It is habitual, hence called natural, for present-day humanity to go along
with the mental flow to outside things. Meditation reverses this direction and
tries to bring the little mind back to its origin - Mind.
PREPARATORY
The importance of meditation
1
Of all the day's activities, this non-activity, this
retreat into meditation, must become the principal one. It ought to be the
centre, with all the others circling round it.
2
For the religionist, meditation is essential because
a nonchalant faith alone is not enough. He who indulges in theological
speculation about the soul without having trod the inner way to the actual
experience of it for himself is like a man standing outside a restaurant with
shuttered windows and purporting to describe the meals being served inside. The
religious mode of life is intended to prepare man for and to lead him eventually
to the mystical mode, which is a higher rung in his development.
For the moralist, meditation is essential because a code of morals or a creed of ethics is only a preliminary aid to the fulfilment of life's purpose - which is to know ourselves. Our morals will automatically adjust themselves, our credo of ethics will automatically right itself once we have come into spiritual self-enlightenment. The noblest and the highest within us will then be evoked spontaneously. A technique of mind-training is indispensable to true self-knowledge.
Meditation is also essential for the artist. However talented he may be, a man can produce only substitutes for works of genius if he lacks the capacity to achieve self-absorbed states. The cultivation of this habit is a powerful help to the development of inspired moods. This is an age of brilliance. The talent for wit, satire, and sophistication abounds. But the true artist needs to go deeper than that. Art which lacks a spiritual import possesses only a surface value. The sun of inspiration shines upon all alike, but few people are so constituted as to be able to behold it. This is partly because they cannot achieve the requisite psychological condition. The artist who is wrapped up in a semi-trance of creative endeavour hardly notices at the time where he is and hardly remembers his own past life - such is the intensity of his concentration. Thus mental quiet is not to be confused with mental laziness. It is not only a triumph over the one-sidedness of external activity but also a creative quiet. This truth achieves its fullest exemplification in the sphere of art.
For the overworked man of affairs or the tired man of action, meditation is essential because it affords a wonderful relief by creating a little secret place within himself where the sordid world will be less able to hurt him, the events of life less able to depress him. Moreover, he needs meditation not only because an unrestrained external activity is not enough but also because it brings up out of the subconscious stores unexpected ideas which may be what he was consciously seeking previously or provides him with swift intuitions which throw light on perplexing problems. How much did their early morning practice of prefacing the day's work with a half hour of devotional meditation and guidance-seeking help some famous historical figures!
For the idealist who is struggling in a hard and harsh world, short daily periods of meditation will in time become the blessed sanctuary wherein he can keep alive his repressed aspirations.
Finally meditation is essential for every man because without it he lives at too great a radius from his divine centre to understand the best thing which life can offer him. He must reclaim the divine estate of which he is the ignorant owner. O! it is worthwhile to make this sacred incursion and attain, for a time, a nobler and wiser state of himself. By this daily act of returning into himself, he reaffirms his divine dignity and practises true self-respect.
3
Spirituality is within. If one does not feel it, then
one needs to search deeper, beneath the weaknesses, faults, passions, and
desires of the ego. It is still there, but the search must be properly made.
This is where help can be found, in the words of those who have already found
it.
4
It is a fact of mere observation that most Western
men live throughout their wakeful existence from morning to night without
finding a few minutes - or even caring to find them - for the liberating
practice of meditation exercises. They are virtually imprisoned in the five
senses and in the thoughts arising from each sense-activity. This fact is a
lamentable one. For how can they hope to cultivate a higher life if this
essential aid be neglected?
5
The consciousness beyond the usual everyday
consciousness can be reached only after a disciplined training of the mind. This
suppresses its activity in thinking and banishes its extroverted worldliness of
character.
6
It comes to this, that what people try to find in
many books is waiting for them within themselves, to be discovered by regularly
practising the art of meditation.
7
This idea, or belief, that we must go somewhere, meet
someone, read something, to accomplish life's best fulfilment is the first and
last mistake. In the end, as in the beginning, we have nothing else to do except
obey the ancient command to LOOK WITHIN.
8
The need of meditation is to establish equilibrium in
the whole being, for ordinary active life is a "going out" while meditation is a
polar opposite, a "coming back" to the source. Whereas ignorant men are
compelled by Nature to "come back" in sleep, they do so without awareness.
Meditation, being a conscious, deliberate undertaking, restores "awareness."
9
So long as he is looking for the Spirit outside
himself - where it is not - so long will he fail to find it. This is the first
justification of meditation.
10
He who would find his Soul has to press deep into
his mind.
11
To separate the mind from the body is abnormal and
ordinarily undesirable. But to free the mind from the tyranny of the body is
absolutely essential and this can be assisted by the regular practice of
meditation.
12
The uncertainty which reigns among people as to
whether there is or is not an Intelligence which presides over the processes of
Nature and the fortunes of mankind - that is, a God - as well as the conflicting
views of educated persons, shows the lack of inner experience, the failure to
practise meditation.
13
Arguments or doubts about the soul can be settled
for us once and for all only by personal experience of it. This is
immeasurably better than logical proof, which is always open to equal disproof.
This mystical experience is the challenge of our times.
14
The truth needed for immediate and provisional use
may be learned from books and teachers but the truth of the ultimate revelation
can be learned only from and within oneself by meditation.(P)
15
The purely intellectual approach to the Overself
can never replace the psychological experience of it. This latter is and must be
supreme.
16
It is a principle of philosophy that what you can
know is limited by what you are. A deep man may know a deep truth but a shallow
man, never. This indeed is one of its reasons for taking up the practice of
meditation.(P)
17
Reading and travel can contribute much to a
cultured way of life, but meditation and reflection can deepen the man himself.
18
It is one of the values of yoga that it can provide
a man with the actual experience of feeling that he is only a witness of the
whirling of time, whereas metaphysics only talks of this state.
19
Meditation is essential for the abstract thinker
because a brooding intelligence is not enough, because it alone operates with
the experienceable facts of consciousness, whereas metaphysics operates either
with erroneous speculations about those factors or with correct but shadowy
images of them. In the latter case, it successfully brings these images into
vividly felt actuality.
20
Reflection must needs be long and arduous before it
is likely to reach certainty. These truths can be reached and realized only in
solitary meditation. Meditation is the first letter in the aspirant's alphabet.
21
Lao Tzu: "The excellence of a mind is its
profundity."
22
If something awakens in him, a serious urge to
unfold more of his spiritual nature, then the practice of meditation becomes one
of the best ways to get into action.
23
What wonderful experiences or realizations,
awarenesses or confirmations await the man who successfully contemplates, and
becomes absorbed in, himself! But it must be the inward, deeper part.
24
The consequences of putting the contents of his own
mind under observation, of becoming fully aware of their nature, origin, and
effect, are immeasurably important.
25
With the sole object of calming and clearing the
mind and concentrating its power, it is a good practice to sit in meditation for
a while each day before beginning to study philosophy. This helps the studies.
26
Prayer is a help, but some method that not only
goes still deeper into the human heart but helps to silence the ego is also
needed. This can be found through the practice of contemplation.
27
To the work of reshaping character and extending
consciousness, the practice of meditation is indispensable.
28
The man who is prone to impatience, irritability,
and anger needs meditation even more than other men. He needs its harmonizing
effect on the whole personality, its pacifying touch on the darker impulses and
passions.
29
If the work and result of meditation seem strange
and unearthly, artificial and abnormal, this is only because the average person
is not yet a fully human being but is only in the process of becoming one.
30
Those who are incapable of practising meditation
are incapable of becoming philosophers.
31
How can you do God's will unless you know what is
God's will? How can you know this unless you are able to communicate with God?
And how can this happen unless you can go deep into yourself in meditation?
32
Meditation is important in this Quest. It must be
learnt. It helps to create a condition wherein the holy presence can be felt,
where before there was nothing, and where the holy guidance can be given.
33
A man may live on the surface of life or in the
divine depths of being beneath his ego's sub-surface. It is for him to make the
effort, dive again and again until there is contact.
34
Withdraw into the inner Stillness: what better
thing can a man do? For it will point to the goal, give direction and support to
finding it.
35
In most cases, students must be reminded of the
importance of practising meditation daily and not just occasionally. Lack
of time or energy are no longer acceptable excuses: time can be made for other
things easily enough, so let it be made for meditation, too; and laziness or
inertia can be overcome by simply applying determination and a little
self-discipline. The student who deliberately sticks to his task, and persists
through the initial irksomeness of this practice, will find that the eventual
results justify all inconveniences. Meditation is essential in order to develop
sensitivity and intuition, which play important roles on this Quest.
36
Both the necessity and justification of meditation
lie in this, that man is so preoccupied with his own thoughts that he is never
aware of the mind out of which they arise and in which they vanish. The process
of stilling these thoughts, or advanced meditation, makes this awareness
possible.
37
Whether we renounce the world or whether we accept
it, the need of mental control still remains the same.
38
So long as thoughts remain unmastered, this present
and personal experience shuts us out from reality.
39
In the recesses of his own being, a man can find
peace, strength, wisdom - but only if he brings his thoughts into obedience.
40
The cerebrum keeps up mental action like a machine.
Only when the mind slows by disengaging from this activity, coming to rest by
some means, does consciousness show its own treasures.
41
Thought may ennoble a man or debase him. It is not
to be dismissed as unimportant. If conquering it is so necessary, stilling it is
even more important and more necessary.
42
The prejudiced mind repels true ideas, which can
take no hold in it. Hence we give yoga to such people to discipline their minds.
43
The mind must be prepared before it can take in the
truth. Its oscillations must be steadied before it can reflect the truth.
44
Psychological methods are not less necessary than
religious exercises. The thought-life of man is ordinarily a confused, a
wandering, and a restless one. Meditation, practised in solitude and quietude,
must be regularly inserted into it, first, to help improve its character, and
second, to open a pathway towards conscious knowledge of the higher self.
45
So long as the mind remains untrained and its
thoughts move unrestricted, so long will man be a stranger to peace and
self-possession.
46
We cannot come to a plain contemplation of life
while we allow ourselves to be unduly disturbed by desires and unduly perturbed
by disappointments. Hence the need of yoga.
47
We have never learnt to keep our minds still as we
sometimes keep our bodies still. It is by far the harder task but also the most
rewarding one. Our thoughts continually titillate them and our desires
periodically agitate them. What the inner resources of mind are, and what they
can offer us, consequently remain unglimpsed and unknown. They are, in their
totality, the Soul, and they offer us the kingdom of heaven.
48
To pursue the realization of his dream - an abiding
peace which would necessarily lead to the falling-away of haunting fears and
negative emotions - he must gain control of thoughts.
49
It is just as valuable for ordinary non-monastic
lay people to learn and practise meditation as it is for the monks themselves.
And they can do this - at least in the earlier stages - without any reference to
religious themes, prayers, or supports should they prefer it.
50
The mere physical act of sitting down to practise
meditation is both a symbolic gesture of withdrawal from the world and an actual
severance from it. Each time it is done the meditator temporarily renounces his
outer personal life, renders himself oblivious of it and of the world in which
it is lived. What other withdrawal is needed? Is this not enough? Therefore
anyone may continue to remain a householder and need not take monastic vows, may
be active in the world provided such daily periods of meditation successfully
take him out of it.
51
Meditation can be learned by the orthodox as well
as the unorthodox, by the atheist as well as the theist, by the rationalist as
well as the mystic.
52
The failure on the part of most people in the West
to give a little of their time to personal and private holy communion, bringing
no priest or clergyman into the period but seeking in their own solitude to take
advantage of the usually well-camouflaged fact that man is essentially alone,
brings its inevitable consequences. Their lives may be good or bad, their
careers may be successful or failing, but having no consciousness of
Consciousness they remain only half-men. They have so little competent guidance
from those who are professional spiritual guides that most do not even know the
sin through omission they are committing, do not recognize the failure in duty.
53
In the Western world this ability is not a common
one. Yet by its absence Western people are less than themselves, are short of
true wholeness.
54
It is true that the Occidental peoples have had in
the past little aptitude for exercises in contemplation. But that is no reason
why they should not make a start at what will inescapably have to be started if
they are to put an end to their aimlessness and restlessness.
55
The Westerner must learn to end this endless
restlessness, this daily impatience to be doing something, must practise
faithfully and regularly "waiting on the Lord," or meditation. Thus he will come
less and less to rely on his own little resources, more and more on the Lord's -
that is, on his Overself's - infinite wisdom, power, and grace.
56
There can be consciousness without a brain. Hence,
there can be consciousness after death. To verify this, it is necessary to
isolate the principle of consciousness from its products. Such isolation
can only be effected through some kind of mystical experience. This experience
can be brought about by meditational practice. The materialists who refuse to
try such practice or who, trying, fail, cannot be regarded as disposing of the
question.
57
We spend so much of the day concentrating on our
personal selves. Can we not spend a half hour concentrating on the higher self?
58
The numerous details with which civilized existence
has complicated our lives make meditation seem an irksome exercise and the daily
meditation period impossible to secure. Yet although we become so engrossed in
those details, analysis would reveal how unnecessary many of them really are, or
how trivial by comparison with the importance of emerging from spiritual death.
59
Only a small minority of the human race feels the
need of giving itself the time for meditation. Consequently, only a small
minority ever knows that mystical experience is really factual. The absence of
intervals of tranquil meditation from their day-to-day lives is not to be
excused but rather explained by the fact that there are many who shrink from
these studies and practices under the impression that the former are dark and
incomprehensible and the latter mysterious and unholy. So they come to leave
philosophical mysticism to the few who are regarded as abnormal or eccentric.
But the truth is that they are disinclined in the first case to make the mental
efforts and in the second case to practise the emotional disciplines.
60
Those who continue the regular exercises in
meditation are outnumbered by those who give them up. The pressure of modern
existence is too much for them.
61
It is a great lack in modern life that it allows no
time for a short period of meditation, whether in the morning or evening or
both, to gain repose of being and elevation of mind.
62
The man who seeks outer peace and quiet to help his
efforts to acquire inner peace and mental stillness will soon find the modern
world opposing his intentions and obstructing his attempts.
63
Meditation is no longer limited to a few Christian
monasteries and Oriental ashrams but has spread among laymen around the world.
64
Too often the Western world sneered at yoga and
gave the name a derogatory, even condemnatory, colouring. But this ignorant
attitude is rapidly vanishing and more respect is given to the subject, as in
earlier times.
65
Field Marshal Montgomery a Meditator! by
Alexander Clifford, the war correspondent, who travelled from El Alamein to
Germany with Field Marshal Montgomery: "Montgomery's military thinking was as
logical and unorthodox as everything else. Once again his simplicity was at the
root of it. He believed deeply in long periods of pure thought - of working each
problem out from scratch. Way back in the desert he started a routine which he
never abandoned. It was built round the same three caravans and the same staff,
and probably the essential items in the day's program were the periods devoted
to uninterrupted meditation. He could not do without it. Once the King came to
visit him at Eindhoven in the autumn of 1944 and, owing to bad weather, was
forced to stay longer than he had intended. Monty's program was dislocated as a
result, and his staff detected signs of serious psychological frustration
because his meditation periods were being curtailed."
