The Misery of Understanding
We all try to Understand – understand life, death, fortunes,
misfortunes, people, why something is the way it is and many other things which
are important to us. Volumes and volumes of literature have been produced on
meaning, purpose and the like. Many movements, ideologies, gurus, cults have
promised or attracted a vast stream of followers to help with Understanding –
of life, the cosmos, the individual in question and what not. Many historical
events, not always peaceful, have been triggered due to misunderstanding (which
to me is just a variant of understanding).
Before proceeding further, let me try to define
Understanding. I refer to understanding as an attempt to form a coherent mental,
emotional, intellectual picture of a phenomena, where in we would know all its
aspects, the cause-and-effect relationships, the exceptions if any, such that
we can say we ‘know’ it, are ‘comfortable’ with it and generally feel there is
nothing that the phenomena has which lends an element of uncertainty to us
about it.
Given this, my proposition in this article is as follows –
·
The very need to Understand (and by corollary,
to be understood) is a cause of problems, nay misery.
·
The need to Understand distorts the core of our
existence, in fact often times destroys it
·
This need originates and perpetuates an illusory
process, from whose grip we struggle to get out, very often unsuccessfully
·
The purpose of life (I doubt there is one) is
Existence, which obviates the need to Understand. I would even go on to say
that understanding does not exist, only existence does
Why does the need to
understand cause misery?
The attempt to understand can and often times leads to
misunderstanding, which causes misery. When we try to understand, it is
impossible to always only understand, avoiding misunderstanding completely.
Secondly, understanding can never be complete. The
potentialities that normally exist/exercised by us are limited in comparison to
the multitude of dimensions of any person or phenomena, leading to at best a
partial or limited understanding of it.
I would even go on to say that misunderstanding or limited
understanding is very much a part of the understanding continuum, with no clear
point of switch over
Why does the need to
understand distort the core of our existence?
Simply because Existence has no component of understanding
in it! A tree does not try to understand, nor does a bird or a blade of grass.
Even a child, who is perhaps the closest to nature that we can see in a human
being, does not try to understand anything or anyone, least of all his (or her)
mother whose presence and care is so inviolable to his existence. Despite the
absence of understanding or the need to understand, children are indeed born
every day and they continue to enjoy their childhood. ‘Grown-ups’ on the other
hand, at best experience only periodic snapshots of joy
Secondly, when we try to understand, our consciousness shifts
to the mental/emotional/intellectual plane which then tend to dominate our
being. On the other hand, there are occasions (this happens often when one
tries to be in meditation as also in the twilight zone when one tries to slip
into sleep from waking state) when this mental chatter or thought process
‘switches off’ and suddenly a whole new world opens up, a world of calm, of
sheer existence. Our senses suddenly become more active. We hear sounds
hitherto unheard, feel the weather in our skin much more ‘alive-ly’, find the
body a lot less ‘stiffer’ with the boundary between itself and the surroundings
getting more and more ‘thinner’ and non-existent. We are more ‘alive’,’
deeper’, ‘stiller’. We also realize, all that our mind was trying to grapple
with all along is like an optical illusion that suddenly has become null and
void (this can be true for even an intense emotion or pain that one may experience
at that point in time).
So to be alive, to exist, there is no need to understand
anything. On the contrary, trying to understand distorts existence
What is this illusory
process that I refer to?
As stated above that the need to understand originates
and perpetuates an illusory process, from whose grip we struggle to get out. Yes!
There are no questions and therefore no answers in Existence. Questions and
answers arise only in our attempt to understand Existence. The origin of
questions and the consequent need, nay a malignant desperation, to find an
answer is a tragic conspiracy that our minds weave.
Let me explain.
