1
Humanity needs yoga, yes, but it must be a yoga that
is workable under twentieth-century conditions. It needs mystical ideals,
certainly, but they must be realizable in London and New York, not only in
Shangri-la. It needs profoundly to kindle the spark of mystical experience
within dull mechanized lives, but it does not need to kindle the historical
errors and traditional excesses of such experience. There is need for mystical
practices to spread but there is no need for mystical absurdities to spread with
them. We personally do not want this restoration of the art of mental quiet to
be accompanied by a restoration of the art of out-of-date views, blind
superstitions, impracticable or unnecessarily harsh rules, and unethical
exploitations. Hence nobody should be so foolish as to misunderstand this effort
to purify yoga as being an effort to denounce yoga altogether. That would be a
profound error.
Much of what I have written will sound like heresy to the unreflective among the mystically minded. But they have their guides and I do not write for them. More intelligent mystics ought not to take exception to what has here been written but ought to probe fearlessly into the true significance of their own experiences. Let it not be said that they cannot bear the truth. In encouraging them to independent or even heretical thinking, and in pointing out the perils of travelling down a mental blind alley, I seek to serve and not to harm the mystically minded. The discerning reader will see that I have all along tried to explain mysticism. The prejudiced reader may however see erroneously that I have tried to expose it. If I have challenged and criticized the validity of certain assumptions common in half-baked yogic circles, if I have impartially showed up some of the insufficiencies of yoga and mysticism as well as corrected their commoner errors, if I have criticized wrong mystical attitudes, all this has been done only to save right mystical ideas from being perverted or lost. I know from personal experience just as much as most Western mystics and Eastern yogis the valuable and attractive benefits resulting from this practice. It is this appreciation which has helped to support me in undertaking the unpleasant task of purifying the theories about it. The weeding-out of errors from such theories is a better service to yoga than their superstitious support. After all, it is not the man who flatters us when we are making mistakes but the man who is courageously outspoken and tells us the bitter but wholesome truth who is a real friend. If, therefore, these critical studies have helped a few mystics to think clearly about their mysticism, and to think of it in terms of the larger background of life itself, then they have rendered them a service. If they have influenced some readers to think and rethink their mystical beliefs, I have rendered them a service, whether they are aware of it or not. If they have persuaded other readers even to consider that the philosophical approach to their own experiences will fulfil and not deny their deepest aspiration, then I have rendered them a service.
2
I do not criticize such men and such practices for
any other reason than the protection of earnest seekers, and I may not desist
from doing so because their path is beset with psychological dangers, fantastic
experiences, worldly harm, and grotesque beliefs. An unhealthy inner life is
often the consequence, one filled with strange phantasmagoria. From all this
they may be saved by wise guidance, just as they may be plunged into it by the
pseudo-guidance which they usually find. So far as I am aware - and I have
travelled the wide world - all the available guidance which such seekers are
likely to obtain will lead them to everything else except the one thing that
really matters, namely, fulfilling the real purpose of our human existence here
on earth, and not an illusory one. Where such guidance is honest, sincere, and
unselfish - which is rare indeed - it is likely to be imperfect, inadequate, and
incomplete. In the written statements of these blind leaders of the blind, as in
their uttered ravings, the sage can quickly discern - by such signs as the
terminology and syntax used - how unregulated and how unbalanced is their course
of thought and experience. I set myself seriously to ponder the question: "How
can these earnest seekers avoid the abundant dangers and satanic deceptions to
which they are exposed?" Hence my published and private warnings.
3
It is most important that I make it clear that I do
not teach the error that all mystic experience is merely private
opinion, judgement, or prejudice, solely personal imagination, belief, or
wish-fulfilment, but rather that I hold it to be a private interpretation of a
general experience, a personal response to a universal event. On the first and
erroneous view, mysticism would merely tell us something about the feelings and
ideas of the person having the experience. On the second view, it tells us all
this, undoubtedly, but it also tells us much about something which is itself
quite independent of the individual's feelings about mystical reality and the
divine soul in humanity. Whereas the first view denies any truth to mystical
experience, the second one vindicates, even if it qualifies, it. The difference
between the two views is most important. Mystical experience emphatically refers
to something over and above the projection of man's wishes or the draping of
man's opinions. Whatever interpretation he places upon his experience or
whatever imagination he projects upon it, the possibility of such experience is
undeniable.
4
Mysticism is a Step - Not a Goal
Point out that it is the seeking of experiences exclusively, making them central, that I criticize - and not the value of the experience itself. Experience is necessary and important. But the young, devaluing the other components of the quest, are going to extremes in seeking experiences alone. For then, in the end any means will do, so - drugs and sex. These are manifestations of the impatient desire for quick results, results at any cost, results here meaning getting experiences, which has become such a mania today. This impatience affects even foods, where instant processing robs them of nourishment and ruins their flavour.