66
That the simple act of sitting down for a length of
time as unmoving as the heron-bird watching its prey could provide the first
condition for self-knowledge may seem strange.
67
There is a deep antipathy in the nature of most
Western people toward the effort required to concentrate and introvert
attention. It fatigues them excessively. That is clearly due to the lack of
familiarity and practice. But this antipathy has also a mysterious element in
it, whose origin is hidden in the ego's desire to avoid any deep, long
self-scrutiny that penetrates beneath its own surface. For that would certainly
lead to its own exposure and its own destruction.
68
Some are frightened by this very proposal to look
deep down into the mind, and they turn away in emotional refusal.
69
The fear of losing the known and familiar prevents
them from entering the unknown and higher consciousness.
70
Young people are naturally outgoing and are
consequently less inclined to take up meditation practice, but this is
counterbalanced by their greater openness of mind and readiness to follow
ideals. Older people are reluctant to include meditation in their daily program
because, they complain, the rush and pressures of modern living fatigue them and
make them less inclined to take on a self-imposed duty of such difficulty for
beginners.
71
They are trying to find their way to a higher kind
of truth but their efforts and understanding are still in the beginning stages.
For instance, to them, the idea of meditation still includes thinking, although
only in its loftier, more abstract themes.
72
They are willing to look everywhere else than into
their own inner being.
73
Not a few have rejected the practice of meditation
because it did not seem natural to them; it was too artificial - as if letting
muddied water settle down to become clear was an unnatural process! No one who
has not successfully brought the active whirling mind to a complete rest through
this practice can know how comparable it is to such a process. Hence Japanese
mystics call it "collecting the mind."
74
Critics and sceptics are on the outside looking in.
Their opinions on meditation are of little value.
75
Those who condemn the hours spent in meditation as
wasted ones, have been misled by mere appearances and have fallen into one of
the greatest errors of their lives.
76
He needs to remember the difference between a
method and a goal: the one is not the same as the other. Both meditation and
asceticism are trainings but they are not the final goals set up for human
beings.(P)
77
But a man cannot be continuously sitting down in
meditation. Nature herself provides him with other tasks, even if he were
capable of the feat, which he is not. All his formal practice of such exercises
is, after all, only an instrument to help him achieve a given end; it is not the
end itself.
78
It is indispensable to attainment but it is not
sufficient to ensure attainment.
79
We must not let the forms of meditation become a
subtler bondage than the merely obvious ones. We must not let it (or anything
else) become a cage. If this has happened then courage must be summoned to
shatter the bars and step out into freedom.
80
Yoga is not finished when a yogin can concentrate
perfectly and keep his mind utterly quiet. Certainly he who has reached this
point has mastered raja yoga - the royal union - but he must go farther and use
the wonderful instrument he has now developed for the mastery of the advanced
phases of gnana yoga - the union with truth. In the earlier phases he can employ
a sharpened intellect, but depth of intuition and an ego-freed will to know are
needed for the later ones.
81
The inwardness through which a human being finds
his way in meditation exercises to the redirection of attention to his soul, his
deeper "I," is needed to restore his lost balance. But it is a process, a means
to an end. For him the end must be not a special and limited experience, briefly
felt, of his innermost being but a settled awareness of its presence throughout
his everyday life, and a consequent sharing in that life.
82
In the life and work of the philosophical aspirant,
meditation takes an important place. There are several different ways and
traditions in such work, so that the aspirant may find what suits him. Although
sometimes it is better for him to discipline himself and practise with a way to
which he is not attracted - that is only sometimes. Generally, it is easier to
learn the art of meditation if we take the way that appeals to us individually.
Meditation is, however, and should be, only part of the program. The importance
given to it can be exaggerated. The work on oneself, on one's character and
tendencies, is also important. The study of the teachings is equally important.
And so, out of all these approaches, there comes a ripening, a broad maturity
which prepares the aspirant for recognition and full reception of the grace -
should it come.
83
Meditation is, after all, a phase which is put on
and off again as needed. The Quest is much bigger than meditation - although it
includes it at times, but not necessarily all the time.
84
He should not make the mistake of taking what is
admittedly important - meditation - for what is all-important.
85
It is most unwise to undervalue meditation and
overvalue reasoning. By so doing one would fall into the complementary error of
another who depreciates reasoning and considers meditation all that is
necessary.
86
It is useful to get misguided people to practise
meditation, for it calms passion and lulls the ego. Nevertheless it cannot cure
them. They are the products of mis-education and so the radical or fundamental
cure is right education - that is, right thinking.
87
The whole bodily and mental purificatory regime
contributes both to the proper development of meditation and to the proper
reception of intuitive knowledge. This is apart from and in addition to, its
direct physical and personal benefits.
88
He must cultivate a sense of the value of
meditation. It is not to be regarded as a hobby for odd moments. It is to be
prized as the way to a peace and contentment worth as much as any material
comfort or possession.
89
This is his sacred hour, his time for holy
communion. It must be shielded from society's inroads.
90
A period and a place should be set apart for
devotional exercises and mystical practices.
91
P92 Man meditating successfully is man at
his highest moment.
93
"The action of the mind which is best," declared
Saint Gregory Palamas, Greek Orthodox Archbishop of Thessalonica seven hundred
years ago, "is that in which it is sometimes raised above itself and unites with
God."
94
It is useless and foolish to try to avoid
meditation. One must learn its lessons.
95
We look for loftier experiences than those the
common day affords us.
96
"Westward Ho!" was the cry in the old days when a
ship left England for America. "Inward Ho!" can be the cry when a quester starts
on his spiritual voyage.
97
Before his mind can understand truth, attain the
Real, and enjoy happiness, it must reach a quiet state. No disturbances, no
agitations, and no resistances must get in the way. To make such a state
possible, it must first be reached spasmodically during special periods each
day, that is, during meditation periods. As it becomes more and more accustomed
to the silencing of its negative activities in this way, it will eventually
become more and more settled in the state by habit during the rest of the day.
Finally the habit becomes a trait of character, permanent and unbroken. Here is
the further reason why the practice of meditation exercises is a necessity,
indispensable to a complete quest.
98
The following of these exercises is indispensable
to train the mind, to create a habit which will make entry into the meditative
mood as easy in the end as it is hard in the beginning.
99
In the earlier history of Christianity, the place
given to meditation was quite important and prominent.
100
The art of meditation found a favourable climate
in which to thrive both in ancient Orient and medieval Europe. Life moved at a
much slower pace. Science and industry had not pressed man to give all his
attention to the outward activities. The oppressions, hardships, toil, serfdom,
and slavery of common people gave them few ways of escape other than the inward
one. There, in the solace of religious prayers or the practice of mystical
introspection, they might find some of the happiness denied them by worldly
society. Moreover, the tropical temperatures of many Oriental lands drove their
inhabitants more easily into lassitude, resignation, defeatism, and pessimism
while the wars, invasions, tyrannies, and poverties of medieval Europe drove a
not inconsiderable number of its inhabitants to wear the friar's garb or enter
the monastic house.
101
The practices of meditation were common in the
first centuries of Christian Egypt but largely dropped out of the Church for a
considerable period thereafter. Then came its revival - first in Roman, then in
Eastern sections.
102
The practice of mental quiet was formerly
confined to the monasteries and convents and kept from the knowledge of lay
folk. When Miguel de Molinos tried to alter this state of affairs, he was
sternly suppressed.
103
Modern conditions have so vastly changed from
those of antique and medieval times that it is necessary to remind readers that
until about the sixteenth century in Catholic countries, the teaching of
meditation to the laity was prohibited. It was a subject to be studied by
ecclesiastics only, and an art to be practised in monastic circles only. When
the Renaissance brought a relaxing of this reserve, it was at first in favour of
the higher social classes alone. Not till the eighteenth century was it
available to all classes.
104
More medieval Christians practised the techniques
of meditation than modern ones do. But a principal reason for that was the
existence of more monasteries and convents to take care of the meditators. Those
who did not care to be buffeted about in the storms of the world found plenty of
harbours of refuge to which they could turn their boats.
105
The archives of Eastern and Western mysticism
teem with instances of successful meditation practice and a scientific view must
explain them from the inside, not merely criticize them from the outside alone.
106
We have tried to build up a form of yoga fit for
those who must live and work in Western cities. The average European, the
average American, cannot imitate the Indian or Tibetan ways of yogic unfoldment,
even if he wants to; they are not always the correct or convenient ways for him.
107
A way suited to our times and our matter-sunk
minds is urgently needed. Because the writer was dissatisfied with most paths
already formulated, he has shaped out the one which is here offered. This way
takes but a fragment of one's daily life, a mere half hour being enough.
108
Let no one believe that these techniques are the
same as, or sympathetic to, those which are employed by spiritualist mediums to
enter the trance state, or by spiritualist believers to secure automatic
writing. The wary student cannot afford, and should not expose himself to, the
peril of letting unknown psychic forces take possession of his body.
109
It is certainly possible for the earnest
Westerner to live an active life and still practise meditation. However, there
are some Indian yoga exercises which could never be practised in active life
without leading to insanity or a nervous breakdown. The exercises given in my
books are intended for Westerners leading active lives and are absolutely safe.
110
The expanding interest in yoga is in part due to
its value as a technique of increasing our understanding of ourselves, achieving
more happiness and peace of mind. It can be applied to normal living by normal
persons, and its use is not limited only to hermits and monks.
111
The word meditation, and the meaning of the word,
are beginning to become known in different Western circles. If this is
contrasted to the ignorance of both which prevailed a half-century ago, the
change is gratifying. But although no longer so unknown and mysterious, the
distance still to be travelled until the word becomes as understood and familiar
here as it is in India is quite long.
112
Meditation is not really a safe term to use
nowadays. For instance for most people it means thinking about a theme, but for
other groups it holds the very opposite meaning - non-thinking.
113
Yoga is a single word covering a multitude of
practices. All are based on the principle of yoking the mind to one idea or one
object; but since the ideas selected differ with the different schools of
teaching, the results are often strikingly at variance. For concentrated thought
gives increased power to our present qualities, intensifying the beliefs with
which we started. Hence the competing schools of occultism with their clashing
doctrines.
114
People who do not know what they are talking
about, who lack the sense of responsibility for one's statements which is
engendered by the scientific training of the West, have mixed up with yoga much
that is totally irrelevant such as childish superstitions, religious fancies,
and magical practices.
115
The term "yoga" itself may mean almost anything
in India, for it has become a generic name for a number of techniques which are
not only vastly different from each other but in some cases even definitely
opposed. It need not even have any reference to a non-materialistic end. It is
therefore necessary to be somewhat explicit when using such an ambiguous term.
116
The contemporary definition of the word yoga in
India is "union with God." To a philosopher this is an unsatisfactory one. For
originally the word, when split into its syllables ya and gam,
meant "the way to go." Later it came to mean "the way to perfection." But in
both cases the application of this term was not limited to God as a goal,
although He was a common one. For there were materialistic, mental, religious,
and philosophic yogas: indeed one could be an atheist and still pursue a
particular yoga. The correct interpretation of the word indicates therefore that
there is a carelessness and looseness in its use, on the one hand, and a radical
misunderstanding of its right meaning, on the other.
117
Yoga is not a system for developing personal
efficiency in order to succeed better in the worldly life, nor a therapy to get
rid of diseases. Those who present it in this way have neither felt the spirit
which belongs to it nor understood its most important offering.
118
If he requests advice on how to set about yoga,
let it be clearly understood that yoga in the orthodox sense is neither
suitable, practicable, nor beneficial to modern Western people. The techniques
permitted merely embody yoga elements but are not limited to such elements.
Indeed the term "yoga" has been dropped from these teachings to avoid further
misunderstandings. Philosophy is the only teaching here offered, using the word
in its ancient Greek sense of love of high wisdom.
119
The traditional, orthodox forms of yoga are not
quite safe for Westerners living in the environment of Western cities and
therefore they cannot be recommended in their old forms.
120
My attempts to clarify the attitude which I had
adopted toward yoga, mysticism, and religion has only partially succeeded in its
objects, and still there seems to be a considerable amount of confusion and
misunderstanding as to what my views really are. Readers still demand a more
explicit statement of my present position and this I propose now to give.
Let it be perfectly clear at the outset that I condemn neither religion nor yoga, but staunchly uphold them. So far as religion consists of a sense of reverence for a higher power and an attempt to live a good life in accordance with the ethical injunctions of the great religious founders, it is a definite necessity for the mass of humanity. So far as the practice of yoga consists in the effort to control thoughts and to subdue worldly attachments, it is an invaluable way for distressed hearts to find peace, an excellent means of obtaining that sharpened attention which is required for the adequate consideration of philosophical questions, and, in its advanced stages, a beatific path to rapt ecstasies.
Holding such views as to the importance and personal value of both religion and yoga for the great majority of mankind, it is natural that I should have nothing but respect and regard for those who faithfully follow and practise their yoga, their religion, or their mysticism. On the other hand, what can honest men give but contempt and indignation for those who become pious hypocrites in the name of religion, parasites on society in the name of yoga, or exploiters of superstition in the name of mysticism? Ought he not to make a strong protest against unbalanced abuse and incorrect practice of yoga which leads to the most unfortunate physical and mental results? Ought he not also to protest against the mistakes of mystics when they take advantage of the much-abused word "intuition" to propagate their own personal imaginations as scientific certainties?
It will be seen that I am for a calm and dispassionate appraisal of these important matters and that I wish to avoid either blind, unthinking adherence on the one side or foolish, hasty scepticism on the other. I could not have arrived at such an attitude of candid examination, I believe, if I had not had the opportunity of studying impartially various manifestations of yoga, religion, and mysticism, not only in India but throughout the world, for more than a quarter of a century. And I have had the advantage of knowing these matters from the inside as well as the outside.
121
It is asked why I consider yoga unsuited to
Western people. This statement needs clarification and qualification for as it
stands it would be untrue. By the term "yoga" is meant the precise forms of
practice which are traditional to India and which originated thousands of years
ago. They can be followed in their fullness only by renouncing the world
entirely, entering the monastic order, retiring to forest mountain or cave
retreats, abjuring all family social and national responsibilities, and
accepting Hindu deities as objects of devotion. The average Westerner today is
not in a position to do this, nor is he intellectually attracted to it. This is
all I meant by criticizing the suitability of such methods. The basic principle
of yoga, which is the cultivation of power to withdraw attention from the
external world to the internal self, stands for all time and all peoples. I
therefore believe it better to separate it from the accidents and traditions of
history and geography, to free it from local accretions and universalize it. But
if this is done it is perhaps wiser not to use the term "yoga" and thus to avoid
confusion.
122
In the attempt to scrutinize, analyse, and define
the perceptions, the sensations, and the successive changes of consciousness
which meditation produced, I questioned many a practitioner, studied many a
text, interviewed the few real experts I could find and, finally, looked at my
own inner experience.
123
Yoga is both a method to be practised and a
result to be attained. It is both going inside the mind and being the
undistracted mind itself.
124
Yoga as work to be done is a process but as the
unified consciousness it is a result.
