Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-2
Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda
Volume-2
Published by Advaita Ashrama, Kolkatta
E-Text Source: www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info
Index
Work and its Secret
The Powers of the Mind
Hints on Practical Spirituality
Bhakti or Devotion
Jnana-Yoga
* The Necessity of Religion
* The Real Nature of Man
* Maya and Illusion
* Maya and Conception of God
* Maya and Freedom
* The Absolute and Manifestation
* God in Everything
* Realisation
* Unity in Diversity
* The Freedom of the Soul
* The Cosmos: The Macrocosm
* The Cosmos: The Microcosm
* Immortality
* The Atman
* Atman: Its Bondage and Freedom
* Real and the Apparent Man
Practical Vedanta and other lectures
* Practical Vedanta: Part I
* Practical Vedanta: Part II
* Practical Vedanta: Part III
* Practical Vedanta: Part IV
* Realisation of a Universal Religion
* Ideal of a Universal Religion
* The Open Secret
* The Way to Blessedness
* Yajnavalkya and Maitreyi
* Soul, Nature and God
* Cosmology
* A study of the Sankhya Philosophy
* Sankhya and Vedanta
* The Goal
Reports in American Newspapers
* Note
* Divinity of Man
* Swami Vivekananda on India
* Religious Harmony
* From far off India
* An Evening with Hindu Cousins
* The Manners and Customs of India
* The Religions of India
* Sects and Doctrines in India
* Less Doctrine and more Bread
* The Religion of Buddha
* All Religions are Good
* The Hindu way of life
* Ideals of Womanhood
* True Buddhism
* India's Gift to the World
* Child Widows of India
* Some Customs of the Hindus
WORK AND ITS SECRET
(Delivered at Los Angeles, California, January 4, 1900)
One of the greatest lessons I have learnt in my life is to pay
as much attention to the means of work as to its end. He was a
great man from whom I learnt it, and his own life was a
practical demonstration of this great principle I have been
always learning great lessons from that one principle, and it
appears to me that all the secret of success is there; to pay as
much attention to the means as to the end.
Our great defect in life is that we are so much drawn to the
ideal, the goal is so much more enchanting, so much more
alluring, so much bigger in our mental horizon, that we lose
sight of the details altogether.
But whenever failure comes, if we analyse it critically, in
ninety-nine per cent of cases we shall find that it was because
we did not pay attention to the means. Proper attention to the
finishing, strengthening, of the means is what we need. With the
means all right, the end must come. We forget that it is the
cause that produces the effect; the effect cannot come by
itself; and unless the causes are exact, proper, and powerful,
the effect will not be produced. Once the ideal is chosen and
the means determined, we may almost let go the ideal, because we
are sure it will be there, when the means are perfected. When
the cause is there, there is no more difficulty about the
effect, the effect is bound to come. If we take care of the
cause, the effect will take care of itself. The realization of
the ideal is the effect. The means are the cause: attention to
the means, therefore, is the great secret of life. We also read
this in the Gita and learn that we have to work, constantly work
with all our power; to put our whole mind in the work, whatever
it be, that we are doing. At the same time, we must not be
attached. That is to say, we must not be drawn away from the
work by anything else; still, we must be able to quit the work
whenever we like.
If we examine our own lives, we find that the greatest cause of
sorrow is this: we take up something, and put our whole energy
on it - perhaps it is a failure and yet we cannot give it up. We
know that it is hurting us, that any further clinging to it is
simply bringing misery on us; still, we cannot tear ourselves
away from it. The bee came to sip the honey, but its feet stuck
to the honey-pot and it could not get away. Again and again, we
are finding ourselves in that state. That is the whole secret of
existence. Why are we here? We came here to sip the honey, and
we find our hands and feet sticking to it. We are caught, though
we came to catch. We came to enjoy; we are being enjoyed. We
came to rule; we are being ruled. We came to work; we are being
worked. All the time, we find that. And this comes into every
detail of our life. We are being worked upon by other minds, and
we are always struggling to work on other minds. We want to
enjoy the pleasures of life; and they eat into our vitals. We
want to get everything from nature, but we find in the long run
that nature takes everything from us - depletes us, and casts us
aside.
Had it not been for this, life would have been all sunshine.
Never mind! With all its failures and successes, with all its
joys and sorrows, it can be one succession of sunshine, if only
we are not caught.
That is the one cause of misery: we are attached, we are being
caught. Therefore says the Gita: Work constantly; work, but be
not attached; be not caught. Reserve unto yourself the power of
detaching yourself from everything, however beloved, however
much the soul might yearn for it, however great the pangs of
misery you feel if you were going to leave it; still, reserve
the power of leaving it whenever you want. The weak have no
place here, in this life or in any other life. Weakness leads to
slavery. Weakness leads to all kinds of misery, physical and
mental. Weakness is death. There are hundreds of thousands of
microbes surrounding us, but they cannot harm us unless we
become weak, until the body is ready and predisposed to receive
them. There may be a million microbes of misery, floating about
us. Never mind! They dare not approach us, they have no power to
get a hold on us, until the mind is weakened. This is the great
fact: strength is life, weakness is death. Strength is felicity,
life eternal, immortal; weakness is constant strain and misery:
weakness is death.
Attachment is the source of all our pleasures now. We are
attached to our friends, to our relatives; we are attached to
our intellectual and spiritual works; we are attached to
external objects, so that we get pleasure from them. What,
again, brings misery but this very attachment? We have to detach
ourselves to earn joy. If only we had power to detach ourselves
at will, there would not be any misery. That man alone will be
able to get the best of nature, who, having the power of
attaching himself to a thing with all his energy, has also the
power to detach himself when he should do so. The difficulty is
that there must be as much power of attachment as that of
detachment. There are men who are never attracted by anything.
They can never love, they are hard-hearted and apathetic; they
escape most of the miseries of life. But the wall never feels
misery, the wall never loves, is never hurt; but it is the wall,
after all. Surely it is better to be attached and caught, than
to be a wall. Therefore the man who never loves, who is hard and
stony, escaping most of the miseries of life, escapes also its
joys. We do not want that. That is weakness, that is death. That
soul has not been awakened that never feels weakness, never
feels misery. That is a callous state. We do not want that.
At the same time, we not only want this mighty power of love,
this mighty power of attachment, the power of throwing our whole
soul upon a single object, losing ourselves and letting
ourselves be annihilated, as it were, for other souls - which is
the power of the gods - but we want to be higher even than the
gods. The perfect man can put his whole soul upon that one point
of love, yet he is unattached. How comes this? There is another
secret to learn.
The beggar is never happy. The beggar only gets a dole with pity
and scorn behind it, at least with the thought behind that the
beggar is a low object. He never really enjoys what he gets.
We are all beggars. Whatever we do, we want a return. We are all
traders. We are traders in life, we are traders in virtue, we
are traders in religion. And alas! we are also traders in love.