Whirling, as practised so artistically by the Mevlevi dervishes is another way of losing the everyday consciousness and gaining the mystic experience. It is comparable to the more elementary forms of yoga like mantram-muttering. But its value is as limited as the latter's. It gives no wisdom.
Balance requires all the other quest components; experience is then put in its proper place as their associate. It then becomes healthy, being kept in equilibrium by them. Otherwise there is no discrimination between good experiences and evil ones, no protection against the misleading, the dangerous, or the insane. Cults appearing in the last thirty-six years have emphasized experience and were bemused by the raptures of drugs and sex. Gerald Heard started Trabujo Monastery, which collapsed. D. Goddard tried to start the first Buddhist monastery in Vermont and failed. His friend and near disciple Aldous Huxley wrote on mescaline - all were seeking experience.
In non-mystic circles among the youth and younger adults, the same over-concentration on experience occurred. In this case experience of sex led to an explosion of having sex continuously and promiscuously. If bare walls and a monastic cell appeal to him he may find peace there. If celibate single existence appeals without experience in the world, there too he may find it.
5
"Why do you contradict yourself by advocating
meditation in your earlier books and then criticizing it in The Hidden
Teaching Beyond Yoga?" One answer to this question which I am sometimes
asked is that there is some misunderstanding here. It is not meditation but the
abuse and misuse of it that was criticized. It is a necessary part of the
philosophic quest, but this does not mean that the laws which govern it can be
recklessly ignored by those who think their enthusiasm for it a sufficient
equipment for it. The law of life is rhythm.
6
He may angrily dissent from the truth of my
conclusions but he can hardly contest their value. For they are not formed from
an outside view of both the Orient and mysticism but from an inside one.
7
These categorical statements should put an end to
all doubts about my present position. Nothing would please me better than to
live to witness a world-wide revival in the practice of meditation.
8
I study the various searches for God in the
different religions, the various techniques of contemplation in the Oriental and
European mystical systems, and the various ideas of metaphysics in the ancient
and modern philosophies. It is inevitable, therefore, that in the pupilage in
Comparative Spiritual Culture I should investigate contemporary gurus and their
methods - which can be properly done only by putting myself on their level. But
this quite temporary and quite brief activity does not in any way make me a
follower, disciple, or believer. To put such a label on me would be absolutely
incorrect. Yet in the past this is what unscrupulous gurus, or their assistants,
have actually done. It is very regretful to note a repetition of the practice.
9
I am not prepared to continue as an agent, although
hitherto an unwitting one, for their exploitation of aspiring gullibility.
10
Instead of abandoning and decrying the beatific
experience of yoga, which was my life-long study and which is still my daily
practice, I have actually put it on a firmer because more philosophical pedestal
than before. Only, I have enlarged the common conception of this antique art,
placing it in proper perspective as being a step forward beyond both materialism
and religion but not being, as ordinarily known, the final phase of mankind's
journey. Aside from this revision of grade and the consequent revaluations
arising therefrom, extremely important though they be in themselves, I have
nothing important to retract from previous statements on the subject but only to
supplement them in the light of a forward advance.
11
Nobody who has had sufficient experience of the
world can deny that this is a study which is infested from fringe to core with
cranks, quacks, and charlatans. Thanks to them the whole study has been brought
into disrepute among well-educated people. My effort to present it in a
thoroughly scientific and philosophic manner, to free it from all superstitious
nonsense and pernicious practices, to base it on reason rather than on belief is
in its own best interests; and I claim to serve mysticism more faithfully by
such effort than do those who blindly, stubbornly, and foolishly allow it to rot
and perish.
12
It is because I have too large a conception of
yoga and not as some think, too small a one, that I have written in this
critical strain.
13
It has been hard to speak my whole mind on such
unpleasant matters. If I have made large reservations and say no more despite
their importance it is only from consideration of their unpleasantness. But to
look away and refuse altogether to see these unpleasant features of mysticism,
to pretend that it has no such defects at all, is a silly muddleheaded
procedure. It is wiser to learn all about them and from them.
14
When mysticism becomes a breeding ground for
ridiculous illusions, the time has arrived to protect it against them; when it
lets the mystic become an indifferent spectator of mankind's sufferings, the
time has arrived to modify it.
15
The lack of accurate firsthand knowledge has
brought about a sorry picture of the subject. Charlatans, sceptics,
pseudo-mystics, and imaginative dreamers have together unconsciously conspired
to present mysticism alternately as primitive superstition, occult humbug,
glorified conjuring, and super-religion. Such is the fruit of the hazy
understanding about it which is to be found in most circles today. Real
mysticism is none of these things.
16
The greatest dangers to the aspirant come from the
votaries of a materialism which deceives itself into believing that it is
mysticism when it is merely materialism varnished with mystical paint.