125
Yoga is, in the earlier stages, a bodily position
to be assumed and a mental practice to be done. But in the advanced stage it
seeks to transcend the other two, to move up to relaxed forgetfulness of them
and peaceful self-absorption in the Overself.
126
The process of yoga demands the positive
introduction of a specific meditation-pattern and the deepest possible
withdrawal of attention from sense-experienced external objects.
127
There are various forms of meditative practice
and various aspects of meditation itself, but none of these are the heart of the
matter.
128
The true state of meditation is reached when
there is awareness of awareness, without the intrusion of any thoughts whatever.
But this condition is not the ultimate. Beyond it lies the stage where all
awareness vanishes without the total loss of consciousness that this normally
brings.(P)
129
There are different kinds of meditation. The
elementary is concerned with holding certain thoughts firmly in the mind. The
advanced is concerned with keeping all thoughts completely out of the mind. The
highest is concerned with merging the mind blissfully in the Overself.
130
Much of the meditation performed by religious
ascetics and monks is a form of self-hypnosis, of imaginings about their
religious concepts, of thinkings and speculations about their religious beliefs.
This is not the same as true meditation, which seeks to stop thinking and to
penetrate to the still centre of Reality.
131
The novice must be warned that certain ways of
practising concentration, such as visualizing diagrams or repeating
declarations, as well as emptying the mind to seek guidance, must not be
confused with the true way of meditation. This has no other object than to
surrender the ego to the Overself and uses no other method than prayerful
aspiration, loving devotion, and mental quiet.(P)
132
Real meditation is not formal but spontaneous,
not set by the intellect but prompted by the heart.
133
In matters of mantrams, prayers, and meditations,
I have found by wide observation that the important thing is not a fixed formula
learnt and repeated so much as the thoughts in the mind, the improvised prayer,
the improvised meditation, the attitude and feeling at the time.
134
Too much systematization complicates the
study of yoga and makes it more difficult. Intellectual over-analysis of yoga
does the same. Both tend to miss the spirit of yoga.
135
What I call natural meditation, that which comes
of itself by itself or which comes from the admiration of nature or of music, is
not less valuable than any meditation of the yogi, and perhaps it is even better
since there is no artificial effort to bring it about. The man feels his inner
being gradually lapsing into this beautiful mood which seems to coalesce a
feeling of hush, peace, knowledge, and benignity.
136
The philosophical system of meditation combines
all those varied methods and diverse subjects which are needed for an all-round,
well-balanced development. Therefore it combines several techniques, such as the
constructive use of imagination in character building with the passive waiting
for intuition in cultivating awareness. It brings together one form which calms
the mind with another which stimulates it.
137
Open the door and let the Light in. It is as
simple - and as hard - as that.
138
Meditation rises to its proper level when the
meditator thinks only of the relation or the aspiration between himself and the
Overself, and it rises to its supreme level when he drops even such ideas and
thinks of nothing save the Overself.
139
This art of meditation is in the end a matter of
reaching ever-greater depth within oneself, until one penetrates beneath the ego
and enters pure being.
140
What is so extraordinary about the practice is
that whereas to meditate is correctly regarded as concentrated pondering and
sustained musing - in other words, producing more associated thoughts from the
first original one - it leads, at its most successful end, to losing the
capacity to ponder or muse. At the point where meditation becomes contemplation,
thinking paralyses itself and brings about its own temporary death!
141
When impressions through the five senses of the
outside world's existence, when ideas, fancies, images, and thoughts no longer
arise in the mind, then its control by yoga, meditation, has been achieved. The
methods used may vary, but in the end what is reached is the residue,
consciousness-in-itself, subject without an object.
142
You may concentrate for fifty million years on an
object, but that will only give the object again, never the Subject; hence,
concentration leads only to the non-self, never to the self. No practice or
action can yield it; only by removing ignorance, only by seeking That which
knows the object, not the object itself, can the Overself be found.
143
A proper study of this subject must embrace a
three-fold division: first, the nature of the mind, according to philosophy;
second, the workings of the mind; third, the method of obtaining control of
these workings, that is, yoga.
144
Meditation is not a one-sided but a two-sided
affair. We begin to practise by being mentally active, but after getting well
into it, we can continue only by being mentally passive.
145
If meditation is to be mastered, two fundamental
conditions must be remembered. The first is, ever and again bring attention back
from its straying. The second is, ever probe with it deeper and deeper, until
the still Void is entered. At the end let yourself become one with the Void.
146
First, mind is held until its continual changes
are stilled; second, it is then possible to switch its identification to the
Overself.
147
The first step is to capture thoughts and hold
them by the power of will. The second step is to carry the attention inward,
away from the five senses of physical experience.
148
The art of meditation is accomplished in two
progressive stages: first, mental concentration; second, mental relaxation. The
first is positive, the second is passive.
149
The preliminary yogas also have as a chief aim
the setting free of consciousness from its continual preoccupation with the
body, the environment, and the personality.
150
The mind must fold inward upon itself, passing
deeper and deeper into the fullness of concentration until it excludes all, or
nearly all, physical consciousness.
151
It is a process of withdrawing his attention from
his surroundings and directing it inside himself. It must be done carefully,
properly, and for limited periods only, if he has to live and work in the world
and retain his normal capacity for dealing with the world.
152
During meditation the basic aim is to free the
mind from worldly concerns and personal desires, to present an empty, clean
receptacle for the divine inpouring, if and when it is attracted by his
preparedness for it.
153
The aim is to clear all thoughts out of the mind
so that it can be experienced for what it is - pure, unmixed.
154
It is a matter of freeing consciousness from its
varied states, for these bind and hold it down.
155
All these practices are necessary only to shake
off a man's impressions and thoughts of the world, to cut off the person's
affairs, to stop the mind's constant movement, and thus to bring him to the
threshold of a deeper consciousness.
156
It is a kind of self-emptying to which he is
called: will he obey?
157
To the extent that he can get away from his
personal consciousness, to that extent he comes nearer to the Real. In that
sense, meditation is simply a device to accomplish this state. But it can do so
only temporarily. Its benefit is great but brief.
158
It is always helpful and sometimes necessary to
let the eyes close for a while if concentration is to become more intense. But
the mind, too, needs to turn just as decisively away from all other matters to
gain its freedom for metaphysical thought, aspirational uplift, or even for the
utter delicacy of mystical thoughtlessness.
159
The period consecrated to meditation will touch
its highest arc if all thoughts of worldly affairs are shut out, all remembrance
of personal activities put away.
160
From the moment he shuts the door of his room to
resume his daily practice, he should become a different person, assume an
unwonted identity. All that is not connected with his quest should be forgotten.
161
This practice requires him to cut himself off
from all living creatures, from their present activity or possible interference,
for several minutes each day. He is to be mentally as remote from all other
human beings as he would be physically if he were on a desert island. At such a
time he is to communicate with no one except his own inner self.
162
He must remember that the essential aim in
meditation is ultimately to conquer all visions and thoughts and to
penetrate to the living centre of strength which surrounds the Overself.
163
Meditation first collects our forces in a single
channel and then directs them toward the Overself.
164
It is a work of leading the attention more and
more inward until it reaches to the plane beneath thoughts, where peaceful being
alone holds and satisfies it.
165
Most systems of yoga are simply devices for
reducing the activity of the brain and thus allowing attention to turn inwards
and become aware of what is sometimes called the unconscious and sometimes the
spiritual self.
166
The mind must transcend the machinery it uses -
the body, the intellect, and the emotions - until it becomes awake to itself.
167
What is all this work, this inner work of
meditation, other than - as a Japanese master once asserted - keeping the
physical body as still as possible when sitting and then, with establishment of
this physical stillness, seeking mentally for the peaceful centre in the mind's
own core?
168
Patanjali, the most ancient and still the most
authoritative teacher of the art, has stated a definition of Yoga which may be
freely rendered as: the complete stoppage of the ego's intellectual and
emotional activities. When this is achieved, he adds, the consciousness hitherto
enmeshed in them shows its true state - which is purely spiritual.
169
It is an aim of meditation to approach closer and
closer to the Centre of one's being.
170
It is a process which detaches consciousness from
things, reasonings, and events, from all its possible objects, in order to
centre it in its own self.
171
Symeon, Byzantine mystic, theologian, and saint
who flourished near Constantinople nine hundred years ago, thus explains the
foundation principle of meditation: "Sitting alone, withdrawn mentally from the
world around, search into your innermost heart."
172
It is a means of severing attention from its
ever-changing objects, and then enabling the freed mental force to study its own
source.(P)
173
The divine essence is within us, not somewhere
else. This shows us the correct direction in which to look for it. The
attention, with the interest and desire which move it, must be withdrawn from
outside things and beings.
174
It is a device for dismantling his extroverted
attention to objects, a method of turning it the other way.
175
The aim is to disentangle Consciousness-in-itself
from the thoughts. The method is to keep brushing off the thoughts.
176
It is an art in which he learns first to absent
himself from his surroundings by concentrating on a thought and, later, to
absorb himself in the Spiritual Mind by dismissing all thought.
177
Its object is to attain an unruffled mind, to
keep out everything which would mar its stillness.
178
He cannot really get closer to what he is
already, his self, but he can push away the distractions which obscure it. And
this is precisely what meditation does.
179
As soon as one thought is suppressed, a new one
arises to replace it. The intellect's capacity to keep up its own activity is
tremendous. Hence the goal is not best reached by crushing each separate thought
but by practising some other and more deeply penetrative method. That is, seek
out the very source of thought itself.
180
The primary objective of meditation is so to
deepen consciousness as to reach the egoless self.
181
What he is really doing is looking for the way
back to himself.
182
The mystic learns to go inside himself, to
discover what is hidden there, and to listen to what it has to tell him. The
practice itself is called meditation.
183
If, in one sense, it is a searching for himself,
in another sense it is a looking away from himself.
184
It is an attempt to become better acquainted,
more intimate with our other self.
185
This is the paradox of the contemplative: that he
shuts himself within himself in order to get away from himself!
186
There are different kinds of human consciousness
- physical, dream, and transcendental. Meditation digs a shaft from the first to
the third of them.
187
"Look within: thou art Buddha," the great Gautama
revealed to his maturer disciples. "The kingdom of heaven is within you," the
sublime Jesus told his hearers. And several others, less known and less
influential, have turned men's minds in the same direction. But even this inner
work on meditation is not enough unless it leads to a deepening that plumbs the
living silence.
188
Meditation is practised so briefly that most of
the time allotted is used up in wandering with his thoughts, so that neither
concentration nor mental quiet is achieved. All this is still on the mind's
surface. Meditation answers to its name only when experienced in depth.
189
What is he to seek in this art of meditation, as
in the ideas of philosophy? Depth! This calls for profound consistent attention.
190
"Be still and know that I am God" is not only to
be interpreted as enjoining the practice of meditation but as enjoining it to
the farthest possible extent - the coma-like, rigid trance experienced by Saint
Catherine of Siena and the young Ramana Maharshi.
191
Meditation is inner work to attain the soul's
presence. It is sometimes quickly resultful, but more often goes on for a long
time before that attainment is realized.
192
First he has to become thoroughly familiar with
the conditions needed to produce the sought-for results. Then he has to become
expert in producing them by repetition at each session.
193
Just as judo or ju-jitsu seek to neutralize any
attempt at assault on the body, so yoga seeks to neutralize all activities of
the mind except the most important one of all - awareness.
194
Judo trains a man in competing and fighting
whereas yoga trains him in peacefulness.
195
According to the ancient Sanskrit texts,
meditation simply means giving concentrated and sustained attention.
196
What the Quaker calls "waiting on the Holy
Spirit," what Swedenborg called "opening the mind to the Lord's influx" - this
is simply meditation.
197
When the Chinese philosophers used the phrase
"sitting in forgetfulness," they meant what the Hindu yogis called "sitting in
meditation." The forgetfulness refers to the world and its affairs, its scenes
and events, as well as to the physical body.
198
In a way this profound annulment of ordinary
activity is an image of death.
199
Why be afraid of this declaration: that the final
goal is to merge in the Absolute? Is it because it promises the same as death -
annihilation? Yet whenever deep sleep is entered this merger happens. The ego
with its thoughts, desires, and agitations, is gone; the world, with its
relativities, is no more. Time, space, form, memory are lost. Yet all reappears
next morning. So it is not a real death. It is pure Being. Meditation tries to
reproduce this condition, to achieve a return to deep sleep but with the added
factor of awareness. In the final phase - Nirvikalpa Samadhi - it
succeeds. Man dissolves but his divine Source remains as the residue, as what he
always and basically was. This is why philosophy includes meditation.
200
The notion held by many Westerners that
meditation is a vague abstract and useless kind of laziness, is curiously
ignorant and quite erroneous. Religiously, it is as much an act of worship as
any ritual can be. It introduces devotion and imparts a feeling of inward
holiness.
201
Mere wandering of the thoughts is not meditation,
is indeed outside even the first phase, which is concentration.
202
There are varying and deepening degrees of
introversion, ranging from slight inattention to full absorption or trance,
which is therefore only one degree or kind of introversion.
203
These different phases of meditation are really
degrees of penetration into the various layers of the mind. Most people stop at
varying points of approach to meditation's final objective and few show the
patience or ability to attain its full course.
204
There are definite stages which mark his
progress. First he forgets the larger world, then his immediate surroundings,
then his body, and finally his ego.
205
This withdrawal of attention from the immediate
environment which occurs when deeply immersed in thought, looking at the distant
part of a landscape, or raptly listening to inspired music, is the "I" coming
closer to its innermost nature. At the deepest level of this experience, the
ego-thought vanishes and "I-myself" becomes merged in the impersonal
Consciousness.
206
"The whole effort of yoga practice may be
described as an effort to think less and less until one thinks of nothing at
all. Instead of letting the mind keep wandering from one thought to another
related thought, it aims at concentration on one point, concentration
(dharana). In the higher stage it advances to pointless meditation
(dhyana) and finally to the trance, samadhi. This, although
similar to sleep and a condition of auto-suggestion, is different from these
other states in that the mind retains complete consciousness of itself and
remembers vividly everything that happens." - Lin Yutang
207
The inferior yoga exercises are preoccupied with
the "I." The higher ones seek to forget it. This is one of the differences
between them but it is an important one. For the spirit of the first is
personal, that of the second impersonal. The thought of the "I" is indeed an
obstacle in the way of enlightenment.
208
First, he empties his mind of all things, then he
empties it of himself. The first part of this work he may accomplish by his own
training, but the second part can only be completed by a higher power - grace.
It begins by unknowing and ends by knowing.
209
Facility comes with time, provided all other
conditions and requirements are fulfilled. Attention passes through two
progressive stages. The first holds it intently on an image, an idea, or an
object. The second keeps these out and holds it in a sublime empty stillness.
210
Reply to P.B. by Buddhist priest in Ceylon -
Meditation according to Buddhism is of two kinds: (a) concentration and (b)
insight. The mind is first purified and the hindrances of passions, sense
desires, hatred, sloth and torpor, restlessness, broodiness, and doubt are
temporarily inhibited. With this concentrated mind he looks deep into the nature
of the world and ego. His concentrated mind is likened to a polished mirror in
which everything is reflected without distortion. Whilst in his meditation he
strives to comprehend things in their true perspective as they truly are,
and the truths are revealed to him whilst he is so engaged. This is why it is
said that the best truths are those that are intuited by oneself, that is,
intuitive truth. The Buddha gained his enlightenment by this kind of meditation.
