Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-1
CHAPTER I
CONCENTRATION: ITS SPIRITUAL USES
अथ योगानुशासनम् ॥१॥
1. Now concentration is explained.
योगश्चित्तवृत्तिनिरोधः ॥२॥
2. Yoga is restraining the mind-stuff (Chitta) from taking
various forms (Vrittis).
A good deal of explanation is necessary here. We have to
understand what Chitta is, and what the Vrittis are. I have
eyes. Eyes do not see. Take away the brain centre which is in
the head, the eyes will still be there, the retinae complete, as
also the pictures of objects on them, and yet the eyes will not
see. So the eyes are only a secondary instrument, not the organ
of vision. The organ of vision is in a nerve centre of the
brain. The two eyes will not be sufficient. Sometimes a man is
asleep with his eyes open. The light is there and the picture is
there, but a third thing is necessary - the mind must be joined
to the organ. The eye is the external instrument; we need also
the brain centre and the agency of the mind. Carriages roll down
a street, and you do not hear them. Why? Because your mind has
not attached itself to the organ of hearing. First, there is the
instrument, then there is the organ, and third, the mind
attached to these two. The mind takes the impression farther in,
and presents it to the determinative faculty - Buddhi - which
reacts. Along with this reaction flashes the idea of egoism.
Then this mixture of action and reaction is presented to the
Purusha, the real Soul, who perceives an object in this mixture.
The organs (Indriyas), together with the mind (Manas), the
determinative faculty (Buddhi), and egoism (Ahamkâra), form the
group called the Antahkarana (the internal instrument). They are
but various processes in the mind-stuff, called Chitta. The
waves of thought in the Chitta are called Vrittis (literally
"whirlpool") . What is thought? Thought is a force, as is
gravitation or repulsion. From the infinite storehouse of force
in nature, the instrument called Chitta takes hold of some,
absorbs it and sends it out as thought. Force is supplied to us
through food, and out of that food the body obtains the power of
motion etc. Others, the finer forces, it throws out in what we
call thought. So we see that the mind is not intelligent; yet it
appears to be intelligent. Why? Because the intelligent soul is
behind it. You are the only sentient being; mind is only the
instrument through which you catch the external world. Take this
book; as a book it does not exist outside, what exists outside
is unknown and unknowable. The unknowable furnishes the
suggestion that gives a blow to the mind, and the mind gives out
the reaction in the form of a book, in the same manner as when a
stone is thrown into the water, the water is thrown against it
in the form of waves. The real universe is the occasion of the
reaction of the mind. A book form, or an elephant form, or a man
form, is not outside; all that we know is our mental reaction
from the outer suggestion. "Matter is the permanent possibility
of sensations," said John Stuart Mill. It is only the suggestion
that is outside. Take an oyster for example. You know how pearls
are made. A parasite gets inside the shell and causes
irritation, and the oyster throws a sort of enamelling round it,
and this makes the pearl. The universe of experience is our own
enamel, so to say, and the real universe is the parasite serving
as nucleus. The ordinary man will never understand it, because
when he tries to do so, he throws out an enamel, and sees only
his own enamel. Now we understand what is meant by these
Vrittis. The real man is behind the mind; the mind is the
instrument his hands; it is his intelligence that is percolating
through the mind. It is only when you stand behind the mind that
it becomes intelligent. When man gives it up, it falls to pieces
and is nothing. Thus you understand what is meant by Chitta. It
is the mind-stuff, and Vrittis are the waves and ripples rising
in it when external causes impinge on it. These Vrittis are our
universe.
The bottom of a lake we cannot see, because its surface is
covered with ripples. It is only possible for us to catch a
glimpse of the bottom, when the ripples have subsided, and the
water is calm. If the water is muddy or is agitated all the
time, the bottom will not be seen. If it is clear, and there are
no waves, we shall see the bottom. The bottom of the lake is our
own true Self; the lake is the Chitta and the waves the Vrittis.
Again, the mind is in three states, one of which is darkness,
called Tamas, found in brutes and idiots; it only acts to
injure. No other idea comes into that state of mind. Then there
is the active state of mind, Rajas, whose chief motives are
power and enjoyment. "I will be powerful and rule others." Then
there is the state called Sattva, serenity, calmness, in which
the waves cease, and the water of the mind-lake becomes clear.
It is not inactive, but rather intensely active. It is the
greatest manifestation of power to be calm. It is easy to be
active. Let the reins go, and the horses will run away with you.
Anyone can do that, but he who can stop the plunging horses is
the strong man. Which requires the greater strength, letting go
or restraining? The calm man is not the man who is dull. You
must not mistake Sattva for dullness or laziness. The calm man
is the one who has control over the mind waves. Activity is the
manifestation of inferior strength, calmness, of the superior.
The Chitta is always trying to get back to its natural pure
state, but the organs draw it out. To restrain it, to check this
outward tendency, and to start it on the return journey to the
essence of intelligence is the first step in Yoga, because only
in this way can the Chitta get into its proper course.
Although the Chitta is in every animal, from the lowest to the
highest, it is only in the human form that we find it as the
intellect. Until the mind-stuff can take the form of intellect
it is not possible for it to return through all these steps, and
liberate the soul. Immediate salvation is impossible for the cow
or the dog, although they have mind, because their Chitta cannot
as yet take that form which we call intellect.
The Chitta manifests itself in the following forms - scattering,
darkening, gathering, one-pointed, and concentrated. The
scattering form is activity. Its tendency is to manifest in the
form of pleasure or of pain. The darkening form is dullness
which tends to injury. The commentator says, the third form is
natural to the Devas, the angels, and the first and second to
the demons. The gathering form is when it struggles to centre
itself. The one-pointed form is when it tries to concentrate,
and the concentrated form is what brings us to Samâdhi.
तदा द्रष्टुः स्वरूपेऽवस्थानम् ॥३॥
3. At that time (the time of concentration) the seer (Purusha)
rests in his own (unmodified) state.
As soon as the waves have stopped, and the lake has become
quiet, we see its bottom. So with the mind; when it is calm, we
see what our own nature is; we do not mix ourselves but remain
our own selves.
वृत्तिसारूप्यमितरत्र ॥४॥
4. At other times (other than that of concentration) the seer is
identified with the modifications.
For instance, someone blames me; this produces a modification,
Vritti, in my mind, and I identify myself with it and the result
is misery.
वृत्तयः पंचतय्यः क्लिष्टा अक्लिष्टाः ॥५॥
5. There are five classes of modifications, (some) painful and
(others) not painful.
प्रमाण-विपर्यय-विकल्प-निद्रा-स्मृतयः ॥६॥
6. (These are) right knowledge, indiscrimination, verbal
delusion, sleep, and memory.
प्रत्यक्षानुमानागमाः प्रमाणानि ॥७॥
7. Direct perception, inference, and competent evidence are
proofs.
When two of our perceptions do not contradict each other, we
call it proof. I hear something, and if it contradicts something
already perceived, I begin to fight it out, and do not believe
it. There are also three kinds of proof. Pratyaksha, direct
perception; whatever we see and feel, is proof, if there has
been nothing to delude the senses. I see the world; that is
sufficient proof that it exists. Secondly, Anumâna, inference;
you see a sign, and from the sign you come to the thing
signified. Thirdly, Âptavâkya, the direct evidence of the Yogis,
of those who have seen the truth. We are all of us struggling
towards knowledge. But you and I have to struggle hard, and come
to knowledge through a long tedious process of reasoning, but
the Yogi, the pure one, has gone beyond all this. Before his
mind, the past, the present, and the future are alike, one book
for him to read; he does not require to go through the tedious
processes for knowledge we have to; his words are proof, because
he sees knowledge in himself. These, for instance, are the
authors of the sacred scriptures; therefore the scriptures are
proof. If any such persons are living now their words will be
proof. Other philosophers go into long discussions about
Aptavakya and they say, "What is the proof of their words?" The
proof is their direct perception. Because whatever I see is
proof, and whatever you see is proof, if it does not contradict
any past knowledge. There is knowledge beyond the senses, and
whenever it does not contradict reason and past human
experience, that knowledge is proof. Any madman may come into
this room and say he sees angels around him; that would not be
proof. In the first place, it must be true knowledge, and
secondly, it must not contradict past knowledge, and thirdly, it
must depend upon the character of the man who gives it out. I
hear it said that the character of the man is not of so much
importance as what he may say; we must first hear what he says.
This may be true in other things. A man may be wicked, and yet
make an astronomical discovery, but in religion it is different,
because no impure man will ever have the power to reach the
truths of religion. Therefore we have first of all to see that
the man who declares himself to be an Âpta is a perfectly
unselfish and holy person; secondly, that he has reached beyond
the senses; and thirdly, that what he says does not contradict
the past knowledge of humanity. Any new discovery of truth does
not contradict the past truth, but fits into it. And fourthly,
that truth must have a possibility of verification. If a man
says, "I have seen a vision," and tells me that I have no right
to see it, I believe him not. Everyone must have the power to
see it for himself. No one who sells his knowledge is an Apta.
All these conditions must be fulfilled; you must first see that
the man is pure, and that he has no selfish motive; that he has
no thirst for gain or fame. Secondly, he must show that he is
superconscious. He must give us something that we cannot get
from our senses, and which is for the benefit of the world.
Thirdly, we must see that it does not contradict other truths;
if it contradicts other scientific truths reject it at once.
Fourthly, the man should never be singular; he should only
represent what all men can attain. The three sorts of proof are,
then, direct sense-perception, inference, and the words of an
Apta. I cannot translate this word into English. It is not the
word "inspired", because inspiration is believed to come from
outside, while this knowledge comes from the man himself. The
literal meaning is "attained".
विपर्ययो मिथ्याज्ञानमतद्रूपप्रतिष्ठम् ॥८॥
8. Indiscrimination is false knowledge not established in real
nature.
The next class of Vrittis that arises is mistaking one thing for
another, as a piece of mother-of-pearl is taken for a piece of
silver.
शब्दज्ञानानुपाती वस्तुशून्यो विकल्पः ॥९॥
9. Verbal delusion follows from words having no (corresponding)
reality.
There is another class of Vrittis called Vikalpa. A word is
uttered, and we do not wait to consider its meaning; we jump to
a conclusion immediately. It is the sign of weakness of the
Chitta. Now you can understand the theory of restraint. The
weaker the man, the less he has of restraint. Examine yourselves
always by that test. When you are going to be angry or
miserable, reason it out how it is that some news that has come
to you is throwing your mind into Vrittis.
अभाव-प्रत्ययालम्बना-वृत्तिर्निद्रा ॥१०॥
10. Sleep is a Vritti which embraces the feeling of voidness.
The next class of Vrittis is called sleep and dream. When we
awake, we know that we have been sleeping; we can only have
memory of perception. That which we do not perceive we never can
have any memory of. Every reaction is a wave in the lake. Now,
if, during sleep, the mind had no waves, it would have no
perceptions, positive or negative, and, therefore, we would not
remember them. The very reason of our remembering sleep is that
during sleep there was a certain class of waves in the mind.
Memory is another class of Vrittis which is called Smriti.
अनुभूतविषयासम्प्रमोषः स्मृतिः ॥११॥
11. Memory is when the (Vrittis of) perceived subjects do not
slip away (and through impressions come back to consciousness).
Memory can come from direct perception, false knowledge, verbal
delusion, and sleep. For instance, you hear a word. That word is
like a stone thrown into the lake of the Chitta; it causes a
ripple, and that ripple rouses a series of ripples; this is
memory. So in sleep. When the peculiar kind of ripple called
sleep throws the Chitta into a ripple of memory, it is called a
dream. Dream is another form of the ripple which in the waking
state is called memory.
अभ्यासवैराग्याभ्यां तन्निरोधः ॥१२॥
12. Their control is by practice and nonattachment.
The mind, to have non-attachment, must be clear, good, and
rational. Why should we practice? Because each action is like
the pulsations quivering over the surface of the lake. The
vibration dies out, and what is left? The Samskâras, the
impressions. When a large number of these impressions are left
on the mind, they coalesce and become a habit. It is said,
"Habit is second nature", it is first nature also, and the whole
nature of man; everything that we are is the result of habit.
That gives us consolation, because, if it is only habit, we can
make and unmake it at any time. The Samskaras are left by these
vibrations passing out of our mind, each one of them leaving its
result. Our character is the sum-total of these marks, and
according as some particular wave prevails one takes that tone.
If good prevails, one becomes good; if wickedness, one becomes
wicked; if joyfulness, one becomes happy. The only remedy for
bad habits is counter habits; all the bad habits that have left
their impressions are to be controlled by good habits. Go on
doing good, thinking holy thoughts continuously; that is the
only way to suppress base impressions. Never say any man is
hopeless, because he only represents a character, a bundle of
habits, which can be checked by new and better ones. Character
is repeated habits, and repeated habits alone can reform
character.
तत्र स्थितौ यत्नोऽभ्यासः ॥१३॥
13. Continuous struggle to keep them (the Vrittis) perfectly
restrained is practice.
What is practice? The attempt to restrain the mind in Chitta
form, to prevent its going out into waves.