If you come to trade, if it is a question of give-and-take, if
it is a question of buy-and-sell, abide by the laws of buying
and selling. There is a bad time and there is a good time; there
is a rise and a fall in prices: always you expect the blow to
come. It is like looking at the mirrors Your face is reflected:
you make a grimace - there is one in the mirror; if you laugh,
the mirror laughs. This is buying and selling, giving and
taking.
We get caught. How? Not by what we give, but by what we expect.
We get misery in return for our love; not from the fact that we
love, but from the fact that we want love in return. There is no
misery where there is no want. Desire, want, is the father of
all misery. Desires are bound by the laws of success and
failure. Desires must bring misery.
The great secret of true success, of true happiness, then, is
this: the man who asks for no return, the perfectly unselfish
man, is the most successful. It seems to be a paradox. Do we not
know that every man who is unselfish in life gets cheated, gets
hurt? Apparently, yes. "Christ was unselfish, and yet he was
crucified." True, but we know that his unselfishness is the
reason, the cause of a great victory - the crowning of millions
upon millions of lives with the blessings of true success.
Ask nothing; want nothing in return. Give what you have to give;
it will come back to you - but do not think of that now, it will
come back multiplied a thousand fold - but the attention must
not be on that. Yet have the power to give: give, and there it
ends. Learn that the whole of life is giving, that nature will
force you to give. So, give willingly. Sooner or later you will
have to give up. You come into life to accumulate. With clenched
hands, you want to take. But nature puts a hand on your throat
and makes your hands open. Whether you will it or not, you have
to give. The moment you say, "I will not", the blow comes; you
are hurt. None is there but will be compelled, in the long run,
to give up everything. And the more one struggles against this
law, the more miserable one feels. It is because we dare not
give, because we are not resigned enough to accede to this grand
demand of nature, that we are miserable. The forest is gone, but
we get heat in return. The sun is taking up water from the
ocean, to return it in showers. You are a machine for taking and
giving: you take, in order to give. Ask, therefore, nothing in
return; but the more you give, the more will come to you. The
quicker you can empty the air out of this room, the quicker it
will be filled up by the external air; and if you close all the
doors and every aperture, that which is within will remain, but
that which is outside will never come in, and that which is
within will stagnate, degenerate, and become poisoned. A river
is continually emptying itself into the ocean and is continually
filling up again. Bar not the exit into the ocean. The moment
you do that, death seizes you.
Be, therefore, not a beggar; be unattached This is the most
terrible task of life! You do not calculate the dangers on the
path. Even by intellectually recognising the difficulties, we
really do not know them until we feel them. From a distance we
may get a general view of a park: well, what of that? We feel
and really know it when we are in it. Even if our every attempt
is a failure, and we bleed and are torn asunder, yet, through
all this, we have to preserve our heart - we must assert our
Godhead in the midst of all these difficulties. Nature wants us
to react, to return blow for blow, cheating for cheating, lie
for lie, to hit back with all our might. Then it requires a
superdivine power not to hit back, to keep control, to be
unattached.
Every day we renew our determination to be unattached. We cast
our eyes back and look at the past objects of our love and
attachment, and feel how every one of them made us miserable. We
went down into the depths of despondency because of our "love"!
We found ourselves mere slaves in the hands of others, we were
dragged down and down! And we make a fresh determination:
"Henceforth, I will be master of myself; henceforth, I will have
control over myself." But the time comes, and the same story
once more! Again the soul is caught and cannot get out. The bird
is in a net, struggling and fluttering. This is our life.
I know the difficulties. Tremendous they are, and ninety per
cent of us become discouraged and lose heart, and in our turn,
often become pessimists and cease to believe in sincerity, love,
and all that is grand and noble. So, we find men who in the
freshness of their lives have been forgiving, kind, simple, and
guileless, become in old age lying masks of men. Their minds are
a mass of intricacy. There may be a good deal of external
policy, possibly. They are not hot-headed, they do not speak,
but it would be better for them to do so; their hearts are dead
and, therefore, they do not speak. They do not curse, not become
angry; but it would be better for them to be able to be angry, a
thousand times better, to be able to curse. They cannot. There
is death in the heart, for cold hands have seized upon it, and
it can no more act, even to utter a curse, even to use a harsh
word.
All this we have to avoid: therefore I say, we require super
divine power. Superhuman power is not strong enough. Super
divine strength is the only way, the one way out. By it alone we
can pass through all these intricacies, through these showers of
miseries, unscathed. We may be cut to pieces, torn asunder, yet
our hearts must grow nobler and nobler all the time.
It is very difficult, but we can overcome the difficulty by
constant practice. We must learn that nothing can happen to us,
unless we make ourselves susceptible to it. I have just said, no
disease can come to me until the body is ready; it does not
depend alone on the germs, but upon a certain predisposition
which is already in the body. We get only that for which we are
fitted. Let us give up our pride and understand this, that never
is misery undeserved. There never has been a blow undeserved:
there never has been an evil for which I did not pave the way
with my own hands. We ought to know that. Analyse yourselves and
you will find that every blow you have received, came to you
because you prepared yourselves for it. You did half, and the
external world did the other half: that is how the blow came.
That will sober us down. At the same time, from this very
analysis will come a note of hope, and the note of hope is: "I
have no control of the external world, but that which is in me
and nearer unto me, my own world, is in my control. If the two
together are required to make a failure, if the two together are
necessary to give me a blow, I will not contribute the one which
is in my keeping; and how then can the blow come? If I get real
control of myself, the blow will never come."
We are all the time, from our childhood, trying to lay the blame
upon something outside ourselves. We are always standing up to
set right other people, and not ourselves. If we are miserable,
we say, "Oh, the world is a devil's world." We curse others and
say, "What infatuated fools!" But why should we be in such a
world, if we really are so good? If this is a devil's world, we
must be devils also; why else should we be here? "Oh, the people
of the world are so selfish!" True enough; but why should we be
found in that company, if we be better? Just think of that.
We only get what we deserve. It is a lie when we say, the world
is bad and we are good. It can never be so. It is a terrible lie
we tell ourselves.
This is the first lesson to learn: be determined not to curse
anything outside, not to lay the blame upon anyone outside, but
be a man, stand up, lay the blame on yourself. You will find,
that is always true. Get hold of yourself.
Is it not a shame that at one moment we talk so much of our
manhood, of our being gods - that we know everything, we can do
everything, we are blameless, spotless, the most unselfish
people in the world; and at the next moment a little stone hurts
us, a little anger from a little Jack wounds us - any fool in
the street makes "these gods" miserable! Should this be so if we
are such gods? Is it true that the world is to blame? Could God,
who is the purest and the noblest of souls, be made miserable by
any of our tricks? If you are so unselfish, you are like God.
What world can hurt you? You would go through the seventh hell
unscathed, untouched. But the very fact that you complain and
want to lay the blame upon the external world shows that you
feel the external world - the very fact that you feel shows that
you are not what you claim to be. You only make your offence
greater by heaping misery upon misery, by imagining that the
external world is hurting you, and crying out, "Oh, this devil's
world! This man hurts me; that man hurts me!" and so forth. It
is adding lies to misery.
