How
astronauts experiencing no gravity are
like realized souls experiencing no karma
by
Dr. Arvind Sharma
Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill
University, Montreal, Canada
Karma
is a key Hindu concept not always easily explained. Comparing it
with the gravity, however, helps to illustrate how it works. Obviously,
the law of gravitation existed before Newton discovered it. Similarly,
the law of karma was actively at work long before some ancient sage
first consciously came to understand it. Both these laws apply equally
to everybody, regardless of race, religion, nationality, sex and
sexual orientation. And they did so before either was understood.
The fact that our actions on Earth are governed by the law of gravity
does not mean that we are frozen in place and cannot move about.
It simply means we have free will within limitations. We can run,
for instance, but we cannot fly. Similarly, the fact that our experiences
in life are governed by the law of karma does not mean that we are
helpless and live at the mercy of fate. Again, it means we have
free will within limitations. We can purposefully improve our lives,
but not without facing and accounting for past misdeeds.
All of the physical experiences that I have on the Earth pleasant
or unpleasant, good or bad are under the influence of gravity. In
a broader sense, all of the experiences that I have in life pleasant
or unpleasant, good or bad are under the influence of karma.
When
an astronaut travels in space outside the range of Earth's gravitational
pull, he exists in a state of zero gravity and has experiences that
no one on the Earth's surface has ever had. When he returns from
his space travels, he can only try to explain it. Yet nothing he
can say can duplicate that experience he has had for others.
Hinduism claims that it is possible to travel beyond karma to a
state of no karma just like the astronaut can travel beyond gravity
to no gravity. If this is true and it has been done, those who did
it experienced something none of the rest of us have. These jivanmuktis
(enlightened beings) can try to describe their experience to others,
but nothing they say can produce that liberated state in the lives
of those who listen.
The astronauts who have experienced the gravity-free zone know that
it is possible. They don't have to be told. The jivanmuktis who
have experienced the karma-free zone know that it is possible. They
also do not have to be told. Both the astronaut and the jivanmukti
know what they know from their personal experience. No one can take
that experience away from them. However, this experience that cannot
be taken away can also not be given away, which leaves us with a
question: How can those who have not had the experience be expected
to understand or believe those who have? They must take their word
for it. This is faith. Faith must suffice until experience takes
hold.
How might we experience the karma-free state? Just as we achieve
a state of zero gravity by performing a certain series of appropriate
actions while under the influence of gravity, so can we achieve
a state of zero karma by following a specific pattern of activity
while under the influence of karma.
The space shuttle itself is designed to deal with gravity. When
we walk toward it and climb into it, we do so under the influence
of gravity. As we launch, we are contending with gravity. We are
not concerned whether the gravity is good or bad. We are focused
only on the effects of gravity with an aim of transcending gravity
into its absence. In so choosing to perform these actions, we have
necessarily given up options to act in other ways for other purposes.
By giving up all actions not relevant to the process of going beyond
gravity, it becomes possible for us to eventually achieve our goal
of experiencing zero gravity.
Similarly, in order to reach a karma-free state, we must give up
not only bad karma, but good karma as well. We must perform only
that karma which is appropriate for the attainment of zero karma.
Just as the concept of good gravity and bad gravity is supplanted
by considerations of gravity and no gravity, so also can the axis
of good and bad karma be exchanged for one of karma and no karma,
when one seeks moksha, or liberation from birth and death.
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