स तु दीर्घकालनैरन्तर्यसत्कारासेवितो दृढभूमिः ॥१४॥
14. It becomes firmly grounded by long constant efforts with
great love (for the end to be attained).
Restraint does not come in one day, but by long continued
practice.
दृष्टानुश्रविकविषयवितृष्णस्य वशीकारसंज्ञा वैराग्यम् ॥१५॥
15. That effect which comes to these who have given up their
thirst after objects, either seen or heard, and which wills to
control the objects, is non-attachment.
The two motive powers of our actions are (1) what we see
ourselves, (2) the experience of others. These two forces throw
the mind, the lake, into various waves. Renunciation is the
power of battling against these forces and holding the mind in
check. Their renunciation is what see want. I am passing through
a street, and a man comes and takes away my watch. That is my
own experience. I see it myself, and it immediately throws my
Chitta into a wave, taking the form of anger. Allow not that to
come. If you cannot prevent that, you are nothing; if you can,
you have Vairâgya. Again, the experience of the worldly-minded
teaches us that sense-enjoyments are the highest ideal. These
are tremendous temptations. To deny them, and not allow the mind
to come to a wave form with regard to them, is renunciation; to
control the twofold motive powers arising from my own experience
and from the experience of others, and thus prevent the Chitta
from being governed by them, is Vairagya. These should be
controlled by me, and not I by them. This sort of mental
strength is called renunciation. Vairagya is the only way to
freedom.
तत्परं पुरुषख्यातेर्गुणवैतृष्ण्यम् ॥१६॥
16. That is extreme non-attachment which gives up even the
qualities, and comes from the knowledge of (the real nature of)
the Purusha.
It is the highest manifestation of the power of Vairagya when it
takes away even our attraction towards the qualities. We have
first to understand what the Purusha, the Self, is and what the
qualities are. According to Yoga philosophy, the whole of nature
consists of three qualities or forces; one is called Tamas,
another Rajas, and the third Sattva. These three qualities
manifest themselves in the physical world as darkness or
inactivity, attraction or repulsion, and equilibrium of the two.
Everything that is in nature, all manifestations, are
combinations and recombinations of these three forces. Nature
has been divided into various categories by the Sânkhyas; the
Self of man is beyond all these, beyond nature. It is effulgent,
pure, and perfect. Whatever of intelligence we see in nature is
but the reflection of this Self upon nature. Nature itself is
insentient. You must remember that the word nature also includes
the mind; mind is in nature; thought is in nature; from thought,
down to the grossest form of matter, everything is in nature,
the manifestation of nature. This nature has covered the Self of
man, and when nature takes away the covering, the self appears
in Its own glory. The non-attachment, as described in aphorism
15 (as being control of objects or nature) is the greatest help
towards manifesting the Self. The next aphorism defines Samadhi,
perfect concentration which is the goal of the Yogi.
वितर्कविचारानन्दास्मितानुगमात् सम्प्रज्ञातः ॥१७॥
17. The concentration called right knowledge is that which is
followed by reasoning, discrimination bliss, unqualified egoism.
Samadhi is divided into two varieties. One is called the
Samprajnâta, and the other the Asamprajnâta. In the Samprajnata
Samadhi come all the powers of controlling nature. It is of four
varieties. The first variety is called the Savitarka, when the
mind meditates upon an object again and again, by isolating it
from other objects. There are two sorts of objects for
meditation in the twenty-five categories of the Sankhyas, (1)
the twenty-four insentient categories of Nature, and (2) the one
sentient Purusha. This part of Yoga is based entirely on Sankhya
philosophy, about which I have already told you. As you will
remember, egoism and will and mind have a common basis, the
Chitta or the mind-stuff, out of which they are all
manufactured. The mind-stuff takes in the forces of nature, and
projects them as thought. There must be something, again, where
both force and matter are one. This is called Avyakta, the
unmanifested state of nature before creation, and to which,
after the end of a cycle, the whole of nature returns, to come
out again after another period. Beyond that is the Purusha, the
essence of intelligence. Knowledge is power, and as soon as we
begin to know a thing, we get power over it; so also when the
mind begins to meditate on the different elements, it gains
power over them. That sort of meditation where the external
gross elements are the objects is called Savitarka. Vitarka
means question; Savitarka, with question, questioning the
elements, as it were, that they may give their truths and their
powers to the man who meditates upon them. There is no
liberation in getting powers. It is a worldly search after
enjoyments, and there is no enjoyment in this life; all search
for enjoyment is vain; this is the old, old lesson which man
finds so hard to learn. When he does learn it, he gets out of
the universe and becomes free. The possession of what are called
occult powers is only intensifying the world, and in the end,
intensifying suffering. Though as a scientist Patanjali is bound
to point out the possibilities of this science, he never misses
an opportunity to warn us against these powers.
Again, in the very same meditation, when one struggles to take
the elements out of time and space, and think of them as they
are, it is called Nirvitarka, without question. When the
meditation goes a step higher, and takes the Tanmatras as its
object, and thinks of them as in time and space, it is called
Savichâra, with discrimination; and when in the same meditation
one eliminates time and space, and thinks of the fine elements
as they are, it is called Nirvichâra, without discrimination.
The next step is when the elements are given up, both gross and
fine, and the object of meditation is the interior organ, the
thinking organ. When the thinking organ is thought of as bereft
of the qualities of activity and dullness, it is then called
Sânanda, the blissful Samadhi. When the mind itself is the
object of meditation, when meditation becomes very ripe and
concentrated, when all ideas of the gross and fine materials are
given up, when the Sattva state only of the Ego remains, but
differentiated from all other objects, it is called Sâsmita
Samadhi. The man who has attained to this has attained to what
is called in the Vedas "bereft of body". He can think of himself
as without his gross body; but he will have to think of himself
as with a fine body. Those that in this state get merged in
nature without attaining the goal are called Prakritilayas, but
those who do not stop even there reach the goal, which is
freedom.
विरामप्रत्ययाभ्यासपूर्वः संस्कारशेषोऽन्यः ॥१८॥
18. There is another Samadhi which is attained by the constant
practice of cessation of all mental activity, in which the
Chitta retains only the unmanifested impressions.
This is the perfect superconscious Asamprajnata Samadhi, the
state which gives us freedom. The first state does not give us
freedom, does not liberate the soul. A man may attain to all
powers, and yet fall again. There is no safeguard until the soul
goes beyond nature. It is very difficult to do so, although the
method seems easy. The method is to meditate on the mind itself,
and whenever thought comes, to strike it down, allowing no
thought to come into the mind, thus making it an entire vacuum.
When we can really do this, that very moment we shall attain
liberation. When persons without training and preparation try to
make their minds vacant, they are likely to succeed only in
covering themselves with Tamas, the material of ignorance, which
makes the mind dull and stupid, and leads them to think that
they are making a vacuum of the mind. To be able to really do
that is to manifest the greatest strength, the highest control.
When this state, Asamprajnata, superconsciousness, is reached,
the Samadhi becomes seedless. What is meant by that? In a
concentration where there is consciousness, where the mind
succeeds only in quelling the waves in the Chitta and holding
them down, the waves remain in the form of tendencies. These
tendencies (or seeds) become waves again, when the time comes.
But when you have destroyed all these tendencies, almost
destroyed the mind, then the Samadhi becomes seedless; there are
no more seeds in the mind out of which to manufacture again and
again this plant of life, this ceaseless round of birth and
death.
You may ask, what state would that be in which there is no mind,
there is no knowledge? What we call knowledge is a lower state
than the one beyond knowledge. You must always bear in mind that
the extremes look very much alike. If a very low vibration of
ether is taken as darkness, an intermediate state as light, very
high vibration will be darkness again. Similarly, ignorance is
the lowest state, knowledge is the middle state, and beyond
knowledge is the highest state, the two extremes of which seem
the same. Knowledge itself is a manufactured something, a
combination; it is not reality.
What is the result of constant practice of this higher
concentration? All old tendencies of restlessness and dullness
will be destroyed, as well as the tendencies of goodness too.
The case is similar to that of the chemicals used to take the
dirt and alloy off gold. When the ore is smelted down, the dross
is burnt along with the chemicals. So this constant controlling
power will stop the previous bad tendencies, and eventually, the
good ones also. Those good and evil tendencies will suppress
each other, leaving alone the Soul, in its own splendour
untrammelled by either good or bad, the omnipresent, omnipotent,
and omniscient. Then the man will know that he had neither birth
nor death, nor need for heaven or earth. He will know that he
neither came nor went, it was nature which was moving, and that
movement was reflected upon the soul. The form of the light
reflected by the glass upon the wall moves, and the wall
foolishly thinks it is moving. So with all of us; it is the
Chitta constantly moving making itself into various forms, and
we think that we are these various forms. All these delusions
will vanish. When that free Soul will command - not pray or beg,
but command - then whatever It desires will be immediately
fulfilled; whatever It wants It will be able to do. According to
the Sankhya philosophy, there is no God. It says that there can
be no God of this universe, because if there were one, He must
be a soul, and a soul must be either bound or free. How can the
soul that is bound by nature, or controlled by nature, create?
It is itself a slave. On the other hand, why should the Soul
that is free create and manipulate all these things? It has no
desires, so it cannot have any need to create. Secondly, it says
the theory of God is an unnecessary one; nature explains all.
What is the use of any God? But Kapila teaches that there are
many souls, who, though nearly attaining perfection, fall short
because they cannot perfectly renounce all powers. Their minds
for a time merge in nature, to re-emerge as its masters. Such
gods there are. We shall all become such gods, and, according to
the Sankhyas, the God spoken of in the Vedas really means one of
these free souls. Beyond them there is not an eternally free and
blessed Creator of the universe. On the other hand, the Yogis
say, "Not so, there is a God; there is one Soul separate from
all other souls, and He is the eternal Master of all creation,
the ever free, the Teacher of all teachers." The Yogis admit
that those whom the Sankhyas call "the merged in nature" also
exist. They are Yogis who have fallen short of perfection, and
though, for a time, debarred from attaining the goal, remain as
rulers of parts of the universe.
भव-प्रत्ययो विदेह-प्रकृतिलयानाम् ॥१९॥
19. (This Samadhi when not followed by extreme non-attachment)
becomes the cause of the re-manifestation of the gods and of
those that become merged in nature.
The gods in the Indian systems of philosophy represent certain
high offices which are filled successively by various souls. But
none of them is perfect.
श्रद्धा-वीर्य-स्मृति-समाधि-प्रज्ञा-पूर्वक इतरेषाम् ॥२०॥
20. To others (this Samadhi) comes through faith, energy,
memory, concentration, and discrimination of the real.
These are they who do not want the position of gods or even that
of rulers of cycles. They attain to liberation.
तीव्रसंवेगानामासन्नः ॥२१॥
21. Success is speedy for the extremely energetic.
मृदुमध्याधिमात्रत्वात्ततोऽपि विशेषः ॥२२॥
22. The success of Yogis differs according as the means they
adopt are mild, medium, or intense.
ईश्वरप्रणिधानाद्वा ॥२३॥
23. Or by devotion to Ishvara.
क्लेशकर्मविपाकाशयैरपरामृष्टः पुरुषविशेष ईश्वरः ॥२४॥
24. Ishvara (the Supreme Ruler) is a special Purusha, untouched
by misery, actions, their results, and desires.
We must again remember that the Pâtanjala Yoga philosophy is
based upon the Sankhya philosophy; only in the latter there is
no place for God, while with the Yogis God has a place. The
Yogis, however, do not mention many ideas about God, such as
creating. God as the Creator of the universe is not meant by the
Ishvara of the Yogis. According to the Vedas, Ishvara is the
Creator of the universe; because it is harmonious, it must be
the manifestation of one will. The Yogis want to establish a
God, but they arrive at Him in a peculiar fashion of their own.
They say:
तत्र निरतिशयं सर्वज्ञत्वबीजम् ॥२५॥
25. In Him becomes infinite that all-knowingness which in others
is (only) a germ.
The mind must always travel between two extremes. You can think
of limited space, but that very idea gives you also unlimited
space. Close your eyes and think of a little space; at the same
time that you perceive the little circle, you have a circle
round it of unlimited dimensions. It is the same with time. Try
to think of a second; you will have, with the same act of
perception, to think of time which is unlimited. So with
knowledge. Knowledge is only a germ in man, but you will have to
think of infinite knowledge around it, so that the very
constitution of our mind shows us that there is unlimited
knowledge, and the Yogis call that unlimited knowledge God.
स पूर्वेषामपि गुरुः कालेनानवच्छेदात् ॥२६॥
26. He is the Teacher of even the ancient teachers, being not
limited by time.
It is true that all knowledge is within ourselves, but this has
to be called forth by another knowledge. Although the capacity
to know is inside us, it must be called out, and that calling
out of knowledge can only be done, a Yogi maintains, through
another knowledge. Dead, insentient matter never calls out
knowledge, it is the action of knowledge that brings out
knowledge. Knowing beings must be with us to call forth what is
in us, so these teachers were always necessary. The world was
never without them, and no knowledge can come without them. God
is the Teacher of all teachers, because these teachers, however
great they may have been - gods or angels - were all bound and
limited by time, while God is not. There are two peculiar
deductions of the Yogis. The first is that in thinking of the
limited, the mind must think of the unlimited; and that if one
part of that perception is true, so also must the other be, for
the reason that their value as perceptions of the mind is equal.
