1
No picture of a beautiful landscape can ever be a
substitute for the landscape itself. All ideas of the higher consciousness are
at best pictures in thought, and can never be a satisfactory substitute for the
consciousness itself. If he wants to pass to the reality pictured by them he
will have to pass out of the second stage into contemplation, the third stage.
2
If he progresses with these ego-crushing efforts and
with these ever-deepening meditations on the Divine, he will come nearer and
nearer to the true core of his being.
3
The ultramystic exercises follow after and
are the sequel to ripe reasoned thinking. They banish thoughts only after
thoughts have done their utmost work, whereas ordinary yoga banishes thoughts
prematurely.
4
At this exalted stage, mind abides immersed in
itself, not in its productions and functions.
5
This condition of concentrated quietness is what the
Master Lu Tze quaintly describes as "the condition in which you sit like a
withered tree before a cliff."
6
When the ego contemplates the Overself with perfect
attention, there is dismay in hell but joy in heaven.
7
Meditation often leads to fatigue but contemplation
never. The one takes strength from him, the other gives it to him.
8
If meditation may have unfortunate results when its
concentrative power is applied negatively or selfishly, contemplation - its
higher phase - may have similar results when its passive condition is entered
without previous purification or preparation. Miguel de Molinos knew this well
and therefore put a warning in the preface of his book The Spiritual
Guide which treats with the authority of an expert the subject of
contemplation. "The doctrine of this book," he announced, "instructs not all
sorts of persons, but those only who keep the senses and passions well
mortified, who have already advanced and made progress in Prayer."(P)
9
There is a single basic principle which runs like a
thread through all these higher contemplation exercises. It is this: if we can
desert the thoughts of particular things, the images of particular objects
raised by the senses in the field of consciousness, and if we can do this with
complete and intelligent understanding of what we are doing and why we are doing
it, then such desertion will be followed by the appearance of its own accord of
the element of pure undifferentiated Thought itself; the latter will be
identified as our innermost self.(P)
10
Now an extraordinary and helpful fact is that by
making Mind the object of our attention, not only does the serenity which is its
nature begin to well up of its own accord but its steady unchanging character
itself helps spontaneously to repel all disturbing thoughts.(P)
11
There is, in this third stage, a condition that
never fails to arouse the greatest wonder when initiation into it begins. In
certain ways it corresponds to, and mentally parallels, the condition of the
embryo in a mother's womb. Therefore, it is called by mystics who have
experienced it "the second birth." The mind is drawn so deeply into itself and
becomes so engrossed in itself that the outer world vanishes utterly. The
sensation of being enclosed all round by a greater presence, at once protective
and benevolent, is strong. There is a feeling of being completely at rest in
this soothing presence. The breathing becomes very quiet and hardly perceptible.
One is aware also that nourishment is being mysteriously and rhythmically drawn
from the universal Life-force. Of course, there is no intellectual activity, no
thinking, and no need of it. Instead, there is a k-n-o-w-i-n-g. There are no
desires, no wishes, no wants. A happy peacefulness, almost verging on bliss, as
human love might be without its passions and pettinesses, holds one in magical
thrall. In its freedom from mental working and perturbation, from passional
movement and emotional agitation, the condition bears something of infantile
innocence. Hence Jesus' saying: "Except ye become as little children ye shall in
no wise enter the Kingdom of Heaven." But essentially it is a return to a
spiritual womb, to being born again into a new world of being where at the
beginning he is personally as helpless, as weak, and as dependent as the
physical embryo itself.(P)
12
In the third stage, contemplation, the mind ceases
to think and simply, without words, worships loves and adores the Divine.(P)
13
When a hushed silence falls on a man or on a whole
group and is properly received, that is, welcomed and sustained, there is then
one of those uncommon opportunities to let mystical peace reveal itself. The
happening may originate in the man's or the group's poignant aspiration for a
higher kind of life, or at the close of listening to great religious music, or
on entry into a grand or ancient forest landscape. This is the moment to touch
its healing pervasive depth, ordinarily so elusive.
14
To think about thinking leads the understanding
towards the verge of its own source. To contemplate contemplation leads it
directly into that source itself.
15
It is a condition where every intervention of
thinking - however rational, however plausible - is a sacrilege.
16
"Contemplation for an hour is better than formal
worship for sixty years." - Muhammed
17
"It is immaterial whether, for this purpose
(meditation), an external object, an idea, a concept or nothingness, is
focussed. It is a question of practising pure quiescence. The mere accumulation
of force which absolute stillness brings with it creates an increase in one's
power of concentration. It is unbelievable how important for our inner growth is
a few minutes of conscious abstraction every morning." - Count Keyserling
18
In the profoundest state of contemplation, the
thinking faculty may be entirely suspended. But awareness will not be suspended.
Instead of being aware of the unending procession of varied images and emotions,
there will be a single joyous serene and exalted consciousness of the true
thought-transcending self.
19
He will find himself in the mind's deep silence,
the heart's gentle stillness, reached after forsaking the ego's activity.
20
"While in the opinion of society contemplation is
the gravest thing of which any citizen can be guilty, in my opinion of the
highest culture it is the proper occupation of man." - Oscar Wilde
21
He is a sailor, taking spiritual soundings in the
deeper water of his own being.
22
In this stage of contemplation, the externalizing
faculty of his mind ceases to operate. This means that he can no longer see hear
feel smell or taste any physical objects. But it does not mean that he can no
longer form corresponding ideas of those objects. To arrive at such a situation
is indeed the work of the following stage. Therein even the possibility of
imagining every kind of external experience completely disappears.
23
Silence often falls upon a group only to embarrass
them, to fill their minds with discomfort, and to oppress their hearts with
disquiet. Yet it could be made, through contemplation, to bring exquisite
felicity.
24
To sit in the stainless silence, watchful yet
passive, is the proper art of contemplation.
25
The mind then becomes so serene and immobile that
there is not even the thought of a thought.
26
During such meditations the place around may seem
to be filled to overflowing with a sense of the divine presence.
27
What he finds so deeply within himself is neither
a thought nor an emotion. It is a fused knowing-feeling.
28
There is a state of mental silence, when no
analytic thinking, logical deliberation, or argumentative discussion is
possible. The mind is so stilled that all its discursive operations stop
completely. By its very nature this state cannot last. It is temporary - from a
few minutes to a few days.
29
In this condition, with mind shifted away from
sensory experience into a fixed self-absorption and stilled to the utmost
degree, the meditator may be said to have mastered contemplation.
30
The mind becomes as still as if he were in the
deepest largest cave penetrating a mountainside.
31
When the requisite preparatory instruction has
been passed through, and when the mind lets thoughts go, lets objects go, lets
the ego go, it comes to know itself, to perceive itself, to discover itself as
Overself.
32
In that stillness, far from the physical
activities, emotional excitations, and mental changes of everyday life, "the
awareness of awareness" becomes possible, the Mind itself is isolated. The real
being of a man is at last discovered and exhibited.
33
The Japanese system of defense called karate has
been demonstrated on the James Bond secret agent films before millions of cinema
and television viewers. Despite this, there are still only a few experts in
Europe who have passed the tests necessary to admit them into the higher grades
called Black Belt. Discussion with one of these adepts brought out some common
ground between the practice of karate and the practice of contemplation. One of
the principal feats necessary to achieve the Black Belt grade is to cut through
one or even two bricks with a single blow of the outside edge of the hand. If
the karate pupil concentrates on the brick itself, he will never succeed in
breaking through it. He must instead concentrate on the ground beneath the
brick, thus admitting no thought of doubt, fear, or hesitation as to whether or
not he can cut the brick. In fact, during the moment before striking the brick,
he must suspend all thinking. And if any such negative thoughts do enter his
mind, he must then abandon the attempt altogether for that period. The emphasis
is laid on immediacy, on direct penetration unobstructed by thoughts of any
kind. The meditator whose mind is centered on his own working of the meditation
technique is like the karate pupil who fixes his mind on the brick. This is a
mistake. But the meditator who fixes his mind on the Overself is like the pupil
who concentrates his thought on the ground below the brick itself, and this is
what leads to success. Obviously, such advice is not suited to the early or
elementary stages of meditation where concentration is required. On the
contrary, it belongs to the more advanced stage where success comes not from
trying but from letting go, relaxing.
34
The mere absence of thoughts is not necessarily
presence of Reality-Consciousness.
35
Thinking lies still as if it were a dead faculty,
the mind void of movement, emptied of thoughts.
36
There are plenty of misconceptions about the
nature of mystical contemplation. They range from the utterly absurd to the
perfectly reasonable. A serious one is that the aim of such contemplation is to
lose consciousness. Anyone who has been hit over the head can do that!
37
In that deep state the mind is at perfect
equilibrium. The forces which ordinarily drive it into conflict or passion are
thoroughly restrained.
38
His consciousness, freed of thoughts, is then
in itself, unmixed and unprojected.
39
Those who know this method and can practise it
successfully, know also the extraordinary change which comes over their whole
being when the mind is stilled.
40
When his thoughts are brought into a stilled
condition and his awareness fully introverted, a state resembling sleep will
supervene but, unlike sleep, it will be illumined by consciousness.
