
"Use
the Force, Luke":
Why yoga is like Jedi training
The
invisible Force producing tangible results both inward and outward
is the whole meaning of the Yogic consciousness. Your question about
Yoga bringing merely a feeling of Power without any result was really
very strange. Who would be satisfied with such a meaningless hallucination
and call it Power? If we had not had thousands of experiences showing
that the Power within could alter the mind, develop its powers, add
new ones, bring in new ranges of knowledge, master the vital movements,
change the character, influence men and things, control the conditions
and functionings of the body, work as a concrete dynamic Force on other
forces, modify events, etc., etc., we would not speak of it as we do.
Moreover, it is not only in its results but in its movements that
the Force is tangible and concrete. When I speak of feeling Force of
Power, I do not mean simply having a vague sense of it, but feeling
it concretely and consequently being able to direct it, manipulate
it, watch its movement, be conscious of its mass and intensity and
in the same way of that of other, perhaps opposing forces; all these
things are possible and usual by the development of Yoga.
It is not, unless it is supramental Force, a Power that acts without
conditions and limits. The conditions and limits under which Yoga or
Sadhana has to be worked out are not arbitrary or capricious; they
arise from the nature of things. These including the will, receptivity,
assent, self-opening and surrender of the Sadhak have to be respected
by the Yoga-force, unless it receives a sanction from the Supreme to
override everything and get something done, but that sanction is sparingly
given.
It is only if the supramental Power came fully down, not merely sent
its influences through the Overmind, that things could be very radically
directed towards that objectfor then the sanction would not be
rare. For the Law of the Truth would be at work, not constantly balanced
by the law of the Ignorance.
Still the Yoga-force is always tangible and concrete in the way I
have described and has tangible results. But it is invisiblenot
like a blow given or the rush of a motor car knocking somebody down
which the physical senses can at once perceive. How is the mere physical
mind to know that it is there and working? By its results? But how
can it know that the results were that of the Yogic force and not of
something else?
One of two things it must be. Either it must allow the consciousness
to go inside, to become aware of inner things, to believe in the experience
of the invisible and the supraphysical, and then by experience, by
the opening of new capacities, it becomes conscious of these forces
and can see, follow and use their workings, just as the Scientist uses
the unseen forces of Nature.
Or one must have faith and watch and open oneself and then it will
begin to see how things happen, it will notice that when the Force
was called in, there began after a time to be a result, then repetitions,
more repetitions, more clear and tangible results, increasing frequency,
increasing consistency of results, a feeling and awareness of the Force
at workuntil the experience becomes daily, regular, normal, complete.
These are the two main methods, one internal, working from in outward,
the other external, working from outside and calling the inner force
out till it penetrates and is visible in the exterior consciousness.
But neither can be done if one insists always on the extrovert attitude,
the external concrete only and refuses to join to it the internal concreteor
if the physical mind at every step raises a dance of doubts which refuses
to allow the nascent experience to develop. Even the Scientist carrying
on a new experiment would never succeed if he allowed his mind to behave
in that way.
From a letter by Sri Aurobindo, December 1935,
On Himself, pp. 19799
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