17
The mystic of the past was too often a philistine,
anti-cultural and anti-intellectual. Not content with his bias for asceticism on
the physical level, he carried it to the mental level also.
18
Such a man may seem to outsiders to be nothing
more than a dreaming loafer. And indeed he might be, for many take the name of
mystic who do not know what true mysticism is.
19
It is a great pity that such an excellent
discipline should have fallen, during the course of ages, into disrepute through
having fallen into the hands of those who despised civilized, self-respecting
society and preferred primitive, half-animal existence, who rejected the earning
of an honest livelihood in favour of undignified begging, who exiled the faculty
of intellect in favour of unthinking adherence to absurd superstitions, who did
violence to natural functions of the body by atrocious ascetism and traded on
the gullibility of the masses by pretending to marvellous powers.
20
The puritanical view of life has been mixed up too
often with the religious view. The philosopher is not concerned with that. But
it has equally been mixed up with the mystical view. Here he is concerned,
enough to declare that they do not necessarily go together.
21
The lack of a sense of humour in certain mystics
has exposed them to the charge of being superstitious and credulous. It has
caused the writings of other mystics to be laughed at, their ideas to be
ridiculed. The lack of aesthetic taste in still other mystics has caused them to
offer fanatical opposition to the decoration of rooms with pictures, or to the
playing of musical instruments.
22
His superior development as a mystic does not
thereby endow him with superior development as a man or bestow on him a larger
capacity to make right decisions than that of other men.
23
The history of modern mysticism has indeed become
a history of gradual declension from the fine disinterestedness of teachers like
Emerson and from the firm truths of mystics like Eckhart. I speak here only of
the West, of the Europe and America whose evidences are most readily available
to readers; but I know from study and experience how true this is also of the
Orient.
24
The conventional ethical codes which regulate
human relations are transcended only in the sense that an even higher, more
austere code is now imposed upon him from within. Those would-be
mystical sects which history has recorded not infrequently - ones that claim a
wider moral freedom than others because they claim to be nearer God, and then
proceed to actions which bespeak the gratification of unloosed baser desires -
deceive themselves, betray mysticism, and lead others astray.
25
Pseudo-mysticism tempts the ego in the mind or the
beast in the flesh with its doctrine of man's divinity requiring no control, no
discipline, and no obedience to ascetic rules.
26
The paths of mysticism are waylaid with
destruction for weak minds. The light is too strong for their eyes and they
emerge with egoism strengthened under the cloud of spirituality.
27
In an exhibition of old historical paintings once
seen in Amsterdam, there hung on one wall a portrait of Sabattai Zevi, the wild
dreamer, self-appointed Messiah, and fantastic leader of a cult whose career
along with his own was abruptly ended by disillusionment and disaster. On the
opposite wall there hung a portrait of Baruch Spinoza, philosopher and ethicist,
whose career brought the fruits of wisdom to humanity. There they were, these
two portraits facing each other - the one a type illustrating the defects of an
unbalanced and unphilosophic kind of mysticism; the other a type of spiritual
intuition and rational intellect active in man, yet balancing each other and
benefiting each other.
28
Since men are liable to err, and since even the
best of mystics are still men, we must not be too awed by their attainments to
believe that they could not make such serious mistakes.
29
In ordinary religion and unphilosophic mysticism
everyone is at liberty to build up his own heaven and hell, to create his own
picture of God, and to invent his own method of reaching God, as he wishes. Who
can disprove his statements? Such disproof is utterly impossible. We may
disbelieve them but we cannot disprove them, for they deal with factors beyond
our experience and hence beyond universal verification.
30
Why are so many mystics mediocrities in their
careers and misfits in life generally? Why is so much mystical literature and
history an imaginative projection of wishful thinking and rarely recognizable in
its all-too-human materialization in the flesh? Here is an indication that
something is wrong.
31
The monk who gets too wrapped up in himself and
his moods, too locked up inside other-worldly experiences, too cut off from the
facts and realities of everyday living, and unable to test by them the illusions
and hallucinations which his imagination produces and his meditation confirms
may tread the edge of a precipice over which he may topple into insanity.
32
It was not levity alone which made Oscar Wilde say
that "most modern mysticism seems to me to be simply a method of imparting
useless knowledge in a form no one can understand." It was not irony alone which
made him remark of a book devoted to saintly and ascetic mystics, "It is
thoroughly well-intentioned and eminently suitable for invalids."
33
I was struck by the truth of a criticism in
Jawaharlal Nehru's autobiography. Nehru wrote: "The mystic tries to rid himself
of self and in the process usually becomes obsessed with it." Nehru ought to
know. For he has been surrounded by the society of Indian mystics for half a
lifetime.
34
We appreciate the dangers and obstacles that beset
the medievals but it must be said with regret that many of them belonged to the
"Mysticism Made Difficult" school.