The very fact that man has a little knowledge shows that God has
unlimited knowledge. If I am to take one, why not the other?
Reason forces me to take both or reject both. If I believe that
there is a man with a little knowledge, I must also admit that
there is someone behind him with unlimited knowledge. The second
deduction is that no knowledge can come without a teacher. It is
true, as the modern philosophers say, that there is something in
man which evolves out of him; all knowledge is in man, but
certain environments are necessary to call it out. We cannot
find any knowledge without teachers. If there are men teachers,
god teachers, or angel teachers, they are all limited; who was
the teacher before them? We are forced to admit, as a last
conclusion, one teacher who is not limited by time; and that One
Teacher of infinite knowledge, without beginning or end, is
called God.
तस्य वाचकः प्रणवः ॥२७॥
27. His manifesting word is Om.
Every idea that you have in the mind has a counterpart in a
word; the word and the thought are inseparable. The external
part of one and the same thing is what we call word, and the
internal part is what we call thought. No man can, by analysis,
separate thought from word. The idea that language was created
by men - certain men sitting together and deciding upon words,
has been proved to be wrong. So long as man has existed there
have been words and language. What is the connection between an
idea and a word? Although we see that there must always be a
word with a thought, it is not necessary that the same thought
requires the same word. The thought may be the same in twenty
different countries, yet the language is different. We must have
a word to express each thought, but these words need not
necessarily have the same sound Sounds will vary in different
nations. Our commentator says, "Although the relation between
thought and word is perfectly natural, yet it does not mean a
rigid connection between one sound and one idea." These sounds
vary, yet the relation between the sounds and the thoughts is a
natural one. The connection between thoughts and sounds is good
only if there be a real connection between the thing signified
and the symbol; until then that symbol will never come into
general use. A symbol is the manifester of the thing signified,
and if the thing signified has already an existence, and if, by
experience, we know that the symbol has expressed that thing
many times, then we are sure that there is a real relation
between them. Even if the things are not present, there will be
thousands who will know them by their symbols. There must be a
natural connection between the symbol and the thing signified;
then, when that symbol is pronounced, it recalls the thing
signified. The commentator says the manifesting word of God is
Om. Why does he emphasise this word? There are hundreds of words
for God. One thought is connected with a thousand words; the
idea "God" is connected with hundreds of words, and each one
stands as a symbol for God. Very good. But there must be a
generalization among all time words, some substratum, some
common ground of all these symbols, and that which is the common
symbol will be the best, and will really represent them all. In
making a sound we use the larynx and the palate as a sounding
board. Is there any material sound of which all other sounds
must be manifestations, one which is the most natural sound? Om
(Aum) is such a sound, the basis of all sounds. The first
letter, A, is the root sound, the key, pronounced without
touching any part of the tongue or palate; M represents the last
sound in the series, being produced by the closed lips, and the
U rolls from the very root to the end of the sounding board of
the mouth. Thus, Om represents the whole phenomena of
sound-producing. As such, it must be the natural symbol, the
matrix of all the various sounds. It denotes the whole range and
possibility of all the words that can be made. Apart from these
speculations, we see that around this word Om are centred all
the different religious ideas in India; all the various
religious ideas of the Vedas have gathered themselves round this
word Om. What has that to do with America and England, or any
other country? Simply this, that the word has been retained at
every stage of religious growth in India, and it has been
manipulated to mean all the various ideas about God. Monists,
dualists, mono-dualists, separatists, and even atheists took up
this Om. Om has become the one symbol for the religious
aspiration of the vast majority of human beings. Take, for
instance, the English word God. It covers only a limited
function, and if you go beyond it, you have to add adjectives,
to make it Personal, or Impersonal, or Absolute God. So with the
words for God in every other language; their signification is
very small. This word Om, however, has around it all the various
significances. As such it should be accepted by everyone.
तज्जपस्तदर्थभावनम् ॥२८॥
28. The repetition of this (Om) and meditating on its meaning
(is the way).
Why should there be repetition? We have not forgotten the theory
of Samskaras, that the sum-total of impressions lives in the
mind. They become more and more latent but remain there, and as
soon as they get the right stimulus, they come out. Molecular
vibration never ceases. When this universe is destroyed, all the
massive vibrations disappear; the sun, moon, stars, and earth,
melt down; but the vibrations remain in the atoms. Each atom
performs the same function as the big worlds do. So even when
the vibrations of the Chitta subside, its molecular vibrations
go on, and when they get the impulse, come out again. We can now
understand what is meant by repetition. It is the greatest
stimulus that can be given to the spiritual Samskaras. "One
moment of company with the holy makes a ship to cross this ocean
of life." Such is the power of association. So this repetition
of Om, and thinking of its meaning, is keeping good company in
your own mind. Study, and then meditate on what you have
studied. Thus light will come to you, the Self will become
manifest.
But one must think of Om, and of its meaning too. Avoid evil
company, because the scars of old wounds are in you, and evil
company is just the thing that is necessary to call them out. In
the same way we are told that good company will call out the
good impressions that are in us, but which have become latent.
There is nothing holier in the world than to keep good company,
because the good impressions will then tend to come to the
surface.
ततः प्रत्यक्चेतनाधिगमोऽप्यन्तरायाभावश्च ॥२९॥
29. From that is gained (the knowledge of) introspection, and
the destruction of obstacles.
The first manifestation of the repetition and thinking of Om is
that the introspective power will manifest more and more, all
the mental and physical obstacles will begin to vanish. What are
the obstacles to the Yogi?
व्याधि-स्त्यान-संशय-प्रमादालस्याविरति-भ्रान्तिदर्शनालब्धभूमिकत्वानवस्थितत्वानि
चित्तविक्षेपास्तेऽन्तरायाः ॥३०॥
30. Disease, mental laziness, doubt, lack of enthusiasm,
lethargy, clinging to sense-enjoyments, false perception,
non-attaining concentration, and falling away from the state
when obtained, are the obstructing distractions.
Disease. This body is the boat which will carry us to the other
shore of the ocean of life. It must be taken care of. Unhealthy
persons cannot be Yogis. Mental laziness makes us lose all
lively interest in the subject, without which there will neither
be the will nor the energy to practise. Doubts will arise in the
mind about the truth of the science, however strong one's
intellectual conviction may be, until certain peculiar psychic
experiences come, as hearing or seeing at a distance, etc. These
glimpses strengthen the mind and make the student persevere.
Falling away ... when obtained. Some days or weeks when you are
practicing, the mind will be calm and easily concentrated, and
you will find yourself progressing fast. All of a sudden the
progress will stop one day, and you will find yourself, as it
were, stranded. Persevere. All progress proceeds by such rise
and fall.
दुःख-दौर्मनस्याङ्गमेजयत्व-श्वासप्रश्वासा विक्षेपसहभुवः ॥३१॥
31. Grief, mental distress, tremor of the body, irregular
breathing, accompany non-retention of concentration.
Concentration will bring perfect repose to mind and body every
time it is practised. When the practice has been misdirected, or
not enough controlled, these disturbances come. Repetition of Om
and self-surrender to the Lord will strengthen the mind, and
bring fresh energy. The nervous shakings will come to almost
everyone. Do not mind them at all, but keep on practising.
Practice will cure them and make the seat firm.
तत्प्रतिषेधार्थमेकतत्त्वाभ्यासः ॥३२॥
32. To remedy this, the practice of one subject (should be
made).
Making the mind take the form of one object for some time will
destroy these obstacles. This is general advice. In the
following aphorisms it will be expanded and particularized. As
one practice cannot suit everyone, various methods will be
advanced, and everyone by actual experience will find out that
which helps him most.
मैत्री-करुणामुदितोपेक्षाणां सुख-दुःखपुण्यापुण्य-विषयाणां
भावनातश्चित्तप्रसादनम् ॥३३॥
33. Friendship, mercy, gladness, and indifference, being thought
of in regard to subjects, happy, unhappy, good, and evil
respectively, pacify the Chitta.
We must have these four sorts of ideas. We must have friendship
for all; we must be merciful towards those that are in misery;
when people are happy, we ought to be happy; and to the wicked
we must be indifferent. So with all subjects that come before
us. If the subject is a good one, we shall feel friendly towards
it; if the subject of thought is one that is miserable, we must
be merciful towards it. If it is good, we must be glad; if it is
evil, we must be indifferent. These attitudes of the mind
towards the different subjects that come before it will make the
mind peaceful. Most of our difficulties in our daily lives come
from being unable to hold our minds in this way. For instance,
if a man does evil to us, instantly we want to react evil, and
every reaction of evil shows that we are not able to hold the
Chitta down; it comes out in waves towards the object, and we
lose our power. Every reaction in the form of hatred or evil is
so much loss to the mind; and every evil thought or deed of
hatred, or any thought of reaction, if it is controlled, will be
laid in our favour. It is not that we lose by thus restraining
ourselves; we are gaining infinitely more than we suspect. Each
time we suppress hatred, or a feeling of anger, it is so much
good energy stored up in our favour; that piece of energy will
be converted into the higher powers.
प्रच्छर्दन-विधारणाभ्यां वा प्राणस्य ॥३४॥
34. By throwing out and restraining the Breath.
The word used is Prâna. Prana is not exactly breath. It is the
name for the energy that is in the universe. Whatever you see in
the universe, whatever moves or works, or has life, is a
manifestation of this Prana. The sum-total of the energy
displayed in the universe is called Prana. This Prana, before a
cycle begins, remains in an almost motionless state; and when
the cycle begins, this Prana begins to manifest itself. It is
this Prana that is manifested as motion - as the nervous motion
in human beings or animals; and the same Prana is manifesting as
thought, and so on. The whole universe is a combination of Prana
and Âkâsha; so is the human body. Out of Akasha you get the
different materials that you feel and see, and out of Prana all
the various forces. Now this throwing out and restraining the
Prana is what is called Pranayama. Patanjali, the father of the
Yoga philosophy, does not give very many particular directions
about Pranayama, but later on other Yogis found out various
things about this Pranayama, and made of it a great science.
With Patanjali it is one of the many ways, but he does not lay
much stress on it. He means that you simply throw the air out,
and draw it in, and hold it for some time, that is all, and by
that, the mind will become a little calmer. But, later on, you
will find that out of this is evolved a particular science
called Pranayama. We shall hear a little of what these later
Yogis have to say.
Some of this I have told you before, but a little repetition
will serve to fix it in your minds. First, you must remember
that this Prana is not the breath; but that which causes the
motion of the breath, that which is the vitality of the breath,
is the Prana. Again, the word Prana is used for all the senses;
they are all called Pranas, the mind is called Prana; and so we
see that Prana is force. And yet we cannot call it force,
because force is only the manifestation of it. It is that which
manifests itself as force and everything else in the way of
motion. The Chitta, the mind-stuff, is the engine which draws in
the Prana from the surroundings, and manufactures out of Prana
the various vital forces - those that keep the body in
preservation - and thought, will, and all other powers. By the
abovementioned process of breathing we can control all the
various motions in the body, and the various nerve currents that
are running through the body. First we begin to recognise them,
and then we slowly get control over them.
Now, these later Yogis consider that there are three main
currents of this Prana in the human body. One they call Idâ,
another Pingalâ, and the third Sushumnâ. Pingala, according to
them, is on the right side of the spinal column, and the Ida on
the left, and in the middle of the spinal column is the
Sushumna, an empty channel. Ida and Pingala, according to them,
are the currents working in every man, and through these
currents, we are performing all the functions of life. Sushumna
is present in all, as a possibility; but it works only in the
Yogi. You must remember that Yoga changes the body. As you go on
practising, your body changes; it is not the same body that you
had before the practice. That is very rational, and can be
explained, because every new thought that we have must make, as
it were, a new channel through the brain, and that explains the
tremendous conservatism of human nature. Human nature likes to
run through the ruts that are already there, because it is easy.
If we think, just for example's sake, that the mind is like a
needle, and the brain substance a soft lump before it, then each
thought that we have makes a street, as it were, in the brain,
and this street would close up, but for the grey matter which
comes and makes a lining to keep it separate. If there were no
grey matter, there would be no memory, because memory means
going over these old streets, retracing a thought as it were.
Now perhaps you have marked that when one talks on subjects in
which one takes a few ideas that are familiar to everyone, and
combines and recombines them, it is easy to follow because these
channels are present in everyone's brain, and it is only
necessary to recur to them. But whenever a new subject comes,
new channels have to be made, so it is not understood readily.
And that is why the brain (it is the brain, and not the people
themselves) refuses unconsciously to be acted upon by new ideas.
