1
The type of meditation called discursive - by which
is meant the kind which rambles on in reflective or logical thinking - does not
suit every student. Several who have essayed it without success after repeated
attempts are really temperamentally unsuited for it, yet they need not abandon
hope. There is another method of meditation which is actually easier, worth
trying, and possibly better suited to their temperament. During a wide
experience with dealing with Western students, I found that those who have
failed with discursive meditation are not necessarily more lacking in good
potentialities than those who have succeeded. It is simply that they have found
the method which will draw out the potentialities that they possess.
2
Meditation exercises whose method is to visualize a
form, pattern, or happening appeal to, and are easier for, some people.
3
The philosophic mode of meditation makes use of
imagination as much as it makes use of reason. Through the use of these
faculties, when directed toward abstract themes and high objects, it leads the
meditator to universal spiritual intuitions that in their own turn will conduct
him to philosophic experiences. Thus mental picturing and mental thinking, when
rightly used, assist his liberation just as when wrongly used they retard it.
4
There are two faculties worth developing. They are
the faculty of observation and the faculty of imagination or visualization. We
look, but see little, for we do not notice much of the detail. We are unable to
imagine clearly, sharply, and vividly. We lack the ability to recreate a
physical scene purely in the mind.
5
Those persons who are unable to "see" and hold these
symbolic pictures through their mind's eye with sufficient vividness, may still
take heart. The capacity to do so can develop itself as a result of repeated
practice in this exercise. Even if at first the picture seems far-off, faint,
blurred, and vague; even if it appears only fitfully and fragmentarily; by
degrees the persistent effort to hold it will be rewarded with the ability to do
so continually as well as clearly.
6
As a support for the beginning period of practice
itself, as a means to fix attention, a particular physical object or sound may
be chosen. He may gaze at a chink of light shining in a dark room or listen to
the pendulum-swing of a metronome. Whatever is thus isolated from the outer
world for concentration, is used merely as a jumping off platform from which to
enter the inner world.
7
Tratak is a technique for focusing the eyes,
as unblinkingly as possible on a special point: this could be a black dot inside
a black circle on a white sheet or wall, until tears fill them.
8
Some yogis try to tranquillize the mind by practising
the gazing exercise. They mark a black point on a white wall, or draw a black
circle on the wall, and then sit down opposite it so that their eyes are exactly
opposite. The body is kept quite still and they continually stare at the mark
for as long as their experience or their teacher prescribes.
9
The gazing exercise can be suitably applied to the
empty sky by day or night, to a star, a tree, etc.
10
A single colourful flower placed in a slim vase may
be used for the gazing exercise.
11
Among physical objects a flower, a stick, or a
flame have traditionally been used.
12
To quieten thoughts, it is helpful to some
practitioners to visualize a globe of blue light - the so-called Wedgewood or
powder blue - and to concentrate on it as fixedly as they can.
13
Meditation may also be made on a colour which, if
harmonious to the meditator, will lead him by deepening concentration into a
mystical state.
14
The lovely colours brought into the sky by the fall
of eventide make a fit object for meditation.
15
A properly directed imagination may be as much a
help to his progress as an improperly directed one is a certain hindrance to it.
During some exercises for meditation it can be creatively used in a particular
way. For instance, the aspirant thinks of his master, if he has one, or of a
scriptural personage, if he believes in him, or of an unknown, ideal,
beneficent, perfected Being in the angelic world, and imagines him to be "the
Gate" to a deeper order of existence. The aspirant then implores him for
admittance into this order, for strength to make the passage, and for Grace to
become worthy of it. In this curious situation, he has to play a double part. On
the one hand, he is to be the person making the request; he must feel intensely,
even to the point of shedding tears over what he is mentally crying out for; on
the other hand, he is to see him doing so, to be a mere witness of what is
happening. Thus at one time he will be part of the scene, at another time merely
looking at it. Every detail of it is to be vividly pictured until it carries the
feeling of veridical reality.
16
He is to take complete possession of this image, to
take hold of it inch by inch.