35
This lack of balance shows itself in the
idolization of inertia which, regarded as a regrettable defect by most normal
people, is regarded as a mystical virtue by these supposedly supernormal people!
36
The mystics and yogis would have others toil and
labour to make bread and draw water while they pray and meditate. This
distinction would be all right if they did not make the mistake of asserting
that the kingdom of heaven lay only at the end of their path.
37
The more intelligent and better balanced aspirants
should try to lead the mystical thought of their contacts into higher personal
channels or wider usefulness and away from the charlatans, the recluses and
escapists, the neurotics and hysterics.
38
Those who like the atmosphere of laziness which
hangs over so much mystical thought and writing are welcome to it.
39
The right kind of mystical experience enriches
life; the wrong kind impoverishes it.
40
They can see the truth, but only with one eye at a
time.
41
Because it has been adopted by fanatics, poseurs,
and fools, the contrary fact that it has also been adopted by executives,
geniuses, and highly esteemed persons tends to be ignored and overlooked.
42
Sir Richard Burton who lived long in the Orient
met and studied the Sufis. He came to the conclusion that the extreme
mystic was a near madman. There is some truth in this view.
43
The passage from seeing visions frequently to
being subject to delusions is not a long one, if the person concerned has not
been disciplined in the philosophic manner.
44
There is a foolish mysticism which ignorantly
follows ways that lead to madness. Those ways usually start with feeling as the
essence of the matter and seek the death of reason because it too often refuses
to go along with feeling. "I am God in a body," poor Nijinsky proclaimed; but he
got himself confined in a madhouse as well as a body.
45
If the world has no place for mysticism this is
because mysticism has no place for the world.
46
Mysticism must be saved from the hot embraces of
emotionally diseased neurotics, intellectually unbalanced fanatics, and
credulously naïve simpletons. It will find its best support in those who
appreciate it without losing their mental equilibrium; in those who show in
their own persons that it has nothing to do with hysteria, neuroticism,
credulity, sensation-seeking, and pathological states. Only by avoiding
extravagant claims and uncritical appraisals can it get the attention and
deserve the respect of the intellectual classes.
47
At a time like the present when the world is
passing though a critical phase of wholesale reconstruction, every opponent of
reason and proponent of superstition is rendering a serious disservice to
mankind.(P)
48
Is it not delicately ironical that Shangri-la
should be more and more giving the West a mysticism for which she is finding
less and less use herself? - that she is foisting upon us a solution which is
increasingly failing to solve her own problems?
49
It is not that I complain of the unintellectual
atmosphere of mysticism or the unintellectual attitude of its Eastern and
Western devotees. The fact may be deplored but it ought not be laid as a fault
against those who cannot help it. I complain of their anti-intellectual
atmosphere and attitude.
50
Those mystics who hastily scorn science as being
anti-spiritual and condemn modern civilization as being pro-materialist should
stop to think how much wider service to mankind men like Jesus and Buddha could
have rendered had the radio, the newspaper, the inexpensive book, the cinema,
and the railway train been at their command. Let them consider how, with the
airplane to travel in, Jesus could have brought thousands of disciples in each
European and North African country under his immediate personal influence and
Buddha could have brought hundreds of thousands more throughout Asia under his
own. The inventions of man's ingenuity can be directed to give an upward trend
to his spiritual evolution just as they have been directed to give a downward
trend to it. All life bears this twofold possibility. We do not refuse light
because it also brings shadows. We also should not refuse inventions merely
because they increase the tempo of our existence too quickly.
51
Those who rightly fear fanaticism or charlatanry
will not find one or the other in philosophy. Yet they will not have to go far
to do so - no farther than the religio-mystical fringe which hangs on one side
of it.
52
It is very questionable as to whether a spiritual
renaissance which led us into the wake of fake mystics and pseudo-scientific
occultists would be any better than the following of hidebound religionists
drained of the vitality of truth and reality.
53
It is easy to parade incompetence and inefficiency
as mystical superiority above mere earthly life, and thus deceive both oneself
and others. It is hard to take oneself uncompromisingly in hand and triumph over
these defects of one's very virtues.
54
This kind of mysticism, which stews truth in the
same pot with absurd fantasy, may attract those who seek the dramatic but often
repels those who appreciate the scientific.
55
Many so-called spiritual persons of this modern
era are rightly regarded by society as neurotics, cranks, eccentrics, useless,
or unpractical. They have, however, felt genuine promptings from the Overself;
but because of the lack of proper instruction, or because of the defect of
improper instruction, they have not also felt the need to integrate this
prompting with the rest of their life - or, even if they have felt it, they have
not been shown how to do it simply because their own teachers had not succeeded
in doing it themselves.
56
He may feel the truth for himself but be unable to
explain it adequately to others.
