1
After the brief hour of peace come the long months
of storm: its purity is then contested by opposition, its light by the world's
darkness. It is through the varying episodes of experience that he must struggle
back to the peace and purity which he saw in vision and felt in meditation.
True, he had found them even then but they were still only latent and
undeveloped.(P)
2
Settled serenity which can be unaffected by the
disorder of our times seems theoretically unfindable. Yet some have found it!
3
We cannot hope to achieve such calm in a day. It
must be worked for, the obstacles to it must be struggled through, before it can
be won.
4
"Time must elapse between sowing and harvest - nay,
even in the growth of such wild grass as the holy Kusa and the like, reflection
on the SELF ripens into self-realization by degrees, and in the course of time."
- Panchadasi
5
Is the search for inner peace a hopeless one? There
is enough testimony to prove that it is not.
6
Sceptics refuse to believe that passion is unable to
intrude itself into that peace-filled mind.
7
Once this sublime equilibrium of mind is reached,
there is then the further need and practice of not letting it get upset.
8
Peace in the hearts of men, with peace in their
relations with one another: is this an idle dream?
9
We do not have to fall asleep to experience this
truth. Everyone has been momentarily flung into the peace-fraught vacuum state
by the unexpected removal of a great fear or by the sudden satisfaction of a
great desire. But very quickly other thoughts, desires, or fears rush in to fill
the vacuum and the glimpse of peace is lost.
10
It is in the very nature of things that the good
should ultimately triumph over the bad, that the true should dissolve the false.
This understanding should bring him patience.
11
He will find that whereas there is a quick road to
agitation, there is no quick road to serenity.
12
How can this peace become continuous and
uninterrupted? That is a question often asked by many who have felt and lost it.
13
It is useless to expect that those who are
insufficiently receptive by temperament and development will be able to feel
this benedictory calmness.
14
Many years are needed for a man to gain this
composure of self, this sureness of purpose.
15
Is it possible to attain such inner calm that
negative thoughts and the baser emotions swirl against it in vain?
16
It is easy to attain a kind of artificial serenity
while seated in the comfort of an armchair and reading a philosophic book, but
to keep calm in the midst of provocation or peril is the test. So the would-be
philosopher will try to keep an even mind at all times, to chill its passions
and control its agitations.
17
A peaceful life does not merely mean the absence
of troubles and strifes. It means this uncommon thing, but it also means
something entirely different: a peace-filled mind.
18
I have written and spoken that this inner work
should start with cultivating a calm, peaceable temperament. The Brahmin boy in
India who is initiated into his caste and given the symbolic sacred thread to
wear at the age of thirteen is also given this same instruction: "Be calm!" And
five hundred years before Jesus started his public work, Chou Tun-Yi in China
earned a personal compliment from Confucius, who observed, "He is a man of great
peaceableness." Two hundred years later, Mencius was practising and gaining the
Unperturbed Mind; later, as an honoured Confucian moralist, he was teaching
others, in his turn, the same method.
19
He should set up as his goal this mood of
sustained inward tranquillity and train himself to allow no wave of emotion or
upsurge of passion to dispel it.
20
The longing for peace may be kept inside a man for
many years, repressed and ignored, but in the end it has to come out.
21
Seek the centre of inner gravity and try to stay
in it. Try to avoid being pulled out of it by emotions and passions, whether
your own or other people's, by anxieties and troubles - in short, by the ego.
22
He who lives in the higher levels of his being
comes into a beautiful serenity as part of his reward. This is a pointer to us.
By consciously cultivating such a serenity, we prepare the way for entry into
such a level.
23
In the end and after many an experience, he will
come to see that peace must take the place of passion, truth must banish
falsity, and reality must come through the illusion which covers it.
24
To attain knowledge of Brahman, the mind must be
held in the prerequisite state of being calm, tranquil, and in equilibrium - not
carried away by attachment to anything. After this is established, and
only then, can you begin enquiry with any hope of success. Unless the mind is
balanced you cannot get Brahman.(P)
25
The importance of cultivating calmness is well
known in India. The Brahmin youth at puberty when initiated into his caste
status and given the sacred thread is taught to make the first sought-for
attribute calmness. Why is this? Because it helps a man to achieve self-control
and because without it he becomes filled with tensions. These tensions come from
the ego and prevent him from responding to intuitive feelings and intuitive
ideas. For the student of philosophy it is of course absolutely essential to
achieve a composed and relaxed inner habit.
26
It is not to be a forced calm, imposed from
without and liable to break down, not a suppression of feelings on the surface
while letting them rage within.
27
The Psalmist's advice, "Be still, and know that I
am God," may be taken on one level - the mystical - as a reference to the
ultimate state achieved intermittently in contemplation; but on another level -
the philosophical - the reference can be carried even deeper. For here it is a
continuous state achieved not by quietening the mind for half an hour but by
emptying the mind for all time of agitation and illusion. Towards this end the
cultivation of calmness amid all circumstances makes a weighty contribution.
28
Half of Asia holds this faith, burns its
sweet-scented incense before the firm conviction that the search for inner calm
and emotional freedom is the highest duty of man.
29
Chinese wisdom verified Indian experience.
"Perfect calm with gentleness makes Tao prosper," wrote Tze Ya Tze.
30
It may be possible to achieve only seldom, but it
is worth trying for: let nothing shake your composure.
31
The quest of the deeper calm that is ordinarily
experienced only occasionally by some people becomes important for him.
32
Hold on to serenity amid all circumstances until
it becomes an abiding quality.
33
This is to wrap the mantle of peace around
himself.
34
What is it that Lao Tzu says? "The disciplined man
masters thoughts by stillness and emotions by calmness."
35
The Persian Sufi Attar's advice to the quester to
"go thy way in tranquillity" amid all his fortunes and frustrations on this
venture is very practical, and not only very sensible.
36
He sets up the ideal of meeting events, be they
favourable or adverse, with equanimity.
37
He must practise an invariable calm, sheathe
himself in its protective power.
38
He should learn to cultivate the feelings of peace
whenever they are strongly present. He should give himself to them completely,
putting aside everything else. For they will bear to him something hidden inside
of them that is even still more valuable.
39
If at any time he feels the touch of Peace, he
should stay where he is, forget all else, and surrender to it.
40
This inner emptiness, its equipoise, serenity, is
neither deviated by passions nor pushed by extremes. Take Nagarjuna's mid-view
and also the early Gautama's middle path.
41
Cultivate calmness; try to keep the balance of
your mind from being upset.
42
If this kind of thought and life is followed,
there comes by slow degrees a stable calmness throughout the whole being which
nothing ever upsets.
43
These quiet moments may enter his life with
greater frequency. If so, he ought to welcome them gratefully and respond to
them wisely and sensitively.
44
The moments when a sudden stillness falls upon a
man must be carefully tended, for they are as delicate as a tiny sprout of
grass. Thus treated so hospitably and reverently, they will expand and lengthen
and turn into a blessing.
45
One can keep the mind as serene as an undisturbed
temple and hence be happier than when amid the mob. We must learn to treasure
such moments when we think grandly, and surrender our laboured hearts to sublime
peace.
46
Whether stricken and humbled in penitence or
uplifted and exalted in meditation, one should come back to the central calm.
47
Great balance is needed. This can be achieved only
if steadfast calmness is cultivated.
48
These moments when negatives are non-existent and
peace within is vivid can only be called delicious, exquisite, and he will do
well to linger over them and stretch out their time.
49
Let the mind find its repose in this delicious and
desirable tranquillity.
50
He who has entered this balanced state has found
peace.
51
If his daily life makes him feel that it is taking
him farther away from this peace, this inner harmony, he may have to reconsider
his situation, environment, and activities.
52
No pleasure which is brief, sensual, and fugitive
is worth exchanging for equanimity and peace, not even if it is multiplied a
thousand times during a lifetime's course.(P)
53
Nothing matters so much that we should throw
ourselves into a state of panic about it. No happening is so important that we
should let ourselves be exiled from inner peace and mental calm for its sake.
54
So long as a man cannot live at peace with
himself, so long will he be unable to live at peace with others.
55
The fidgety, restless movements of the moderns
merely betray their neurotic lack of self-control. The Buddhist seeker and the
Taoist sage value and practise calm.
56
The worst result of all this hurry and tumult and
preoccupation with externals is that it leaves no time for intuitive living.
57
Those who live in a world of turmoil need this
serenity not less but even more than the yogis do.
58
It is never worth paying the price of losing one's
inner calm to attend to any matter or to do any job. If he cannot cope with the
matter or master the job without fraying his nerves, he had better drop the one
or the other, if he can.