211
The Catholic Christian mystics distinguish three
different stages of advancement in meditation; the Buddha distinguished ten, and
the oldest Hindu authorities, five.
212
The first stage of meditation is the attempt to
keep attention from wandering by tethering it to a fixed idea or a line of
ideas. The next stage is its withdrawal from physical surroundings as much as
possible. The third is lifting the object of thought to an abstract,
non-physical plane, getting absorbed in it. The fourth stage is a turning point.
Drop thoughts, rest in mental quiet.
213
The stages of deepening meditation may be
progressively differentiated from each other thus: first, a general, feeble, and
vague fixing of thoughts upon the aspiration or object; second, a general
withdrawal of attention from external things on all sides; third, a definite but
intermittent concentration of thoughts upon the aspiration or object; fourth, a
continuous and unbroken concentration upon the same; fifth, the object dropped
from focus but the concentrated mood still successfully maintained in pure
self-contemplation.
214
The differences between the first and second
stages are: (a) in the first there is no effort to understand the subject or
object upon which attention rests whereas in the second there is; (b)
concentration may be directed to any physical thing or mental idea whereas
meditation must be directed to thinking about a spiritual theme either logically
or imaginatively.
In the third stage this theme pervades the mind so completely that the thinking activity ceases, the thoughts and fancies vanish. The meditator and his theme are then united; it is no longer separate from him. Both merge into a single consciousness. To shut off all perceptions of the outer world, all physical sense-activities of seeing hearing and touching, is the goal and end of the first stage. It is achieved when concentration on one subject or object is fully achieved. To shut off all movements of the inner world, all mental activities of thinking, reasoning, and imagining, is the goal and end of the second stage. It is achieved when the subject or object pervades awareness so completely that the meditator forgets himself and thus forgets even to think about it: he is it. To shut off all thoughts and things, even all sense of a separate personal existence, and rest in contemplation of the One Infinite Life-Power out of which he has emerged, is the goal and end of the third stage.
215
The deeper he looks into his own nature - a
procedure which cannot be done without practising meditation - the nearer he
will come to the truth about it.
In the first stage of penetration, his external surroundings and the whole world with them, vanish. In the second and deeper stage, the feeling "I am rooted in God," alone remains. In the third stage the "I" thought also goes. In the final stage even the idea "God" disappears. There remains then no idea of any kind - only peace beyond telling, consciousness in its pure ever-still state.
If he stops at penetrating to the surface level of the unconscious individual mind, or even at penetrating to its depths, he is still unable to fulfil his purpose. It is just as if a composer of a piece of music were to stop halfway during its composition. Only by penetrating still farther into the depths of his being until he reaches the level of impersonal and infinite universal mind will he be able to undergo that tremendous, profound, and radical change which may be called the first degree of illumination. So sudden and so startling a change could not have come unless he had had the perseverance to make so prolonged a plunge.
Few mystics pass the first degree. The rapture of it detains them.
216
Attention is projected on a thought which keeps
away all other thoughts, is kept in rigid concentration on it. This is the first
achievement and, for most practisers, the farthest they can go. But beyond that
is another, the thought-less void. This needs complete privacy.
217
If he begins the practice with a physical object,
he will have to end with an imagined one. But these are only phases of
concentration. The quest goes on beyond them, to a stilled, picture-less mind.
218
The query as to whether the seat of the Overself
is in the heart or in the pineal gland is a problem which has long excited
controversy. The yogis are divided upon this issue. My own research leads to the
following view: from the standpoint of yoga practice both answers are correct
because at one stage of the quest, it is necessary to meditate upon the Overself
as being in the heart. But at a different stage it is necessary to meditate upon
it as being in the pineal gland in the head. This is because the different
stages have different objectives, each of which is quite proper in its own
place. However, from the philosophical standpoint which is arrived at after
these two stages are passed through, the idea of the position of the Overself is
then dropped, for the effort is then to be made to transcend the body-belief
altogether. From this ultimate standpoint, space is regarded as being merely an
idea for the mind whilst the mind itself is regarded as being outside both
position and distance. Hence the philosophic meditation seeks to know the
Overself by direct insight into its timeless, spaceless nature and not
indirectly by bringing it into relation with a particular point in the physical
body.
219
Getting the practice under way during the first
stage requires cutting loose from memories of the day's earlier acts. The more
incisive and determined this beginning is, the quicker he will be able to finish
this stage and pass into the next one.
220
The first phase is to learn how to collect his
forces together and pin them down to a particular theme, thought, or thing. It
is essentially an exercise in attention and concentration. This is attempted
daily. To succeed in it he must exert his power of will, must adopt a determined
posture, or the mind will wander off repeatedly. With enough work on this phase
he will be able to begin meditation proper, for which this was only a
preparation.
221
All the work he is called on to do in the first
stage is to secure the right conditions in the place around him, to calm the
emotions, control the breathing, and concentrate the attention. Only when all
this has been sufficiently achieved is he ready for the second stage -
meditation proper - when the objective is to turn yearningly towards his higher
self. Everything before this is merely preparatory work, to enable him to keep
his mind steadily upon the principal objective which emerges later during the
second stage.
222
A rhythm of daily practice in meditation is more
or less indispensable. Some mental image or theme or physical object must be
taken and the mind focused upon it to the exclusion of all other irrelevant
matters. As facility develops, the image must be a definitely elevating one,
something to nourish spiritual aspiration and strengthen moral ideals. In the
end, meditation must become the attempt to unite with the higher Self, of which
only faint and intuitive glimpses are given at first (but later on they become
strong and clear). The attempt to meditate usually takes up most of the
allotted time. The achievement of meditation is itself brief and rare.
223
The purpose of this first phase is to quieten,
deepen, and stabilize the mind, to bring the agitations of thought and
upheavings of emotion to an end. But this is only a preparation for the work to
fulfil meditation's real purpose.
224
It is unlikely that any noticeable result will
come during this first phase. Here will be a test of his patience. He needs "to
wait on the Lord," in Biblical phrase.
225
This first stage is devoted to gaining prompt and
effective control of attention.
226
Only after he has passed through the
preliminaries of a contest with the mind's restlessness and wandering
proclivities and emerged successfully will real meditation start.
227
Only when he becomes entirely engrossed in the
one idea, unconscious of any other idea, can he be said to have achieved
concentration, the first stage.
228
The second phase will not come into being unless
he ceases to try only to think about it and starts to feel for its
presence, drawing the energy down to the heart from the head, and loving the
presence as soon as it is felt. He will express this love by letting his face
assume a happy pleasant smile.
229
He begins to practise real meditation only when
he begins to reach the silence of feelings and thoughts inside himself. Until
then he is merely maneuvering around to attain this position.
230
When concentration reaches a full degree of
intensity, and when its object is a highly spiritual one, it passes over into
meditation by itself.
231
The only way to learn what meditation means is to
practise and keep on practising. This involves daily withdrawal from the round
of routine and activity, of about three-quarters of an hour if possible, and the
practice of some exercise regularly. The form which such an exercise should take
depends partly upon your own preference. It may be any of the set formal
exercises in books published, or it may be a subject taken from a sentence in
some inspired writing whose truth has struck the mind forcibly; it may be a
quality of character whose need in us has made itself felt urgently, or it may
be a purely devotional aspiration to commune with the higher self. Whatever it
is, the personal appeal should be sufficient to arouse interest and hold
attention. This being the case, we may keep on turning over the theme
continually in our thoughts. When this has been adequately done, the first stage
(concentration proper) is completed. Unfortunately most of this period is
usually spent in getting rid of extraneous ideas and distracting memories, so
that little time is left for getting down to the actual concentration itself!
The cure is repeated practice. In the next stage, there is a willed effort to
shut out the world of the five senses, its impressions and images, whilst still
retaining the line of meditative thinking. Here we seek to deepen, maintain, and
prolong the concentrative attitude, and to forget the outside environment at the
same time. The multiplicity of sensations - seeing, hearing, etc. - usually
keeps us from attending to the inner self, and in this stage you have to train
yourself to correct this by deliberately abstracting attention from the senses.
We will feel in the early part of this stage as though we were beating against
an invisible door, on the other side of which there is the mysterious goal of
your aspiration.(P)
232
Meditation must begin with lulling the physical
senses into quiescence. We cannot begin to put the mind at ease unless we have
earlier put the body at ease; and we cannot make the intellect inactive unless
we have earlier made the senses inactive. The first reward and sign of success,
marking the close of the first stage, is a feeling of lightness in the body, of
numbness in the legs and hands, of having no weight and being as light as air.
This shows a successful detachment from the thought of the body. After this, the
second stage opens, wherein a deep intense half-trancelike absorption in the
mind itself is to be achieved, and wherein the body is utterly forgotten.
233
This inward light reflects itself physically as a
sort of lightness both in the air and in the body itself.
234
A pleasant relaxed feeling comes over his body.
With sufficient time, and after he enters into a deeper state, the arms may
become as limp as rope and numbness may develop in the legs.
235
At a deeper level the feet and legs seem to pass
out of the area of awareness; at a still deeper level it seems confined to the
head and chest.
236
If, in the middle or later part of his practice,
someone speaks to him but gets no reaction from him, he can be sure that this
first stage has been mastered and that the second stage is well advanced.
237
The second stage is fully attained when his mind
becomes so absorbed in the object or subject of its attention as to forget
itself utterly as a result.
238
It borders on but does not actually enter the
state of trance. It seems to have the utter fixity of that condition, the deep
oblivion of outer surroundings, but actually there is a slight awareness outside
of the body.
239
In this state he lets go of the world outside,
cuts off its links with him, and folds in upon himself.
240
The second stage will often occupy a man for
several years and although it lacks the altogether different quality of
contemplation, it yields its own benefits and gains. These are valuable and
necessary, even though they are the product of concentrated intellect or
creative imagination. They prepare him for the next stage and remove the
obstructions to its entry.
241
Meditation needs to become very intense and very
deep before the last phases of the second stage can be left behind. It is in
these phases that the great truths concerning the ego, the self, God, and the
world can be most profitably held before the mind.
242
The second stage of meditation shows its largest
fruits when the meditations are practised with patience and they become deep,
long, and intense.
243
He has become proficient when he is able to sit
motionless for a whole hour until he passes into a state of mental vacuity.
244
He may, if he holds on and succeeds in crossing
the border of the intermediate stage, begin to feel a sense of impending
discovery.
245
With consciousness of physical existence largely
gone, with power of concentration greatly heightened, he enters a world where
only his own vivid thoughts are real.
246
When thoughts are utterly quiescent and the body
utterly immobile, the meditation has finished its second stage.
247
In these first two stages, the will must be used,
for the attention must not only be driven along one line and kept there but must
also penetrate deeper and deeper. It is only when the frontier of the third
stage is reached that all this work ceases and that there is an abandonment of
the use of the will, a total surrender of it, and effortless passive yielding to
the Overself is alone needed.
248
At this point where concentration has been fully
achieved all striving should cease. The mind is then able to repose in itself.
249
Noises and sights may be still present in the
background of consciousness, but the pull and fascination of the inner being
will be strong enough to hold him and they will not be able to move his
attention away from it. This, of course, is an advanced state; but once mastered
and familiar, it must yield to the next one. Here, as if passing from this
waking world to a dream one, there is a slip-over into universal space,
incredibly vast and totally empty. Consciousness is there but, as he discovers
later, this too is only a phase through which it passes. Where, and when, will
it all end? When Consciousness is led - by Grace - to itself, beyond its states,
phases, and conditions, where man, at last, is fit to meet God.
250
Not all are ready to displace meditation and
concentration by contemplation and there ought to be definite direction before
starting on it. This may come either from within, intuitively, or from without,
by advice from a spiritual guide.
251
In the second stage he is to banish some thoughts
and keep the others. In the third stage he is to banish all thoughts and keep
none. This is the most difficult.
252
It is true that deep meditation induces a kind of
absent-mindedness as attention gets more and more withdrawn from the external
world. It is as if a part of the person were not present, and indeed, this is
what happens. There is a partial, if temporary, loss of ordinary
self-consciousness of some part of the I and of the senses. At this stage of
meditation he should let go of what he knows and let the Unknown speak to him.
253
The second and third stages may have five
stations from start to finish, although this is not the experience of all
aspirants. In the first, the body becomes numb and its weight vanishes. In the
second, a fiery burning force uplifts the emotions and energizes the will. In
the third, a sensation of being surrounded by light is felt. In the fourth, the
man is alone in a dark void. In the fifth he seems to dissolve until there is
nothing but the infinite formless being of God.
254
In meditation the mind is active with ideas and
images. In contemplation it is passive and silent, resting in a blissful calm.
255
You may, by force of will, bring about the first
and second stages, concentration and meditation, but you cannot bring about the
third stage, contemplation. All you can do is to prepare the prerequisite
conditions for its coming...then, when it does come, it will seize you and
swallow you. As it comes in, the strength of that which resists it, of the
personal ego, begins to go out.
256
In the passage from meditation to contemplation -
from the second to the third stage - the capacity is strongly required to
continue doggedly and patiently until the need of effort lapses of its own
accord. The temptation to stop halfway, to be satisfied with what has already
been accomplished, will show itself insistently and irresistibly during each
sitting for meditation practice. After the failures to purify the feelings and
concentrate the thoughts, this is the third major reason why so few ever reach
the Quest's goal.
257
All thinking is a movement in consciousness and
must stop at a certain stage; even thoughts of the highest metaphysical
character should then also be rejected.
258
At this stage his direct efforts must cease, his
urgent seeking must withdraw. Instead he must wait patiently and quietly, with
heart emptied of all else save the faith that infinite being may reveal itself
at any moment.
259
The second stage is man's effort; the third stage
is the Overself's response to that effort.
260
When the intensely positive work of the first
stage is over, then - and not before - he can let himself go as if ready to
float idly on a stream.
261
When this point has been reached, it is not the
ego's efforts that bring the aspirant into the sacred stillness, but the ego's
inertia.
262
When meditation deepens into contemplation, the
man penetrates the still centre of his being and there finds the best part of
himself - the Overself.
263
The mind then enters into itself, not its
negative petty self, but its best purest and deepest one.
264
The meditation may serve a useful or helpful or
constructive purpose, but it will not serve its highest purpose unless it
transforms itself into contemplation - that is to say, unless it transforms
itself from an effort-making activity to an effortless experience by taking him
out of himself. His own will cannot do it but divine Grace can.
265
The concentration on that "Other" is to be so
complete that he can echo the words of Theresa Neumann: "I am so completely
alone with the dear saviour that I could not possibly have any time to think
about myself."
266
There is often a point in the second stage where
any effort to prolong the meditation produces severe mental strain and
consequent fatigue, whereas there is no point in the third stage where the
desire to stop ever appears - such is the sense of renewal and refreshment it
yields.
267
It doesn't matter very much in the end whether or
not one succeeds in achieving contemplation. This is only part of the Quest.