We are to take care of ourselves - that much we can do - and
give up attending to others for a time. Let us perfect the
means; the end will take care of itself. For the world can be
good and pure, only if our lives are good and pure. It is an
effect, and we are the means. Therefore, let us purify
ourselves. Let us make ourselves perfect.
THE POWERS OF THE MIND
(Delivered at Los Angeles, California, January 8, 1900)
All over the world there has been the belief in the supernatural
throughout the ages. All of us have heard of extraordinary
happenings, and many of us have had some personal experience of
them. I would rather introduce the subject by telling you
certain facts which have come within my own experience. I once
heard of a man who, if any one went to him with questions in his
mind, would answer them immediately; and I was also informed
that he foretold events. I was curious and went to see him with
a few friends. We each had something in our minds to ask, and,
to avoid mistakes, we wrote down our questions and put them in
our pockets. As soon as the man saw one of us, he repeated our
questions and gave the answers to them. Then he wrote something
on paper, which he folded up, asked me to sign on the back, and
said, "Don't look at it; put it in your pocket and keep it there
till I ask for it again." And so on to each one of us. He next
told us about some events that would happen to us in the future.
Then he said, "Now, think of a word or a sentence, from any
language you like." I thought of a long sentence from Sanskrit,
a language of which he was entirely ignorant. "Now, take out the
paper from your pocket," he said. The Sanskrit sentence was
written there! He had written it an hour before with the remark,
"In confirmation of what I have written, this man will think of
this sentence." It was correct. Another of us who had been given
a similar paper which he had signed and placed in his pocket,
was also asked to think of a sentence. He thought of a sentence
in Arabic, which it was still less possible for the man to know;
it was some passage from the Koran. And my friend found this
written down on the paper.
Another of us was a physician. He thought of a sentence from a
German medical book. It was written on his paper.
Several days later I went to this man again, thinking possibly I
had been deluded somehow before. I took other friends, and on
this occasion also he came out wonderfully triumphant.
Another time I was in the city of Hyderabad in India, and I was
told of a Brâhmin there who could produce numbers of things from
where, nobody knew. This man was in business there; he was a
respectable gentleman. And I asked him to show me his tricks. It
so happened that this man had a fever, and in India there is a
general belief that if a holy man puts his hand on a sick man he
would be well. This Brahmin came to me and said, "Sir, put your
hand on my head, so that my fever may be cured." I said, "Very
good; but you show me your tricks." He promised. I put my hand
on his head as desired, and later he came to fulfil his promise.
He had only a strip of cloth about his loins, we took off
everything else from him. I had a blanket which I gave him to
wrap round himself, because it was cold, and made him sit in a
corner. Twenty-five pairs of eyes were looking at him. And he
said, "Now, look, write down anything you want." We all wrote
down names of fruits that never grew in that country, bunches of
grapes, oranges, and so on. And we gave him those bits of paper.
And there came from under his blanket, bushels of grapes,
oranges, and so forth, so much that if all that fruit was
weighed, it would have been twice as heavy as the man. He asked
us to eat the fruit. Some of us objected, thinking it was
hypnotism; but the man began eating himself - so we all ate. It
was all right.
He ended by producing a mass of roses. Each flower was perfect,
with dew-drops on the petals, not one crushed, not one injured.
And masses of them! When I asked the man for an explanation, he
said, "It is all sleight of hand."
Whatever it was, it seemed to be impossible that it could be
sleight of hand merely. From whence could he have got such large
quantities of things?
Well, I saw many things like that. Going about India you find
hundreds of similar things in different places. These are in
every country. Even in this country you will find some such
wonderful things. Of course there is a great deal of fraud, no
doubt; but then, whenever you see fraud, you have also to say
that fraud is an imitation. There must be some truth somewhere
that is being imitated; you cannot imitate nothing. Imitation
must be of something substantially true.
In very remote times in India, thousands of years ago, these
facts used to happen even more than they do today. It seems to
me that when a country becomes very thickly populated, psychical
power deteriorates. Given a vast country thinly inhabited, there
will, perhaps, be more of psychical power there. These facts,
the Hindus, being analytically minded. took up and investigated.
And they came to certain remarkable conclusions; that is, they
made a science of it. They found out that all these, though
extraordinary, are also natural; there is nothing supernatural.
They are under laws just the same as any other physical
phenomenon. It is not a freak of nature that a man is born with
such powers. They can be systematically studied, practiced, and
acquired. This science they call the science of Râja-Yoga. There
are thousands of people who cultivate the study of this science,
and for the whole nation it has become a part of daily worship.
The conclusion they have reached is that all these extraordinary
powers are in the mind of man. This mind is a part of the
universal mind. Each mind is connected with every other mind.
And each mind, wherever it is located, is in actual
communication with the whole world.
Have you ever noticed the phenomenon that is called
thought-transference? A man here is thinking something, and that
thought is manifested in somebody else, in some other place.
With preparations - not by chance - a man wants to send a
thought to another mind at a distance, and this other mind knows
that a thought is coming, and he receives it exactly as it is
sent out. Distance makes no difference. The thought goes and
reaches the other man, and he understands it. If your mind were
an isolated something here, and my mind were an isolated
something there, and there were no connection between the two,
how would it be possible for my thought to reach you? In the
ordinary cases, it is not my thought that is reaching you
direct; but my thought has got to be dissolved into ethereal
vibrations and those ethereal vibrations go into your brain, and
they have to be resolved again into your own thoughts. Here is a
dissolution of thought, and there is a resolution of thought. It
is a roundabout process. But in telepathy, there is no such
thing; it is direct.
This shows that there is a continuity of mind, as the Yogis call
it. The mind is universal. Your mind, my mind, all these little
minds, are fragments of that universal mind, little waves in the
ocean; and on account of this continuity, we can convey our
thoughts directly to one another.
You see what is happening all around us. The world is one of
influence. Part of our energy is used up in the preservation of
our own bodies. Beyond that, every particle of our energy is day
and night being used in influencing others. Our bodies, our
virtues, our intellect, and our spirituality, all these are
continuously influencing others; and so, conversely, we are
being influenced by them. This is going on all around us. Now,
to take a concrete example. A man comes; you know he is very
learned, his language is beautiful, and he speaks to you by the
hour; but he does not make any impression. Another man comes,
and he speaks a few words, not well arranged, ungrammatical
perhaps; all the same, he makes an immense impression. Many of
you have seen that. So it is evident that words alone cannot
always produce an impression. Words, even thoughts contribute
only one-third of the influence in making an impression, the
man, two-thirds. What you call the personal magnetism of the man
- that is what goes out and impresses you.
In our families there are the heads; some of them are
successful, others are not. Why? We complain of others in our
failures. The moment I am unsuccessful, I say, so-and-so is the
cause of the failure. In failure, one does not like to confess
one's own faults and weaknesses. Each person tries to hold
himself faultless and lay the blame upon somebody or something
else, or even on bad luck. When heads of families fail, they
should ask themselves, why it is that some persons manage a
family so well and others do not. Then you will find that the
difference is owing to the man - his presence, his personality.
