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I
remember a man who came here a very long time ago, to stand
as a candidate for the government. It so happened
that he was introduced to me because they wanted my opinion
of him, and so he asked me questions about the Ashram and
the life we lead here, and about what I considered to be an
indispensable discipline for life. This man used to smoke
the whole day and drank much more than was necessary, and
so he complained, you see, that he was often tired and sometimes
could not control himself. I told him, "You know, first
of all, you must stop smoking and you must stop drinking."
He looked at me with an unbelievable bewilderment and said,
"But then, if one doesn't either smoke or drink, it is
not worth living!" I told him, "If you are still
at that stage, it is no use saying anything more."
And
this is much more frequent than one thinks. To us it seems
absurd, for we have something else which is of course more
interesting than smoking and drinking. But for ordinary men
the satisfaction of their desires is the very reason for existence.
For them it seems to be an affirmation of their independence
and their purpose in life. And it is simply a perversion,
a deformation which is a denial of the life-instinct,
it is an unhealthy interference of thought and vital impulse
in physical life. It is an unhealthy impulse which does not
usually exist even in animals. In this case, instinct in animals
is infinitely more reasonable than human
instinct - which, besides, doesn't exist any more, which has
been replaced by a very perverted impulse.
Perversion
is a human disease, it occurs very rarely in animals, and
then only in animals which have come close to man and therefore
have been contaminated by his perversion.
There
is a story about some officers in North Africa
- in Algeria
- who had adopted a monkey. The monkey lived with them and
one day at dinner they had a grotesque idea and gave the monkey
something to drink. They gave it alcohol. The monkey first
saw the others drink, this seemed to it something quite interesting,
and it drank a glass, a full glass of wine. Afterwards it
was ill, as ill as could be, it rolled under the table with
all kinds of pains and was really in a very bad condition,
that is, it gave the men an example of the spontaneous effect
of alcohol when the physical nature is not already perverted.
It nearly died of poisoning. It recovered. And some time later
it was again allowed to come for dinner as it was all right,
and somebody placed a glass of wine in front of it. It picked
it up in a terrible rage and flung it at the head of the man
who had given the glass... By that it showed that it was much
wiser than the men!
It
is a good thing to begin to learn at an early age that to
lead an efficient life and obtain from one's body the maximum
it is able to give, reason must be
the master of the house. And it is not a question of yoga
or higher realisation, it is something which should be taught
everywhere, in every school, every family, every
home: man was made to be a mental being, and merely
to be a man - we are not speaking of anything else, we are
speaking only of being a man - life must be dominated by reason
and not by vital impulses. This should be taught to all children
from their infancy.
The Mother
8
May 1957
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