1
To deny himself is to refuse to accept himself as he
is at present. It is to become keenly aware that he is spiritually blind, deaf,
and dumb and to be intensely eager to gain sight, hearing, and speech. It is to
realize that nearly all men complacently mistake this inner paralysis for active
existence. It is restlessly to seek the higher state, the nobler character, a
more concentrated mind: it is to be willing to withdraw from all that
accumulation of memories and desires which ordinarily constitute the ego.
2
The heart should be kept free. For that, too, is a
desire that binds, a longing that torments, like all longings, unnecessarily.
Being bound brings disappointment, brings pain. Renounce the desire to
live in any particular place, as you have renounced other cherished desires.
Then happiness will not depend on its satisfaction. Nor will inner peace be lost
at its non-re-al-iza-tion.
3
Disgust with life, recognition of the futility of all
human exertions, is one common precondition of inwardly turning away from the
world. The aspirant who feels this dies to the world and consequently to the
personal self which was active in that world. After that, he is attracted only
to that which is deep within him - to the utter Void of the Overself.
4
With simpler homes and fewer pleasures, with physical
bonds and emotional attachments reduced to a minimum, it is easier for a man to
fortify his life and cultivate his soul. When he denies satisfaction to his
various desires, he eventually exhausts the desire to live itself. With this
sterility the cycle of reincarnation comes to an end and the peace of Nirvana is
his.
5
Prof. T.M.P. Mahadevan said: "The truest Renunciation
is to renounce belief in the world's reality." P.B.'s comment on above: This is
the interpretation of Sankara given most commonly. Perhaps by altering the word
"reality" to "materiality" we may help the Western mind.
6
This is not the fierce, tough, ruthless, forcible use
of the personal will to gain some desired worldly thing or position, but the
calm, mental-emotional letting go of captivity to it.
7
A single revolutionary act of renunciation rooting
out the ego will take care of all the lesser ones. That done, they will adjust
themselves in time. Some things he will not be required to give up.
8
It is not always and absolutely essential to remove
from one's existence any thing, person, or habit to become detached from it.
What is essential is to keep it at a distance emotionally.
9
The ideal may require sacrifice, in its name, of
possession, love, ambition, desire. But unless he be a monk, this purifying
experience may be an internal one. He may stay in the world yet not be of it.
10
If the inner reality of holiness or renunciation is
missing, then the wearing of priestly robes or yogic loincloth merely
camouflages hypocrisy and hides humbug.
11
If, on the inward journey from ego to Overself, a
man has to give up everything, on the outward journey he may pick up everything
again. If he has to become a little child in order to enter the kingdom of
heaven, he will return from that kingdom and become a man again, yet without
losing all that was worthy in the childlike faith. Whatever the aspirant has
sacrificed for the sake of finding God, God may restore to him afterwards.
12
The theory of detachment may seem cold and
heartless if applied to human relationships also, and its practice positively
cruel. Yet life itself enforces it upon us in the end. There is no avoidance.
13
In the elderly man, desires are gradually outlived
and dropped, ambitions begin to come to a natural death. But in the philosophic
man they pass through the same process through his own deliberate choice and at
an earlier age.
14
The man who embraces philosophy is not called upon
to renounce the pleasures and comforts of this world, but he is called upon to
re-evaluate his time, discipline his body, and train his will. This is not done
out of a harsh and narrow austerity but in the need and name of the body's
health and the will's strength.
15
Prince Rama wanted to withdraw from his position,
title, duties, and family in pursuit of God. But the wise Vashistha, the great
teacher of Mentalism, asked him: "Is He apart from the world that you wish to
renounce it?"
16
Whether we acquire or renounce possessions is not
really the main point. Renunciation is a dramatic and symbolic gesture whereby a
man announces his change of course. No longer satisfied with worldly life, he
will seek the kingdom of heaven in his heart. The physical manifestation will
depend on circumstances, situation, family, country, and outer or inner
guidance.
17
It is an inner emptiness gained by casting out
desires and attachments, habits and tendencies, so that the heart is wide open
to receive life's greatest gift - Grace. The craving to acquire personal
possessions is a hard thing to still but once done we are rewarded a
hundredfold.
18
It cannot be bought cheaply. Relinquishments of
distracting activity must be made, disciplines must be brought in, the work on
oneself must be done, the hands which want to hold others unclasped and solitude
embraced.
19
It is not enough to renounce something by excluding
it from your physical life. You ought also to exclude it from memory and
imagination.
20
There comes a time when he has to turn his back on
the past, for the old man is becoming a stranger and a new man is coming to
birth. Memories would obstruct this process.
21
First let go of attachment, then let go of the ego
itself. First let go of all things - physical and mental, all creatures, all
that is past - in the end nothing is really yours. This inner separation, this
detachment, is the true freedom.
22
The counsel about not being attached to results was
never intended to mean being blind to results. It means that we should rise
emotionally above them; it does not mean that we should not study their nature
and take appropriate action accordingly. If we are to be blown emotionally
hither and thither by favourable and unfavourable results, it will never be
possible to attain any peace. On the other hand, if we are not to use our
critical judgement about people in situations, we cannot deal successfully with
the world.
23
It is better to realize that transiency is in the
very nature of things. Man constantly deludes himself with the hope that some
transient possession will become a permanent one. It never does, and the
self-deception merely robs him of a peace he might otherwise keep. And this is
true whether he wants to possess another human being or another hundred dollars,
whether he wants to chain someone's love to himself or to chain more things to
his home. Hence the student who is oppressed by the rapidity with which his
years are waning away will seek all the more intensely and aspire all the more
earnestly for that which is itself eternal and above the years.
24
We have come into incarnation for a purpose: life
is our business here, not running away from it. When certain renunciations are
called for, they are part of this preparation for life, because they are needed
in the fulfilment of this purpose.
25
He who claims to have renounced the world and to
own nothing must then beg, accept, or take from other people the things he needs
to survive - food, clothes, shelter, and so on. While he has these things he is
back in the world again, making use of it, in some kind of relationship with it.
26
This inner detachment from the world comes but
slowly, so deep are the roots of desire. The young who value freedom to the
point of rejecting home, parents, family, society, education, and tradition
should enquire more deeply into what freedom is.
27
A double work goes on: the man slowly withdraws
from the things which hold him, which make him theirs, while his higher
aspirations attract the higher self to slowly take over the place in his heart
which they filled.
