What are a few critical lessons we must learn in this journey of life?
Education that does not confer modesty and wisdom, is a sheer waste of precious time.
Whatever else you learn or do not learn, equip yourself with the strength that’s necessary to be virtuous, to resist temptation and lures of the objective world.
Discrimination is not the cleverness that’s given inordinate value today but the capacity to see things in their proper proportion, to evaluate temporary and lasting, the particular and universal, the shallow and deep.
You must also have an attitude of reverence toward the past, toward elders who are repositories of the saintly spiritual wisdom and experience that you must acquire.
Have also faith — faith in your own essential divinity, faith in the higher values attainable by earnest practice and the exercise of detachment.
Life becomes sweeter with a little dose of denial, too; if you get all your desires, it begins to cloy.
Deny yourselves many of the things your mind runs after and you will find that you become tough enough, to bear both good fortune and bad!
- Divine Discourse, Sep 12, 1963.
The senses have to be rigorously controlled by discrimination and detachment, the twin talents given exclusively to humans.
Source: radiosai.org
