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Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Valluvar on Self-Control



Valluvar on Self-Control over the Senses, Speech, and Behavior

Dr. R. Prabhakaran

Introduction

Self-control is the ability to control one's emotions and desires and the expression of them in one's behavior. There are two aspects to self-control. One aspect of self-control is controlling one's desires through effectively controlling one's mind. The other aspect of self-control is to show restraint in one's behavior towards others. In both cases, self-control implies exercising control over the desires and actions through the mind. As Marcus Aurelius (121 AD – 180 AD), the Roman Emperor, mentions in his book, Meditations, "You have power over your mind - not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength." In other words, the only tool at the disposal of human beings to control their desires, words, and deeds is their mind.

 

Valluvar emphasizes the importance of controlling one's desire for the gratification of the senses. Also, he warns against hurtful speech and the consequences of careless and vicious speech, including lies. He praises the virtue of self-control and the benefits of exercising self-control in words and actions.

Self-control over the senses

One of the major desires of mankind is the desire for the pleasures experienced by the five senses:  sight (vision), hearing (audition), taste (gustation), smell (olfaction), and touch (somatosensation). In order to live happily and enjoy life, it is necessary that all five sense organs function properly. However, overindulgence in the sense organs causes physical and psychological problems. For example, it is a well-known medical fact that in the case of most people, overeating leads to obesity, high cholesterol, and cardiovascular diseases. So also, overindulgence in sexual pleasures may cause damage to the tissues, nerves, and joints. Also, it is known to weaken the immunity system, cause muscular and nervous pain and promote infection and inflammation. The danger of reckless and unprotected sex is very well-known to everyone. In the case of youngsters, it has been observed that excessive TV watching, playing video games, and listening to music may lead to behavioral problems and affect their academic performance. It is an established fact that alcohol, cigarettes, and narcotics cause serious physical and psychological problems. So, moderation in the enjoyment through the use of sense organs should be the goal. In order to practice moderation, one should develop the ability to exercise self-control. Valluvar suggests that by exercising self-control through the mind, one should control one's desires for the gratification of the five senses. He says one should do this like the tortoise instinctively withdrawing its four legs and head when it senses danger.

 

Like a tortoise withdrawing its four legs and its head into its shell, those who

control their five senses in one life will be guarded in their next seven births.      (kural – 126)

 

The above kural echoes the following similar statement from Bhagavad Gita. “He who can withdraw his senses completely from the sense objects like a tortoise withdraws its limbs, his mastery is established.” (Bhagavad Gita, Chapter 2, Stanza 58)

 

            The mention of "seven births" in the above kural does not really mean exactly seven births. It simply means several future births. This is akin to someone saying, "I have a million questions in my mind." to imply that he has many questions about something. The above kural is based on Valluvar's belief that the actions in one birth will have consequences in future births (karma theory). The idea behind kural 126 is that the knowledge and experience gained by an individual from controlling the senses in one birth will be helpful to him in future births. It should be noted that Valluvar makes a similar statement regarding learning. He says that "The learning that a man acquires in one birth will be helpful to him in seven births to come (kural 398)."

Eastern religions assert that desires lead to attachments, and attachments result in several reincarnations (or, as Buddhists prefer to call them, several rebirths). In order to break the chain of births and deaths and to attain salvation (nirvana or eternal bliss), one is supposed to control all desires and eventually vanquish all desires and attachments. The following kural shows that Valluvar is in agreement with the idea that one should extricate oneself from all attachments in order to reach a stage of not being born again:

The final release (from births and deaths) comes to those who have severed

all attachments. Others will continue to experience more births and deaths. (kural – 349)

 

It is indeed very difficult to sever all attachments. It requires enormous willpower and practice. It appears that the idea behind kural 126 is that those who practice self-control over their senses in one birth will continue to improve upon their experience in the next several births and eventually extricate themselves from all attachments.

Exercising self-control in speech

The sense organ tongue is associated with serving two purposes. One function is to taste, and the other function is to speak. In kural 126, the tasting ability of the tongue was addressed. In the following kural, Valluvar discusses the need to control the tongue from the evils arising from speech.