Moreover, if a meeting takes place with a Master who will assist one in
meditation, the necessary impetus will be implanted to energize and guide him
when he practises alone.
268
The body sits, squats, or lies like a motionless
statue; the senses are lulled and lethargic, but the mind is quite conscious of
where the meditator is and what is happening around him. Only in the next and
deeper stage does this consciousness pass away, does the physical self, involved
in place and time as it is, lose both: only then is the body robbed of its
capacity to move and act.
269
It is a strange state wherein he literally
becomes as nothing - without thoughts or will, bereft of the flesh yet not
merged in any higher consciousness.
270
At the deepest point of this condition, he loses
the power to make any physical movement: he sits or lies quite deprived of the
bodily will.
271
If the exercises are successful, the breathing
becomes considerably slower and gentler. If the mind enters into deep meditation
and the thoughts are largely stopped and with them there vanishes the sense of
time, this will be the final phase.
272
The third stage is successfully reached when he
forgets the world outside, when he neither sees nor touches it, neither hears
nor smells it with his body, when memory and personality dissolve in a vacuum as
the attention is wholly and utterly absorbed in the thought of, and identity
with, the Overself.
273
When the meditation deepens sufficiently, he may
feel that higher forces seize hold of him, of his will and mind, body and self,
even of his breathing. But to predict with certainty when this may happen is
usually beyond his capacity. A long-established experience and a high degree of
concentration would be the first prerequisites for this, and there are others
too.
274
The wandering of thoughts stopped and the
consciousness held steady, the next phase is to turn it - if he has not already
started with that idea - towards the diviner part of himself in aspiration, in
devotion, and in love. As he continues this inward focusing, the willed effort
becomes easier and easier until it seems no longer needed: at this point it is
replaced by something deep within coming up to the surface and taking him OVER.
He should remain perfectly still, passive, embraced.
275
When body, mind, feeling, and Overself are all in
harmony, the highest goal of meditation has been attained.
276
In the complete meditation, the surrender of self
is also complete. The Overself alone is then present.
277
It is a slipping of the mind into gentle
passivity, which leads in the end to a kind of mediumship, not for wandering
spooks but for the medium's own Overself.
278
Contemplation is a deeper stage: no thinking is
involved in it.
279
Meditation fulfils itself when it succeeds in
climaxing its third stage and banishes all thoughts from the field of awareness.
Then the mind is utterly calm and utterly clear.
280
Thinking must stop, but if it stops at the level
of the little ego only a psychical experience or a mediumistic possession may
result. If, however, it stops at a deeper level after right preparation and
sufficient purification, the mind's emptiness may be filled by a realization of
identity with the Overself.(P)
281
For now he is acutely conscious of the very
principle whereby he knows the outside world, instead of merely knowing the
world alone as in ordinary awareness.
282
In the depth of meditation, his sense-impressions
are revoked. He finds himself sitting, not in time but in eternity, not in
matter but in pure Spirit.
283
"All discursive operations cease in mystic
ecstasy," wrote an ancient. The mind's winding in and out of a subject, its
thoughts running to and fro, its interests running among varied topics, come to
an end.
284
He finds himself in an unchanged world of being
where what was hitherto as nothing, changes place with a consciousness of the
intensest reality.
285
We think of the yogi as being totally absorbed in
his inner remoteness: no sound heard, no environment seen, nothing smelt or
felt. This emptiness of mind is certainly, on the negative side, the final stage
of meditation. The rich and rewarding positive side is another matter not being
considered just now. What most of us do not know is that this is a condition
which only those who have withdrawn from the world and devote most of their time
to these practices are likely to attain. Westerners who fail to do so but who
succeed in entering the great Stillness of Divine Presence, need not lament
their failure. It does not matter if they can go no farther, provided their
contact with the world is still maintained and they have not fully withdrawn
from it. The hearing of a sound, the sight of an object, can be disregarded as
trivial and unimportant, so long as they are able to enjoy this immaculate
centre of their being.
286
When Socrates thought and talked, he walked
about; but when the transcendental experience struck him, holding him enraptured
and thought-free, he remained rigidly still, standing where it caught him. No
probing questions then engaged him, no arguments with his friends then
interested him.
287
The mind slips into the deeper consciousness, at
first almost unwittingly but soon recognizing its precious value and exulting in
its transcendental quality.
288
The essential difference is this: in the
fulfilment of the second phase, consciousness of the outer surroundings of the
world vanishes; but in the fulfilment of the third phase, consciousness of the
ego, the person, also vanishes. Then there is left behind only Pure
Consciousness in itself.
289
Look for the moment when grace intervenes. Do
not, in ignorance, fail to intercept it, letting it pass by unheeded and
therefore lost. There is a feeling of mystery in this moment which, if lingered
with, turns to sacredness. This is the signal; seek to be alone, let go of
everything else, cease other activities, begin not meditation but
contemplation, the thought-free state.
290
In this deep state of meditation which assumes
for the outer observer the signs of trance, or half-trance, there will be some
transitional moments when consciousness itself disappears, when the deepened
bliss of the experience is broken by utter insensibility, when its growing light
is met by darkness and when the meditator's own awareness of any kind of being
at all lapses. If his moral and intellectual preparations have been sufficiently
and properly made, he need have no fear of this temporary state, which will be
quite brief in any event. The Indians call it "Yoga sleep," and indeed, it is as
pleasant and as harmless as ordinary sleep.
Before the higher functions of the human entity's psychological machinery can displace the lower ones, it seems that Nature requires in most cases this interruption in existence, this discontinuity of awareness to take place for a few moments.
291
Meditation is properly done when one feels happy
and joyous at the end.
292
Once he has gained control of his thinking, he
finds that it is just as easy to respond to high ideals as it formerly was to
low ones. Once he has learned to manage his mind, the good life becomes the
natural life.
293
Right meditation makes easier the cultivation of
virtue. A virtuous character makes easier the practice of meditation.
294
It is a blessed purpose of this daily meditation
to regain inner contact with the higher mind. With a successful result, there is
a temporary disappearance of disagreeable or irritated moods, emotional hurts,
or mental anxieties.
295
The inward stillness which is attained during
meditation affects the character in this way: it shows the man a joy and beauty
beyond that which animal appetite can show him. It gives him a satisfaction
beyond that which animal passion can give him. This he discovers and feels
during meditation periods; but its after-effects also begin to linger more and
more during the long intervals between such periods and to permeate them.
296
He who is willing to submit his mind to the
severe discipline of yoga will receive proof of these statements adequate to the
effort he puts forth.
297
The seeds sown while emerging from contemplation
will one day appear in conduct.
298
You will sink into the profound silent depths of
your own soul, yet you will never be able to say at any moment that you have
touched the bottom. How could you? It is infinite.
299
If in meditation he goes down sufficiently far
through the levels of consciousness, he will come to a depth where the
phenomenal world disappears from consciousness, where time, thoughts, and place
cease to exist, where the personal self dissolves and seems no more. If there is
no disturbance caused by violent intrusion from the physical world, this phase
of complete inner thought-free stillness may continue for a long period; but in
the end Nature reclaims the meditator and brings him back to this world. It is
only an experience, with the transiency of all experiences. But it will make its
contribution to the final State, which is permanent establishment in the
innermost being, whether in the depth of silent meditation or in the midst of
worldly turmoil and activity.(P)
300
Men who have taken to the practice of meditation
have begun a course which, if continued to its full development, could bring the
best result - the feeling, the idea, and finally the presence of the Overself
alone.
301
Consciousness is expanded and deepened, a new and
detached view is taken of the ego and its affairs, and a participation in a
higher self, radiant and divine, actually occurs. Such experience may last only
a few moments, or a whole hour, or even longer, but whatever the effect it is
made possible by this Power let in during the meditation period.
302
The yogis believe that a couple of hours of
really deep meditation gives as much rest as a whole night's sleep.
303
The fruits of successful meditation will show
themselves in his character, too. For the deeper he can probe into his mental
being, the deeper he will pass beneath his passional and emotional natures. And
out of this passage there will come a control of those natures, a detachment
from the senses, a purifying of the imagination, which affect moral attitude and
arouse moral strength.
304
When the practice is able to reach the third
stage and complete it, successfully as well as effortlessly, the constant daily
repetition will bring about a gradual mingling of transcendental with ordinary
consciousness.
305
It is from these hours of silent contemplation
that a man draws his true strength and real wisdom. They charge the battery of
his highest will and purpose with renewed energies. They fill his mind with a
goodness which gives him a feeling of peace and gives others a feeling of
uplift.
306
It is this period of communion which enables him
to keep steady and persistent the dedication of his purposes to the Overself and
the consecration of his person by it.
307
So long as he must force himself to come to the
practice or, having come to it already, to continue it, so long must he regard
himself as a beginner whose faulty tendencies need to be firmly disciplined.
Only when he comes freely and gladly, and only when he continues willingly and
easily, so that a day without doing his exercises seems like a day with
something lost or missing, can he regard himself as a proficient who has at last
mastered meditation.
308
You learn to meditate in the solitude of your own
room; later you learn to carry that solitude with you into the thronged street,
the crowded train, the busy mart. For it becomes your personal atmosphere, your
"aura."
309
His meditation will not necessarily follow a set
course each time he sits down to practise it. At times it will take a turn quite
independent of his will, desire, forethought, or planning. One day it will force
him to dwell upon certain mistakes of the past, to acknowledge them feelingly,
until the future seems hopeless. And then, imperceptibly, it will open a door to
prayer; he will resolve to profit by his mistakes and follow wiser paths in the
future, and the peace or joy which follows the descent of grace will attend the
closing minutes of his prayerful exercise.
310
At one meditation session the deepest level
reached yields a rare feeling of stillness. Yet at another session a universal
pulsation is experienced.
311
By this simple - but not at all easy - act of
withdrawing into himself, his hushed deeper self, he puts himself on the way to
discover man's supreme treasure, hidden in another world of being.
312
Meditation, if successful, accomplishes two main
purposes: it draws the mind inward, releasing it from the physical imprisonment,
and it elevates the mind to a heavenly state of union with the Overself.
313
If with time, practice, and truth they reach the
deeper side of meditation, it will be well for them and the world. For then they
can sit hushed and motionless yet a benefic presence radiating the Good.
314
There is no doubt that many of those who attempt
meditation at first find nothing for their labours, and even though at times
they seem to be on the verge of finding something, it does not get
realized. When after a sufficiently long period the seeming lack of success
turns the effort into a bore, two things are indicated. A point has been reached
where a greater patience is needed and the man must learn to go on waiting.
Short periods without practice are then permissible if the strain is too much.
The other indication is that the Short Path must be brought in or may even
replace the work of meditation for the time being. But all this is subject to
the qualification that the meditation is correctly conducted - so the method
must be checked, the process must be understood and its purpose clarified.
315
The practice of meditation finds its climax in an
experience wherein the meditator experiences his true self and enjoys its pure
love.
316
It invades his mind as silently and as gradually
as the onset of dawn.
317
One measure of his success with these exercises
is the increasing degree with which he feels an inner life, a subtler
thought-emotional being within his own personal being.
318
The first onset of this grace in meditation is
felt in the same way the onset of sleep is felt; it is hardly perceptible. At
one moment it is not there at all, but at the next it has begun to manifest.
319
One rises from a successful meditation not only
with the feeling that one has done something meritorious, but also with the
feeling of spiritual fulfilment, of final benediction.
320
To keep up this practice faithfully and
successfully is to find within oneself a spring of living water from which one
can drink directly and with which one can be filled, refreshed, and satisfied.
321
To watch, observe, study, and reflect how the
mind works, to go deep enough to divorce it from the limitations imposed by the
body - this finally leads to understanding how the mechanism has become a trap
and there is then a vast liberation of the mind.
322
Outwardly one's life may suffer every kind of
limitation, from bodily paralysis to miserable surroundings, but inwardly it is
free in meditation to reach out to a sphere of light, beauty, truth, love, and
power.
323
If he practises the meditation exercises
correctly, the more he exposes himself to the forces they awaken inside him, the
more will he be able to resist the influences of a worldly or earthly character
that he meets outside.
324
There is an abatement of outward-turned desires
and an increment of inward-turned aspirations. There is a quiescence of the
lower nature and a joy in the higher one.
325
When the meditation period is given much more
importance than Western people usually give it, when the practice becomes
accepted as the day's vital centre - in short, when it becomes indispensable -
the rewards, in higher education and personal purification, in more self-control
and freedom from anxieties, will be rich.
326
The discipline of these exercises constantly
repeated may bring him to the first success. He may find himself standing back
from the ego, his attention aware of the I as well as its surroundings,
both being separate from their hidden observer.
327
He knows that it is only his own feebleness of
concentration that stops him from entering his deeper self, that when he does
succeed at rare moments in making the passage he enters a world of truth,
reality, and selflessness. He knows that meditation, for a properly prepared
mind, leads to no illusion and no sleep but to his own Overself.
328
If one returns daily to the Centre of his being,
keeps the access to it open by meditation, he withdraws more and more from the
body's domination and the intellect's one-sidedness. That is to say, he becomes
more and more himself, less and less limited by his instruments.
329
His efforts to dislodge those animal desires and
fleshly passions which seem too strong for his moral life can be assisted by
meditation practice if he has advanced it to a certain level. It is then that he
can regard the disturbers while keeping the mind perfectly still until they seem
separate from himself. This idea gained must be considered and reconsidered day
after day until it is fully realized and fixed in his emotional nature as well
as his mental one. Thus the will takes hold of it too. This advanced stage
requires persistent inner work, for to overcome and master self is a great
reward.
330
What he finds in that deeper state, where the ego
is all but lost, is a joy beyond all earthly pleasures, a bliss free from all
earthly excitements. Yet, despite this fact that it is so calm, so equable, it
is not less satisfying than they are; in fact, it is much more so.
331
If he can develop the facility to sustain his
meditation and keep off distracting thoughts, he can gain a cooler vision in
worldly matters and a clearer one in spiritual matters.
332
If he holds firmly to his purpose, the day must
come when the meditation period will be regarded as one of daily blessing, one
to be enjoyed and no longer merely worked through. Indeed, the more he deepens
his inner life, the more he will want to be alone for these practices. He will
take care to keep away from unnecessary meetings with others. For him the hours
of useless idle talk are at an end. The delight and fruit of meditation replace
them. Time is now a part of his most precious possessions and is no longer to be
thrown away thoughtlessly.
333
A feeling of drawing nearer to the essence of his
own consciousness may grow slowly. A few riper souls may be astonished by a
swifter result.
334
If the concentrated attention can penetrate to a
certain level of the mind in meditation, it will penetrate to a source of power
and knowledge that is ordinarily hidden, unknown, neglected, or untapped. From
this source one can draw guidance, engender strength, and obtain instruction.
335
The test of a meditation's success is whether it
can keep his mind off personal affairs. The exceptions to this rule would
include the practice of intercessory prayer for others or mystical blessing on
them.
336
Long practice of precise exercises in internal
quietude removes us from continuous immersion in the world. This in turn enables
us to detach ourselves from its lures more effectually. Such detachment leads to
a calmness which more and more permeates our entire being. In this way, whatever
is lost by the physical inaction of these exercises is well compensated by the
spiritual gain.