28
He will discover that renouncing the world is only
a stage on the way, that renouncing oneself is an even longer and much more
austere stage.
29
If we are called by the Quest to give up everything
for a time or for all time it is only that we may receive something infinitely
better in exchange. The Quest calls us to renunciation of earthly desires not to
make us miserable but to make us happy.
30
How to translate these philosophic ideas and
spiritual ideals into terms of actual life is our problem. Here is the answer,
from an Indian text: "One who relinquishes the fruit of action, is from the
spiritual point of view, a true Sanyassi," says the Gita. This is plain
enough. "One who remains unaffected by the fruit of action done in discharge of
duty, is not entangled in the meshes of births and rebirths by such
action!"
31
There is much confusion about this reiterated
counsel to practise self-surrender, to give up the ego, and to become unselfish.
Its primary meaning is not that we are at once to run out in the street and
transfer all our possessions to other men. Indeed, it is not concerned with
society at all. It is that we are to effect in consciousness a displacement of
the lower by the higher self. Such a displacement cannot happen so long as there
is any inner resistance on the ego's part. Hence the counsel warns us to avoid
such resistance, encourages us to offer the ego willingly as a sacrifice to the
Overself, stimulates us to let go of the animal and human complexes which retard
the consummation of such a sacrifice. Each struggle passed through successfully
builds up our higher will.
32
He finds in the end that he does not need to
divorce himself from ordinary civilized society except for periodical and,
perhaps, short daily retreats; that the work to which he is called is,
primarily, an inner one; that the only asceticism he is called to is a simple
self-mastery gotten in either the worldly order or the monastic order; and that
his spiritual quest is in the end a personal, not an institutional, one.
33
Perhaps most people find it easier to graduate
their renunciations but some find the oppositive way of drastic renunciation the
simplest solution.
34
He may keep his likes and preferences, his
attachments, if he must, but he should be prepared to drop them at the shortest
notice.
35
Whatever purifying renunciations and ascetic
disciplines are to be effected should be effected naturally, inevitably, and
without strain from within.
36
"One is not to be called a renunciate for having
merely given up his possessions. Unattached at heart even though attached in
outward show, standing aloof from the world, having broken all his bonds, and
regarding friend and foe equally, such a man, O king, is to be regarded as
emancipate."
37
If he really wants to renounce them by doing
without them, he ought to do without some of the things he loves. Only
then will he understand the Oriental phrase, "God only is rich."
38
It is not by becoming a pauper that one
demonstrates spirituality, as so many yogis think, or by becoming well-to-do, as
so many "Right Thinkers" and Christian Scientists think.
39
The mind's detachment from the world will bring the
body into line with it in time: this takes longer than the ascetic's way of
forcibly imposing rigid renunciations, but it is more natural and less harsh -
easier and philosophic. It softens the rigour of inescapable controls. What is
more important, perhaps, is that it works in a deeper ground, so its result is
more durable than the other way.
40
He may have to adopt a penitential way of living
for a time, purificatory and reformative. It may even be required for several
years. But fanatical extremes and foolish self-torments are not required.
41
He who is owned by things and no longer owns them
should turn to asceticism and practise the virtue of renunciation. But he who is
so enamoured of asceticism that he shrinks from comfort and shudders at the
sight of pleasure should turn away from renunciation. Balance is required.
42
The drastic means used by some forms of asceticism
are not suited to nor willingly accepted by most modern seekers. It is
preferable to lead them by gentler and more gradual means.
43
How is he to achieve this inner freedom? Should the
method include outer acts? Should he make the Herculean gesture of parting with
all his possessions? Should he embrace voluntary poverty like a monk and
henceforth live without receiving any regular income and consequently without
paying any further income tax? This ascetic idea of not being fettered by any
external thing is good as far as it goes. But it fails to take note of the fact
that one may be just as fettered by an internal thought. The ascetic gives up
the vices and allurements of the world in order to become free, renounces
earthly desires and futilities in order to become happy, shuns pleasures because
he associates them with guilt. But if he has not grasped the truth of mentalism,
if he does not comprehend that thought is the next battlefield, he remains as
tied as before, albeit by new chains.
44
His feet will have to tread the painful path of
asceticism for a while. But whether it will be for a short or a long while,
whether the pain will be little or great, whether the asceticism will be slight
or extreme, will depend on the circumstances of each individual case.
45
This search for the road to God has been turned by
many in the past into an impoverishment of human existence, a denial of human
joy. Yet if the greatest rapture exists in the finding of God, why should the
way to it be so cloudy and gloomy?
46
Have these men found peace in their world-rejecting
hearts, won harmony in their womanless lives?
47
The logic of Buddhist asceticism is as relentless
as it is comfortless.
48
Even Muhammed could not stop the arisal of ascetic
ideas and practices, however plainly he banned them.
49
Science justifies itself insofar as it helps to
make life on this planet more bearable and more pleasant. We are here to live.
Fools make the rigours of renunciation the end of living.
50
Ascetic regimes, just like other spiritual
practices, may become a source of spiritual pride. It is needful for him to
watch out for the subtle desire to indulge them as glorifications of the ego.
Instead, the proper desire is to submit to them as steps to the true
consciousness.
51
Those who can only learn self-discipline by leading
the restricted life of asceticism may do so. The wise, however, will rule
themselves by reason - which is not something one suddenly calls up for the
first time in one's life, but is the matured fruit of a gradually growing habit
of thinking.
52
If we need not follow an extreme asceticism, we
must obey a moral discipline that seeks to purify thought, feeling, and conduct.
If we are not asked to become martyrs and heroes in the battle against lower
impulses and calculating worldliness, we are called to the battle itself.
53
Ascetic panegyrics on the simple life find their
logical conclusion in grinding poverty and utter destitution.
54
The notion that a woman cannot have a husband, bear
children, and wear fine dresses if she wants to and still enter the kingdom of
heaven, is as stupid as it is barbaric. Yet this is the constricted teaching
which is propagated in the name of "higher" spirituality. But its proponents are
usually monks themselves, men who, having found what suits the taste,
temperament, or circumstances of their particular personality, would proceed to
impose such taste on all mankind by raising it to the dignity of a universal
law. My plaint against ascetics therefore is that they turn their very
limitations into vaunted virtues.
