1
When the personal ego's thoughts and desires are
stripped off, we behold ourselves as we were in the first state and as we shall
be in the final one. We are then the Overself alone, in its Godlike solitude and
stillness.(P)
2
One feels gathered into the depths of the silence,
enfolded by it and then, hidden within it, intuits the mysterious inexplicable
invisible and higher power which must remain forever nameless.
3
A life with this infinite stillness as its
background and centre seems as remote from the common clay of everyday human
beings, and especially from their urban infatuation with noise and movement, as
the asteroids.
4
This stillness is the godlike part of every human
being. In failing to look for it, he fails to make the most of his
possibilities. If, looking, he misses it on the way, this happens because it is
a vacuity: there is simply nothing there! That means no things, not even mental
things, that is, thoughts.(P)
5
The spirit (Brahman) is NOT the stillness, but is
found by humans who are in the precondition of stillness. The latter is
their human reaction to Brahman's presence coming into their field of
awareness.(P)
6
That beautiful state wherein the mind recognizes
itself for what it is, wherein all activity is stilled except that of
awareness alone, and even then it is an awareness without an object - this is
the heart of the experience.(P)
7
The Stillness has so much to give mankind, yet
mankind ignores or neglects it.
8
The Mystic who penetrates to this depth of
meditation is momentarily lost to the world, lost indeed to everything except
himself.
9
This glorious interlude of blissful peace, when
thoughts come to rest and speech is silenced, ought to be valued at its proper
worth.
10
It is true peace because he is inwardly at peace
with himself, with his fellow men, and with God.
11
What he experienced in those quietly rapturous
moments is to be used as a standard of comparison with what he experiences in
everyday life. This will teach him, better than guides or books. It will show
him his spiritual shortcomings and give him his right direction.
12
The Overself is first and last felt or experienced
as a deep peace within oneself. Hence the larger meaning of the greeting used in
the Orient and in early Greek Mysteries that "Peace be with you!"
13
When he first awakens to this great stillness,
ordinary life seems a mere agitation and fuss.
14
In the ordinary person, consciousness remains only
at his periphery, but in the adept it can be drawn at any moment and at will to
this centre.
15
The Stillness may speak directly to a man's heart
in clear feeling or leave its value and existence to be inferred from subtle
clues provided.
16
It is not the kind of silence which shuts anyone
else out rudely: it is too benevolent for that, too concentrated in seeking the
inner reality to be so negative.
17
It is all the difference between living at the
still centre and on the bustling circumference, at the mysterious core and on
the prosaic surface.
18
"With an untroubled soul, abiding in himself he
enjoys extreme happiness. This tranquillity may be described as resembling sweet
sleep, or a lamp which in calm air burns without flickering. So, as time goes
on, fixing his soul in itself, eating little, inwardly purified, he sees the
soul in himself." - Mahabharata
19
It is in these deeper moods that life seems to
pulse more quietly.
20
There is a silence born of ignorance and another
born of knowledge - mystical knowledge. The right interpretation comes only
through the intuitive faculty - not through the intellect.(P)
21
With such a perspective as can be gained on the
mountaintop of the ultimate, commanding the entire scene as it does, every stage
of the shift from ego to Centre can be seen.
22
The ordinary man, living his simple existence
uncomplicated by questions about the abstract meaning of that existence, not
troubling his head about yoga, religion, God, and such matters, enjoys his own
kind of limited peace, one which the quester has forfeited.
23
There is no need for sensational psychic
phenomena; because consciously or unconsciously you love being Being, therefore
you have taken to the Quest.
24
Essence of Mind is more important than the
temporary stages on the way to discovery of its ever-presence.
25
What men of our modern age, bewildered by
tremendous world-wide happenings, crushed by the forces of an apparently
uncontrollable destiny, deafened by the noises of a scientifically mechanical
civilization, are really yearning after is simply Stillness. This, which would
seem to be the simplest of all things, is inwardly the hardest to find of all
things. This is what Jesus spoke of when he said, "Few there be that find it."
Why is it so hard to find? The answer is that a price must be paid, as with all
things. That price is the giving up of self. For Stillness is behind the
self.
26
It is far subtler than the first ecstasies of a
newly made mystic, much more refined than the personal joys of a religious
saint. It is deeper, quieter, more relaxed yet, withal exquisite - this
peace.(P)
27
He can buy this rare peace only at a costly price.
He can be immune to the miseries of life only by being immune to its elations.
28
The immobility of that higher plane of being
frightens most people away from it. They are ignorant of the blessed peace that
is conjoined with it.
29
We may hold talent - be it the craftsman's, the
intellectual's, the artist's - in high esteem, yet not lose our hold on the
stillness. It is a delicate balanced position, reached after risky attempts.
30
There is intense feeling in this experience but it
is as quiet as it is deep. The sensational or the violent mystical raptures
belong to the beginner and occur on the shallower level.