17
Imagine and believe that the Master is here in your
room, sitting in his accustomed chair or position. Then behave and meditate as
you would do if in his presence.
18
This exercise requires him to retract his attention
inwards until, oblivious of his immediate surroundings, he intently projects
certain suggestive mental images into this blankness and holds them determinedly
yet calmly. The result will appear later in his ordinary state when the wakeful
consciousness will seize these images abruptly and unexpectedly and effectively
act upon their suggestions.
19
Imagine a brilliant white light shining forth in
the heart and spreading into the entire body.
20
Any visualized form, especially of a living or a
dead master, may be used as a focus of concentration.
21
Visualization Exercise: It will help him if, for a
few minutes, he stops whatever exercise he is engaged with and projects the
mental image of himself doing it successfully.
22
A remarkable, unusual, and excellent exercise in
self-perception is to imagine himself sitting down to the work of
meditation, and going through with it to successful fulfilment of his purpose,
all obstacles seen, fought, and eventually pushed aside. All this is to
be done in his mind, his own person, and its doings becomes the object of
concentration. In short, he paints a mental portrait of a meditating man, who is
himself.
23
Exercises: Visualize a lovely quiet landscape
scene, either from memory or pictures, and think of yourself being there. Feel
its peacefulness. Visualize the face of some inspiring person; feel you're in
his presence.
24
A suggested theme for this pictorial concentration
is that of a spiral pattern like a staircase. The meditator must choose whether
it seems to go up or down, guided by intuition.
25
When the mental form on which he is meditating
vanishes of its own accord and the mind suddenly becomes completely still,
vacant, and perfectly poised, the soul is about to reveal itself. For the
psychological conditions requisite to such a revelation have then been provided.
26
It is easier for almost all people to think
pictorially rather than abstractly, to form mental images rather than mental
conceptions. Although the more difficult feat is also the superior one, this
fact can be utilized to promote meditational progress. The mental picture of a
dead saint whom the aspirant feels particularly drawn to or of a living guide
whom he particularly reveres, makes an excellent object upon which to focus his
concentration.
27
I mentioned in The Quest of the Overself
that radiations from a photograph had been discovered by a scientist I met long
ago, Mr. Shrapnell-Smith, and also by another English investigator at that time
whose name I can not now remember. Many readers of the book have since then
sought for photographs of their gurus and used them as objects for
concentration. Not only so, but somewhat later the idea was adopted by healers
who used photographs of patients living at a distance to give them absent
treatment at a fixed time of the day, the patient himself putting himself in
tune with the healer passively and receptively. In connection with these usages
of photographs by disciples of gurus and healers of patients, it ought to be
pointed out that more effective than using the material object of the photograph
is the implantation of the picture in the mind, the mental image itself. In
other words, the thought of the guru without any external physical aid or the
thought of the patient gives a better connection for the purpose desired.
Centuries ago, before photography was invented, gurus knew this principle and
many of them told their disciples that wherever they were living the remembrance
of the guru would give a link and that the emotional attitude, devotion,
reverence, and so forth, linked with the remembrance, would bring back some
benefit from the guru.
28
The picture must be perfectly vivid and sharply
formed. It must be held for a little while. Then let it slowly fade away into
the still centre of your being, absorbed by its light and love.
29
Withdraw attention from everything outside and
imagine a radiant, shining Presence within the heart. Visualize it as a pure
golden sunny light. Think of it as being pure Spirit.
30
He should study the figure well, note every one of
its details carefully, close his eyes, and then try to reproduce the figure
again mentally.
31
To place the drawing before you is the first stage.
To hold it in your mind is the second one. Hold the mind immobile upon it until
a slightly hypnotic state is induced.
32
The mandala is a diagrammatic representation, used
by Tibetans and Jains for concentration, usually featuring a square enclosing a
circle. Each side of the square has an opening. At the centre of the circle is a
figure which is the important part of the picture and to which attention must
find its way through the openings and put to rest there, until the deeper mind
is reached.
