This story comes from Anand Ramayan
Long after Ram became king and all was well with the world, a dog came
crying before Ram. He had been struck by a priest because he had licked
food from the priest’s plate. Ram declared the priest guilty and asked
the dog if he had any particular punishment for the priest. “Make him
the head of the temple.” Ram immediately agreed.
Everyone
thought this was strange. The priest had wronged the dog and instead of
being punished he had been promoted to the position of the head of a
temple. What was the mystery?
So the dog explained, “I too was
once head of a temple. When you become the head of a temple, you become
powerful, as everyone listens to you and your word is law. Then you
become corrupt. And you do stupid things. And when you die, you are
reborn as a dog. I want the priest who struck me to suffer the same fate
as me. I therefore want him to get a position of power and become
corrupt.”
Whether we believe in rebirth or not, we all know
power corrupts. But when we think of power, we think of politicians or
policemen. But that is not the only seat of power. Old withered men
clinging to power, transforming what is supposed to be fun and
entertainment into a complex web of intrigue. Actors who are humble
before their break transforming into demanding monsters once they get
their first hit. We see that in the corporate world, with CEOs behaving
like Maharajas, treating their organizations as private fiefdoms, but
spouting management mantras at all conferences.
Why do simple
decent human being become corrupt? It’s a question that begs to be
asked. Is it genetic, considering we do have concepts like sociopaths
and psychopaths popularized by television serials? Is it about
upbringing: denial of love and attention to children? Is it about too
much wealth or too little wealth? Is it just our inability to cope with
success? Is it the God-complex, suddenly believing that the world
revolves around us?
We play politics and do everything in our
power to become heads of temples. We are just not able to sit back,
relax and enjoy the abundance that nature very spontaneously brings
before us.
-Yakshini
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