Coming to great leaders of mankind, we always find that it was
the personality of the man that counted. Now, take all the great
authors of the past, the great thinkers. Really speaking, how
many thoughts have they thought? Take all the writings that have
been left to us by the past leaders of mankind; take each one of
their books and appraise them. The real thoughts, new and
genuine, that have been thought in this world up to this time,
amount to only a handful. Read in their books the thoughts they
have left to us. The authors do not appear to be giants to us,
and yet we know that they were great giants in their days. What
made them so? Not simply the thoughts they thought, neither the
books they wrote, nor the speeches they made, it was something
else that is now gone, that is their personality. As I have
already remarked, the personality of the man is two-thirds, and
his intellect, his words, are but one-third. It is the real man,
the personality of the man that runs through us. Our actions are
but effects. Actions must come when the man is there; the effect
is bound to follow the cause.
The ideal of all education, all training, should be this
man-making. But, instead of that, we are always trying to polish
up the outside. What use in polishing up the outside when there
is no inside? The end and aim of all training is to make the man
grow. The man who influences, who throws his magic, as it were,
upon his fellow-beings, is a dynamo of power, and when that man
is ready, he can do anything and everything he likes; that
personality put upon anything will make it work.
Now, we see that though this is a fact, no physical laws that we
know of will explain this. How can we explain it by chemical and
physical knowledge? How much of oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, how
many molecules in different positions, and how many cells, etc.,
etc. can explain this mysterious personality? And we still see,
it is a fact, and not only that, it is the real man; and it is
that man that lives and moves and works, it is that man that
influences, moves his fellow-beings, and passes out, and his
intellect and books and works are but traces left behind. Think
of this. Compare the great teachers of religion with the great
philosophers. The philosophers scarcely influenced anybody's
inner man, and yet they wrote most marvellous books. The
religious teachers, on the other hand, moved countries in their
lifetime. The difference was made by personality. In the
philosopher it is a faint personality that influences; in the
great prophets it is tremendous. In the former we touch the
intellect, in the latter we touch life. In the one case, it is
simply a chemical process, putting certain chemical ingredients
together which may gradually combine and under proper
circumstances bring out a flash of light or may fail. In the
other, it is like a torch that goes round quickly, lighting
others.
The science of Yoga claims that it has discovered the laws which
develop this personality, and by proper attention to those laws
and methods, each one can grow and strengthen his personality.
This is one of the great practical things, and this is the
secret of all education. This has a universal application. In
the life of the householder, in the life of the poor, the rich,
the man of business, the spiritual man, in every one's life, it
is a great thing, the strengthening of this personality. There
are laws, very fine, which are behind the physical laws, as we
know. That is to say, there are no such realities as a physical
world, a mental world, a spiritual world. Whatever is, is one.
Let us say, it is a sort of tapering existence; the thickest
part is here, it tapers and becomes finer and finer. The finest
is what we call spirit; the grossest, the body. And just as it
is here in microcosm, it is exactly the same in the macrocosm.
The universe of ours is exactly like that; it is the gross
external thickness, and it tapers into something finer and finer
until it becomes God.
We also know that the greatest power is lodged in the fine, not
in the coarse. We see a man take up a huge weight, we see his
muscles swell, and all over his body we see signs of exertion,
and we think the muscles are powerful things. But it is the thin
thread-like things, the nerves, which bring power to the
muscles; the moment one of these threads is cut off from
reaching the muscles, they are not able to work at all. These
tiny nerves bring the power from something still finer, and that
again in its turn brings it from something finer still -
thought, and so on. So, it is the fine that is really the seat
of power. Of course we can see the movements in the gross; but
when fine movements take place, we cannot see them. When a gross
thing moves, we catch it, and thus we naturally identify
movement with things which are gross. But all the power is
really in the fine. We do not see any movement in the fine,
perhaps, because the movement is so intense that we cannot
perceive it. But if by any science, any investigation, we are
helped to get hold of these finer forces which are the cause of
the expression, the expression itself will be under control.
There is a little bubble coming from the bottom of a lake; we do
not see it coming all the time, we see it only when it bursts on
the surface; so, we can perceive thoughts only after they
develop a great deal, or after they become actions. We
constantly complain that we have no control over our actions,
over our thoughts. But how can we have it? If we can get control
over the fine movements, if we can get hold of thought at the
root, before it has become thought, before it has become action,
then it would be possible for us to control the whole. Now, if
there is a method by which we can analyse, investigate,
understand, and finally grapple with those finer powers, the
finer causes, then alone is it possible to have control over
ourselves, and the man who has control over his own mind
assuredly will have control over every other mind. That is why
purity and morality have been always the object of religion; a
pure, moral man has control of himself. And all minds are the
same, different parts of one Mind. He who knows one lump of clay
has known all the clay in the universe. He who knows and
controls his own mind knows the secret of every mind and has
power over every mind
Now, a good deal of our physical evil we can get rid of, if we
have control over the fine parts; a good many worries we can
throw off, if we have control over the fine movements; a good
many failures can be averted, if we have control over these fine
powers. So far, is utility. Yet beyond, there is something
higher.
Now, I shall tell you a theory, which I will not argue now, but
simply place before you the conclusion. Each man in his
childhood runs through the stages through which his race has
come up; only the race took thousands of years to do it, while
the child takes a few years. The child is first the old savage
man - and he crushes a butterfly under his feet. The child is at
first like the primitive ancestors of his race. As he grows, he
passes through different stages until he reaches the development
of his race. Only he does it swiftly and quickly. Now, take the
whole of humanity as a race, or take the whole of the animal
creation, man and the lower animals, as one whole. There is an
end towards which the whole is moving. Let us call it
perfection. Some men and women are born who anticipate the whole
progress of mankind. Instead of waiting and being reborn over
and over again for ages until the whole human race has attained
to that perfection, they, as it were, rush through them in a few
short years of their life. And we know that we can hasten these
processes, if we be true to ourselves. If a number of men,
without any culture, be left to live upon an island, and are
given barely enough food, clothing, and shelter, they will
gradually go on and on, evolving higher and higher stages of
civilization. We know also, that this growth can be hastened by
additional means. We help the growth of trees, do we not? Left
to nature they would have grown, only they would have taken a
longer time; we help them to grow in a shorter time than they
would otherwise have taken. We are doing all the time the same
thing, hastening the growth of things by artificial means. Why
cannot we hasten the growth of man? We can do that as a race Why
are teachers sent to other countries? Because by these means we
can hasten the growth of races. Now, can we not hasten the
growth of individuals? We can. Can we put a limit to the
hastening? We cannot say how much a man can grow in one life.
