// Karma Yoga //
As we have repeated more than once, Hatha Yoga is but a preparation and is often
practised without any admixture of religious or even only philosophical
considerations. The exercises which we have described have as their purpose the
conscious control of physical and mental activities which ordinarily are not
subject to such control. The goal is to teach us to perceive directly what is
going on within us, in our inner physical and mental world and to direct these
activities in a conscious and voluntary manner.
But this is yet only preparation. All Yoga is intensification of consciousness
and of an evolution, of which Hatha Yoga is only the preparatory stage. There
are several paths or methods by which the goal may be reached. One of these is
Karma Yoga. It is, in reality, more a collection of ethical and moral precepts
for those who live "in the world", than a system. This is so because, according
to Indian thought, no one has the right to devote himself exclusively to the
development of his inner self until he has paid his tribute to life. The Hindu
knows four distinct periods of life: To his eighteenth year, man should be a
student; to his fortieth year he is a griheshu or householder; after that he is
allowed to abandon "life in the world" and to consecrate himself entirely to
mental and spiritual development. If, in the course of this period, he feels
himself called to the highest development, he may become a Sanyasin, leaving all
earthly cares behind him, taking to the road, clad in the orange coloured gown
of the beggar-monk, living on alms.
The much criticized Indian caste system divides men roughly into those who
follow a spiritual life from the start (Brahman), warriors (Kshatriya), and the
doers, the followers of practical life, merchants and peasants (Vaishias). It is
a division of society similar to that in clergy, nobility and bourgeoisie of the
middle ages in Europe.
Karma means action and Karma Yoga takes action as the way to salvation. The
ideal here is the active life as praised by the Bhagavad Gita, the most
beautiful and deepest of Indian holy books.
"Action alone concerns you, never its fruit,
Stability in success or failure, this balance is called Yoga."
The two priviliged castes, Brahman and Kshatriya are highly esteemed in India
because they are (or should be) ready to pay for their privileges with special
sacrifices. If the warrior must be ready to give up his life at any time, the
Brahman is bound by any number of rules and precepts, apt to develop a purely
spiritual type of man. The Hindus knew early, to what extent a certain diet will
influence mental attitude. Even the attitude, while eating, is prescribed. For
the Brahman, the taking of food is a holy rite. Only "innocent" food is
permitted.
Karma Yoga praises action (Karman), without attachment to the fruit of action.
The following legend shows how this is to be understood.
A king came to a Yogi living in solitude to learn about Karma Yoga. They sat
together under a tree and the Yogi began to recite the verses of the holy
scriptures. High up in the tree two birds had built their nest. As darkness
began to fall and the two men had not finished their talk, the male bird said to
his female companion: "We have guests and I must see to it that they are made
comfortable. As it is getting cold I shall gather some wood and start a fire."
Thus speaking it flew off and gathered some dry twigs. Soon a bright fire flared
up and king and Yogi gratefully warmed their hands on it. The two birds were
glad to see their host’s content, but after a little while the male bird said to
his wife: "The men must be hungry. Let's see if we can't get them something to
eat." "Alas, we have nothing fit for them to eat," said the female, "but we
cannot let them go hungry." The male said: "It is our duty as hosts to feed
them. If there really isn't anything else, then I shall sacrifice myself." Thus
saying, the bird threw himself into the fire. The female, however, said to
herself: "How can two big men possibly eat their fill on such a little bird? I
shall follow my husband's example and sacrifice myself also." And she too threw
herself into the flames.
The two men below understood too late what the birds were trying to do and cooed
not save them. The Yogi rose and said to the king: "Now I do not have to tell
you anything further regarding Karma Yoga, O king. An example is worth more than
all the words in all the books. Whosoever does his duty in such a way that he is
willing to give up even his own life to it, he is a true Karma Yogi."
Karma Yoga glorifies action and for this reason, is very close to the occidental
mind. A Karma Yogi is not required to believe anything or in any kind of dogma.
He follows no other idea than to work for work's sake. In this respect, the
teaching of the Bhagavad Gita closely resembles that of Buddha who was adverse
to any kind of metaphysical speculation, repeating over and over: "Be good and
do good."
The principal rules of Karma Yoga are contained in the two ordinances of Yama
and Niyama. Yama is concerned with conduct towards other, not killing,
not stealing, truthfulness, disinteredness, these are its prescriptions. "Six
enemies in us we must fight," it says, "greed, anger, non-discrimination, lust,
pride and jealousy." These are the passions which incite us to the above named
sins of killing, stealing, lying etc. They are all equally reprehensible,
whether they are done, caused or merely tolerated. Since they are deeply rooted
in human nature, they are hard to overcome. Good will alone is not sufficient.