33
No man has complete freedom to use his creative
thought-power to its most magical extent, for all men have to share it with the
Overself which, being their ruler, also rules the results of their efforts. In a
divinely ordered world it would be anarchical to vest full power in unredeemed
man.
34
The trained meditator can make any episode of his
own past seem as real and near as the present. He is able to create distinct and
vivid images of it after so long a time as even several years.
35
These image-building powers can be expanded until
mere thoughts seem external things.
36
The gazing exercise may be alternated by simply
looking towards a point midway between both half-closed, half-opened eyes and
keeping them fixed in this position.
37
Visualized figures can be concentrated on with such
intensity as to make them seem like real ones. Such an experience which is
sought in certain meditation disciplines is used as an illustration of the tenet
that everything known is, in the end, a mental experience.
38
The meditator should sustain the chosen mental
image for as long as his power allows.
39
The first stage of this exercise consists in
withdrawing attention from the object or landscape at which he is looking, and
using it instead to observe the eyes themselves; they remain open. The second
stage is to withdraw attention still further and try to become aware of the
observing mind alone.
40
The eyes look out on the landscape in a vague
general way, without focussing on any particular object. This belongs to the
second stage, whereas specific concentration belongs to the first and more
elementary one.
41
It may help the meditator to picture the world
along with his body dissolving into space until all distinctions stop.
42
The use of imagined forms, scenes, and persons is
only for beginners in meditation: it is to be left behind when the object has
been sufficiently achieved. As Saint John of the Cross says, "For though such
forms and methods of meditation may be necessary in order to inflame and fill
their souls with love through the instrumentality of sense, and though they may
serve as remote means of union, through which souls must usually pass to the
goal of spiritual repose - still they must so make use of them as to pass beyond
them, and not dwell upon them forever." Such a use of pictured forms must
include the master's too. Saint John of the Cross even includes Christ's. For
many this practice is a step forward, but aspirants must not linger all their
lifetime on a particular step if they really seek to climb higher.
43
It is a common practice for religious or mystical
Indians to meditate upon their favourite deity until they get the experience of
being completely identified with it of becoming one with it. This experience is
then considered a grace given by the deity itself. But what else is it to the
outside observer, however sympathetic he may be to such practices if he is at
all critical at the same time, than a process involving the creative imagination
and what is the end result but an imaginary one?
44
In the end the symbol must be dropped; the reality
it points at must alone be held by the mind when it seeks a deeper level of
meditation.
45
The Spiritual Symbol represents in a symbolic
language what is usually represented in spoken or written words.
46
The Spiritual Symbol serves a threefold purpose. It
is an aid to concentration of attention. It expresses and teaches a universal
truth or law. It evokes an intuitive perception of this truth or law. Moreover,
it may even bring about a certain moral effect upon the character provided the
foregoing three purposes have been successfully realized.
47
The cross is a symbol given to man by the creative
imagination of his race's early seers. Its flat crossbar is his ordinary
everyday life which he shares with all other men. Its upright bar is his higher
spiritual life which he shares with God. The entire figure tells him that
crucifixion of his ego is resurrection of his spirit - normally and daily dead
in the material life.
48
If the paper photograph of a living sage or the
bronze statue of a departed one helps to remember his achievement, to realize
his ideas, or even to touch his aura, why should we not use it? It is only when
we put it to superstitious uses that we then degrade the sage's name and harm
our own progress.
49
Just as a photograph contains certain magnetic
radiations which link it with the person pictured thereon but which vanish with
his death, so the book of a living author offers an activated link between his
mind, which is incarnated in its pages, and those readers who look to him and
his writings for help. Although at his death the contact with his actual mind is
broken, the contact with the way in which it worked is not.
50
The Spiritual Symbols are given to pupils who are
highly intellectual, professional, or active-minded as a means of (1) allaying
mental restlessness; and (2) constructively working on the inner bodies, since
these forms are in correspondence with the actual construction of (a) an atom,
and (b) the universe.(P)
51
The Cross symbolizes personally the utter surrender
of the ego in desiring and willing impersonally. The vertical line means
consciousness transcending the world, the horizontal one means consciousness in
the world: the complete figure shows the perfect balance needed for a perfect
human being.