337
The effect may not reveal itself all at once but
may work its way into his conscious self by slow degrees or almost
imperceptibly.
338
The time will come if he perseveres when he will
bring himself out of the meditation with as great a feeling of reluctance as he
had of irksomeness when he entered it. Its present ease will match its past
difficulty. It will then not be a duty but an enjoyment.
339
When inner contact with the Presence is
established, when it has taken firm hold over him, he no longer moves, speaks,
or acts out of his own will.
340
The mind that is properly used, and perfectly
stilled when not used, becomes a mirror reflecting Truth.
341
Meditation proves its worth, shows its best
value, and merges into contemplation, when it is deepest. For then thoughts
cease to flutter, the ego is lulled, the world vanishes, and the burden of the
flesh with it.
342
To reflect upon That which we are will one
day bring It into consciousness. To contemplate It by seeking the
stillness in which It abides, will one day make It a palpable
presence.
343
Some of us have found our way to the glorious
stillness which is so deep within the self, have heard its silent message,
received its mysterious grace, and been comforted, helped, pacified.
344
Meditation may succeed in touching the Overself
but yet remain mingled with thoughts. However satisfying this state may be to
the meditator, obviously he must not stop there but must go farther.
345
The ecstasy which the beginner so eagerly
welcomes is regarded as a disturbance by the proficient meditator.
346
Anyone who is willing to fulfil the prerequisite
disciplinary conditions and who will do these exercises for sufficient time,
will sooner or later get results in growth of character and intuition.
347
The regularly repeated practice of meditation
should have this effect: it removes the haste, the hurry, the pressure, and the
restlessness with which modern Western life is afflicted. It supplants them by
calm, by patience, and by relaxation.
348
The feeling of a sacred presence during
meditation is important in every way. It provides a channel whereby Grace can be
given, ideas communicated, and character uplifted.
349
Those who have entered the calm of life through
mere passing of the years into old age could have found it much earlier if they
had practised meditation.
350
The man who sits in this heavenly silence each
day through the years cannot remain the same man all the time. The animal nature
in him will become more and more subdued, the angelic more and more vivified.
351
The frequent practice of meditation slows down
emotional responses and thus makes the practiser more relaxed, calmer.
352
Men complain that such high moods come to them
but rarely and leave them too quickly. They do not know that the source of those
moods neither comes nor leaves them, for it is ever present, it is their own
higher self. Who then makes the move into and out of the mood? If they find the
answer, they will find that it is all a matter of thought control. They can
develop the capacity to bring thoughts into a stable relationship of obedience
and through that to bring consciousness into steadiness and equanimity.
353
A meditation like this puts sunshine into every
day.
354
A time may come when what happens to him during
the meditation hour will seem more important than what happens during the entire
day which follows it.
355
These minutes spent in utter unmoved stillness
can become a source of great moral and spiritual strength.
356
Just as a novel creates a diversion for the
reader and changes his world for a time, so a successful period of meditation
transfers consciousness to another zone.
357
Men have practised these exercises in meditation
since the most ancient days. Their goals were different, but what was generally
sought was an exalted state of mind and a liberation from the body's own
limitations.
358
When this self-turning from bustle and fret and
speed toward mental quiet begins to become a daily habit, it begins to yield its
first yet least reward - the soothing of our nerves.
359
If he really goes deep enough - and few ever do -
he will penetrate to a level where the ordinary emotions are left behind and
common attitudes are utterly alien.
360
With meditations he achieves a mental condition
which is equilibrated and harmonized, no longer divided into a lower self
against which he struggles and a higher one for which he seeks.
361
If a man will dive into his inmost self he will -
nay, he must - eventually arrive at a place deeper than thinking.
362
To preach, teach, guide, and inspire, to minister
the fruits of meditation, may not be seen during the act itself but at odd hours
during the day or night.
363
If some have arrived at definite results through
meditation, enjoying its benefits and fruits, others complain they have arrived
at nothing. Their minds are still as unruly as ever and mystical experiences are
still as elusive.
364
Even if it offered nothing more than a respite
from private cares and a refuge from public woes, the meditation-chamber would
well justify its existence.
365
It becomes a communion between the human and the
divine in us, an adventure in seeking and finding oneness with the Overself.
366
The more he multiplies these efforts, the quicker
his sought-for results are likely to appear.
367
Each man may enjoy a communion with his divine
essence if he sets about it in the right way and with the right feeling.
368
Going within oneself in this deep sense is like
coming home.
369
Even if through meditation you can establish only
the weakest of contacts with this Presence, it is a start.
370
Time used in such meditation and prayer is well
used. His mind will widen, his judgement improve.
371
From these sessions we may return to the rough
world inspired, renewed, and enriched.
372
One rises from one's seat calm and carrying a
sense of assured sovereignty in one's breast.
373
First there is surprise at the change in his
character, then admiration of its achievement. Such is the result of success
with one of these practices.
374
The skill which comes of long continued practice
is his reward.
375
One thing which he is likely to derive from the
regular practice of meditation, when some proficiency is attained, is a
sense of inner growth, a definite awareness that progress is being made.
376
It is one purpose of such meditation to create,
for a short period and under favourable circumstances, those new and higher
qualities, as well as that power of mastery over his being, which the aspirant
will one day be able to express continuously and under the most difficult
circumstances.
377
He will come in time to start the period with
ardour and to spend it joyfully; its minutes will be regarded as precious ones,
its high peaks of achieved stillness as Elysian interludes.
378
The most important of the several purposes of
this period is not achieved until he is able to withdraw from being the person
bearing his name and from playing the role in which he habitually appears on
life's stage.
379
The hours of long meditation will fix in time a
serene expression upon his face.
380
He will know that he has mastered the practice
when it becomes completely satisfying to him, and a way of achieving the highest
pleasure.
381
If meditation is properly done and worthily
directed it has a purifying effect upon the ego.
382
What he brings out of his meditation is important
or not according to the depth he has penetrated.
383
As one's consciousness grows in depth, it grows
also in power.
384
From these practices he receives a feeling of
courage which in turn enables him to confront the hard situations of life
without flinching.
385
The quality of a meditative session is not to be
measured by its timed length but by its effective contact with Reality.
386
The practice was at first undertaken because of
the benefit he hoped to get from it. But, with some proficiency, it is now
continued also because of the pleasure it gives him.
387
If we can gradually put ourself in this state of
absorbed, fascinated reverie, this condition of being almost lost to the
external world only because we have become intensely alive to an internal one,
we awaken powerful, creative possibilities.
388
How relaxing it is to feel all tension dissolve
within him!
389
Meditation, when successful, flings a magic spell
over the man - one that is benign and blessed.
390
The power of meditation to build virtues and
dissolve faults exists in its ability to impregnate the mind with causative
patterns.
391
The lack of enjoyable result following the
practice does not mean that it has been in vain. The belief that he is sitting
in the presence of the Overself, if clung to despite the meditation's dryness,
will one day bring him a Glimpse at least. But he must come to it faithfully
each day.
392
When this peace falls on the man's mind, it is
like the hush falling on a room full of people making a loud noise.
393
The awakening of this power comes mainly by
meditation: it helps him to be good and to do good, to intuit spiritual truths
and penetrate spiritual symbols. But it does not turn him into a superman.
394
Once he is able to push the door open, he finds
himself in a place where the light is heavenly, the peace indescribable, the
feeling of divine support immeasurable.
395
The outgoing tendencies of the mind are gradually
reduced by the practice of meditation and in the end stopped, so that they are
reversed and turned inwards.
396
It bestows a perception which is not for dreamers
alone, but which can be put to constant use, thus proving itself to those who
demand that kind of evidence.
397
When he can sit still and composed, shutting the
door of his thought and his room on the endless agitation of worldly business or
worldly pleasure, these hours will grant him the true significance of his own
life.
398
In some ways the full practice of meditation is
parallel with falling asleep. The same physical, nervous, and psychological
phenomena reproduce themselves in both cases.
399
When the self-absorption attains a sufficient
depth, the meditator hardly knows whether he is in the world of dream or the
world of wakefulness. He is lost in a new world where both the familiar ones
become merged into each other and where their values become blurred.
400
He should try to let the mood thus created be
carried over into his ordinary life. This will be exceedingly hard at first for
he will find every thing and everyone seems to drag him out of it. The secret of
success is to "remember to remember," for success depends on keeping his aim in
view.
401
The experience of seeing a bright light in
meditation is a high class of mystic occurrence and does not come to all. It is
indeed a manifestation of God to the internal senses. It is not intended,
however, to become a regular feature of the inner life because it is only a
favourable sign or token of progress yet to come. Therefore he to whom this sign
comes should not crave it as it happens only a few times in any one life, and in
many cases does not happen at all even to advanced mystics. The important thing
about it is the consciousness which comes with it, the sense of a sacred
presence. The light itself, being an appearance, however wonderful, belongs to
the realm of phenomena and like all other clairvoyant visions is not to be
sought for its own sake.
402
The great Light-experience is uncommon. If it
happens once in a lifetime that is enough, for it will never be forgotten. But
the Stillness experience can happen every day, if you seek it by retreating
inward.
403
The very sounds of the music which brings him to
this exalted state will fall away and paradoxically get lost as he passes into a
sound-free state, rapt in mental stillness and inward silence.
404
If in the process he feels himself becoming
partially a disembodied being, a creature half-flesh and half-phantom, he need
not be dismayed or frightened.
405
There is a point in meditational experience when,
in the momentary state between sleeping and waking, the person feels as though
he were a shadow of himself, a pulsation of waves, as if he were the only person
in the universe.
406
Example: The sensation of light may be
overwhelming. He will feel as if a large electric bulb has been lighted inside
his brain.
407
His sensitivity to the thoughts and feelings of
other persons will become so developed and so accurate that the mere entrance of
another man into the same room will spontaneously register within his
consciousness that man's momentary attitude towards or thought about him.
408
It is when the second stage of meditation is
fully developed that occult powers may arise. The mind is able so to identify
itself with anyone as to reproduce his characteristics within itself quite
faithfully. It may even overcome distance and do so even when the other person
is not physically present but fifty miles away. Indeed, he who acquires this
power of clairvoyance may have to protect himself against mixing up the other
man's thoughts with his own, or against mistaking them as his own.
409
One experience which the meditator may get and
which many meditators have had is to get a lightness in the body, a feeling as
if he is floating in air, in space, or in infinity. It is blissful and to be
welcomed, although there have been a few cases where beginners are frightened by
it, frightened that it may be the beginning of annihilation, the annihilation of
consciousness, and so they stop and withdraw.
410
The sensation of nearly (but not fully) getting
out of his body may prove a pleasant or a frightening one, according to his
preparedness for it.
411
He need not get either perturbed or puzzled if,
after a certain period of the session has elapsed and a certain depth of
concentration reached, there is a momentary disappearance of consciousness. This
will be a prologue to, as well as a sign of, entrance into the third state,
contemplation. The immediate after-effect of the lapse is somewhat like that
which follows deep dreamless sleep. There is a delicious awakening into a mind
very quiet, emotions gently stilled, and nerves greatly soothed.(P)
412
The feeling of being half-bodiless is of course
an illusory one. It arises from becoming aware of, and sufficiently attentive
to, the stillness behind mental activity.
413
If in the period of meditation there comes a
feeling of expansion in space, of the nlargement of consciousness along with a
concentrated tranquillity, the practitioner need not get frightened, but should
let the happening take its own natural course.
414
Possible experiences during meditation:
(1) drowsy; (2) a feeling of frustration causes abandonment of session; (3) feel
presence of a higher power; (4) finished with a sense of ease and lightness; (5)
deeper meaning of certain past experiences become clearer; (6) a dynamic energy
was felt in spine; (7) feeling benevolent to all; (8) mixed thoughts kept on
distracting attention; (9) varied mental pictures of events, persons, or scenes
- mostly past - floated through and vanished; (10) sounds from outside bothered
and distracted; (11) ended happy in heart and positive in attitude; (12) no
special result but generally relaxed; (13) for periods of about a half-minute or
so each he gets into complete mental quiet, unbroken by outer sounds even if
they were there or by the procession of thoughts; (14) a feeling of failure or
anxiety; (15) a sense of general welfare; (16) an arousal of hope and
cheerfulness concerning the future; (17) a wish to be helpful to others; (18)
general contentment; (19) harmony with Nature.
415
His development becomes mature when the hour for
meditation no longer remains outside the day but perfumes its every minute.
416
If the meditative act is used aright by the
intellect, will, and imagination, it can become a means to an inspiration and an
ecstasy beyond itself. It can be used as a stimulus to creative achievement in
any field, including the spiritual and the artistic fields. It should be
practised just before beginning to work. The technique is to hold on to the
inspired attitude or the joyous feeling after meditation is completed and not to
let it fade away. Then approach the work to be done and carry the attitude into
it. It will be done with more power, more effectiveness, and especially more
creativeness. Anyone who loves his task in this deeper way does it more easily
and successfully than he who does not.
417
Among the visions which are possible, there is
one of great beauty but which comes more often to Far Eastern disciples than to
Euramerican ones. It depicts the sun rising out of the sea and throwing a
straight trail of light across the dark waters.
418
Almost any symbolic vision is possible, but
certain ones have repeated themselves so often down through the centuries as to
become classic. They may appear to the same man only rarely, but each time they
will act as bearers of fresh hope, power, or beauty and as incentives to acquire
needed humility, purity, or discipline.
419
The aspirant should vigilantly detect and
immediately appreciate those rare mystical moments which come of their own
accord. They should be ardently cherished and used as they come by putting all
other activity aside for a few minutes and concentrating fully on them.
Otherwise they display an ephemeral nature and disappear on fleet wings. They
can later be used as themes for meditational exercises by striving to recapture
them through imaginative remembrance and concentration.
420
There is a twilight, vague, and nebulous frontier
between the two states, most often experienced just after waking. It is here
that the psychic and occult are most easily felt and, on a higher level, the
intuitive and spiritual most easily known.
421
If seen at all, the Light as a lightning-flash is
ordinarily seen at the beginning and near the end of the Quest. In the first
case, it appears as a slender ray and inclines the man toward spiritual things
or wakes him up to their existence. In the second case, it appears as a mass of
living brilliance pulsating inside, through, and around him, or throughout the
universe, and brings him close to union with God.
422
When a pronounced uplifting feeling comes,
identify yourself with it, not with thoughts about it.
423
It is important that the practiser should be able
to recognize and detect the advent of a higher power: it may present itself in
several different ways and forms. One of them is to make itself felt as a
mysterious gripping of the head and neck which are quite involuntarily swivelled
round to one side and held rigidly there. Or they may slowly, at intervals, be
moved in a semi-circle. He should accept the happening, go along with it until
it ends by itself.
424
His encounters with other persons may affect him
emotionally or interfere with him mentally, so sensitive does he become. This is
why it is better to limit his contacts and if possible avoid those who leave
undesirable effects until such time as his development brings them under
control. He learns by experience how to guard the mental purity and inner peace.