The most potent questions which create tectonic agitations
in us, which threaten to declare the whole enterprise of our lives
‘meaningless’ unless answered, simply vanish when we go to sleep! Secondly, if
were to maintain a diary of ‘existential questions’ that bother us at various
points in time of our lives, we would have evidence to prove to ourselves that
what is existential at one point in time is inconsequential very soon. Thirdly,
as I have stated above, the moment we try to quieten our mind (or say ‘switch
it off’) we realize that not just the questions, but our thoughts, emotions and
all that we were experiencing seem to evaporate into nowhere
Therefore doesn’t the very authenticity of the questions come
into question?!
Worse, in seeking to find ‘answers’ we go on a desperate
search like headless chickens. We read, write, listen, ask, follow, argue and
defend ideologies, frameworks, practices and what not, which promise to lessen
our agony. Even worse, in our attempt to find answers we encounter words which
at first sight seem to help but in reality take us deeper into the cesspool.
For example, to answer the question why someone is rich and someone else poor,
we may come across words like fate, destiny, sin, etc. We immediately go on a
semantic tailspin expending all our energy trying to understand these terms
forgetting the fact that they were mere instruments which we came across for
our work
Finally, an answer to a question
is never final or complete. It only leads to more questions. So a question,
non-existent in the first place, sets off a circular chain reaction of
questions and answers which have no end. We are left high and dry, akin to a
dog trying to catch its tail! Some one seems to be having a good laugh at our
expense!
Life is to exist, not to find purpose
(Before saying anything further,
I mean ‘to exist’ as being ‘alive’ in the fullness of consciousness and not as
being a slothful, passive recipient of what happens to us)
I feel we come into being simply
to live. Perhaps our coming into being is itself the achievement of a purpose
we cannot know. There is no further purpose or meaning to be extracted from
life.
To explain, let me go back to
nature – does the tree have a purpose, does the bird have a purpose, other than
to just live? Well, one can argue that the purpose of the tree is to produce
fruits, but that is a very limited argument, for the tree does a lot more than
just bear fruits. For a moment even if we were to accept that bearing a fruit
is one of the purposes of the tree, it may be so only to beget another tree,
for the cycle of existence to continue. In essence, the underlying purpose (if
one were to consider it so), is existence and nothing else
In conclusion, perhaps when we abandon the need to understand, we no more will need any philosophy and life might just become blissful!

1 Comments:
Dear Sankara,
The dictionary defines understanding either and to 1.Perceive meaning or.2.interpret or view. Therein lies the problem. Live has no purpose, it just is. Science allows for the known and unknown, yet life is a mystery:truly unknowable. Buddha remarks that 'dhuki' mostly interpreted as misery is a cause arising out of desire. Perhaps we should view it as 'unsatisfactoriness' with the way we perceive things which cause us misery. The 'I' is an illusion, the ego. It is egoistic and even the dropping of ego is the desire of the ego. The search for satori, or improving oneself is an advanced egoistic need. Who is it that wishes to understand? Understanding is the mind: the ego is the product of the mind. Asking questions is a never ending process, when one question is answered another one arises. For questions come from the duality of the mind. Till we drop the mind: when it really does become still we experience our deepest connect with that which is outside and ourselves.
We did not come into this life, this world: we come out it. Birth, Life, decay and extinction is an inevitable process. It is devoid of meaning. Why should life have meaning? Life just is: thatatsu.
When we realise that life has no meaning. Life just is, then we take responsibility. No one to blame, no one to be held responsible but ourselves. Then we experience the ultimate freedom: total freedom that comes from choicelessness. Then we just keep walking. Just moving on, to what is and what is the evolution of our being.
Drop the understanding: embrace the experiencing. Live No Where else, but just NOW HERE.
And as you say, discover your ability to be responsive. Like the seed that must flower, like the river that must flow, that the sun that must shine. Cos that's it very nature.
Nothing to discover, no search out there, no questions to be answered. Just total acceptance of what is. Just total mindfullness of what exists now. Just total bliss.
Happy to steer you to my blog:
stevecorrea7@blogspot.com
which has explored some of the themes in your article.
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