You know, many of you often say, 'Oh, I feel so hurt'.
You fall in love and then you get hurt, isn't it. How many of you have had this experience? (Many raise their hands)
You didn’t expect a certain action or reaction from the people whom you
love, and you get an unexpected response and you feel hurt.
What happens when you are hurt? You start shutting down, you start
withdrawing. And if it happens more than three times, your whole
personality gets affected. Then you become a very rude, rough and angry
person. Isn’t that so?
Let us say someone hurts you, how do you behave the next moment? You
become rough, rude and angry. This is one reaction. There is another way
to look at it.
Why does someone hurt another person? Only two kinds of people can hurt
you. First, one who is wise can hurt you, because when you get hurt you
wake up from your slumber. The hurt wakes you up, somewhere it makes
you stronger.
Second, one who is himself hurt or who is ignorant. The person is
ignorant, or is experiencing anger, hatred and hurt. Now there are only
two categories of people in front of you, through whom you can judge
about your own hurt.
So when you get hurt by someone’s actions, think that there is a lesson for you to learn, and that is why it is coming to you.
This is what the Gurus in the ancient tradition used to do. Blame a
person for something when he has not done anything wrong. Why? Because when you take that blame, you become stronger. You can smile through the blame for a mistake you have never done and take the lesson from it that you need to learn.
If you know that there is some karma getting washed out, you realize that you are becoming freer.
So consciously taking out that hridaya daurbalyam (weakness of heart).
In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna first hurts Arjuna by
saying, 'What a coward you are, you want to run away from the
battlefield? What will the world think about you! You are such a coward
and you are so foolish. Do you think you are intelligent? You are
talking like a great scholar and you are crying for things which you
should never cry for'. He stops just short of saying, 'You are so
stupid!'
Hearing these words from someone so close, Arjuna thinks this is his
world! He thinks that he is right and his world is right, so he
challenges Lord Krishna and tells him, 'Why are you putting me in this
place? Why do you want me to fight this war? What do I get? Don’t push
me into such wrong things'.
So Arjuna thought he was right and Krishna was wrong.
Arjuna was known for his valor, and Lord Krishna tells him, 'You
coward!'. If you call the most valorous man and tell him he is a coward,
there cannot be a bigger hurt than that.
Now, when Krishna said this, Arjuna did not argue. He did not say, 'No, I’m not a coward', he just took it.
He said, 'Krishna, I hear you. You know me better than I know myself'.
So when you feel hurt, don’t shut down. Look into the situation.
If the actions of a wise person, or someone who you have a lot of
regard for, is hurting you, then know that it is for some good reason.
If a friend is hurting you, know that some karma is getting released.
'I must have done something in the past to this person, so this person
is just returning that back to me'.
If the hurt is coming from an ignorant person, then have compassion.
Poor thing, that person must be having so much pain, and so they are
giving that back to me. They don't know what else to give me. Whatever
people have, only that they will give. If someone is so hurt, and so
pained, they can only give what they have with them.
These three attitudes can make your whole personality shine.
I remember once, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, had asked his colleague, Swami Satyanand to enroll 1000 kayastha (a caste or community of Hindus) boys for some administration project and train them. He strongly believed in the DNA of the kayasthas. The kayasthas traditionally were administrators.
So he asked Swamiji to go to Allahabad and enroll 1000 or 10,000
people; some big number. After three months of hard work, Swami
Satyanand calls Maharishi and tells him, 'I have enrolled 10,000 kayastha boys and youngsters'.
Maharshi was so upset, and he said, 'Who asked you to do it? Why
did you do it? This is wrong. You should enroll everybody. Why did you
enroll only kayastha boys'.
He himself asked Swami Satyanand to go and do it, and then he asks this
question! This was a big shock for the gentleman, because he was doing
the work very sincerely.
These actions, of a very wise person, should be seen in a different
light. Do not judge these things from a human mind, but judge them from a
bigger perspective. Not from the emotions, thinking that he has a
grudge on me or he thinks bad about me, no! Not in the same way you
judge all the time.
There was one great man called Gurjyev in Russia. He used to do this,
give shocks to people. When you give shock treatment again and again,
it is like an immunization to getting hurt in the world. You will never
get hurt again by anybody.
Same thing with mothers at home. If mothers don’t scold their children
at all, the children become so weak because they become so timid.
Sometimes this is a problem with kids from very wealthy families,
because their mothers never scold them. So they cannot withstand a
simple criticism from someone outside. They are not immune to criticism.
The mind becomes so weak.
So if you get hurt from a wise person, or an elderly person, or from
your mother or father, then know it is for some good reason, for some
learning. So it does not even touch you.
If a friend is hurting you, your attitude should be, this person has hurt me, there is some karma getting released.
And people who are miserable, if they try to hurt you, your attitude
should be, compassion. So then the hurt does not cause hurt, but the
hurt brings another level of strength within you. And you become much
stronger, you smile through it. Otherwise, if you brood over it all day,
bruised and upset, you tend to get so negative.
This is a choice for you. Either you get so negative, or you use
every opportunity, whether it is hurt or misery, to become strong and
grow in wisdom.
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