An act of the will, in regard to our mental world, usually gives rise to a
thought the exact opposite to the one desired. Repression through an act of the
will, of the thought of lust, for example, stimulates lust. It is not possible
to overcome the enemy in this manner. If, however, we concentrate on the idea of
purity and sacrifice, the new idea will usually prevail. The right procedure,
therefore, is to replace a wrong thought such as anger, jealousy, lust etc. by a
new and contrary idea and to hold on to it until the first impulse has been
overcome.
It is also possible to philosophies about one's faults and to analyze their
sources. One can ask, for instance, "Why should I not steal? It would be very
nice if I had that piece of bread. I am hungry and the other fellow surely does
not need it as much as I do." Why not? A Christian will say: Because it is a
sin. The Hindu says: Because it is an error, born of ignorance. You think you
are doing yourself a favor; in reality, you only hurt yourself. The stolen food
will poison you.
This is a typical Indian idea and it is based on the Hindu philosophy of food.
In terms of occidental medical science, the idea would appear in this way: A
thief has a bad conscience. We know that fear causes certain changes in
metabolism. We also know that the symptoms of such emotions are brought about
with the collaboration of certain hormonal substances which, in the long run,
can adversely affect the organism. This is the material side of the question.
and the spiritual side? A theft, for instance, is always an intrusion of egotism
into a foreign sphere of the will. Our attachment to material things is a result
of egotistical activity. A man who wishes to tread the path of spiritual
evolution will not take on new fetters ... In this way, all "enemies" and all
"sins" are analyzed in meditation and overcome.
The rules of Niyama, on the other hand, are concerned with our conduct in
regard to ourselves. They are outer and inner cleanliness, contentment,
chastity, study and devotion. A first sign that we have achiveved a certain
degree of inner cleanliness is contentment. It is a purely Christian
superstition that a religious person should have something of the mien and
bearing of an undertaker. Quite the contrary is true. A really pious person is
always joyous and content. The rule of chastity is not a rule of asceticism; it
is merely significant of moeration. This is, incidentally, the fundamental note
of Yoga: Harmony, Moderation.
Hindu literature, and especially the Gita, is full of references to the active
life, without attachment to the fruits of action. There is, for instance, the
story of Narada, the holy man who passed his days in praising God in prayer.
Vishnu was very pleased with his zeal, but at the same time he wanted to pont
out to him the weaker side of his conduct and so he said to him: "Go to the
first house of the next village. There you will find a man even more pious than
you." Narada immediately set out to find so holy a man. But what he found was
only a peasant who told him that he called upon the name of God once in the
morning before going to work and once in the evening before going to bed. Narada
returned to Vishnu and reproachfully remarked: "I cannot see much piousness in
that man. Twice a day he calls upon Thy exalted name and apart from that attends
to his wordly affairs." Thereupon Vishnu bade him take a pail of water and carry
it through the village without spilling a drop. Narada did as he was told and on
his return proudly exhibited the full pail from which not a drop had been
spilled. Vishnu, however, asked him: "And how many times in carrying the pail
did you call upon my name?" "Not once," Narada had to admit, "I was too busy
watching the pail." And so Vishnu said to him: "During your small task you have
not given me a single thought. How much more pious is the peasant who, with his
hard day-long work finds time to call upon me twice."
Men work for the most varied reasons. But we should learn how to work without
any special motive and without regard for the fruits of work. One works for
glory, another for money, yet another for power. Many hope that their actions
will find their reward in heaven. But who works selflessly? Perhaps an artist
who works for his art, whether recognized or not, or a scientist who only lives
in and for his research, sometimes at the risk of his life. Such men are the
real "elite" of humanity.
The Hindu ideal is not an ascetic idea. In opposition to Christianity, Hindu
thought is of the opinion that wealth is not necessarily a curse. What matters
is whether the rich man is at every moment ready to abandon his riches, if
necessary, the point being that no man should attach himself to his earthly
possessions, which is the secret of real liberty. A beggar possessing only a few
rags can be more attached than a wealthy prince like Buddha, who from one day to
the next abandoned kingdom, wealth and family as soon as he recognized that this
was necessary for his inner liberty. "He who acts in dedicating all his actions
to the Eternal One, abandoning all attachment, is not troubled by sin, the same
as a lotus leaf is not touched by the water." Thus the Karma Yogi can go through
life and enjoy life; he can enjoy it, but shall not attach himself to it.