57
Many mystical cults present teachings which
contain some sublime truths but which, because of their incompleteness or their
ignorance of other truths or their wrong attitude towards the body, do not tend
towards balanced living. As a result, when they over-emphasize the particular
feature which most interests them, they become unbalanced. The need today is for
the balanced mystic.
58
The excessive self-centeredness of ascetic
mysticism, its passive enmity to an integral human life, its unworthy praise of
pious indolence, its oyster-like indifference to human interests, and its narrow
disparagement of the married state make it unfit to become a perfect ideal
suited to our own times. What modern intelligence can accept and what modern
heart can approve such an attitude? Asceticism is an important phase but it is
not everything.
59
The smallest understanding of philosophy will show
that, although it holds a mystical core, it is quite different in approach and
atmosphere from those mystical cults which breed superstition and encourage
charlatanism. The understanding enthusiasts and uncritical panegyrists who are
the professed followers of such cults would feel uneasy in the purer and finer
air breathed by the true student of philosophy.
60
The cramped, ascetical, and intolerant virtue of
the ashrams is not enough. Philosophy prefers a more spacious, more generous and
kindlier virtue.
61
If we try to compute the number of those who are
not overawed by the prestige, the success, and the organization of a religion,
sect, cult, or group, and who seek truth with a better measure than these
things, we shall find only a small remnant is left out of all those who profess
an interest in the things of spirit.
62
Those who are making a determined search for truth
fall into a very tiny segment of humanity. Most self-styled seekers are
motivated by half-hidden desires for different kinds of ego satisfaction rather
than the egoless truth.
63
The loftiness of this teaching, is not to be
measured by the trumpery standards of recent so-called spiritual movements.
64
To study and understand these sects, to explain
the inner dynamic which draws people to them, is not necessarily to agree with
their teachings or condone their practices.
65
Let outsiders not blame philosophy for
shortcomings which exist only in untrained and uninstructed followers.
66
Those who have deformed their minds by vehement
fanaticism or befuddled them by dangerous drugs will find the sanctity of
philosophy unattractive.
67
Most organizations tend to give the impression of
cults, which are the very antitheses of our objectives as well as irreconcilable
with the Hidden Teaching.
68
It is regrettable that a subject so interesting -
and formerly such a little-visited byway - should become infested with maniacal
ideas and should attract ill-balanced persons who fall easily into superstition.
The higher levels, where religion moves into mysticism and metaphysics, need a
well-informed, well-poised mind for their proper appreciation.
69
Those who flock to these cults often dislike
philosophy. They rightly fear its threat to their superstitious dreams and
correctly comprehend that it would destroy their egoistic fantasies.
70
How many who have seen the foolishness of these
cults pardonably react against it by rejecting them, but unpardonably reject the
wisdom which is overshadowed by it.
71
Philosophy may not appeal to the weak-minded
followers of such cults, since it would force them to acknowledge their
deficiencies and to set about remedying them.
72
Where is the spiritual movement which has not
deteriorated into a religious sect, with passive followers and unquestioning
members?
73
No sect is important but every sect is
significant. None is particularly influential but all are unquestionably
evidential. For the indication here of a trend toward heterodoxy is quite plain
and its cause quite meaningful.
74
Philosophy accepts part of the tenets of occultism
- the part which its own seers and sages have handed down - and does not deny
them. But it places emphasis on that which rests on a higher level and which is
much more significant. It refuses to allow its students to be involved in the
practices, the bypaths, and the dangers of occultism.
75
The psychical is concerned with
imaginations, visions, voices, thoughts, and feelings which originate beneath
the surface of the ego's mind, whereas the spiritual is concerned with
the higher self. The two are not the same but utterly different in quality and
character. Aspirants often confuse them although the first is still within the
realm of personal things whereas the second is within the impersonal. A still
greater confusion concerns the mediumistic. This is the same as the
psychical but influenced or possessed by what purports to be someone else's ego,
often someone unknown and usually unseen, or even by what purports to be from
the realm of the spiritual itself.
76
Intuition need not be the only manifestation of
this deeper layer of mind. There are indeed other and stranger signs of its
existence, which belong to a classification variously called occult, magical, or
psychic. They include thought-transference and clairvoyance. The history of yoga
has always been associated with stories of such thaumaturgic marvels, and few
advanced yogis fail to manifest these powers at some period or other of their
careers.
Such are some of the extraordinary mental powers which may be unfolded by man, but they are of secondary consequence to the sage. He holds to and values most the remaining constantly fixed within that universal being which transcends all forms and changes.
Nevertheless the average scientist who used to sneer at their existence has since become much more cautious, although a remnant of materialistic scientists still continue to sneer. Such people represent a type of mind which dreads superstition to the point of making its dread a superstition! These supernormal powers of the mind lose much of their mystery when their rationale is understood.
