1
To describe the wonders and benefits, the delights
and beauties of these glimpses will whet the appetite of people without
satisfying it. Hence they will then be led to ask how such a glimpse is to be
obtained.
2
Many glimpses have come suddenly and spontaneously
to those who never followed any particular technique intended to bring them on.
Nevertheless, it is undoubtedly true that as many if not more glimpses have come
to those who follow some technique chosen from the variety which have been
transmitted from traditional sources or supplied by authentic contemporary ones.
3
The principle which makes union with the Overself
possible is always the same, albeit on different levels. Whether it appears as
humility in prayer, passivity to intuition, stillness in meditation, or serenity
despite untoward circumstances, these attitudes temporarily weaken the ego and
lessen its domination. They temporarily silence the ego and give the Overself
the opportunity to touch us or work through us. So long as the ego dominates us,
we are outside the reach of the Overself and separated from its help.
4
The notion that it is first necessary to become a
monk or to live like a saint before one can hope to acquire this knowledge is
erroneous. One must find the inner self, and this of itself will purify us,
subdue passions, and tame selfishness. When the magic touch of the Overself
falls upon us, our long-held foolishness withers away, and our tightly clutched
vices die off and disappear.
5
That which is aware of the world is not the world.
That which is aware of the ego is not the ego. When this awareness is isolated,
the man "experiences" the Overself.
6
If he will try to perceive the mind by which he
perceives the world, he will be practising the shortest, most direct technique
of discovering the Overself. This is what Ramana Maharshi meant when he taught,
"Trace the 'I' to its source."
7
All that a man knows and experiences is a series of
thoughts. There is only one exception and that, in most cases, remains usually
as an unrealized possibility. It is when he discovers his being. Here
thinking is not active, would in fact prevent the discovery if not reined in at
the proper point. Here, in this private paradise, knowing and experiencing are
one.
8
He should send out experimental feelers in his
mental-emotional world until he recognizes an element that seems different from
all the others - subtler, grander, nobler, and more divine than all the others.
Then, catching firm hold of it, he should try to trace its course back to its
source.
The point where the personal ego establishes contact with the Overself is reached and passed only through a momentary lapse of consciousness. But this lapse is so brief - a mere fraction of a second - that it may be unnoticed.
A presence enters his consciousness and comes over him, a benign feeling to which he is glad to surrender himself, a mysterious solvent of his egotism and desires.
9
The value of letting oneself pass this point can
hardly be overestimated, even though it be done only during the limited sessions
of meditation or the casual periods of unexpected visitations. For from them
peace, wisdom, sanity can be emanated. At this point there is the mysterious
division between human normal meditation and divine contemplation, between
discursive thinking and its dissolution as the divine self takes over, between
mental concentration and release into still, timeless being, between imagery and
pure Consciousness.
10
Koestler got his glimpse by working out Euclid's
geometrical proof of the infinitude of the number of primes. That he was able to
learn of the reality of the Infinite by a purely mathematical and precise
method, without becoming a vague emotional mystic, so satisfied his highly
intellectual and scientific nature that, in his own words, an "aesthetic
enchantment" fell upon him. This developed until he became one with Peace never
before known. The experience passed away, as it usually does, but it remained to
haunt his memory. It inspired his journey to India and Japan several years
later, where he spent a year trying to meet holy men and yoga experts. These
meetings did not bring him what he sought, but his faith in the authenticity of
that earlier glimpse never left him. He knew what few mystics know, that he did
not need to violate the integrity of Reason, nor become lost in generally hazy
gushy feelings, to know Infinity, which is the truth of Reality.
11
Those who seek this mystic communion with the
Overself, this sublime glimpse of its hidden face, must make the Quest their
chosen path.
12
If you have enough confidence to trust in the
teaching, and to move in the direction toward which it guides you, sooner or
later the future will be lighted by these small fugitive glimpses.
13
What, it has been asked, if I get no glimpses?
What can I do to break this barren, monotonous, dreary, and sterile spiritual
desert of my existence? The answer is if you cannot meditate successfully go to
nature, where she is quiet or beautiful; go to art where it is majestic,
exalting; go to hear some great soul speak, whether in private talk or public
address; go to literature, find a great inspired book written by someone who has
had the glimpses.
14
The fact that we know our bodies is a guarantee
that we can know our souls. For the knowing principle in us is derived from the
soul itself. We have only to search our own minds deeply enough and ardently
enough to discover it.(P)
15
When you begin to seek the Knower, who is within
you, and to sever yourself from the seen, which is both without and within you,
you begin to pass from illusion to reality.(P)
16
The mind's chief distinguishing power is to
know - whether the object known is the world around or the ideas within.
When this is turned in still deeper upon itself, subject and object are one, the
thought-making activity comes to rest, and the "I" mystery is solved. Man
discovers his real self, or being - his soul.(P)
17
Without learning, studying, or practising yoga,
Heisenberg, famed nuclear physicist, formulator of the Law of Indeterminacy,
unwittingly entered what is a high goal to yogis, Nirvikalpa Samadhi. This
happened at times at the end of the deepest abstract thinking about his subject.
