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Nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology: Difference between revisions

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[[Vanisource:741022 - Lecture SB 01.08.42 - Mayapur|741022 - Lecture SB 01.08.42 - Mayapur]]
[[Vanisource:741022 - Lecture SB 01.08.42 - Mayapur|741022 - Lecture SB 01.08.42 - Mayapur]]
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So nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology. Just like last night, when the snake... We do not... We did not want to be killed by the snake. We became disturbed. Why this psychology? Because we don't want to be dead, because we are eternal. Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre ([[Vanisource:BG 2.20|BG 2.20]]). Neither we wish to take the trouble of being changed of the body. Otherwise, why we became disturbed? We know... Others may not know that we shall not be killed, even bitten by the snake. Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre. So why we become disturbed? What is the psychology? The basic principle is that we don't want to be killed. We don't want to change the body even. We have got attraction for the body. Even an animal or insect, living very wretched condition of life, still, if you want to kill it, it will protest. It will protest: "No, no. I don't want to be killed." This is the psychology.
So nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology. Just like last night, when the snake . . . we do not . . . we did not want to be killed by the snake. We became disturbed. Why this psychology? Because we don't want to be dead, because we are eternal. ''Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre'' ([[vanisource:BG 2.20 (1972)|BG 2.20]]). Neither we wish to take the trouble of being changed of the body. Otherwise, why we became disturbed? We know . . . others may not know that we shall not be killed, even bitten by the snake. ''Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre''. So why we become disturbed? What is the psychology? The basic principle is that we don't want to be killed. We don't want to change the body even. We have got attraction for the body. Even an animal or insect, living very wretched condition of life, still, if you want to kill it, it will protest. It will protest, "No, no. I don't want to be killed." This is the psychology.


So our real business is how to attain that eternal life. That is real business. Other business, they are not important. Tasyaiva hetoḥ prayateta kovido na labhyate yad bhramatām upary adhaḥ ([[Vanisource:SB 1.5.18|SB 1.5.18]]). This is the instruction, that we should try how to become again immortal. We are immortal by nature, but we have been covered by another nature, external nature, bahiraṅga-śakti And because we have been entangled with this material body, we have to die. Otherwise there is no death. Na jāyate na mriyate vā ([[Vanisource:BG 2.20|BG 2.20]]). The living entity does not take birth, neither it dies. Then why we are taking birth and dying? The..., this question does not arise to the fools and rascals of this materialist world. I was talking with one very big man in London, Lord Fenner Brockway. He came to see me. So I asked him this question. He was old man. He was, I think, older than me. He was eighty-four. So he said, "Yes, I'll die peacefully." Just see. This question does not bother even any man. And I talked with that Professor Kotovsky in Moscow. He also said, "Swāmījī, after death, everything is finished." You see? Big, big men in Europe, very exalted position, they do not know even that there is life after death. They do not know. And in India, I think when I spoke in Calcutta, the American Consulate... There is a club, Indo-American Cultural. They invited. So they gave me the subject matter for speaking: "East and West." So in that meeting I said that "We don't make any such distinction 'East' and 'West,' because everything belongs to Kṛṣṇa. But there is little difference between East and West. What is that difference? Here, even an ordinary man, a cultivator, uneducated villager, he believes in the next birth. He believes. He's afraid of committing sin—'Oh, I'll have to suffer in my next life.' And in the Western world, the big, big men like Lord Fenner Brockway and Professor Kotovsky, they do not know that there is life after death."
So our real business is how to attain that eternal life. That is real business. Other business, they are not important. ''Tasyaiva hetoḥ prayateta kovido na labhyate yad bhramatām upary adhaḥ'' ([[vanisource:SB 1.5.18|SB 1.5.18]]). This is the instruction, that we should try how to become again immortal. We are immortal by nature, but we have been covered by another nature, external nature, ''bahiraṅga-śakti ''And because we have been entangled with this material body, we have to die. Otherwise there is no death. ''Na jāyate na mriyate vā'' ([[vanisource:BG 2.20 (1972)|BG 2.20]]). The living entity does not take birth, neither it dies. Then why we are taking birth and dying? The . . . this question does not arise to the fools and rascals of this materialist world.
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Latest revision as of 13:45, 4 July 2021

Expressions researched:
"nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology"

Lectures

Srimad-Bhagavatam Lectures

Nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology.


So nobody is immortal within this material world. And still, we are attached. We want to be immortal. That is the psychology. Just like last night, when the snake . . . we do not . . . we did not want to be killed by the snake. We became disturbed. Why this psychology? Because we don't want to be dead, because we are eternal. Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre (BG 2.20). Neither we wish to take the trouble of being changed of the body. Otherwise, why we became disturbed? We know . . . others may not know that we shall not be killed, even bitten by the snake. Na hanyate hanyamāne śarīre. So why we become disturbed? What is the psychology? The basic principle is that we don't want to be killed. We don't want to change the body even. We have got attraction for the body. Even an animal or insect, living very wretched condition of life, still, if you want to kill it, it will protest. It will protest, "No, no. I don't want to be killed." This is the psychology.

So our real business is how to attain that eternal life. That is real business. Other business, they are not important. Tasyaiva hetoḥ prayateta kovido na labhyate yad bhramatām upary adhaḥ (SB 1.5.18). This is the instruction, that we should try how to become again immortal. We are immortal by nature, but we have been covered by another nature, external nature, bahiraṅga-śakti And because we have been entangled with this material body, we have to die. Otherwise there is no death. Na jāyate na mriyate vā (BG 2.20). The living entity does not take birth, neither it dies. Then why we are taking birth and dying? The . . . this question does not arise to the fools and rascals of this materialist world.