31
It is in this superb stillness that truth finds
its origin and beauty touches the heart. It is here that love - not its poor
substitutes - is at last known. Such precious treasures must be paid for. The
price is high and the purchasers few.
32
We ought not judge a deeper and different plane of
being by our reactions to the present one. Here, its limitations inevitably
cause boredom, impatience, and dullness if we have to sit unoccupied for a few
hours. There, those limitations are non-existent and consequently we may sit for
a whole eternity, yet in its stillness feel only contentment, serenity, and the
sensation of being unutterably alive.
33
If he goes into the silence enough, he will become
accustomed to the obstacles that bar entry and learn by practice how to deal
with them.
34
Each man must create his own inner peace by his
own struggles with himself, with his ego. It is attainable but the price must be
paid.
35
In the stillness may be the Truth, but it has to
come to him through his emotional beliefs, through the prejudices instilled in
him by family and society, and through the limitations of his lack of higher
education, his inability to grasp metaphysical statements above his simple
elementary level.
36
The Sufis even use the term "veiling" when
referring to ecstatic mystic experiences and discussing them with students
sufficiently advanced to profit by this advice. Indeed one of the Sufi masters
whose name was Junaid and who lived in the ninth and tenth centuries, wrote that
his ecstasies vanished altogether as he advanced to a higher stage.
37
The wise seeker after Truth will not lose himself
in mystical and magical symbolisms. In the end they become obstacles, screens
between himself and that which they ought to represent.
38
There is an immense realization of abiding at last
in the complete truth about life, the final word about reality. There is a
perfect inner silence, broken only when presently shapes from environment come
into the field of awareness again or sounds from the external surroundings make
themselves heard. There is an utter emotional calm when desire and fear lie
quite still. There is a sense of reality, a reality that ever was and ever will
be, and of the surface-illusions having stopped at last.
39
In this deep stillness wherein every trace of the
personal self dissolves, there is the true crucifixion of the ego. This is the
real meaning of the crucifixion, as it was undergone in the ancient Mystery
Temple initiations and as it was undergone by Jesus. The death implied is
mental, not physical.(P)
40
The city's uproar and the brain's turbulence die
down. The desires and troubles slip slowly away. There is a renewal of calm as
consciousness settles deeper and ever deeper until an utter void is reached.
41
He feels that he is now in the very centre of his
being, that he has shifted identity there. The ego no longer covers it over and
occupies his whole view. Rather is it now transparent to the light radiating
from this centre. This transparency is peace.
42
Subtle and, in the beginning, almost imperceptible
is the growth of that exquisite inner peace.
43
Learn to be satisfied with this gift, this grace
of the Stillness. Do not ask for more or for something more striking and
dramatic. This is a common error, and an ungrateful one.
44
The intensity of this experience, the deep
tranquillity, separates it from all other experiences.
45
The quester may reach a point when the aspirations
and activities, the practices and exercises, the meditations even, of the quest
itself will fade away as the grace invades him and the inner silence takes over.
46
Not seldom this high phase of the Quiet is
accompanied by great light, of which this "Divine Body" is made and by which he
may feel great ennobled awe.
47
Sitting there in deep contemplation, shut off from
the world, detached and unconcerned in every way, he becomes the incarnation of
stillness and silence.
48
Here is the final consummation of all his highest
aspirations, as with bowed, humbled head he receives the mysterious bestowal of
a supreme grace.
49
The most important kind of spiritual development
is usually undramatic and unexciting. It is found and felt in a deep peace.
50
Peace is a quality which man must extract for
himself by himself and within himself.
51
The seeker after stillness should be told that the
stillness is always there. Indeed it is in every man. But he has to learn,
first, to let it in and, second, how to do so. The first beginning of this is to
remember. The second is to recognize the inward pull. For the rest, the
stillness itself will guide and lead him to itself.
52
The presence is always there, always waiting to be
recognized and felt, but inner silence is needed to make this possible. And few
persons possess it or seek it.
53
There is an area of peace hidden within every man.
Its presence is the gracious gift of God but his task is to discover it.
54
There is a stillness in the depth of each man, but
he has to find it for himself, a work demanding patience and humility.
55
Whatever method of meditation is used, the last
phase must always be the Great Silence.
56
He must begin this meditation by isolating himself
in thought not only from the world but also from other people. He is not to be
afraid of being inwardly alone. Only so can he find the great Friend who shall
appear and speak to him out of the stillness.
57
That is that ultimate solitude to which all human
beings are.(P)
58
"Seek lonely happiness," taught the first
Shankara, "and concentrate the mind on Paramatma."
59
The higher he climbs, the lonelier he becomes. The
crowds forgather at the base; the chosen few scatter around the peak.
60
The feeling of oneness with others will not last
if he is carried farther by this indrawing force. They seem removed from him,
receding, and then vanishing.
61
Far from the arguments of mind-narrowed men, he
will find himself without a supporting group in the end. He is to meet God
alone, for all his attention is to be held - so fully that there is
nothing and no one else. Thus the three become two, who in turn become the One,
which it always is. Truth is no longer needed; its seeker has vanished. The
great Silent Timelessness reigns.