Thoughts themselves ceased to be active. He found himself in the Stillness of
the Void. He knew then, and knows today, his spiritual being.(P)
18
Hugh Shearman: "There is no self. But, when told
this, we still remain ourselves; and the utterance of this truth is again only a
thought-form in a world of other thought-forms. What, then, is to be done? There
can be no ending of karma by karma, no ceasing of thought-forms by creating
counteracting thought-forms. The only effective thing is to come
self-consciously awake at the point within ourselves at which thought itself is
set in motion, to discover in ourselves the thought-producer, to find the
fundamental answer to 'Who Am I?' "
19
It cannot come to those who live on the surface of
things, for merely to discover and recognize its existence requires the deepest
attentiveness and the strongest love. All the human forces must unite and look
for this divine event.
20
The affirmations of the true self made by some
creeds are contributions as useful as the denials of the false self made by
other creeds. Both are on the same plane, the intellectual plane, and therefore
both have only a limited usefulness as one-sided contributions only. They do not
solve the problem of eliminating that false self or of uniting with the true
self. Only the Quest in all its integral many-sided nature can do that. It uses
every function of the psyche in the effort to change the pattern of the mind -
not the imagination alone, nor the intellect alone, nor the intuition alone, nor
the will alone, nor the emotions alone, but all of them combined.
21
If he has freed himself from the ego's domination,
he is entitled to receive the Overself's benedictory influx.
22
His contemplation of the Divine has to become so
absorbing as to end in self-forgetfulness.
23
A woman gazing at her child with continued joy may
unwittingly lead herself to the glimpse.
24
While most glimpses come naturally and
unexpectedly, it is possible to develop the experience systematically by the
technique of meditation.
25
Later I intellectually pulled my own inner
experiences to pieces to show them to others in the hope that it would help them
either obtain or understand such experiences for themselves - and to do this in
a scientific way by cultivating a habit of precise observation which rigorously
sought to exclude personal prepossession and imaginative intrusion.
26
If the glimpse is not to remain an isolated event,
he must try to put less of his mind on himself and more on the Overself, less
into emotional reactions to it and more into pure contemplation of it.
27
It may come upon you without warning at any time
and in any place. But it is more likely to come if you provide conditions which
are proper and propitious for it.
28
Once a man has had this sacred experience he will
naturally want to provoke it again. But how? He will find meditation to be part
of the answer.
29
If he is tempted by these sudden glimpses to
enquire whether there is a method or technique whereby they may be repeated at
will, he will find that there is and that it is called meditation. If he wishes
to go farther and enquire whether his whole life could continuously enjoy them
all the time, the answer is that it could and that to bring it about he needs to
follow a way of life called The Quest.(P)
30
It is a useful exercise, to bring the experience
back to mental sight and emotional presence, to evoke the glimpse as vividly as
he can.
31
The Glimpse is to be recalled frequently and
enjoyed reminiscently. Let it help him in this way to dedicate the day to
greater obedience of intuitive urge. Let it bring forth afresh that love of and
aspiration toward the Overself which are necessary prerequisites to a stable
experience of it.
32
If few attain the wonder of Overself
consciousness, it is because few can lift their minds to the level of
impersonality and anonymity. But what all cannot do with their minds, they can
do much more easily with their hearts. Let them approach enveloped in love, and
the grace will come forward to meet them. By its power, the ego which they could
not bring themselves to renounce will be forgotten.
33
These glimpses will last longer and come more
easily, hence more often, if the mind and the feelings are properly balanced,
and if, at the same time, the body is purified, its organs co-operated with, and
its forces regenerated.
34
When the glimpse happens, a man comes out of
himself. It may follow his admiration of a beautiful scene in Nature or his
appreciation of a beautiful poem or his simple relaxed mood, but in each case he
lets go of his taut self-consciousness. This allows the entry of grace.
35
He will be blessed with such glimpses if he works
intensively on himself according to the prescriptions of philosophy.
36
I have given, in The Wisdom of the
Overself, an exercise for recapturing the Glimpse by reproducing it
imaginatively with all effects and details associated with its appearance. It
may be added now that not only should the mental and emotional features be
reproduced but also the physical. Whatever he can remember of the condition of
the muscles, limbs, mouth, eyes, and spine should be faithfully copied.
37
Peering down into those mysterious depths of the
"I" which are far deeper than its human and bestial layers, he will come to a
region where personality becomes essence. The psychoanalyst cannot reach it by
his intellectual and hypnotic methods, but the mystic, by his intuitive and
contemplative ones, can.
38
The Soul has its chance to have its voice heard
also when the conscious self is too fatigued by the troubles of life to offer
resistance.
39
If he understands that the origin of these
mystical moments is his own best self, he will understand too that the shortest
and quickest way to recapture them is to go directly to that self, while the
surest way to keep their happiness for life is to keep constantly aware of that
self.
40
Only when the heart has been utterly emptied of
all its ties can the divine presence come into it. If you can empty it only for
a few moments, do not lament in despair when the visit of the presence comes to
an end after a few moments.
41
Sometimes he is lifted up by the beauty of
Nature's forms or man's arts, sometimes by the discipline of moral experience or
religious worship, sometimes by the personal impact of a great soul.
42
Some people have even felt this calmness, which
precedes and follows a glimpse, in a warm-water bath; while enjoying or
luxuriating in its comfort, they have half-given themselves up to a half-drowsy
half-emptiness of mind. Some Japanese are able to pass from this calmness to the
deeper stage, or state, of the glimpse itself.