55
It is to the extent that a desire stands in the way
of pursuing this quest that it is to be negated, but only to this extent. This
means that a total asceticism is usually unnecessary as it is often undesirable.
56
The true place of asceticism is at the beginning
and in the middle of this quest, when a man becomes conscious of his weakness of
will and slavery to sensuousness. In order to strengthen the one and neutralize
the other, it is a part of yoga to practise hard austerity and painful
self-denial. But this is done only for a time; it is a means not an end, a path
to detachment and deliverance but not a goal for human life.
57
The practice of a wise and philosophic asceticism
enables him to separate himself from a widespread illusion - identification with
the body. When its self-denials are directed against fleshly appetites,
passions, and desires for the purpose of compelling them to submit to intuition
and reason, greater health for the body and greater truth for the mind are
secured.
58
An intelligent asceticism is proper, even
praiseworthy, for certain periods at certain times. It gives a man power over
himself, his body, his passions, his appetites. It disciplines whereas the mad
asceticism merely destroys.
59
The asceticism has its place, just like the Long
Path, of which it is a component, but when it is stressed to an unnatural point,
fanaticism is born, equilibrium is lost, and tolerance is destroyed.
60
A proper asceticism is concerned with the curbing
of desire, the practice of self-denial, the overcoming of weaknesses, and the
control of body, mind, and speech.
61
Proper asceticism ought to be not a torment or a
punishment, but a purifier; it gets rid of bad habits and clears the way for
good ones. It trains feeling, disciplines body, prepares a temple for "the Holy
Ghost."
62
The stringent rules of some monastic institutions
may discipline the body and defy its senses, but the consequences may show in a
harsher character and a colder heart.
63
Gautama found that imposing harsh denials on the
body, ascetic pains and rigorous torments, gave certain valuable fruits - such
as strengthening of the will - but did not give enlightenment.
64
But this said, it must also be said that
philosophical mysticism does not desire to nullify our human joys with a
lugubrious and somber asceticism. There is an unfortunate tendency among
ordinary mystics to become so enthused about the way of asceticism as to regard
it not as it should be, that is, only as a means to an end, but as a complete
end in itself. The original purpose of ascetic discipline was threefold: First,
the victory of mind over body as a preliminary to the victory of mind over
itself. This involved taming passions and disciplining appetites. Second, the
solar plexus, the spinal nerve ganglions, and the brain nerve-centres were not
only recharged with essential life-force but both the cerebro-spinal and
sympathetic nervous systems were stopped from obstructing, and made to promote,
the new and high ideals implanted in the subconscious mind by the conscious one.
Third, the stimulation of the pituitary and pineal glands. Fourth, to straighten
and strengthen the spinal column. is gave a clear unhindered path for and helped
to evoke the currents of a mystically illuminating force fully evoked by special
meditation exercises. Asceticism was like a remedy taken to cure a sickness. But
in their unbalanced reaction against worldly life, its followers turned it into
a permanent way of life. Medicine is most valuable as medicine, but not as food.
Because quinine has cured someone of fever, he does not incorporate it in his
diet for the remainder of his lifetime. Yet this is just what most ascetics did.
They succumbed to intolerant manias with fanatical exaggeration and without
understood purpose, and thus lost the balance of their psyche.
Clearly, the way of sanity lies between the two extremes of self-indulgent worldliness and of body-crushing mortification. Philosophy highly values asceticism when used with adequate reason, when sane, temperate, and balanced. It knows how necessary such a regime is to cleanse the body of poisonous toxins and keep it strong and healthy. But it despises the unnecessary misery and useless struggles with which the ordinary ascetic obsesses himself. It sympathizes with the modern seeker when he is not as attracted by the rigours of a forbidding asceticism as his medieval forebear was. It respects, indeed includes and advocates, an occasional and limited asceticism, but it rejects a permanent and excessive asceticism. It very definitely makes use of abstinence at a certain stage of the aspirant's career but then only as far as necessary, and for a limited time, and with the knowledge got from experience. It certainly bids its votary to practise some austerities, submit to some disciplines, but not to make a fetish of them, to use them only so far and so long as they are helpful to achieve self-mastery and bodily health and thus treat them as means, not ends. Lastly, it affirms that self-restraint and sense-discipline are always necessary, even though harsh asceticism is not.
The limitation of a merely physical asceticism is demonstrated by the fact that bodily habits are really mental habits. Desire, being but a strong thought, can be effaced only by an equally powerful thought, that is, by a mental process. No merely external discipline or physical renunciation can have the same effect, although it does help to bring about that effect and therefore should be used. Asceticism pronounces the pleasure we take in the experience of the senses to be evil in itself. Philosophy replies that it is the being carried away from reason and intuition by the pleasures, the being attached to them to the point of utter dependence upon them, that is evil. The fanatical and dogmatical kind of asceticism declares the physical things we touch and taste to be evil, but philosophy says touch and taste are really mental experiences and that their mental discipline will be more effective than abstaining altogether from their physical exercise. Hence, it leaves us free to enjoy the good things of this world, so long as we do not get too attached to them nor inwardly enslaved by them. Living in inward detachment from the world is much more important than practising outward contempt for the world.
65
The ascetic who retires from the sordid struggles,
gnawing insecurities, and dangerous discontents of our time, like a rabbit into
its hole, gains ease at the cost of conscience. The philosopher must think of
others as well as himself. If the message to the world of this ancient wisdom
were only a call to its inmates to desert it, then would the outlook for mankind
be a sorry one indeed.
66
The ascetics who seek to kill out desire are
themselves inflamed with the desire to kill it out. They may lull, refine,
purify, or exalt desire - but its root always remains.
67
In so far as ascetic regimes clip our worldly
desires, they also clip the illusions and deceptions which are bred by those
desires.
68
The wise and well-disciplined man will be able to
put on asceticism or take off luxury like a suit of clothes, that is, at will,
at any moment and in any place.
69
A temperate asceticism hardens the will, fortifies
against temptation, and profits character. Such self-imposed discipline of
animal desires and earthly aggrandizement pays high dividends.
70
We need not a fussy asceticism but an inspired
humanism.
71
The ascetic who wants to dodge experience in the
belief that it is either valueless or vile is the unfortunate victim of a
widespread inability to distinguish between means and ends in these matters of
yoga, renunciation, and the like.
