Bodily Pleasure - The Flickering Intoxication
In the pursuit of happiness, the modern world focuses almost exclusively on "bodily pleasure." However, Śrīla Prabhupāda warns that this pursuit is misguided. Bodily pleasure is described as "flickering" and "intoxicating"—it stimulates the senses for a moment but leaves the soul unsatisfied. Real education involves understanding the distinction between the temporary body and the eternal self, and learning to tolerate the dualities of material experience while striving for spiritual perfection.
Flickering Nature of Material Joy
Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that happiness derived from the body is not permanent. It comes and goes like the seasons. Because it is fleeting, we cannot actually hold onto it or enjoy it deeply. To base one's life on such temporary sensations is to remain in the clutch of asat (non-eternal) existence, ignoring the eternal nature of the self.
- Bodily pleasure is flickering and intoxicating, and we cannot actually enjoy it, because of its momentary nature. Actual pleasure is of the soul, not the body. We have to mold our lives in such a way that we will not be diverted by bodily pleasure.
- That is the critical point, that if we indulge in our bodily pleasure, that pleasure is flickering. That pleasure is flickering. We cannot enjoy. Bodily pleasure we cannot enjoy.
- There are those who are striving for temporary things (asat). Matter and the body are temporary, and if one only engages himself for bodily pleasure, he is conditioned by temporary things.
- The whole Vedic scripture describes that happiness derived of sense perception out of the body, that is not real happiness. If we are to enjoy real happiness, then we have to transcend these bodily pleasures.
Soul is Distinct
A fundamental tenet of Vedic knowledge is the difference between the body and the soul. Śrīla Prabhupāda asserts that the soul is separate from the pains and pleasures of the body. However, due to ignorance and the "heating" effect of material contact, the conditioned soul feels affected. True knowledge is realizing that one's hard labor for bodily comfort is ultimately misdirected.
- According to Vedic civilization, anyone who is thinking, "I am this body," and doing accordingly - for the bodily pleasure he is working so hard - so that is not knowledge.
- This is very important verse. In the previous verse it has been described, dehino 'smin yatha dehe (Bhagavad-gita 2.13). Actually, we living entities, we are within the body. The bodily pains and pleasure are not the pains and pleasure of the soul within.
- It is not a fact that the soul or Supersoul becomes poor simply because the body is poor. These are the statements of ignorant people. The soul and Supersoul are always apart from bodily pleasure and pain.
- You may put a pot of milk and rice within fire, and the milk and rice are automatically heated one after the other. Similarly, due to bodily pains and pleasures, the senses, mind and soul are affected. The soul cannot be completely detached from this conditioning.
Factual but Temporary
Śrīla Prabhupāda refutes the idea that bodily experiences are false. He argues that because we feel them, they are real—or "factual"—but they are not eternal. This distinction is crucial. We cannot dismiss the body as non-existent, but we must understand its temporary status to avoid becoming entangled in its demands.
- If the bodily pains and pleasures were false, the creation would be false also, and consequently no one would take very much interest in it. The conclusion is that the material creation is not false or imaginary, but it is temporary.
- This body is true. We have got body. We don't say it is false. It is true. Bodily pains and pleasures we feel, so how can I say that the body is false?
- The bodily needs, bodily pains and pleasures, there we are affected. So how you can say it is false? Similarly the mind, and soul is absolutely factual. So any item you take, you can understand by thorough study.
- This argument (that bodily desginations like pain and pleasure are felt by the soul) put forward by Maharaja Rahugana is correct from the practical point of view, but it arises from an attachment to the bodily conception.
Transcending the Body
The goal of Kṛṣṇa consciousness is to rise above the bodily platform. Śrīla Prabhupāda points to the example of the gopīs of Vṛndāvana, who sacrificed everything—including their own bodily happiness and reputation—for the pleasure of Kṛṣṇa. For the practitioner, this begins with tolerance (titikṣā) and cultivation of spiritual life. As one advances, the attraction to bodily pleasure naturally fades, replaced by the superior taste of devotional service.
- Social customs, scriptural injunctions, bodily demands, fruitive action, shyness, patience, bodily pleasures, self-gratification and the path of varnasrama-dharma, which is difficult to give up - the gopis have forsaken all these.
- Bodily pains and pleasure come and go; they are not permanent. Tams titiksasva bharata. So you have to learn how to tolerate these bodily pains and pleasure, but you have to take care of the soul.
- If one is engaged in his cultivation of spiritual life, then he should tolerate all these bodily pains and pleasure, because they come and go.
- When one is in Krishna Consciousness, he no more feels any bodily pains and pleasures. After all, we are not this body. But we should make progress steadily by following the rules and regulations, not making experiment.
Conclusion
Bodily pleasure is a distraction that keeps the soul bound to the material world. By understanding its temporary nature and the distinct reality of the soul, we can learn to tolerate the flickering waves of happiness and distress. Ultimately, by following the path of the gopīs and dedicating our energy to the pleasure of Kṛṣṇa, we achieve a state of transcendental bliss that far exceeds any sensation the body can offer.
Dive Deeper into Śrīla Prabhupāda's Vani
Śrīla Prabhupāda lives within his instructions. This article is a summary of the profound truths found in the Vaniquotes category Bodily Pleasure. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.