62
Although other human voices cease to speak to him,
he must now look only to, and be alone with, God, for the Silence itself will
thenceforth speak to him.
63
He must learn not only to be alone and like it
but, even more, to love it. For in the great silence of being shut in with his
higher self he can find great satisfaction, serene fulfilment.
64
This is his private secret place. Here he must
keep out of the world. Here he stands alone in the divine presence.
65
Each personal existence has its place to fill here
in life and its development to undergo, but it is given a higher meaning than
the animal's only as it is sought and found. Neither psychology nor physiology,
neither metaphysics, religion, nor mysticism can each by itself sufficiently
explain the human being. If, however, they work together in harmony they come
much nearer to this goal; but their totality is still incomplete. The last turn
of the key is philosophy. Thereafter the final revelation must come by itself,
by grace, for man has then removed the obstruction, the tyranny of his own
little self. If the ego remains to live and act in the world, whether busy in
doing or lost in meditation, it is a purified, a surrendered being. But it has
not surrendered to other egos. Even the gurus, however reputed and respected,
can teach and lead others only by the path along which they themselves came.
Their work can be helpful, valuable, encouraging; but at a certain point, when
apprenticeship must give way to proficiency, it can become repetitive and
restrictive. After that, the courage and strength to obey the Voice of the
Silence, sought and given by the Silence itself, must alone lead him.
66
This aspiration must be his one master-feeling,
the single key that fits all the ciphers of his destiny.
67
You get sidetracked into thoughts about various
persons. Think only of one person - the true self or the guide. Apart from that,
drop all thinking and dwell in his stillness alone. The thoughts about others
must be reserved for some future date after you have thoroughly
established yourself in the thought-free state of utter stillness.
68
The silencing of our thoughts and the inward
concentration of our forces bring a rare stillness, a remarkable peace to us.
69
The Quest will come to an end when he turns away
from teachers and teachings and begins to receive instruction from within
himself. Previously all that he got was someone else's idea; now he is acquiring
firsthand knowledge.
70
When the quiet receptivity is deep enough, we
enter the stillness. When the stillness is deep enough, we cease to think, to
desire, and to will anything.
71
Without leaving his room he finds out Truth! He
simply sits still! This is the source of his knowledge and strength. The
conclusion is: learn to sit still, but not only bodily; it must also be
mentally. Yet not only that, not only for half a minute or so, but to sit still
patiently. He must wait the situation out. So much - if not most - of the
world's evil and misery and wrong action is due to the inability to do it.
72
To produce a result, one usually has to perform an
action. But here is a non-action which produces an intangible result, one that
cannot be photographed or packed or shown to someone else. Yet it is there, all
the same, a marvellously satisfying harvest of peace unutterable, of inner
support impregnable.
73
Let the personal will relax in this gentle peace.
74
"It is only because the sage does nothing that he
can do everything. Nature never makes any fuss, and yet It does everything. If a
ruler can cling to It, all things will grow of themselves." These are Lao Tzu's
words. His advice to "do nothing" as the way to the best accomplishment simply
means that ordinarily whatever we do is done at the ego's behest. It cannot
therefore lead us into any happiness that will not be illusory in the end, any
accomplishment that will not be destroyed in the end. To continue action in the
old way is to perpetuate the ego's rule. But to refuse to do so, and to "be
still," is to create the inner vacuum which allows the higher self to enter and
work through us. This is inspired action.
75
Once he has touched this stillness briefly,
learned the way to it, and comprehended its nature, his next task is to develop
it. This takes time and practice and knowledge. Or, rather, the work is
done on him, not by him. He has to let be.
76
In this condition, with the self quieted and the
thoughts collected, patient waiting may bring on the inner stillness. Here, the
world and its ways, the person and his desires drop out of the field of interest
and attention; the Overself absorbs all the energies, its presence rendering him
utterly humble, his consciousness now put on an ethereal plane.
77
He does not, can not, fabricate this inner
silence, but he provides the correct conditions of relaxed concentrated
listening which allow it to be discovered as a presence within himself.
78
By this simple act of unlearning all that you know
- all that you have acquired by thinking, by remembrance, by measurements, by
comparison, and by judgement - when you return to the mere emptying of the
consciousness of its contents of thoughts and ideas, and when you come to the
pure consciousness in itself, then only can you rest in the Great Silence.
79
He must not only give up the slavery of passion,
but also the slavery of intellect.
80
Shiva Yoga Dipika: "Listen, I shall mention
to you the method of worshipping Shiva who is made of Intelligence. It is a
secret - the essence of the Sastras and the bestower of instantaneous
freedom.... Thoughtlessness is the contemplation of Shiva; Inactivity is his
worship; Motionlessness is going round him in veneration; the realization of the
state 'I Am He' is prostration before him; Silence is singing his glory;
knowledge of what ought to be done and what not, is good character; looking on
all alike is the supreme pleasure."