72
The modern man is predisposed to want too much of
the comforts and too many of the pleasures of the world. A little asceticism
will therefore do him no harm and may bring him much benefit.
73
A self-tormenting frustration, imposed from
without, is not the same as and not to be mistaken for a self-improving
asceticism, imposed from within.
74
There is an asceticism which blights life and
exhausts man, which shrivels his sympathies and freezes his humour. This he
ought never be willing to accept, nor does true philosophy ever ask him to
accept it. There is another asceticism which expands life and renews man, which
confers the benediction of good health and tends towards a warm, cordial, and
cheerful disposition.
75
Men with energy crushed it by ascetic practices
until the state of a hibernating toad became their highest goal. Men with good
will denied it by withdrawing from society and leaving the fields of activity,
guidance, and leadership free for more selfish men, so that the general welfare
inevitably suffered!
76
We do not honour the soul by imposing tortures on
its tabernacles.
77
The weakling who is incapable of resisting whatever
can bring him pleasure, who has never learnt discipline from the results of his
weaknesses, has no other way to harden his will than the way of ascetic
withdrawal.
78
Contemporary society is apt to laugh at and even to
hinder these aspirations. We are not likely to become saints. All the likelihood
runs in the opposite way. So let us not hesitate to practise a little
self-denial, a little self-discipline, yes! even a little asceticism.
79
The Jain yogis even make the severest asceticism
the chief feature of their path to the spiritual goal.
80
The discipline of the will must be practised
against one's weaknesses and passions. This is where the ascetic finds his
proper justification. But he need not push his effort into absurdities, for then
he becomes a fool, or to extremes, for then he becomes a masochist.
81
It is not fully helpful to us, creatures of modern
civilization and metropolitan cities as we are, that most of the information
which has come down to us about this subject has come from monks, nuns, abbots,
and hermits too often given over to excesses of asceticism. This has given us
their point of view, but we ourselves are not placed at the same point as they
are.
82
To withdraw ascetically from worldly affairs and
let go one's grip on worldly things quite deliberately, and not through old age
or chronic illness or repeated failure, is something that many active-bodied or
keenly intellectual people find difficult to understand.
83
It is not suggested that he become the kind of
mystic who remains on the outside of life, unattached and rootless, a mere
onlooker while others act and work and move and love.
84
We dislike the idea of becoming saints and fear the
idea of becoming martyrs, just as we are averse to the idea of becoming
ascetics. The spirituality of an antique period is not for us. We agree to learn
a subject only when it is made easy, or to become spiritual only when the
disciplines and dangers are first removed. We want the Quest but without the
cross, the Overself without forsaking the ego.
85
Nobody need be frightened away from the quest by
unnecessary fears and imaginary obstacles. Complete asceticism and full
retirement are not asked for by philosophy. It asks instead for a spiritualizing
of life in the world. It is realistic even when being idealistic. It leads men
on from where they already are, not from where they find it impossible to be.
86
Philosophy does not encourage the escapist in his
evasion of morally obligatory responsibilities or in his illusion of merely
external asceticism.
87
The notion that, in order to live a spiritual life
or to attain spiritual salvation, a man must always flee from the world arises
from several different causes, as well as from certain understandable
confusions. It is not baseless although in a number of cases it is useless. One
of the causes is disgust with the evil that surrounds us. One of the confusions
is failure to perceive that mental flight is far more important than physical
flight.
88
The Hindu-Buddhist monastic sects which consider
life in this world to be an evil, and the world itself to be an inexplicable
mistake to be endured until we can escape from it by a transcendental
attainment, are not supported by all their own sages. Some, and they are of the
best, reject such statements.
89
It is sinful to throw away or destroy what Nature
or man has taken the trouble to produce, and what some other person can use.
Life attaches a penalty to such a sin, the penalty of loss or privation in the
thing concerned. It is not generally known or recognized as a sin but then not
all of the higher laws are known or recognized.
90
Like the celebrated Abbess of Port-Royal, some
thought that by living in squalor they were actually living in poverty, to which
they were vowed. But this was a ghastly mistake, a confusion of definitions
which brought about lamentable results.
91
To accept such values and to act in accordance with
them would lead society back to a primitive stage and deprive it of the benefits
of invention, the progress of civilization, and of the inspirations of
literature and art.
92
Such temporary ascetic practices are an
unmistakable gesture to the Overself that he is willing to make some sacrifices
in return for dominion over his animal nature, that he is prepared to pay with
the coin of self-discipline for liberation from slavery to his lower appetites,
that, in short, he really has elevated his values.
93
Among Orientals the popular association of poverty
with holiness is undeniable. The fakir begged his way as he wandered, the
dervish begged at the door - both had given their lives to religion.
94
A reasonable ascetic abnegation may well become
necessary at some stage, but it is he who must judge and test himself.
95
You are to hate nobody but to extend to everybody
the sincere hand of goodwill, to bless all because in your own heart the
conscious presence of the Overself has itself blessed you. Hence to purify your
personal feelings from hate, resentment, anger, or malice, it is always needful
to lift the problem of your enemy or your critic onto that plane where divine
love and forgiveness can be felt and bestowed. But to discharge the social
duties of the world in which we live, it is also needful to deal with him
according to reason. The two attitudes are not conflicting ones. For whatever
practical action you will then take will be taken calmly, nobly, and justly.
96
There are certain vital differences between the
harsh asceticism of ordinary mysticism and the balanced discipline of
philosophy. The first is an effort to arrive at a spiritual state by physical
means, by forcible suppression and by mechanical obedience. The second is an
effort to arrive at the same state by mental means, by gradual self-training,
and by intelligent response. That is, the philosophical aspirant waits for the
inner call to impose a bodily renunciation upon himself. He does not impose it
arbitrarily merely because some external authority commands him to do so or
because he seeks blindly to imitate the saints.
97
An occasional and limited austerity, intended to
help and strengthen the growing will, is valuable to everyone. It is even more
valuable to the spiritual aspirant because it teaches him to dissociate the self
from the body.
98
Our objection is against that kind of asceticism
which on the one hand merely expands vanity and increases egotism and on the
other is only outward, formal, and physical.
99
Ascetic self-discipline must precede spiritual
self-realization. We must let go of the lesser things of earth if we would find
the greater ones of heaven.