41
In this state of "conscious sleep" there is no
awareness of the physical body and no movement of thoughts succeeding one
another. The Stillness alone reigns.
42
This state is indescribable. He is neither asleep
nor awake.
43
The resultant condition is no negative state.
Those who imagine that the apparent blankness which ensues is similar to the
blankness of the spiritualistic medium do not understand the process. The true
mystic and the hapless medium are poles apart. The first is supremely positive;
the second is supinely negative. Into the stilled consciousness of the first
ultimately steps the glorious divinity that is our True Self, the
world-embracing shining One; into the blanked-out consciousness of the second
steps some insignificant person, as stupid or as sensible as he was on earth,
but barely more; or worse, there comes one of those dark and malignant entities
who prey upon human souls, who will drag the unfortunate medium into depths of
falsehood and vice, or obsess her to the point of suicide.(P)
44
It is not a dreamy or drowsy state. He is more
lucidly and vitally conscious than ever before.(P)
45
It is not just ceasing to think, although it
prerequires that, but something more: it is also a positive alertness to the
Divine Presence.(P)
46
This last stage, contemplation, is neither deep
reflective thinking nor self-hypnotic trance. It is intense awareness, without
the intrusion of the little ego or the large world.(P)
47
It is something far deeper than mere restful
quietness, something dynamic and intense.
48
In this strange experience he seems to be doing
nothing at all, to be mentally quite inactive, all his forces having reached a
full stop. Yet the Overself is intensely active.
49
When he is settled down in this final stage, his
mind takes on a diamond-like quality - hard and unchangeable in its
identification with its deepest layer, bright and positive in its radiation.
50
The stillness is not a cold one: it is living,
radiant.
51
The ever-shifting intellect has at last been
established in the eternal stillness of the soul that now dominates it; the
leaping mercury has been solidified and the alchemical instrument prepared
wherewith human base metal can be turned into spiritual gold, immune to the
corrosive acids of earthly experience.
52
There are definite stages which mark his progress.
First he forgets the larger world, then his immediate surroundings, then his
body, and finally his ego.
53
The differences between the first and second
stages [concentration and meditation, respectively - ed.] are: (a) in the first
there is no effort to understand the subject or object upon which attention
rests, whereas in the second there is; (b) concentration may be directed to any
physical thing or mental idea, whereas meditation must be directed to thinking
about a spiritual theme either logically or imaginatively.
In the third stage [contemplation - ed.] this theme pervades the mind so completely that the thinking activity ceases, the thoughts and fancies vanish. The meditator and his theme are then united; it is no longer separate from him. Both merge into a single consciousness. To shut off all perceptions of the outer world, all physical sense-activities of seeing hearing and touching, is the goal and end of the first stage. It is achieved when concentration on one subject or object is fully achieved. To shut off all movements of the inner world, all mental activities of thinking, reasoning, and imagining, is the goal and end of the second stage. It is achieved when the subject or object pervades awareness so completely that the meditator forgets himself and thus forgets even to think about it: he is it. To shut off all thoughts and things, even all sense of a separate personal existence, and rest in contemplation of the One Infinite Life-Power out of which he has emerged, is the goal and end of the third stage.
54
In these first two stages, the will must be used,
for the attention must not only be driven along one line and kept there but must
also penetrate deeper and deeper. It is only when the frontier of the third
stage is reached that all this work ceases and that there is an abandonment of
the use of the will, a total surrender of it, and effortless passive yielding to
the Overself is alone needed.
55
In the second stage he is to banish some thoughts
and keep the others. In the third stage he is to banish all thoughts and keep
none. This is the most difficult.
56
The second and third stages may have five stations
from start to finish, although this is not the experience of all aspirants. In
the first, the body becomes numb and its weight vanishes. In the second, a fiery
burning force uplifts the emotions and energizes the will. In the third, a
sensation of being surrounded by light is felt. In the fourth, the man is alone
in a dark void. In the fifth he seems to dissolve until there is nothing but the
infinite formless being of God.
57
This withdrawal of attention from the immediate
environment which occurs when deeply immersed in thought, looking at the distant
part of a landscape, or raptly listening to inspired music, is the "I" coming
closer to its innermost nature. At the deepest level of this experience, the
ego-thought vanishes and "I-myself" becomes merged in the impersonal
Consciousness.
58
The third stage is successfully reached when he
forgets the world outside, when he neither sees nor touches it, neither hears
nor smells it with his body, when memory and personality dissolve in a vacuum as
the attention is wholly and utterly absorbed in the thought of, and identity
with, the Overself.
59
The body sits, squats, or lies like a motionless
statue; the senses are lulled and lethargic, but the mind is quite conscious of
where the meditator is and what is happening around him. Only in the next and
deeper stage does this consciousness pass away, does the physical self, involved
in place and time as it is, lose both: only then is the body robbed of its
capacity to move and act.
60
Explanation of diagram: The deeper he looks
into his own nature - a procedure which cannot be done without practising
meditation - the nearer he will come to the truth about it.
In the first stage of penetration, his external surroundings, and the whole world with them, vanish. In the second and deeper stage, the feeling "I am rooted in God" alone remains. In the third stage the "I" thought also goes. In the final stage even the idea"God" disappears. There remains then no idea of any kind - only peace beyond telling, consciousness in its pure ever-still state.
If he stops at levels A or B, he is still unable to fulfil his purpose. It is just as if a composer of a piece of music were to stop halfway during its composition. Only by penetrating still farther into the depths of his being until he reaches level C will he be able to undergo that tremendous, profound, and radical change which may be called the first degree of illumination. So sudden and so startling a change could not have come unless he had had the perseverance to make so prolonged a plunge.
Few mystics pass the first degree. The rapture of it detains them.
61
As he enters this immobile state, not only do his
eyes close to the scenes of this world but his mind closes to the thought of it.
The reflected change appears on his face, which is transfigured, mysterious, and
serene.
62
The lines of the face become somewhat rigid, the
eyes mostly or wholly closed, as he retires into himself and into abstraction
from this world. That which draws him magnetically through noisy thoughts to the
state of silent thoughtlessness is none other than the soul itself.
63
The world recedes and the last fringes of it in
awareness seem a long, long way off. The sensation is exquisitely comforting.
64
He is beginning to succeed when his absorption is
so deep that the world outside seems a thousand miles away.
65
At this point he may lose touch with the outer
world and no longer see or sense it in any way. The consciousness sinks away
from place and form, the passing of time and the solidity of matter, into its
own being.
66
The world is more and more shut off as his
concentrated attention moves inward until it vanishes altogether. It is then
that he may become aware of his unknown "soul" and its peace.
67
In this state the feeling of the passage of time
and the perception of forms in space may or may not vanish, according to its
depth.
68
The deepest meditation takes the meditator to a
completely different level of consciousness. It causes him to drop all thoughts
about the world and especially about himself.
69
One cannot experience the outside world in exactly
the same way as he is experiencing the inside self. In both ways he is
experiencing God, but there is a difference. At the deepest possible point of
meditation one reaches the stillness; there is no world-experience any more.
Beyond it one cannot go: even the "he" is lost.
70
This feeling of extreme lightness, of entire
independence from the body, may grow to such an extreme point of intensity that
the idea of being actually levitated into the air may take hold of his mind. He
is in such a state that inner reality is confused with physical reality.
71
He feels that his hands become heavy, hard to
move. This is because he is half-separated from his body. Soon he feels quite
free of them, light as air. The mental change accompanying this liberation is
quite extraordinary. He feels that he would smile gravely and tranquilly, if
only he could, but he feels only on the verge of doing so, not being quite able
to finish it.
72
In that deeper state when the body is held still
with concentration, the mind paradoxically feels most liberated.
73
In this deep state the body, while one's
consciousness of it remains, assumes a fixed position of its own accord. A
powerful force surges through it, straightening the spine, lifting the head, and
stretching the feet.
74
There is a strange dislocation of consciousness'
seat, pushing it out of his body slightly, up above his head and somewhat behind
his torso.
75
There will be no sensation of weight in his
physical body and a light airy feeling will replace it. It will also seem as
though a heavy inner body has fallen away from him, leaving an ethereal
detachment, a delightful liberation, as a result.
76
When he has climbed to this mystical altitude of
being where concentration becomes finished and perfect, he will possess the
power of entering at will into the inwardly pleasant though outwardly strange
condition of rapt absorption. The body will rest rigid and immovable, the eyes
will be tight shut, half-closed, or wide open but staring emptily straight
before him into space, the face paler than usual, the pulse-beat lower than
normal, the breath-cycle slower quieter and shallower, but the mind fully alive.
77
If the consciousness has not previously been
prepared, by competent instruction or intuitive understanding, to receive this
experience, then the passage out of the body will begin with a delightful sense
of dawning liberation but end with a frightful sense of dangerous catastrophe.
Both knowledge and courage are needed here, otherwise there will be resistance
to the process followed by an abrupt breaking away from it altogether.(P)
78
Consciousness is withdrawn from the senses and
nervous system, even life itself is largely withdrawn from the heart and lungs,
until the man himself is centered in the higher self.
79
He feels that he is losing command of his senses
and that he is lapsing from the safe real normal consciousness of his everyday
self.