When the entire world itself is mentally constructed - that is, a kind of magical show - why should we be incredulous of the possibility of magical powers? All of us have these powers in vestigial form. Evolution will make them grow anyway, and effort will make them grow more quickly. However surprising to beginners, they are realizable facts to an adept.
Telepathy is perhaps the first, simplest, and most easily explicable of these powers.
77
What they seldom see is that spiritual
illumination and psychical error can and do exist in the same mind at the same
time.(P)
78
All occult and psychic powers are extensions
either of man's human capacity or of his animal senses. They are still
semi-materialistic, because connected with his ego or his body. All truly
spiritual powers are on a far higher and quite different plane. They belong to
his divine self.(P)
79
A witch's brew of mystery, compounded of ancient
sorceries and modern pseudo-sciences, philosophic smatterings and monstrous
claims, lies and deception - that, stripped of all its high-sounding verbiage,
is a fair description of occultism.
80
It is an error, and one commonly made, to confound
occult phenomena with spiritual experience. It is true that, at certain times or
in certain phases of the inner life, the two may accompany one another. But they
do not do so on equal levels. Spiritual experience certifies itself but psychic
experience proves little because it is always open to doubt. A philosopher may
be and often is a psychic, but few psychics are ever philosophers. We do not
need to be purified to witness occult phenomena, and therein lies their danger.
81
Much incorrect knowledge is today offered the
seeker intent on an understanding of the psychic and spiritual laws of the
universe.
82
Confronted by the discoveries of science, the
inventions of technology, the marvels of Nature, and the mystery of mind, one
would be foolish to assert what is possible and what is not possible.
83
A man who works in a scientific laboratory can
provide proofs for his discoveries which any other scientist in any part of the
world can test and confirm. But a mystic, a seer, or a prophet who communicates
a revelation of what he has learned by intuition, vision, or meditation can
provide no such proofs. His audience is compelled to take his words with little
direct or immediate means of testing their worth.
84
The finished product of a carpenter's work can be
tried in use and tested by examination. His chairs can be sat upon, his table
legs measured, and faults or inaccuracies will soon reveal themselves. But how
are the mystic's intuitions, inspirations, visions, and teachings to be
appraised, measured, tested with complete certainty? How much in them can be
fully trusted, how much suspected as being the undivine part? The
metaphysician's concepts and the religionist's beliefs come into the same
category; they cannot at once be checked for faults, tried by results, or
measured for accuracy, whereas the craftsman's productions can. Religion,
mysticism, and metaphysics cannot immediately offer their proofs, if at all.
85
There are certain unusual occurrences which are
often a source of astonishment to those involved in them, as well as to others
learning about them. The powers to bring these into being are much sought after
in some circles and are generally termed "occult powers."
86
Occultism is concerned with the unseen working of
nature, and with phenomena, forms, messages of the nonphysical side of the ego's
being, including visions and voices experienced inwardly. It is on a lower level
than pure Spirit, not dealing with the body and not dealing with spirit, but
somewhere in between. It's easy to be led astray by it, since it is close to
fantasy and imagination. Try to avoid seeking it, but if it comes by itself try
to judge it critically and understand it. On the highest level there are no
occult phenomena which keep you in your ego.
87
Today Mechanics rules where once Magic held its
sway. We do not dream that there is room in life for both.
88
As much nonsense has been written about the mystic
and the occult as about politics, or any other subject where appearances do not
coincide with realities.
89
We were not born to perform magical stunts, nor
were we born to be able to remember past lives or to foretell the future. We
were born for one thing only and that is to discover what we really are in our
deepest, innermost being, not just the crest of it.
90
Philosophy rejects such psychic, occult,
mediumistic, or trance experiences when imagination runs unbraked into them, or
emotion heaves hysterically in them. It is then time to stop the dangerous
tendency by applying a firm will and cold reason. Philosophy welcomes only a
single mystic experience - that of the Void (Nirvikalpa Samadhi), where
every separate form and individual consciousness vanishes, whereas all other
mystic experiences retain them. This is the difference.(P)
91
The spiritualists, the occultists, and the psychic
groups are far from the purest thought, for they are still preoccupied with the
ego and with a subtle materialism which substitutes a subtler body for the
material one but is just as illusory. However, they are steps on the way for
spiritual children - stages to be passed through and outgrown.
92
Philosophy has no use for empty fancies, no time
for mere self-deceptions. Therefore it refuses to dally in this illusory region
which the inward-moving mind must cross through until it reaches solid ground.
It will not give itself to psychism, occultism, or spiritism.
