Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Even if we have no interest at all in becoming a Hindu, Hinduism offers us at least four

  • fascinating ideas.

  • 1. LOOK FORWARD TO DEATH

  • Hinduism is hugely radical in suggesting that there is nothing especially noble or interesting

  • about being alive.

  • Once we look at matters dispassionately, a lot of what we have to go through is misery

  • and suffering: we need - with great effort - to grow up, to assume responsibilities,

  • to master a profession, to have a family, to take our place in societies full of backbiting

  • and hypocrisy, to watch those we love get ill and eventually to succumb to old age ourselves.

  • To think highly oflifeis, through a Hindu lens, a fundamental intellectual error.

  • As Hinduism sees it, our real purpose is to be done with life forever; that is the true

  • summit of existence. Hinduism reverses the Western equation: the sinful and blinkered

  • are forced to live forever, the righteous and awakened are privileged enough to be able

  • to die. If we are not careful, if we do not show sufficient mercy and imagination toward

  • others, we may well - Hinduism suggests - be subjected to the ultimate punishment: we will

  • have to carry on into eternity.

  • The symbol of this ghastly on-goingness is the eight-spoked wheel ofsamsara’, the

  • most commonly depicted item in the religion, which evokes the pitiless and unceasing nature

  • of life - to which we are committed unless we take a disciplined series of averting actions

  • which together comprise the central components of Hindu ethics.

  • Hinduism does not suggest that we will carry on forever in our own bodies. According to

  • the process ofsamsara’, we are reborn into a succession of different outward envelopes,

  • as each example is eroded away and disintegrated by time. Because samsara is at work across

  • the whole animal kingdom, we might find that our enduring soul (‘atman’) transmigrates

  • at our death into the body of a woodlouse, a pelican or a house spider (though we might

  • also be reborn as a paediatric nurse or the president). What determines the quality of

  • the migration is the degree ofkarmaor virtue that we have accrued in our lives.

  • Among the many reasons why we might have to be kind to others is an awareness that unkindness

  • might wind us up having to suffer a cycle or two of life as a cockroach or a naked mole

  • rat.

  • The suspicion that life is constantly painful and anxious is one that we largely have to

  • bear in a very lonely way in the philosophies of the West; in those of the East, pessimism

  • is ennobled and takes center stage. We are permitted to feel weary and amply dissatisfied;

  • we have, without quite knowing it, been alive since the start of creation - and it is untenably

  • exhausting and frustrating. The trick, and the true prize, will be to be good and wise

  • enough to learn to die once and for all.

  • 2. REJOIN COSMIC TOTALITY

  • For Hindus, the way to step off the treadmill of eternal existence is to realise that, despite

  • many appearances to the contrary, however paradoxical or absurd the idea might sound,

  • we and the universe are in truth one!

  • From the earliest age, we tend to assume the very opposite. It seems self-evident that

  • we are one kind of thing and the tree over there, the relative over here, the clouds

  • in the sky, the monkey on the parapet and the river wending its way to the sea belong

  • to quite different categories. Yet Hinduism insists that our belief in difference belongs

  • ultimately to a realm ofmayaor illusion. If we look more deeply into the nature of

  • things, through the help of teaching and spiritual exercises, we stand to discover the remarkable

  • unity of all elements. Unlike what appearances imply, everything we can see and experience

  • around us belong to the same life force: the leaves unfurling on the tree, the child learning

  • to read, the earthworm digging its tunnels, the lava bubbling from the earth, all belong

  • to a single unitary power which only egoistic prejudice has hitherto prevented us from acknowledging

  • as one.

  • Most of our pain, Hinduism argues, arises from an overeager attachment to the difference

  • between ourselves and the rest of the world. We pay inordinate attention to who has slightly

  • more money or respect than we do, we are constantly humiliated by people and events that don’t

  • seem to honour our sense of uniqueness.