It resists. The Prana is trying to make new channels, and the
brain will not allow it. This is the secret of conservatism. The
fewer channels there have been in the brain, and the less the
needle of the Prana has made these passages, the more
conservative will be the brain, the more it will struggle
against new thoughts. The more thoughtful the man, the more
complicated will be the streets in his brain, and the more
easily he will take to new ideas, and understand them. So with
every fresh idea, we make a new impression in the brain, cut new
channels through the brain-stuff, and that is why we find that
in the practice of Yoga (it being an entirely new set of
thoughts and motives) there is so much physical resistance at
first. That is why we find that the part of religion which deals
with the world-side of nature is so widely accepted, while the
other part, the philosophy, or the psychology, which clears with
the inner nature of man, is so frequently neglected.
We must remember the definition of this world of ours; it is
only the Infinite Existence projected into the plane of
consciousness. A little of the Infinite is projected into
consciousness, and that we call our world. So there is an
Infinite beyond; and religion has to deal with both - with the
little lump we call our world, and with the Infinite beyond. Any
religion which deals with one only of these two will be
defective. It must deal with both. The part of religion which
deals with the part of the Infinite which has come into the
plane of consciousness, got itself caught, as it were, in the
plane of consciousness, in the cage of time, space, and
causation, is quite familiar to us, because we are in that
already, and ideas about this world have been with us almost
from time immemorial. The part of religion which deals with the
Infinite beyond comes entirely new to us, and getting ideas
about it produces new channels in the brain, disturbing the
whole system, and that is why you find in the practice of Yoga
ordinary people are at first turned out of their grooves. In
order to lessen these disturbances as much as possible, all
these methods are devised by Patanjali, that we may practice any
one of them best suited to us.
विषयवती वा प्रवृत्तिरुत्पन्ना मनसः स्थितिनिबन्धिनी ॥३५॥
35. Those forms of concentration that bring extraordinary
sense-perceptions cause perseverance of the mind.
This naturally comes with Dhâranâ, concentration; the Yogis say,
if the mind becomes concentrated on the tip of the nose, one
begins to smell, after a few days, wonderful perfumes. If it
becomes concentrated at the root of the tongue, one begins to
hear sounds; if on the tip of the tongue, one begins to taste
wonderful flavours; if on the middle of the tongue, one feels as
if one were coming in contact with something. If one
concentrates one's mind on the palate, one begins to see
peculiar things. If a man whose mind is disturbed wants to take
up some of these practices of Yoga, yet doubts the truth of
them, he will have his doubts set at rest when, after a little
practice, these things come to him, and he will persevere.
विशोका वा ज्योतिष्मती ॥३६॥
36. Or (by the meditation on) the Effulgent Light, which is
beyond all sorrow.
This is another sort of concentration. Think of the lotus of the
heart, with petals downwards, and running through it, the
Sushumna; take in the breath, and while throwing the breath out
imagine that the lotus is turned with the petals upwards, and
inside that lotus is an effulgent light. Meditate on that.
वीतरागविषयं वा चित्तम् ॥३७॥
37. Or (by meditation on) the heart that has given up all
attachment to sense-objects.
Take some holy person, some great person whom you revere, some
saint whom you know to be perfectly nonattached, and think of
his heart. That heart has become non-attached, and meditate on
that heart; it will calm the mind. If you cannot do that, there
is the next way:
स्वप्ननिद्राज्ञानालम्बनं वा ॥३८॥
38. Or by meditating on the knowledge that comes in sleep.
Sometimes a man dreams that he has seen angels coming to him and
talking to him, that he is in an ecstatic condition, that he has
heard music floating through the air. He is in a blissful
condition in that dream, and when he wakes, it makes a deep
impression on him. Think of that dream as real, and meditate
upon it. If you cannot do that, meditate on any holy thing that
pleases you.
यथाभिमतध्यानाद्वा ॥३९॥
39. Or by the meditation on anything that appeals to one as
good.
This does not mean any wicked subject, but anything good that
you like, any place that you like best, any scenery that you
like best, any idea that you like best, anything that will
concentrate the mind.
परमाणु परममहत्त्वान्तोऽस्य वशीकारः ॥४०॥
40. The Yogi's mind thus meditating, becomes unobstructed from
the atomic to the infinite.
The mind, by this practice, easily contemplates the most minute,
as well as the biggest thing. Thus the mindwaves become fainter.
क्षीणवृत्तेरभिजातस्येव मणेर्ग्रहीतृ-ग्रहण-ग्राह्येषु
तत्स्थ-तदञ्जनता समापत्तिः ॥४१॥
41. The Yogi whose Vrittis have thus become powerless
(controlled) obtains in the receiver, (the instrument of)
receiving, and the received (the Self, the mind, and external
objects), concentratedness arid sameness like the crystal
(before different coloured objects).
What results from this constant meditation? We must remember how
in a previous aphorism Patanjali went into the various states of
meditation, how the first would be the gross, the second the
fine, and from them the advance was to still finer objects. The
result of these meditations is that we can meditate as easily on
the fine as on the gross objects. Here the Yogi sees the three
things, the receiver, the received, and the receiving
instrument, corresponding to the Soul, external objects, and the
mind. There are three objects of meditation given us. First, the
gross things, as bodies, or material objects; second, fine
things, as the mind, the Chitta; and third, the Purusha
qualified, not the Purusha itself, but the Egoism. By practice,
the Yogi gets established in all these meditations. Whenever he
meditates he can keep out all other thoughts; he becomes
identified with that on which he meditates. When he meditates,
he is like a piece of crystal. Before flowers the crystal
becomes almost identified with the flowers. If the flower is
red, the crystal looks red, or if the flower is blue, the
crystal looks blue.
तत्र शब्दार्थज्ञानविकल्पैः सङ्कीर्णा सवितर्का समापत्तिः ॥४२॥
42. Sound, meaning, and resulting knowledge, being mixed up, is
(called) Samadhi with question.
Sound here means vibration, meaning the nerve currents which
conduct it; and knowledge, reaction. All the various meditations
we have had so far, Patanjali calls Savitarka (meditation with
question). Later on he gives us higher and higher Dhyânas. In
these that are called "with question," we keep the duality of
subject and object, which results from the mixture of word,
meaning, and knowledge. There is first the external vibration,
the word. This, carried inward by the sense currents, is the
meaning. After that there comes a reactionary wave in the
Chitta, which is knowledge, but the mixture of these three makes
up what we call knowledge. In all the meditations up to this we
get this mixture as objects of meditation. The next Samadhi is
higher.
स्मृतिपरिशुद्धौ स्वरूपशून्येवार्थमात्रनिर्भासा निर्वितर्का ॥४३॥
43. The Samadhi called "without question" (comes) when the
memory is purified, or devoid of qualities, expressing only the
meaning (of the meditated object).
It is by the practice of meditation of these three that we come
to the state where these three do not mix. We can get rid of
them. We will first try to understand what these three are. Here
is the Chitta; you will always remember the simile of the
mind-stuff to a lake, and the vibration, the word, the sound,
like a pulsation coming over it. You have that calm lake in you,
and I pronounce a word, "Cow". As soon as it enters through your
ears there is a wave produced in your Chitta along with it. So
that wave represents the idea of the cow, the form or the
meaning as we call it. The apparent cow that you know is really
the wave in the mind-stuff that comes as a reaction to the
internal and external sound vibrations. With the sound, the wave
dies away; it can never exist without a word. You may ask how it
is, when we only think of the cow, and do not hear a sound. You
make that sound yourself. You are saying "cow" faintly in your
mind, and with that comes a wave. There cannot be any wave
without this impulse of sound; and when it is not from outside,
it is from inside, and when the sound dies, the wave dies. What
remains? The result of the reaction, and that is knowledge.
These three are so closely combined in our mind that we cannot
separate them. When the sound comes, the senses vibrate, and the
wave rises in reaction; they follow so closely upon one another
that there is no discerning one from the other. When this
meditation has been practiced for a long time, memory, the
receptacle of all impressions, becomes purified, and we are able
clearly to distinguish them from one another. This is called
Nirvitarka, concentration without question.
एतयैव सविचारा निर्विचारा च सूक्ष्मविषया व्याख्याता ॥४४॥
44. By this process (the concentrations) with discrimination and
without discrimination, whose objects are finer, are (also)
explained.
A process similar to the preceding is applied again; only, the
objects to be taken up in the former meditations are gross; in
this they are fine.
सूक्ष्मविषयत्वञ्चालिङ्ग-पर्यवसानम् ॥४५॥
45. The finer objects end with the Pradhâna.
The gross objects are only the elements and everything
manufactured out of them. The fine objects begin with the
Tanmatras or fine particles. The organs, the mind, (The mind, or
common sensorium, the aggregate of all the senses), egoism, the
mind-stuff (the cause of all manifestation), the equilibrium
state of Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas materials - called Pradhâna
(chief), Prakriti (nature), or Avyakta (unmanifest) - are all
included within the category of fine objects, the Purusha (the
Soul) alone being excepted.
ता एव सबीजः समाधिः ॥४६॥
46. These concentrations are with seed.
These do not destroy the seeds of past actions, and thus cannot
give liberation, but what they bring to the Yogi is stated in
the following aphorism.
निर्विचार-वैशारद्येऽध्यात्मप्रसादः ॥४७॥
47. The concentration "without discrimination" being purified,
the Chitta becomes firmly fixed.
ऋतम्भरा तत्र प्रज्ञा ॥४८॥
48. The knowledge in that is called "filled with Truth".
The next aphorism will explain this.
श्रुतानुमानप्रज्ञाभ्यामन्यविषया विशेषार्थत्वात् ॥४९॥
49. The knowledge that is gained from testimony and inference is
about common objects. That from the Samadhi just mentioned is of
a much higher order, being able to penetrate where inference and
testimony cannot go.
The idea is that we have to get our knowledge of ordinary
objects by direct perception, and by inference therefrom, and
from testimony of people who are competent. By "people who are
competent," the Yogis always mean the Rishis, or the Seers of
the thoughts recorded in the scriptures - the Vedas. According
to them, the only proof of the scriptures is that they were the
testimony of competent persons, yet they say the scriptures
cannot take us to realisation. We can read all the Vedas, and
yet will not realise anything, but when we practise their
teachings, then we attain to that state which realises what the
scriptures say, which penetrates where neither reason nor
perception nor inference can go, and where the testimony of
others cannot avail. This is what is meant by the aphorism.
Realisation is real religion, all the rest is only preparation -
hearing lectures, or reading books, or reasoning is merely
preparing the ground; it is not religion. Intellectual assent
and intellectual dissent are not religion. The central idea of
the Yogis is that just as we come in direct contact with objects
of the senses, so religion even can be directly perceived in a
far more intense sense. The truths of religion, as God and Soul,
cannot be perceived by the external senses. I cannot see God
with my eyes, nor can I touch Him with my hands, and we also
know that neither can we reason beyond the senses. Reason leaves
us at a point quite indecisive; we may reason all our lives, as
the world has been doing for thousands of years, and the result
is that we find we are incompetent to prove or disprove the
facts of religion. What we perceive directly we take as the
basis, and upon that basis we reason. So it is obvious that
reasoning has to run within these bounds of perception. It can
never go beyond. The whole scope of realisation, therefore, is
beyond sense-perception. The Yogis say that man can go beyond
his direct sense-perception, and beyond his reason also. Man has
in him the faculty, the power, of transcending his intellect
even, a power which is in every being, every creature. By the
practice of Yoga that power is aroused, and then man transcends
the ordinary limits of reason, and directly perceives things
which are beyond all reason.
तज्जः संस्कारोऽन्यसंस्कारप्रतिबन्धी ॥५०॥
50. The resulting impression from this Samadhi obstructs all
other impressions.
We have seen in the foregoing aphorism that the only way of
attaining to that superconsciousness is by concentration, and we
have also seen that what hinder the mind from concentration are
the past Samskaras, impressions. All of you have observed that,
when you are trying to concentrate your mind, your thoughts
wander. When you are trying to think of God, that is the very
time these Samskaras appear. At other times they are not so
active; but when you want them not, they are sure to be there,
trying their best to crowd in your mind. Why should that be so?
Why should they be much more potent at the time of
concentration? It is because you are repressing them, and they
react with all their force. At other times they do not react.
How countless these old past impressions must be, all lodged
somewhere in the Chitta, ready, waiting like tigers, to jump up!
These have to be suppressed that the one idea which we want may
arise, to the exclusion of the others. Instead they are all
struggling to come up at the same time. These are the various
powers of the Samskaras in hindering concentration of the mind.
So this Samadhi which has just been given is the best to be
practised, on account of its power of suppressing the Samskaras.
The Samskara which will be raised by this sort of concentration
will be so powerful that it will hinder the action of the
others, and hold them in check.
तस्यापि निरोधे सर्वनिरोधान्निर्बीजः समाधिः ॥५१॥
51. By the restraint of even this (impression, which obstructs
all other impressions), all being restrained, comes the
"seedless" Samadhi.