100
The philosophic discipline makes use of physical
austerity at certain periods and in a limited way. But it does not prescribe it
arbitrarily. The prescription must come from within the aspirant himself. This
ensures the right time, the mental readiness for imposing whatever outward
discipline may be required.
101
The simple life advocated quite understandably by
saints and mystics as a means of detaching people from too much worldliness is
to be welcomed. But two points should be made and then kept clear. It should not
be confused with the monastic life, with vows of poverty imposed on laymen. It
should not be opposed to the cultural life and deprive us of the gifts of art,
beauty, colour, and replace them by utter bareness or drabness. It should not be
fanatical and push its dislike for the products of man's invention to the
extreme. The cave is the simplest habitation. Are we to stop only there? And
scratch on the walls instead of printing on paper?
102
Since they are so irrelevant to our times, why
should we not soften the harsh rules of asceticism, so long as such softening
does not minify the ultimate purpose itself, does not prevent a man from
attaining the highest self-fulfilment?
103
When asceticism becomes a form of ill-treating
the body, it renders no useful service - neither to religious aspiration in the
best sense, nor certainly to the body itself, its health or well-being.
104
Buddha drew attention to the unpleasant parts and
functions of the body and the unpleasantnesses associated with it, in order to
get people disgusted with the body so that they might become less attached to
the desires associated with it. The Hindu teachers instructed their seeking
pupils to live near cremation grounds and burial grounds with a somewhat similar
purpose in view, except that here there was emphasis upon the brevity of
incarnation. But for those whose minds can function on a higher level, there is
no need for such a one-sided outlook. Neither fanatical asceticism nor an
utterly bare, so-called simple life should obscure the fact that the body also
brings satisfactions. The pleasures of eating need not be disparaged;
appreciation of beautiful song need not be missed.
105
Buddha tried the fanatic's way of asceticism but
in the end gave it up for the Middle Way.
106
The body, passions, and undesirable emotions must
be perseveringly disciplined. Whilst ungoverned and running wild, they
constitute the lower nature that is symbolized in so many myths as a dragon,
lion, or serpent which has to be slain before the guardians of the divine gate
permit entrance. Such purification is a necessary preliminary to and
prerequisite of the higher training, which opens the individual mind to
spiritual consciousness. This does not mean that total asceticism is demanded,
and, indeed, in the present era, such a demand would often be an impractical
one. What is demanded is inner asceticism, that is, inner
purification of thought and feeling. External measures may be adjusted later,
according to the individual circumstances and personal inclinations.
107
Asceticism is not identified with philosophy but
only with mysticism. Nevertheless there comes a period in his life when he has
to go through the battles of Hercules, fight and overcome his lower nature
before he may be initiated into higher realizations. Sex must and can be
conquered. Only when this is done can rapid spiritual advancement be in order.
108
To take a single instance, the asceticism which
marked those two Oriental messages (Buddhism and Hinduism), will not be a
suitable feature of the new message. The new one says that we are to live in the
world but not to become worldly, and that we may enjoy the good things of this
world so long as we do not forget also to enjoy the good things of the Spiritual
Quest.
109
He is here to understand life; and it can be
understood just as well in business as in a cave. Moreover if he stays in the
world he will have a far better opportunity to serve mankind than if he runs
away. The time for withdrawing from business in order to have more time for
meditation and study will come when it is right later on. He will gain little by
withdrawal unless he does so under the orders of a competent teacher, whereas he
will be able to benefit by the invaluable lessons and practical experience that
business affords him. It is not a matter of finding time, this business of
self-realization, but of finding the right tuition.
110
The ascetic physical regimes such as strict
celibacy, total abstention from alcoholic liquor, living apart from worldly
people, and not engaging in worldly business, were planned to keep the novice
away from distracting environments and obstructing temptations. To concentrate
successfully in meditation the mind must first become moderately settled. If it
is excited with any passion, or agitated by any anger, then the aspirant finds
it impossible to meditate properly. What he loves, longs for, or desires may
come first before him when he sits down to meditate. The picture of that thing
appears before him and makes his effort to concentrate more difficult. He may
remove this unequal emphasis by strengthening his will through the deliberate
renunciation of that thing for a time. This quietens the mind before he begins
and thus there is a gradual, if temporary, dropping-away of the desire which
might otherwise intrude and interfere. This is the theory of asceticism. Its
defect is that the result is too often either a temporary repression or a total
failure.
111
It is not at all necessary to emulate the
emaciated self-hypnotized anchorite or the sombre intense ascetic.
112
If the Chinese ideal of the Harmonious Whole
enters deeply into his thought, a one-sided attitude toward life seems too
restricted. He can see no reason why a temporary and narrowing ascetic
concentration, necessary though it was for most persons, should become a
permanent imposition of austerity.
113
To reject a fanatical asceticism is not to plead
for a free self-indulgence. The sybarite has no place on this quest. Moral,
mental, and physical health needs the support of will and discipline.
114
Some practise asceticism, others merely pretend
to do so.
115
Neither penance nor asceticism need be permanent.
They are but stages, after all. The aspirant will receive an inner prompting
when to bring them to an end. If, however, he is unintelligent, excessively
obstinate, or emotionally unbalanced, he may disregard the prompting and turn
what should be a means into an end.
116
If we want to understand why so many men have
pursued ascetic ideals in a large part of the world and since before the
Christian era, we have only to glance at those who have not pursued these ideals
but rather the very opposite ones. What have ambition, wealth, power, pleasure
and fame done to the character of those who placed the highest possible value
upon them? How often have they weakened finer feelings, strengthened ignoble
selfishness, or kept the mind on shallower levels?
117
A man may quite properly seek his material
welfare without in any way being a materialist. The kind of ascetic mysticism
which confuses the two is based on mere surface readings, not inner realities.
The modern Westerner quite rightly has no use for that medieval outlook, that
spurious holiness which praises the spiritual man only when he is also a starved
man. He will prefer to follow Jesus' injunction to be in the world, but not of
it.
118
They commit the mistake of going too far when
they combat asceticism. They rightly object to its fanaticism, but this does not
justify its total denunciation. It has a place, however limited, and a very
necessary place, however temporary, in the life of all those who seek to rise
above a merely animal existence. Because so many ascetics have been ignorant and
extremist and unbalanced, this is no reason for refusing to honor the need of a
prudent, sensible, and balanced restraint of the lower nature.
119
The kind of asceticism which turns its votaries
into human cabbages or living corpses is unattractive in theory and
uncomfortable in practice.
