Let Go (of Possessions)

Dr. Rajesh Bhola
India
Jun 28, 2013

 
Flaunting wealth has become as important as owning it. One of the most pervasive ways by which we have exaggerated class distinction is through our purchases. In our materialistic society, possessions are increasingly functioning as symbols of success. However, conspicuous consumption does more than divide people; it has been found to change our brain chemistry. In fact, the shopping urge seems to release dopamine, a neurotransmitter that regulates the levels of pleasure and reward in the brain. Dopamine release is also associated with highly addictive drugs, such as cocaine and methamphetamine. So, for many people, spending sprees are producing a ‘high’ that can be powerfully addictive. Although goods have served as class markers in most societies in the world, in India conspicuous consumption has become a powerful social force. Accumulating possessions has become a central aspect of our lives. However, we do have the power to change our behaviour, and free ourselves from the desire to blindly consume.

As we accumulate objects, we accumulate being. Our prized possessions demonstrate our struggle for recognition. We believe that these objects offer proof of our being, and provide us security. However, no one has been able to buy his way to happiness by accumulating more.

One of my very close friends lost his mother a few days ago. It was an incredibly difficult time for him. He lives in America and, after she passed away, it was his responsibility to have her house vacated. When he opened the cupboards he found that they were packed wall to wall with her belongings. There was 68 years of accumulation in the cabinets

My friend was burdened with the emotional cost of each item. At first he did not want to let go of anything. However, soon overcome, he realized that his effort to retain all her belongings was futile. She surely could just live on in his memory. He started donating all the items, to places and people who could actually use them.

Of course it was difficult for him to let go. Both of us realized quite a few things about the relationship between memories and possessions. We are more than our possessions; our memories are not in our cupboards; an item that is sentimental for us can be an item that is useful for someone else; holding on to belongings weighs on us mentally and emotionally; letting go is ‘freeing’. My friend has traces of her anyway - in the way he acts, the way he treats others, and even in the way he smiles. 

Letting go reminds me also of a foreigner friend who shared some very good moments with me in my college days. One day this friend asked himself some questions: “Is all this material stuff really what life is all about? What if I were to get rid of it all and concentrate on what truly makes me happy? Can I lighten the burden of my possessions? If I concentrate on things that truly matter, wouldn’t my goals be that much closer”? He took early retirement, which was being offered at his workplace. He took that first step and later told me: “I had to first get rid of my stuff. The purge began. I began emptying out storerooms and storage closets. It was hard at first. I found myself attached to some things only because I’d had them so long.  Out they all went. It soon started to feel good”. He kept just enough to fit in his car, including a few ‘sentimental’ items, He expected it to be scary, but in fact it was liberating. He had broken the bonds that shackled his flexibility and kept him from living the life he had imagined. He was free.

There is a great Zen proverb that says: “In the end, these things matter most: How well did you love? How fully did you live? How deeply did you let go?” My friend took this wisdom to heart. Without all the noise and distractions of the clutter in his life, he felt that he would be able to concentrate on relationships with people – rather than things. It would be a simple life committed to living well. He could, over time, learn to let go - not only of physical things, but also past hurts and the frustration of dealing with things he could not change. Now he simply moves around to any place that he thinks of visiting - he has nothing tying him down. He feels busier than ever, but from doing things he loves. Entertainment comes from relationships and hobbies, not from an idiot box on the wall. He has time to be a friend, and gives of himself to those in need. People may feel that this friend of mine is crazy, but we all should remember that time is ultimately our most precious asset. There is freedom that comes from living a life of authenticity, and peace of mind that comes from knowing we are not tethered to our things - which if we do not leave, share and give with our own hands, will anyway be given away one day. 
  
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus taught his disciples not to accumulate wealth. He told them: ‘Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on the earth, where moth and rust consume, and where thieves break in and steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.’ 

Dr. Rajesh Bhola is President of Spastic Society of Gurgaon and is working for the cause of children with autism, cerebral palsy, mental retardation and multiple disabilities for more  than 20 years

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