52
The geometric designs which appear in the stained
glass windows of so many churches, on the painted frescoes of so many tombs, and
in the architectural plans of so many temples are sacred symbols useful for this
purpose. They have not been selected by chance but by illumined men, for their
number is very small compared with the hundreds of possible groupings and
arrangements also available. The measurements of the different parts of each
geometric symbol follow certain proportions which are not fixed by personal whim
but by cosmic order. This is why Pythagoras declared that number is the basis of
the universe. The same proportions of 1-4-7-13 exist in the distances of the sun
to its planets and asteroids, in their movements. They were used in Stonehenge,
in the Greek temple, and in the Gizeh Pyramid. Each symbol corresponds to some
cosmic fact; it is not arbitrary or imaginary or accidental. Its value for
meditation practice does not end with promoting concentration but extends beyond
that. Its power to affect man derives also from its connection with the divine
World-Idea, whose perfection and beauty it reflects.
53
The purpose of using the symbol has been achieved
when the user actually feels the luring presence, the inspiring force of the
spiritual quality it symbolizes. He should then put it aside and concentrate on
the feeling only.
54
A practical rule which applies to all the pictures,
diagrams, and designs is to visualize them as standing vertically upright, not
as lying flat as when drawn on paper.
55
The artists who drew these spiritual diagrams in
the first instance belong to far-off antiquity. They were mostly holy men,
monks, or priests. Centuries ago, as they meditated on the mysteries of God, the
universe, and man, they entered a state of mystical revelation and saw eternal
truths, hidden realities, laws and forces of the universe. When they tried to
communicate their intuitive knowledge to others, they felt guided to do so in
the form of the symbolic pictures. Even today these visions sometimes arise of
their own accord, offering themselves spontaneously to the mind's eye, when the
intuition is trying to find another form of expression than the verbal one for
what it knows or what it seeks to communicate.
56
The spiritual emblem combining a circle and some
other form stands for reconciliation of the Overself and the ego, for
integration of man's higher and lower nature.
57
There are used in India, Tibet, and China
meditation symbols of a purely geometric kind. They may be quite simple or quite
intricate in design. They are drawn in black ink on white paper or parchment, or
they are embroidered in coloured silk panels on tapestries, or they are painted
directly on monastery walls. The designs include completed circles, perfect
arcs, equilibrated triangles, rigid squares, pyramids, pentagons, sexagons,
octagons, and rhomboids. It is believed that by concentrating on these geometric
diagrams, with their straight undeviating lines, some help is obtained toward
disciplining the senses, balancing the mind, and developing logicality of
thought.
58
The Pyramid is a perfect symbol of both spiritual
balance and spiritual completeness.
59
Symbols are diagrams or paintings on paper
pertaining to the chosen Ideal or deity worshipped.
60
The concentration of attention on the chosen symbol
must occupy itself with reflections which rise above their merely pictorial
value.
61
Colours enter into the composition of a Spiritual
Symbol. Each is significant, each corresponds to a cosmic or a human force.
62
The spiritual diagram takes the shape of a square
combined with a circle when it stands for a reconciliation of opposites, for the
equilibrium of their forces and the balance of their functions.
63
Manjusri is depicted with sword in hand, meaning
that he cuts away one's illusions.
64
Whether it be called a mandala, as with Tibetan
Buddhism, or a yantra, as with Tantrik Hinduism, it consists of a geometrical
design, or a linear diagram, or some non-human, non-animal, non-pictorial
representation by a drawing which is taken as a symbol of God, or of the higher
self. Concentrated attention upon it is supposed to lead man closer to this
self, like any other form of worship.
65
At the apex of a pyramid there is only a single
point. At its base there are innumerable points. The tenet of the One appearing
as the Many is well symbolized by this ancient figure.