80
There are stories of Socrates in the Grecian wars
and of a nameless yogi in the Indian mutiny, absorbed in such deep contemplation
that neither the noise and tumult nor the violence and strife of battle were
enough to break it. Each remained bodily still and mentally serene for hours.
81
Saint Teresa writes about what she terms "the
trance of union": "As to the body, if the rapture comes on when it is standing
or kneeling, it remains so." If, when starting the meditation period, you are
suddenly transfixed with the stillness or if it occurs during non-meditation
times, remain in the place and attitude as you are. Do not move - or you break
the spell. It is then irrecoverable. Never resist this "possession." Obviously
this is possible only if alone.
82
In this deep level of meditation, he will scarcely
be aware of the body. What awareness there is will objectify it as something he
uses or wears, certainly not as himself. He will feel that to be a purely mental
being.
83
His power of abstract concentration, of
withdrawing into a thought or a series of thoughts, or of having no thoughts at
all, shows in the eyes, in their long-sustained stillness, their brilliance and
"not-seeing" physically because focused on nothing in particular.
84
The body stilled as if by an outside force, its
limbs unwilling to move and its breathing diminished to gentleness - this is the
best condition for the higher Consciousness.
85
Noises and sights may be still present in the
background of consciousness but the pull and fascination of the inner being will
be strong enough to hold him and they will not be able to move his attention
away from it. This, of course, is an advanced state; but once mastered and
familiar, it must yield to the next one. Here, as if passing from this waking
world to a dream one, there is a slip-over into universal space, incredibly vast
and totally empty. Consciousness is there but, as he discovers later, this too
is only a phase through which it passes. Where, and when, will it all end? When
Consciousness is led - by Grace - to itself, beyond its states, phases, and
conditions where man, at last, is fit to meet God.
86
There is a mood of deep abstraction when, although
the eyes are open, he appears to be looking beyond the immediate surroundings
with no precise focus but with apparent wonder.
87
It will feel as if his scalp had been painlessly
lifted off his head and as if the mind had been indescribably liberated in the
process. It is now released in its own native element - intensely alert,
immensely clear and utterly concentrated, gloriously beautiful and serenely
percipient.
88
You will experience the sensation of rising, of
hovering over your body.
89
The body seems far away, but I seem closer
than ever. For I feel that now I am in my mind and no longer the body's captive.
There is a sense of release. I am as free as Space itself.
90
In this third phase, contemplation, there is a
feeling of being surrounded by the immensity of infinite space with one's own
being somehow connected with it.
91
He will feel that he has become an air-being,
bodiless and weightless.
92
The stage of contemplation has its own definite
signs. Prominent among them are its thought-free emptiness, its utter
tranquillity, its absence of personal selfishness.
93
He enters the third stage, contemplation, when the
thought or thing on which he fixed his mind alone remains there whereas the
consciousness that he is meditating vanishes. He finishes this stage when this
residue is none other than the Overself, thus transcending his personal self and
losing it in the Overself.
94
When this third stage is reached, there is a
feeling, sometimes gradual but sometimes abrupt, that his thought activities
have been cancelled out by a superior force.
95
The third stage of practice, contemplation, is
definitely a joyous one. There is a subtle feeling of great comfort, sublime
ease, at times even expanding into a rich and refined blissfulness.
96
We enter into paradise when, in contemplation, we
enter into awareness of the Overself.
97
Those who have their first experience of the
delightful peace which may be briefly felt in contemplation may become
emotionally excited and mentally thrilled by it. These experiences are useful
and helpful, especially for the encouragement they give; but it must be
remembered that they are not in themselves the main object of meditation, for
they still deal with the person, the personality, even though on its highest and
best levels. Only when contemplation leads to a forgetfulness of the personality
and a total immersion in the Higher Being is this purpose achieved.
98
When consciousness is stripped of its contents and
stands in naked simplicity so that it can be seen as it really is, a tremendous
quietude falls upon us. All strivings cease of their own accord.
99
A sudden mysterious tranquillity descends upon
him, a feeling as if he were not there at all.
100
His efforts at this stage will be saturated with
the hope and expectancy with which one watches a slow sunrise.
101
There is a great calm in this state: not a great
rapture, but a patient attentive repose in the higher power.
102
Bring to these intervals your suffering and
disappointments, your weariness and burdens, and let them slide into the Mystery
that suffuses some of these moments.
103
Once he has been able to establish himself in
this inward self-isolation and to adjust himself to its entirely different level
of being, he will experience delight and feel peace.
104
All thoughts are submerged in the stillness. The
overheated brain is cooled. The emotions are reined in. The profoundest peace
reigns in the whole being.
105
He stands on the verge of a great and enigmatic
stillness. All Nature seems arrested, all her processes within himself come to a
halt.
106
The beginner's ecstatic rapture will grow by
degrees into the proficient's impassive serenity.
107
Ecstatic moods, trances, or swoons are not
sought by the philosopher, as they are by the saint; but if they do happen to
come, as they might, through his meditations he takes care that they will find
their proper place and leave his inner equilibrium undisturbed.
108
As he enters this fourth dimension of the Soul,
infinite well-being pervades him.
109
The peace of contemplation, when achieved, falls
upon us like eventide's hush. The brain's busy travail stops, the world's
frantic pressure upon the nerves ends.
110
When there is no consciousness of the world, yet
Consciousness-in-itself remains, ecstasy follows.
111
He is submerged in the peace as though it were a
great wave.
112
In this state the thought-making activity comes
to an end, the intellect itself is absorbed in the still centre of being, and a
luminous peace enfolds the man.
113
In this state the world is not presented to
consciousness. Consequently none of the problems associated with it is present.
No ego is active with personal emotions and particular thoughts. No inner
conflicts disturb the still centre of being.
114
He feels that he is upon the very edge of a
great revelation, one that will open a new world of beauty and truth for him.
115
His mind is so concentrated that his body makes
no movement at all. His thought is so intensified that no one else's thoughts
and feelings can come into the focus of attention and sometimes not even their
physical presence.
116
While the higher mystic experiences are mostly
the same universally, the personal beliefs and teachings of the mystics differ,
and usually take some or all of the form of the religious tradition into which
they were born.
117
All his fears melt in this triumphant
tranquillity as though they had never been.
118
When the flowing stream of thoughts is brought
to an end at last, there is indescribable satisfaction.
119
Here is a condition where the only world is the
world of pure blissful being itself.
120
The beauty of those calm moments when the tumult
of the mind has been stilled, is supreme.
121
When the mind falls into stillness, when time
stretches the moment out into a limitless life, man stands on the inner edge of
his true soul.
122
The Overself should not be reached merely in
trance; it must be known in full waking consciousness. Trance is merely the
deepest phase of meditation, which in turn is instrumental in helping prepare
the mind to discover truth. Yoga does not yield truth directly. Trance does not
do more than concentrate the mind perfectly and render it completely calm.
Realization can come after the mind is in that state and after it has begun to
inquire, with such an improved instrument, into truth.
123
If he lets all his mental energy be
absorbed in contemplation of the Real, a state in between waking and sleeping
must follow. If he stays in this state too long, a further condition may ensue
which is comparable to trance.
124
Saint Catherine of Siena passed often into deep
trances, during which she lay bodily rigid and mentally rapt in ecstasy. On some
of these occasions her entire physique became so hot that her face was flushed
red with blood and covered with drops of perspiration. This is Spirit-Energy.
125
There are physical symptoms of the dawning of
the semi-trance state. They are a feeling of tightness around the scalp and of
pressure between the temples.
126
The deepest trance state involves the slowing
down of all bodily activities to an almost imperceptible level. Even the working
of the cells comes nearly, but not quite, to an end. The state, therefore, is a
kind of death and, indeed, if prolonged too far, may sometimes result in death.
127
When the practiser is really proficient he may
encounter a very profound state of "yoga sleep." This is difficult to describe.
It is mysterious and enigmatic. He will not even be quite sure whether or not it
happened, but will probably deduce its factuality from the length of time that
must have been spent in it. He will not remember anything about it since he is
very vaguely aware that total unconsciousness did not occur, that it was not
ordinary dreamless sleep, that some kind of spiritual experience was present of
which he can form no conception and obtain no understanding. The end result
after emerging will be satisfying and pleasant, calming and detaching.
128
With the feeling of the ego's displacement, all
feelings of devotional worship or mystical communion also come to an end. For
they presuppose duality, a relation which vanishes where there is only the
consciousness of a single entity - the Overself.
129
Contemplation, in its fullest measure, is a
rehearsal for death. For in letting all thoughts go, we let the world go, we let
possessions go, and lastly we let the body go!
130
For the meaning and use of the term
"transparency" in describing mystic experience, note (a) Mabel Collins' book on
Patanjali uses the title "The Transparent Jewel," (b) the Chinese painter Pata
Shan-Jen, seventeenth century: "When the mind is transparent and pure as if
reflected on the mirrorlike surface of water; when it is serene...." (c) a
Chinese modern writer on art, Juo Chang Chung-yuan: "There is a calmness...the
atmosphere is of rare transparency...his innermost being tranquil."