425
Many different kinds of inner experience are
possible as meditation progresses, some exceedingly interesting but all merely
temporary. Among them are: divorce from the body, seeing bright light, losing
inclination to talk with others, losing the sense of personal identity, the
feeling that everything has come to a standstill and the suspension of time
passing, and a vast spatial emptiness.
426
It is correct to say that many aspirants have
undergone strange, weird, inexplicable, unrepeated, or occult experiences in
their attempts to practise meditation. But it is necessary to point out that
these phenomena belong to the first or middle stages of the practice, not to the
real work in contemplation.
427
These are all experiences for a beginner: when
they pass away he may know that the beginning phase has passed. He should be
satisfied with the verifications which they have produced and know that
appearances are turning into realities.
428
Meditation is also a valuable pause from a
totally different point of view, that of health and vitality. It allows body,
nerves, energy, and functional organs to recoup.
429
Unfamiliarity with these phenomena may cause
fright and withdrawal at first, but the confidence that comes with experience
usually replaces these negative feelings.
430
Several reported after meditations that they did
not feel their body (except head) and did not feel any life in their trunk hands
or legs. But one man reported a feeling of sinking downwards, not inwards
from the head.
431
What is the absent-mindedness which he
experiences both in and out of meditation? If this is accompanied by a blissful
feeling, it is nothing to get anxious about and would indeed be a sign of the
spiritual force working underground. Even so it would completely disappear in
time as he will have to get and keep full consciousness. However, if the
blissful feeling is absent, then it is a mental difficulty which he must strive
to overcome by using his willpower.
432
Their wishful expectations have a formative
effect on whatever revelation or vision may happen to them.
433
There is a disadvantage in these practices, too.
If they penetrate deep enough, he becomes sensitive to the unseen emanations
from other people - to their thought, feeling, character.
434
The mechanical operation of the lungs and heart
may be markedly slowed down as the working of the intellect is itself slowed
down or, in some cases, it may come very close to suspension.
435
The feeling of dreamy contentedness prevails long
after a good meditation.
436
At times he may feel as if apart from his
physical body, a strangely detached spectator of it.
437
It is not correct to assume that because the
condition of muscular rigidity and bodily coma has so often followed the
condition of emotional spiritual ecstasy, it must necessarily and always do so.
It is enough in proficient and experienced cases for the ordinary state to be
partially obscured.
438
As attention sinks inward, its outward-turned
strength gets reduced until physical objects appear blurred.
439
If the penetration goes deep enough, attention
may or may not any longer notice the outside surroundings, the external world.
440
As he enters the higher self there is a great
intensification of consciousness.
441
A feeling of delicate sweetness may rise in his
heart. If so, it is to be surrendered to completely.
442
It is possible that thoughts involuntarily cease,
as in swoon, or are deliberately stopped, as in held breathing, yet none of this
exquisite peace is felt.
443
Under influence of drugs, the sense of time may
slow down or accelerate, the sense of space may become unbounded or squeeze down
to a minute point. Yet exactly the same may happen in certain kinds of
meditation.
444
Buddha said that consciousness of pain in the
body, along with all other sense reports, vanishes in the trance-stage even
before Nirvana is entered.
445
One need not fear "letting go" of the
body-thought in meditation. If a momentary swoon should ensue, it will be
immediately followed by return to full consciousness. In addition, one will feel
physically refreshed and spiritually stimulated.
446
It is possible to experience the mind-being as
something separate from the body before one has gained control over the body and
ego. But the experience will be fleeting until then.
447
If he is unprepared for these occurrences and
uncertain of their nature, the encounter may give rise to fears which cause an
abrupt abandonment of these meditations.
448
Trance is often a confusing word to use to
describe the deepest condition of meditation. It could lead to misunderstanding.
Safer words would be "dynamic reverie" or "constructive introversion." The idea
of reverie promotes some kind of background awareness continuing through, either
from one's surroundings or from oneself, and is therefore truer.
449
It is not necessary that every seeker of the
Spiritual Truth should pass through the trance state. A few do, most others do
not, on their way to the goal yet both groups arrive at the same goal. It is
indeed not advisable for the average wisdom-seeker deliberately to try to get
into trance when his environment is not specially suitable for it, and doing so
may even be dangerous.
450
By the trance state I mean one where meditation
becomes so deep that the senses of bodily sight and hearing are suspended.
451
An outwardly similar condition can be induced by
artificial methods - such as suspension of breath, fixation of the gaze,
or even hypnotizing of the mind - but it is only a counterfeit, only useful on
its own physical and mental level, never on the mystical level which it is
unable to touch. It has as much spiritual value as the hibernation of animals
has. For the true condition does not really come through such effort of the ego,
it comes by Grace. This is why the hatha yogi is warned not to get stuck in
hatha yoga but to climb higher.
452
He may fall into a daze which, the longer it
lasts the longer it will take for him to emerge from. But Nature will have her
way and bring him out of the condition.
453
Right meditation is one of the most fruitful
activities anyone can engage in, but wrong meditation is one of the most
foolish.
454
It is true that it may now be desirable to spread
the knowledge of contemplative practices as an urgent necessity for the masses,
but it would be quite undesirable to do so without proper safeguards against the
abuses and repeated warnings against the dangers involved. And it is equally
true that only a few have achieved the state which is the goal of these
practices, so difficult are they to follow.
455
It is because I have affirmed and do still
strongly affirm the necessary validity of meditation, that I have also the right
to criticize the aberrations, excrescences, mistakes, exaggerations, and
deceptions which grow like weeds in the same field.
456
Meditation is still of the highest importance but
it has certain difficulties and dangers which must be avoided.
457
The practice of meditation is beneficial, not
harmful; but there are persons who are not yet ready for it and who should
postpone it until they are. These include: those whose moral values are low;
those who suffer from psychoses, mental disturbances, or emotional ysteria; who
take drugs, who possess inordinate ambitions, seek occult powers, or ractise
sorcery and black magic. Such persons need preparatory or purificatory
disciplines or treatments, psychological or physical.
458
All aspirants should be warned that
self-development in meditation without some co-equal effort and development in
morality, intellectuality, and practicality may easily lead to a state of
unbalance which would unfit them for the ordinary obligations and duties of
life.
459
Meditation is a very delicate technique and
incorrectly done may do harm as well as good. Moreover there are times when it
is even necessary to abandon it, in order to strengthen weaker parts of the
personality which might otherwise affect the meditator adversely as he becomes
more sensitive through the practice.
460
It is necessary to understand that meditation
performed incorrectly may attract unseen mischievous spirits or else it may
unbalance the mind.
461
The practice of meditation is accompanied by
certain risks if it is also accompanied by ignorance and indiscipline. The first
risk has been dealt with in The Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga and The
Wisdom of the Overself; it is mystical hallucination, self-deception, or
pseudo-intuition. The second risk is mediumship. Whereas spiritualists believe
it confers benefits, philosophers know it causes injury. Whereas the former
regard it as a process for getting new faculties, powers, and gifts, the latter
regard it as a process for losing reason, will, and character.
462
Life is too tragically short at all times and too
dismayingly swift-passing at the present time for us to find any pleasure in
echoing to the last letter Patanjali's rules prohibiting the practice of
meditation before character has been purified, desires dismissed, attachments
broken, and asceticism followed. Hence we have not done so in past writings. If
meditation is to be wooed only after a monkish virtue has been pursued and
found, then the hope and possibility of a mystical inner life for
twentieth-century man seem alien and remote. But this did not mean that we could
not perceive the value or importance of those rules. On the contrary, by
advocating constant reflection upon the lessons of earthly experience, by
inserting such a theme into the formal meditation practices themselves, we took
some of their essence without taking their appearance. This proved to be not
enough, however. We found that the lack of equal or larger emphasis upon moral
culture as upon meditation led many readers to neglect or even ignore the first
whilst lunging recklessly into the second.
463
Because so many mystics have confused their own
personal characteristics - resultant of inborn tendencies, education, and
environment - with the particular effects of meditation, many errors of
interpretation have been born as a consequence. These personal additions are
superfluities and have little to do with the intrinsic process of meditation.
When rightly conducted under the guidance of a competent teacher, the practice
liberates the seeker from the tyranny, the warpings and distortions of these
characteristics; but when wrongly practised, as often happens when it is done
alone, it merely strengthens their domination, and leads him into greater error
still. Hence meditation is a double-edged sword.
464
After you have been practising for some weeks or
months, if heavy headaches or much dullness should appear, they may be taken as
signals to stop or diminish your exercises temporarily until you feel better.
465
Some aspirants who fall asleep during meditation
welcome this as a good sign. They talk vaguely of yoga-sleep. I would not wish
to deprive them of such a pleasurable state, but it is perhaps pardonable to
point out that sleep is not samadhi. The state of utter blankness in such a
sleep, however blissful, is poles apart from the state of supreme alertness and
positive consciousness of Self in samadhi.
466
The ordinary man, with unpurified feelings and
unprepared mentality, can not be safely entrusted with the practical exercises
involving breath changes and dynamized imagination. Indeed, he is not entitled
to them. Their practice may easily harm him and hurt others.
467
Where there is maladjustment between the seeker's
moral fitness and his meditational progress, serious dangers exist for him and
sometimes for others.
468
Every man has a deep and endless well of truth
within himself. Let him cast his pitcher of thought down into it and try to draw
up some of its fresh waters. But alas, there is also a pit of mud within him.
Most men cast their buckets into this and think that the mud they fetch up is
the pure water of truth. The mud is made of his own selfish desires and ignorant
prejudices and slavish slothfulnesses.
469
Where a practice like meditation may lead to
increased power, especially occult power, it can be safeguarded only when moral
growth accompanies it.
470
Some meditation exercises are not without danger,
but this is because most exercises share such danger. Hence, they are usually
prescribed along with the religious devotions, intellectual training, and moral
disciplines intended to eliminate their danger. Where these safeguards have been
absent, unfortunate results may be perceived both in the Orient and the
Occident, both in the past annals of mysticism and the present ones. The
philosophic discipline and the purificatory preparation are also intended to
guard against the danger of inflation of the ego. The cultivation of humility,
the moral re-education, the rigorous self-examination, and the honest
self-criticism form part of these preparations.
471
The danger of sitting passively in meditation
whilst in the presence of someone else who is not, and even in a number of cases
of someone who is, is the danger of receiving and absorbing from that person his
emotional and mental emanations of a negative character. This is one important
reason why solitary practice is usually enjoined.
472
If desires arise during his meditation and take
him away from its holy subject, it is better to close the session and try again
at another time.
473
It is not advisable to attach so much importance
to meditation as to use it indiscriminately. It is necessary at certain times
greatly to reduce efforts at meditation for a while, or even discontinue them
altogether. Otherwise the sensitivity being brought about may become a hindrance
and not a help.
474
It is not really safe or wise for anyone to
attempt the exercises without some degree of moral development and even of
intellectual development. I have explained in my book, The Wisdom of the
Overself, why the intellectual checks upon meditation are necessary.
Unfortunately I have not explained why moral qualifications are also necessary,
so this I propose to do whenever opportunity of further publication arises. At
one time I was inclined to accept the teaching that the practice of meditation
alone would of itself purify the character. Wide observation since then has led
me to doubt the wisdom of this teaching. It is better that strenuous effort at
self-improvement and self-discipline should go side by side with efforts in
meditation.
475
Every good quality of character becomes a
safeguard to his travels in this mysterious realm of meditation.
476
The earlier stages of meditation are often
associated with psychic phenomena. This has led to the false belief that all the
stages of meditation are so associated and to the gross error of taking the
absence of these phenomena as indicative of failure to progress. The truth is
that they are not inevitable and not essential. When they do appear the seeker
is so easily led astray that they often do more harm than good.
477
If he is merely seeking paranormal powers, the
meditator runs a grave risk. Nor, when the desire for paranormal powers is mixed
up with spiritual aspirations, is this risk eliminated: it is only reduced. The
risk results from those beings who dwell on the inner plane, who are either
malevolent or mischievous, and who are ready to take advantage of the
mediumistic condition into which such a hapless and unprotected meditator may
fall.
478
If he carries on these exercises in the right way
- with sane objectives, and for not too long a time on each occasion - then
there will be no weakening of his worldly capacities and no harm to his personal
interests. If he does not, he will become less able to cope with practical life
and will find it increasingly necessary to withdraw from social existence.
479
There is no human activity which has not some
kind of danger attached to it if it is pursued to excess or pursued wrongly or
pursued ignorantly. It is silly to refuse ever to practise meditation because of
its own particular dangers. These do not exist for the man who approaches it
reasonably, perceptively, and with good character.
480
The aim of meditation is to bring him within his
innermost self. If he permits any psychical experience to detain him on the way,
he enters within that experience and not within himself. It is a cunning device
of the ego to make use of such experiences to trick him into thinking of them as
being more important than they really are, more spiritual than they really are.
If he does not see through these pretensions, he may waste years uselessly in
psychism - sometimes even a whole lifetime.
481
Books tell him what experiences he is likely to
have and what he ought to have if he is able to progress smoothly. When, despite
effort and toil, he fails to bring about the desired effects, he either
despairingly abandons the practice or else artificially imagines that they are
happening. In the latter case he is the victim of suggestion, and makes only
illusory progress.
482
Where trouble develops as the result of having
made some contact with the psychic plane instead of the spiritual, he should
take the following course of action without delay: (a) Stop all meditation,
breathing, and gazing exercises, until quite cured. After the expiration of this
period, he should judge carefully whether or not to resume meditation practice
and then only provided further that he feel an inner call to do so. He should
conscientiously follow the instructions given on prayer and purification of
character. (b) Until the trouble disappears, try to sleep at night with the
light on, dim enough however so as not to disturb sleep. It will probably be
necessary to wear a mask as eye-shade over the eyes to keep out the light. (c)
Endeavour to purify character as much as possible. Especially keep vigilant
control over thoughts and feelings, trying to cleanse them and be careful what
is allowed to enter your mind. (d) Kneel in prayer at least twice daily, asking
for God's help and Grace in this endeavour, confessing weakness and
helplessness.
483
By this power of sympathy which is so largely
developed in him, he is able to rise to levels higher than his own as well as to
plunge to levels beneath it. In the first case, he opens himself to help from
sages or saints. In the second, he gives help to the vicious and criminal.
484
If by meditation you mean mere absorption within
oneself, withdrawal from the world of the senses and contact with some inner
world, this need not necessarily be a holy state, but could be an unholy one and
a communion taking place therein could be demonic rather than divine. There are
various ways of achieving this deep absorption which to an outward observer may
seem to be a kind of trance and these ways include drugs, witchcraft, and black
magic, just as they also include religion, spiritual devotion, and aspiration.
This difference must be clearly understood. This distinction is both ethical and
mystical. Too many half-crazy, mixed-up persons who refuse to acknowledge it
have fallen into a spurious mysticism that leads to their downfall and
destruction.
485
Any good thing overdone may easily become a bad
thing. Any valid mystical practice overdone by the wrong person at the wrong
time and under the wrong circumstances may lead to madness. In all cases of
doubt, disquiet, or uneasiness, it is better to draw back than to push on to
extremes.