You remember that our goal is to perceive the Soul itself. We
cannot perceive the Soul, because it has got mingled up with
nature, with the mind, with the body. The ignorant man thinks
his body is the Soul. The learned man thinks his mind is the
Soul. But both of them are mistaken. What makes the Soul get
mingled up with all this? Different waves in the Chitta rise and
cover the Soul; we only see a little reflection of the Soul
through these waves; so, if the wave is one of anger, we see the
Soul as angry; "I am angry," one says. If it is one of love, we
see ourselves reflected in that wave, and say we are loving. If
that wave is one of weakness, and the Soul is reflected in it,
we think we are weak. These various ideas come from these
impressions, these Samskaras covering the Soul. The real nature
of the Soul is not perceived as long as there is one single wave
in the lake of the Chitta; this real nature will never be
perceived until all the waves have subsided. So, first,
Patanjali teaches us the meaning of these waves; secondly, the
best way to repress them; and thirdly, how to make one wave so
strong as to suppress all other waves, fire eating fire as it
were. When only one remains, it will be easy to suppress that
also, and when that is gone, this Samadhi or concentration is
called seedless. It leaves nothing, and the Soul is manifested
just as It is, in Its own glory. Then alone we know that the
Soul is not a compound; It is the only eternal simple in the
universe, and as such, It cannot be born, It cannot die; It is
immortal, indestructible, the ever-living essence of
intelligence.
CHAPTER II
CONCENTRATION: ITS PRACTICE
तपः-स्वाध्यायेश्वरप्रणिधानानि क्रियायोगः ॥१॥
1. Mortification, study, and surrendering fruits of work to God
are called Kriyâ-yoga.
Those Samâdhis with which we ended our last chapter are very
difficult to attain; so we must take them up slowly. The first
step, the preliminary step, is called Kriya-yoga. Literally this
means work, working towards Yoga. The organs are the horses, the
mind is the rein, the intellect is the charioteer, the soul is
the rider, and the body is the chariot. The master of the
household, the King, the Self of man, is sitting in this
chariot. If the horses are very strong and do not obey the rein,
if the charioteer, the intellect, does not know how to control
the horses, then the chariot will come to grief. But if the
organs, the horses, are well controlled, and if the rein, the
mind, is well held in the hands of the charioteer, the
intellect, the chariot reaches the goal. What is meant,
therefore, by this mortification? Holding the rein firmly while
guiding the body and the organs; not letting them do anything
they like, but keeping them both under proper control. Study.
What is meant by study in this case? No study of novels or story
books, but study of those works which teach the liberation of
the Soul. Then again this study does not mean controversial
studies at all. The Yogi is supposed to have finished his period
of controversy. He has had enough of that, and has become
satisfied. He only studies to intensify his convictions. Vâda
and Siddhânta - these are the two sorts of scriptural knowledge
- Vada (the argumentative) and Siddhanta (the decisive). When a
man is entirely ignorant he takes up the first of these, the
argumentative fighting, and reasoning pro and con; and when he
has finished that he takes up the Siddhanta, the decisive,
arriving at a conclusion. Simply arriving at this conclusion
will not do. It must be intensified. Books are infinite in
number, and time is short; therefore the secret of knowledge is
to take what is essential. Take that and try to live up to it.
There is an old Indian legend that if you place a cup of milk
and water before a Râja-Hamsa (swan), he will take all the milk
and leave the water. In that way we should take what is of value
in knowledge, and leave the dross. Intellectual gymnastics are
necessary at first. We must not go blindly into anything. The
Yogi has passed the argumentative state, and has come to a
conclusion, which is, like the rocks, immovable. The only thing
he now seeks to do is to intensify that conclusion. Do not
argue, he says; if one forces arguments upon you, be silent. Do
not answer any argument, but go away calmly, because arguments
only disturb the mind. The only thing necessary is to train the
intellect, what is the use of disturbing it for nothing? The
intellect is but a weak instrument, and can give us only
knowledge limited by the senses. The Yogi wants to go beyond the
senses, therefore intellect is of no use to him. He is certain
of this and, therefore, is silent, and does not argue. Every
argument throws his mind out of balance, creates a disturbance
in the Chitta, and a disturbance is a drawback. Argumentations
and searchings of the reason are only by the way. There are much
higher things beyond them. The whole of life is not for
schoolboy fights and debating societies. "Surrendering the
fruits of work to God" is to take to ourselves neither credit
nor blame, but to give up both to the Lord and be at peace.
समाधि-भावनार्थः क्लेश-तनूकरणार्थश्च ॥२॥
2. (It is for) the practice of Samadhi and minimising the
pain-bearing obstructions.
Most of us make our minds like spoilt children, allowing them to
do whatever they want. Therefore it is necessary that Kriya-yoga
should be constantly practised, in order to gain control of the
mind, and bring it into subjection. The obstructions to Yoga
arise from lack of control, and cause us pain. They can only be
removed by denying the mind, and holding it in check, through
the means of Kriya-yoga.
अविद्यास्मिता-राग-द्वेषाभिनिवेशाः क्लेशाः ॥३॥
3. The pain-bearing obstructions are - ignorance, egoism,
attachment, aversion and clinging to life.
These are the five pains, the fivefold tie that binds us down,
of which ignorance is the cause and the other four its effects.
It is the only cause of all our misery. What else can make us
miserable? The nature of the Soul is eternal bliss. What can
make it sorrowful except ignorance, hallucination, delusion? All
pain of the Soul is simply delusion.
अविद्याक्षेत्रमुत्तरेषां प्रसुप्त-तनु-विच्छिन्नोदाराणाम् ॥४॥
4. Ignorance is the productive field of all these that follow,
whether they are dormant, attenuated, overpowered, or expanded.
Ignorance is the cause of egoism, attachment, aversion, and
clinging to life. These impressions exist in different states.
They are sometimes dormant. You often hear the expression
"innocent as a baby," yet in the baby may be the state of a
demon or of a god, which will come out by degrees. In the Yogi,
these impressions, the Samskâras left by past actions, are
attenuated, that is, exist in a very fine state, and he can
control them, and not allow them to become manifest.
"Overpowered" means that sometimes one set of impressions is
held down for a while by those that are stronger, but they come
out when that repressing cause is removed. The last state is the
"expanded," when the Samskaras, having helpful surroundings,
attain to a great activity, either as good or evil.
अनित्याशुचि-दुःखानात्मसु नित्य-शुचि-सुखात्मख्यातिरविद्या ॥५॥
5. Ignorance is taking the non-eternal, the impure, the painful,
and the non-Self for the eternal, the pure, the happy, and the
Âtman or Self (respectively).
All the different sorts of impressions have one source,
ignorance. We have first to learn what ignorance is. All of us
think, "I am the body, and not the Self, the pure, the
effulgent, the ever blissful," and that is ignorance. We think
of man, and see man as body. This is the great delusion.
दृग्दर्शनशक्त्योरेकात्मतेवास्मिता ॥६॥
6. Egoism is the identification of the seer with the instrument
of seeing.
The seer is really the Self, the pure one, the ever holy, the
infinite, the immortal. This is the Self of man. And what are
the instruments? The Chitta or mind-stuff, the Buddhi or
determinative faculty, the Manas or mind, and the Indriyas or
sense-organs. These are the instruments for him to see the
external world, and the identification of the Self with the
instruments is what is called the ignorance of egoism. We say,
"I am the mind," "I am thought," "I am angry," or "I am happy".
How can we be angry and how can we hate? We should identify
ourselves with the Self that cannot change. If It is
unchangeable, how can It be one moment happy, and one moment
unhappy? It is formless, infinite, omnipresent. What can change
It ? It is beyond all law. What can affect it? Nothing in the
universe can produce an effect on It. Yet through ignorance, we
identify ourselves with the mind-stuff, and think we feel
pleasure or pain.
सुखानुशयी रागः ॥७॥
7. Attachment is that which dwells on pleasure.
We find pleasure in certain things, and the mind like a current
flows towards them; and this following the pleasure centre, as
it were, is what is called attachment. We are never attached
where we do not find pleasure. We find pleasure in very queer
things sometimes, but the principle remains: wherever we find
pleasure, there we are attached.
दुःखानुशयी द्वेषः ॥८॥
8. Aversion is that which dwells on pain.
That which gives us pain we immediately seek to get away from.
स्वरसवाही विदुषोऽपि तथारूढोऽभिनिवेशः ॥९॥
9. Flowing through its own nature, and established even in the
learned, is the clinging to life.
This clinging to life you see manifested in every animal. Upon
it many attempts have been made to build the theory of a future
life, because men are so fond of life that they desire a future
life also. Of course it goes without saying that this argument
is without much value, but the most curious part of it is, that,
in Western countries, the idea that this clinging to life
indicates a possibility of future life applies only to men, but
does not include animals. In India this clinging to life has
been one of the arguments to prove past experience and
existence. For instance, if it be true that all our knowledge
has come from experience, then it is sure that that which we
never experienced we cannot imagine or understand. As soon as
chickens are hatched they begin to pick up food. Many times it
has been seen, where ducks have been hatched by hens, that, as
soon as they came out of the eggs they flew to water, and the
mother thought they would be drowned. If experience be the only
source of knowledge, where did these chickens learn to pick up
food, or the ducklings that the water was their natural element?
If you say it is instinct, it means nothing - it is simply
giving a word, but is no explanation. What is this instinct? We
have many instincts in ourselves. For instance, most of you
ladies play the piano, and remember, when you first learned, how
carefully you had to put your fingers on the black and the white
keys, one after the other, but now, after long years of
practice, you can talk with your friends while your fingers play
mechanically. It has become instinct. So with every work we do;
by practice it becomes instinct, it becomes automatic; but so
far as we know, all the cases which we now regard as automatic
are degenerated reason. In the language of the Yogi, instinct is
involved reason. Discrimination becomes involved, and gets to be
automatic Samskaras. Therefore it is perfectly logical to think
that all we call instinct in this world is simply involved
reason. As reason cannot come without experience, all instinct
is, therefore, the result of past experience. Chickens fear the
hawk, and ducklings love the water; these are both the results
of past experience. Then the question is whether that experience
belongs to a particular soul, or to the body simply, whether
this experience which comes to the duck is the duck's
forefathers' experience, or the duck's own experience. Modern
scientific men hold that it belongs to the body, but the Yogis
hold that it is the experience of the mind, transmitted through
the body. This is called the theory of reincarnation.
We have seen that all our knowledge, whether we call it
perception, or reason, or instinct, must come through that one
channel called experience, and all that we now call instinct is
the result of past experience, degenerated into instinct and
that instinct regenerates into reason again. So on throughout
the universe, and upon this has been built one of the chief
arguments for reincarnation in India. The recurring experiences
of various fears, in course of time, produce this clinging to
life. That is why the child is instinctively afraid, because the
past experience of pain is there in it. Even in the most learned
men, who know that this body will go, and who say "never mind,
we have had hundreds of bodies, the soul cannot die" - even in
them, with all their intellectual convictions, we still find
this clinging on to life. Why is this clinging to life? We have
seen that it has become instinctive. In the psychological
language of the Yogis it has become a Samskara. The Samskaras,
fine and hidden, are sleeping in the Chitta. All this past
experience of death, all that which we call instinct, is
experience become subconscious. It lives in the Chitta, and is
not inactive, but is working underneath.
The Chitta-Vrittis, the mind-waves, which are gross, we can
appreciate and feel; they can be more easily controlled, but
what about the finer instincts? How can they be controlled? When
I am angry, my whole mind becomes a huge wave of anger. I feel
it, see it, handle it, can easily manipulate it, can fight with
it; but I shall not succeed perfectly in the fight until I can
get down below to its causes. A man says something very harsh to
me, and I begin to feel that I am getting heated, and he goes on
till I am perfectly angry and forget myself, identify myself
with anger. When he first began to abuse me, I thought, "I am
going to be angry". Anger was one thing, and I was another; but
when I became angry, I was anger. These feelings have to be
controlled in the germ, the root, in their fine forms, before
even we have become conscious that they are acting on us. With
the vast majority of mankind the fine states of these passions
are not even known - the states in which they emerge from
subconsciousness. When a bubble is rising from the bottom of the
lake, we do not see it, nor even when it is nearly come to the
surface; it is only when it bursts and makes a ripple that we
know it is there. We shall only be successful in grappling with
the waves when we can get hold of them in their fine causes, and
until you can get hold of them, and subdue them before they
become gross, there is no hope of conquering any passion
perfectly. To control our passions we have to control them at
their very roots; then alone shall we be able to burn out their
very seeds. As fried seeds thrown into the ground will never
come up, so these passions will never arise.
ते प्रतिप्रसवहेयाः सूक्ष्माः ॥१०॥
10. The fine Samskaras are to be conquered by resolving them
into their causal state.
Samskaras are the subtle impressions that manifest themselves
into gross forms later on. How are these fine Samskaras to be
controlled? By resolving the effect into its cause. When the
Chitta, which is an effect, is resolved into its cause, Asmitâ
or Egoism, then only, the fine impressions die along with it.
Meditation cannot destroy these.
ध्यानहेयास्तद्वृत्तयः ॥११॥
11. By meditation, their (gross) modifications are to be
rejected.
Meditation is one of the great means of controlling the rising
of these waves. By meditation you can make the mind subdue these
waves, and if you go on practicing meditation for days, and
months, and years, until it has become a habit, until it will
come in spite of yourself, anger and hatred will be controlled
and checked.
क्लेशमूलः कर्माशयो दृष्टादृष्टजन्मवेदनीयः ॥१२॥
12. The "receptacle of works" has its root in these pain-bearing
obstructions, and their experience is in this visible life, or
in the unseen life.
By the "receptacle of works" is meant the sum-total of
Samskaras. Whatever work we do, the mind is thrown into a wave,
and after the work is finished, we think the wave is gone. No.
It has only become fine, but it is still there. When we try to
remember the work, it comes up again and becomes a wave. So it
was there; if not, there would not have been memory. Thus every
action, every thought, good or bad, just goes down and becomes
fine, and is there stored up. Both happy and unhappy thoughts
are called pain-bearing obstructions, because according to the
Yogis, they, in the long run, bring pain. All happiness which
comes from the senses will, eventually, bring pain. All
enjoyment will make us thirst for more, and that brings pain as
its result. There is no limit to man's desires; he goes on
desiring, and when he comes to a point where desire cannot be
fulfilled, the result is pain. Therefore the Yogis regard the
sum-total of the impressions, good or evil, as pain-bearing
obstructions; they obstruct the way to freedom of the Soul.
It is the same with the Samskaras, the fine roots of all our
works; they are the causes which will again bring effects,
either in this life, or in the lives to come. In exceptional
cases when these Samskaras are very strong, they bear fruit
quickly; exceptional acts of wickedness, or of goodness, bring
their fruits even in this life. The Yogis hold that men who are
able to acquire a tremendous power of good Samskaras do not have
to die, but, even in this life, can change their bodies into
god-bodies. There are several such cases mentioned by the Yogis
in their books. These men change the very material of their
bodies; they re-arrange the molecules in such fashion that they
have no more sickness, and what we call death does not come to
them. Why should not this be? The physiological meaning of food
is assimilation of energy from the sun. The energy has reached
the plant, the plant is eaten by an animal, and the animal by
man. The science of it is that we take so much energy from the
sun, and make it part of ourselves. That being the case, why
should there be only one way of assimilating energy? The plant's
way is not the same as ours; the earth's process of assimilating
energy differs from our own. But all assimilate energy in some
form or other. The Yogis say that they are able to assimilate
energy by the power of the mind alone, that they can draw in as
much of it as they desire without recourse to the ordinary
methods. As a spider makes its web out of its own substance, and
becomes bound in it, and cannot go anywhere except along the
lines of that web, so we have projected out of our own substance
this network called the nerves, and we cannot work except
through the channels of those nerves. The Yogi says we need not
be bound by that.
Similarly, we can send electricity to any part of the world, but
we have to send it by means of wires. Nature can send a vast
mass of electricity without any wires at all. Why cannot we do
the same? We can send mental electricity. What we call mind is
very much the same as electricity. It is clear that this nerve
fluid has some amount of electricity, because it is polarised,
and it answers all electrical directions. We can only send our
electricity through these nerve channels. Why not send the
mental electricity without this aid? The Yogis say it is
perfectly possible and practicable, and that when you can do
that, you will work all over the universe. You will be able to
work with any body anywhere, without the help of the nervous
system. When the soul is acting through these channels, we say a
man is living, and when these cease to work, a man is said to be
dead. But when a man is able to act either with or without these
channels, birth and death will have no meaning for him. All the
bodies in the universe are made up of Tanmâtras, their
difference lies in the arrangement of the latter. If you are the
arranger, you can arrange a body in one way or another. Who
makes up this body but you? Who eats the food? If another ate
the food for you, you would not live long. Who makes the blood
out of food? You, certainly. Who purifies the blood, and sends
it through the veins? You. We are the masters of the body, and
we live in it. Only we have lost the knowledge of how to
rejuvenate it. We have become automatic, degenerate. We have
forgotten the process of arranging its molecules. So, what we do
automatically has to be done knowingly. We are the masters and
we have to regulate that arrangement; and as soon as we can do
that, we shall be able to rejuvenate just as we like, and then
we shall have neither birth nor disease nor death.
सति मूले तद्विपाको जात्यायुर्भोगाः ॥१३॥
13. The root being there, the fruition comes (in the form of)
species, life, and experience of pleasure and pain.
The roots, the causes, the Samskaras being there, they manifest
and form the effects. The cause dying down becomes the effect;
the effect getting subtler becomes the cause of the next effect.
A tree bears a seed, which becomes the cause of another tree,
and so on. All our works now are the effects of past Samskaras;
again, these works becoming Samskaras will be the causes of
future actions, and thus we go on. So this aphorism says that
the cause being there, the fruit must come, in the form of
species of beings: one will be a man, another an angel, another
an animal, another a demon. Then there are different effects of
Karma in life. One man lives fifty years, another a hundred,
another dies in two years, and never attains maturity; all these
differences in life are regulated by past Karma. One man is
born, as it were, for pleasure; if he buries himself in a
forest, pleasure will follow him there. Another man, wherever he
goes, is followed by pain; everything becomes painful for him.
It is the result of their own past. According to the philosophy
of the Yogis, all virtuous actions bring pleasure, and all
vicious actions bring pain. Any man who does wicked deeds is
sure to reap their fruit in the form of pain.
ते ह्लादपरितापफलाः पुण्यापुण्यहेतुत्वात् ॥१४॥
14. They bear fruit as pleasure or pain, caused by virtue or
vice.
परिणामताप-संस्कारदुःखैर्गुणवृत्तिविरोधाच्च दुःखमेव सर्वं
विवेकिनः ॥१५॥
15. To the discriminating, all is, as it were, painful on
account of everything bringing pain either as consequence, or as
anticipation of loss of happiness, or as fresh craving arising
from impressions of happiness, and also as counteraction of
qualities.
The Yogis say that the man who has discriminating powers, the
man of good sense, sees through all that are called pleasure and
pain, and knows that they come to all, and that one follows and
melts into the other; he sees that men follow an ignis fatuus
all their lives, and never succeed in fulfilling their desires.
The great king Yudhishthira once said that the most wonderful
thing in life is that every moment we see people dying around
us, and yet we think we shall never die. Surrounded by fools on
every side, we think we are the only exceptions, the only
learned men. Surrounded by all sorts of experiences of
fickleness, we think our love is the only lasting love. How can
that be? Even love is selfish, and the Yogi says that in the end
we shall find that even the love of husbands and wives, and
children and friends, slowly decays. Decadence seizes everything
in this life. It is only when everything, even love, fails,
that, with a flash, man finds out how vain, how dream-like is
this world. Then he catches a glimpse of Vairâgya
(renunciation), catches a glimpse of the Beyond. It is only by
giving up this world that the other comes; never through holding
on to this one. Never yet was there a great soul who had not to
reject sense-pleasures and enjoyments to acquire his greatness.
The cause of misery is the clash between the different forces of
nature, one dragging one way, and another dragging another,
rendering permanent happiness impossible.
हेयं दुःखमनागतम् ॥१६॥
16. The misery which is not yet come is to be avoided.
Some Karma we have worked out already, some we are working out
now in the present, and some are waiting to bear fruit in the
future. The first kind is past and gone. The second we will have
to work out, and it is only that which is waiting to bear fruit
in the future that we can conquer and control, towards which end
all our forces should be directed. This is what Patanjali means
when he says that Samskaras are to be controlled by resolving
them into their causal state.
द्रष्टृदृश्ययोः संयोगो हेयहेतुः ॥१७॥
17. The cause of that which is to be avoided is the junction of
the seer and the seen.
Who is the seer? The Self of man, the Purusha. What is the seen?
The whole of nature beginning with the mind, down to gross
matter. All pleasure and pain arise from the junction between
this Purusha and the mind. The Purusha, you must remember,
according to this philosophy, is pure; when joined to nature, it
appears to feel pleasure or pain by reflection.
प्रकाश-क्रिया-स्थितिशीलं भूतेन्द्रियात्मकं भोगापवर्गार्थं
दृश्यमः ॥१८॥
18. The experienced is composed of elements and organs, is of
the nature of illumination, action, and inertia, and is for the
purpose of experience and release (of the experiencer).
The experienced, that is nature, is composed of elements and
organs - the elements, gross and fine, which compose the whole
of nature, and the organs of the senses, mind, etc. - and is of
the nature of illumination (Sattva), action (Rajas), and inertia
(Tamas). What is the purpose of the whole of nature? That the
Purusha may gain experience. The Purusha has, as it were,
forgotten its mighty, godly nature. There is a story that the
king of the gods, Indra, once became a pig, wallowing in mire;
he had a she-pig and a lot of baby pigs, and was very happy.
Then some gods saw his plight, and came to him, and told him,
"You are the king of the gods, you have all the gods under your
command. Why are you here?" But Indra said, "Never mind; I am
all right here; I do not care for heaven, while I have this sow
and these little pigs." The poor gods were at their wits' end.
After a time they decided to slay all the pigs one after
another. When all were dead, Indra began to weep and mourn. Then
the gods ripped his pig-body open and he came out of it, and
began to laugh, when he realised what a hideous dream he had had
- he, the king of the gods, to have become a pig, and to think
that that pig-life was the only life! Not only so, but to have
wanted the whole universe to come into the pig-life! The
Purusha, when it identifies itself with nature, forgets that it
is pure and infinite. The Purusha does not love, it is love
itself. It does not exist, it is existence itself. The Soul does
not know, It is knowledge itself. It is a mistake to say the
Soul loves, exists, or knows. Love, existence, and knowledge are
not the qualities of the Purusha, but its essence. When they get
reflected upon something, you may call them the qualities of
that something. They are not the qualities but the essence of
the Purusha, the great Atman, the Infinite Being, without birth
or death, established in its own glory. It appears to have
become so degenerate that if you approach to tell it, "You are
not a pig," it begins to squeal and bite.
Thus is it with us all in this Mâyâ, this dream world, where it
is all misery, weeping and crying, where a few golden balls are
rolled, and the world scrambles after them. You were never bound
by laws, nature never had a bond for you. That is what the Yogi
tells you. Have patience to learn it. And the Yogi shows how, by
junction with nature, and identifying itself with the mind and
the world, the Purusha thinks itself miserable. Then the Yogi
goes on to show you that the way out is through experience. You
have to get all this experience, but finish it quickly. We have
placed ourselves in this net, and will have to get out. We have
got ourselves caught in the trap, and we will have to work out
our freedom. So get this experience of husbands, and wives, and
friends, and little loves; you will get through them safely if
you never forget what you really are. Never forget this is only
a momentary state, and that we have to pass through it.
Experience is the one great teacher - experience of pleasure and
pain - but know it is only experience. It leads, step by step,
to that state where all things become small, and the Purusha so
great that the whole universe seems as a drop in the ocean and
falls off by its own nothingness. We have to go through
different experiences, but let us never forget the ideal.
विशेषाविशेष-लिङ्गमात्रालिङ्गानि गुणपर्वाणि ॥१९॥
19. The states of the qualities are the defined, the undefined,
the indicated only, and the signless.
The system of Yoga is built entirely on the philosophy of the
Sânkhyas, as I told you before, and here again I shall remind
you of the cosmology of the Sankhya philosophy. According to the
Sankhyas, nature is both the material and the efficient cause of
the universe. In nature there are three sorts of materials, the
Sattva, the Rajas, and the Tamas. The Tamas material is all that
is dark, all that is ignorant and heavy. The Rajas is activity.
The Sattva is calmness, light. Nature, before creation, is
called by them Avyakta, undefined, or indiscrete; that is, in
which there is no distinction of form or name, a state in which
these three materials are held in perfect balance. Then the
balance is disturbed, the three materials begin to mingle in
various fashions, and the result is the universe. In every man,
also, these three materials exist. When the Sattva material
prevails, knowledge comes; when Rajas, activity; and when Tamas,
darkness, lassitude, idleness, and ignorance. According to the
Sankhya theory, the highest manifestation of nature, consisting
of the three materials, is what they call Mahat or intelligence,
universal intelligence, of which each human intellect is a part.
In the Sankhya psychology there is a sharp distinction between
Manas, the mind function, and the function of the Buddhi,
intellect. The mind function is simply to collect and carry
impressions and present them to the Buddhi, the individual
Mahat, which determines upon it. Out of Mahat comes egoism, out
of which again come the fine materials. The fine materials
combine and become the gross materials outside - the external
universe. The claim of the Sankhya philosophy is that beginning
with the intellect down to a block of stone, all is the product
of one substance, different only as finer to grosser states of
existence. The finer is the cause, and the grosser is the
effect. According. to the Sankhya philosophy, beyond the whole
of nature is the Purusha, which is not material at all. Purusha
is not at all similar to anything else, either Buddhi, or mind,
or the Tanmatras, or the gross materials. It is not akin to any
one of these, it is entirely separate, entirely different in its
nature, and from this they argue that the Purusha must be
immortal, because it is not the result of combination. That
which is not the result of combination cannot die. The Purushas
or souls are infinite in number.
Now we shall understand the aphorism that the states of the
qualities are defined, undefined, indicated only, and signess.
By the "defined" are meant the gross elements, which we can
sense. By the "undefined" are meant the very fine materials, the
Tanmatras, which cannot be sensed by ordinary men. If you
practise Yoga, however, says Patanjali, after a while your
perceptions will become so fine that you will actually see the
Tanmatras. For instance, you have heard how every man has a
certain light about him; every living being emits a certain
light, and this, he says, can be seen by the Yogi. We do not all
see it, but we all throw out these Tanmatras, just as a flower
continuously sends out fine particles which enable us to smell
it. Every day of our lives we throw out a mass of good or evil,
and everywhere we go the atmosphere is full of these materials.
That is how there came to the human mind, unconsciously, the
idea of building temples and churches. Why should man build
churches in which to worship God? Why not worship Him anywhere?
Even if he did not know the reason, man found that the place
where people worshipped God became full of good Tanmatras. Every
day people go there, and the more they go the holier they get,
and the holier that place becomes. If any man who has not much
Sattva in him goes there, the place will influence him and
arouse his Sattva quality. Here, therefore, is the significance
of all temples and holy places, but you must remember that their
holiness depends on holy people congregating there. The
difficulty with man is that he forgets the original meaning, and
puts the cart before the horse. It was men who made these places
holy, and then the effect became the cause and made men holy. If
the wicked only were to go there, it would become as bad as any
other place. It is not the building, but the people that make a
church, and that is what we always forget. That is why sages and
holy persons, who have much of this Sattva quality, can send it
out and exert a tremendous influence day and night on their
surroundings. A man may become so pure that his purity will
become tangible. Whosoever comes in contact with him becomes
pure.
Next "the indicated only" means the Buddhi, the intellect. "The
indicated only" is the first manifestation of nature; from it
all other manifestations proceed. The last is "the signless".
There seems to be a great difference between modern science and
all religions at this point. Every religion has the idea that
the universe comes out of intelligence. The theory of God,
taking it in its psychological significance, apart from all
ideas of personality, is that intelligence is first in the order
of creation, and that out of intelligence comes what we call
gross matter. Modern philosophers say that intelligence is the
last to come. They say that unintelligent things slowly evolve
into animals, and from animals into men. They claim that instead
of everything coming out of intelligence, intelligence itself is
the last to come. Both the religious and the scientific
statements, though seeming directly opposed to each other are
true. Take an infinite series, A-B-A-B -A-B. etc. The question
is - which is first, A or B? If you take the series as A-B. you
will say that A is first, but if you take it as B-A, you will
say that B is first. It depends upon the way we look at it.
Intelligence undergoes modification and becomes the gross
matter, this again merges into intelligence, and thus the
process goes on. The Sankhyas, and other religionists, put
intelligence first, and the series becomes intelligence, then
matter. The scientific man puts his finger on matter, and says
matter, then intelligence. They both indicate the same chain.
Indian philosophy, however, goes beyond both intelligence and
matter, and finds a Purusha, or Self, which is beyond
intelligence, of which intelligence is but the borrowed light.
द्रष्टा दृशिमात्रः शुद्धोऽपि प्रत्ययानुपश्यः ॥२०॥
20. The seer is intelligence only, and though pure, sees through
the colouring of the intellect.
This is, again, Sankhya philosophy. We have seen from the same
philosophy that from the lowest form up to intelligence all is
nature; beyond nature are Purushas (souls), which have no
qualities. Then how does the soul appear to be happy or unhappy?
By reflection. If a red flower is put near a piece of pure
crystal, the crystal appears to be red, similarly the
appearances of happiness or unhappiness of the soul are but
reflections. The soul itself has no colouring. The soul is
separate from nature. Nature is one thing, soul another,
eternally separate. The Sankhyas say that intelligence is a
compound, that it grows and wanes, that it changes, just as the
body changes, and that its nature is nearly the same as that of
the body. As a finger-nail is to the body, so is body to
intelligence. The nail is a part of the body, but it can be
pared off hundreds of times, and the body will still last.
Similarly, the intelligence lasts aeons, while this body can be
"pared off," thrown off. Yet intelligence cannot be immortal
because it changes - growing and waning. Anything that changes
cannot be immortal. Certainly intelligence is manufactured, and
that very fact shows us that there must be something beyond
that. It cannot be free, everything connected with matter is in
nature, and, therefore, bound for ever. Who is free? The free
must certainly be beyond cause and effect. If you say that the
idea of freedom is a delusion, I shall say that the idea of
bondage is also a delusion. Two facts come into our
consciousness, and stand or fall with each other. These are our
notions of bondage and freedom. If we want to go through a wall,
and our head bumps against that wall, we see we are limited by
that wall. At the same time we find a willpower, and think we
can direct our will everywhere. At every step these
contradictory ideas come to us. We have to believe that we are
free, yet at every moment we find we are not free. If one idea
is a delusion, the other is also a delusion, and if one is true,
the other also is true, because both stand upon the same basis -
consciousness. The Yogi says, both are true; that we are bound
so far as intelligence goes, that we are free so far as the soul
is concerned. It is the real nature of man, the soul, the
Purusha, which is beyond all law of causation. Its freedom is
percolating through layers of matter in various forms,
intelligence, mind, etc. It is its light which is shining
through all. Intelligence has no light of its own. Each organ
has a particular centre in the brain; it is not that all the
organs have one centre; each organ is separate. Why do all
perceptions harmonise? Where do they get their unity? If it were
in the brain, it would be necessary for all the organs, the
eyes, the nose, the ears, etc., to have one centre only, while
we know for certain that there are different centres for each.
Both a man can see and hear at the same time, so a unity must be
there at the back of intelligence. Intelligence is connected
with the brain, but behind intelligence even stands the Purusha,
the unit, where all different sensations and perceptions join
and become one. The soul itself is the centre where all the
different perceptions converge and become unified. That soul is
free, and it is its freedom that tells you every moment that you
are free. But you mistake, and mingle that freedom every moment
with intelligence and mind. You try to attribute that freedom to
the intelligence, and immediately find that intelligence is not
free; you attribute that freedom to the body, and immediately
nature tells you that you are again mistaken. That is why there
is this mingled sense of freedom and bondage at the same time.
The Yogi analyses both what is free and what is bound, and his
ignorance vanishes. He finds that the Purusha is free, is the
essence of that knowledge which, coming through the Buddhi,
becomes intelligence, and, as such, is bound.
तदर्थ एव दृश्यस्यात्मा ॥२१॥
21. The nature of the experienced is for him.
Nature has no light of its own. As long as the Purusha is
present in it, it appears as light. But the light is borrowed;
just as the moon's light is reflected. According to the Yogis,
all the manifestations of nature are caused by nature itself,
but nature has no purpose in view, except to free the Purusha.
कृतार्थं प्रति नष्टमप्यनष्टं तदन्यसाधारणत्वात् ॥२२॥
22. Though destroyed for him whose goal has been gained, yet it
is not destroyed, being common to others.
The whole activity of nature is to make the soul know that it is
entirely separate from nature. When the soul knows this, nature
has no more attractions for it. But the whole of nature vanishes
only for that man who has become free. There will always remain
an infinite number of others, for whom nature will go on
working.
स्वस्वामिशक्त्योः स्वरूपोपलब्धिहेतुः संयोगः ॥२३॥
23. Junction is the cause of the realization of the nature of
both the powers, the experienced and its Lord.
According to this aphorism, both the powers of soul and nature
become manifest when they are in conjunction. Then all
manifestations are thrown out. Ignorance is the cause of this
conjunction. We see every day that the cause of our pain or
pleasure is always our joining ourselves with the body. If I
were perfectly certain that I am not this body, I should take no
notice of heat and cold, or anything of the kind. This body is a
combination. It is only a fiction to say that I have one body,
you another, and the sun another. The whole universe is one
ocean of matter, and you are the name of a little particle, and
I of another, and the sun of another. We know that this matter
is continuously changing. What is forming the sun one day, the
next day may form the matter of our bodies.
तस्य हेतुरविद्या ॥२४॥
24. Ignorance is its cause.
Through ignorance we have joined ourselves with a particular
body, and thus opened ourselves to misery. This idea of body is
a simple superstition. It is superstition that makes us happy or
unhappy. It is superstition caused by ignorance that makes us
feel heat and cold, pain and pleasure. It is our business to
rise above this superstition, and the Yogi shows us how we can
do this. It has been demonstrated that, under certain mental
conditions, a man may be burned, yet he will feel no pain. The
difficulty is that this sudden upheaval of the mind comes like a
whirlwind one minute, and goes away the next. If, however, we
gain it through Yoga, we shall permanently attain to the
separation of Self from the body.
तदभावात् संयोगाभावो हानं तद्दृशेः कैवल्यम् ॥२५॥
25. There being absence of that (ignorance) there is absence of
junction, which is the thing-to-be avoided; that is the
independence of the seer.
According to Yoga philosophy, it is through ignorance that the
soul has been joined with nature. The aim is to get rid of
nature's control over us. That is the goal of all religions.
Each soul is potentially divine. The goal is to manifest this
Divinity within, by controlling nature, external and internal.
Do this either by work, or worship, or psychic control, or
philosophy - by one or more or all of these - and be free. This
is the whole of religion. Doctrines, or dogmas, or rituals, or
books, or temples, or forms, are but secondary details. The Yogi
tries to reach this goal through psychic control. Until we can
free ourselves from nature, we are slaves; as she dictates so we
must go. The Yogi claims that he who controls mind controls
matter also. The internal nature is much higher than the
external and much more difficult to grapple with, much more
difficult to control. Therefore he who has conquered the
internal nature controls the whole universe; it becomes his
servant. Raja-Yoga propounds the methods of gaining this
control. Forces higher than we know in physical nature will have
to be subdued. This body is just the external crust of the mind.
They are not two different things; they are just as the oyster
and its shell. They are but two aspects of one thing; the
internal substance of the oyster takes up matter from outside,
and manufactures the shell. In the same way the internal fine
forces which are called mind take up gross matter from outside,
and from that manufacture this external shell, the body. If,
then, we have control of the internal, it is very easy to have
control of the external. Then again, these forces are not
different. It is not that some forces are physical, and some
mental; the physical forces are but the gross manifestations of
the fine forces, just as the physical world is but the gross
manifestation of the fine world.
विवेकख्यातिरविप्लवा हानोपायः ॥२६॥
26. The means of destruction of ignorance is unbroken practice
of discrimination.
This is the real goal of practice - discrimination between the
real and the unreal, knowing that the Purusha is not nature,
that it is neither matter nor mind, and that because it is not
nature, it cannot possibly change. It is only nature which
changes, combining and re-combining, dissolving continually.
When through constant practice we begin to discriminate,
ignorance will vanish, and the Purusha will begin to shine in
its real nature - omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent.
तस्य सप्तधा प्रान्तभूमिः प्रज्ञा ॥२७॥
27. His knowledge is of the sevenfold highest ground.
When this knowledge comes; it will come, as it were, in seven
grades, one after the other; and when one of these begins, we
know that we are getting knowledge. The first to appear will be
that we have known what is to be known. The mind will cease to
be dissatisfied. While we are aware of thirsting after
knowledge, we begin to seek here and there, wherever we think we
can get some truth, and failing to find it we become
dissatisfied and seek in a fresh direction. All search is vain,
until we begin to perceive that knowledge is within ourselves,
that no one can help us, that we must help ourselves. When we
begin to practise the power of discrimination, the first sign
that we are getting near truth will be that that dissatisfied
state will vanish. We shall feel quite sure that we have found
the truth, and that it cannot be anything else but the truth.
Then we may know that the sun is rising, that the morning is
breaking for us, and taking courage, we must persevere until the
goal is reached. The second grade will be the absence of all
pains. It will be impossible for anything in the universe,
external or internal, to give us pain. The third will be the
attainment of full knowledge. Omniscience will be ours. The
fourth will be the attainment of the end of all duty through
discrimination. Next will come what is called freedom of the
Chitta. We shall realise that all difficulties and struggles,
all vacillations of the mind, have fallen down, just as a stone
rolls from the mountain top into the valley and never comes up
again. The next will be that the Chitta itself will realise that
it melts away into its causes whenever we so desire. Lastly we
shall find that we are established in our Self, that we have
been alone throughout the universe, neither body nor mind was
ever related, much less joined, to us. They were working their
own way, and we, through ignorance, joined ourselves to them.
But we have been alone, omnipotent, omnipresent, ever blessed;
our own Self was so pure and perfect that we required none else.
We required none else to make us happy, for we are happiness
itself. We shall find that this knowledge does not depend on
anything else; throughout the universe there can be nothing that
will not become effulgent before our knowledge. This will be the
last state, and the Yogi will become peaceful and calm, never to
feel any more pain, never to be again deluded, never to be
touched by misery. He will know he is ever blessed, ever
perfect, almighty.
योगाङ्गानुष्ठानादशुद्धिक्षये ज्ञानदीप्तिरा विवेकख्यातेः ॥२८॥
28. By the practice of the different parts of Yoga the
impurities being destroyed, knowledge be comes effulgent up to
discrimination.