93
How simple is the path itself, how complex is the
pseudo-path offered by occultism and exaggerated asceticism. "All that God asks
of them," writes Thomas Merton, "is to be quiet and keep themselves at peace,
attentive to the secret work that He is beginning in their souls."(P)
94
You must learn to discriminate between what is
psychic and what is spiritual. You will tend to lose power if you yield to that
popular hankering after psychic and occult experiences. It is fascinating to
have psychic claims, sensational experiences. Keep them in their place, however,
which is second and subordinate. They have nothing to do with the Quest, which
is to lead you above the realm of mind into spirit. Mind goes down deep into the
subconscious and the Overmind; there psychic and occult experiences take place -
not in the normal mind, certainly, but in the region of the planetary mind, the
Overmind. Occult experiences will not give you any more peace, or reality. Do
you want these? Then do not over-emphasize your occult experiences. Just observe
them, but attach little importance to them. The important thing is to arrive at
that state of being which never changes, which is eternal, which is God.
95
The mystic is on a loftier plane than the
occultist and psychic. The various systems of occultism, theosophy, and psychism
are all objective to the true Self of man, and hence distract him from the
straight and narrow path. Yet they are useful and necessary for those egoistic
and over-intellectualized natures who cannot aspire to the rarefied reaches of
the real Truth. Everything - including the fascinating systems of knowledge and
practice that comprise ancient and modern occult teachings - which distracts man
from becoming the truly spiritual, distracts him from the real path. Only when
all objective things and thoughts have disappeared into the subject, the self or
the seer, can man achieve his highest purpose. All other activities simply cause
him to stray from the highest truth. So I have abandoned the study and practice
of occultism. I have given it up unwillingly, for the power it promises is not
to be despised. Yet I recognize that my past is strewn with errors and mistakes.
I imagined that a great personal experience of the psychic and mysterious side
of Nature would bring me nearer Truth. As a fact, it has taken me farther from
it. Once I enjoyed frequent glimpses of a great bliss and intense state of
samadhi; then I was unfortunate enough to come into contact with
theosophists and others of that ilk who subtly supplanted my real inward
happiness with intellectual systems and theories upon which I was thenceforward
to ponder. Alas! I was too young and too green to know what was happening. The
bliss went before long; the samadhis stopped, and I was cast upon the
shore of the Finite, an unhappy and problem-puzzled bit of human wreckage! No
promise of wonderful initiations at some future time will lure me to trust my
life into the care of a so-called guru who is either unable to or unwilling to
give me a glimpse of the God-consciousness he claims to possess. I am not
inclined to follow a trail which may land me somewhere out in the middle of the
desert, bereft of reason, hope, and fortune.(P)
96
At its best, psychism leads us into human fancies
about the holy; at its worst, to the very lair of the devilish. The spiritual
alone, in its true sense, can lead us into the veritably holy.
97
The essence of the matter is that the higher
ultramystic experiences are not concerned with personal clairvoyant visions or
clairaudient voices but with the raising of consciousness to an impersonal
transcendent state wherein none of the relative phenomena of a space-time world
can enter.
98
The quest is not jugglery. The most breath-taking
feat of the conjurer will not prove the least insignificant of spiritual truths.
99
People spend half their lives in darkened rooms
trying to establish communication with the "spirits," with dubious and debatable
results, when one-tenth of the time devoted to trying to establish communication
with their OWN divine spirit would bring indubitable and delightful results.
100
There are countless thousands who, weak in faith
and lacking in intuition, must perforce seek amid external things for proof of
the soul. Spiritualism claims to give this proof. There are, of course, those
who believe that the spiritualists have misinterpreted their experiences.
101
The seventh chapter of The Wisdom of the
Overself contains some material which generally answers the questions of
life after death. It is quite true that spiritualism has served the useful
purpose of proving the existence of an afterlife. Nevertheless it is a dangerous
matter to experiment with practically. It is far safer to limit investigation to
a study of its literature. More specifically: (1) The quest of psychic
experiences is definitely a stumbling block on the true path during the earlier
stages. They are almost sure to lead the novice astray, may cause him to waste
valuable years, and will sometimes harm him in various ways. Most attempts to
establish contact with the astral world will either end in failure and deception
or psychic injury. (2) Astral projection is neither wrong nor right but it
should not be sought for its own sake. It develops naturally of itself to one
who is highly advanced on the truly spiritual quest. But if novices prematurely
seek it they are likely to harm themselves. In the end it will be found that
spiritualism is only a stepping-stone to the higher mystical philosophy. It is
of use as a halfway house for many Westerners, but one should not tarry here too
long. The higher and lower teachings are like oil and water. They cannot be
mixed together and one day you will have to make your choice between them if you
wish to progress and not to remain stagnating.
102
These occult authors catalogue such a formidable
list of necessary qualifications that it is likely to deter most people rather
than attract them. One wonders whether the writers have succeeded in fulfilling
their own standards. It is good however to remember that there are ways not so
steep as theirs, that there are easier paths in existence in other lands than
that of occultism. Genuine mysticism, true religion, or right philosophy: any of
these can conduct one to the goal with less trouble and less danger than
occultism.