59
Tranquillizers and antidepressants sell by the
million in highly advanced countries such as England and the U.S., but peace of
mind is no nearer; indeed, this enormous sale is a sign of how far away it still
is.
60
He must find and keep a centre within himself
which he is determined to keep inviolate against the changes, alarms, and
disturbances of the outside world. Human life being what it is, he knows that
troubles may come but he is resolved that they shall not invade this inner
sanctuary and shall be kept at a mental distance.
61
The serene life is not subject to emotional
crises. It has clearly worked out, in the hours of contemplation, its wise
attitude towards life and men so that no situation that arises can sweep it off
its feet.
62
Take your experiences with as much equanimity as
you can muster. Like Buddha, keep no illusions about life's delightful side:
observe its imperfections and inadequacies, lament its transiency; but, unlike
Buddha, enjoy its offerings while they are still here. Only - value your peace
of mind above all amid the good and the bad; keep the precious inner calm.
63
But such calm, such satisfying equanimity, can
only be kept if he does not expect too much from others, does not make too many
demands on life, and is not too fussy about trifles.
64
Even when a situation becomes quite critical, a
here-and-now matter, he should not give way to panic. The first move after the
first shock should be to restore and maintain calm, the second to consider what
he is to do - a question for which he should look not only to thinking for an
answer but also to intuition.
65
However adverse or difficult a situation may be,
it is not only in conformity with the Quest to keep one's equanimity but in the
end it is to one's advantage.
66
A great mind is not distressed by a little matter.
67
He learns by practice to live within a measure of
inner peace while working in the closely packed, crowded world.
68
He will learn by practice to discipline his own
emotional reactions to every situation, however provoking or irritating it may
be. The cultivation of inner calm, the growth of mental equanimity, will be set
up as a necessary goal.
69
If the world tires you, if the evil deeds of
others torment you, you can find blessed peace and healing refuge by turning
within.
70
Marcus Aurelius: "When you happen to be ruffled a
little by any untoward accident, retire immediately into your reason, and do not
move out of tune any further than you needs must; for the sooner you return to
harmony, the more you will get it in your own power."
71
Patience is needed, and confidence in the path
chosen; resignation is better than rebellion.
72
He does not need to turn his back on the world to
find peace.
73
In the stillness we find the perfect shelter from
the unease brought by so many human presences, with all their radiating auras.
74
Remember to recess back into consciousness, to the
centre, when other persons are present. This instantly subjugates nerve strain
and self-consciousness.
75
To remain in obscurity and to pass unnoted assists
inner peace. For the contrary attracts other persons' thoughts which beat
against one's head and buzz in one's mind like flies - this is an annoyance.
76
He will develop a rhythm of response to intuitive
feeling and reaction to outward environment which will be in faultless harmony
and put no strain of conflict upon him.
77
It is easier to feel the fine excitement of a
sacred presence, and most especially the Overself's presence, than to relate it
to and unite it with the prosaic everyday human routines.
78
When confronted by turmoil, he will remember to
remain calm. When in the presence of ugliness, he will think of beauty. When
others show forth their animality and brutality, he will show forth his
spiritual refinement and gentleness. Above all, when all around seems dark and
hopeless, he will remember that nothing can extinguish the Overself's light and
that it will shine again as surely as spring follows winter.
79
The belief that this kind of beatitude is
valueless for practical life can only be expunged by personal experience.
80
When the evils or tribulations or disappointments
of life become too heavy a weight, if he has made some advance he has only to
pause, turn away and inward, and there he can find a radiant peace of mind which
offsets the dark things and counterbalances the menacing depressions.
81
This truth, taught by Greek sage and Zen master,
that action is best done from a tranquil centre, is logical in theory and
provable in practice.
82
If trouble comes, first take refuge in the Void,
then do what reason and practicality suggest.
83
That some unexpected and unpleasant event may
surprise him to the extent that his composure breaks down, is another
possibility to which the same rule applies - rise after every fall.
84
He is to cultivate a smooth calmness under all
conditions until his emotions are never taken by surprise. He is to keep
self-possessed at all times so that no contingency finds him inwardly unprepared
for it.
85
The better he is poised, the more easily he will
adjust to unexpected situations.
86
Such great serenity gives an effect of great
reserves dwelling behind it.
87
He who has enough confidence in himself to be at
ease can keep his nerve, his emotional equilibrium, in the most varied
situations.
88
The changes and happenings around him, the
temptations and tribulations he encounters will not affect his precious inner
calm.
