The
danger of equating self-fulfillment with happiness
The
inability for materialism to adequately account for this aspect
of oneself called “consciousness” is the reason why death
too has been inadequately accounted for. Materialism suggests
that death is simply when the battery dies and the “body-mind”
machine (thereby) comes to a halt. But if there is a residual
part to a human being beyond the part that has died (the physical
body), then understanding its destiny is of paramount, personal
importance to each of us. Therefore, the inability for materialism
to account for human consciousness raises a big question mark
in the context of our own mortality. If one has any intelligence
one can’t say, “I can’t
account for consciousness in material terms”, and simultaneously
say, “Who cares about what happens after we die? Let’s just
eat, drink, and be merry in the meanwhile!”
We
seem to be getting by okay as materialists.
Seem. But Avatar Adi Da Samraj indicates that
almost all of us die not from “natural causes” but rather,
from egoity. That is to
say, we are not “getting
by” being materialists. Being a materialist has a
cumulative effect, which, on a physical level,
culminates in physical death, and also carries over into our
after-death destiny the psychic
baggage that has been accumulating.
Scientific
materialism not only fails to account for death, in failing
to account for the non-material aspects of a human being;
it also fails to account for human
suffering altogether.
Scientific
materialism tends to equate self-fulfillment and happiness.
Thus its proposed solution to human suffering is to find out
how to fulfill oneself better (physically, mentally, emotionally,
psychically, etc.), and even to devise ever better technological
means for doing so. Its wisdom relative to personal happiness
is limited to the chemistry of the body and the therapies
of materialistic psychology.
Avatar
Adi Da Samraj has said that, as a result of this technological
frenzy, and as a result of mistaking self-fulfillment for
happiness, we are a culture that is increasingly pleasured
in body and mind, but increasingly desperate at heart.
The
search for self-fulfillment reinforces,
from moment to moment, the sense of being a limited sack of
flesh in need of self-fulfillment. This is why most of us
tend to experience increasingly less pleasure in the same
things as we get older, because the addictive activity of
self-centering in which we are chronically engaged is increasingly
tightening the noose around our neck, hunching the body, and
collapsing the soul; eventually it will kill us.
“The
ego is a guru that has a fool for a disciple”, Adi Da Samraj
once said humorously. Self-fulfillment is the worshipping
of ourselves, and one cannot worship both self and God. As
Jesus put it, we cannot serve two masters: