I got all my religion from school, friends and cousins- that is whatever I got of it, which by the way things have turned out is not much. Though I did turn out to be very multi-culturally respectful of whatever everyone else believed in. I suppose it was a "They do god, we do math" thing. Or at least it seemed that way.
And yet by the time I was in senior school, I did believe in something. Perhaps not the bearded old gentleman the Bible seemed to be about (pictures on the Sistine Chapel are proof enough), nor even the many limbed deities most festivals seemed to be about. And certainly not a vengeful formless creator who seemed very concerned about how much skin women showed. But something for sure. Vague, kindly understanding, and in general a benign deity who seemed to listen to fervent pleases of "let me do well in this exam". But there were rules. I could do the "let me do well.." routine, unless I had studied hard enough, made good notes, memorized what I needed to, practiced Math. The "let me do well…" was a just-before-the-questions-were-handed filler, in between the drawing margins on the paper and filling up the fountain pens. Anyhow it was churlish to wish for results without putting in effort.
The year I passed out of school was a fairly horrible one. My father had a brain tumor surgery and was diagnosed with lung cancer in the final stages. Now, cancer was not totally alien. My mother's parents had both battled with it and succumbed. The "what will happen now" was a foregone conclusion. Especially since the doctor said "Three months" too. So, when one of my cousins, who had recently found the divine in a multi-national property, expensive cars and jewelry owning Mataji began the she-is-amazing-she will-effect-an-immediate-cure, it was not only ridiculous, it was heartless to the extreme. As were the discussions on "performing the last rites" and other extremely human activities in the following of a supposed divine will.
Personal tragedy did not lead me to any disillusionment with the creator of the universe. I was very much of the "as you sow, so shall you reap" school. It was just unfair to lay the blame on something out there. Even though life had changed rather drastically. I just began to pay a little more attention to what seemed to be divinely ordained or blessed. And the ridiculousness began to strike me. " Our car was in an accident and no one got even a scratch. God saved us. " Yes, but there was an accident in the first place. Or the presumptuousness of "XYZ was saved during the **insert natural or other calamity**, which devastated **insert number** XYZ ascribes it to praying to **insert favorite deity**" . The great divine intervened specially on the behalf of XYZ condemning all the others- that is some favoritism I did not like at all (reminded me of one of my teachers for whom no one could be better than one of her pets)- this was so Human, and so not fair. And the cricket players, or Oscar winners (I do not remember if the Miss Worlds did it too- they may have, they seemed empty headed enough) whose victory was because someone/thing out there was specially arranging things for them, that just seemed plain silly. I also began to wonder about the divine which needed to manifest itself through milk drinking idols (capillary action, it was actually) or appear on bits of toast, chapattis, sliced through tomatoes or brinjals to make itself belief worthy, even as war, hunger, famine, poverty, disease, insurgency seemed to be thriving.
So, I stopped praying. And found that the frequency at which they were going unanswered was the same as it had been earlier.
8 comments:
A lot like how we grew up Alankrita!
One of the things we learnt (at school) was "God Helps Those how help themselves". And another Lok-parlok everything is here, so you reap what you sow.
And what I love best is 'They do god, we do math" :)
I know couple of people who temple hop yes! just like blog hopping because they think that if they visit one god the other will be mad.
It is all about our belief. Named or nameless, we gain the strength from inside.
It's a wonder why people don't see the obvious. What is it that makes them so blind? what is it that makes them ignore the facts. I sometimes feel they don't want to see anything that might shake the foundations of their belief. They prefer to remain unchallenged and cloistered in their comfort zones.
"So, I stopped praying. And found that the frequency at which they were going unanswered was the same as it had been earlier."
You sounded like george carlin there :-)
yup same understanding of religion here except that now I see so many versions of it around me..
''They do god, we do math" thing...really good one Alankrita!:)
LOl@mataji..yeah well...to each his/her own..
sorry to hear about your father..
hope you coped with the loss well((hugs))
LOL...To each his or her own...Your last sentence was the best...
**Please delete the comment once you have read it**Please don't approve :-)
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Ally,
This has got to be one of your best posts ever. Straight from the heart. So beautiful.
I was a little startled to read about your father...am so sorry for the loss...but the reason I was startled (pleasantly) is how you have grown into a wonderful, vivacious, bubbly woman despite the personal tragedy. Your dad must be extremely proud of you.
God bless you, buddy :-)
(Oh...just reaslised, after the above line, that the original post was about not praying and perhaps, not believing in that pre-defined entity called God).
Who do we pray for? For all or for just ourselves?
The whole idea is to get out of this limited individual shell to our true universal Self. ayam aatma brahma Till that time we are in a sort of dream state. Would you be grateful to someone who prevents you from waking up?
Look back at all the unanswered prayers. Life moves on, like a river flowing between the two banks of pleasure and pain. What we are today depends on how we moved on from those "unanswered prayers".
Prayer has always been a very selfish act by humans. Fact is, everyone goes through ups and downs in life. Being social beings, humans must help others in need, as it’s the best way an individual can improve the chances (strictly speaking statistics) of getting help when he or she needs it most. Now that’s something a prayer cannot guarantee.
P.S. Thanks for visiting my blog. Loved yours.
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