by Satsvarupa das Goswami
CERTAIN
PSYCHOLOGISTS and folklorists imagine that the womb was a very nice place a
comfortable, warm home where food .and shelter were provided without our
effort. Some even say that throughout our adult lives, we unconsciously desire
to return to that protection and security, "floating undisturbed in the
warm, dark, quiet world of unparalleled intimacy with the beloved mother."
By the scientific method of hearing from Vedic literature, however, we get the
actual account of a human being's conception, his pre-natal condition, and his
birth. Contrary to what our psychologists and folklorists have imagined, life
in the womb is among the most painful and miserable of human experiences.
The Srimad-Bhagavatam, a
5,000-year-old spiritual classic containing the essence of Vedic knowledge,
gives the following vivid description of the living entity's experience from
the point of conception to the time of birth: "Under the supervision of
the Supreme Lord (Sri Krsna) and according to the results of his work, the
living entity, the soul, is made to enter the womb of a woman through the
particle of a man's semina to assume a particular kind of body. On the first
night, the semina and ovum mix, and on the fifth night the mixture ferments
into a bubble. On the tenth night it develops into a form like a plum, and
after that it gradually turns into a lump of flesh. In the course of a month, a
head is formed, and at the end of two months, hands, feet and other limbs take
shape. By the end of three months, the nails, fingers, toes, body hair, bones
and skin appear, as do the organ of generation and the other apertures in the
body, namely, the eyes, nostrils, ears, mouth and anus. Within four months from
the date of conception, the seven essential ingredients of the body (lymph,
blood, flesh, fat, bone, marrow and semina) come into existence. At the end of
five months, hunger and thirst make themselves felt, and at the end of six
months the fetus begins to move in the abdomen on the right side if the child
is a male and on the left side if female."
Painful
Confinement
The
actual experience of the fetus, however, cannot be known by mere medical
observation. For this information we must go to the Vedic scriptures, which
give us direct knowledge of events beyond our normal experience. The Bhagavatam continues,
"Deriving its nutrition from the food and drink taken by the mother, the
fetus grows and remains in that abominable residence of stool and urine, which
is a breeding place for all kinds of worms. Bitten again and again all over his
body by these hungry worms in the abdomen itself, the child suffers terrible
agony because of his tenderness. He thus becomes unconscious moment after
moment. When the mother eats bitter, pungent foods or food that is too salty or
too sour, the body of the child incessantly suffers pains that are almost
intolerable. Placed within the amnion and covered outside by the intestines,
the child remains lying on the side of the abdomen, his head turned toward his
belly and his back and neck arched like a bow." An adult would be unable
to endure such a difficult confinement. The child's pain is beyond our
conception, but because his consciousness is yet undeveloped, he is able to
tolerate it.
As
adults, we have forgotten all this suffering and absorbed ourselves in trying
to become happy in material life. Life in the womb may seem remote; no one has
ever .told us before about its actual nature, and it has not concerned us.
Writing on this topic, His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
comments, "It is an unfortunate civilization in which these matters are
not plainly discussed to make people understand the precarious condition of
material existence."
Astounding
Remembrance. At the end of seven months in the womb, the child remains just
like a bird in a cage unable to move freely and suffering without relief. At
that time, if the soul is fortunate, he gains one astounding facility: he can
remember all the troubles of his past one hundred lives. The vision of his
wasted attempts to be happy makes him grieve wretchedly. While in the womb, the
living being realizes that he has unnecessarily entered the material world. In
this frightful condition, he prays with folded hands, appealing to the Lord,
who has put him there.
Sometimes
a woman in labor promises herself that she will never again become pregnant and
suffer such severe pain. Or a man on the operating table may promise himself
that he will act in such a way as to never again become diseased and undergo
surgery. Similarly, the child, deeply repentant, prays to the Lord that he will
never again commit sinful activities and be forced into another womb. He prays
as follows: "I take shelter of the lotus feet of Lord Krsna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, who appears in His various eternal forms. I, the pure
soul, appearing now to be bound by my activities, am lying in the womb of my
mother by the arrangement of the Lord's illusory energy. I offer my respectful
obeisances unto Him, who is also here with me, but who is unaffected and
changeless. He is unlimited, but He is perceived in the repentant heart."
Repentant
Prayer
The
child in the womb, praying out of bewilderment and repentance, realizes he is not
independent or supreme. He seeks shelter from the Supreme Lord, perceiving that
the Lord in his heart is the supreme master and that he is subordinate. By the
grace of God, the child in the womb can understand his actual relationship with
the Supreme Lord, and he realizes that he has been reduced to his abominable
condition because of his forgetfulness of God. He wants to get out, but he
understands that he can do so only by the mercy of the Supreme Lord, and thus
he asks for the Lord's blessings.