120
The ascetic belief that comfort is a spiritual
hindrance, luxury a spiritual sin, and art a spiritual tempter is not entirely
groundless. Much depends on the definitions made, the standards set, but more
especially on the circumstances fixed by destiny.
121
The denial of comfort is not necessary to a
simpler life, although grim ascetics may think so. Sitting on soft cushions need
not make anyone more materialistic as squatting on bare earth, cemented or tiled
floor has not made any Western visitor to Indian ashram more spiritual, if he
dares to ignore his discomfort and think a little for himself.
122
Excessive surrender to the physical senses,
instincts, desires, and appetites has created the need in most religions of
codes, systems, and schools of the opposite, that is, asceticism. This is why
more stress has been laid upon asceticism in a system like yoga than is really
required, and why fanaticism so often accompanies it when it is excessive.
123
Those who wish to respond to the quest's silent
invitation must begin by repentance, continue by self-discipline, and end by
surrender.
124
If a sceptic asks, "Why should I be detached from
the things and creatures which make me happy?" the answer is a multiple one.
First, their transiency - all and everyone are subject to change, thus making
possible a change in the happiness you get from them. Second, their brevity -
next year they may not be present for your enjoyment, whether through death,
accident, illness, or ill-fortune. Third, life is like a dream; its solid
reality is a borrowed feeling not really there but in the deeper being of
yourself. Fourth, and final - to discover this being is why you are here anyway,
what you have to do in the end, even if you put it off for many a reincarnation.
Nor will you miss out on happiness if you do respond to the idea of detachment.
It does not mean living like a caveman. It does not mean denying life, art,
comfort, humanity.
125
The same possessions which enslave one man may
set another free. For where the first uses them to strengthen desires, nourish
passions, increase selfishness, and exploit humanity, the second may use them to
build character, improve intelligence, foster meditation, and serve humanity.
The very things which captivate the first man help to liberate the second one.
126
The belief supported by Rousseau that living
simply and on a low income improves character or promotes spirituality is
correct only in the case of those who have renounced the world, that is, of
monks and nuns. In the case of the others, who constitute the mass of mankind,
it is correct only for exceptional persons who know how to live in the world and
yet not be of it. But most people are in the grade of life's school where they
need to acquire experience and develop the faculties of human individuality. The
spurs to that are first, responsibility, and second, ambition. These and the
need to discharge family obligation must in the end force them to improve
themselves and to improve their position.
127
It is possible happily to enjoy the pleasures of
life in the world, the sense of power which position gives in the world, the
securities afforded by properties and possessions in the world, without clinging
inordinately to their ownership in the mind. It is possible to hold them without
uncontrolled attachment, to take or leave them as fate or inclination dictates.
This is not to say that human feelings are to be expunged and human nature
crushed, but only that they are to be freed from avoidable and unnecessary
miseries by the practice of philosophy.
128
We hear much counsel from the Orient bidding us
relinquish career, fortune, and family. Is the pauper to be an aspirant's ideal
type? Even Tiruvalluvar, a man whom South Indians revere as one of their
greatest saints and poets, in his most celebrated classic, The Kural,
rated poverty not only as painful but as a great evil. He abhorred begging.
129
When he lets himself get cluttered up with an
excess of possessions, each demanding his attention, interest, and care, not to
speak of his time, his needs get confused with wants, reality with illusions.
130
Possessions should not become prisons. The
aspirant's mental attitude toward them must be vigilant lest he lose his deeply
hidden independence. The ideal is to move through life with inward detachment.
The thought of the impermanence of all things is one which should spontaneously
arise in his mind whenever he comes into good fortune.
131
The way of decreasing possessions as a means of
increasing spirituality is necessary at certain times to certain persons, but
not to all persons at all times.
132
It may be a help to some in the attainment of
inner freedom if they stop using the possessive pronoun "my" in reference to
anything that belongs to them except their weaknesses.
133
If we could learn to hold things less
possessively and people less adhesively, we would enjoy the things and give joy
to the people much more than we do now.
134
The more he brings himself to let go
inwardly of his possessiveness, the less he will suffer. It is easier to
do so at first in abstract meditation and later in actual everyday life.
135
Yang Chu who was a Taoist, but such a strongly
individual one that he did not hesitate to modify the teachings where necessary,
thought that neither being poor nor being wealthy was desirable, that a better
condition was the middle one between the two. The sage argued that they brought
their own special kind of anxieties with them and so were not conducive to peace
of mind.
136
If the religionist declares that man cannot live
by bread alone, the materialist retorts that he cannot even survive unless he
seeks, obtains, and eats bread. Moreover if too little money may bring a lot of
misery, a lot of money may still accompany a lot of misery. But on the other
hand if, as it is often said, money does not bring happiness, neither does
poverty. The reasonable man is not tricked by such generalizations. He looks
deeper and longer and more into those individual circumstances that are not so
obvious.
137
The fifth of the yama restraints laid down
in yoga discipline is variously translated as avoidance of "avarice," avoidance
of "abundance of worldly goods," avoidance or non-taking of "gifts." The
original word is parigraha (in Jaina texts). The philosophical view is
that it means both "miserly hoarding of possessions," and "non-taking of gifts
conducive to luxury."
138
If a man will not get this inner attitude toward
possessions while he owns them, he may still fail to do so if destiny snatches
them away.
139
Freedom means being able to make money without
contracting into the sense of anxious possession which goes with it.
140
Although decried by the yogic and Vedantic texts,
what is wrong with eating tasty food? Does not its enjoyment promote secretion
of digestive juices? And although decried by the same texts, how is character
harmed by comfortable surroundings or by artistic and intellectual culture? And
finally, in what way could any of these things be discreditable to truth or the
quest?
141
Wittgenstein gave away a large inheritance
because he believed that money is a nuisance to a philosopher! The result was
that he had to take a job, working among people who made him miserable.
142
To suggest, as philosophy does, a standard of
living that rejects equally the exaggerated narrowing down to primitive and
monastic conditions or the exaggerated expanding up to incessant acquirement of
possessions is simply to suggest a healthily balanced life.
143
The simple life is rightly advocated as an
accompaniment of the spiritual life. But the purpose of this advocacy should not
be forgotten - to save time and thought from becoming too preoccupied with
physical things. Yet those who draw help from beauty in art or nature, who are
affected by colour and form, should not throw aside this cultural heritage in
favour of bare, dull, dreary, and sometimes squalid surroundings in the name of
simplicity.