43
If he understands the process whereby he arrived
at illumination, he will know how to recover it if and when it fades away. But
if he arrived at it by an unconscious process, then when he loses it he will not
know how to help himself.
44
Is it possible, if the Divine is formless,
motionless, voiceless, and matterless, to recognize It when the quest brings us
to a glimpse of It? The answer is Yes! but either intuition well-developed or
intelligence well-instructed is needed: otherwise it happens by faith.
45
Whether it be a mountain scene or a peaceful
meadow, a distinguished poem or an impressive opera, the particular source of an
unaccustomed exaltation is not the most important thing. Such a visitation can
also have its origin in no outside source but within oneself.
46
It should be remembered that whatever kind of
meditation is adopted, the glimpse which comes from it comes because we have
provided the right condition for its appearance, not because our own doing makes
the glimpse appear. For it comes from the realm of timelessness with which we
come into some sort of harmony through the intuitive nature. What we do is in
the realm of time, and it can only produce effects of a like nature.
47
In contacting the Overself, he does not really
sense a bigger "I." He senses SOMETHING which is. This is first achieved
by forgetting the ego, the personality, the "I." But at a later stage, there is
nothing to forget for then he finds that the ego, the personality, and the "I"
are of the same stuff as this SOMETHING.
48
All thinking keeps one's awareness out of the
Overself. That is why even thinking about the Overself merely produces another
thought. Only in the case of the sage, who has established himself in the
Overself, is thinking no barrier at all. In this case, thinking may coexist with
the larger awareness. So it is not enough to be a good thinker; one also has to
learn how to be a good non-thinker. Of course, the way to do this is through the
practice of meditation.
49
Tantrik Kashmir - How a glimpse may come: (1)
Between two breaths, as then the small self vanishes, the universal pause taking
over. (2) Imagine the divine Self's light moving up spine. (3) Mind's attention
between eyebrows, without thoughts. (4) Let external beauty melt within you or
let any point in space or on a wall dissolve. (5) When everything external
dissolves into you, then your wish for another comes true. (6) Meditate with
face covered by hands, or with fingers touching eyeballs very lightly. (7)
Concentrate continuously on the sound of waterfall, or similar sounds. (8)
Intone A-U-M slowly and move with the sound into harmony of
soundlessness. (9) Bring mindstuff below in your heart. (10) Consider your form
as space. (11) Saturate body with cosmic being. (12) Bring senses into heart.
(13) Never mind thoughts, keep in the centre. (14) In worldly activity, keep
attentive between breaths. (15) Concentrate on withdrawing into heart
when going to sleep and thus direct dreams. (16) See all things converging into
your being. (17) When eating or drinking, become the taste of the food, or
become the eating. (18) Abide in a place endlessly spacious, clear of
habitations and hills, then undo mind's pressures. (19) Whatever kind of
satisfaction is enjoyed, actualize this ever-living presence. (20) Just before
falling into sleep, being is revealed. (21) See as if for first time a beautiful
person or an object. (22) Let yourself swing in slowing invisible circles and
thus experience. (23) Close eyes, find blackness. Open eyes, see blackness. So
faults disappear. (24) Just as you have impulse to do something, stop. (25) When
some desire comes, consider it, then suddenly quit it. (26) Realize; feel your
form as made of consciousness. (27) When exhausted physically, drop to the
ground, be whole. (28) Both enlightened and unenlightened persons perceive
objects, but former remain in subjective mood, not lost in thing. (29) When
hearing ultimate teaching imparted, keep eyes still, unblinking, thus become
free. (30) Contract rectum, withdraw inwards. (31) Nothing else exists than this
consciousness. (32) Enter space, supportless, eternal, still. 33. This
consciousness is the guru, be this one.
50
It is not by any kind of privilege that anyone
obtains the glimpse but by preparation and equilibration, with some amount of
purification. To equilibrate is to calm feelings as and when necessary and
render them deeper, exquisitely delicate.
51
To suppose that you are going to be wafted into
this lofty awareness of the Overself without having to work very hard and very
long for it, is to be a simpleton.
52
The glimpse comes and the glimpse goes, suddenly
or slowly, and this coming and this going are independent of his will. This does
not, however, mean that he is totally helpless in the matter. Instruction or
experience or both can teach him what those conditions are which assist the
onset of the glimpse and those which obstruct it.
53
In The Spiritual Crisis of Man, a chapter
was devoted to the topic of glimpses. It was also touched on briefly in earlier
books although not under that name, but when dealing with meditation. I tried to
tell what could be done to get more out of a glimpse and mentioned recapturing
the memory of it as part of an exercise. It ought to be added that the best time
to do such an exercise is before falling asleep at night and on waking up in the
morning. It is then easier to recapture such a memory.
54
If we want to hear the voice of the Overself, we
have to create a quiet all around us and all within us and we have to listen and
go on listening with patience.
55
To enjoy a glimpse it is better to be alone,
undisturbed, and undistracted, better to be with nature than with people, better
to be among the woods and lakes and mountains than in the offices, the drawing
rooms, and the factories of society.
56
Some, like the poet Keats, find Truth through
beauty while others, like the poet Dante, find it through suffering.