131
The mind slides into a blankness, where time is
not, the movement of hours unmarked by ticking watch, and where the
pleasurableness of non-being takes over.
132
At first strange transformations may take place
in his space-time sense. Space is grotesquely narrowed while time is grotesquely
slowed down. A far-off tree may seem within hand's reach while the movement of a
hand itself may seem an hour's work. The concentration of attention becomes so
extreme that the whole world narrows down to the preoccupation of the moment.
This stage passes away.
133
In this complete stillness, the mental waves
come to rest and with them the sense of time is thrown out of function or else
so strangely changed that a few minutes become a whole hour.
134
Time itself is erased by the mysterious Power of
the Stillness.
135
In that deep state of contemplation the ego
becomes a mere potential, the consciousness is unwrinkled by thoughts, the body
is completely immobile.
136
By a penetrating to the profound stillness
within and a letting go of the world with its turmoil, the higher power itself
is found and met: its message is then able to penetrate his consciousness. Such
stillness provides the correct condition for letting the man become absorbed
into it. For the period in which this happens, his ego thought-simplex vanishes;
be it only a few seconds, the pause is most valuable.
137
When the student attains to this stage of
meditation, all sensations of an external world sink away but the idea of his
own abstract existence still remains. His next effort must therefore be to
suppress this idea and if he succeeds then this is followed by a sense of
infinity.
138
In those moments when he has gone as deep as
seems possible, when he is himself not there and the ego is obliterated, there
is real freedom, and most especially freedom from desires, attachments, bonds,
dependencies.
139
This is an experience - one of the unforgettable
meditations - where the ego dwindles down to a mere point in consciousness.
140
In that passionless calm, where the littlenesses
of the ego melt and dissolve, and its agitations sink and lose themselves, he
may touch a few moments when he loses the sense of his own identity. The
tremendous wonder of it, this delicious liberation from the confines of his own
person!
141
All thoughts, and most important the
world-thought and the ego-thought, melt little by little into the stillness.
142
How can one forget the first day when one sat in
deep contemplation, feeling a mesmeric influence coming over him and drawing him
deeper and deeper within, while the sensation of light surrounded him? Deeper
and deeper one went until one forgot almost who one was and where one was. How
reluctant was the slow return after having played truant to this world and to
the ego!
143
That out of which it arises and to which it
returns is a sublime stillness, a holy calm.
144
When the senses are completely lulled and the
thoughts completely rested, consciousness loses the feeling of movement and with
it the feeling of time. The state into which it then passes is an indication of
what timelessness means.
145
The ego dissolves into that infinity of relaxed
being which is unforgettable and therapeutic. All strains fade out, all
pressures vanish with the gentle influx of this peace-filled mood.
146
In that sublime condition his reasoning capacity
is powerless, for the thinking function ceases to act, the image-making
imagination becomes dormant.
147
In the deepest phase of contemplation all power
of speech will temporarily desert him, so rapt inwardly will he become.
148
He remains blissfully without thoughts, without
even the thought that he has no thoughts.
149
If we search into the innermost part of our
self, we come in the end to an utter void where nothing from the outside world
can reflect itself, to a divine stillness where no image and no form can be
active. This is the essence of our being. This is the true Spirit.
150
When the emptying of the mind is made the goal
of the mind, then it is not really emptied even if this seems to occur. The
unexpressed goal is also present, even though unthought during the time of the
void. In short it is not a genuine, authentic emptiness. Yet this is the sort of
thing that happens in most yogic circles. Only a philosophically informed mind
can reach the real void.
151
This experience of self-annihilation
(fana, the Sufis call it) teaches several valuable truths, but the one
which needs mention here is that whether you feel the Reality in an overwhelming
mystic experience or not, what matters is that you should carry the unfaltering
faith that it is always there, always present with you and within you.
152
The mind is called pure not only when passions
and desires have ceased surging through it, but also when thoughts and pictures
have ceased to arise, especially the personal self-thought.
153
This exercise in emptying the mind of its
thoughts begins as a negative one but must end as a positive one. For when all
thoughts are gone, it will then be possible to affirm the pure principle of
Thought itself.
154
That which IS, by its very nature, is out of
time - while thinking involves a series of points in time. Thinking is finite
and limits awareness to finite objects. Therefore, to contact the
infinite we must go beyond thought. Because human intellect is too
finite, it follows that our thoughts cannot encompass it. Since that which IS
cannot be taken hold of by thinking of any kind, a part of the essential
requirement for contact with it is the non-acting of the thinking function. The
mind must be emptied of all its contents in order that its true nature -
awareness - should be revealed. At present, it is always entangled with some
thought so that awareness by itself is lost in that thought. Self disappears in
the ego-thought, and the "I" mistakes the object for the subject - whether the
object be the world outside it, or thoughts inside it.
155
When the mind enters into this imageless and
thoughtless state, there is nothing in it to resist the union with divine
consciousness.
156
If one remembers that speech is a form of
communication with other men because it uses words, then he must conclude that
thinking is a form of communication with himself since it also uses words. But
that means he remains apart separate and distant from himself. This is why the
art of meditation, which is the art of finding oneself, involves the practice of
mental silence - cutting off words, and that which they express, thoughts.
157
If a state of vacant mind be deliberately and
successfully induced, one of the chief conditions requisite to temporary
awareness of the soul will then exist.
158
All that he has hitherto known as himself, all
those thoughts and feelings, actions and experiences which make up the ego's
ordinary life, have now to be temporarily deserted if he would know the
universal element hidden behind the ego itself.
159
When the mind is able to remain utterly still in
itself, it is able to see and recognize the soul.
160
Says the Mukti Upanishad: "There is only
one means to control one's mind, that is to destroy thoughts as soon as they
arise. That is the great dawn."
161
In the Tibetan work Buddha Doctrine Among the
Birds, there is a single line which contains an entire technique in its few
words. "Put your inmost mind into a state of non-action," it runs.
162
If he wishes to enter the stage of
contemplation, he must let go of every thought as it rises, however high or holy
it seems, for it is sure to bring associated thoughts in its train. However
interesting or attractive these bypaths may be at other times, they are now just
that - bypaths. He must rigidly seek the Void.(P)
163
Only in perfect stillness of the mind, when all
discursive and invading thoughts are expelled, can the true purity be attained
and the ego expelled with them.(P)
164
Every state other than this perfect stillness is
a manifestation of the ego, even if it be an inner mystical "experience." To be
in the Overself one must be out of the ego, and consequently out of the ego's
experience, thoughts, fancies, or images. All these may have their fit place and
use at other times but not when the consciousness is to be raised completely to
the Overself.(P)
165
"The best form of meditation is to avoid
thinking of anything. In the mind so kept clear, God will manifest Himself." -
Shankara of Kanchi
166
It is not enough to make the mind a thought-free
blank: his thoughts should expire in a state of deep fervent aspiration. After
this achievement it must be held motionless, for then only can the touch of
grace be felt, the authentic inner experience begin.
167
If he does not practise keeping himself - his
body and mind - still, this presence which emanates grace is not given the
chance to activate his consciousness. Here is the first secret of meditation -
Be still! The second secret is - Know the I am, God! The stillness will have a
relaxing and somewhat healing effect, but no more, unless he has faith,
unless he deliberately seeks communion with God.
168
L.C. Soper: "The mind has to be still, not made
still. Effort only leads to a rigid mind. When it realizes the futility of
effort to penetrate to reality, the mind becomes still. There is only a
self-forgetting attentiveness."
169
The thread of contemplation once broken, it is
nearly impossible to pick it up again quickly enough that same time. This is why
it is important to let nothing else, not even a change in bodily posture, come
to interrupt the contemplation.
170
When the ego is silent, the Overself can speak.
171
When the last thought is absorbed and the mind
left alone in its native stillness, if purification and preparation have been in
some measure attended to, "then," as Chuang Tzu says,"the heavenly Light is
given forth."
172
Hence he must let go of every single and
separate thought which arises to bar his path, every sensuous image which memory
or anticipation throws down as a gauntlet before him, and every emotion which
seeks to detain or distract him.
173
When thoughts cease of themselves the
stillness comes. When thinking rejects its own activity consciousness is.
174
When all movements are at an end, and all
physical actions are suspended, he can enter into the most interesting of all
states.
175
The catching of the breath happens partly by
itself, partly is done deliberately to help bring the body into harmony with a
deeper level of mental absorption.
176
"Be still, and know that I am God," sings the
Biblical Psalmist. This simply means that the movement of thoughts and emotions
is to be brought to an end by entering the deepest degree of contemplation. The
same teaching is given in the Bhagavad Gita. "As the wick of an oil lamp
placed in a wind-free spot is flickerless, so is the yogi of mastered mind who
practises union with the God-Self."
177
What is called for at this stage is not so much
a renunciation of the world as a renunciation of thoughts - of all thoughts, be
they of the gross world or of the spiritual quest!
178
To give up the self means to give up what is
ordinarily known as self - that is, personal thoughts and feelings - to the
deeper self within. But the latter is pure awareness and void of all emotional
or intellectual contents: nothing. Hence when the personal egoity gives up to,
and enters, it, such thoughts and feelings become as nothing too. The mind is
stilled and they are annihilated.