After
nine months, however, the child in the womb makes an extraordinary request to
the Lord: "Although I am living in a terrible condition, still I do not
wish to depart from my mother's abdomen to fall again into the blind well of
materialistic life." The child foresees that the trauma of birth will
destroy his clear knowledge of the miseries of material life and his
remembrance of Lord Krsna. If he forgets the ordeal in the womb and again
assumes the false position of an enjoyer, it would be better for him never to
be born. Although bitten and burned and surrounded by blood and urine, at least
in the womb he is able to remember Krsna. The thought of his future miseries
makes him reluctant to take birth, but of course he cannot possibly live in the
womb much longer. While he thus extols the Lord, the wind that helps
parturition propels him forth with his face turned downward. Pushed down
suddenly by the wind, the child comes out with great trouble, breathless and
deprived of his memory due to severe agony. He cries piteously, having lost his
superior knowledge in the ordeal of birth.
We
should not take lightly this account of life in the womb. One may say, "I
cannot remember such pain in the womb. I am not suffering now, so why worry?
Besides, I don't care." According to this way of thinking, ignorance is
bliss. But it is only a temporary illusion of bliss. Although we now have no
idea of the suffering in the womb, by reading such scriptures as the Srimad-Bhagavatam and
the Bhagavad-gita, we can understand the terrible condition there and
learn how to act in such a way that we will not suffer again. We learn from
the Bhagavad-gita that, as individual souls, we are never created,
but are eternal, fragmental parts of the Supreme Lord. By misusing our small
independence, we desire to be supreme and are thus cast into the material
world. Then we wander, according to our material desires, from body to body in
each of the different species, until we finally evolve to the human form of
life. All this happens under the supervision of the Supreme Lord. As Sri Krsna
states in the Bhagavad-gita (18.61), "I am seated in everyone's
heart, and I direct the wanderings of all living beings." If, upon
reaching the human form of life, we do not utilize the opportunity for
self-realization, we will again be forced to enter a womb and undergo repeated
tortures there. We should therefore thoughtfully reflect, "What can we do
to avoid such miseries?"
True
Identity
Repeated
acceptance of material life is due to forgetting our true identity as eternal
loving servants of the Supreme Lord,
Krsna. Therefore reviving our relationship
with Krsna is crucial because that is the only means for the soul to escape the
cycle of repeated birth and death. The primary method for doing this is
chanting Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama,
Rama Rama, Hare Hare. Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, an incarnation of Krsna who
appeared five hundred years ago in Bengal, India, recommended that everyone
take up this Great Chant for Deliverance to awaken his dormant Krsna
consciousness. We should also follow the instructions given by Lord Krsna
in Bhagavad-gita (9.27-28): "All that you do, all that you eat,
all that you offer and give away, as well as all austerities that you may
perform, should be done as an offering unto Me. In this way you will be freed
from all reactions to good and evil deeds, and by this principle of
renunication, you will be liberated and come to Me." By chanting Hare
Krsna and acting in this way, the conditioned soul cleanses his mind of the
false notion that he can enjoy this material world separate from Krsna. He
gradually becomes completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord, and at the end of
life liberation from the miseries of repeated birth and death is assured. Krsna
not only speaks the Bhagavad-gita for our guidance. He also manifests
Himself internally as the Supersoul within our hearts and externally as the
spiritual master to instruct us how to avoid the repeated miseries of material
existence. If one is anxious to get out of the material entanglement, Krsna
will direct him from within the heart how to approach a genuine spiritual master.
By following the instructions of a spiritual master, one can perfect devotional
service and be transferred to the spiritual world, which is completely free
from birth and death.
We
are all eternal spirit souls, but death and rebirth are great dangers for us as
long as we remain in conditioned, material existence. We must pray to the Lord,
as did the child in the womb, to realize our eternal relationship with Krsna,
the Supreme Personality of Godhead. But we should not wait until it is too
late. Preparing for the next life is a proposal for thoughtful human beings, a
proposal we are meant to act on by following spiritual authorities while we are
still healthy in this lifetime.
Overruling
the Supreme Court
According
to the 1973 United States Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion, only in
the last twelve weeks of pregnancy does the growing fetus have a right to live
despite the mother's wish to abort him. This decision supports the claim of
those who favor abortion that killing a human embryo after a few weeks or
months is not murder because , human life has not yet developed. They say that
not until a full six months after conception does the fetus become
"viable," or able to sustain itself outside the womb. Until that
time, the embryo is supposedly nothing but a lump of flesh, and is therefore
"abortable."
According
to Vedic wisdom however, the right to life is determined by laws that even the
Supreme Court cannot overrule. It is the law of karma, working under the direct
supervision of the Supreme Lord, that determines when an individual spirit soul
will be placed in a human womb. Thus to deny a spirit soul a human birth due
him by the laws of karma is to defy the will of God in a most heinous fashion.
The Vedas tell
us that anyone who prevents a spirit soul from entering the mother's womb by
contraception, or who destroys a developing fetus, is subject to severe
punishment after death. In the case of abortion, both the person performing the
abortion and those sanctioning it are forced at the time of death to enter
wombs where they themselves become victims of the same 'vicious act. Thus those
who are anxious to enjoy sexual pleasure, yet wish to avoid the responsibility
of having children, should soberly consider the severe consequences of
contraception and abortion, which are grave transgressions of the laws of
nature. Unlike the edicts of the Supreme Court, there is no escaping their
strict enforcement.
Courtsey: BTG (Sept 1, 1975)
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