Nothing is really yours except your good works. He who learns to abandon his
egotistical desires develops immense power. To deny oneself is often a more
heroic deed than a victory on the battlefield of war or of sport.
On the other hand, the Hindu despises him who makes duty a mania. Many of us are
only slaves of duty where we have no time to eat in peace, no time to enjoy
nature, no time to take stock of ourselves, no time to live. We are foolish to
let duty rob us of our inner freedom. The mechanism of the world is a dangerous
machine; once we are in its clutches we are in danger of being crushed by it.
Indian thought refers here, as always, to the law of Sattwa, the law of the
pendulum which is everywhere characteristic of life. Inspiration is followed by
expiration, work by play, and extraversion by introversion. Every faithful Hindu
begins and closes his day with meditation; what he has expended in the extravert
activity of the day he takes back again in the introversion of meditation. To be
stable, a tower, a skyscraper needs a deep foundation. Our generation is
superficial and always in danger of losing its balance. Modern psychiatry knows
this and in the analytical technique leads the mentally ill back into the past.
Former generations, grounded in faith and mystical introversion had no need of
this aid. A man who combines the two poles in himself through religion or Yoga
remains tranquilly serene in the midst of the turbulence of modern life as
though he lived in solitude.
With our work we help only ourselves. It is a gathering of experiences. Those
who believe that we work in order to help improve the world, to "make the world
a better place to live in" etc., are in error. The world cannot be helped. The
same needs and cares it had a thousand years ago it has today and will still
have a thousand years from now. All we do, in this respect, is to move the
problems from one plane to another, that is all. When the waves rise in one
place, they fall in another. And as with waves, so with fortune and misfortune,
divided in the world, but their sum is always in balance.
"What do you want to do with the world?
It is made.
The Lord of Creation has thought of everything."
It has been said that the world resembles a spiral which we continually seek to
straighten out. But as soon as we let go at un end, the spiral forms again. An
Indian legend tells of a man who was tired of his daily work. He called upon a
magician and asked him for a jinn, a demon, who could do his work for him. The
magician warned him that a jinn was a powerful spirit who needs work all the
time. "If you cannot keep him busy at all times he will devour you." The man
laughed and said: "Please do not worry about that; I have plenty of work for the
strongest jinn!" And so the magician gave him a Mantra, an incantation which
would get him a jinn. The man did as he was told and behold, a towering powerful
spirit stood before him and asked in a resounding voice: "What do you want from
me?" At first the man was a little scared, but took heart and ordered: "Build me
a palace at once!" - "Here it is." - "Cut down yon forest!" - "It is done." -
"Bring me gold!" - "Here it is." - "Build me a city!" - "There it stands." Every
wish was fulfilled almost before the man had time to express it. In despair, he
ran to the magician and begged him on his knees to help him once more. "I do not
know what to order anymore and the jinn threaten to devour me." The magician
smiled and said: "In truth you scarcely deserve a better fate, but nevertheless
I shall help you once more. See the dog over there, the one with the curly tail?
Go cut it off and tell the jinn to straighten it out. He will be busy with the
job as long as the world lasts." The man did as he was told and the Jinn is
still busy with his task. Every time he lets go, the tail curls again. Every
generation tries to change and reform the world, but it remains as inadequate as
ever.
When once we have recognized that our actions serve only the gathering of
experiences and thus our own salvation, we realize how important it is
consciously to live every day of our life. To live consciously is to live in the
present. Many people in their thoughts are constantly a day, a week, a year
ahead. Do they really know if they will still be alive next year? In our
dreaming about the future we are apt to miss the experiences which the present
offers us for our edification. Let the day take care of the day.
Living consciously, learning from life, we come close to the metaphysical
interpretation of our actions, characteristic of Indian thought, close to the
idea of Karma, of the consequences of our actions, not only of the actions of
our present life, but also of former lives.
Western thought says: "By their fruits shall you know them." Eastern wisdom
replies: "All created beings are owners of their works, heirs of their works,
children and slaves of their works." Karma, Law of Consequence. To escape Karma
is possible only if we change what we are to what we would be. Everything that
happened to us today is conditioned by previous actions and desires.
Unconditioned, however, is our inner attitude towards our self-made destiny,
whether we say yes or no to it, whether we learn from it or deny it.