57
That is a valuable meditation which, whether at
odd moments or for fixed periods, returns again and again to dwell on the nature
of the Overself and disregards all lesser topics. Such frequent remembrances and
such fixed meditations become indeed a kind of communion and are usually
rewarded sooner or later by a glimpse.
58
The contemplation in memory of those glimpses will
help him to weaken the power of negative thoughts and to weaken, however
slightly, the very source of those thoughts, the ego.
59
The Lightning-flash may occur either after reason
reaches the peak of its performance and has been exhausted, or by deliberately
abandoning intellectual activity for the utmost faith and devotion. In both
cases, one has to let go and sink back into the Nothing and stop further efforts
on one's own. Sometimes, by destiny, the Lightning-flash can occur unexpectedly
when no effort is made.
60
If he can come to this belief in the reality of
his own higher self, he can come into all the knowledge he needs, all the help
he needs, by heeding its guidance (felt intuitively) and by applying its
injunctions to his daily life.
61
If the ego would be willing to abdicate its rule
for a short period, the way to a glimpse would be opened.
62
The paradox is perfect: when he is most empty of
petty ends, the shining glimpse reveals itself.
63
He must look ardently forward to, and eagerly
await, each time when the Overself takes over more and more.
64
Ever drawing us toward Itself, Its power to
attract blocked by the layers of thoughts, emotions, desires, and passions which
compose the personal self, much time and many lives are needed to unblock a
passage to It.
65
Follow the self's track within, not slipping down
into its muddy bogs but ascending up to its diviner sources.
66
Is it possible to recapture these wonderful
sensations? Long intervals of aridity may inspire a negative answer to this
question, but adequate knowledge of the laws at work and the mental processes
involved inspires a positive one.
67
Know Consciousness without its objects - and you
are free!
68
If he is willing to take the training of his mind
seriously in hand he can, either during or at the end of his course, live again
in such experiences.
69
In that condition of passive emotions and
paralysed thoughts, consciousness can receive That which otherwise it shuts out.
70
When he retreats to his centre, he has retreated
to the point where the Glimpse of truth may be had.
71
An event, a book or a person, a piece of music or
a piece of landscape may bring the mind to brief spiritual consciousness.
72
The evanescence of all these glimpses is saddening
to most of us, but the causes once understood, the remedy is at hand.
73
It is harder to find amid the din of city streets,
and when found, easier to lose in the press of thronging crowds.
74
Believe in the higher Self and look up to it.
75
Sometimes one word may flash a light into his mind
which goes far and wide. At other times a short phrase may do the same work for
him.
76
He realizes that he has had an important
experience which will be followed at intervals by others, when he stands on the
fringe of cosmic consciousness. Through proper metaphysical study, meditation
practice, and philosophic action, it will not be difficult for him to come into
the awareness of his own Overself to some extent, although it is difficult to
acquire full consciousness in the present age, when the opposition of a
materialistic society is so strong and intense. However, even to enjoy a
fraction of this wider consciousness is to transform his life in every way.
77
Look back in imagination upon those wonderful
glimpses and try to recapture the feeling they produced.
78
Just as the lotus flower opens its buds bit by
bit, so should he open his mind to this great truth.
79
In becoming conscious of the not-thinking
hinterground of my personality, I attain true being.
80
What peace fills the mind when its thinking
faculty is put out of gear in the proper way! What ever-remembered moments of
illumination this happening may produce!
81
Everywhere in the Orient as well as the Occident,
men and women seek for this glimpse but most of their attempts to gain it are
unavailing ones. The explanations usually offered them for this frustrating
result fall into four categories. First, they need to look harder into
themselves and persevere longer at the practices. Second, they need to get God's
grace. Third, they need to get a Master's grace. Fourth, their destiny was
unfavourable in this matter or, if favourable, was due to maturate at a later
time. All these explanations seem to have some truth in them, but which aspirant
knows with any certainty which one of them - or which two in combination - apply
to his or her own particular case? It seemed to me that, as with every other
major event in human life obeying some law of nature, some process operated by
infinite intelligence, there must be an invisible pattern behind these mystical
happenings too. And when the truths of the higher philosophy were unveiled to
me, I found that this was indeed so.
82
These revealings of inner life, which put its
truths before the mind so vividly, seem to come by chance to some, by working
for them to others. Faith in a divinely-ordered universe tells us, and
philosophy confirms, that we may be sure that they follow certain laws even when
we know nothing about those laws.
83
The glimpse is as much subject to grace as the
Enlightenment which endures forever. It happens outside the man's own will,
although inside his consciousness.
84
Such a glimpse represents a bestowal of Grace.
This is why it comes unsought and unworked for, and why some who inwardly work
hard fail to experience the Glimpse.
85
One can no more make the Glimpse come by
personal endeavours than he can make himself fall in love.
86
The gifted - rather than achieved - nature of the
glimpse is much more frequent and may be seen from its unexpected manifestation
at unforeseen times.
87
The glimpse does not necessarily have to come to
you during meditation, even though the work in meditation helps to bring about
its occurrence. It may come at any time.(P)
88
Many Yogis are made but some are also born.
Destiny transcends all training and often it needs but a mere touch of an
illuminate's finger to release the pent-up stores of secret power within a soul.