66
When the spiritual emblem takes the form of a
circle, it represents the Wholeness which is the ideal state of the fully
developed and equilibrated man.
67
The higher self should be invoked at the beginning
of the deliberate work done on these affirmations and symbols. The latter may
then become its channels, if other conditions have been fulfilled.
68
The gesture of right thumb tip joined in circular
form to the forefinger tip represents, in Hindu-Buddhist statues, giving a
blessing of the truth. The same gesture also appears in some Greek Orthodox
Christian icons as a blessing.
69
The Rising Sun was originally a symbol of the
Overself in relation to man's conscious development.
70
The Swastika originally had two meanings: as a
wheel revolving clockwise it was the symbol of the unfolding World-Idea; as a
radiant circle it was the pictograph of the invisible Sun behind the sun, which
was the proper object of human worship.
71
The symbol is intended to create a corresponding
mood, or to arouse a latent force.
72
The highest of all symbols is that which expresses
God.
73
The thought-form whose reverence helps him to keep
concentrated, the mental image whose worship holds his attention quite absorbed,
justifies a place for itself in the meditator's method. Only at an advanced hour
may he rightly put them aside. But when that hour arrives, he should not
hesitate to do so. The devotional type of meditation, if unaccompanied by higher
metaphysical reflection, will not yield results of a lasting character although
it will yield emotional gratification of an intense character. Overself is only
an object of meditation so long as he knows it only as something apart
from himself. That is good but not good enough. For he is worshipping a graven
image, not the sublime reality. He has to rise still higher and reach it, not as
a separate "other," but as his very self.
74
Philosophy recognizes that the human mind cannot
even grasp the concept of the Void that is a Spirit save after a long course of
study and reflection, much less realize it. Therefore it provides for this
situation by offering a Symbol of that Void, a picture or an idea of which the
mind can easily take hold as a preliminary until he can make the direct attempt.
75
This Symbol will become a focal centre in his mind
for all those spiritual forces which he has to receive intuitively. From it he
will get inspiration; to it he must give veneration.
76
Thus the symbol becomes equated with the Soul, with
entry into and memory of it. The indefinite and formless, the remote and
abstract Reality takes on a nature which, being approachable, comprehensible,
and visible, can help him seek, worship, and love that Reality in a personal and
human way.
77
The portrayal of Gautama as a seated meditating
figure symbolizes his basic message. This was really, and quite simply, "Be
still - empty yourself - let out the thoughts, the desires, and the ego which
prevent this inner stillness."
78
What is the inner significance of the rosary? At
the time of meditation, the worldly man is harassed by worldly thoughts. The
rosary teaches that until unimpeded meditation becomes possible, the aspirant
should persevere, leaving behind thought after thought. The beads represent
thoughts and they are pushed back. The thread passing through the beads
represents "the all-pervading ideal." With patience and perseverance, thoughts
are subdued and, as a result of unimpeded meditation, the ideal is realized. The
head bead which is bigger than the rest represents the point of realization,
that is, God, in whom the universe has its birth and in whom it ends.
79
There is a difference between the symbol which only
tells us that a higher reality exists and the symbol which not only tells us
that but also inspires, leads, informs, and helps us to its attainment.
80
The symbol is to be no mere abstraction, no formal
usage, but a living presence.
81
When a Buddha figure has its palms turned upward
with the thumbs touching, this symbolizes unwavering faith.
82
The strength which he cannot find in himself, he
may draw from the Symbol. In that is release from self-weakening doubts, is the
power to achieve greater things.
83
The Swastika is an ancient symbol used in Tibet, in
India, and in China. It is closely related to another symbol, the Cross. The
Swastika bespeaks the fixed unmoving and everlasting centre of a circle whose
circumference is the ever-changing, ever-moving world-process.
84
The Swastika is both a meaningful symbol and a
picture of what actually happens. The ever-moving vibration of the ultimate atom
goes forward and right in a circle to bring a world into being and to maintain
it, but it moves backward and left to deteriorate and eventually destroy it.