Now comes the practical knowledge. What we have just been
speaking about is much higher. It is away above our heads, but
it is the ideal. It is first necessary to obtain physical and
mental control. Then the realization will become steady in that
ideal. The ideal being known, what remains is to practice the
method of reaching it.
यम-नियमासन-प्राणायाम-प्रत्याहार-धारणा-ध्यान-समाधयोऽष्टावङ्गानि
॥२९॥
29. Yama, Niyama, Âsana, Prânâyâama, Pratyâhâra, Dhâranâ,
Dhyâna, and Samâdhi are the eight limbs of Yoga.
अहिंसा-सत्यास्तेय-ब्रह्मचर्यापरिग्रहा यमाः ॥३०॥
30. Non-killing, truthfulness, non-stealing, continence, and
nor-receiving are called Yamas.
A man who wants to be a perfect Yogi must give up the sex idea.
The soul has no sex; why should it degrade itself with sex
ideas? Later on we shall understand better why these ideas must
be given up. The mind of the man who receives gifts is acted on
by the mind of the giver, so the receiver is likely to become
degenerated. Receiving gifts is prone to destroy the
independence of the mind, and make us slavish. Therefore,
receive no gifts.
एते जाति-देश-काल-समयानवच्छिन्नाः सार्वभौमा महाव्रतम् ॥३१॥
31. These, unbroken by time, place, purpose, and caste-rules,
are (universal) great vows.
These practices - non-killing, truthfulness, non-stealing,
chastity, and non-receiving - are to be practised by every man,
woman, and child; by every soul, irrespective of nation,
country, or position.
शौच-सन्तोष-तपःस्वाध्यायेश्वरप्रणिधानानि नियमाः ॥३२॥
32. Internal and external purification, contentment,
mortification, study, and worship of God are the Niyamas.
External purification is keeping the body pure; a dirty man will
never be a Yogi. There must be internal purification also. That
is obtained by the virtues named in I.33. Of course, internal
purity is of greater value than external, but both are
necessary, and external purity, without internal, is of no good.
वितर्कबाधने प्रतिपक्षभावनम् ॥३३॥
33. To obstruct thoughts which are inimical to Yoga, contrary
thoughts should be brought.
That is the way to practise the virtues that have been stated.
For instance, when a big wave of anger has come into the mind,
how are we to control that? Just by raising an opposing wave.
Think of love. Sometimes a mother is very angry with her
husband, and while in that state, the baby comes in, and she
kisses the baby; the old wave dies out and a new wave arises,
love for the child. That suppresses the other one. Love is
opposite to anger. Similarly, when the idea of stealing comes,
non-stealing should be thought of; when the idea of receiving
gifts comes, replace it by a contrary thought.
वितर्का हिंसादयः कृतकारितानुमोदिता लोभक्रोधमोहपूर्वका
मृदुमध्याधिमात्रा दुःखाज्ञानानन्तफला इति प्रतिपक्षभावनम् ॥३४॥
34. The obstructions to Yoga are killing, falsehood, etc.,
whether committed, caused, or approved; either through avarice,
or anger, or ignorance; whether slight, middling, or great; and
they result in infinite ignorance and misery. This is (the
method of) thinking the contrary.
If I tell a lie, or cause another to tell one, or approve of
another doing so, it is equally sinful. If it is a very mild
lie, still it is a lie. Every vicious thought will rebound,
every thought of hatred which you may have thought, in a cave
even, is stored up, and will one day come back to you with
tremendous power in the form of some misery here. If you project
hatred and jealousy, they will rebound on you with compound
interest. No power can avert them; when once you have put them
in motion, you will have to bear them. Remembering this will
prevent you from doing wicked things.
अहिंसाप्रतिष्ठायां तत्सन्निधौ वैरत्यागः ॥३५॥
35. Non-killing being established, in his presence all enmities
cease (in others).
If a man gets the ideal of non-injuring others, before
him even animals which are by their nature ferocious will become
peaceful. The tiger and the lamb will play together before that
Yogi. When you have come to that state, then alone you will
understand that you have become firmly established in
non-injuring.
सत्यप्रतिष्ठायां क्रियाफलाश्रयत्वम् ॥३६॥
36. By the establishment of truthfulness the Yogi gets the power
of attaining for himself and others the fruits of work without
the works.
When this power of truth will be established with you, then even
in dream you will never tell an untruth. You will be true in
thought, word, and deed. Whatever you say will be truth. You may
say to a man, "Be blessed," and that man will be blessed. If a
man is diseased, and you say to him, "Be thou cured," he will be
cured immediately.
अस्तेयप्रतिष्ठायां सर्वरत्नोपस्थानम् ॥३७॥
37. By the establishment of non-stealing all wealth comes to the
Yogi.
The more you fly from nature, the more she follows you; and if
you do not care for her at all, she becomes your slave.
ब्रह्मचर्यप्रतिष्ठायां वीर्यलाभः ॥३८॥
38. By the establishment of continence energy is gained.
The chaste brain has tremendous energy and gigantic will-power.
Without chastity there can be no spiritual strength. Continence
gives wonderful control over mankind. The spiritual leaders of
men have been very continent, and this is what gave them power.
Therefore the Yogi must be continent.
अपरिग्रहस्थैर्ये जन्मकथन्तासंबोधः ॥३९॥
39. When he is fixed in non-receiving, he gets the memory of
past life.
When a man does not receive presents, he does not become
beholden to others, but remains independent and free. His mind
becomes pure. With every gift, he is likely to receive the evils
of the giver. If he does not receive, the mind is purified, and
the first power it gets is memory of past life. Then alone the
Yogi becomes perfectly fixed in his ideal. He sees that he has
been coming and going many times, so he becomes determined that
this time he will be free, that he will no more come and go, and
be the slave of Nature.
शौचात्स्वाङ्गजुगुप्सा परैरसंसर्गः ॥४०॥
40. Internal and external cleanliness being established, there
arises disgust for one's own body, and non-intercourse with
others.
When there is real purification of the body, external and
internal, there arises neglect of the body, and the idea of
keeping it nice vanishes. A face which others call most
beautiful will appear to the Yogi as merely animal, if there is
not intelligence behind it. What the world calls a very common
face he regards as heavenly, if the spirit shines behind it.
This thirst after body is the great bane of human life. So the
first sign of the establishment of purity is that you do not
care to think you are a body. It is only when purity comes that
we get rid of the body idea.
सत्त्वशुद्धि-सौमनस्यैकाग्र्येन्द्रियजयात्मदर्शन-योग्यत्वानि च
॥४१॥
41. There also arises purification of the Sattva, cheerfulness
of the mind, concentration, conquest of the organs, and fitness
for the realisation of the Self.
By the practice of cleanliness, the Sattva material prevails,
and the mind becomes concentrated and cheerful. The first sign
that you are becoming religious is that you are becoming
cheerful. When a man is gloomy, that may be dyspepsia, but it is
not religion. A pleasurable feeling is the nature of the Sattva.
Everything is pleasurable to the Sâttvika man, and when this
comes, know that you are progressing in Yoga. All pain is caused
by Tamas, so you must get rid of that; moroseness is one of the
Exults of Tamas. The strong, the well knit, the young, the
healthy, the daring alone are fit to be Yogis. To the Yogi
everything is bliss, every human face that he sees brings
cheerfulness to him. That is the sign of a virtuous man. Misery
is caused by sin, and by no other cause. What business have you
with clouded faces? It is terrible. If you have a clouded face,
do not go out that day, shut yourself up in your room. What
right have you to carry this disease out into the world ? When
your mind has become controlled, you have control over the whole
body; instead of being a slave to this machine, the machine is
your slave. Instead of this machine being able to drag the soul
down, it becomes its greatest helpmate.
सन्तोषादनुत्तमः सुखलाभः ॥४२॥
42. From contentment comes superlative happiness.
कायेन्द्रियसिद्धिरशुद्धिक्षयात्तपसः ॥४३॥
43. The result of mortification is bringing powers to the organs
and the body, by destroying the impurity.
The results of mortification are seen immediately, sometimes by
heightened powers of vision, hearing things at a distance, and
so on.
स्वाध्यायादिष्टदेवतासंप्रयोगः ॥४४॥
44. By the repetition of the Mantra comes the realisation of the
intended deity.
The higher the beings that you want to get the harder is the
practice.
समाधिसिद्धिरीश्वरप्रणिधानात् ॥४५॥
45. By sacrificing all to Ishvara comes Samadhi.
By resignation to the Lord, Samadhi becomes perfect.
स्थिरसुखमासनम् ॥४६॥
46. Posture is that which is firm and pleasant.
Now comes Asana, posture. Until you can get a firm seat you
cannot practice the breathing and other exercises. Firmness of
seat means that you do not feel the body at all. In the ordinary
way, you will find that as soon as you sit for a few minutes all
sorts of disturbances come into the body; but when you have got
beyond the idea of a concrete body, you will lose all sense of
the body. You will feel neither pleasure nor pain. And when you
take your body up again, it will feel so rested. It is only
perfect rest that you can give to the body. When you have
succeeded in conquering the body and keeping it firm, your
practice will remain firm, but while you are disturbed by the
body, your nerves become disturbed, and you cannot concentrate
the mind.
प्रयत्नशैथिल्यानन्तसमापत्तिभ्याम् ॥४७॥
47. By lessening the natural tendency (for restlessness) and
meditating on the unlimited, posture becomes firm and pleasant.
We can make the seat firm by thinking of the infinite. We cannot
think of the Absolute Infinite, but we can think of the infinite
sky.
ततो द्वन्द्वानभिघातः ॥४८॥
48. Seat being conquered, the dualities do not obstruct.
The dualities, good and bad, heat and cold, and all the pairs of
opposites, will not then disturb you.
तस्मिन् सति श्वासप्रश्वासयोर्गतिविच्छेदः प्राणायामः ॥४९॥
49. Controlling the motion of the exhalation and the inhalation
follows after this.
When posture has been conquered, then the motion of the Prana is
to be broken and controlled. Thus we come to Pranayama, the
controlling of the vital forces of the body. Prana is not
breath, though it is usually so translated. It is the sum total
of the cosmic energy. It is the energy that is in each body, and
its most apparent manifestation is the motion of the lungs. This
motion is caused by Prana drawing in the breath, and it is what
we seek to control in Pranayama. We begin by controlling the
breath, as the easiest way of getting control of the Prana.
बाह्याभ्यन्तरस्तम्भवृत्तिः देशकालसंख्याभिः परिदृष्टो
दीर्घसूक्षमः ॥५०॥
50. Its modifications are either external or internal, or
motionless, regulated by place, terns, and number, either long
or short.
The three sorts of motion of Pranayama are, one by which we draw
the breath in, another by which we throw it out, and the third
action is when the breath is held in the lungs, or stopped from
entering the lungs. These, again, are varied by place and time.
By place is meant that the Prana is held to some particular part
of the body. By time is meant how long the Prana should be
confined to a certain place, and so we are told how many seconds
to keep one motion, and how many seconds to keep another. The
result of this Pranayama is Udghâta, awakening the Kundalini.
बाह्याभ्यन्तरविषयाक्षेपी चतुर्थः ॥५१॥
51. The fourth is restraining the Prana by reflecting on
external or internal object.
This is the fourth sort of Pranayama, in which the Kumbhaka is
brought about by long practice attended with reflection, which
is absent in the other three.
ततः क्षीयते प्रकाशावरणम् ॥५२॥
52. From that, the covering to the light of the Chitta is
attenuated.
The Chitta has, by its own nature, all knowledge. It is made of
Sattva particles, but is covered by Rajas and Tamas particles,
and by Pranayama this covering is removed.
धारणासु च योग्यता मनसः ॥५३॥
53. The mind becomes fit for Dharana.
After this covering has been removed, we are able to concentrate
the mind.
स्वस्वविषयासम्प्रयोगे चित्तस्वरूपानुकार इवेन्द्रियाणां
प्रत्याहारः ॥५४॥
54. The drawing in of the organs is by their giving up their own
objects and taking the form of the mind-stuff, as it were.
The organs are separate states of the mind-stuff. I see a book;
the form is not in the book, it is in the mind. Something is
outside which calls that form up. The real form is in the
Chitta. The organs identify themselves with, and take the forms
of, whatever comes to them. If you can restrain the mind-stuff
from taking these forms, the mind will remain calm. This is
called Pratyahara.
ततः परमा वश्यतेन्द्रियाणाम् ॥५५॥
55. Thence arises supreme control of the organs.
When the Yogi has succeeded in preventing the organs from taking
the forms of external objects, and in making them remain one
with the mind-stuff, then comes perfect control of the organs.
When the organs are perfectly under control, every muscle and
nerve will be under control, because the organs are the centres
of all the sensations, and of all actions. These organs are
divided into organs of work and organs of sensation. When the
organs are controlled, the Yogi can control all feeling and
doing; the whole of the body comes under his control. Then alone
one begins to feel joy in being born; then one can truthfully
say, "Blessed am I that I was born." When that control of the
organs is obtained, we feel how wonderful this body really is.