144
It is easy to fall into the error that
spirituality means stagnation, that transcending the worldly life means
abandoning it. This error arises because it is not clearly comprehended that the
operative principle is what one does with his thoughts, not with his things. For
the second activity is always a result of the first.
145
The attitude taken up in preaching or writing
that material things are worthless and on no account to be sought for, is not
only nonsensical but often hypocritical. It is seldom put into practice by its
advocates.
146
It is common for religious preachers and mystical
authors to condemn the effort to acquire money. It is uncommon to find one who
defends it. But the correct attitude toward money ought to be determined by the
way in which it is gained and by the use to which it is put. The young man who
nourishes honest ambitions and puts them to work without injury to other men but
rather in service of them, until he is able to command sufficient wealth, and
who then retires and puts his wealth to work in a way which enables him to
command the kind of surroundings and life conducive to spiritual ideals, has
attained true balance. The processes of money-making can destroy those ideals or
promote them. Ignorance and greed bring about the first result, but wisdom and
balance the second.
147
Inner security can be gained by anyone anywhere,
but in Europe and America it can be gained with less difficulty and more speed
if the seeker has just enough outer security to enable him to do the things he
needs to do to foster spiritual growth. Money will corrupt him and delay or even
stop his quest only if in its acquisition he does not know when to stop.
148
Must I add this new possession to the others? Is
it a help toward living or really an encumbrance? If it can replace an existing
one by being more efficient, better for health, comfort, work, or elegance, it
may be permissible. But if it merely multiplies the number of objects needing
care or using up attention, I will do better without it. Acquisition run to
excess is the modern disease.
149
The gospel of the simple life, as preached by the
Tolstoyans, the Gandhians, the Yogis, and the Fakirs, rejects every beautiful
thing because, in its view, all art is distracting, unnecessary luxury. It
rejects most of the inventions, developments, and creations brought about by
modern science and industry because man can live without them and did, until
recently, do so. It demands that he acquire the barest minimum of goods, food,
clothing, and shelter which he can manage to maintain existence. Philosophy,
while appreciative of the virtue of being unpossessed by possessions, of the
advantage of some simplification of our pattern, sees no need why we should go
so far as these ascetic extremists go. It rejects their rejections and turns
away from their demands. In short, it accepts the reasonable enjoyment of life,
art, possessions, and the physical world, so long as we do not forget the quest
while we are enjoying them.
150
The attempt to cling to possessions or persons
after they have been lost is the craving for what is past and the refusal to
live in what is already here. It can only lead to frustration and
dissatisfaction.
151
When a thing, a position, or a person is no
longer an obstacle to his interior work of purification or meditation, then he
has achieved the detachment from it which philosophy seeks. The possession of it
will then be acceptable and harmless.
152
When the spirit of inner detachment has really
been gained, whatever things were discarded during the struggle to attain it may
again be taken up and used if they are needed.
153
In the end the things he appreciates are more his
own than those he possesses.
154
It has yet to be shown that any wealth beyond
what is needed for decency of living makes anyone any happier, or that owning
more possessions and property than others have makes him really better off in
the end than they are.
155
My true wealth lies not in the extent to which I
possess things but in the extent to which I can cheerfully dispossess myself of
them.
156
Those who complain of the burden of having too
many possessions should remember the misery of having too few possessions.
157
The best of all possessions is to have this
inward and secret possessionlessness.
158
It is not in the actual owning of things that the
wrong lies; it is in such blind attachment to them that their ephemeral
character and hidden penalties are left unrecognized. The beautiful and the
useful have their proper place in home and life. Their offering may be accepted
if it is kept within our understanding of truth and does not displace it and if
our sense of values is not smothered by it.
159
If he lacks the material things and possessions
to provide for essential requirements, his mind will constantly recur to them.
In that sense he finds that poverty does not let him attain peace of mind.
160
With money one can disdain the inferior and
purchase the best, cultivate the art of beautiful living, raise the quality of
this human existence above the merely animal one, improve and refine
surroundings. But without money, the only satisfactory alternative is the simple
desireless life of a yogi.
161
The purification of the heart from worldly
attachments is not easily achieved. A simpler life, setting a limit on the
number of possessions, is a proven help to such an achievement.
162
The money he earns or possesses and the material
benefits which he desires, pardonably occupy his mind. There is nothing wrong in
this from the philosophical standpoint although there may be from the fanatical
ascetic-mystic standpoint. But when they preoccupy his mind to the exclusion of
all higher things, then the imbalance is certainly wrong.
163
The more possessions the more time we have to
give to them, and therefore the more energy. There is then proportionately less
of both available for higher studies, meditation practice, and metaphysical
reflection.
164
Many of those things which we eagerly collect or
gratefully accept as possessions in the beginning, we ruefully recognize as
encumbrances in the end. For the responsibilities and consequences which follow
in their train are often not to our liking.
165
The monk who takes the vow of personal poverty
and renounces the possession of worldly goods is not superior to, but only on a
parallel plane with, the householder who decides to simplify his life and
discard superfluities or inessentials.
166
Earthly things are to be regarded as possessing a
secondary value and offering a limited satisfaction. Where they have such a grip
on the heart that this attitude cannot be taken up, then they are to be
deliberately renounced to the extent and for the period necessary to set the
heart free. Thus philosophy is somewhat ascetical but not wholly ascetical.
167
The simple life opposes itself to the abundant
life: philosophy reconciles these opposites. Its full development of human
faculty passes through an alternating rhythm, using both of them. But
enlightenment itself is independent of either condition. It comes from grace,
not from poverty and austerity nor from possessions and elegance. The austerity
draws out self-control. The possessions, which include mental and artistic ones,
enlarge the outlook. Both are merely for training the human entity. They are
means, not ends.
