AFTER GIVING Arjuna knowledge of matter and spirit, Lord Krishna tells him, “Deliberate on this fully, and then decide what you wish to do.” Our children also have to choose between material and spiritual life. To prepare them for this choice, do we need to give them experiences of both? Do our children need any experience of materialism to choose Krishna consciousness? The sages do indeed say that to be complete in knowledge one must study both spirit and matter. But our children can best gain knowledge of illusion by seeing both illusion and reality from the perspective of reality. Srila Prabhupada tells us that the most intelligent people learn simply by hearing. Hearing about Krishna gives a child a direct perception of spiritual happiness and knowledge. And as Krishna tells Arjuna, “Upon gaining this one thinks there is no greater gain.” Spiritual experience, then, can give any child the intelligence to stay clear of materialism just by hearing about it. But even if a child isn’t convinced by his spiritual experience, adults don’t have to arrange for children to have a taste of material life. Even without intervention from parents or teachers, each child feels material life moment by moment. What child has no frustrations or disease? What child doesn’t come across envy, anger, and greed, if not in himself then in others? And what child doesn’t see aging and death, at least in the animals and plants that surround him? Our children will also get direct experience of bodily and mental pleasure. As distress comes, even uninvited, material happiness will also come. A caring adult will use a child’s naturally occurring painful and pleasurable experiences as a connection to what the child has heard from scripture.
As Dr. Howard G. Hendricks writes in The Seven Laws of the Teacher, “You don’t have to get hooked on cocaine to be aware of its devastation, and even many who are hooked don’t understand the danger. So a better way to say it is: properly evaluated experience is the best teacher.” (author’s emphasis) When adults say that for our children to understand maya we must expose them to it, they often mean they want to expose children to the illusions of illusion. They suggest taking children to amusement parks, or showing them television, or engaging them in much of the frivolities of childhood. But children who get a taste for such illusions generally become—illusioned. Their higher knowledge and taste for Krishna become covered. The child asks for further and further indulgence in illusion, because, as Krishna tells us, material desires can never be satisfied. The parents then feel they must give the child maya because the child demands it; they forget that they themselves, the parents, sparked that demand.
A good parent or teacher tries to keep a child physically healthy. And there is a way to expose a child to disease in order to prevent disease—vaccination. The Vedic scriptures offer a similar method for material life in general. A vaccination introduces a disease in a form that isn’t dangerous. Similarly, conditioned souls can safely deal with matter in a changed form—by using it in Krishna’s service. So children can listen to music glorifying Krishna, eat food offered to Krishna, watch plays and movies about Krishna, use their talents to serve Krishna, and possibly later marry and raise a family in Krishna’s service. This is a way to dovetail material inclinations with spiritual knowledge, to see both maya and Krishna and choose Krishna. When maya is used in Krishna’s service under the direction of a guru it ceases to work as a force of illusion. Rather, it acts spiritually to purify material desires. Still, some adults insist that a child will learn best just through his or her own experiences, coming to Krishna consciousness naturally, just from experiencing material life, without any outside help.
In ancient times, also, there were parents who argued that their children would gain spiritual determination simply through their own material lives. An example cited in the Bhagavatam is that of Daksa. “Material enjoyment,” he said, “is indeed the cause of all unhappiness, but one cannot give it up unless one has personally experienced how much suffering it is. Therefore one should be allowed to remain in so-called material enjoyment while at the same time advancing in knowledge to experience the misery of this false material happiness. Then, without help from others, one will find material enjoyment detestable. Those whose minds are changed by others do not become as renounced as those who have personal experience.” Sometimes we who have come to Krishna consciousness as adults assume that our determination to renounce material life is the result of a bad taste for illusory enjoyment. Yet in discussing Daksa’s statement, Srila Prabhupada tells us that Daksa’s philosophy is wrong. He writes, “The young boys and girls of the Krishna consciousness movement have given up the spirit of material enjoyment not because of practice [of material life] but by the mercy of Lord Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and His servants.” Why is the experience of material “enjoyment” not enough to teach us? Prabhupada explains, “Material nature is so strong that although a man suffers at every step, he will not cease in his attempts to enjoy.”
Experience, then, won’t enable a child to learn unless hearing comes with it. One longs for the happiness of serving Krishna not merely because one has become disgusted with materialism but because hearing from a great soul has sparked love of God in one’s heart, so that by comparison material life has no allure. Urmila Devi Dasi was initiated in 1973 and has been involved in ISKCON education since 1983. Urmila’s husband, three children and six grandchildren are all active in Krishna consciousness. She has a Masters of School Administration and a Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This is an article I wrote 5 years ago when I was working for a “logistics” company (a fancy name for a warehouse). As human beings we have to learn to deal with the problems of life, like suffering and death. Some would go so far as to say that unless we understand death we can’t truly live. So it is not a “morbid’ philosophy that talks about death, but a philosophy that sees death not as a end, but as a door to another life. Every situation should be our teacher. Many of us have read in the Christian Bible, that : “As we sow, so shall we reap”. This is another way to express the law of karma, or that for every action there is a reaction. So as we live our current life, we will suffer or enjoy in the next ones (reincarnation). The actions of our life do have consequences, all though some people, like those who ran the Tri-State Crematory in the following story, don’t think so. Even if we do escape the laws of the State, we will be responsible before the Universal laws of God.
Reprinted from Back to Godhead Magazine Volume 30 Number 01, 1996 © BBT International; all rights reserved.