89
These glimpses come on rare occasions, for the
mind's tumult is hard to still - only the Overself's Grace can do so.
90
The glimpse is a blessing which is given to those
who have earned it, or those who have sought it in the right spirit.
91
These illuminative glimpses do not come at will or
at once. They do not come once for all or when it pleases us. They come and go
like the wind and when it pleases them. For they come by Grace.
92
The belief that mystical illumination is solely
luck or accident or destiny must be refuted.
93
That a man must work his way into this experience
is one view. That a higher power must induce it in him is another.
94
Such a mystical experience is not an after-effect
of illness but the latter is used by the Overself to open the way for its
reception in the conscious mentality. It is an uncommon experience, a visitation
of the Overself, and a manifestation of its grace. Why it occurs could only be
explained in terms of the theory of reincarnation.
95
There will be a precise moment when he
knows with a certitude totally and unequivocally unwavering, but until
then it will more likely be unplanned, uncertain explorations. This may surprise
some persons but it is still true that "the wind bloweth where it listeth. Of
such is the kingdom of heaven." Or, going still farther East, in Hindu terms,
"The Spirit enlightens whom it chooseth." Of course the human element of seeking
and trying must be there, but in the end it is the divine element which wins
out.
96
Out of visible light which rapidly increased in
intensity and drew nearer, the face and form of Jesus appeared in this twentieth
century of ours to two mystics, Sundar Singh in India and Martinus in Denmark.
They saw him plainly, heard him speak clearly. In both cases they were already
familiar with his name and story. Out of a not very dissimilar light, Jesus
appeared to Saul on the Damascus Road. He too was familiar with them. A part of
the source of these visions is to be traced back to the suggestive power of the
thought-form already implanted in the mind; but the other part, the sudden and
dramatic and total change of heart and shift of outlook, has still to be
accounted for. What is the secret? It is contact with the Overself, Grace.
97
The divine moment happens. It is the gift of
grace. Its arrival is unbidden. Yet the previous longing and working for it have
not been futile.
98
The significant flash of insight may come at any
moment, the sacred presence of the Overself may be felt when it is not being
sought, and the noble peace of reality may even visit one who has never
practised any technique at all. For as the New Testament has warned him, "The
wind bloweth where it listeth," and as the Katha Upanishad has informed
him, "Whomsoever the Divine chooses, by him alone is It reached."
99
The Glimpse is sometimes given to him and
sometimes created by him. Sometimes the connection between his effort and its
appearance may not be visible and yet it may be there.
100
"O Nachiketas, only by the Divine lovingly
possessing thee can this transcendental knowledge be got" is an ancient
Upanishadic statement of this same truth.
101
The glimpses are not directly caused by his own
endeavours. They are experiences of the working of Grace, gifts from the
Overself, echoes from former lives on earth, or belated responses to his
knocking on the door.
102
It is essentially a grace-given experience.
103
One day there will be a response to the search
of his mind for its creative inspirational source.
104
His "I," hemmed in by its ignorance and
limitations, is a small affair compared with the "I" which is drawing him onward
and upward through the quest and which he must one day become. His personal
self, controlled and purified, kept in its place, humbly prostrating itself
before the Overself, can gratefully receive even now glimpses of that day,
momentary revelations that bless the mind and put intense peace in the heart.
Whoever does not feel that these affirmations apply to him but who is yet able
to believe in their truth, will be befriended by grace at the time of death.
105
The good karma or God allows him this glimpse of
a loftier world in which he could live and thus put his personal turmoil to
flight.
106
If with the purpose of seeking to identify
himself with the ego a man practises the necessary self-denial, makes the
requisite sacrifices, and trains his thoughts and feelings, after a certain time
and at a certain point of his path the forces of heaven will come to him to
complete the work which he has started.
107
One should be profoundly grateful for even a
single glimpse. It is a grant of grace.
108
When the sacred moment comes, let him not
hesitate to let himself go, to adore the Overself ecstatically, and to let his
heart be ravished.
109
The rapt return to mental indrawnness may come
to the practising meditator quite unexpectedly and suddenly. It may find him
engaged in some ordinary daily activity or caught speaking in the middle of a
sentence, but whatever it be, he should instantly surrender himself and his time
to it. In the result, the meditation will gradually deepen into a mild ecstasy.
110
The Overself throws out a clue to its existence
and presence. This comes in various ways to different persons. One form is a
delicate feeling drawing him inward either to deeper thought or to no thought at
all. If he goes along with it even though hardly aware and half-involuntarily,
he will be led by this clue to a glimpse.
111
He should learn to recognize that these moments,
which come so suddenly and so delightfully, have a special value. As soon as
they come he ought to suspend all activities, put aside whatever it is that he
is doing, even stop what he is speaking, and concentrate all his attention in a
passive submissive way upon the delicate feelings and deep understanding that
come with them.
112
Once caught up in the glimpse, keep quite still;
any physical movement may break its delicate gossamer thread.
113
He may feel his attention being suddenly but
gently drawn inwards. The moment this occurs, he should at once pay the fullest
heed to this subtle whisper from the Overself, which it really is. It will pay
him handsomely to drop for a few minutes whatever else he may be doing at that
time. For if he does turn inwards, as he is directed to do, the whisper will
grow quickly into a loud call, which will overwhelm his whole being. And as he
gives himself up utterly to such listening, he will - and here we are speaking
metaphorically only - be led into the sacred precincts of the Overself. The
visit may be very brief, but it will also be very beautiful, finely refreshing,
and greatly enlightening.
