Teachings on the Individual
Practice
of Integral Yoga
The Foundation of Sadhana
The first thing to do in the sadhana
is to get a settled peace and silence in the mind. Otherwise you may
have experiences, but nothing will be permanent. It is in the silent
mind that the true consciousness can be built.
A quiet mind does not mean that
there will be no thoughts or mental movements at all, but that these
will be on the surface and you will feel your true being within separate
from them, observing but not carried away, able to watch and judge
them and reject all that has to be rejected and to accept and keep
to all that is true consciousness and true experience.
Passivity of the mind is good,
but take care to be passive only to the Truth and to the touch of
the Divine Shakti. If you are passive to the suggestions and influences
of the lower nature, you will not be able to progress or else you
will expose yourself to adverse forces which may take you far away
from the true path of yoga.
Aspire to the Mother for this
settled quietness and calm of the mind and this constant sense of
the inner being in you standing back from the external nature and
turned to the Light and Truth.
The forces that stand in the way
of sadhana are the forces of the lower mental, vital and physical
nature. Behind them are adverse powers of the mental, vital and subtle
physical worlds. These can be dealt with only after the mind and heart
have become one-pointed and concentrated in the single aspiration
to the Divine. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol.
23, p. 635)
Equality is the chief support
of the true spiritual consciousness and it is this from which a sadhak
deviates when he allows a vital movement to carry him away in feeling
or speech or action. Equality is not the same thing as forbearance,
--though undoubtedly a settled equality immensely extends, even illimitably,
a man's power of endurance and forbearance.
Equality means a quiet and unmoved
mind and vital, it means not to be touched or disturbed by things
that happen or things said or done to you, but to look at them with
a straight look, free from the distortions created by personal feeling,
and to try to understand what is behind them, why they happen, what
is to be learnt from them, what is it in oneself which they are cast
against and what inner profit or progress one can make out of them;
it means self-mastery over the vital movements,-anger and sensitiveness
and pride as well as desire and the rest,-not to let them get hold
of the emotional being and disturb the inner peace, not to speak and
act in the rush and impulsion of these things, always to act and speak
out of a calm inner poise of the spirit. It is not easy to have this
equality in any full perfect measure, but one should always try more
and more to make it the basis of one's inner state and outer movements.
Equality means another thing-to
have an equal view of men and their nature and acts and the forces
that move them; it helps one to see the truth about them by pushing
away from the mind all personal feeling in one's seeing and judgment
and even all the mental bias. Personal feeling always distorts and
makes one see in men's actions, not only the actions themselves, but
things behind them which, more often than not, are not there. Misunderstanding,
misjudgment which could have been avoided are the result; things of
small consequence assume larger proportions. I have seen that more
than half of the untoward happenings of this kind in life are due
to this cause. But in ordinary life personal feeling and sensitiveness
are a constant part of human nature and may be needed there for self-defence,
although, I think, even there, a strong, large and equal attitude
towards men and things would be a much better line of defence. But
for a sadhak, to surmount them and live rather in the calm strength
of the spirit is an essential part of his progress.
The first condition of inner
progress is to recognise whatever is or has been a wrong movement
in any part of the nature,-wrong idea, wrong feeling, wrong speech,
wrong action,-and by wrong is meant what departs from the truth, from
the higher consciousness and higher self, from the way of the Divine.
Once recognised it is admitted, not glossed over or defended,-and
it is offered to the Divine for the Light and Grace to descend and
substitute for it the right movement of the true Consciousness. (Sri
Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, Vol. 23, p. 661)
Yoga Through Work
Self-dedication does not depend
on the particular work you do, but on the spirit in which all work,
of whatever kind it may be, is done. Any work done well and carefully
as a sacrifice to the Divine, without desire or egoism, with equality
of mind and calm tranquillity in good or bad fortune, for the sake
of the Divine and not for the sake of any personal gain, reward or
result, with the consciousness that it is the Divine Power to which
all work belongs, is a means of self-dedication through Karma. (Sri
Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 23, p. 678)
Men usually work and carry on
their affairs from the ordinary motives of the vital being, need,
desire of wealth or success or position or power or fame or the push
to activity and the pleasure of manifesting their capacities, and
they succeed or fail according to their capability, power of work
and the good or bad fortune which is the result of their nature and
their Karma. When one takes up the yoga and wishes to consecrate one's
life to the Divine, these ordinary motives of the vital being have
no longer their full and free play; they have to be replaced by another,
a mainly psychic and spiritual motive, which will enable the sadhak
to work with the same force as before, no longer for himself, but
for the Divine. If the ordinary vital motives or vital force can no
longer act freely and yet are not replaced by something else, then
the push or force put into the work may decline or the power to command
success may no longer be there. For the sincere sadhak the difficulty
can only be temporary; but he has to see the defect in his consciousness
or his attitude and to remove it. Then the Divine Power itself will
act through him and use his capacity and vital force for its ends.