81
When we dig down into the under-surface conditions
which give rise to such a question, we find that the question itself vanishes
and so there is no longer any need to try to find an answer to it. For it
depended upon the mind's agitation, turbulence, curiosity, or imbalance, and
when the mind's activity died down, when above all stillness lulled ego, the
question died down with it.
82
The mind must constantly give itself up to the
idea of its own infinity.
83
In her book Mysticism Evelyn Underhill
writes: "The psychic state of Quiet has a further value for the mystic, as being
the intellectual complement and expression of the moral state of humility and
receptivity: the very condition, says Eckhart, of the New Birth. 'It may be
asked whether this Birth is best accomplished in Man when he does the work and
forms and thinks himself into God, or when he keeps himself in Silence,
stillness and peace, so that God may speak and work in him; ...the best and
noblest way in which thou mayst come into this work and life is by keeping
silence, and letting God work and speak. When all the powers are withdrawn from
their work and images, there is this word spoken.' " She goes on to quote
Eckhart further on the same theme: "And thus thine ignorance is not a defect but
thy highest perfection, and thine inactivity thy highest work. And so in this
work thou must bring all thy works to nought and all thy powers into silence, if
thou wilt in truth experience this birth within thyself."
84
Chinese philosopher Lieh-tse wrote: "Avoid action,
and keep the silence; all the rest is commentary."
85
Every outer activity is to be brought to an end;
every inner one is to be stilled.
86
Thinking is mental action, just as moving is
physical action. The admonition "Be still and know that I am God" refers not
only to the body but also to the mind. Both are to cease from activity if the
higher consciousness is to be attained.
87
Thinking can put together all sorts of theories
and speculations and even discoveries. But only when it dies down and lets the
pure quietened mind come to rest in the very essence of consciousness, at peace
with itself, with nature, with the world, only then is there a deep sense of
utter fulfilment.
88
When thinking comes naturally to its rest, either
because he has felt his way through intense reverence to the higher power or
because he has apprehended the truth by the subtlest and sharpest perception,
then stillness is born. It would be an error to continue either the feeling or
the thinking beyond this time. The utter stillness must take their place, and he
must humbly yield to it. At such a moment, the ego is withdrawn; the knowing
intuition, the great Peace, alone remains.
89
The process acts with the sureness of a chemical
combination; if you quiet the ego, the Overself becomes responsively active.
90
Where the heart goes, there soon or late the other
faculties will follow. This is why it is so important to let the Overself
take possession of the heart by its total surrender in, and to, the Stillness.
91
The more he can keep his personal will passive and
his personal mind still, the more shall wisdom and peace flow into him.
92
It is nice and noble to talk about becoming an
instrument in God's hands, a channel of the Overself. But this is still an
inferior relationship. It is not the highest kind. It is still occupied with the
ego. Ascend to a higher level, give yourself completely to, and talk about, the
higher power alone.
93
This centre of his own being never moves. It is
forever in stillness.
94
To the extent that a man keeps inwardly still, to
that extent he unfolds himself and lets the ever-perfect Overself shine forth.
95
Whether they are positive or negative, let all
thoughts die. Then there will remain only Mind, which is always there, which is
the Real.
96
He does not know why the grace is present, only
that it is. He does not use the intellectual machine to find out. There is
contentment, acceptance, peace. It is enough just now to take no precise
scientific measurements but to stay with the Stillness.
97
In the Stillness he can renew his lost forces,
re-find his store of wisdom and, if it is accompanied by solitude, find his
innermost being.
98
An understanding based on logic alone, on the
faculty of the intellect alone, may produce seemingly solid and sound ideas, but
with time it may also produce counter-ideas which effectively oppose the earlier
ones. For as it itself changes with the years and with the body, the ego may
shift its standpoint, may accept what it previously rejected and reject what it
previously accepted. If stability is to be found, it must be found at a deeper
level and that is the changeless Overself.
99
Men try to fill the heart's emptiness with things
and other persons when, if they would only let it alone ("Be Still!"), grace
would enter and fill it for them.
100
Putting aside one's own internal and personal
pressures is a precondition which sooner or later lets in the Overself's peace.
101
How beautiful, how comforting, and how
profitable are those minutes of withdrawal from the world into the blessed
stillness in the deeper layers of the mind and heart. Here one can enjoy
oneself, one's self, one's inner self, one's Overself.
102
However dark or blundering the past, however
miserable the tangle one has made of one's life, this unutterable peace blots it
all out. Within that seraphic embrace error cannot be known, misery cannot be
felt, sin cannot be remembered. A great cleansing comes over the heart and
mind.(P)
103
The more he gives himself up to this element of
stillness within and lets it work on him, the less destructive will his
character and tendencies be.
104
The past has become a vanished phantasmal world.
He can stay in peace.
105
There will be a zone of peace around him which
some feel but others cannot. It seems to put him quite at his ease and free him
from any trace of nervousness.