179
Mind purified of the image-making faculty's work
- that is, free from visions, fancies and pictures, symbols, scenes, and every
sort of imagination - can become quite silent.
180
There is no other way to discover the Pure
Consciousness than the renunciation of thinking, then the willingness to go
beyond it altogether.
181
It is the disentanglement of consciousness from
its own projections, its thoughts of every kind, which is the final and first
work of a would-be philosopher. Consciousness is then in its pure unconditioned
being.
182
To the extent that a man is willing to empty
himself of himself, to that extent he is providing a condition for the influx
into his normal consciousness of a sense of the Overself's reality. It is like
emptying a cup in order that it may be filled.
183
It is a fact that when the mind becomes
perfectly controlled and thoughts are brought to a point and stilled, there
arises a clear intuitive feeling which tells him about the mind itself.
184
The Surangama Sutra (Japanese title
Ryogonkyo), Mahayana Zen text: "There are two methods to effect this
entrance, practised conjointly. (1) By Samatha [tranquillization] the
world is shut out of consciousness so that an approach is prepared for the final
stage. When one's mind is full of confusion and distraction, it is no fit organ
for contemplation. (2) By Vipasyana [contemplation] the Yogin is first to
awaken the desire for enlightenment, to be firmly determined to live the life of
Bodhisattvahood, and to have an illuminating idea as regards the source of evil
passions which are always ready to assert themselves in the Tathagathagarbha
[storehouse, all-conserving mind]. . . . When entrance is effected to the inner
sanctuary, all the six senses are merged in one."
185
He must not only practise sitting perfectly
still and thus stop squandering the body's energies, but also, and at the same
time, practise emptying the mind of thoughts and thus conserve his mental
energies, too. The whole effort is indeed intended to "stop the out-going
energies," in the Gita's phrase. This is why sports, long walks,
protracted manual labor, and, especially, sexual intercourse are prohibited to
the would-be yogi.
186
To put an end to this constant working of the
mind, this manufacture of thoughts without apparent stop, is the purpose of
yoga. But by the practice of philosophy, by the utter calm, thoughts end
themselves.
187
It is the art of putting oneself into and, for
experts, of remaining in the soul's consciousness. Therefore only one who is
capable of doing this can write about it with either accuracy or authority. All
other writers, viewing the state from outside, can get back only their own
thoughts about it, not real knowledge.
188
To help mind attain the inner stillness, press
the chest and "catch" the breath sharp.
189
Get away from your usual and habitual mental
activities, your emotional drives and passional urges; get beneath them and you
will come to pure mind, pure feeling, able to look, as from a far-off point, at
God.
190
Both the world which his senses report and the
thoughts which his mind creates must be left outside the door of Being. When
that is done, consciousness is no longer lost in its states. Then only does the
man know himself; then only does the eternal I manifest itself in the
transient me.
191
E. Underhill, Mysticism: "The deliberate
inhibition of discursive thought and rejection of images, which takes place in
the 'orison of quiet,' is one of the ways in which this entrance is effected:
personal surrender, or 'self-naughting,' is another."
192
Patanjali recommends a repeated effort to keep
the mind steadily in a thought-free condition. This is a valuable method and not
much known.
193
Patanjali said the idea is to vacuum thought
from the mind.
194
The task which confronts the awakened man is
nothing less than to free himself from this perpetual immersion in activity and
thought. He already does it involuntarily during sleep. He must now do it
voluntarily and therefore consciously during the waking state.
195
Whenever he is still, silent, concentrated, and
reverent, he will be able to place his mind in rapport with the Overself.
196
A Japanese Master said: "If you try to get
nearer to It, you will only get farther from It."
197
When self-absorption is somewhat advanced and
concentration fairly steady, we are ready for the third stage. Here, personal
effort should cease. An intuition will gently make itself manifest and the
moment it does we must let it affect us by being as inwardly submissive as
possible. If we can follow it up, it will increase in strength and clearness. It
is not at all easy to arrive at this profound submissiveness within ourself and
let go of all the egoistic resistances which we unconsciously harbour. There
should be a glad self-yielding to this intuition, which is a harbinger of the
soul whose presence and power we had so long to accept on trusting faith alone.
As it develops, some ethereal presence seems to come over us, a diviner happier
nobler self than your common one. An ethereal feeling will echo throughout your
inner being. It seems to come from some far-off world yet it will be like some
mysterious half-remembered music in its paradoxical mixture of strangeness and
familiarity. We are then on the threshold of that in us which links us with God.
198
The passage from the second stage to the third
stage, from meditation to contemplation, from the activity of thought to the
immobilization of thought, from the creation of mental images to their
elimination, may take several years to effect. It calls for hard practice and
hundreds of attempts. Even the person who has attained some proficiency in this
art may find it requires at least a half or three quarters of an hour before he
is able to attain the third degree.
199
At this advanced point, mentally dissolve each
thought into undifferentiated Thought. Don't reason about the latter but try to
be it and to feel it. Use imagination here rather than reasoned thinking.
Reasoned reflections should have been pursued and finished during metaphysical
studies and not carried into this contemplation. Picture it, instead of
reflecting on what it is like.
200
When this stage is reached, when we can dismiss
everything else from our attention, when the thought which flows through the
sense-channels has been gathered in and turned around to face itself, we must
grope within the heart with a strong determination for the essence of our
consciousness.
201
As he sinks deeper after many relapses towards
the undivided mind, as he calls on all the powers of his will and concentration
to keep within focus the inner work of this spiritual exercise, he may get a
sense of leading, of being directed by something within.
202
The idea around which his meditation revolved
must now be used as a springboard from which to move to a higher level. Whereas
he was before intent on working out his own thoughts, now he must abandon them
altogether. Before he was positive; now he must be passive. The mind must become
quiet, the emotions must compose themselves, before he can receive the sacred
flux.
203
The particular idea upon which he is meditating
may be dropped when concentration reaches its intensest point or it may then
drop away of its own accord. He is embraced by pure consciousness, is immersed
in the "contemplation without a seed" of the Yogis.
204
The second stage of meditation should be brought
to an end the moment you become aware of a slowing down in the tempo of thinking
and of a quickening of intuitive feeling; after that moment you are ready to
attempt to enter the third stage of contemplation proper. Let your consciousness
become quiet and still. In truth it has nothing really to do, except to permit
that intuitive feeling to spread all over it and envelop it.
205
When a certain depth is reached and the
concentration remains unflagging, the ego begins to sink back into its source,
to dissolve into and unite with that holy source. It is then indeed as near to
God's presence as it can get.
206
In this third stage all thinking is thrust
aside. He simply looks directly at the Overself, remaining inwardly quite still
until he feels himself being drawn into the Overself.
207
The contemplation deepens until it reaches a
point where reasoned thinking and judgement, as well as memory, are suspended,
so that only the mind's knowing faculty is left.
208
Trace consciousness back to itself, unmixed with
bodily sense-reports, emotional moods, or mental thoughts. This can be done
successfully only by withdrawing it inwards as you analyse. The process becomes
a meditation. In the final term you are aware of nothing else, that is, of
nothing but being aware. But at this point you cannot know it as a second thing,
an object, but only by being it.
209
Take attention away from the everyday egoistic
self and you may open a gate to the Overself. This is one method - and the
harder one. Let attention be held by a glimpse so that the everyday self drifts
out of focus. This is another method - and the easier. The first is yoga and
depends on active personal effort. The second is passive and depends on
absorption in art, music, landscape, or a visitation.
210
Follow this invisible thread of tender holy
feeling, keep attention close to it, do not let other things distract or bring
you away from it. For at its end is entry into Awareness.(P)
211
The student must for minutes deliberately recall
himself from the external multitude of things to their single mental ground in
himself. He must remind himself that although he sees everything as an objective
picture, this picture is inseparable from his own mind. He has to transcend the
world-idea within himself not by trying to blot it out but by thoroughly
comprehending its mentalist character. He must temporarily become an onlooker,
detached in spirit but just as capable in action.(P)
212
Contemplation is attained when your thinking
about a spiritual truth or about the spiritual goal suddenly ceases of itself.
The mind then enters into a perfectly still and rapt condition.(P)
213
He directs his attention inward, seeking the
mind itself rather than its incarnation in thought-bodies.
214
The practice involves a search, a probe, made by
directing both emotional feeling and mental concentration within the heart
region.
215
Deeper and deeper attention is needed. It must
draw all his forces, all his being, into the concentration.
216
The faculty of attention is interiorized and
turned back upon itself.
217
Let the thoughts drift away into a state of
harmony with the body, both getting more and more inactive. This is a practice
which can be done whenever the time is convenient, and for as short or as long a
period as desired.
218
He pushes the thoughts of the world farther and
farther away towards the periphery of consciousness and sinks deeper and deeper
into the centre of it.
219
We rise then from the working of imagination and
from the activity of reasoning, which are but veils, to the pure reality itself,
which is the void of pure thought.
220
Follow the "I" back to its holy source.
221
The mind undivided, that is, without a
subject-object parting of it into two portions, passes into a deep
contemplation.
222
He must pursue this faint feeling as it bears
him into the inmost recesses of his being. The farther he travels with it in
that direction, the stronger will it become.