You have no reason to say that this much a man can do and no
more. Circumstances can hasten him wonderfully. Can there be any
limit then, till you come to perfection? So, what comes of it? -
That a perfect man, that is to say, the type that is to come of
this race, perhaps millions of years hence, that man can come
today. And this is what the Yogis say, that all great
incarnations and prophets are such men; that they reached
perfection in this one life. We have had such men at all periods
of the world's history and at all times. Quite recently, there
was such a man who lived the life of the whole human race and
reached the end - even in this life. Even this hastening of the
growth must be under laws. Suppose we can investigate these laws
and understand their secrets and apply them to our own needs; it
follows that we grow. We hasten our growth, we hasten our
development, and we become perfect, even in this life. This is
the higher part of our life, and the science of the study of
mind and its powers has this perfection as its real end. Helping
others with money and other material things and teaching them
how to go on smoothly in their daily life are mere details.
The utility of this science is to bring out the perfect man, and
not let him wait and wait for ages, just a plaything in the
hands of the physical world, like a log of drift-wood carried
from wave to wave and tossing about in the ocean. This science
wants you to be strong, to take the work in your own hand,
instead of leaving it in the hands of nature, and get beyond
this little life. That is the great idea.
Man is growing in knowledge, in power, in happiness.
Continuously, we are growing as a race. We see that is true,
perfectly true. Is it true of individuals? To a certain extent,
yes. But yet, again comes the question: Where do you fix the
limit? I can see only at a distance of so many feet. But I have
seen a man close his eyes and see what is happening in another
room. If you say you do not believe it, perhaps in three weeks
that man can make you do the same. It can be taught to anybody.
Some persons, in five minutes even, can be made to read what is
happening in another man's mind. These facts can be
demonstrated.
Now, if these things are true, where can we put a limit? If a
man can read what is happening in another's mind in the corner
of this room, why not in the next room? Why not anywhere? We
cannot say, why not. We dare not say that it is not possible. We
can only say, we do not know how it happens. Material scientists
have no right to say that things like this are not possible;
they can only say, "We do not know." Science has to collect
facts, generalise upon them, deduce principles, and state the
truth - that is all. But if we begin by denying the facts, how
can a science be?
There is no end to the power a man can obtain. This is the
peculiarity of the Indian mind, that when anything interests it,
it gets absorbed in it and other things are neglected. You know
how many sciences had their origin in India. Mathematics began
there. You are even today counting 1, 2, 3, etc. to zero, after
Sanskrit figures, and you all know that algebra also originated
in India, and that gravitation was known to the Indians
thousands of years before Newton was born.
You see the peculiarity. At a certain period of Indian history,
this one subject of man and his mind absorbed all their
interest. And it was so enticing, because it seemed the easiest
way to achieve their ends. Now, the Indian mind became so
thoroughly persuaded that the mind could do anything and
everything according to law, that its powers became the great
object of study. Charms, magic, and other powers, and all that
were nothing extraordinary, but a regularly taught science, just
as the physical sciences they had taught before that. Such a
conviction in these things came upon the race that physical
sciences nearly died out. It was the one thing that came before
them. Different sects of Yogis began to make all sorts of
experiments. Some made experiments with light, trying to find
out how lights of different colours produced changes in the
body. They wore a certain coloured cloth, lived under a certain
colour, and ate certain coloured foods. All sorts of experiments
were made in this way. Others made experiments in sound by
stopping and unstopping their ears. And still others
experimented in the sense of smell, and so on.
The whole idea was to get at the basis, to reach the fine parts
of the thing. And some of them really showed most marvellous
powers. Many of them were trying to float in the air or pass
through it. I shall tell you a story which I heard from a great
scholar in the West. It was told him by a Governor of Ceylon who
saw the performance. A girl was brought forward and seated
cross-legged upon a stool made of sticks crossed. After she had
been seated for a time, the show-man began to take out, one
after another, these cross-bars; and when all were taken out,
the girl was left floating in the air. The Governor thought
there was some trick, so he drew his sword and violently passed
it under the girl; nothing was there. Now, what was this? It was
not magic or something extraordinary. That is the peculiarity.
No one in India would tell you that things like this do not
exist. To the Hindu it is a matter of course. You know what the
Hindus would often say when they have to fight their enemies -
"Oh, one of our Yogis will come and drive the whole lot out!" It
is the extreme belief of the race. What power is there in the
hand or the sword? The power is all in the spirit.
If this is true, it is temptation enough for the mind to exert
its highest. But as with every other science it is very
difficult to make any great achievement, so also with this, nay
much more. Yet most people think that these powers can be easily
gained. How many are the years you take to make a fortune? Think
of that! First, how many years do you take to learn electrical
science or engineering? And then you have to work all the rest
of your life.
Again, most of the other sciences deal with things that do not
move, that are fixed. You can analyse the chair, the chair does
not fly from you. But this science deals with the mind, which
moves all the time; the moment you want to study it, it slips.
Now the mind is in one mood, the next moment, perhaps, it is
different, changing, changing all the time. In the midst of all
this change it has to be studied, understood, grasped, and
controlled. How much more difficult, then, is this science! It
requires rigorous training. People ask me why I do not give them
practical lessons. Why, it is no joke. I stand upon this
platform talking to you and you go home and find no benefit; nor
do I. Then you say, "It is all bosh." It is because you wanted
to make a bosh of it. I know very little of this science, but
the little that I gained I worked for thirty years of my life,
and for six years I have been telling people the little that I
know. It took me thirty years to learn it; thirty years of hard
struggle. Sometimes I worked at it twenty hours during the
twenty-four; sometimes I slept only one hour in the night;
sometimes I worked whole nights; sometimes I lived in places
where there was hardly a sound, hardly a breath; sometimes I had
to live in caves. Think of that. And yet I know little or
nothing; I have barely touched the hem of the garment of this
science. But I can understand that it is true and vast and
wonderful.
Now, if there is any one amongst you who really wants to study
this science, he will have to start with that sort of
determination, the same as, nay even more than, that which he
puts into any business of life.
And what an amount of attention does business require, and what
a rigorous taskmaster it is! Even if the father, the mother, the
wife, or the child dies, business cannot stop! Even if the heart
is breaking, we still have to go to our place of business, when
every hour of work is a pang. That is business, and we think
that it is just, that it is right.
This science calls for more application than any business can
ever require. Many men can succeed in business; very few in
this. Because so much depends upon the particular constitution
of the person studying it. As in business all may not make a
fortune, but everyone can make something, so in the study of
this science each one can get a glimpse which will convince him
of its truth and of the fact that there have been men who
realised it fully.
This is the outline of the science. It stands upon its own feet
and in its own light, and challenges comparison with any other
science. There have been charlatans, there have been magicians,
there have been cheats, and more here than in any other field.
Why? For the same reason, that the more profitable the business,
the greater the number of charlatans and cheats. But that is no
reason why the business should not be good. And one thing more;
it may be good intellectual gymnastics to listen to all the
arguments and an intellectual satisfaction to hear of wonderful
things. But, if any one of you really wants to learn something
beyond that, merely attending lectures will not do. That cannot
be taught in lectures, for it is life; and life can only convey
life. If there are any amongst you who are really determined to
learn it, I shall be very glad to help them.
