ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
IN LIFE
That view of one's Karma which leads to a bewailing of the
unkind fate which has kept advantages in life away from us, is
a mistaken estimate of what is good and what is not good for
the soul. It is quite true that we may often find persons surrounded
with great advantages but who make no corresponding use of them
or pay but little regard to them. But this very fact in itself
goes to show that the so-called advantageous position in life
is really not good nor fortunate in the true and inner meaning
of those words. The fortunate one has money and teachers, ability,
and means to travel and fill the surroundings with works of art,
with music and with ease. But these are like the tropical airs
that enervate the body; these enervate the character instead
of building it up. They do not in themselves tend to the acquirement
of any virtue whatever but rather to the opposite by reason of
the constant steeping of the senses in the subtle essences of
the sensuous world. They are like sweet things which, being swallowed
in quantities, turn to acids in the inside of the body. Thus
they can be seen to be the opposite of good Karma.
What then is good Karma and what bad? The all embracing and
sufficient answer is this:
Good Karma is that kind which the Ego desires and requires;
bad, that which the Ego neither desires nor requires.
And in this the Ego, being guided and controlled by law, by
justice, by the necessities of upward evolution, and not by fancy
or selfishness or revenge or ambition, is sure to choose the
earthly habitation that is most likely, out of all possible of
selection, to give a Karma for the real advantage in the end.
In this light then, even the lazy, indifferent life of one born
rich as well as that of one born low and wicked is right.
When we, from this plane, inquire into the matter, we see
that the "advantages" which one would seek were he
looking for the strengthening of character, the unloosing of
soul force and energy, would be called by the selfish and personal
world "disadvantages." Struggle is needed for the gaining
of strength; buffeting adverse eras is for the gaining of depth;
meagre opportunities may be used for acquiring fortitude; poverty
should breed generosity.
The middle ground in all this, and not the extreme, is what
we speak of. To be born with the disadvantage of drunken, diseased
parents, in the criminal portion of the community, is a punishment
which constitutes a wait on the road of evolution. It is a necessity
generally because the Ego has drawn about itself in a former
life some tendencies which cannot be eliminated in any other
way. But we should not forget that sometimes, often in the grand
total, a pure, powerful Ego incarnates in just such awful surroundings,
remaining good and pure all the time, and staying there for the
purpose of uplifting and helping others.
But to be born in extreme poverty is not a disadvantage. Jesus
said well when, repeating what many a sage had said before, he
described the difficulty experienced by the rich man in entering
heaven. If we look at life from the narrow point of view of those
who say there is but one earth and after it either eternal heaven
or hell, then poverty will be regarded as a great disadvantage
and something to be avoided. But seeing that we have many lives
to live, and that they will give us all needed opportunity for
building up character, we must admit that poverty is not, in
itself, necessarily bad Karma. Poverty has no natural tendency
to engender selfishness, but wealth requires it.
A sojourn for everyone in a body born to all the pains, deprivations
and miseries of modern poverty, is good and just. Inasmuch as
the present state of civilization with all its horrors of poverty,
of crime, of disease, of wrong relations almost everywhere, has
grown out of the past, in which we were workers, it is just that
we should experience it all at some point in our career. If some
person who now pays no heed to the misery of men and women should
next life be plunged into one of the slums of our cities for
rebirth, it would imprint on the soul the misery of such a situation.
This would lead later on to compassion and care for others. For,
unless we experience the effects of a state of life we cannot
understand or appreciate it from a mere description. The personal
part involved in this may not like it as a future prospect, but
if the Ego decides that the next personality shall be there then
all will be an advantage and not a disadvantage.
If we look at the field of operation in us of the so-called
advantages of opportunity, money, travel and teachers we see
at once that it all has to do with the brain and nothing else.
Languages, archæology, music, satiating sight with beauty,
eating the finest food, wearing the best clothes, traveling to
many places and thus infinitely varying impressions on ear and
eye; all these begin and end in the brain and not in the soul
or character. As the brain is a portion of the unstable, fleeting
body the whole phantasmagoria disappears from view and use when
the note of death sends its awful vibration through the physical
form and drives out the inhabitant. The wonderful central master-ganglion
disintegrates, and nothing at all is left but some faint aromas
here and there depending on the actual love within for any one
pursuit or image or sensation. Nothing left of it all but a few
tendencies-- skandhas , not of the very best. The advantages
then turn out in the end to be disadvantages altogether. But
imagine the same brain and body not in places of ease, struggling
for a good part of life, doing their duty and not in a position
to please the senses: this experience will burn in, stamp upon,
carve into the character, more energy, more power and more fortitude.
It is thus through the ages that great characters are made. The
other mode is the mode of the humdrum average which is nothing
after all, as yet, but an animal.
WILLIAM Q. JUDGE
Path , July, 1895
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