223
None of these other ways of getting absorbed is
absolutely prerequisite; the essential thing is to catch the delicate feeling of
being indrawn and to go along with it.
224
He must let himself be entirely transported by
whichever of these two feelings comes to him: indrawnness or upliftment.
225
Entry into the third or contemplative stage may
be marked by a momentary lapse from any consciousness at all. Yet it will be
such a deep lapse that the meditator will not know on recovery whether it has
endured a few seconds or a whole hour.
226
Letting go all thoughts - the ego-thought, the
world-thought, even the God-thought - until absolutely none is present in mind:
it is as simple as that!
227
If he is sufficiently advanced he need make no
verbal formulation or pictured image to prepare a point of concentration, but
can begin straightaway in an abstract wordless pressure towards the heart.
228
This is one of the subtlest acts which anyone
can perform, this becoming conscious of consciousness, this attending to
attention.
229
Whether thinking of the personal God or of the
impersonal God, one is still thinking of God. In the end he has to drop all
thoughts, to be with God and not merely to have thoughts of God, whether
they are personal or impersonal.
230
As he retreats from all the outer phases of
experience, he comes to something which he can now identify as pure
Consciousness.
231
What was named in The Hidden Teaching Beyond
Yoga "The Yoga of the Untouch" can be literally translated as "The Yoga
which Touches no Object," meaning - in plain English - the practice of turning
attention away from every thought and image and thing in profound concentration
and being utterly absorbed in pure Mind. This is a feat which obviously requires
prior preparatory training. There is no attempt at self-improvement,
self-purification, or mind-training here; nor any aspiration, or longing. It is
a calm movement into the Silent Universal Mind, without personal aims.
232
Thinking is an activity which has its place in
certain kinds of meditation - the kind which seeks self-betterment, moral
improvement, or metaphysical clarification. It is an activity which occupies the
generality of its practitioners in the earlier stages. In the more advanced
stages and certainly on the Short Path, the attitude towards it must change. The
practitioner must seek to transcend thinking so that he can enter the stillness
where every movement of thought comes to an end but where consciousness remains.
233
A point is reached where the seeker must stop
making a thought of the Overself, or he will defeat himself and ensure
inability to go beyond the intellect into the Overself. At this point he is
required to enter the Stillness.
234
We have to let our thoughts lose themselves for
a while in the source whence they arose and not let them actively follow each
other from the first moment of our awakening till the first moment of our return
to sleep.
235
He must hold with unflagging concentration to
this deep centre within his being.
236
Place the mind where it belongs - at the Centre.
237
Holding the high aspiration strongly but
relaxing the thoughts and personal pressures opens the way.
238
He will understand the real spirit of meditation
when he understands that he has to do nothing at all, just to sit still
physically, mentally, and emotionally. For the moment he attempts to do
anything, he intrudes his ego. By sitting inwardly and outwardly still, he
surrenders egoistic action and thereby implies that he is willing to surrender
his little self to his Overself. He shows that he is willing to step aside and
let himself be worked upon, acted through, and guided by a higher power.
239
He has reached the subtlest area of the mind's
journey. For what is to be done now must be done without bringing the ego into
it, without the consciousness as a background that he is trying to
do it. This may appear impossible and is certainly paradoxical. It is, however,
accomplished by a process of letting go, negative rather than positive. It is a
passive letting-do.
240
At this critical point consciousness shifts from
forced willed attention, that is, concentration, to passive receptive attention,
or contemplation. This happens by itself, by grace.
241
Nothing is to be held within the consciousness
but rather consciousness is to let itself be held by the enveloping Grace.
242
The period of active effort is at an end; the
period of passive waiting now follows it. Without any act on his own part and
without any mental movement of his own, the Grace draws him up to the next
higher stage and miraculously puts him there where he has so long and so much
desired to be. Mark well the absence of self-effort at this stage, how the whole
task is taken out of his hands.
243
This anti-technique must not be
misunderstood. Without the quality of self-imposed patience, the student cannot
go far in this quest. If he has only a tourist mentality and nothing more, if he
seeks to collect in one, sweeping, surface glance all the truths which have
taken mankind lifetimes of effort and struggle to perceive, he will succeed only
in collecting a series of self-deceptive impressions which may indeed provide
him with the illusion of progress but will lead nowhere in the end.
244
At this stage his business is to wait patiently,
looking as deeply inward as he can while waiting. Any attempt to grasp at the
Overself would now defeat itself, for the ego's willed effort could only get the
ego itself back. But the willingness to sit still with hands metaphorically
outstretched like a beggar's, and for a sufficient stretch of time, may lead one
day to a moment when the Overself takes him by surprise as it suddenly takes
hold of his mind. The much sought and memorable Glimpse will then be his. He has
applied for discipleship and this is his sign of acceptance.
245
Thinking must be reduced more and more until it
goes. But by no deliberate act of will can he bring on contemplation. All he can
do is to be passive and wait in patience and keep the correct attitude -
aspiring, loving, watching, but devoid of any kind of tension.
246
Look for the moment when grace intervenes. Do
not, in ignorance, fail to intercept it, letting it pass by unheeded and
therefore lost. There is a feeling of mystery in this moment which, if lingered
with, turns to sacredness. This is the signal; seek to be alone, let go of
everything else, cease other activities, begin not meditation but
contemplation, the thought-free state.
247
He has to let himself become totally absorbed by
this beautiful feeling, and to remain in it as long as possible. Work, family,
friends, or society may call him away but, by refusing to heed them, he is
denying his own will and abandoning it to God.
248
At this stage thoughts are removed by a higher
power, even thoughts of higher things. This is a temporary experience but a very
memorable one.
249
If a meditator shifts into passivity, the
Overself must take over, provided the prerequisite qualifications have been
fulfilled.
250
His own efforts at this stage will consist in
removing from the field of concentration every mental association and emotional
influence which distracts him from attaining the stillness. When he has
succeeded in removing them, he is then to do nothing at all, only to relax.
251
Although it is the duty of the beginner who
seeks to master concentration to resist this distraction of thoughts, this
tendency to move endlessly in a circle from subject to subject, there is quite a
different duty for the proficient who seeks to master contemplation. He ought
not take this flow of thoughts too seriously or anxiously, but may let it go on
with the attitude that he surrenders this too to the Overself. He lets the
result of his efforts be in God's hands.
252
Withdrawn from the world's clamour to this still
centre of his innermost being, waiting in utter patience for the Presence which
may or may not appear, he performs a daily duty which has become of high
importance and priority.
253
The more inert the ego can be during this
exercise, and the more passively it rests before the Overself, the fuller will
be the latter's entry. Obviously this condition cannot be achieved during the
first stage, that of conscious effort and struggle with distractions.
254
His own power will bring him to a certain point
but it will not be able to bring him farther along. When this is reached, he has
no alternative than to surrender patiently, acquiescently, and wait. By such
submission he shows his humility and takes one step in becoming worthy of grace.
255
He is beginning to master wisdom when he tries
to learn how not to try.
256
It is almost impossible to throw all thoughts
and all images out of the mind. But what we cannot do for ourselves can be done
for us by a higher power.
257
Wait with patience for His Majesty the Inner
Ruler to appear in the Hall of Audience.
258
It comes to this, that we have to learn the art
of doing nothing! It would seem that everyone could practise this without the
slightest preparation or training, but the fact is that hardly anyone can do so.
For the expression "doing nothing" must be interpreted in an absolute sense. We
must learn to be totally without action, without thought - without any tension
or manifestation of the ego. The Biblical expression "Be still!" says exactly
the same thing but says it positively where the other says it negatively. If we
really succeed in learning this art, and sit absolutely still for long periods
of time, we shall be given the best of all rewards, the one promised by the
Bible: we shall "know that I am God."
259
Learn to free yourself from all the inner and
outer bindings as the spirit wafts you into utter lightness and stillness.
260
What happens next comes from no effort on his
part and depends on nothing that he does. He is simply to remain still,
perfectly still in body and mind. Then from above, from the Overself, grace
descends and he begins to experience the joy of feeling the divine presence.
261
Now that he has entered the blank silence he
must be prepared to wait patiently for what is about to unfold itself. This next
development cannot be forced or hurried; indeed, that attempt would effectively
prevent its manifestation.
262
If it is true to say that in the earlier stages
of his quest he holds on to the Still Thought-less stage, in the later
and more settled stage he is held by It.
263
As he sits there, hieratically immobile, in
peaceful surrender, his mind turned away from everyday matters, he feels the
Presence little by little.
264
It was quite correct to seek in the earlier
stages understanding of what is happening to him, but not in this later stage.
Here he is to be like a dumb creature, letting the Overself do its cleansing,
ego-stilling work in him.
265
It is no longer a matter of discursive thinking
which flows by orderly and logical transition from one idea to the next - that
was proper until grace came in - but of putting all thoughts aside and waiting
passively, quietly, letting awareness sink deeper.
266
The significant moment in meditation begins when
the man stops making efforts himself and when the mind begins to take him, to
withdraw him into itself quite of its own accord. This is an amazing experience
for he does not know how he came to stop doing what he was already doing,
trying, using effort. He is somehow led into letting it all go, into yielding to
the mood of passivity which gently, imperceptibly steals over him.