HINTS ON PRACTICAL SPIRITUALITY
(Delivered at the Home of Truth, Los Angeles, California)
This morning I shall try to present to you some ideas about
breathing and other exercises. We have been discussing theories
so long that now it will be well to have a little of the
practical. A great many books have been written in India upon
this subject. Just as your people are practical in many things,
so it seems our people are practical in this line. Five persons
in this country will join their heads together and say, "We will
have a joint-stock company", and in five hours it is done; in
India they could not do it in fifty years; they are so
unpractical in matters like this. But, mark you, if a man starts
a system of philosophy, however wild its theory may be, it will
have followers. For instance, a sect is started to teach that if
a man stands on one leg for twelve years, day and night, he will
get salvation - there will be hundreds ready to stand on one
leg. All the suffering will be quietly borne. There are people
who keep their arms upraised for years to gain religious merit.
I have seen hundreds of them. And, mind you, they are not always
ignorant fools, but are men who will astonish you with the depth
and breadth of their intellect. So, you see, the word practical
is also relative.
We are always making this mistake in judging others; we are
always inclined to think that our little mental universe is all
that is; our ethics, our morality, our sense of duty, our sense
of utility, are the only things that are worth having. The other
day when I was going to Europe, I was passing through
Marseilles, where a bull-fight was being held. All the
Englishmen in the steamer were mad with excitement, abusing and
criticising the whole thing as cruel. When I reached England, I
heard of a party of prize-fighters who had been to Paris, and
were kicked out unceremoniously by the French, who thought
prize-fighting very brutal. When I hear these things in various
countries, I begin to understand the marvellous saying of
Christ: "Judge not that ye be not judged." The more we learn,
the more he find out how ignorant we are, how multiform and
multi-sided is this mind of man. When I was a boy, I used to
criticise the ascetic practices of my countrymen; great
preachers in our own land have criticised them; the greatest man
that was ever born, Buddha himself, criticised them. But all the
same, as I am growing older, I feel that I have no right to
judge. Sometimes I wish that, in spite of all their
incongruities, I had one fragment of their power to do and
suffer. Often I think that my judgment and my criticism do not
proceed from any dislike of torture, but from sheer cowardice -
because I cannot do it - I dare not do it.
Then, you see that strength, power, and courage are things which
are very peculiar. We generally say, "A courageous man, a brave
man, a daring man", but we must bear in mind that that courage
or bravery or any other trait does not always characterise the
man. The same man who would rush to the mouth of a cannon
shrinks from the knife of the surgeon; and another man who never
dares to face a gun will calmly bear a severe surgical
operation, if need be. Now, in judging others you must always
define your terms of courage or greatness. The man whom I am
criticising as not good may be wonderfully so in some points in
which I am not.
Take another example. You often note, when people are discussing
as to what man and woman can do, always the same mistake is
made. They think they show man at his best because he can fight,
for instance, and undergo tremendous physical exertion; and this
is pitted against the physical weakness and the non-combating
quality of woman. This is unjust. Woman is as courageous as man.
Each is equally good in his or her way. What man can bring up a
child with such patience, endurance, and love as the woman can?
The one has developed the power of doing; the other, the power
of suffering. If woman cannot act, neither can man suffer. The
whole universe is one of perfect balance. I do not know, but
some day we may wake up and find that the mere worm has
something which balances our manhood. The most wicked person may
have some good qualities that I entirely lack. I see that every
day of my life. Look at the savage! I wish I had such a splendid
physique. He eats, he drinks, to his heart's content, without
knowing perhaps what sickness is, while I am suffering every
minute. How many times would I have been glad to have changed my
brain for his body! The whole universe is only a wave and a
hollow; there can be no wave without a hollow. Balance
everywhere. You have one thing great, your neighbour has another
thing great. When you are judging man and woman, judge them by
the standard of their respective greatness. One cannot be in
other's shoes. The one has no right to say that the other is
wicked. It is the same old superstition that says, "If this is
done, the world will go to ruin." But in spite of this the world
has not yet come to ruin. It was said in this country that if
the Negroes were freed, the country would go to ruin - but did
it? It was also said that if the masses were educated, the world
would come to ruin - but it was only made better. Several years
ago a book came out depicting the worst thing that could happen
to England. The writer showed that as workmen's wages were
rising, English commerce was declining. A cry was raised that
the workmen in England were exorbitant in their demands, and
that the Germans worked for less wages. A commission was sent
over to Germany to investigate this and it reported that the
German labourers received higher wages. Why was it so? Because
of the education of the masses. Then how about the world going
to ruin if the masses are educated? In India, especially, we
meet with old fogies all over the land. They want to keep
everything secret from the masses. These people come to the very
satisfying conclusion that they are the crême de la crême of
this universe. They believed they cannot be hurt by these
dangerous experiments. It is only the masses that can be hurt by
them!
Now, coming back to the practical. The subject of the practical
application of psychology has been taken up in India from very
early times. About fourteen hundred years before Christ, there
flourished in India a great philosopher, Patanjali by name. He
collected all the facts, evidences, and researches in psychology
and took advantage of all the experiences accumulated in the
past. Remember, this world is very old; it was not created only
two or three thousand years ago. It is taught here in the West
that society began eighteen hundred years ago, with the New
Testament. Before that there was no society. That may be true
with regard to the West, but it is not true as regards the whole
world. Often, while I was lecturing in London, a very
intellectual and intelligent friend of mine would argue with me,
and one day after using all his weapons against me, he suddenly
exclaimed, "But why did not your Rishis come to England to teach
us?" I replied, "Because there was no England to come to. Would
they preach to the forests?"
"Fifty years ago," said Ingersoll to me, "you would have been
hanged in this country if you had come to preach. You would have
been burnt alive or you would have been stoned out of the
villages."
So there is nothing unreasonable in the supposition that
civilisation existed fourteen hundred years before Christ. It is
not yet settled whether civilisation has always come from the
lower to the higher. The same arguments and proofs that have
been brought forward to prove this proposition can also be used
to demonstrate that the savage is only a degraded civilised man.
The people of China, for instance, can never believe that
civilisation sprang from a savage state, because the contrary is
within their experience. But when you talk of the civilisation
of America, what you mean is the perpetuity and the growth of
your own race.
It is very easy to believe that the Hindus, who have been
declining for seven hundred years, were highly civilised in the
past. We cannot prove that it is not so.
There is not one single instance of any civilisation being
spontaneous. There was not a race in the world which became
civilised unless another civilised race came and mingled with
that race. The origin of civilisation must have belonged, so to
say, to one or two races who went abroad, spread their ideas,
and intermingled with other races and thus civilisation spread.
