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The truth about trash
TRASH is everywhere in Bangalore, indeed in any urban Indian
city. Vegetable peels, tea leaves, dust, plastic, bulbs, used
sanitary napkins: these are what one might find if one peers into
the three-foot high concrete cylinders placed at every street
corner.
Trash usually overflows from these containers. The cylinder may
be partially full, but the area around is littered with garbage
that includes plastic bags, knotted to keep the contents from
bursting out in the heat.
Trash is simply matter, in a form unpalatable to those who
produce it. Every article found in the trash has had, at least in
the Indian context, some useful function, whether it be discarded
food or the newspaper that serves as wrapping. Yet this waste
becomes another person's wages. However, except for those who
depend on it for their livelihood, most prefer to avert their
gaze from these mountains of waste.
These humble monuments to consumption placed me in a peculiar
predicament. Because I too shared this feeling of aversion to
garbage. At every corner I wanted to take flight. I found myself
holding my breath so that I would not smell the mass decomposing
in the heat. I would turn the street corner, breathe out and be
relived that for at least another hundred yards, I would not have
to shrink from my environment.
But as one committed to being present to every split second of my
life, it became clear that this aversion must become the subject
of contemplation. Why this sense of alienation from the things
that have nourished us, made our lives livable, even enjoyable?
What sense of entitlement underwrote this narrowly utilitarian
relationship to matter? Each pile of waste I encountered posed
fundamental questions about the nature of matter, its social
construction, our collective choices of how to live and their
consequences. As evidence of our everyday actions, trash was an
invitation to embrace the cycle of life in its entirety, to
contemplate the food chain and our part in it. I began to rank it
with the many shrines and temples: like them, it was calling out
to me to live well, to act wisely.
Crucial to this aversion to trash is the widespread cultural
disdain for matter and for the physical body as a particularly
potent instance of it. This view may have had its origins in
upper caste predilections but it is now shared much more broadly.
It is only logical that this ambivalence extends to the
phenomenal world more generally, especially that part which is
not conceived as sacred. Thus, homes may be scrupulously kept
clean but the dust emptied outside the door or compound wall.
Likewise, ashrams may be spotless, but their toilets are another
matter altogether. Few of those who can afford to employ someone
else tend to clean their toilets or take out their trash.
Is it believed that God, sharing our prejudices, is to be found
only in certain spaces, in particular kinds of matter?
It is a short step from rejection of the physical to its
desecration in spiritual discourse. The exhortation to transcend
body consciousness is a symptom of this perspective. We are urged
to overcome the senses, to remember that "we are not the body".
Controlling the body - its needs and desires - is said to be a
pre-requisite to the realisation of spiritual aspirations. From
this standpoint, humanness becomes not that which is to be gained
through sadhana, but rather that which our yoga is intended to
eradicate. Thus is made crude that subtle process by which the
cultivation of spiritual practice opens the possibility of a
gradual transformation of humanness such that it becomes
congruent with - and not opposed to - divine consciousness. If
one followed this oversimplified view to its logical conclusion,
there would be no inherent purpose to incarnation or embodiment.
We exist so that we may transcend existence. Small wonder then
that both the physical body and by extension, the environment,
are treated with such disrespect. For their value rests solely in
their utility, in what each makes possible.
Mercifully, there is another important seam in the cultural ethos
of Hinduism: the proposition that all matter is sacred and that
everything, whether sentient or apparently non-sentient, vibrates
with divine consciousness. The entire phenomenal world is held to
be sacred and the goal of life is to recognise and experience the
divine nature of all things. This fundamental truth is the
bedrock of Hindu mystical teachings as also of the tribal
religions. Belief in the inherent sacredness of matter has
inspired rituals and everyday practices of both philosophical
systems.
Both the positive and the negative attitudes to matter may be
witnessed by observing those who are entrusted the work of waste
disposal. On the one hand, hatred of matter is reflected in their
conditions of work and the social ostracism they face on account
of their labour. Their wages are low, are exposed to danger when
clearing the broken glass and other sharp objects and live in the
shadow of social discrimination. On the other hand, in their
attentiveness and dignity, in the joy they often bring to their
work, is present an embrace of the phases of life, of an
acceptance of the pilgrimage made by matter as it surrenders
naturally, unhesitatingly out of one form into the next. If we
could but open to the truth that trash is simply matter in motion
and as such, shares the essential quality of all matter in
changing form, shape and function, we would be able to honour the
waste we produce as well as those who tend to it.
It is time to accept our intimate relationship to trash, to
recognise the sacredness of all fluids and substances, time to
heal our distaste for that which makes our life whole and holy.
Either that or we must remain predators of nature with an
extractive and deeply profane relationship to Creation. Nature
gives unceasingly. Matter must transform its form, that is a law
of nature. To the extent that we, as humans, wish to refuse the
full implications of our role in the
creation/destruction/transfiguration of matter, we will continue
to have an exploitative relationship to the phenomenal world. And
this world, with its tendency to continually transform, will
portend danger. Our refusal to live consciously on the material
plane alienates us from precisely that which has sustained us and
as part of which we must learn to take our place. Alienation
produces distance and disgust, the very opposite of loving
recognition, mutuality and gratitude, the only basis for relating
to nature and to the phenomenal world.
The overflowing heaps of garbage thus represent the potential for
an antidote to the seamlessly invisible violation of nature that
is possible in many First World locations, where trash is bagged,
bundled into containers, and hurtled out of sight. Few are aware
of the effects of such sanitised efficiency on the
consciousness of those who seem to benefit from the sanitary
conditions in which they live and from the efficiency of waste
disposal in their communities. I am not suggesting that there is
no need to seek more effective ways of treating trash in a cities
like Bangalore that have grown so rapidly that the infrastructure
has not been able to keep pace.
I am simply proposing that we use these bins spilling over with
that which we have discarded, to contemplate our place in nature,
the effects of our actions, our nomination of matter into the
acceptable and the unacceptable, that which we will call our own
and that which we pretend has no relationship to us as we pass it
at the end of our very own street.
LATA MANI
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