(This is mirrored in the big dipper, too.)
85
The circle is also used as a symbol of complete
self-mastery.
86
There have been many opinions about the symbolism
of the Pyramid. The Freemasons, the Theosophists, and others have put forward
their views. Since the actual structure of the Pyramid stood upon a temple built
like a cube, at least in the case where the famous Sphinx and the Great Pyramid
are concerned, the whole figure should be taken into account when analysing its
symbolism. The base, cubically shaped, represents both balance and stability:
the visible pyramid, triangular in form, represents aspiration and the Quest.
87
If men cannot find a human channel in whom they can
believe as mediating the higher power to them, then they usually feel the need
of finding one in whom they can believe as a symbol of it.
88
A symbol is a message from his higher self to his
personal self. It is intended to give him hope and faith for the future as well
as to encourage him to fresh efforts in developing a new life out of the ashes
of the old one.
89
A figure or photograph may give off a vibration of
attained peace. If we are sensitive enough to respond, we begin to share it.
90
Men who cannot absorb the subtle concept of the
Spirit, who cannot grasp the idea of infinite and eternal being, may yet absorb,
and therefore be helped by, the concept of its human Channel, may yet visualize
and be inspired by its human symbol.
91
What the mantra does for sound, the yantra does for
sight. It is a graphic representation, pictorial or geometrical, full of
philosophic significance about the vanity of earthly existence. In shape, it is
either square or circular (when it is renamed mandala). It is used first
to fix the mind and then to pass beyond it.
92
The Polynesian and Hawaiian traditions wove sacred
symbolic patterns into cloths in certain combinations and hung the cloth as a
tapestry to gaze upon. The results, spread over time or spectacularly swift,
were inner peace and spiritual uplift.
93
The practical use of the Spiritual Symbol requires
it to represent himself, or the relation between the different parts of himself,
or the whole Cosmos.
94
What are these symbols but attempts to make use of
art for man's loftiest purposes - the transforming of his consciousness?
95
The Far Eastern symbols are divided into two
classes: simple geometric diagrams and elaborate pictures of Nature or of
Enlightened Men. The first class appears also in the Near Eastern traditional
patterns.
96
The image of the Magic Circle or globe expresses
the goal of Wholeness as exemplified in the true, complete, fully developed,
individualized, "redeemed" man.
97
Jung found that certain symbols were present in the
ceremonial art of primitive religions as well as in the dreams of contemporary
persons. He concluded that they were universal and archetypal, projected by the
collective inner being of humans.
98
Rama Prasad writes: "The tantrik philosophers had
symbols to denote almost every idea. This was necessary because they held that
if the human mind were fixed on any object with sufficient strength for a
certain time, it was sure by the force of will to attain that object. The
attention was secured by constantly muttering certain words and thus keeping the
idea always before the mind. Symbols were used to denote every idea. 'Hrim'
denotes modesty. 'Klim' denotes love."
99
The superior type of aspirant can dispense with
symbols, but this type is much less frequently found.
100
In the animal kingdom we find that boa
constrictors can practise union with their mates for a longer period than other
creatures. Why does the Hindu religion honour the serpent as a symbol of the
highest knowledge? Why did Jesus say, "Be ye shrewd as serpents?" And why did
Gautama the Buddha receive the cobra as his protector against the sun's fierce
rays when he sat in the final session of meditation before attaining Nirvana?
101
The symbol is to be remembered and revered daily.
102
The first value of the symbol is that it at once
focuses attention, concentrates thought, arouses love, and strengthens faith.
The second is that it automatically reminds the aspirant of the higher state,
being, and power.
103
The sign made by joining the thumb to the tip of
the forefinger of the right hand so as to form a circle shows that the person
knows the highest truth. It appears in both Hindu (atman is one with Brahman)
and Greek Orthodox sacred pictures.
104
Many members of a group use their master's face
for the purpose. Many Hindus choose the deity they worship for the mental image
to be meditated on. Jesuits choose Christ's figure, the Rosicrucians a rose.