89
Amid all the vicissitudes of human affairs, and
the distractions of historical upheaval, he will keep this central peace.
90
The more he gathers in this peace, the less he
feels the need of artificial stimulants like drugs or tobacco or alcohol.
91
Amid the chances and changes, the happenings and
episodes of everyday life, he practises keeping unaltered within - in temper and
temperament.
92
He is never disturbed by untoward events or
perturbed by untoward personal events. His mind floats in a sea of calmness.
93
He walks on his serene course, kept to it by
remembering where his true allegiance lies.
94
There is serenity and certainty of the mind when
he is in this state.
95
The wise man cannot spare a single hour for
repining as he cannot spare a single word for recrimination. He will maintain
his imperturbable calm, his reserved air, his refusal to dispute any question.
96
Tranquillity - the first psychological
quality taught at his caste-initiation to the Brahmin youth; much admired by
Benjamin Disraeli because seldom met with in society; prized by Marcus Aurelius
and his Stoic sect as the best of virtues - this is to be practised by those who
would become philosophers and sought by those who would become saints. Yet for
others, who must perforce stay, mix, and work in the world, it is not less
valuable to smooth their path and reduce their difficulties. The first it does
by putting men at their ease, the second by bestowing clearer sight. For them
too it is the defense against rancour, the preserver of humour and peace, and,
lastly, if they desire, the way to be in the world but not of it. As Lao Tzu
wrote: "There is an Infinite Being which was before Heaven and Earth. How calm
it is!"
97
He who attains this beautiful serenity is absolved
from the misery of frustrated desires, is healed of the wounds of bitter
memories, is liberated from the burden of earthly struggles. He has created a
secret, invulnerable centre within himself, a garden of the spirit which neither
the world's hurts nor the world's joys can touch. He has found a transcendental
singleness of mind.(P)
98
As his centre moves to a profounder depth of
being, peace of mind becomes increasingly a constant companion. This in turn
influences the way in which he handles his share of the world's activities.
Impatience and stupidity recede, wrath at malignity is disciplined;
discouragement under adversity is controlled and stress under pressures
relaxed.(P)
99
How soothing to the nerves, how healing to the
wearied mind is this quality of utter calm.
100
Depression cannot coexist with this realization
of the presence.
101
That state is a joyous one which brings with it
freedom from lusts and passions, wraths and resentments, servitudes to cravings,
and enslavements that prevent growth.
102
Vasistha: "To those who have gained internal
composure, the whole world becomes calm." Sruti: "Whoever has his standby
in Self - all desires harboured in his mind turn away." (P.B.: He has freedom of
the spirit.)
103
The inner calm which philosophy preaches and the
philosopher practises, while not an anodyne to assuage the pains of living, does
help the struggle against them and the endurance of them.
104
When this peace falls upon him, equilibrium
establishes itself spontaneously in emotion and thought.
105
The great calm which now holds him
absorbs and thus causes the disappearance of passions, negative emotions, and
fears.
106
The fruits of the Spirit are several but the
list begins with inner peace. The agitation and anxiety, the desires and
passions are enfeebled or extinguished.
107
It is said in the ancient texts that constant
sama (calmness) and samadhana (equanimity) provide conditions out
of which knowledge of truth can arise.
108
The man who has found this wonderful serenity
cannot be tormented by the denial of desires and longings or excited by their
satisfaction.
109
It is a peace so complete as to lift him beyond
the world.
110
Such is the peace which he attains that he can
say with Chuang Tzu, "Within my breast no sorrows can abide; I feel the great
world's spirit through me thrill."
111
In those high gathered moments when truth and
beauty become loving allies to possess us, we ourselves become inwardly aloof
from tormenting desires.
112
Here, within this delicious calm, he will find
the inspirational source of such diverse qualities as courage and benevolence,
poise and honesty.
113
The man who is established in the Overself
cannot be deflected from the calm which it gives into passions, angers, hatreds,
and similar base things. Calmness has become his natural attitude.
114
Those desired moments of the mind when peace
falls are rare, but they exist and are still to be found. The solace they can
confer becomes with time the most prized possession of those few who have
touched it.
115
It affords a satisfaction free from anxiety,
unmarred by painful changes.
116
If he can attain this inner poise, no event can
bring him unhappiness, no person can bring him harm.
117
From this deep calm, certain valuable qualities
are born: courage when tragedy confronts him, strength when battles must be
fought, and wise perception when problems arise.