106
It is not generally known that Florence
Nightingale drew her inspiration and courage for her Red Cross work in Crimea
from her meditations in silence.
107
In that silent centre there is immense power and
rocklike strength.
108
The Stillness is its own enthralling inner gain,
sufficient in itself to pay for the time or effort given, but with return to
activity there is a varied outer harvest.
109
This beautiful peace is both the reward of his
efforts and the atmosphere surrounding his higher nature.
110
In this deep stillness the worst sinner feels
that he is like a reformed, reborn man.
111
Whether from his study of inspired books or from
meditations in the silence, he will draw understanding and strength for his life
in the active, busy turmoil of the world.
112
There are situations which may seem beyond
endurance and circumstances beyond sufferance. It is then that those who have
learned how to withdraw into their interior being, how to return to their
source, may find some measure of help and strength.
113
From this deep source, he nourishes the
continuous tranquillity of the atmosphere he carries about with him; from it he
gains the solid assurance that the quest is worthwhile and its goal very real.
114
When you have trained yourself to empty your
consciousness of its thoughts at will, your worries will naturally be emptied
along with them. This is one of the valuable practical fruits of yoga.
115
This is the refuge to which he must turn when
troubled, this is the place of divine beatitude. Let him go into the silence;
there he will find the strength to conquer.
116
In this wonderful atmosphere of unimaginable
intense peace, all that was negative in the past years is effaced so radically
that it becomes as nothing.
117
Even if there were no joy in the realization of
the Overself it would still be worth having, for it would still be richly loaded
with other treasures. But the joy is also there and always there.
118
Profundity and serenity become his great
strength.
119
He can return from these visits to his innermost
being richly laden with gifts, precious and uncommon.
120
Out of these deep silences he will gather wise
decisions and originate new progressive inclinations; from them he will come
with, first, the love of God and, second, the knowledge of God.
121
The quietness of this deep daily initiation into
the Overself may seem a small and flat thing against the thrilling raptures that
religious mystics and babbling evangelists have described. But its life-guiding
and life-changing power, its truth-revealing light, will be of a much higher
voltage.
122
In the end, as in the beginning, it is best to
defer a grave decision to the Stillness.
123
The Overself remains always the same and never
changes in any way. It is the hunger for this quality, thought of as "peace of
mind," which drives men to seek the Overself amid the vicissitudes of health or
fortune which they experience.(P)
124
To complain that you get no answer, no result
from going into the silence indicates two things: first, that you do not go far
enough into it to reach the intuitive level; second, that you do not wait long
enough for it to affect you.(P)
125
In seeking the stillness and the beautiful inner
equilibrium which comes with it, he will learn to find a new way of life.
126
It is as though he had an inner, separate
consciousness which was forever fastened to a central point of his being.
127
He who has attained this stage will be ready to
forgo all those worldly activities, benefits, and assets which the bidding of
his higher self may call for.
128
This reached, he reaches the true source of
power, evicts all confusions, and becomes inwardly clear.
129
According to the intensity of his concentration
and withdrawnness will be the sharpness of his realization that: This is the
truth!
130
The stillness is not experienced in the same way
as a mere lazy and idle reverie: it is dynamic, creative, and healing. The
presence of one man who is able to attain it is a gift, a blessing, to all other
men, though they know it not.
131
No problems vex the mind here, because none can
arise. All problems are now seen to be fictitious because they arise out of a
wrong view of the world.
132
The Stillness possesses a power to purify the
heart, to heal strained nerves and sick bodies.
133
He who can gain this deep buried state will gain
the attributes of supernal power and untroubled calm which go with it.
134
This will change your life and give you real
peace. You will know that you have touched truth, and henceforth problems of the
whys and wherefores of human existence can come no more to vex your head and
pain your heart.
135
This peace is not to be confounded with lethargy
and inertia, for it is a dynamic condition. It is the peace that comes after
storm. It puts tormenting desires to rest. It brings the confused mind into
surety. It heals the wounds caused by other people, by our own selves, and by a
harsh destiny.
136
Out of the Stillness what is true may come forth
with high certitude.
137
Out of this stillness will come the light he
seeks, the guide he needs, the strength he requires.
138
The first way of finding peace when harassed by
a hard problem or situation is to turn away from the tumult of thoughts and look
for the still centre within. When it is found and just when it leaves, or must
be left, ask it for the guidance needed. Let it correct those thoughts.
139
From this inner stillness the highest truths
have come forth and passed into human knowledge.
140
The more still it becomes, whatever the mind
knows it knows more clearly, and hence truly.
141
The stillness does for you what you're unable to
do for yourself, and therefore it can be said to manifest grace. For by yourself
you can only use your will, the ego's will.
142
As a serious Quaker, John Woolman was, as he
himself wrote, "a man taught to wait in silence, sometimes many weeks together,
until he hears God's voice."
143
All questions can find some kind of an answer in
this mental silence; no question can be brought there often enough without a
response coming forth in time. It is needful to be patient and to have faith
during the waiting period. The inner monitor is certainly there but we have to
reach it.