For practical purposes, let us talk in the language of modern
science. But I must ask you to bear in mind that, as there is
religious superstition, so also there is a superstition in the
matter of science. There are priests who take up religious work
as their speciality; so also there are priests of physical law,
scientists. As soon as a great scientist's name, like Darwin or
Huxley, is cited, we follow blindly. It is the fashion of the
day. Ninety-nine per cent of what we call scientific knowledge
is mere theories. And many of them are no better than the old
superstitions of ghosts with many heads and hands, but with this
difference that the latter differentiated man a little from
stocks and stones. True science asks us to be cautious. Just as
we should be careful with the priests, so we should be with the
scientists. Begin with disbelief. Analyse, test, prove
everything, and then take it. Some of the most current beliefs
of modern science have not been proved. Even in such a science
as mathematics, the vast majority of its theories are only
working hypotheses. With the advent of greater knowledge they
will be thrown away.
In 1400 B.C. a great sage made an attempt to arrange, analyse,
and generalise upon certain psychological facts. He was followed
by many others who took up parts of what he had discovered and
made a special study of them The Hindus alone of all ancient
races took up the study of this branch of knowledge in right
earnest. I am teaching you now about it, but how many of you
will practice it? How many days, how many months will it be
before you give it up? You are impractical on this subject. In
India, they will persevere for ages and ages. You will be
astonished to hear that they have no churches, no Common
Prayers, or anything of the kind; but they, every day, still
practice the breathings and try to concentrate the mind; and
that is the chief part of their devotion. These are the main
points. Every Hindu must do these. It is the religion of the
country. Only, each one may have a special method - a special
form of breathing, a special form of concentration, and what is
one's special method, even one's wife need not know; the father
need not know the son's. But they all have to do these. And
there is nothing occult about these things. The word "occult"
has no bearing on them. Near the Gangâ thousands and thousands
of people may be seen daily sitting on its banks breathing and
concentrating with closed eyes. There may be two reasons that
make certain practices impracticable for the generality of
mankind. One is, the teachers hold that the ordinary people are
not fit for them. There may be some truth in this, but it is due
more to pride. The second is the fear of persecution. A man, for
instance, would not like to practice breathing publicly in this
country, because he would be thought so queer; it is not the
fashion here. On the other hand, in India. if a man prayed,
"Give us this day our daily bread", people would laugh at him.
Nothing could be more foolish to the Hindu mind than to say,
"Our Father which art in Heaven." The Hindu, when he worships,
thinks that God is within himself.
According to the Yogis, there are three principal nerve
currents: one they call the Idâ, the other the Pingalâ, and the
middle one the Sushumnâ, and all these are inside the spinal
column. The Ida and the Pingala, the left and the right, are
clusters of nerves, while the middle one, the Sushumna, is
hollow and is not a cluster of nerves. This Sushumna is closed,
and for the ordinary man is of no use, for he works through the
Ida and the Pingala only. Currents are continually going down
and coming up through these nerves, carrying orders all over the
body through other nerves running to the different organs of the
body.
It is the regulation and the bringing into rhythm of the Ida and
Pingala that is the great object of breathing. But that itself
is nothing - it is only so much air taken into the lungs; except
for purifying the blood, it is of no more use. There is nothing
occult in the air that we take in with our breath and assimilate
to purify the blood; the action is merely a motion. This motion
can be reduced to the unit movement we call Prâna; and
everywhere, all movements are the various manifestations of this
Prana. This Prana is electricity, it is magnetism; it is thrown
out by the brain as thought. Everything is Prana; it is moving
the sun, the moon, and the stars.
We say, whatever is in this universe has been projected by the
vibration of the Prana. The highest result of vibration is
thought. If there be any higher, we cannot conceive of it. The
nerves, Ida and Pingala, work through the Prana. It is the Prana
that is moving every part of the body, becoming the different
forces. Give up that old idea that God is something that
produces the effect and sits on a throne dispensing justice. In
working we become exhausted because we use up so much Prana.
The breathing exercises, called Prânâyâma, bring about
regulation of the breathing, rhythmic action of the Prana. When
the Prana is working rhythmically, everything works properly.
When the Yogis get control over their own bodies, if there is
any disease in any part, they know that the Prana is not
rhythmic there and they direct the Prana to the affected part
until the rhythm is re-established.
Just as you can control the Prana in your own body, so, if you
are powerful enough, you can control, even from here another
man's Prana in India. It is all one. There is no break; unity is
the law. Physically, psychically, mentally, morally,
metaphysically, it is all one. Life is only a vibration. That
which vibrates this ocean of ether, vibrates you. Just as in a
lake, various strata of ice of various degrees of solidity are
formed, or as in an ocean of vapour there are various degrees of
density, so is this universe an ocean of matter. This is an
ocean of ether in which we find the sun, moon, stars, and
ourselves - in different states of solidity; but the continuity
is not broken; it is the same throughout.
Now, when we study metaphysics, we come to know the world is
one, not that the spiritual, the material, the mental, and the
world of energies are separate. It is all one, but seen from
different planes of vision. When you think of yourself as a
body, you forget that you are a mind, and when you think of
yourself as a mind, you will forget the body. There is only one
thing that you are; you can see it either as matter or body - or
you can see it as mind or spirit. Birth, life, and death are but
old superstitions. None was ever born, none will ever die; one
changes one's position - that is all. I am sorry to see in the
West how much they make of death; always trying to catch a
little life. "Give us life after death! Give us life!" They are
so happy if anybody tells them that they are going to live
afterwards! How can I ever doubt such a thing! How can I imagine
that I am dead! Try to think of yourself as dead, and you will
see that you are present to see your own dead body. Life is such
a wonderful reality that you cannot for a moment forget it. You
may as well doubt that you exist. This is the first fact of
consciousness - I am. Who can imagine a state of things which
never existed? It is the most self-evident of all truths. So,
the idea of immortality is inherent in man. How can one discuss
a subject that is unimaginable? Why should we want to discuss
the pros and cons of a subject that is self-evident?
The whole universe, therefore, is a unit, from whatever
standpoint you view it. Just now, to us, this universe is a unit
of Prana and Âkâsha, force and matter. And mind you, like all
other basic principles, this is also self-contradictory. For
what is force? - that which moves matter. And what is matter? -
that which is moved by force. It is a seesaw! Some of the
fundamentals of our reasoning are most curious, in spite of our
boast of science and knowledge. "It is a headache without a
head", as the Sanskrit proverb says. This state of things has
been called Maya. It has neither existence nor non-existence.
You cannot call it existence, because that only exists which is
beyond time and space, which is self-existence. Yet this world
satisfies to a certain degree our idea of existence. Therefore
it has an apparent existence.
But there is the real existence in and through everything; and
that reality, as it were, is caught in the meshes of time,
space, and causation. There is the real man, the infinite, the
beginningless, the endless, the ever-blessed, the ever-free. He
has been caught in the meshes of time, space, and causation. So
has everything in this world. The reality of everything is the
same infinite. This is not idealism; it is not that the world
does not exist. It has a relative existence, and fulfils all its
requirements But it has no independent existence. It exists
because of the Absolute Reality beyond time, space, and
causation.
I have made long digressions. Now, let us return to our main
subject.
All the automatic movements and all the conscious movements are
the working of Prana through the nerves. Now, you see, it will
be a very good thing to have control over the unconscious
actions.