118
Wise action comes out of composure, not out of
passion or lust, which put the mind in a feverish state and blur, even falsify,
its vision.
119
Whoever achieves this gemlike serenity will no
longer be sensitive to criticism, however vulgar it be, or susceptible to
insult, however venomous. This does not mean he will always ignore them. He may
even humbly study the one to learn about his shortcomings and calmly reply to
the other to fulfil his public duty. But he will not feel personal resentment
nor express emotional anger about them.
120
Right judgement is more easily made in a calm
atmosphere. It is confused, upset, or even blocked by passion or tension or
strong negative moods such as depression.
121
Where this attitude of philosophic detachment is
lacking, one's sufferings under the blows of karma will inevitably be more
intense.
122
This freedom from inner conflict, this
disburdenment of troubling complexes, this liberation from gnawing unrest,
releases his mental and emotional energies for concentration upon his work.
123
A serene, cool mind is more likely to grasp the
truth of any situation in which it is personally involved than is a turbulent,
excited one.
124
Caruso: "It is essential that the singer should
bring to his study a complete calmness. Unless he is calm, how can he hope to
control his will? Moreover, a calm mind facilitates the task of completely
relaxing the vocal organs."
125
He becomes established in a calm when dealing
with the world or when alone with himself, a calm which leads to freedom from
moods, which remains the same whether he is provoked by someone's nasty sneers
or flattered by pleasant compliments.
126
Suzuki always kept imperturbable, always calm,
whenever and wherever we met. As Herman Hesse said of him, when Arthur
Koestler's criticism of Suzuki appeared in The Lotus and the Robot, "He
does not allow himself to be touched."
127
If he puts up a curtain of equanimity between
himself and his troubles, this is not to evade them but rather to deal with them
more effectively.
128
If he has real inner peace he will never know
the mental shock and nervous collapse which come to numbers of people when
bereavement or loss of fortune comes. Such a calamity may not be preventable,
but the emotional suffering it causes may be cut off at the very start by a
philosophic attitude toward life generally.
129
If a man can train himself to keep calm not
merely in pleasant periods but also in distressing ones, he will be in better
form to do what can be done to mitigate his trouble. Without such self-training
and with panicky nerves or fear-stricken mind, he will be in worse form. A calm
man's actions when calamity besets him are more likely to be right than a
frantic one's.
130
If he is to keep this inner peace, he must keep
no care on the mind. But this does not mean that he is to become casual,
indifferent to responsibility, and neglectful of duty.
131
As the inner peace advances, the outer problems
recede; as truth permeates the mind, harmony re-arranges the life.
132
He will then be able to endure with unruffled
mind what the average man can only endure with exhausted emotions.
133
In this desirable state cares are forgotten,
agitations are lost, and a godlike peace descends on the man.
134
The problems that once tormented him do not seem
to exist any more. But have they really been dissolved by the exaltation, by its
calmness and satisfaction?
135
Present troubles are mentally put at a distance
so that inner calm may be restored: then they can be more properly attended to.
136
The more you can let yourself stay in this
wonderful mood, where the sacred presence becomes so vivid and so positive, the
less will you be troubled by, or at the mercy of, negative moods or other
people's negative thoughts about you.
137
Not to lose this inner peace amid difficulties
which may crush others to the ground in despair, not to lose faith in this
deeper source of fortitude and support - if this should be called for at a
certain time in a quester's life, he will only grow inwardly by taking the
challenge, even if he fails outwardly by the seeming result.
138
The work of the day will be better cared for if
it is done in an atmosphere of serenity than if it is done in an atmosphere of
anxiety.
139
The attainment of inner peace does not guarantee
the freedom from outer conflict. But it does reduce the likelihood of such
conflict.
140
He will gradually build a habit of applying this
balanced and poised attitude to all his problems, be they worldly or
intellectual. It will be a habit that will bring them to a quicker and better
solution.
141
To practise being calm at the onset of troubles,
whether one's own or someone else's, is not the same as to practise being
callous.
142
Does the phrase "peace of mind" suggest that he
will not suffer in a suffering world? This can hardly be true, or even possible.
As actual experience, it means that his thoughts are brought under sufficient
control to enable him to repel disturbance and to retain sensitivity. The sacred
stillness behind them becomes the centre.(P)
143
It is easy to misunderstand this deep
unfathomable calm of his and regard it as a chill, impassive, impersonal, and
remote attitude. But in reality if one could explore its heart, it would be
found to be a beautiful benevolent and wise feeling.