144
The Stillness is the only magical panacea,
applicable always in all situations.
145
Amid the trouble and clamour created by one's
own weaknesses and other people's misunderstandings, it is better to remain
silent, to rest content with entering the stillness and turn the problem over to
the Higher Power.
146
There comes a time when out of the silence
within himself there comes the spiritual guidance which he needs for his further
course. It comes sometimes as a delicate feeling, sometimes as a strong one,
sometimes in a clear formulated message, and sometimes out of the circumstances
and happenings themselves. Not only does it tell him and teach him, but
sometimes it does the same for others. Such is the effect of the Divine Life now
working increasingly within him.
147
The certitude of truth and the plenitude of
reality - with their coming a great peace falls onto man.
148
In that peace-filled oblivion of the lesser self
there is renewal of life and rebirth of goodness in, and by, the Overself.
149
The more he finds his way from the tumultuous
surface of his consciousness to the quiet mystery of the centre of his being,
the more he finds the steady comfort of truth and the better he understands
life.
150
Just as a man who has escaped from the inside of
a burning house and finds himself in the cool outdoors understands that he has
attained safety, so the man who has escaped from greed, lust, anger, illusion,
selfishness, and ignorance into exalted peace and immediate insight, understands
that he has attained heaven.
151
When he has achieved the capacity or gotten the
Grace of sitting in the unbroken stillness of a perfect contemplation, he will
feel a loving sweetness indescribable by human words and unmatched by human
joys.
152
Bliss begins only when the point of contact with
the Overself is approached and reached. For at this point the mind begins to be
taken possession of, and the ego to be absorbed. Naturally the experience is
most intense, most vivid, and most rapturous during meditation, for then there
are no other distractions to share attention or get in the way.
153
He will find that this tremendous peace puts all
his desires to rest, that the great love it engenders overpasses all his other
loves.
154
If there is a paradise anywhere it is here, deep
deep within a man, where he is absorbed forever into a state of utter
desirelessness, of complete negation of living, of unruffled contentment in
habitual contemplation.
155
It is a sweet peace gracious beyond all telling.
156
One arrives at a blessed state where all lesser
desire comes to an end, because it is Satisfaction itself; where all will ceases
to be active, because there is nothing that needs doing; where the little and
limited love which depends on someone else, whether for receiving or giving,
dissolves into an infinite ocean of pure love.
157
The peace overwhelms everything else. Nothing
seems to matter any more. There are no problems, no difficult decisions to make,
no trying situations to endure. There is only this loving benignant Power
holding them all, more important than them all.
158
Such is the enchantment of the Stillness, that
one would like to stay in it forever.
159
"I, the Homeless, have My home in each person's
heart." This is what the Great Silence told me.
160
Friction and opposition cannot exist on this
higher level where all is at peace.
161
The Tamil poet and sage Tiruvalluvar calls this
sublime state of Yoga "the vision of the supremely beautiful," reminding us of
similar language in Plato.
162
How sweet is this tranquil relaxed state by
contrast with the inevitable struggle of day-to-day living!
163
To sit in this delicate tender exquisite
stillness, aloof from all that is ugly, coarse, violent, or brutish, is a lovely
experience.
164
In the depths of meditation, when one is sitting
still and enchanted, all egoism gone for the moment and all care suspended, it
is possible to understand what the word "Heaven" really means.
165
From this peace which is always within him now
he looks out, as from a citadel, upon the world's disharmonies and distresses.
166
In its beautiful soothing peace he lets his
hurts lapse from memory, his troubles evaporate from mind.
167
The peaceful feeling which comes over him shows
more vividly than words what the desireless state means.
168
The freedom which he attains is in the
background of consciousness, as it were. For here he rests tranquilly in the
mind-essence alone. No separate ideas exist here, whereas the foreground is
occupied by the ordinary ideas involved in human existence. He perceives now
that the value of all his former yoga practice lay in its capacity, when success
crowned it, to enable him to approach behind the stream of ideas to the bed on
which it flowed, that is, to the mind-stuff itself.
169
The harmony of the highest state is unbroken by
thoughts. It is like a song without words; it is the perfumed essence of
stillness, the deepest heart of silence.
170
There are times when the white sheet on the desk
before me remains untouched minute after minute, for words will not come to
express the inexpressible mood, the strange presence, the incredible loss of
memory which makes me forget where I am, what I am, what I am trying to do, and
which mysteriously merges me into That which is, but is not any
particular thing. Only after I return to normality do I discover that during
that mood I was no longer the writer or even the thinker, for there were no
thoughts. It was a mood of release and a benign one.
171
When one comes into the real, deep stillness,
every mental and emotional activity comes to an end.
