
In any field of activity, there are certain skills required for success, attributes and levels of dexterity that correspond with the required tasks of the discipline. For those managing the endeavors, the people in charge of seeing to the successful end of a particular task, just finding one person who suitably matches a specific component of the job is cause for celebration. The leader would love to tackle the entire project alone if they could, but to increase productivity in the venture, they add helpers to the mix, especially in jobs where a team of workers is a necessity. But if the manager, the owner of the team, is able to find one individual who possesses many different beneficial attributes and qualities capable of being utilized across a broad scope of activities, the results of their recruiting efforts become all the more enjoyable. There is one individual, one supreme entity, who is not only qualified to perform every task in the phenomenal world, but He in fact possesses all six of the most important attributes to the fullest degree and simultaneously. Therefore not only is He the ideal worker and the missing piece of the puzzle in any endeavor, He is also the best friend anyone could ever have, the companion we’re all looking for.
Pitching is only one aspect of the game, for good pitchers don’t necessarily make good hitters, nor are they expected to be skilled behind the plate. When the pitcher throws the ball, someone needs to catch it. Not surprisingly, that someone is known as the catcher. This position similarly doesn’t require a very capable batter due to the other functions that must be performed. A catcher must be able to crouch down and catch pitches thrown by all the pitchers in the nine inning game. Therefore catchers are usually somewhat stocky in stature, with the majority of their weight found in their thighs and calves. As such, catchers are also usually not fleet afoot. The first-baseman is tasked with fielding any ground balls hit to the infield. When a batter hits a ball into fair territory, they must run to first base. The first-baseman thus covers this base and hopes to get the runners out before they reach the bag. Since the first-baseman doesn’t really need to run very long or even throw the ball very well, he can concentrate more on the hitting aspects of the game. Therefore the first-baseman is usually a power hitter, one who can bulk up in the upper body so as to have a high bat-speed. The higher the speed of the swing and the more power in the arms of the batter, the farther the struck baseball will travel.
Moving to the outfield, the center-fielder has the most ground to cover, so he must be very fast at running. Any outfield position requires a long throw back into the infield, so the fielder must be capable of throwing the ball very hard and a far distance. The left-fielder is similar in makeup to the center fielder but he doesn’t have to run as much. The right-fielder must have a good arm, as he has to make throws from his position in the field all the way to third base quite often, but he doesn’t have to run nearly as much as the other outfielders. Hence the right-fielder tends to have the most power at batting, while the center fielder has very good speed on the base paths. The left-fielder is usually somewhere in between the two as far as speed and power go.
The five-tool player is a real gem because he can be placed at any position and still succeed. He can play the outfield or the infield and not cause a detriment to the team. If opposing teams want to pitch around such a player and put him on base, he is fast enough to be a threat to steal bases. The five-tool player can inflict damage at the plate in any situation, despite what the other team’s strategy might be. It is not surprising, therefore, to see five-tool players be handsomely rewarded in salary and be highly sought after by teams.
“The person who possesses all wealth, strength, fame, beauty, knowledge and renunciation is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Bhagavan.” (Parashara Muni, Vishnu Purana, 6.5.47)
Krishna is a Sanskrit word that describes the features of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the entity most of us refer to as God. Even for those who are in the unintelligent state of mind, where the picture of the Absolute Truth remains foggy, there is still a tendency to associate with and pray to the Divine Entity in the spiritual sky. The Vedas, the ancient scriptures of India, provide many names for the Supreme Being, allowing for different addresses by the conditioned souls desperately needing a companion while travelling the troublesome road of life. The name “Krishna” especially indicates the Lord’s attractiveness. He is the most beautiful entity the world has ever seen. While every aspect of His nature is beautiful, His transcendental form is uniquely attractive. More than just an ordinary figure turned folk hero, Krishna is the Lord of Lords who constantly appears on different planets in the innumerable universes. Just as the sun is rising at some place on earth at every moment, Krishna is appearing from the womb of Mother Devaki in some universe at this precise second. Wherever He is and wherever He goes, His natural beauty follows Him. He is the greatest enchanter, as those who have witnessed His unmatched beauty firsthand have described their experiences and how they became immediately transcendentally situated upon first glancing at the sweet Lord, who is also known as Shyamasundara. In this way, Krishna’s beauty is like no other’s.
An infant, through the proper training and nutrition regimen, may eventually grow up to be a strong adult, but Krishna is so strong that He is not limited by His body type. Since He is eka-rasa, or complete in potency at all times, He can exhibit tremendous strength while even in the body of a small child. Such were the miraculous feats He performed during His childhood in Vrindavana some five thousand years ago that people couldn’t believe how the young Krishna was able to defy the laws of nature. Demon after demon was sent from the neighboring town of Mathura to kill baby Krishna, but each of them not only went away surprised, but dead. Krishna is the most benevolent killer, as He grants the soul of the departed liberation from the cycle of birth and death. The demon’s form of salvation is a little different from what others receive, as Krishna’s sparring partners get association with the blissful energy beaming off of the Lord’s original, gigantic transcendental body. For the devotees, those who swim in the ocean of bliss consisting of Krishna’s names, pastimes, forms and qualities, there is no loss of individuality when liberation arrives. Indeed, there is not even a loss of consciousness, as the thought processes of the soul remain forever blissfully stimulated. Krishna lifted a massive hill and held it over His head, all while He was just seven years old in terms of the time that had elapsed since His exit from the womb of Mother Devaki. In this way Krishna proves that His strength is always unmatched, as no one is able to come close to performing the same feats in any similar type of body.
Krishna’s supreme and unmatched knowledge is evidenced in the wonderful teachings He provides in books like the Bhagavad-gita and Shrimad Bhagavatam. Though one may argue that even such wisdom is narrow in scope, the limitations actually apply only to the individual being instructed. The human mind cannot think beyond time and space, but Krishna can. The Bhagavad-gita represents only a tiny fraction of His immeasurable mastery in the fields of logic, understanding, rational thought and sublime wisdom. Krishna can create thousands of Bhagavad-gitas in an instant, with each version supplanting the previous one in beauty and effectiveness at arousing the dormant spiritual consciousness within the listener. Krishna’s scriptures such as the Vedanta-sutras are so profound that others can study them for many years and still not understand them fully. The wisdom of the Vedas is so powerful and logical that many foolish commentators even try to deny Krishna’s existence by citing passages from the very same Vedas. Vedic logic is so potent that when not properly understood it can actually further delude the mind into believing that the human beings are themselves God. Only in the highest knowledge system, one emanating from Krishna, can the words be so powerful that they can lead to utter and complete delusion for those not qualified to understand them.
Only the fools who have no ability to think beyond mundane logic, reason and the bounds imposed by the material world will give deference to rules, regulations and postulates and turn their backs on divine love. Krishna is the object of all dharma, or religiosity. The rules of science and math are meaningless unless applied practically. Similarly, the Vedic tenets, and the rituals and rules of conduct recommended, are all intended to bring one to the platform of bhakti, or pure love for God. As such, one who has attained the state of pure Krishna consciousness has no need to adhere to any mundane rules of morality. If such a principle applies to an individual worshiper, it most certainly also applies to the object of worship, Lord Krishna. Though Krishna spent so much time giving pleasure to those who desperately sought it from Him, He was still never attached to anyone or anything. He left Vrindavana when family business required His attention in Mathura. He left the world and His queens behind when the time was right. Though it is said that Krishna never leaves Vrindavana, it should be understood that the Lord voluntarily agrees to be in the company of His loving associates at least in thought. He is never required to listen to anyone.
