On death and existence
Everything that is born, exists, grows, slows, and dies.
Between birth and death, lies what we call life.
I, like many other people, believe in rebirth.
Then it can be said: everything that is dead, shall be born
again.
So, then there is a period between death and the next birth.
We do not know much about that period.
If one believes in rebirth, one believes in cycles of life
and death.
Is this a random process, or there are laws of these cycles?
In my country, there are seasonal worships.
A statue is made of clay and brought to life.
The statue becomes a deity, full of divine energy.
People stand in awe, emote, and rejoice.
They share food and dance together in happiness.
People recognize the presence of an energy higher than
oneself that has descended among them.
And they become part of that energy.
Then the time comes for the energy to leave.
The statue becomes life-less.
It is usually immersed in water.
The clay goes back to earth.
It is all an amorphous state of existence for that clay, which
was once the covering of a divine energy.
The year changes.
Time comes for the next worship.
Another statue is made from clay, brought to life, and divinised.
The cycle of life and death is a part of my culture.
There are many cycles.
Inside the cells, cycles of biochemical reactions generate
energy from simple molecules coming from our food.
Oxygen from the air enter our body, helps produce energy,
and is released as carbon dioxide.
The carbon dioxide is used by photosynthetic plants to
produce food that we eat.
Plants also release oxygen.
Life, as we know, cannot exist without the oxygen - carbon
dioxide cycle of nature.
Many human organs have their own cycles.
The heart beats 72 times each minute.
Each beat of the heart is based on electrical changes.
These cyclical changes (PQRST-PQRST-) can be seen on an ECG
strip.
The SA node creates these cycles or rhythms of the heart.
There are cycles of mood swings.
Physiological and cultural cycles pervade our lives.
But cycles are prior to human.
In the sky, earth moves around itself, once every day, and
around the sun, once every year.
When we did not know this, we were so scared of night.
Fear, in any form, is fear of the unknown.
Now, science has made us bolder, and we are no longer afraid
of light-dark cycles.
We know that after day, there is night, and there is day
after that.
The planets and stars move according to laws of physics.
Understanding this makes me stable in my thinking.
As if, I have been asking the wrong question.
Instead of asking “what is death?”, it may be asked:
What prevents me from giving my little self away to that
great cycle of becoming and unbecoming, the great fire in which the present “me”
is sacrificed only to become the “future self” – more radiant and complete?
This has been going on for ever.

Very profound thoughts.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteBhai good thoughts
ReplyDeleteThank you, Bhai.
DeleteNicely written,Saroj.
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated.
DeleteLove each and every moment. Live profoundly in that moment. Drink the nectar of life. Life is a journey and death is destiny. The final union of self with supreme.. beyond which we are free from cycle of death and birth
ReplyDeleteYou are a very wise person. Thank you for sharing your view.
DeleteI love the way you described the descent of Durga Maa to earth and how the masses turn an idol into a mother, Devi and vanquisher of evil.
ReplyDeleteKeep writing. Your style is simple yet elegant. Lipi
Thank you, Lipi.
DeleteWe use examples to illustrate general principles that exceed the examples. Cycles of nature and culture help us understand a fundamental truth: sristiprabaha, that the manifest universe is existent, yet always in flux.
DeleteAnother truth is That Which Exists Forever, A core of that flowing or oscillating universe, so to say. Psychologically, it is knowing oneself. Like how one changes, learning new things, even if the person is the same.
ReplyDelete