267
Before he can benefit by the Presence he must
put himself in a receptive state, must be prepared mentally and emotionally and
even physically. Rested and relaxed, self-cleansed and God-turned, humbled and
involved, he is ready for the "touch."
268
Both mind and heart must be used in persistent
effort to find the goal of this quest; but at a certain point the effort must
cease, and both mind and heart must be stilled. For it is then that the divine
can enter; it is then that the quester must cease trying and let the divine
grace bless its preparatory work. Thus from a positive attitude he passes,
eventually, into a passive one, not trying to force the issue any longer, but
letting himself be receptive and relaxed.
269
The more deeply he lets himself sink into this
attitude of receptivity - whether in meditation on God or admiration of art -
the finer the result.
270
More than any other author, Lao Tzu has put in
the tersest and simplest way the importance, the meaning, and the result of the
sitting-still practice, the patient waiting for inner being to reveal itself,
the submissive allowing of intuition to be felt and accepted.
271
There is nothing to do, no technique to practise
when you already are in the Light.
272
Once these preliminaries have been fulfilled and
the ego's active devotions have subsided, all that he can do is to wait,
watchfully, for the arisal of intuitive feelings and then devote his utmost
attention to them.
273
In the ultimate phase of meditation, he has
mastered the art, finished his work, and relaxed completely. He is quite
inactive, quite still in both body and mind, doing nothing. For now he is at his
best level of consciousness - the holiest, calmest, widest one.
275
"Here I am" is to be his attitude, "humbly
receptive in the silence, submissively waiting with restrained ego and stilled
mind for whatever guidance comes and however distasteful to personal emotion or
however unwelcome to personal judgement it may be."
276
If after you reach the deepest contemplation,
you then direct attention towards a particular problem on which you are seeking
knowledge, knowledge which neither the senses nor the intellect has so far been
able to supply, you may be able to perceive as in a flash what is the proper
solution of this problem.
277
Observe how still our whole being spontaneously
becomes when we want to be fully receptive just before some important
announcement. If it is of the highest possible importance, we almost hold our
breath; such is the intense stillness needed to take it in to the utmost degree
and to miss nothing. How much more should we be still throughout every part of
mind and body when waiting to hear the silent pronouncements of the Overself!
278
The truth germinates in Silence.
279
There is no better authority for a truth on
which to rest than its own clear perception directly within oneself. But this
statement is valid only if the ego has been put where it belongs, at least
during the period of perception.
280
We not seldom find speech to be but the
laryngeal medium whereby men convey lies to us; it is somewhat paradoxical,
therefore, that silence should be the mysterious medium whereby someone should
convey truth to us.
281
Out of this silence a voice begins to speak to
him.
282
Advanced contemplation may lead to Revelation.
283
In the deeper phases, certain thoughts which
come to him can be taken as divine guidance. "Thy will."
284
He has developed the capacity to open the door
of his inner being. He has reached the stillness which envelops its threshold.
But this is only a beginning, not the end. He has now to pass beyond it and find
out what the light itself holds for him.
285
At such a time he is to put aside his own ideas
and wait patiently for the Overself-inspired ideas to come to him.
286
A mind cleansed, centered, quietened, and
emptied is what he must offer; the revelation and benediction are what he is
given.
287
When attention is stilled, the mind void of
thoughts and the desires at rest, it is possible for the instructed
person to perceive truth much more clearly than before, and to feel Reality.
But the instruction must concern what is the always-true and the ever-real.
288
It is only as he frees himself from all inward
and outward pressures, all suggestions and impositions, that he becomes relaxed
enough to receive what the Overself can present him with - ego-freed truth.
289
In the mind's stillness it is possible to find
either nothing at all or clear understanding. It depends on the man's
preparation for it, on his knowledge, character, and experience.
290
In the soft felicitous stillness he can wait
expectantly for the answers to troubling questions.
291
Spiritual truth passes more easily into a mind
emptied of its thoughts, its cares, its desires.
292
When the mind is brought to the quiescence of
unstirring leaves in a windless garden, and when with this there is a habitual
aspiration truthward, a devotion to the highest being, the Revelation may more
easily come to it.
293
There, in the deepest state of contemplation,
the awareness of a second thing - whether this be the world of objects outside
or the world of thoughts inside - vanishes. But unconsciousness does not
follow. What is left over is a continuous static impersonal and unchanging
consciousness. This is the inmost being of man. This is the supreme Self,
dwelling within itself alone. Its stillness transcends the activity of thinking,
of the knowing which distinguishes one thing from another. It is incommunicable
then, inexplicable later. But after a while from this high level the meditator
must descend, returning to his human condition. He has come as close in the
contact with the Great Being, the most refined ultimate Godhead, as is
posssible. Let him be grateful. Let him not ask for more for he cannot
know or experience more. This is as far as any man can go, for "Thou shalt not
see God and live."
294
The attainment of a certain experience marks the
permanent attainment of a higher grade in the aspirant's evolution. When this
experience comes to him, he will have "the universal vision," wherein he will
actually experience whatever beings, persons, forms, and creatures in the
world he thinks of. For a few minutes or a few hours he will forget his real ego
and be universalized.
295
Said the Sage Arada: "Having obtained this
ecstatic contemplation the childish mind is carried away by the possession of
the new unknown ecstasy...he reaches the world of Brahma deceived by the
delight. But the wise man, knowing that these thoughts bewilder the mind,
reaches a stage of contemplation separate from this, which has its own pleasure
and ecstasy. And he who carried away by this pleasure sees no further
distinction, obtains a dwelling full of light, even amongst the Abhasura
deities. But he who separates his mind from this pleasure and ecstasy, reaches
the third stage of contemplation ecstatic but without pleasure. Upon this stage
some teachers make their stand, thinking that it is indeed liberation, since
pleasure and pain have been left behind and there is no exercise of the
intellect. But he who, immersed in this ecstasy, strives not for a further
distinction, obtains an ecstasy in common with the Subhakritsna deities. But he
who, having attained such a bliss desires it not but despises it, obtains the
fourth stage of contemplation which is separate from all pleasure and pain. But
rising beyond this contemplation, having seen the imperfections of all embodied
souls, the wise man climbs to a yet higher wisdom in order to abolish all body."
- Asvaghosha: The Buddha Karita
296
If he is aware that he is aware, then he is no
longer being aware!
297
"The priest concentrates his mind upon a single
thought. Gradually his soul becomes filled with a supernatural ecstasy and
serenity, while his mind still reasons upon and investigates the subject chosen
for contemplation; this is the first Jha<->na. Still fixing his thoughts
on the same subject, he then frees his mind from reasoning and investigation,
while the ecstasy and serenity remain, and this is the second Jha<->na.
Next, his thoughts still fixed as before, he divests himself of ecstasy, and
attains the third Jh\oana, which is a state of tranquil serenity. Lastly, he
passes to the fourth Jha<->na, in which the mind, exalted and purified, is
indifferent to all emotions, alike of all pleasure and of pain." - Childer's
Pali Dictionary
298
The Venerable Dr. Parawehera Vajiranana Thera:
"The Buddha's own conclusion in regard to the practical methods of mind training
has been developed into two complex systems known as 'cultivation of
concentration,' and 'cultivation of insight.' Again, these two systems
correspond to the two predominant faculties, faith and wisdom. Those who have
entered into the religious life through strong faith and devotion are trained in
the Samadhi path which appreciates the special practice of rapt, absorbed,
concentrated thought called Jh\oana, the ecstatic tranquillity of mind. The
method of jha<->na meditation is called 'the path of tranquillity,' and
the disciple who has practised this path should enter in the end to the
acquisition of that full knowledge which leads to Arhatship. Those who practise
Samadhi meditation in the beginning, experiencing psychic powers as the aid of
enlightenment, should practise insight at the end to attain Arhatship. Those who
practise insight in the beginning, with or without Samadhi practice, will attain
Arhatship. The Samadhi system, therefore, is optional in Buddhism, and is
regarded as only a mental discipline preparatory to the attainment of full
knowledge. But Vipassana being the direct path to full knowledge is
indispensable and is universally imperative for the attainment of Nirvana. Hence
insight meditation is the essential method of mental training in Buddhism and it
is a unique system in Buddha's teachings. Thus ends an outline of the scheme of
mental training explained in Buddhism as the only path to win the goal of man,
the Eternal Happiness of Nirvana."
299
He should not be satisfied with a mere glimpse
of the pacified mind. He should hold on to it long enough to make the meditation
period a glorious success.
300
In the early stages of enlightenment, the
aspirant is overwhelmed by his discovery that God is within himself. It stirs
his intensest feelings and excites his deepest thoughts. But, though he does not
know it, those very feelings and thoughts still form part of his ego, albeit the
highest part. So he still separates his being into two - self and Overself. Only
in the later stages does he find that God not only is within himself but is
himself.