114
There are moments when the Overself gets at a
man's consciousness, and rarer moments when he gets at Its consciousness. It is
his profit to extend them, if he can, or to dwell long and often on their
memory, if he cannot. What he needs to cultivate is both the facility and the
capacity to expand the slightest premonitory movement of the door of intuitive
awareness to the widest opening of it. Whenever he notices the very slightest
indrawing to the Overself, whenever the least feeling of Its onset appears, he
should at once begin to wrap himself around with the felt influence to
the exclusion of everything else.
115
Let go, let thoughts come to rest, let the ego
go. This is the best preparation to receive the glimpse, to invite and feel its
bliss, wiping out the memories of suffering.
116
Whenever a glimpse is given to him, he should
stretch its duration to the utmost. This can be markedly helped by being very
careful to keep his physical position unchanged, by not even slightly moving
hand or foot or trunk. The perfectly still body offers the best condition for
retaining the perfectly still mind. If attention is to be placed anywhere in the
body, it should be placed in the region of the heart.
117
The sudden but gentle drawing away from outer
activity to the inner one, "the melting away in the heart," as Oriental mystics
call it, felt actually inside the middle-chest region, may make itself felt
occasionally, or, in an advanced or regular meditator, every day. In the last
case it will tend to appear at around the same hour each time. This is a call
which ought to be treated properly with all the reverence it deserves. But
before it can be honoured it must be recognized. Its marks of identification
must be studied in books, learned from experience, gleaned from the statements
of other persons, or obtained from a personal teacher. When it comes, the man
should heed the signal, drop whatever he is doing, and obey the unuttered
command to turn inwards, to practise remembrance, or to enter meditation.(P)
118
The significant points in this matter are three:
first, it is a call to be recognized and understood; second, it is a command
from the highest authority to be obeyed instantly, as disregard brings its own
punishment, which is that the call may not come again; third, it is an offer of
grace. If the call is heeded and its meaning known or intuited, the aspirant
should first of all arrest his movements and remain utterly frozen, as if posing
for a portrait painter. Let the mind be blank, held as empty of thoughts as
possible. After a while, when adjusted to this sudden suspension of activity, he
may with extreme slowness and with utmost gentleness assume a bodily posture
where he will be more relaxed and more comfortable, or perhaps even a formal
meditation posture. He may then shut his eyes or let them stay in a steady gaze
as if he were transfixed, or he may alternate with both according to the urge
from within. If everything else is dropped and all these conditions are
fulfilled, then a successful meditation bringing on a spiritual glimpse is sure
to follow.(P)
119
If we heed their earliest beginnings and do not
ignore their smallness, glimpses can be cultivated. They can grow. Look for them
in the feelings - these light delicate intuitions - for that is what they mostly
are.
120
What is strange is that the experience which
comes with the Overself visitation assumes any one of a wide range of feelings,
from the most delicate to the most overwhelming. With time and growth it may
become well settled, or - though rarely - its light may shine from the
beginning. There are even other possibilities. It is safer to keep out the
preconceptions and the expectations, safer too if the ties of books and bibles
are left outside for a while. That is, accept the freedom of utter surrender to
the Overself, of dissolving in it and letting the wind blow where it listeth.
121
The Overself's summons is immediate, so the
response must be immediate too. A king ignored will not wait around.
122
The experience is capturable not by the self's
grasping hand but by its loving surrender. This is the paradox.
123
It must be something which possesses him,
not something which he possesses.
124
These glorious moments must be appraised for
what they are, and not received with just casual enjoyment. They are gifts from
heaven.
125
Anti-technique: If he regards it
egoistically as a new "experience," then it will have to share the transient
character of all experience and come to an inevitable end. If, however, he has
been taught and trained by metaphysical reflection to regard it impersonally as
a realization of something which was always there, which always was and shall
be, and if he is morally ready for it - if, in short, he recognizes it as the
experience of his own self to which he did not attend before - then it may not
lapse.
126
As he receives an influx of light from the
Overself, the Glimpse is experienced. But only to the degree that he has
previously prepared, molded, and purified himself will he experience it
correctly, completely, and safely.
127
The Glimpse is either the result of a certain
sensitivity to intuitive feelings and ideas, or else brings him to it.
128
The ego's imagination soon gets to work
recreating its past or extending its desires for the future, whenever a glimpse
of spiritual calm suspends those memories and desires for a time. It is this
restless picture-making faculty, among others, which is used so actively by the
ego to keep us out of the kingdom by wrenching us out of the eternal into the
temporal. We must beware its operations, or renounce its results, if we would
keep this calm a little longer.
129
The less he lets anything disturb the full
impact of this experience, the deeper will be the impression it makes. The
glimpse requires a complete concentration.
130
Meet these first moments of the Glimpse's onset
with instant acceptance and warm love. Then you cannot fail to enter the
experience itself.
131
When this glorious feeling comes over him,
whether at a gentle pace or with a lively rush, he should accept the gift
straightaway.