 

Even if nothing else can be controlled, one must control one's tongue; if not,

speech from the uncontrolled tongue will lead to immense trouble.           (kural – 127)

 

Valluvar considers 1) hurtful and abusive language, 2) slander, 3) idle talk, and 4) lying as the four evils that pertain to the speech. A major motivating factor for using harsh and unkind words could be anger. Therefore, Valluvar warns that people should avoid getting angry at anyone. He says, "Only evil consequences arise out of anger. Therefore, forget about getting angry at anyone (kural – 303)." Envy and jealousy are the most likely causes for indulging in slanderous gossips. It may also be the basic flaw in a person's character that causes him to indulge in slander and or idle talk. Valluvar strongly condemns slander. He says, "It is better to die than to live by lying and slander; for such a death brings with it the fruits of righteousness (kural – 183)." He is equally critical of those who engage in idle talk. According to him," Those who engage in the idle talk are chaff among men (kural -196)." He warns against uttering a lie. In fact, he says, "Do not utter falsehood about what your conscience knows to be true; for later, your own conscious will continue to hurt you (kural – 293)." 

An angry word, a hurtful speech, a lie, or an insult uttered by a person offends others, and it remains in their minds for a long time. Valluvar says, "The injury caused by a burn heals, but not the scar that is caused by an offending word (kural – 129)." Valluvar considers all the four kinds of offensive speech as evil. He is of the opinion that since evil results in evil consequences, evil should be feared even more than the fire itself (kural 202). According to him, "Just one hurtful word and its resultant evil is enough to spoil all the intended good in one's speech (kural – 128)." In view of the disastrous consequences resulting from mean and malicious speech, Valluvar warns that it is essential that everyone should exercise self-control to guard against them.

Self-Control in the deeds

Valluvar condemns evil deeds as well as evil words. The source of all words (speech) and deeds is the mind. If the mind is pure, then it will be free from all evil thoughts. This is precisely why Valluvar says, "Virtue is nothing but cultivating a mind without blemishes; everything else is an empty show (kural 34." In order to eliminate the blemishes from the mind, it is necessary to exercise control over the mind. If one can exercise effective self-control and steer the mind away from evil thoughts, then there will be no evil words or deeds.

                                                 

Self-Control and Humility

According to Valluvar, in addition to practicing self-control over one's words and deeds, one should also proactively exercise self-control and practice humility. He says it is particularly more important for the rich to behave with humility. By virtue of being rich and being powerful, some are likely to look down upon others and behave arrogantly without a trace of humility. He says that humility is an added possession for the wealthy.

 

Humility is a precious quality in all people. But, it is a priceless possession

for the wealthy.                                                                                              (kural – 125)

 

The same idea was expressed by Saadi of Shiraz (1213 AD– 1291 AD), who was a prominent Persian poet and literary scholar during the 13th century. One of his aphorisms is as follows: The beloved of the Almighty are the rich who have the humility of the poor.

Benefits of self-control

Self-control helps an individual to curb his desires for sensual gratification. He who exercises self-control will also avoid offending others through his speech. Furthermore, self-control also helps an individual to restrain his anger and causing physical and mental harm to others. The persistent practice of self-control in one's words and deeds will help one to gain the respect of others. In fact, Valluvar says, "If one exercises self-control with knowledge and intent, one will gain the esteem of others (kural – 123)." One who consistently practices self-control will also learn to become humble. Valluvar admires a man who excels in self-control by saying, "The grandeur of a man who consistently exercises self-control is more imposing than a lofty mountain (kural – 124)." He adds, "Self-control places one among the gods; lack of it will lead to utter darkness (kural – 121)." A man of limited learning may be humble in the midst of well-learned people. Sometimes, some people who are known for their knowledge may not be very humble. If one is well-learned and still exercises self-control to control his anger, he will benefit from his own virtuous qualities. Valluvar personifies virtue as an anthropomorphic entity and says, "Virtue waits for the right time to help a man of knowledge, who exercises self-control and controls his anger. (kural – 130). "Dr. S. M. Diaz comments that the idea expressed by Valluvar in kural  130 is very similar to the statement, "The spirit of God is delighted to dwell in the hearts of the humble." made by Desiderius Erasmus Rotterdamus (1466 AD -1536 AD) (also known as Erasmus of   Rotterdam) who was a Dutch renaissance humanist, Catholic priest, teacher, and a theologian.