172
The Stillness is both an Understanding, an
Insight of the mind, and an Experience of the being. The whole movement or
vibration comes to a stop.(P)
173
When he temporarily achieves this lofty
condition, he ceases to think, for his mind becomes inarticulate with heavenly
peace.(P)
174
The effort should be to find inward stillness
through a loving search within the heart's depths for what may be called "the
soul," what I have called "the Overself." This is not the soul thought of by a
judge when he passes the sentence of death and asks the Lord to have mercy on
the condemned man's soul. It is the Holy Ghost of Christian faith, the diviner
part of man which dwells in eternity. The nearer we get to it in our striving,
the greater will be the mental peace we shall feel. It can be found and felt
even whilst thoughts continue to move through the mind, although they will
necessarily be thoughts of a most elevated nature for the baser ones could not
obtain entry during this mood.(P)
175
The whole of one's aim should be to keep the
mind in an unbroken rest permanently, while using the intellect whenever
necessary in an automatic manner to attend to external duties. "Does not that
destroy the efficiency of the intellect?" it may be objected. No - only its
selfishness is destroyed. Do the hands lose their efficiency because we use them
in a purely mechanical manner? Just the same, when one unites with God he
regards himself as greater than mere intellect, which becomes for him only an
instrument to deal with the external world.
176
Here, in the divine centre, he can turn at will
and rest completely absorbed for a while and completely lost to the world. No
thinking will then penetrate its stillness. Here is peace indeed.
177
This is the Great Silence. While he is under its
spell, words will not come to his lips or pen, nor thoughts to his brain. They
would only be disturbances.
178
That deep silence has a melody of its own, a
sweetness unknown amid the harsh discords of the world's sounds.
179
Both the dreamer and his dream, the thinker and
his thought, will merge into this sublime stillness.
180
As the peace settles over him, he becomes as
still as a stone. He does not wish to move, to speak, or even to think.
181
Ideas which are thought, emotions which are
felt, and physical experiences which are lived fall away when Stillness is
entered.
182
One may sink inward to the point of being
tightly held by the delicious Stillness, unable for a while to move limb or body
into activity.
183
It is the quietest part of the mind where all
the stir and babble of the day's clamorous thoughts are left behind.
184
In this practical workaday business of living,
thinking is a useful and necessary activity. But on a higher level, the
transcendental level of an awed quietude, there is no need or place for thinking
nor words - only being.
185
When all thoughts move far away and then are
gone, when mental pictures fade off, then the whole being rests in the Stillness
of THAT WHICH IS.
186
In that beautiful silence, no words form
themselves, no intellectual activity goes on.
187
It is the secret undercurrent which flows
beneath all his mind's activity.
188
One who has cultivated the inner life and
learned to sit quietly without creating or demanding endless talk of a trivial
kind, finds that fuss, nervousness, or fidget will be his companion less and
less.
189
Too often people are afraid of sitting in
silence. Each thinks he or the others should be continually talking, continually
throwing sentences at each other. If the silence does fall and remains a little
while, they feel awkward, uneasy, as if they were not doing what was expected of
them. It is a sign of human weakness that a person feels he or she must
continuously be vocal should someone else be present.
190
Sufi remark: "If what you come to tell me is
less beautiful than the Stillness, keep it to yourself."
191
Why should silence be such a social sin?
192
We spoil the silence with our talk.
193
The strange result of going deeper and deeper
into the Real is that silence falls more and more as a curtain over his private
experience and private thought. The strong urgency of communication which the
missionary and the reformer feel, the strong need of expression which the artist
and the writer have, trouble him no longer. The inner voice is tight-lipped, or
speaks to him alone. He begins to see how much apostolic utterance is merely the
overflow of personal emotion, how much artistic achievement is motivated by
personal ambition, how much spiritual service is simply another phase of the ego
adoring and serving itself. Thomas Aquinas came to such an insight late in life
and he, the author of so many books dedicated to the glory of God, could never
again write another line. Those who stand on the outside may consider such a
severe restraint put upon oneself to be harsh and fanatical, perhaps even
antisocial. But it is safe to say that all these critics have never tracked the
ego to its secret lair, never had all movement of their individual will stopped
by the divine Stillness.
194
Whoever enters into this perfect peace must
emerge from it again in the end. When he returns to his fellow men he will find
it hard - if he is a novice - to keep silent about his wonderful experience, but
easy if he is a proficient. This is because the novice is still egoistic whereas
the adept is truly altruistic. For the one is concerned with his own experience
whereas the other is concerned with whether his fellows are ready to leap so
high.
195
It is not easy to translate this sacred silence
into comprehensible meaning, to describe a content where there is no form, to
ascend from a region as deep as Atlantis is sunk today and speak openly in
familiar, intelligible language; but I must try.(P)
196
The truth which leads a man to liberation from
all illusions and enslavements is perceived in the innermost depths of his
being, where he is shut off from all other men. The man who has attained to its
knowledge finds himself in an exalted solitude. He is not likely to find his way
out of it to the extent, and for the purpose, of enlightening his fellow men who
are accustomed to, and quite at home in, their darkness unless some other
propulsive force of compassion arises within him and causes him to do so.(P)
197
We have heard much about the sayings of Jesus,
nothing about his silences. Yet it was from the latter that they came and in the
latter that he himself lived.