168
The simplicity which is advocated in the name of
asceticism, taking the original definition of the words as "training," is
unobjectionable. It is part of the work of bringing the body and the physical
senses under control, making them obey mind and will. It is an attempt to rule
the acquisitive instinct which demands more and more belongings, more and more
possessions, and in the end more and more luxuries: this leads into attachments
to them and dependence on them for one's happiness. Buddha pointed out that
cravings and desires were insatiable and block the way to durable
satisfaction. These facts have been used as part of the justification for
monastic existence. The monk does not have to take care of more objects than he
can pack into a single small suitcase. This leaves his mind and time freer for
its religious pursuits. But for those who have elected to stay in the world and
follow the layman's supposedly lower and certainly less harsh way of life a
wider view is permissible, and a little latitude may be given to the need of
comfort and the sense of beauty. Bleak, shabby, or ugly surroundings do not
promote spirituality. Cheerless and comfortless furnishings may dull
sensitivity. It is not far from these things to regard art, music, poetry,
colour, fine literature, and general culture as hindrances to the spirit at
best, or enemies to the seeker after God at worst. But in the enlargement of
life, mind, thought, feeling, and intuition for which philosophy becomes the
agent, there is space for all these things. They are turned into helps on the
way, feeding and promoting the spiritual life.
169
The Hindu sadhu and the Franciscan monk would
applaud Roman Seneca's assertion that "property (is) ...the greatest cause of
human troubles." But would it not be juster to counterbalance this with the
comment that the lack of property is one of the great causes of human
troubles and crimes? Can there be contentment before basic human needs are met?
Can we return to the caveman's propertyless and primitive way of life? Are not
physical well-being and healthy surroundings necessary to satisfactory
existence, and living decently necessary to the transition from the merely
animal to the properly human order? Did not Epictetus put it in a phrase: "There
is a difference between living well and living profusely"? Ought we not learn
something from the sadhu's attitude of non-attachment without falling into his
extremism? Should we not esteem control of thoughts and command of desires and
passions for the inner peace they give to a man? In short, it is not only things
but not le the mental attitude which matters.
170
How can he escape? There are but two ways. The
first is to gather sufficient wealth into his bins to enable him to snap his
fingers at conventional society, or at least to stand aside and laugh at the
world whenever he likes. But by the time he has succeeded in this purpose, he is
unlikely to want to free himself. The grip of routine will be greater than ever
before. This method of liberation is a problematical one, after all. The second
and certain way is to cut down his wants and needs so that his call on this
world's goods is small.
171
A minimum of possessions must be set unless a man
is to go about completely naked. A minimum of shelter must also be set,
otherwise he may lose his health or soon die off. A minimum of food and drink
likewise has to be set, or the body will perish even quicker. Where then is this
minimum to be placed? Is it to be the same for every man? Is it to be the same
for men in utterly different climates - such as the tropics and the arctic? The
higher individuality is one, and unchanging, whereas the personal self may take
different forms at different times, and certainly changes.
172
"Blessed are the poor," said Jesus. Jesus could
not have meant that there is spiritual advantage in living in a slum. It is more
likely to breed discontent, or why do those who increase their income move to a
better neighbourhood? The phrase is not to be taken literally but
metaphorically, as were so many utterances by Orientals. To live inwardly ever
detached from things - whether they are owned and used or not - is a blessed
state, giving peace of mind.
173
The disadvantage of having possessions is that
they dissipate our energies and use up our time, either in making use of them or
in taking care of them. These energies and this time and especially the
attention involved in them, make it more difficult for beginners, I repeat - for
beginners - to reorient their mind towards the Overself.
174
There is nothing wrong, but, rather, everything
right in aspiring to a certain amount of success in worldly life along with
one's spiritual development. But one must make sure that the worldly attainments
are not gained at the expense of neglecting his inward development, and that
they do not infringe upon the ethical principles which govern discipleship.
175
After an active, aggressive business life one
does reach the time when more emphasis should be placed on inner development.
Outer acquisition can become largely a distraction as that period emerges.
176
This is also true as respects personal
attainments, whether intellectual, scientific, or otherwise. When the time has
come for more intensive inner seeking it may be wise to consider if one's
further activities in these other fields should not be left to others.
177
Money can be regarded as a symbol which
represents, among other things, two which are quite important although unequally
so. They are power and privacy.
178
It is usually the moneyless aspirants who decry
wealth and praise poverty (calling it simplicity). If money can chain a man more
tightly to materialism, it can also give him the conditions whereby he can set
to work freeing himself from materialism.
189
If he feels the urge to discard superfluous
personal possessions, he ought to obey it!
190
It is doubtless quite pardonable for a man to
regard as permanently his own what he has possessed for a long time and to
believe that life not only will let him have it always but ought to do so. To
him, the idea of detachment must be an irritant.
181
How many of our possessions are, in reflective
analysis, mere toys for adults! We expend so much effort and desire to get them,
we cling so desperately to them, and we make ourselves so unhappy to lose them -
when they are really toys, playthings. We take their arrivals and departures too
seriously, hence we are overmuch elated or overmuch depressed quite needlessly.
182
Why must it be assumed that only the
beggar, moneyless and homeless, can acquire this knowledge, this truth? Surely
the privacy needed for meditation is easier got by the wealthier man? Getty, oil
millionaire, summed up the chief benefit of his wealth as "privacy." Again, why
must it be assumed that because most seekers in the past as in the present join
a religious order, or mystical organization, all should become followers of some
guru or leader? Has not history told us of those who found their own way after
having passed beyond the beginning stages of joining or following?
183
To use possessions while being inwardly detached
from them, to work as actively as if one had the ambition to succeed while all
the time as indifferent toward success as toward failure - this is part of the
freedom he seeks and gains.
184
If a little extra comfort leaves one's thoughts
untroubled, one's feelings undisturbed, why not indulge in it?
185
It is not for everyone to accept the rule that to
be civilized is to be sinful, that to make the furnishing of a house
comfortable, tasteful, and agreeable is to betray spiritual standards. Does
spirituality vanish if we go beyond making the house humanly habitable and make
it aesthetically pleasing also?
186
It is true that every unnecessary possession may
become a hindering fetter, obstructing the inner life. But what is unnecessary
to a man in one set of circumstances or in one position of life may be quite
necessary to a man in a different one.
187
The attachment to worldly goods and family life
must be delicately balanced by the consciousness of their impermanence. It is
impossible to get such a balance when the attachment is excessive.
188
Lao Tzu: "Which is the most to you, your person
or your goods? Much hoarding must be followed by great ruin. He who knows when
he has enough suffers no disgrace."
189
When we consider the care, the anxiety, the
distraction, the time and energy associated with possessions, it may be a relief
to shed some of them, and not a grief.