On some other occasions, I told you the definition of God and
man. Man is an infinite circle whose circumference is nowhere,
but the centre is located in one spot; and God is an infinite
circle whose circumference is nowhere, but whose centre is
everywhere. He works through all hands, sees through all eyes,
walks on all feet, breathes through all bodies, lives in all
life, speaks through every mouth, and thinks through every
brain. Man can become like God and acquire control over the
whole universe if he multiplies infinitely his centre of
self-consciousness. Consciousness, therefore, is the chief thing
to understand. Let us say that here is an infinite line amid
darkness. We do not see the line, but on it there is one
luminous point which moves on. As it moves along the line, it
lights up its different parts in succession, and all that is
left behind becomes dark again. Our consciousness; may well be
likened to this luminous point. Its past experiences have been
replaced by the present, or have become subconscious. We are not
aware of their presence in us; but there they are, unconsciously
influencing our body and mind. Every movement that is now being
made without the help of consciousness was previously conscious.
Sufficient impetus has been given to it to work of itself.
The great error in all ethical systems, without exception, has
been the failure of teaching the means by which man could
refrain from doing evil. All the systems of ethics teach, "Do
not steal!" Very good; but why does a man steal? Because all
stealing, robbing, and other evil actions, as a rule, have
become automatic. The systematic robber, thief, liar, unjust man
and woman, are all these in spite of themselves! It is really a
tremendous psychological problem. We should look upon man in the
most charitable light. It is not so easy to be good. What are
you but mere machines until you are free? Should you be proud
because you are good? Certainly not. You are good because you
cannot help it. Another is bad because he cannot help it. If you
were in his position, who knows what you would have been? The
woman in the street, or the thief in the jail, is the Christ
that is being sacrificed that you may be a good man. Such is the
law of balance. All the thieves and the murderers, all the
unjust, the weakest, the wickedest, the devils, they all are my
Christ! I owe a worship to the God Christ and to the demon
Christ! That is my doctrine, I cannot help it. My salutation
goes to the feet of the good, the saintly, and to the feet of
the wicked and the devilish! They are all my teachers, all are
my spiritual fathers, all are my Saviours. I may curse one and
yet benefit by his failings; I may bless another and benefit by
his good deeds. This is as true as that I stand here. I have to
sneer at the woman walking in the street, because society wants
it! She, my Saviour, she, whose street-walking is the cause of
the chastity of other women! Think of that. Think, men and
women, of this question in your mind. It is a truth - a bare,
bold truth! As I see more of the world, see more of men and
women, this conviction grows stronger. Whom shall I blame? Whom
shall I praise? Both sides of the shield must be seen.
The task before us is vast; and first and foremost, we must seek
to control the vast mass of sunken thoughts which have become
automatic with us. The evil deed is, no doubt, on the conscious
plane; but the cause which produced the evil deed was far beyond
in the realms of the unconscious, unseen, and therefore more
potent.
Practical psychology directs first of all its energies in
controlling the unconscious, and we know that we can do it. Why?
Because we know the cause of the unconscious is the conscious;
the unconscious thoughts are the submerged millions of our old
conscious thoughts, old conscious actions become petrified - we
do not look at them, do not know them, have forgotten them. But
mind you, if the power of evil is in the unconscious, so also is
the power of good. We have many things stored in us as in a
pocket. We have forgotten them, do not even think of them, and
there are many of them, rotting, becoming positively dangerous;
they come forth, the unconscious causes which kill humanity.
True psychology would, therefore, try to bring them under the
control of the conscious. The great task is to revive the whole
man, as it were, in order to make him the complete master of
himself. Even what we call the automatic action of the organs
within our bodies, such as the liver etc., can be made to obey
our commands.
This is the first part of the study, the control of the
unconscious. The next is to go beyond the conscious. Just as
unconscious work is beneath consciousness, so there is another
work which is above consciousness. When this superconscious
state is reached, man becomes free and divine; death becomes
immortality, weakness becomes infinite power, and iron bondage
becomes liberty. That is the goal, the infinite realm of the
superconscious.
So, therefore, we see now that there must be a twofold work.
First, by the proper working of the Ida and the Pingala, which
are the two existing ordinary currents, to control the
subconscious action; and secondly, to go beyond even
consciousness.
The books say that he alone is the Yogi who, after long practice
in self-concentration, has attained to this truth. The Sushumna
now opens and a current which never before entered into this new
passage will find its way into it, and gradually ascend to (what
we call in figurative language) the different lotus centres,
till at last it reaches the brain. Then the Yogi becomes
conscious of what he really is, God Himself.
Everyone without exception, every one of us, can attain to this
culmination of Yoga. But it is a terrible task. If a person
wants to attain to this truth, he will have to do something more
than to listen to lectures and take a few breathing exercises.
Everything lies in the preparation. How long does it take to
strike a light? Only a second; but how long it takes to make the
candle! How long does it take to eat a dinner? Perhaps half an
hour. But hours to prepare the food! We want to strike the light
in a second, but we forget that the making of the candle is the
chief thing.
But though it is so hard to reach the goal, yet even our
smallest attempts are not in vain. We know that nothing is lost.
In the Gita, Arjuna asks Krishna, "Those who fail in attaining
perfection in Yoga in this life, are they destroyed like the
clouds of summer?" Krishna replies, "Nothing, my friend, is lost
in this world. Whatever one does, that remains as one's own, and
if the fruition of Yoga does not come in this life, one takes it
up again in the next birth." Otherwise, how do you explain the
marvellous childhood of Jesus, Buddha, Shankara?
Breathing, posturing, etc. are no doubt helps in Yoga; but they
are merely physical. The great preparations are mental. The
first thing necessary is a quiet and peaceable life.
If you want to be a Yogi, you must be free, and place yourself
in circumstances where you are alone and free from all anxiety.
He who desires a comfortable and nice life and at the same time
wants to realise the Self is like the fool who, wanting to cross
the river, caught hold of a crocodile, mistaking it for a log of
wood (Vivekachudâmani, 84.). "Seek ye first the kingdom of God,
and everything shall be added unto you." This is the one great
duty, this is renunciation. Live for an ideal, and leave no
place in the mind for anything else. Let us put forth all our
energies to acquire that, which never fails - our spiritual
perfection. If we have true yearning for realisation, we must
struggle, and through struggle growth will come. We shall make
mistakes, but they may be angels unawares.
The greatest help to spiritual life is meditation (Dhyâna). In
meditation we divest ourselves of all material conditions and
feel our divine nature. We do not depend upon any external help
in meditation. The touch of the soul can paint the brightest
colour even in the dingiest places; it can cast a fragrance over
the vilest thing; it can make the wicked divine - and all
enmity, all selfishness is effaced. The less the thought of the
body, the better. For it is the body that drags us down. It is
attachment, identification, which makes us miserable. That is
the secret: To think that I am the spirit and not the body, and
that the whole of this universe with all its relations, with all
its good and all its evil, is but as a series of paintings -
scenes on a canvas - of which I am the witness.