144
It is not that he has no likes and dislikes - he
is still human enough for them - but that he knows that they are secondary to a
true and just view, and that his inner calm must not be disturbed by them.(P)
145
It is not that the years pass by unregarded, nor
that he is dead to human feelings, but that at this centre of his being to which
he now has access, there is utter calm, a high indifference to agitations which
compels him to treat them with serene dignity. He is a dweller in two worlds
more or less at the same time.(P)
146
A frozen calm, which chills with its iciness, is
not what is meant.
147
His calm is inscrutable to those who themselves
know only agitation.
148
He himself, though utterly calm, can sympathize
with, and fully understand, those who are agitated or worried.
149
It is not a dull apathy, this equanimity.
150
It is not correct to believe that the stricken
body of a sage suffers no pain. It is there and it is felt, but it is enclosed
by a larger peace-filled consciousness. The one is a witness of the other. So
pain is countered but not removed.
151
While within himself remaining imperturbably
calm, he will yet be sensitive enough to register the moods and feelings of all
others who cross his orbit.
152
Some people mistake philosophic calm for
fatalistic resignation. This is because the philosopher will seem to endure some
situations stoically unperturbed. They do not know that where he finds that he
cannot work outwardly to improve a situation, he will work inwardly to extract
the utmost spiritual profit from it.
153
To keep contained within himself and thus
preserve the precious treasure which he has won, and yet not withhold sympathy
from others nor interest in them, is another balancing act he learns with time.
154
The more he practises this inward calm, the less
he shows concern about outward situations. If this seems to lead to a kind of
casualness, it actually leads to inner peace.
155
To say that outer events will not affect him at
all is to say something untrue. What happens in him is that they do not affect
him in the same way as they do others.
156
This state of mind and heart is attainable by
regulated life, purified emotions, and the practice of mystical exercises.
157
This calmness comes partly from this
self-imposed training of thoughts and feeling during the day's activity, partly
from practice of meditation, and partly from knowledge of the World-Idea and the
profound trust in the World-Mind which it engenders.
158
Holding on to the future in anxiety and
apprehension must be abandoned. It must be committed to the higher power
completely and faithfully. Calmness comes easily to the man who really trusts
the higher power. This is unarguable.(P)
159
He teaches and trains himself to feel the peace
beneath the tension.
160
Think of the Overself as an ever-deepening calm.
It may seem to come spontaneously after you have practised it much and found the
helpfulness.
161
With sufficient intelligence, reverent devotion,
and personal purification, it is possible to enter one day into this experience
of being enclosed within the divine mystery, enravished by the divine peace.
162
This moving of consciousness to a higher level
will come about by itself, if the calm is patiently allowed to settle itself
down sufficiently, and if there has been preparation by study, aspiration, and
purification.
163
The mind which is purified from desire may
easily be calmed. The mind which is calmed may easily be abstractly
concentrated. And, concentrated, it may then easily be turned upon itself.
164
Before the Overself can stay with you, the
feelings must be brought to a condition of calm, the thoughts must be turned
inwards and centered there. Otherwise the outer difficulties will not let go of
your attention. All this often includes the disengagement from strong desires
and sensual passions. This inner work leads the practitioner - if he is willing
to go so far - deeper within the self. What does he find there if efforts are
successful? A beautiful quietude, an unearthly sense of having moved to another
plane of being, a closer communion with spirituality. It is true that at its
deepest points the working of intellect gets suspended. It is, however, a
temporary condition.
165
Passion of any kind is a bad counsellor; and in
its blind mood nothing drastic, nothing irrevocable, should be done.
166
When desire is quenched, peace is found.
167
He has brought over from earlier births a number
of subconscious memories, tendencies and complexes, unfulfilled desires and
unexpressed aspirations. These have to be dealt with, either by increasing
eradication or by diminishing satisfaction, so that they no longer interrupt the
calm tenor of the mind.
168
The closer he comes to the source of his being,
the farther he goes from depression and despair.
169
One consequence of inner rule is inner peace.
The more there is mastery over lust and thought, the more there is peace.
170
There is no room in that complete inner
quiescence for vain useless emotions or violent disturbing passions.
171
The impulses which arise within and the
temptations which come from without may attack his peace. If he would keep it,
he must overcome the desire to gratify the one and to yield to the other.