In your case, it is the psychic being and a part of the mind that
have drawn you to the yoga and were predisposed to it, but the vital
nature or at least a large part of it has not yet put itself into
line with the psychic movement. There is not as yet the full and undivided
consecration of the active vital nature.
The signs of the consecration
of the vital in action are these among others:
The feeling (not merely the idea
or the aspiration) that all the life and the work are the Mother's
and a strong joy of the vital nature in this consecration and surrender.
A consequent calm content and disappearance of egoistic attachment
to the work and its personal results, but at the same time a great
joy in the work and in the use of the capacities for the divine purpose.
The feeling that the Divine Force
is working behind one's actions and leading at every moment.
A persistent faith which no circumstance
or event can break. If difficulties occur, they raise not mental doubts
or an inert acquiescence, but the firm belief that, with sincere consecration,
the Divine Shakti will remove the difficulties, and with this belief
a greater turning to her and dependence on her for that purpose. When
there is full faith and consecration, there comes also a receptivity
to the Force which makes one do the right thing and take the right
means and then circumstances adapt themselves and the result is visible.
To arrive at this condition the
important thing is a persistent aspiration, call and self-offering
and a will to reject all in oneself or around that stands in the way.
Difficulties there will always be at the beginning and for as long
a time as is necessary for the change; but they are bound to disappear
if they are met by a settled faith, will and patience. (Sri Aurobindo,
Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol.23, p. 669)
Yoga Through Meditation and Concentration
Your questions cover the whole
of a very wide field. It is therefore necessary to reply to them with
some brevity, touching only on some principal points.
1. What meditation exactly means.
There are two words used in English to express the Indian idea of
dhyana, “meditation” and “contemplation”. Meditation means properly
the concentration of the mind on a single train of ideas which work
out a single subject. Contemplation means regarding mentally a single
object, image, idea so that the knowledge about the object, image
or idea may arise naturally in the mind by force of the concentration.
Both these things are forms of dhyana, for the principle of dhyana
is mental concentration whether in thought, vision or knowledge. There
are other forms of dhyana. There is a passage in which Vivekananda
advises you to stand back from your thoughts, let them occur in your
mind as they will and simply observe them and see what they are. This
may be called concentration in self-observation. This form leads to
another, the emptying of all thought out of the mind so as to leave
it a sort of pure vigilant blank on which the divine knowledge may
come and imprint itself, undisturbed by the inferior thoughts of the
ordinary human mind and with the clearness of a writing in white chalk
on a blackboard. You will find that the Gita speaks of this rejection
of all mental thought as one of the methods of yoga and even the method
it seems to prefer. This may be called the dhyana of liberation, as
it frees the mind from slavery to the mechanical process of thinking
and allows it to think or not to think, as it pleases and when it
pleases, or to choose its own thoughts or else to go beyond thought
to the pure perception of Truth called in our philosophy Vijñana.
Meditation is the easiest process
for the human mind, but the narrowest in its results; contemplation
more difficult, but greater; self-observation and liberation from
the chains of Thought the most difficult of all, but the widest and
greatest in its fruits. One can choose any of them according to one's
bent and capacity. The perfect method is to use them all, each in
its own place and for its own object; but this would need a fixed
faith and firm patience and a great energy of Will in the self-application
to the yoga.
2. What should be the object or
ideas for meditation? Whatever is most consonant with your nature
and highest aspirations. But if you ask me for an absolute answer,
then I must say that Brahman is always the best object for meditation
or contemplation and the idea on which the mind should fix is that
of God in all, all in God and all as God. It does not matter essentially
whether it is the Impersonal or the Personal God, or subjectively,
the One Self. But this is the idea I have found the best, because
it is the highest and embraces all other truths, whether truths of
this world or of the other worlds or beyond all phenomenal existence,-“All
this is the Brahman.” In the third issue of Arya, at the end of the
second instalment of the Analysis of the Isha Upanishad, you will
find a description of this vision of the All which may be of help
to you in understanding the idea [See Sri Aurobindo, Isha Upanishad
(1965 Edition), p. 35] .
3. Conditions internal and external
that are most essential for meditation. There are no essential external
conditions, but solitude and seclusion at the time of meditation as
well as stillness of the body are helpful, sometimes almost necessary
to the beginner. But one should not be bound by external conditions.