105
The image, thought, or name of a spiritual giant
gives a point of concentration and helps to settle the wandering mind.
106
The exponents of some yoga methods have minutely
described, in their books, seven centres or "lotus-flowers" or "whirling wheels"
as they are termed, which are situated in the "soul-body" at intervals from the
base of the spine up to the crown of the head but which work in intimate
relation with similar places in the physical body. Elaborate diagrams have also
been drawn to make plainer their claims about this remarkable feature of
spiritual anatomy.
On its practical side, the system affords a basis for redirecting attention, a method of providing useful points for concentrating it as a yoga exercise. It is easier for undeveloped minds, which are unable to entertain abstract metaphysical ideas or to meditate upon them for any length of time, to picture the "centre" in the throat, for example, and fasten their attention upon that. To encourage these novices to undertake such meditations they are lured with the bait of miraculous powers, a different power being associated with each "centre," or with that of visions of gods and goddesses, a different deity being associated with each centre. If the novice practises, he will gain some tranquillity, even if he fails to unfold any powers.
107
The practice of meditating on the mental image of
the master is helpful at the proper time, but the meditator should understand
that it is not the most advanced practice. If at any time during it, or after
attempting it, he feels drawn to the Void exercise, or to any of the exercises
dealing with the formless spirit of Mind, he ought to let himself slip away from
the pictorial meditation and pass up into the pure contemplation. He need have
no reluctance or hesitation in doing so.
108
There is hope and help for those among the masses
who are tired of moribund, orthodox religion but who are not able to make the
grade of mysticism. Let them repeat in their heart again and again, day after
day, the name of a Spiritual Guide in whose attainment they earnestly believe,
who is known to have dedicated himself to service and in whose saving power they
are prepared to trust. He may be a man long dead or a living one. They need
never have met him but they must have heard something about him. If their faith
is not misplaced, if he really is one who had dwelt in the Overself's sacred
light, they will get genuine results. If, however, their faith is misplaced and
the name represents nothing divine, no results except hallucinatory ones need be
expected from this practice. But where the devotion is given to a great soul, it
shall surely be rewarded. For the silent repetition of his name, wherever they
may be and whatever they may be doing, will in itself become an easy mystical
exercise in concentration. No matter how ignorant the devotee may otherwise be,
let him do this and out of the infinite Overmind there will presently sound its
Grace as an echo of his inner work. The sacred name will thus have become for
him a link with the Divine. The Grace which descends is rich and real.
109
The manifestation of the adept to his disciple in
meditation may come in different ways to different disciples at first, or in
different ways to the same disciple as he progresses. But in general it is:
first one sees his picture or image very vividly appearing before the mind's
eye; later there is a sense of his nearness or presence along with the picture;
in the image he seems to smile or to talk to the disciple and pronounce words of
advice and guidance; in the third stage the picture disappears and only the
presence is felt; in the fourth stage the disciple comes into tune with the
master's spirit. In the fifth and final stage the student relinquishes the
teacher.
110
Abrupt recalls to the inner life, when associated
with remembrance of the name, or seeing the image of the guide, are intuitions
of real value. The student should at once drop all other activities and
concentrate on them, giving himself up utterly to the inward-turning of
attention they prompt him to practise.
111
It is a recognized yoga-path in the Orient,
especially among the Sufis of Persia, Iraq, and Northern Africa, for the
sensitive disciple mentally to merge his own individual being in the being of
his master during the period of meditation. The master can be anyone in whom he
has most faith, to whom he is most devoted, by whom he is most inspired.
112
The yoga of self-identification with an adept is
the most effective method and brings the quickest results because it quickly
elicits his grace. After all, it is the result that counts. The fact is that
inspiration does come with the mere thought of him. This yoga-path
involves two techniques; first, formal meditation at fixed periods, focused on
the master's mental picture and presence and, second, informal remembrance of
the master as frequently as possible at any and all times of the day. In both
techniques, you are to offer your body to him just as a spiritist medium offers
his own to a disincarnate spirit. You are to invite and let him take possession
of your mind and body. First, you feel his presence. Then you feel that he takes
possession of your body and mind. Next, you feel that you are he (no duality).
