Do Not Work Very Hard Like Beasts of Burden
Śrīla Prabhupāda frequently warns against the trap of modern materialistic society, which encourages people to work very hard simply for bodily comforts and sense gratification. He explains that human life is meant for spiritual elevation, not for imitating the exhausting, aimless labor of lower animals. By studying his teachings, we learn how to shift our tremendous working energy away from mundane illusions and direct it toward the eternal service of the Supreme Lord.
The Illusion of Material Happiness
Modern civilization programs individuals to believe that intense labor leading to wealth and sensory enjoyment equates to success. However, Śrīla Prabhupāda points out that this endless struggle for existence only produces immense anxiety, temporary gains, and inevitable death. The conditioned soul falsely accepts this continuous friction and suffering as happiness.
- Due to the living entity's ignorance of his eternal blissful life, he becomes attracted to material activities under the spell of maya. In this world, he can never experience happiness, yet he works very hard to do so. This is called maya.
- No one in this material world is happy, but the struggle gives a false sense of happiness. A person must work very hard, and when he attains the result of his hard work, he thinks himself happy.
- On the whole there is no happiness in this material world, but an illusioned person works very hard for so-called happiness. Indeed, this process of working hard is actually taken for happiness. This is called illusion.
- We think we are enjoying, but we are suffering actually. And we cannot understand what is suffering. Sometimes we come to understand. But we are accepting this suffering as enjoying. A man is working very hard, whole day. This is not enjoyment.
Laboring Like Beasts of Burden
When a human being neglects self-realization to focus exclusively on eating, sleeping, mating, and defending, their existence drops to the level of an animal. Śrīla Prabhupāda vividly compares such fruitive workers to asses and hogs, who carry heavy burdens or eat abominable things day and night without understanding the ultimate futility of their labor.
- As confirmed in Bhagavad-gita, the miscreants who are simply concerned with material enjoyment, who work very hard like beasts of burden, can hardly know the Personality of Godhead at any stage due to asurika-bhava, or a spirit of revolt against the Supreme Lord.
- The typical example of the beast of burden is the ass. This humble beast is made to work very hard by his master. The ass does not really know for whom he works so hard day and night.
- Ass is called mudha. Mudha, he works very hard, a big load of washerman's cloth is laden on his back, and he works, and the washerman gives little grass. He thinks, "He is giving me grass; therefore I must bear this load."
- The stool-eater is also working very hard day and night and gratifying senses. So is the human civilization meant for imitating the hogs and dogs to work very hard day and night and gratify the senses, that's all?
- In the human society. - This is not meant for working very hard like the dogs and hogs. Kastan kaman arhati vid-bhujam ye. Simply by working hard day and night for sense gratification, this is done by the dogs and hogs.
The True Purpose of Human Life
The human form of life is an exceedingly rare gift designed specifically for spiritual awakening, not for grueling mundane labor. Śrīla Prabhupāda teaches that instead of wasting our intelligence on sophisticated methods of sense gratification, we should engage in tapasya (austerity) to purify our existence and return to the spiritual world.
- To work very hard like dogs and hog for sense gratification is not the ambition of human life. Human life is meant for little austerity. Tapo divyam putraka yena suddhyet sattvam. We have to purify our existence. That is the mission of human life.
- This human form of life is not meant for working very hard like cats and dogs. It is meant for tapasya. Tapasya: simple life, and realize yourself. And then you stop the miserable condition of your life.
- We are given this human form of life not to work hard like asses, swine and dogs but to attain the highest perfection of life.
- People without spiritual education do not know that the ultimate goal of life is to go back home, back to Godhead. Forgetting this aim of life, they are working very hard in disappointment and frustration.
Transforming Work Through Devotion
Rejecting materialistic labor does not mean becoming lazy or inactive; rather, it means changing the beneficiary of our actions. Śrīla Prabhupāda explains that when a person works incredibly hard but offers the fruits of their labor to Kṛṣṇa, their work transcends karma and becomes a blissful expression of pure devotion.
- Karmi also works very hard, harder and harder but all for this amisa-mada-seva. Amisa-mada-seva. Vyavaya, only for sex life, eating meat, and intoxication. And a devotee works in the same way, hard, but for Krsna's satisfaction.
- A person who works very hard, no matter in what occupation, and who offers the result of the work to the service of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna, is called a karma-yogi.
- The body of a devotee who tries his best to work very hard for the satisfaction of Krsna by fully engaging in the Lord's service must be accepted as transcendental.
- They (people) like it, to work very hard. But our Krsna consciousness movement is transferring that hard working to the business of Krsna. That tendency for hard working may be utilized.
Conclusion
Śrīla Prabhupāda masterfully exposes the tragic irony of modern society, where individuals proudly work themselves to exhaustion for the fleeting pleasures of the material body. By comparing mundane laborers to beasts of burden, he shakes the conditioned soul out of its complacency. The immense energy currently wasted on temporary economic development and sensory indulgence must be redirected. When we stop imitating the aimless labor of animals and begin working intensely for the pleasure of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, our hard work no longer binds us to the cycle of repeated birth and death, but instead secures our eternal, blissful life.
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 Work Very Hard. We invite you to visit this link to study the complete compilation and experience Śrīla Prabhupāda's teachings in their direct, verbatim form.