Once the habit of meditation is formed, it should be made possible
to do it in all circumstances, lying, sitting, walking, alone, in
company, in silence or in the midst of noise etc.
The first internal condition necessary
is concentration of the will against the obstacles to meditation,
i.e. wandering of the mind, forgetfulness, sleep, physical and nervous
impatience and restlessness etc. The second is an increasing purity
and calm of the inner consciousness (citta) out of which thought and
emotion arise, i.e. a freedom from all disturbing reactions, such
as anger, grief, depression, anxiety about worldly happenings etc.
Mental perfection and moral are always closely allied to each other.
(Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 23, pgs. 721-723)
If the difficulty in meditation
is that thoughts of all kinds come in, that is not due to hostile
forces but to the ordinary nature of the human mind. All sadhaks have
this difficulty and with many it lasts for a very long time. There
are several ways of getting rid of it. One of them is to look at the
thoughts and observe what is the nature of the human mind as they
show it but not to give any sanction and to let them run down till
they come to a standstill-this is a way recommended by Vivekananda
in his Rajayoga. Another is to look at the thoughts as not one's own,
to stand back as the witness Purusha and refuse the sanction-the thoughts
are regarded as things coming from outside, from Prakriti, and they
must be felt as if they were passers-by crossing the mind-space with
whom one has no connection and in whom one takes no interest. In this
way it usually happens that after a time the mind divides into two,
a part which is the mental witness watching and perfectly undisturbed
and quiet and a part which is the object of observation, the Prakriti
part in which the thoughts cross or wander. Afterwards one can proceed
to silence or quiet the Prakriti part also. There is a third, an active
method by which one looks to see where the thoughts come from and
finds they come not from oneself, but from outside the head as it
were; if one can detect them coming, then, before they enter, they
have to be thrown away altogether. This is perhaps the most difficult
way and not all can do it, but if it can be done it is the shortest
and most powerful road to silence. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga,
SABCL, Vol. 23, p. 731)
Yoga Through Love and Devotion
And first about human love in
the sadhana. The soul's turning through love to the Divine must be
through a love that is essentially divine, but as the instrument of
expression at first is a human nature, it takes the forms of human
love and bhakti. It is only as the consciousness deepens, heightens
and changes that that greater eternal love can grow in it and openly
transform the human into the divine. But in human love itself there
are several kinds of motive-forces. There is a psychic human love
which rises from deep within and is the result of the meeting of the
inner being with that which calls it towards a divine joy and union;
it is, once it becomes aware of itself, something lasting, self-existent,
not dependent upon external satisfactions, not capable of diminution
by external causes, not self-regarding, not prone to demand or bargain
but giving itself simply and spontaneously, not moved to or broken
by misunderstandings, disappointments, strife and anger, but pressing
always straight towards the inner union. It is this psychic love that
is closest to the divine and it is therefore the right and best way
of love and bhakti. But that does not mean that the other parts of
the being, the vital and physical included, are not to be used as
means of expression or that they are not to share in the full play
and the whole meaning of love, even of divine love. On the contrary,
they are a means and can be a great part of the complete expression
of divine love,-provided they have the right and not the wrong movement.
There are in the vital itself two kinds of love,-one full of joy and
confidence and abandon, generous, unbargaining, ungrudging and very
absolute in its dedication and this is akin to the psychic and well-fitted
to be its complement and a means of expression of the divine love.
And neither does the psychic love or the divine love despise a physical
means of expression wherever that is pure and right and possible;
it does not depend upon that, it does not diminish, revolt or go out
like a snuffed candle when it is deprived of any such means; but when
it can use it, it does so with joy and gratitude. Physical means can
be and are used in the approach to divine love and worship; they have
not been allowed merely as a concession to human weakness, nor is
it the fact that in the psychic way there is no place for such things.
On the contrary, they are one means of approaching the Divine and
receiving the Light and materialising the psychic contact, and so
long as it is done in the right spirit and they are used for the true
purpose they have their place. It is only if they are misused or the
approach is not right, because tainted by indifference and inertia,
or revolt or hostility, or some gross desire, that they are out of
place and can have a contrary effect.
But there is another way of vital
love which is more usually the way of human nature and that is a way
of ego and desire. It is full of vital craving, desire and demand;
its continuance depends upon the satisfaction of its demands; if it
does not get what it craves or even imagines that it is not being
treated as it deserves-for it is full of imaginations, misunderstandings,
jealousies, misinterpretations-it at once turns to sorrow, wounded
feeling, anger, all kinds of disorder, finally cessation and departure.