Finally, he vanishes from consciousness and another being announces itself as
your divine soul. This is the goal. You have found your higher self.
113
The disciple should try to feel the master inside
himself, sensing his presence and seeing his image at various times. For the
master is really there, but must be sought for and felt after. This
self-identification with the master is one of the best of short cuts for those
who find it difficult to meditate. Even when working or walking, they should
suddenly pull themselves up in thought and imagine the master present in them
and working or walking through them. Once such a habit is created and properly
established, it will not be long before remarkable results are obtained.
114
If the master practises the technique of silent
helping from a distance at the very time when his mind is deeply sunk in the
mystic heart, and the mental image of the pupil is introduced there, the latter
will suddenly have a beautiful experience. He will feel an inner opening and
another consciousness will seem to flow in. Then he will sense the real nearness
of the master and savour something of the spiritual quality of his aura.
115
The disciple who practises this kind of yoga
imagines himself to be the master, thinks and behaves accordingly. He plays this
role as if he were acting in a stage drama. He is to imitate the Master's way of
meditating, including even the expression of his face at the time, not only in
pictorial vision but also in self-identified feeling. The exercise can be done
both during the formal daily sessions of his regular program and even at odd
moments or in unexpected leisure at other times of the day. The formula is
twofold: remembering the master and identifying oneself with him.
116
Now the ultimate use of a mental image, whether
of God or guru, is only to help him do without it altogether in the end. For the
ultimate aim of a true seeker must always be to become aware of God for himself,
to perceive the Real with his own insight, and to understand the truth with his
own intelligence. Therefore when he has reached this stage of meditation, when
he is able easily to enter into rapport with the presence of the Guide or guru,
it has accomplished its work and he must take the next step, which is to let go
this presence, or the image which carries this presence, altogether. If he
clings unduly to it, he will defeat the very purpose of his practice. The
Overself will, of its own accord, eventually complete the work, if he does not
so resist, by banishing the image and the presence and itself stepping into the
framework of his consciousness. He will then know it as his own very soul, his
true self, his sacred centre. He will then feel God within his own being as the
pure essence of that being. Any other feeling of any other individual would be
sacrilege.(P)
117
The self-identification with the Master consists
of lending his spirit in the disciple's body - not the disciple's spirit in the
Master's body.
118
The photograph of the teacher is placed
immediately in front of the pupil. The latter fixes his gaze upon it and gives
the whole energy of his mind to its contemplation. Thus the photograph becomes
"printed" on the mental screen. The practice is continued until it can be "seen"
with the eyes closed as clearly as with the eyes open. This after-image must
then be meditated upon.
119
Photograph the master's face with your mental
camera and then carry the picture with you - not, of course, in the foreground
of attention but always in its background. When at odd places and odd times you
wish to meditate, preface your exercise by gazing intently at the eyes in your
mental picture for a minute or two.
120
When this picture impresses itself so strongly,
so vividly, and so frequently on his consciousness that it begins to have a
hypnotic effect, the real work of his guide also begins.
121
Merely by concentrating on the mind's image and
memory of the guide, the disciple may draw strength, inspiration, and peace from
him.
122
The simple practice of holding the master's image
in consciousness is enough to provide some protection in the world's temptations
or dangers.
123
The personal attraction to, and affection for,
the man Jesus can be usefully made into a focus for meditation. To meditate on
the character, example, and teaching of one's spiritual Guide has long been a
standard path in mysticism. It culminates in a joyous spiritual union, at which
time the student becomes aware that the living presence of his chosen Guide is
no longer separate from himself - his Real Self. This is what Jesus meant when
he said, "I and My Father are One." It is, indeed, one of the shortest paths to
the Goal.
124
Meditation on a guru's face, form, or name is
only for the preliminary and intermediate stages; it must be followed by
dropping all thoughts, including the guru-thought, if advancement is to
be made.