486
Although falling asleep is listed as one of the
obstacles to yoga by Patanjali, whether it really is so depends both on the kind
of sleep and the circumstances in which it develops. If very deep and very
refreshing, it has some positive value - either in conferring temporary peace of
mind or in healing some bodily ill. And if it occurs while practising conjointly
with and in the presence of a master, it is definitely conducive to spiritual
progress. But any other kind is certainly a waste of meditational time. To
prevent its happening, or to arouse the sleeper from it if it has already
happened, the Japanese Zen monks sitting in the meditation hall are supervised
by a prefect who either slaps the drowsing man on the shoulder with the broad
end of an oar-like pole or else rings a bell every twenty minutes. A different
method is used in Siam and Ceylon by monks who meditate in solitude. A few
pieces of wood are fastened to a candle about one inch apart. As the candle
burns down, the pieces fall at intervals, thus awakening the monk if he is
asleep.
487
Meditation, rightly used and sufficiently
developed, will silence his personal opinions so that he may hear the Overself's
Voice. But wrongly used or superficially developed, it will only confirm those
opinions and, if they are erroneous, lead him further astray.
488
The improvement of character is both a necessary
prelude to, and essential accompaniment of, any course in these practices of
meditation. Without it, self-reproach for transgressions or weaknesses will
penetrate the peace of the silent hour and disturb it.
489
A Buddhist ancient text gives the following
blocks to meditational work: (a) a settled residence whose maintenance becomes a
cause of anxiety, (b) family connections whose troubles require attention, (c)
fame drawing admirers who demand attention or drawing gifts which create
obligations having the same result, (d) acceptance of disciples or pupils and
giving them instruction, (e) getting involved in various public or private
works, (f) frequent journeys, (g) friends or relatives requiring services, (h)
illness, (i) study without application in practice, (j) yielding to the
fascination of occult powers. All these things take up time which has to be
taken from that needed for meditation - this is the objection to them, however
worthy they may be in themselves. However it must be remembered that the text
itself - Vishudi-Magga - was compiled by, and for, monks.
490
Because the art of meditation is unfamiliar to
most Western people, mistakes in its practice are easily made. To detect them,
it is well to describe one's experiences to a more proficient student if a
qualified teacher is not available, and have them checked in the light of his
knowledge.
491
If the practice is regularly made in a room, it
is prudent to lock the door. During the early attempts to attain the first stage
this may not be necessary; but during the later periods, when proficiency has
been reached, it is necessary for self-protection. If a condition of deep
self-absorption is present, and if another person were to burst into the room
unexpectedly and abruptly, the nervous shock given would be severe.
492
Some measure of moral culture is indispensable
both as a preliminary course and parallel endeavour to meditation. The Path is
beset with moral risks and mental dangers for those who have not previously
prepared their characters and personalities to engage in its practices, for
those who are still largely gripped by selfish instincts and undisciplined
passions, for those who are emotionally unstable and intellectually unbalanced.
Hence preliminary and accompanying courses of ascetic self-denial, self-control,
and self-improvement are usually prescribed. Sensual lusts and low desires have
not only to be curbed, but also ignoble thoughts and unworthy attitudes, if
meditation exercises are to be done with safety and finished with success.
493
The very way he habitually uses his mind may be
so wrong that if it inserts itself into his approach to meditation, the result
is self-defeating. His practice of the exercise may be faithful and persistent
but yet so wrongly carried out that no other result is possible.
494
Some of the exercises will be of no benefit if
practised too soon by unready minds, and may even do some harm.
495
One danger of mystic experience is the possible
swelling of the ego. It could make ignored unimportant persons become a centre
of attention and give them a feeling of public importance.
496
Men who are drunk, insane, angry, or insensitive
cannot practise meditation.
497
Psychotic states and psycho-pathological
conditions usually make it undesirable for a person to continue with or take up
ordinary meditation practices. He has lost his way and needs treatment from
outside himself rather than from within his ego.
498
To mark off a short part of the day or night for
such thought, feeling, and aspirational exercise, or better still, two parts, is
a way of life which, however uncommon, is highly important. It will prove itself
in time and in various results. The self is brought under better control; the
character is morally uplifted; an awareness of a link with the Universal Mind
will disclose itself. But again, what is here referred to is a
philosophic practice, and must conform with the ideals, principles, and
knowledge of philosophy. It must be properly done by qualified persons if the
effects are to be beneficial and not harmful. Otherwise a preparatory study and
purificatory course should first be undertaken. Right meditation can bring about
changes for the good, the harmonious and constructive in a man, but wrong or
premature or ill-intentioned or totally ignorant meditation can develop the
opposite.
499
A difficulty arises from the constant practice of
meditation in that sensitivity is much increased: sensitivity to the feelings
and thoughts of others. And when this sensitivity seems to submerge him in their
influences and auras, he is in danger of losing his own individuality or of
getting confused and muddled by this mental absorption. Action must be taken to
keep the sensitivity without letting it make him the victim of other peoples'
emotional emanation and mental projection.
500
The hazards which beset the practice of
meditation ought not frighten us away from it altogether. We should of course
beware the foolish cults and lunatic fringes and paranoiac leaders. We should
also avoid falling into a lazy daydreaming which self-fabricates its own world.
But a healthy mental attitude will readily protect us.
501
In a particular case it is sometimes advisable to
discontinue practising meditation for a while in order to apply more attention
to spiritual eeds and requirements. The student should realize that it is of the
utmost importance to steadily increase his power of self-control over emotions,
moods, and troublesome thoughts and to develop a more balanced emotional state.
Meditation, by itself, cannot bring about this state. What is needed here is
dogged and persistent application of the higher will.
502
If, while in a highly sensitive state, the
individual finds he is arriving at a psychic rather than a truly spiritual
level, he or she should substitute simple spontaneous prayer or worship for
meditation, at least for a while. It will also be necessary to practise
strengthening the will and getting rid of occult fears. The student must
increase his faith in his higher Self and call upon it for strength and courage.
503
It is better not to dwell on any visual phenomena
other than at the moment of occurrence, or else progress will be impeded. What
is more important than seeing is the state of feeling produced; this must
be pure awareness from which all psychical elements are excluded. Not until this
state has been thoroughly established and integrated with active life and
intellectual understanding and the moral nature, is it safe to examine or
experiment with psychic phenomena.
504
The wise aspirant will throw out all those
foolish imaginations and egoistic fancies which beset the way of meditation.
They are false leads and hindrances to seeing truth.
505
There is a practice by which a man can put
himself into a passive condition by quietening his thoughts. But if this
passivity is not directed by aspiration towards the higher consciousness,
towards the holier sources, it may be turned into mere mediumship directed not
to spirits but to other living persons. In this way he may become sensitive to
other peoples' emotional-mental condition but will not have the higher
consciousness.
506
Aspirants who are more intent on getting
"experiences" out of their meditation than on getting rid of the ego, risk
falling into the quest's sidetracks. For the experiences are mostly wanted
because of the pleasure they give the ego's emotions and the flattering they
give its mentality.
507
Dr. Carl Gustav Jung, and those disciples who
practise his system of psychoanalysis, have shown some interest in certain
Chinese and Indian yoga systems. I, myself, once discussed the subject with him
in his own home. But, despite his sympathetic interest, he advises Westerners in
various publications to avoid any practical attempts to master yoga.
Such attempts, he says, would be false and sometimes dangerous. The proper approach should be by way of strictly scientific and non-religious observation. Moreover, he condemns the personal asceticism and social withdrawals which are usually associated with yoga.
Now, such a view comes quite close at points to the Philosophic one, but it does not coincide with it completely. For the question must be asked how, by following the Western path of turning his eyes outward and his mind towards analysis, can man arrive at the same goal as by following the Eastern path of turning them inward and his mind toward self-quiescence? It is impossible for the result to be the same. Hence, Philosophy says, bring the two paths together; learn how to unite and keep a balance between them. This is modern man's need and duty.
Why does Jung reject yoga, despite the high praise he gives to Eastern wisdom in both his lectures and writings? He decries meditation, which is the heart of yoga, as being unsuitable to Western man, just as Martinus, the Danish mystic, denounces it as dangerous to Western man. Now, both these authorities have a solid basis for their criticism, but not for their conclusions. As regards the unsuitability of meditation, since it is simply the deepening of the intuitive faculty in man, we can reject it only by saying that intuition is unsuitable to man. As regards its dangers, it must be asked why we do not disdain to use automobiles even though their use has proved dangerous to quite a number of people? It is true that there are perils in the practice of meditation, but they exist only for those who are unqualified to enter it and who should therefore leave it alone, or for those who through ignorance or faulty character abuse it. In the category of the unqualified, we may place those who are seeking occult powers, strange phenomena, mysterious visions, sensational and dramatic experiences, or the satisfaction of mere curiosity. Whatever pathological results have emerged from their meditation have done so because the people who practised it had no business to be doing so. Among the unqualified we may further place those who are dominated by undesirable complexes, by negative feelings, by hidden fears; those who are wildly unbalanced and neurotically unstable. For the qualities they bring into meditation become even magnified by the stimulation in which it results. The gravest possible danger of meditation, and the one to which my friend Martinus usually alludes, is that if the meditator passes out of his body temporarily, there is a danger of the body becoming possessed by another entity. Let it be stated at once that such a danger could arise only during the trance state, and that few persons ever penetrate deeply enough to gain that condition. But, if a person is intelligent, sensible, fairly balanced, and of good character, he need have no fear whatsoever of meditation. And if his motive of coming to the practice is simply to find his True Self, his Best Self, and if he will reject everything else as likely to lead him aside from this path, and if he devotes part of his meditative time to constructive work in self-improvement as an essential accompaniment and preface to the work in mind-stilling, he is quite unlikely to come to any grief.
Since the means used by all religion, mysticism, and philosophy is the denial of self while the end they propose is the realization of the Overself, and since meditation in its most complete stage is such a denial and such a realization, it would be folly to abandon meditation because of its possible dangers and delusions or because Martinus says it is an out-dated primitive technique for backward peoples of the pre-Christian era or because Jung says it is not suited to Western man. For consider that meditation's stillness is corpse-like, that its utter freedom from all emotional agitations virtually begins the ego's death, and that the mental silence which ends thinking completes that death. Is not all this a dying unto self which allows the Overself to replace it in consciousness?
508
Mrs. Aniela Jaffé told me that late in his life
Jung himself practised yoga, but those patients who had neuroses had to be cured
first before being allowed to do so.
509
There are perils waiting for those who are
mentally ill and who try meditation on their own without supervision. It would
be better for them to practise simple relaxation, calming their emotions,
quietening their thoughts.
510
The mystic, sitting in the silence of his
meditation room, may receive great wisdom and feel a beneficent presence or,
astray and imprudent, may fall into psychical deception and be possessed by evil
presences. If he is to avoid these dangers, he must adopt certain safeguards and
find competent guidance. Without them, he had better be content with reading and
study and belief.
511
Why reveal knowledge of meditation if it is
dangerous to some people? Reply: the facts should be known even if the practice
is prohibited. We should learn about the existence of poisons even if their
drinking is prohibited. But in the form of simple relaxation there is urgent
need for meditation today and no danger is in that.
512
The practice of meditation in any form, including
the use of mantrams or mandalas, does not in any way exempt him from the
prerequisite or accompanying conditions of cleansing and disciplining his
character.
513
He may become so sensitive that a feeling of
unease comes with the presence of other men.
514
If a time comes when the stream of meditation
dries up, when its practice brings no apparent response and is undertaken with
no felt fervour, the aspirant should take these signs as warnings to make a
change of approach for some time. He should desist from internal habitual
exercises and engage in external, new, and informal activities, or simply take a
long rest.
515
Meditation practised by an emotionally unstable
and intellectually egotistic personality, may not only be without value for
progress but may even increase the instability and the egotism.
516
If men who lack sincerity, purity, and humility
take up such a practice as meditation, it will harm them and increase their
capacity to harm others. Moral character not only cannot be neglected in this
sphere but is quite foundational.
517
Too much meditation could create hypersensitivity
and nervousness in certain persons.
518
People with acidulated tempers or gross
selfishness, with serious neuroses or wild hysterias, are required to improve
themselves until they are sufficiently changed, before attempting to penetrate
the deeper arcana of meditation. For the result would be morally or
intellectually harmful to them. Yet it is unfortunately the case that so many
among those attracted to mysticism are psychoneurotics. It is worse still when
they are half-educated persons. They are often incapable of absorbing its moral
disciplines, or are unwilling to do so. The well-educated, who might be expected
to be more balanced, are also more sceptical of it.
519
This wandering tendency of thoughts can be
blocked by undesirable, artificial, unhealthy, or even dangerous means and the
seeker should be warned against using them. Drugs are merely one of these forms.
520
To become a mystic is simply to penetrate from
within more deeply than is customary into the psychological element of religion.
But after all, this is only a single element, although a most important one, in
what is really made up of several elements. And this is the defect, or even
danger, of mysticism - that it is insufficient because incomplete, that it
discards such useful religious characteristics as moral re-education of thought
and conduct, personal compassion, social helpfulness, and worshipful humility.
521
The unbalanced seeker will do better to limit the
time he gives to meditation and use it to try to adjust himself to the world
instead of running away from it.
522
He should clearly discriminate what good is to be
had from, and what evil is to be avoided in, these various practices.
523
It is possible to practise badly and thus bring
about negative results. Such meditation can degenerate into mediumship, so that
new, strange facets of personality appear. Or, a loss of efficiency may become
manifest, a kind of apathy, indifference, which will turn the man into a
dreamer.
524
Among the Tibetans the prescribed period of
meditation will not be used for this purpose if the man is overcome by anger. He
is advised to lie down and wait until his temper cools.
525
What is the use of teaching advanced lessons to
those who have not yet learnt the primary ones?
526
If his meditation deviates from a correct moral
procedure he will have only himself to blame for his fall into black magic and
its dire punishment.
527
The mind can explore itself. But to do this
properly it must first prepare, train, and purify itself.
528
Emotionally, and especially mentally, disturbed
persons should not attempt most meditational exercises, but should get
psychologically helped and healed first.
529
Whenever the development of one or more of the
four sides of the psyche falls behind the others, nature soon calls attention to
it in order to restore the necessary balance. Almost everybody is deficient in
this sense but the degree varies. It is not advisable to practise meditation
until there is sufficient balance.
530
Jung objected to yoga being done by ordinary
Westerners only so far as it was likely to affect their psychic control. He did
not object if they had been properly prepared by a trained analyst who could
remove their psychoses and neuroses. This was what I understood him to say at
our personal discussion in
1937
. In his Collected Works, Volume 11,
"Yoga and the West," he makes a short statement on this subject: "I do not apply
yoga methods in principle, because in the West, nothing ought to be forced on
the unconscious.... On the contrary, everything must be done to help the
unconscious to reach the conscious mind and free it from its rigidity."
531
Some of the obstacles to successful practice of
meditation have been told by Swatmarama Swami, one of the medieval authorities
on yoga in India. He wrote: "Yoga does not succeed when accompanied by excessive
eating, by overwork, by overtalking, by carrying out painful vows, by
promiscuous society and by fickleness. It becomes successful by energy,
initiative, perseverance, reflection and solitude."