Maya’s Tightest Grip: How Civilization Made Man More Helpless Than Ever
The Cave Was Safer Than We Think
Early humans faced wild animals, floods, and rival tribes. They
lived under open skies, breathed unfiltered air, ate what the earth gave, and
slept under stars that were not yet polluted by light. Their dangers were
visible, physical, and immediate. They knew their enemy. They could run from
it, fight it, or outwit it. The modern human cannot run from his enemies
because he cannot even see them clearly. He sits inside climate-controlled
rooms, surrounded by every convenience imaginable, and yet something fundamental
has been hollowed out of him.
The ancient sages saw this coming. Not because they were
pessimists, but because they understood the nature of Maya — the cosmic
illusion — with frightening precision.
What the Bhagavad Gita Reveals About Human Bondage
In the Bhagavad Gita, Bhagavan Krishna speaks directly to
the condition of the dependent, confused, and paralyzed human mind. He says in
Chapter 16, Verse 12:
“Bound by a hundred ties of expectation, enslaved by
lust and anger, they strive to accumulate wealth by unjust means for the
fulfillment of their desires.”
This verse was not written for a distant future. It
describes the average person alive today — chasing money, trapped in anxious
dependency, unable to act freely because the entire architecture of modern life
demands that he remain bound. Every bill, every subscription, every digital
login is another rope around the wrist.
The Gita further reminds us in Chapter 3, Verse 27:
“All actions are performed by the modes of material
nature. But in delusion, the soul, confused by false identification, thinks
itself to be the doer.”
Modern man believes he is empowered because he holds a
smartphone. But he is not the doer. The algorithm is. The system is. The
network is. The moment the electricity goes out, his identity, his work, his
relationships, his navigation, and his sense of self all flicker and die with
the screen.
The New Wild Animals
The beasts that hunted early humans were honest in their
violence. A tiger does not pretend to be your friend before it strikes. Modern
threats wear the masks of convenience. Road accidents kill more people globally
every year than most ancient plagues did in a decade. Climate change, born from
the very industries that promised comfort, now threatens to render entire
coastlines uninhabitable. The gadget designed to connect you has quietly
trained you to be unable to think, wait, remember, or feel without it.
The Mahabharata warns repeatedly about the nature of Kali
Yuga — the present age — in which righteousness stands on a single leg and
human consciousness narrows to the point of near blindness. This is not poetic
exaggeration. It is a precise psychological observation about what happens to a
civilization when it abandons inner development in favor of outer accumulation.
Dependent on Everything, Master of Nothing
There is a cruel paradox at the heart of modern existence.
The more technology a society develops, the more fragile its individual members
become. A farmer in ancient India, working by the rhythms of seasons and guided
by the knowledge of his ancestors, knew how to grow food, read the sky, heal a
simple wound, and find water. He had genuine competence rooted in direct
experience.
Today, most urban humans cannot change a tire without
watching a video. They cannot cook without a recipe app. They cannot navigate a
city without GPS. They cannot feel calm without a notification telling them
they have been appreciated. The Taittiriya Upanishad speaks of the human being
as consisting of multiple sheaths — the physical body, the vital breath, the
mind, the intellect, and the bliss body. True education, it teaches, is the
harmonious development of all five. Modern civilization has developed only the
outermost sheath and called it progress.
The Money Trap and Its Spiritual Significance
Perhaps no modern dependency is more complete than the
dependency on money. The ancient Vedic understanding never denied the
importance of Artha — wealth — as one of the four Purusharthas, or legitimate
goals of human life. But Artha was always meant to be pursued within the
boundaries of Dharma and as a stepping stone toward Moksha, liberation.
Today, money has ceased to be a tool and become the master.
A person without money in the modern world has no healthcare, no shelter, no
legal protection, and often no social worth. This inversion — where a means
becomes the end — is precisely what the Arthashastra and the Dharmashastra
traditions warned against when they spoke of a society losing its moral center.
What Must Be Reclaimed
The Mundaka Upanishad makes a distinction between two kinds
of knowledge — Para Vidya, the higher knowledge of the self, and Apara Vidya,
the lower knowledge of the world and its sciences. It does not reject the
lower. It simply insists that without the higher, all worldly knowledge leads
to confusion and ultimately to bondage.
The lesson for modern times is not to abandon electricity or
throw the phone into the river. It is to understand, as clearly as the ancients
did, what you actually are beneath all your dependencies. The Atman — the true
self — cannot lose power in a blackout. It requires no internet connection. It
is not sold in any marketplace.
The Real Crisis Is Inner
Modern man is not merely technologically dependent. He is
emotionally infantilized. He does not know how to sit in silence. He does not
know how to face grief without a screen. He does not know how to help a
stranger without first checking if it is safe to do so. He has outsourced his
courage, his memory, his compassion, and his judgment to systems that do not
care whether he lives or dies.
The Yoga Vasishtha teaches that the highest form of human
strength is Viveka — discriminative wisdom — the ability to see through
illusion and choose rightly. This is not the strength of the gym. It is the
strength of the awakened mind. And it is precisely this strength that modern
life, with all its comfort and noise, is systematically eroding.
Early man ran from the tiger. Modern man cannot see the cage
he is already in. And this cage is his own making. That, in the end, is a far more dangerous condition.