A love of this kind is in its very nature ephemeral and unreliable
and it cannot be made a foundation for divine love.... It is for this
reason that we discourage this lower vital way of human love and would
like people to reject and eliminate these elements as soon as may
be from their nature. Love should be a flowering of joy and union
and confidence and self-giving and Ananda,-but this lower vital way
is only a source of suffering, trouble, disappointment, disillusion
and disunion. Even a slight element of it shakes the foundations of
peace and replaces the movement towards Ananda by a fall towards sorrow,
discontent and Nirananda. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga,
SABCL, Vol. 23, pgs. 755-757)
The love which is turned towards
the Divine ought not to be the usual vital feeling which men call
by that name; for that is not love, but only a vital desire, an instinct
of appropriation, the impulse to possess and monopolise. Not only
is this not the divine Love, but it ought not to be allowed to mix
in the least degree in the yoga. The true love for the Divine is a
self-giving, free of demand, full of submission and surrender; it
makes no claim, imposes no condition, strikes no bargain, indulges
in no violences of jealousy or pride or anger-for these things are
not in its composition. In return the Divine Mother also gives herself,
but freely-and this represents itself in an inner giving-her presence
in your mind, your vital, your physical consciousness, her power re-creating
you in the divine nature, taking up all the movements of your being
and directing them towards perfection and fulfilment, her love enveloping
you and carrying you in its arms Godwards. It is this that you must
aspire to feel and possess in all your parts down to the very material,
and here there is no limitation either of time or of completeness.
If one truly aspires and gets it there ought to be no room for any
other claim or for any disappointed desire. And if one truly aspires,
one does unfailingly get it, more and more as the purification proceeds
and the nature undergoes its needed change.
Keep your love pure of all selfish
claim and desire; you will find that you are getting all the love
that you can bear and absorb in answer.
Realise also that the Realisation
must come first, the work to be done, not the satisfaction of claim
and desire. It is only when the Divine Consciousness in its supramental
Light and Power has descended and transformed the physical that other
things can be given a prominent place-and then too it will not be
the satisfaction of desire, but the fulfilment of the Divine Truth
in each and all and in the new life that is to express it. In the
divine life all is for the sake of the Divine and not for the sake
of the ego.
I should perhaps add one or two
things to avoid misapprehensions. First, the love for the Divine of
which I speak is not a psychic love only; it is the love of all the
being,-the vital and vital-physical included,-all are capable of the
same self-giving. It is a mistake to believe that if the vital loves,
it must be a love that demands and imposes the satisfaction of its
desire; it is a mistake to think that it must be either that or else
the vital, in order to escape from its “attachment”, must draw away
altogether from the object of its love. The vital can be as absolute
in its unquestioning self-giving as any other part of the nature;
nothing can be more generous than its movement when it forgets self
for the Beloved. The vital and physical should both give themselves
in the true way-the way of true love, not of ego-desire. (Sri Aurobindo,
Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 23, pgs. 757-758)
The Triple Transformation: Psychic,
Spiritual, and Supramental
What you said on the subject was
quite correct. There are three stages of the sadhana, psychic change,
transition to the higher levels of consciousness-with a descent of
their conscious forces-the supramental. In the last even the control
over death is a later, not an initial stage. Each of these stages
demands a great length of time and a high and long endeavour. (Sri
Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, Vol. 24, p. 1233)
The two feelings are both of them
right-they indicate the two necessities of the sadhana. One is to
go inward and open fully the connection between the psychic being
and the outer nature. The other is to open upward to the Divine Peace,
Force, Light, Ananda above, to rise up into it and bring it down into
the nature and the body. Neither of these two movements, the psychic
and the spiritual, is complete without the other. If the spiritual
ascent and descent are not made, the spiritual transformation of the
nature cannot happen; if the full psychic opening and connection is
not made, the transformation cannot be complete. There is no incompatibility
between the two movements; some begin the psychic first, others the
spiritual first, some carry on both together. The best way is to aspire
for both and let the Mother's Force work it out according to the need
and turn of the nature. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, Vol.
24, p. 1093)
Then only can the psychic being
fully open when the sadhak has got rid of the mixture of vital motives
with his sadhana and is capable of a simple and sincere self-offering
to the Mother. If there is any kind of egoistic turn or insincerity
of motive, if the yoga is done under a pressure of vital demands,
or partly or wholly to satisfy some spiritual or other ambition, pride,
vanity or seeking after power, position or influence over others or
with any push towards satisfying any vital desire with the help of
the yogic force, then the psychic cannot open, or opens only partially
or only at times and shuts again because it is veiled by the vital
activities; the psychic fire fails in the strangling vital smoke.