 

Conclusion

Exercising self-control in one's speech and deeds and acting with humility towards others is indeed a very laudable quality that results in many benefits. Because of this, Valluvar considers self-control a valuable treasure worth cherishing.

Guard your self-control as a precious treasure, for there is no greater

wealth in life than that.                                                                                  (kural – 122)


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Appendix

அறன்வலியுறுத்தல்
மனத்துக்கண் மாசிலன் ஆதல் அனைத்து அறன்
ஆகுல நீர பிற.                                                            (குறள்34)

அடக்கமுடைமை
அடக்கம் அமரருள் உய்க்கும் அடங்காமை
ஆரிருள் உய்த்து விடும்.                                               (குறள்121)
காக்க பொருளா அடக்கத்தை ஆக்கம்
அதனின்ஊங்கு இல்லை உயிர்க்கு.                              (குறள் – 122)
செறிவறிந்து சீர்மை பயக்கும் அறிவறிந்து
ஆற்றின் அடங்கப் பெறின்.                                          (குறள்123)
நிலையின் திரியாது அடங்கியான் தோற்றம்
மலையினும் மாணப் பெரிது.                                        (குறள்124)
எல்லார்க்கும் நன்றாம் பணிதல் அவருள்ளும்
செல்வர்க்கே செல்வம் தகைத்து.                                  (குறள்125)
ஒருமையுள் ஆமைபோல் ஐந்துஅடக்கல் ஆற்றின்
எழுமையும் ஏமாப்பு உடைத்து.                                     (குறள்126)
யாகாவார் ஆயினும் நாகாக்க காவாக்கால்
சோகாப்பர் சொல்லிழுக்குப் பட்டு.                                (குறள்127)
ஒன்றானுந் தீச்சொல் பொருட்பயன் உண்டாயின்
நன்றாகா தாகி விடும்.                                                 (குறள்128)
தீயினாற் சுட்டபுண் உள்ளாறும் ஆறாதே
நாவினாற் சுட்ட வடு.                                                  (குறள்129)
கதங்காத்துக் கற்றடங்கல் ஆற்றுவான் செவ்வி
அறம்பார்க்கும் ஆற்றின் நுழைந்து.                               (குறள்130)

புறங்கூறாமை
புறங்கூறிப் பொய்த்துயிர் வாழ்தலின் சாதல்
அறம்கூறும் ஆக்கம் தரும்.                                           (குறள்183)

பயனில சொல்லாமை
பயனில் சொல் பராட்டு வானை மகன்எனல்
மக்கட் பதடி எனல்.                                                     (குறள்196)


தீவினையச்சம்
தீயவை தீய பயத்தலால் தீயவை
தீயினும் அஞ்சப் படும்.                                                (குறள்202)
வாய்மை
தன்னெஞ் சறிவது பொய்யற்க பொய்த்தபின்
தன்னெஞ்சே தன்னைச் சுடும்.                                      (குறள்293)
வெகுளாமை
மறத்தல் வெகுளியை யார்மாட்டும் தீய
பிறத்தல் அதனான் வரும்.                                            (குறள்303)

துறவு
பற்றற்ற கண்ணே பிறப்பறுக்கும் மற்று
நிலையாமை காணப் படும்.                                         (குறள்349)

கல்வி
ஒருமைக்கண் தான்கற்ற கல்வி ஒருவற்கு
எழுமையும் ஏமாப்பு உடைத்து.                                    (குறள் – 398)



1 comment:

  1. Thank you for your interest in my blog and my posts. I would be interested in your comments, if you have any.

    anbudan,
    Prabhakaran

    ReplyDelete