132
He may sit or stand there, where it caught him,
mesmerized by the glimpse, permeated by its tranquillity.
133
When the personal "me" stops the endless
struggle for a while and remains quiet, inactive, and passive, the impersonal "I
Who Am" arises and, little by little, gently suffuses it with new life and heals
it with great love.
134
When the feel of this unusual and ethereal
presence suffuses the heart, the first duty is to drop all attention elsewhere
and respond to it. This response is not only to be immediate, unhesitating, and
unquestioning; it must also be warm, loving, grateful, and joyous.
135
Once he catches that feeling of happy stillness,
he should not let himself leave it on any excuse whatever - for thoughts will
invade him and try to drag him away. He should refuse to disturb his
tranquillity even for thoughts about the nature, working, and effects of the
stillness itself! One objective alone should be with him, and that is to become
absorbed more and more deeply in this happy state, until every idea, concept,
decision, or impulse is dissolved in it. Any other objective will only invite
loss of the Glimpse.
136
If it comes without preliminary meditation, then
it will probably come unexpectedly and suddenly. Therefore a certain amount of
either knowledge or experience is required to recognize the authentic signs of
its onset and to detect the precious opportunity which offers itself.
137
He must first identify its real character when
he feels its presence, and then be passive to facilitate its onset.
138
Even with the first feelings of this
peace-bringing awareness, he should be careful, first, not to ignore them but on
the contrary recognize that their importance exists in what they lead up to and,
second, to let himself be carried away gently by them. The first he must do
quickly but the second slowly.
139
In this experience, the more he can let himself
be lost in the feeling of ecstatic peace and egoless understanding, opening his
total personality to it, the more will it become a milestone on his road. As
such he will look for its inspiration again and again in memory.
140
Sometimes it is necessary to rest a little while
to take in more fully the sacred Presence one becomes aware of.
141
Sometimes sleep must be sacrificed to let the
glimpse become more than a flash, to let it expand and settle a while in all its
healing serenity. This is important, for it is a special opportunity although
seldom understood at its true value.
142
Acknowledge the inner call when it comes by
simply dropping whatever you are doing and relax, be it for a minute or a
half-hour. Let consciousness turn away from the world to Consciousness, attend
to Attention, but do it all passively, receptively.
143
The glimpse may open delicately, quietly, even
faintly; but if we give it the full patient attention which it deserves, it can
grow and grow into a great vision.
144
These glimpses do not come often enough to be
treated casually. Their importance is easily missed in their subtle outset, but
the intuitive mind will begin to learn to recognize the signs of these
beginnings, to consider them sacred, and to let them do their work unhindered.
This work is something like a magician's throwing of a spell over the mind.
145
The beginnings of a glimpse may be vague,
dreamlike, faintly suggestive; but if we let it work and remain passive it will
grow into a vivid consciousness, peaceful or joyful, wise and strengthening.
146
Surrender to it as to a piece of music. Let it
take possession of you while it lasts, for it will not last. The music reaches
its finale and so does the glimpse. The oscillation that is life in the body,
the movement to-and-fro between the pairs of opposites, cannot be kept still,
inoperative, for more than a fraction of time.
147
When the glimpse starts, it is best to remain
still, and in the same bodily position whether sitting or standing, with eyes
fixed at the same point.
148
The feeling may be so slight at first that it
may easily remain unrecognized for what it is. But if he pauses in whatever he
is doing at the time, and gives heed, it will become stronger and stronger.
149
Anyone who is just beginning to feel this
presence, however briefly and intermittently, needs to learn how to guard his
feeling against large dangers and small encroachments, or it will quickly be
killed.
150
Socrates had entered a battlefield along with
his friends when suddenly and unexpectedly he caught his breath because he found
himself falling into a spiritual Glimpse. It was so wonderful an experience that
he denied all other calls on his time and so sunk deeper and deeper into the
glimpse. It was not until twenty-four hours later that the glimpse came to an
end of itself. There is a lesson here. Such a chance may not repeat itself, it
may not be possible to get it again. Advantage should be taken of it because of
its all-importance. No one knows how deep the absorption of a glimpse will carry
him nor how long a time there will be before it comes to an end.
151
The moment he feels this inner hush, the
possibility of developing it is presented to him. But will he use it? Or will he
ignore it and thus remain unmindful of his divine source?
152
The glimpse is too delicate and too elusive to
be held by force.
153
Those first delicate feelings which betoken the
Glimpse must be accepted at once or they may quickly retire and vanish
altogether.
154
Be passive and let in the Glimpse. For a while
he loses his self-identity but the event happens as if it were quite natural.
155
When this mood comes upon him, he ought to chain
himself to it.
156
He should appreciate the worth of these moments
and not let them slip by without giving himself up wholly to them.
157
When such moments of grace come to him he should
appraise them at their real worth and not turn away to the next activity. Rather
should he pause from all activities and wait with hushed thoughts, watchfully,
patiently, reverently.
158
If the signals show the probability of an
impending glimpse, it is an error to neglect them just because he is preoccupied
with something. Better to lay aside the immediate activity and wait, relaxed and
receptive, to welcome the likely visitation.
159
He should catch such moments just when they are
there and not let them vanish into nothing through inattention or failure to
recognize their importance.