Also, if the mind takes the leading part in the yoga and puts the
inner soul into the background, or if the bhakti or other movements
of the sadhana take more of a vital than of a psychic form, there
is the same inability. Purity, simple sincerity and the capacity of
an unegoistic unmixed self-offering without pretension or demand are
the condition of an entire opening of the psychic being. (Sri Aurobindo,
Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 24, p. 1098).
Aspiration, constant and sincere,
and the will to turn to the Divine alone are the best means to bring
forward the psychic. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL,
Vol. 24, p. 1100)
It is the aim of the sadhana that
the consciousness should rise out of the body and take its station
above,-spreading in the wideness everywhere, not limited to the body.
Thus liberated one opens to all that is above this station, above
the ordinary mind, receives there all that descends from the heights,
observes from there all that is below. Thus it is possible to witness
in all freedom and to control all that is below and to be a recipient
or a channel for all that comes down and presses into the body, which
it will prepare to be an instrument of a higher manifestation, remoulded
into a higher consciousness and nature. What is happening in you is
that the consciousness is trying to fix itself in this liberation.
When one is there in that higher station, one finds the freedom of
the Self and the vast silence and immutable calm-but this calm has
to be brought down also into the body, into all the lower planes and
fix itself there as something standing behind and containing all the
movements. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 24,
p. 1128)
It is very good. The ideas and
feelings that come up from within you were those of the new-born psychic
nature. The feeling you had in the afternoon of the cessation of thought
and the sensation of something within you going up above the head
is part of the movement of the sadhana. There is a higher consciousness
above you, not in the body, so above the head which we call the higher
spiritual or divine consciousness, or the Mother's consciousness.
When the being opens then all in you, the mind (head), emotional being
(heart), vital, even something in the physical consciousness begin
to ascend in order to join themselves to this greater higher consciousness.
One has when one sits with eyes closed in meditation the sensation
of going up which you describe. It is called the ascension of the
lower consciousness. Afterwards things begin to descend from above,
peace, joy, light, strength, knowledge etc. and a great change begins
in the nature. This is what we call the descent of the higher (the
Mother's) consciousness. The unease you felt was because of the unaccustomed
nature of the movement. It is of no importance and quickly goes away.
(Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 24, p. 1130)
All
should understand that the true direct supramental does not come at
the beginning but much later on in the sadhana. First the opening
up and illumination of the mental, vital and physical beings; secondly,
the making intuitive of the mind, through will etc. and the development
of the hidden soul consciousness progressively replacing the surface
consciousness; thirdly, the supramentalising of the changed mental,
vital and physical beings and finally the descent of the true supramental
and the rising into the supramental plane. This is the natural order
of the yoga. These stages may overlap and intermix, there may be many
variations, but the last two can only come in an advanced state of
the progress. Of course the supramental Divine guides this yoga throughout
but it is first through many intermediary planes; and it cannot easily
be said of anything that comes in the earlier periods that it is the
direct or full supramental. To think so when it is not so may well
be a hindrance to progress. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga,
SABCL, Vol. 24, p. 1223)
To merge the consciousness in
the Divine and to keep the psychic being controlling and changing
all the nature and keeping it turned to the Divine till the whole
being can live in the Divine is the transformation we seek. There
is further the supramentalisation, but this only carries the transformation
to its own highest and largest possibilities-it does not alter its
essential nature. Immortality is one of the possible results of supramentalisation,
but it is not an obligatory result and it does not mean that there
will be an eternal or indefinite prolongation of life as it is. That
is what many think it will be, that they will remain what they are
with all their human desires and the only difference will be that
they will satisfy them endlessly; but such an immortality would not
be worth having and it would not be long before people are tired of
it. To live in the Divine and have the divine Consciousness is itself
immortality and to be able to divinise the body also and make it a
fit instrument for divine works and divine life would be its material
expression only. (Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol.
24, p. 1232)
It [the supermind] cannot be
brought down to the mind and vital without being brought down into
the physical-also one can feel its influence or get something of it
but bringing down means much more than that. The supermind is a luminous
whole-it is not a mixture of light and ignorance. If the physical
mind is not supramentalised, then there will be in mind a mixture
of ignorance, but then it will not be supermind there, but something
else-so also with the vital. All that can manifest in the mind separately
is a partly supramentalised overmind. If the supramental can stand
in the mind and vital, then it must stand in the physical also. If
it does not stand in the physical, it cannot stand in the mind and
vital also; it will be something else, not the supramental. (Sri Aurobindo,
Letters on Yoga, SABCL, Vol. 24, p. 1227)