198
Let him first attain this insight, and then talk
about the selfishness of being silent about it if he still feels like doing so.
199
The man who found his divine soul will not,
unless he is divinely enjoined to do so as part of a special beneficent mission,
publicly advertise the fact.
200
"Be ye as shrewd as serpents," Jesus warned the
disciples. Therefore, avoid arguments and verbal traps. Keep answers to two or
three words, even to the extreme of being evasive. Specimens are: "Perhaps," "A
hard problem," "Yes," "No," "I do not know." Do not make statements on your own
initiative - better to be silent, refer questioner to others as authorities,
such as "Professor X" or "His Holiness the X."
201
Out of that grave silence there will come to his
mind the declaration of truth. And out of that in turn will come his argument
with others about it.
202
In keeping silent about his spiritual status and
inner activities, he is not trying to be wilfully obscurantist but is rather
imitating the mode of being he finds in the Overself. For what could be more
hidden, more elusive than that?
203
It is not advisable to break the stillness in
order to give inner help to other persons. Such an activity should be reserved
for a special time. One should not disturb the benediction of one's own
stillness, one's own being alone with God, for any reason of this kind.
204
Many persons in different parts of the world and
in different centuries have had glimpses of that other order of being which is
their highest source, but how few are those who have succeeded in establishing
themselves in continuous communion with that higher order, how rare is the feat?
And who, having established himself therein, can find enough words to express
what he now perceives and experiences? Words fall back; this is a plane not for
them: this is a vast universal silence impregnated with consciousness which
swallows every individualized being, for individuality cannot exist there. The
established man can turn to it in this great silence and must himself remain
silent to do it the honour it deserves. All language is so limited that it must
seem blasphemy when put side by side with this awed reverent stillness which is
the proper form of worship here.
205
Truth lies hidden in silence. Reveal it - and
falsehood will creep in, withering the golden image. Communication by speech or
paper was not necessary.(P)
206
The complete silence which he finds in the
centre of his being cannot be conveyed in words to others without passing into
the intellect, which originates and arranges them. But to do this is to leave
that centre, to desert that silence, and to step down to an altogether lower
level.
207
No one has ever brought a full report when he
emerged from tunnelling in that mystic silence, and no one can.
208
The deeper he penetrates into this inner being,
the more will he feel inclined to keep the development quite secret. It is
becoming too holy to be talked about.
209
We are vocally benumbed on entering the presence
of embodied spiritual attainment, for the intellect is silent and abashed at
feeling so acutely its own inferiority, its own futility. And it is the
intellect in which we mostly live, not the intuition.
210
He carries his secret as a woman carries her
unborn child. Its importance is supreme.
211
The Chinese Master Ekai (thirteenth century)
wrote: "Words cannot describe everything. The heart's message cannot be
communicated in words."
212
There are some inner experiences which seem too
holy to be talked about in public, too intimate even to be talked about with
intimate friends, too mysterious to be mentioned to anyone else except a student
or a teacher who has passed through similar experiences himself.
213
Is it not strange that the highest experience of
an inner nature open to man is a completely secret one, a fully hushed one, and
almost an indefinable one? Looking back upon it afterwards, knowing how
profoundly beautiful and deeply moving it was at the time, he will find it
difficult to speak about it to others.
214
Thoughts can be put into words, spoken and
written; but the truth about Reality must remain unworded, unspoken, and
unwritten. All statements about it which the intellect can grasp are merely
symbolic - just clues, hints. Only in the great stillness can it be known,
understood.
215
At this point, communication by words must stop:
the seer lapses into himself, into his own silent experience of the Ineffable
where there is no second person.
216
It is this inner work in the Silence which
reaches the deepest level and in the end achieves the greatest effects. The
world does not understand this, and hence its noisy and superficial activities
which have produced the chaos and disorder of our times.
217
How extraordinary is this stillness that it can
convey meaning without making use of words! For the communication is made
through feeling, not through intellect. But inevitably, when the stillness ends,
the mind begins to work, and the intellect begins to work upon the experience
and translates it into words.
218
When the Great Peace is felt and thoughts
utterly stilled, there are two possible but different mistakes which he may
make. One is to start analysing what is happening. If he wishes to do this
either to instruct intellect or to communicate it to others, he must wait until
it is no more and for a day longer. Otherwise he cuts it short or diminishes its
quality, besides losing the secondary benefits of its afterglow. Nor do words
give it to others at the time of its presence, for it gives itself, silently.
219
The reason why this silent, inward, and
pictureless initiation in the stillness is so much more powerful
ultimately, is that it reaches the man himself, whereas all other kinds
reach only his instruments or vehicles or bodies.(P)
220
Truth may be written or spoken, preached or
printed, but its most lasting expression and communication is transmitted
through the deepest silence to the deepest nature in man.(P) EXTRA When thoughts
cease of themselves the Stillness comes. When thinking rejects its own
activity, Consciousness is.