  • But in a process known asmokshaor liberation, we can throw off the veil of illusion

  • that works to separate us from the universe and can start to identify with cosmic totality.

  • It no longer matters exactly where we end and others begin; everything belongs to the

  • same whole that we have mistakenly and unnecessarily carved up into parts. There is a little less

  • reason to grasp, to be puffed up, to be proud or to become embittered. We can survey the

  • course of our lives and of our societies with calm indifference. We can cease to identify

  • happiness with the working out of our will upon the world - and take in with compassion

  • and serenity whatever destiny throws our way. We enjoyparipurna-brahmanubhava’, the

  • experience of oneness withbrahman’, the principle of all things.

  • Once we have let go of our own ego like this, we may have a few more years left to live,

  • but we can be sure that - eventually - we will not need to keep returning. Constant

  • rebirth is the fate of those who cleave too tightly to their own selves. By contrast,

  • those who have learnt to surrender can at their demise merge with the universe and will

  • never need to suffer the indignities of individual life again.

  • 3. Don’t Forget Money

  • Ravi Varma, The Goddess Lakshmi, 1894

  • We might expect that a religion devoted to spiritual enlightenment would have scant concern

  • for money and possessions. But Hinduism surprises and challenges us by suggesting that - despite

  • everything - what it callsarthaor a concern for material prosperity has a place

  • within a wise life.

  • Hinduism is not directing us towards crass materialism. It doesn’t want to exhaust

  • us with overly rich foods or attention-seeking displays of wealth. But it is aware - with

  • a touching practicality - that many good and elevated things require a degree of financial

  • support in order to go well. One won’t be able to undertake spiritual exercises unless

  • one is able to take a considerable amount of time off from practical duties every day.

  • Meditation on nothingness can be substantially assisted by having a servant or two to take

  • care of the laundry and the housekeeping.

  • Hindus traditionally direct their hopes for material comfort to Lakshmi, the goddess of

  • prosperity. One of the most popular of all Hindu deities, she is typically represented

  • holding two lotus flowers that speak of spiritual liberation as well as material good fortune.

  • She is usually accompanied by at least one elephant, a symbol of power and strength,

  • and a swan, an animal that is at home both in the air and in the water, and thereby speaks

  • of an ability to combine competence in the material and spiritual realms.

  • Lakshmi understands, and would never condemn, one’s appetite for a better house or a more

  • high paying job. Her role isn’t to make us feel guilty about wanting more wealth,

  • it is to remind us that the true point of money is - in the end - to enable us to forget

  • about money.

  • 4. Don’t Turn Against Sex

  • Copulating Couple (mithuna), temple carving, thirteenth century, Orissa, Eastern Gangay

  • Dynasty, Northern India https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/38141

  • We have come to expect very little by way of encouragement or sympathy in relation to

  • sex from religions. At best, a blind eye, at worst, a constant hounding and reminder

  • of the evils of the flesh.

  • But Hinduism surprises us; it made the remarkable step of placing sexual fulfilment - ‘kama

  • - among the fourpuruṣārthas’, or aims of human life, alongsidedharma

  • (morality), ‘artha’ (prosperity) andmoksha’ (spiritual liberation).

  • Hinduism’s respect for sex was rooted in a particular understanding of what lies behind

  • our erotic feelings. These do not stem - as has so often been alleged - from a base animal

  • impulse; they are a means by which we can sense the unity of the universe (‘brahman’).

  • Normally, we live beneath a veil of illusion which persuades us of the separateness of

  • all things, bodies included, but our sexual desires push us to break down the barriers

  • between ourselves and others. We might colloquially say that we are turned on, but through a Hindu

  • lens, at the core of our excitement is the sense that we are breaking down the illusion

  • of separateness and taking a small but important step towards oneness with what we can, without

  • exaggeration, following the religion, term the universe.

  • ****

Even if we have no interest at all in becoming a Hindu, Hinduism offers us at least four

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it