Living content with what you have is a healthy exercise
in balance and demonstrating that you are close to
serenity.
Everyday situations often make an individual suffer
temptations and be attracted to what he does not have.
But if he has moral strength he will not be seduced.
With effort, he learned to control his desires and
overcome the inner conflicts that he has overcome or is
close to overcoming. He sees importance in the simplest
things he has, because he looks at them from the right
side, exactly the opposite of what many do.
The person - content with what he has – has developed a
humble, grateful look, which makes him see the useful
side of things in his life. Even if some have a monetary
value, or a seductive appeal, their view about
themselves does not involve a sense of exclusive
ownership or self-promotion. And while they're in his
care, he does not use them to flaunt or humiliate. He
gives them the right value that they really have.
Simple in a little and simple in a lot
The idea of the simple is commonly associated with the
little. This does not mean that much cannot be linked to
simplicity, especially when that much is not the result
of excessive ambition, of selfish accumulation.
It so happens that the Divine Providence sometimes leads
abundance to certain people, not to accumulate goods,
but to make wealth produce more, and always for the
general benefit, for the benefit of life.
One can find, in the crowds, wealthy people who
understand their mission, their role in society.
However, the suggestion contained in Matthew's
evangelical text, 19: 22,23,24, is very strong and I
would say almost exclusive. According to it, the rich
face great difficulties to "enter the Kingdom of
Heaven".
However, the misuse, or the abuse of things, cannot be
related only to the one who is rich, wealthy. Often, the
poor also do not value, waste, ignore the little they
have, while still aiming for what they think is due.
This should also make it difficult for you to enter that
Kingdom. In both cases, first of all, there is moral
poverty.
What one has and what one is
To be satisfied with what you have, in my understanding,
is a result of being satisfied with what you are. In the
latter case, there are two orders of ideas: 1 - the
person is aware of himself, knows his limits, knows his
conditions and where he can or cannot go, he would never
venture to undertake something for which he is not
prepared, he will not intend to occupy a space where he
perceives not to fit;
2 - despite these findings, the person knows that life
is a dynamic act and suggests progressive actions. Not
longing for power, wealth, supremacy, does not mean
being stagnant, inert and unproductive. On the contrary,
overcoming oneself must be a constant, without this
implying competing with others. It is one thing not to
desire the impossible, it is another to stand with your
arms crossed, without moving your intelligence. I do not
discuss here the power of God, who can give the world to
an individual if He wants. I speak of what that
individual can or should do with what God has already
given him.
To live well
In this line of reasoning, the idea of the simple is
linked to self-stripping, disinterestedness, detachment,
applied to a responsible person, and consequently, free.
With these characteristics, the individual is almost
certainly also humble. We will then have the one who
rejects the unnecessary, the superfluous, the useless,
for understanding that he does not need this to live
well. We will have one who learns to identify the real
needs that will meet the standard of living that he must
live.
But, it is not always easy to be aware of our real
needs. Choices are made based on our ability to judge
what is good for us. And this judgment is always ready
to satisfy the demands of the moral defects that we
have. Most of the time the "ego doesn't think" about the
consequences of what it chooses. Hence, disappointments,
delusion and failures arise. And also the pain.
This Kardec thinking makes all the difference
Allan Kardec wrote in The Gospel according to
Spiritism: “Man can soften or increase the
bitterness of his tests, by the way of facing earthly
life” (¹). This thinking makes all the difference for
anyone who is interested in adjusting to divine
guidelines with less suffering. Kardec explains it
better: “The result of the spiritual way of looking at
life is the diminishing importance of worldly things,
the moderation of human desires, making man content with
his position, without envying that of others, and
feeling less about his setbacks and disappointments.
Thus, he acquires a calm and a resignation as useful to
the health of the body as to that of the soul, while
with envy, jealousy and ambition, he voluntarily
surrenders to torture, increasing the miseries and
anxieties of his short existence”.
The Spirit Fenelon, one of the collaborators in the
elaboration of the Spiritist Doctrine, endorsed Kardec's
statement when he said: “How many torments, on the
contrary, can he avoided by the one who knows how to be
content with what he has, who sees without envy what
does not belong to him? That does not pretend to be more
than what he is, (...) He is always calm, because he
does not invent absurd needs. To be calm isn't it - in
the midst of life's storms – a fortune?” (²)
Simplicity changes
Illusion is one of man's greatest enemies. It is
important to beware of everything that eludes, and in
this way to interrupt the flow that keeps the old man who
went bankrupt alive and that needs to die in us. Only
then will a renewed man be born, with an airy mind, a
clear conscience, able to share the age of the Spirit.
Simplicity changes, creates a wise way of looking and
doing differently, gives a gain in the life of those who
want to be more and better, without judging themselves
more and better than anyone else.
(1) ESE, chapter V, item
13, Reasons for resignation.
(2) ESE, chapter V, item
23, Voluntary torments.
Learn more at: Allan
Kardec, The Book of Spirits, third book,
Conservation Law. |