172
The unclouded evenness of his mind is precious
to him: he tries to keep it undisturbed by frenetic passions.
173
This preliminary injunction to nourish calm is
given very seriously. The student is expected to practise it as if he were never
short of time. Both lack of patience and the hurrying attitude - so marked in
the modern West - are condemned.
174
Seek continually the deepest tranquillity
possible - this also is a yoga path.
175
Haste is not only vulgar, as Emerson noted, but
it is also irreverential.
176
Peace reigns within him because desires do not
reign there.
177
One secret of preserving the stillness after
returning to outward activity is not to let oneself be hurried, not even to seem
hurried. Cultivate a leisurely approach.
178
How can a man obtain dominion over an
unfavourable environment from which he is unable to escape? There is but one way
and that lies entirely within himself. He must turn away in thought from its
contemplation and fix his mind firmly upon the radiant Power within. Thus he
will be uplifted.
179
That deep inner state keeps him calm and
deliberate: it makes hurrying seem a kind of madness and impatience a kind of
vulgarity.
180
At this stage of inner development take care of
the hara, centre of balance, by not moving abruptly and hastily but
slowly and sedately. He should walk more gently than before among his fellows
yet not less purposively or determinedly.
181
This evenness of temperament comes gradually of
itself as he lives more and more with the deeper part of his being.
182
We gain more by learning to depend upon the
silent mind within rather than the noisy rituals without.
183
If calmness is the friend of the quester, haste
is the enemy of calmness.
184
The man in a hurry is the one who is more likely
to commit an error than the man who is not.
185
By assiduously learning to live inwardly, he may
develop slow deliberate and unhurried movements, while his eyes develop a
far-away look.
186
The man who has learned the art of staying
within himself finds peace.
187
There is an inward way to that stillness.
188
When one knows that the Real always is and that
all disappear back into it because there is nowhere else to go, then one ceases
his terrific hurry to get somewhere and takes events more calmly. Patience comes
with the fragrance of the eternal. One works at self-improvement all the same,
but there need not be any desperate bother about the task. There is plenty of
time. One can always do tomorrow what one needs to do today.
189
The practice of philosophy brings more peace,
more freedom from frantic passions of every kind. Calm reigns within the walls
of a true philosopher's mind.
190
If philosophy does not help him meet each
troubling situation as it arises with inner calm and without destructive
agitation, then it is not true philosophy.
191
Because an even mind is necessary if inner peace
is to be reached, philosophy instructs us to take both the troubles and the joys
of life with calmness.
192
When the I is no longer felt then all the
problems and burdens associated with it are also no longer felt. This is the
state of inner calm which philosophy seeks to bring about in a man.(P)
193
If you would become a philosopher in practice,
then the first step is to cultivate calmness.
194
It is this deep calm which especially marks out
the philosopher and makes him what he is. In most cases it has not come to him
easily.
195
The tensions inside himself and the
circumstances outside himself combine to determine what kind of mood prevails at
any given time in the average man. But the philosophic aspirant needs to achieve
a deeper stability than this, a greater fixity of attention.
196
The first fruit of philosophy is to bring the
calm repose of the soul into the activity of the body.
197
With the passage of well-spent time and the
coming of well-deserved Grace, he will finally reach the serenity and mastery
that characterize the last stages of the path.
198
It is often not easy to preserve one's calm amid
provocative or passion-filled events, but that is precisely what a philosopher
must set himself to do.
199
The first thing to note about an attained
philosopher is that he constantly stays in his innermost calm being, a condition
generally reflected in his outermost active physical self.
200
Philosophy places a high appraisal upon this
quality. It says, blessed is the man who can keep serenely balanced and inwardly
progressive amid the carking troubles and exciting pleasures of the modern
world.
201
It is the business of philosophy to show us how
to be nobly serene. The aim is always to keep our thoughts as evenly balanced in
the mind as the Indian women keep the pitchers of water which they may be
carrying evenly balanced upon their heads. A smugly self-satisfied, piously
sleek complacency is not the sort of exalted serenity meant here. It would
indeed be fatal to true progress, and especially fatal to the philosophic duty
of making one's personal contribution toward the betterment of human existence.
When such equilibrium of mind is established, when the ups and downs of external
fortune are unable to disturb the inner balance of feeling, reason, and
intuition, and when the mechanical reactions of the sense-organs are
effortlessly controlled, we shall achieve a true, invincible self-sufficiency.