301
Psychologically the void trance is deeper than
the world-knowing insight, but metaphysically it is not. For in both cases one
and the same Reality is seen.(P)
302
The principle behind it is that once this
contact with the Overself has been established during the third stage, it is
only necessary first, to prolong, and second, to repeat the contact for
spiritual evolution to be assured.(P)
303
"So by passing wholly beyond all consciousness
of form, by the dying out of the consciousness of sensory reactions, and by
turning the attention from any consciousness of the manifold, he enters into and
abides in that rapt meditation which is accompanied by the consciousness of the
sphere of unbounded space - even unto the fourth Jha<->na (ecstasy)." -
The Dhamma Sangani (a Buddhist scripture)
304
Meditation, absent-mindedness, abstraction, to
be sunk in thought, trance "where both sensations and ideas have ceased to be" -
these are Buddhist stages of progress.
305
Of those who reach the third stage, some go
wrong at its critical point through inexperience or incomprehension. If they try
to think egoistically about what has happened or even to draw an
intellectualized meaning, message, or revelation from its silence, they lose the
experience itself. It cannot be dragged down to these inferior levels. They must
be content with its utter stillness, its sacred emptiness.
306
Sri Ramakrishna: "The mind ordinarily moves in
the three lower chakras. But if it rises above them and reaches the heart, one
gets the vision of Light." "Even though it has reached the throat, the Mind may
come down again (from utterly unworldly consciousness - PB). One ought to be
always alert. Only if his mind reaches the spot between the eyebrows need he
have no more fear of a fall, the Supreme Self is so close."
307
That desirable inner state is close to us, but
its attainment is elusive to us. The mind is more slippery than an eel when one
touches the fringe of the state, for usually the next minute one loses it in a
flash.
308
During the course of a single session, the
meditator may touch the transcendent consciousness quite a few times.
309
When man attains this state of harmony within
himself and with Nature outside, it may be only a temporary experience or a
permanent one. It is given to few to attain such a state permanently and even
the hour of its temporary onset is usually unpredictable.
310
The most advanced person can enter immediately
into the contemplative state.
311
He who has reached this stage of his meditation
may well pray: "O Lord, grant the capacity to go deeper into Thy presence and to
stay longer in it."
312
When the attempt at control is stopped,
awareness arises that thinking itself has stopped. This stillness then continues
by itself, effortlessly. If through inexperience, lack of instruction,
unfamiliarity, or unpreparedness fear is felt, fear of death, annihilation of
consciousness, this extremely subtle and delicate experience will suddenly come
to an end. The opportunity is lost.
313
Consciousness must, and will, enter in the end
into this unique activity - the contemplation of itself. But it can do so with
much more understanding if it draws the world, along with its relation to the
world - the two together - into that contemplation and then merges them there
until they are dissolved.
314
The fear of annihilation which comes to a number
of persons who meditate deeply enough, and which forces them to withdraw
themselves from the practice for that session, is justifiable. There is an
experience which seems to be equivalent to self-obliteration. Nevertheless it is
not the end of existence, for it is followed by an entry into the beautiful
white light, bringing an immense feeling of space and goodwill, of harmony and
liberation from all that is low, of peace and compassion. The whole experience
is so vivid, so real, so convincing - all through from beginning to end - that
whether or not it recurs, it will remain forever in his memory. It has also a
strange power when recalled years afterwards in moments of trouble and distress
to provide inner help and support.
315
This transparent light-world is the source of
creation, the cosmic birthplace, the home of dazzling primal energy. Galaxies,
universes, suns, and planets come forth from here. The revelatory, blissful
vision of God's Form may happen only once in a lifetime. Beyond it all is God
without Form - the still void.
316
All these methods of establishing contact with
the higher self may be dispensed with at a more advanced stage when it will
suffice to have a simple turning of attention towards it or a simple
remembrance.
317
He will attain a stage when he can sink in
self-imposed rapt absorption at will.
318
We may know when we have entered into the
awareness of the Self, for in that moment we shall have gone out of the
awareness of the world. The spiritual records which have been left behind by the
great mystics, and which evidence this rarer experience of the race, all testify
to this.
319
The term "cosmic consciousness" is used rather
loosely by different writers. It has been equated with different kinds of mystic
experience and different grades of intuition and insight. Because of this
ambiguity, it is best to try to avoid the use of this term; but, when found, it
should be judged by the context wherein it appears.
320
One of the uses of the term "cosmic
consciousness" is certainly to indicate what has been called "unitary"
consciousness. Judging by the experience of at least one advanced mystic, its
most appropriate application as a name would be to the experience whereby one is
able to identify oneself with all other living creatures, in feeling and in
intelligence. Many mystics are referring to this when they speak of "love."
321
The attention must be concentrated at this stage
solely on the hidden soul. No other aim and even no symbol of It may now be
held. When he has become so profoundly absorbed in this contemplation that his
whole being, his whole psyche of thought, feeling, will, and intuition are
mingled and blent in it, there may come suddenly and unexpectedly a displacement
of awareness. He actually passes out of what he has hitherto known as
himself into a new dimension and becomes a different being. When first
experienced and unknown, there is the fear that this is death itself. It is
indeed what is termed in mystical traditions of the West as "dying to oneself"
and of the East as "passing away from oneself." But when one has repeated
periodically and grown familiar with this experience, there is not only no fear
but the experience is eagerly sought and welcomed. There I dissolved myself in
the lake of the Water of Life.(P)
322
The novice must cautiously feel his way back
from the divine centre at the end of his period of meditation to the plane of
normal activity. This descent or return must be carefully negotiated. If he is
not careful he may easily and needlessly lose the fruit of his attainment. An
exercise to accomplish this, to bring the meditator slowly back to earth and to
prepare him for the external life of inspired activity, is the following one:
very slowly opening and shutting eyelids several times. Those moments
immediately following cessation of meditation are equally as important as the
period preceding. They are of crucial importance in fact. For in those few
minutes he may have lost much of what he gained during the whole period. Hold
the state attained as gently and preciously as you would hold a baby. Hold to
the centre and do not stray from it. Such a state the yogis call sahaja
samadhi: despite all moving about there is non-action, for the heart is
free.
323
He finds that the peace generated, the will
aroused, and the insight gained do not last longer than the period of meditation
itself.
324
He should endeavour skilfully to keep active
from one moment to another this wonderful faculty which lays the heart of
reality open to his insight. He should keep the integrity of this insight quite
unimpaired even when he is occupied with the shapes and is participating in the
events of a space-time, relativity-stamped world. After he has learned to rest
inwardly in the thought-free state at all times and amid all circumstances and
not merely during meditation, it is not essential that he should keep
permanently free from thoughts in order to keep always in the pure-Thought
awareness. No mental or physical activity can interrupt this insight once it has
been fully realized. For then whatever thinking the duties of earthly life may
rightly demand of him will be done within the pure Thought and not with any
feeling of being apart from it. He will feel that it is one and the same pure
Thought which is able to play through all these separate thoughts without
prejudice to its own self-identity.
325
Although its deepest meditation culminates in
thoughts ceasing to exist, the man must eventually end his meditation. As he
does so, his mind necessarily returns from this condition to the common one of
continuously active thought.
326
For anyone to be able to hold the mind utterly
free of all thoughts and absolutely cleared of all images is an uncommon
achievement. Even when successful, the effort seldom lasts longer than a few
minutes. But after that short space of time, those particular thoughts and those
particular images which first rise up are important, valuable, or suggestive.
They should be carefully noted or remembered.
327
The deeper he plunges in meditation, the less
does worldly life appeal to him when he emerges from it; the old incentives
which drive him begin to weaken.
328
If it is to be a continuous light that stays
with him and not a fitful flash, he will need first, to cast all negative
tendencies, thoughts, and feelings entirely out of his character; second, to
make good the insufficiencies in his development; third, to achieve a state of
balance among his faculties.
329
It was sweet to be in the temple of true
consciousness, but I could not stay indefinitely. I roused myself to ordinary
waking consciousness.
330
If he emerges from this deep state, he will
recognize his surroundings by slow gradations only. His reluctance to leave that
region of absolute delight may account for this slowness.
331
The end of a meditation which attains such a
high state may find him unable to return at once to the body's activity. It is
prudent in that case to wait patiently for warmth, force, and movement to return
to it. There need be no concern about this condition, which is quite familiar to
practising mystics.
332
Experience shows that if a sufficiently deep
level - not necessarily the deepest level but one that corresponds to what the
yogis call savikalpa samadhi, which is not as deep as nirvikalpa -
if that can be attained and then prolonged sufficiently in time, an artist or a
writer can draw from the experience creative power for his work.
333
When the mind has really plunged very deep in
contemplation, when attention has travelled very far away from its normal plane,
recalling oneself to that plane is best done slowly, gently, little by little.
334
It is a fact that contemplation can become so
deep and the personality so lost for the time being that when the period of
practice is over the meditator may need a little time to accustom himself to his
surroundings, just as any ordinary person who awakens from a very deep sleep may
need several seconds to become conscious of his physical surroundings. In this
half-absentminded state he may even fail to recognize someone else in the room.
This happened once to the famous professor D.T. Suzuki, the great Zen teacher,
after we had been sitting together in a private meditation in his study.
Although the period was not at all long, when the silence was broken and he
began to speak, he addressed the question to me, asking, "Who are you?" Of
course after some seconds he came back into full consciousness and remembered.