103
There is a problem of mental unbalance and
partial insanity in the modern world. Philosophy offers help, as it aims at
securing complete sanity whereas most other guides cater to unbalance.
104
There is something which might be called the
higher spiritualism which is on a higher level altogether than ordinary
spiritualism. This has been found by an exhaustive study, both practical and
theoretical. The higher spiritualism stands midway between the lower kind and
mysticism proper. By mysticism is meant the endeavour to become possessed, not
by any disembodied human entity, but by the divine Spirit, be it named God,
Soul, Christ, Allah, Atman, or some other name which has been given to that
which man knows to be the Divine. In the group of those who belong to this
higher spiritualism can be included such men as Stainton Moses, who edited
Light, the leading spiritualist journal in London, and Andrew Jackson
Davis, the famous American clairvoyant. Their writings were admirable and much
in Life and Its Manifestations is reminiscent of them in tone, idea, and
atmosphere.
105
Occult or spiritistic practices which have
served their purpose in convincing their student that materialism is false,
should be abandoned if he wishes to make the best use of his limited period on
earth. When such a point has been reached, he should turn his thoughts in the
direction of seeking the Overself alone, or his life-period will be wasted.
106
If philosophy denies the authenticity of many
occult, psychical, and religio-mystical experiences, it does not have to deny
that they did occur. That need not be in dispute. But the danger of taking fancy
for reality and a way-station for the terminus is very easy to fall into and
must be pointed out. "Beware them who perceive the deep reality," warned the
Buddha in a statement which recalls for us the warning of Jesus about the
straightness of the way to truth and that "Few there be that find it." The
prudent seeker will be on his guard not to succumb to the temptation of dallying
in ego-flattering thrills.
107
Why should we surrender the simple clarity of
true self-knowledge for the involved obscurity of occultism?
108
Philosophic spiritualism does not go far enough.
Inspiration derived from any individual, disembodied and angelic though he might
be, is not as fine as inspiration derived from the unindividuated Soul, which
the best mystics seek. It is a step in the right direction, though.
109
It is as necessary to avoid pitfalls of
superstition on one side as those of psychism on the other.
110
Everything that stimulates us to follow the
quest is worth encouraging if its demerits be not too large; but everything
which paralyses this aspiration is rendering a disservice to humanity.
111
The occult, and indeed all extraordinary
happenings, attracts a far larger amount of interest than the mystical. For here
the physical senses come into play and find satisfaction whereas in the mystical
only the intuitive and the emotional faculties are engaged.
112
The majority are seekers after occultism. They
thirst for powers that will give them an advantage over others. They seek to
inflate their egos whereas the true disciples seek to flatten it.
113
Excessive addiction to supernormal mystic
experiences or bizarre occult titillations leads to wrong views and draws the
seeker to a wrong goal. The dignity of quiet philosophical study often appears
to prove too frigid for those who revel in superstition and who seek the gaudy
caricatures of truth rather than the austere truth itself.
114
Many people yearn to escape from the world of
the flesh; many seek for psychic worlds full of magical half-shadows; many minds
are turning into the narrow lanes of thought and wide roads of study indicated
by the signposts of occultism and its kindred.
115
Many are called on the spiritual telephone
exchange of life, but few get a clear connection!
116
Psychical derangements are common enough to keep
the specialists busy. Mentally upset persons crop up everywhere, even on
airplanes. We have seen insanity appear in high places and collect many
followers. If anything can give sanity, it is the calm and balance of
philosophy. But unless it is hidden behind magic and occultism, those who need
it most are least attracted to it and least fit for it.
117
It is not a path suited to neurotic, weak,
mentally odd, and emotionally sick persons. Such people are often attracted to
mystical movements and ideas but they shrink from philosophic truth and
discipline.
118
History shows that where people have had the
opportunity to imbibe the highest truth, they still preferred occult
sensationalism to it.
119
All this interest in and pursuit of occultism is
merely an enlargement of the ego's ordinary sphere. Why should a teacher of
philosophy cater to that?
120
How many persons have imprisoned themselves in
their own mental creations or auto-hypnotic fabrications at the very moment when
they had the chance to experience the Spirit in all its purity! This could not
have happened had they been prepared in character and purified in intellect by
philosophy. Without this safeguard, the ego intervenes and corrupts the truth
and keeps as much of its illusions as it can hold onto under that dazzling
light.
121
Philosophy is not for the thrill-seekers - there
are cults and groups, "isms" and practices which will better excite and satisfy
them. Even on a higher level, the mystic's, there is still a search, a longing,
for "experiences." In most cases such experiences are desired as escapes from
the ego's tensions and burdens, its insignificance or environment.