takes a qualified I.Q. test and scores in the top 2%. I’ve taken multiple qualified tests and scored in the top 1% each time, so according to their criteria I’m eligible to join. So even though I’m merely stating a fact, people will react to it differently based on their own pre-existing biases.
Now consider the statement, “I have a permanent visual impairment.” If believed, this statement may evoke a neutral reaction (“Okay”) or possibly one of sympathy or pity (“I’m sorry to hear that.”). Others may poke fun at it (“That explains why you’re so clumsy.”). But once again this is merely a statement of fact. I was born colorblind, and at present I’m unaware of any real cure (there are tinted contact lenses that can help a little, but they don’t correct the underlying condition). My visual world consists of a subset of colors that people with normal vision take for granted. On a computer monitor, bright green (RGB 0, 255, 0) and yellow (RGB 255, 255, 0) look identical to me. Even when placed side by side, I cannot see the border between them. My two-year old son, however, can name these colors with ease. (For those who are curious about it, see my previous post oncolorblindness, which includes a link to some images that will show you how I see the world.)
A simple statement of fact such as in the above examples will often receive different responses from different people. You may say something that you perceive as completely neutral, yet the other person may offer a reaction that seems to pin your statement at a seemingly random point along the arrogance-honesty-timidity spectrum.
Even when you strive to be honest and your intentions are honorable, you will not always get a reaction that seems appropriate. Others will often react as if you’re being either arrogant or timid. But in such cases their reaction is usually more about them than it is about you. Stay the middle course and focus on being as honest as possible while allowing others to retain full ownership of their reactions. Free yourself from the fear of an undesirable response, and simply accept whatever response you get. Truthfulness, both with yourself and others, is the best way to honor the noble spirit of human communication.

Envy and humility

Something interesting that I found today:

Humility is intelligent self-respect which keeps one from thinking too highly or too meanly of oneself.

One who is thinking too meanly of himself is envious and simply using fake humility to feel better about it.

It's a huge huge realization. May I be able to digest it and never forget this lesson. I have been for many years sarcastic and have treated people like they are stupid - that I am better, more intelligent - don't they understand simple things? - how stupid they are - feeling anger. No compassion, no humility. Just a sense of I AM RIGHT and YOU ARE WRONG and YOU DON'T KNOW HOW TO DO IT. I KNOW BETTER. This treating people as less than myself has resulted in me pushing away well-wishers. They can sense that I am treating them with no respect - as lower and not as an equal. Thus I am bullied, alienated, and treated with anger and harshness, because I hurt others by making them feel that they're Stupid - unlike me. While listening to others talk I simply refuse to accept that it could be any way but my way when it contradicts with information I believe to be true. I become angry when I am accused of being forceful with others. And I treat people badly without realizing that I'm doing this.

My mentality and attitude must change. This is a manifestation of my envy - wanting to be better than the others. It is causing me to develop fake humility - which makes me demean myself too much, thus creating pain in my life as well.
Gurudeva simply said, "I am proud of you" and I chastised him with "No, Maharaj, there is nothing to be proud of." This was fake humility. And it was denying him the right to feel proud of what he wants to be proud of. I just couldn't believe it. But I could have asked politely "How can this be possible?" But I reacted so rudely and walked off without giving him a chance to respond to me. I have offended my Gurudeva. What can be my fate? I hope he forgives me. I will honestly admit that I have been using fake humility to hide my envy.