160
He should pause at the first faint impression
that something unusual and lofty is happening to him, should stay just where he
is, stilled into inaction like Socrates standing motionless in the battlefield.
161
In other words, all he has to do at such a
moment is to receive passively: no other action is needed. Thoughts of
any other topic, however elevated in character, would get in the way of such
reception: so he should ignore them.
162
The glimpse or Grace bestowed on him, whether by
a teacher or by God, must be fully utilized and fully recognized for the
opportunity, guidance, help, and inspiration that it is. Otherwise, it will
remain only transient emotional experience, which has left behind a tantalizing
saddening memory of a joy he is unable to catch again.
163
In the case of persons who are not consciously
seeking for the reality or truth, the glimpse may also come but may be turned
away, refused, and rejected. This may happen because of their earthy character,
materialistic belief, or excessively outgoing orientation. The first faint
beginning of the glimpse is suppressed and its importance simply unrecognized.
Even if its hushed gentle beauty is momentarily felt, it will be pushed aside as
mere daydreaming. Thus these people deny, unwittingly, the messenger and lose
what could have been a precious chance to discover what is best in them.
164
Beware of keeping out these beautiful
spontaneous intuitive moods through the over-intellectualizing of the path to
them and of the truth behind them.
165
The Glimpse will be at its best when his ego is
not present to interfere with it. Such interference can not only come from its
misinterpretations and distortions, against which philosophy so constantly warns
its disciples, but also from the self-consciousness which wants him to notice
how the experience is happening, to analyse what effect it is having, and to
observe the reactions of other people to it. All these may be done but not then,
not at the same time as the glimpse itself. Instead, they may be studied
afterwards, when his consciousness has resumed its ordinary state. During the
glimpse, he must let himself be completely surrendered to it.(P)
166
Why try to predetermine what, by its very
nature, is beyond your reach? Why not let the Overself reveal its existence in
its own way? For the moment you introduce your own conception of what it ought
to be and insist that it shall be allied to, or governed by, this conception, in
that moment you become diverted from the pure and true mystical experience of
the Overself into an adulterated and imperfect one.
167
The way in which he got his first glimpse,
especially if similar to subsequent ones, becomes a fixed form in his belief
about it or in his search for a repetition of it. This may become a handcuff, an
unnecessary restriction which the finite self puts upon infinite being. Those
who have been instructed in philosophy and therefore in the way glimpses, with
the reactions to them and the interpretations of them, happen are not likely to
make this mistake; but those who know only religions, aesthetics, and other
mysticisms may do so. Let them not dogmatize but leave the Infinite its freedom.
168
The concentration upon the glimpse must be full,
complete, and sustained. If, for only a single moment, he allows his attention
to be diverted toward some outer thing or person, or to be divided with some
inner idea, the glimpse may instantly disappear.(P)
169
It is not that they are wholly insensitive to
the touch of the Overself, but that they keep on pushing it away from
themselves. And this they do for various reasons, according to their individual
nature and situation.
170
The moment you seek to keep the glimpse as your
own, it is gone.
171
If he complains that the glimpse does not last,
he should understand that it cannot last. Unless the mind and the heart are
previously put into a properly prepared state to receive it, they will soon
reject it. The process of rejection, however, is an unconscious one, for the
active agents in it are the restlessness of his thoughts, the negativity of his
emotions, the identification with the body, the strength of his desires and, in
fact, all those things which constitute his ego. The forces which keep him apart
from the higher state are within his personal self and not within that state. If
he is unable to retain it, it is because he needs further purification and
preparation, and its departure is really a signal indicating this need.
172
The glimpse is hard to get but easy to lose. It
slips away if he interferes with it by becoming intellectually analytic or
emotionally conceited during its brief reign.
173
It is the easiest of things to lose the glimpse.
For when attention is transferred from it to any physical activity whatever, and
however necessary, if it is NOT guarded with the utmost care, it will slip from
you.
174
In the glow of the experience any attempt to
analyse it destroys it. Let it explain itself. Do not bring it within the
narrower walls of the intellect. For then you bring in the ego and unwittingly
dismiss the Overself.
175
It is less likely that the glimpse will come if
the prerequisite conditions do not exist, if hidden negative traits and
mental-emotional imbalance tend to act as a short-circuit and prevent its
manifestation.
176
In those first few moments of its beginning the
glimpse is so fragile, so vulnerable, that even a small movement of interest
elsewhere is likely to bring it to a premature end.
177
The quicker he begins to think about the
experience, the quicker does the glimpse go. For by reflecting upon it he
unwittingly moves out of it to observe, wonder, and then to analyse it.
178
It is a moment of blessed quietness when earth
is deserted and paradise regained. He cannot, perhaps dare not, be himself but
must fall into step with all the others. He is imprisoned within their banal
patterns of routine, within a life without real awareness.
179
This inward feeling may easily be lost if he
gives himself up wholly to the world, if he lets life's trivialities or
difficulties absorb it.
180
These moments must be caught as they come, or
they will turn their back on us and be gone.
181
The more eagerly he tries to hold the glimpse,
the more anxiously his thoughts surround it, the more quickly it leaves him.
182
Many have experienced the early beginnings of a
glimpse but, failing to recognize it, have aborted it unwittingly by inattention
to this delicate feeling.