Unconditioned also is the determination to new aspiration, to new endeavor which
will lead us further on the path of liberation.
Bhakti Yoga - The Yoga of Love
There are two possibilities in us to comprehend the world, the possibility of
feeling and the possibility of reasoning. The way to a comprehension of the
world through feeling is Bhakti Yoga, while the way through conscious
reasoning is Jnana Yoga. One addresses itself to the emotions and the
subconscious forces, the other to reason, using consciousness as a means to
salvation. The pair of opposites can be compared with the contrast existing
between mysticism and scholasticism which characterizes the early development of
Christianity. Bhakti Yoga would correspond to mysticism, Jnana Yoga to
scholasticism. Such differentiations, of course, have always something
artificial about them, because at a certain degree of development, the two
opposites, reason and feeling blend together in something more perfect. Then the
heart thinks, the brain feels, there is inspiration and intuition.
It is said that the way of feeling, Bhakti Yoga is easier, love demanding no
effort. All is possible to love. A mother, in daily life perhaps afraid of a
mouse, will snatch her baby from the clutches of a tiger to save the life of her
child. Love is the great ennobling impulse of our life. All Christians know St
Paul's hymn to love: "... love suffers long, and is kind; love envies not; love
vaunts not itself, is not puffed up, does not behave itself unseemly, seeks not
her own ..." Love is the force which cements the universe.
Hindus have a number of names for the many shadings of love. But when the great
Yogi Vivekananda sings his himn to love he uses only one name: God. In the
source of love, all its various forms and manifestations have their origin, even
animal love, even the forces of attraction within matter. To Vivekananda, even
the passionate desire that may lead to crime is a manifestation of love,
"Whichever it may be - divine, angelic, rational, animal or instinctive," says
Saint Hierotheus, "through love we hear and understand the force which
establishes and maintains harmony between beings." In following the different
rivers back to their source, we recognize that there is an original source which
creates unity and harmony between all things, from the highest to the lowest
creature. In the same spirit Jesus (St Luke 7-47) declares: "Wherefore I say
unto thee, her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much; but to
whom little is forgiven, the same loveth little. And he said unto her: "Thy sins
are forgiven."
Love is the lever used by God to lift us out of our egotism. In love every
sacrifice seems easy, even that of our own egotistical desires. For this reason
Bhakti Yoga does not teach: "Resign thyself", but simply: "Love!" Love with all
your heart and resignation will follow by itself. But all that we may love on
earth: beauty, virtue, happiness, is only a pale reflection of the glory of God.
Thus, love of Him should be far more ardent than the love of earthly things.
There is in the Vedas a verse which means: "The husband loves not his wife, but
only the Atman (God) in her." He believes to love the wife; but soon he sees
that it was only his ideal which he projected on her and loved in her. Our final
ideal is God. Why therefore love the second-rate? The more we love Him, the
better we will understand Him.
It is difficult, however, to love an abstract notion. Bhakti Yoga says: "There
are two forces in you which can carry you up to God: Feeling and Reason,
representation and idea. But the representation will prove more powerful than
the mere idea."
As we have seen in Hatha Yoga, it is possible to influence bodily functions
through the imagination. When we lift our arm, for instance, we do not do so on
the strength of a conscious, logical process of thinking, consciously sending
the impulse of the will from the brain to the nerves and from there to the
muscles. No, it is done in a flash by means of our imagination. This power of
the imagination affecting our subconscious mind is used by Bhakti Yoga. The
discriminative factor of reason is largely eliminated in favor of imagination
and love.
The Occident has made its no doubt phenomenal conquest of the realm of matter
under the sign of reason, although the imagination has played its part in the
formulation of the most revolutionary ideas such as relativity etc. There are
many signs which portend a change of attitude and the reign of pure materialism
is surely at an end. All artistic creation is a child of phantasy, of "temporary
insanity". In the last analysis, all is imagination, idea, mind. As C.G. Jung
says: "It is a matter of indifference what the world thinks of religious
experience; he who possess it has a treasure, the source of life, intelligence
and beauty, lending the world and humanity a new sense."
Images existed before abstractions. This is why images affect deeper regions of
the soul than mere abstractions. Such images are not to be confused with
illusions. Modern psychology recognizes the reality of the soul experience. A
psychic experience is not necessarily a hallucination just because we do not
share in it. To term it as such would be erroneous as when a blind man would
call the perceptions of a seeing man mere illusion.
All religions are full of images and symbols. Mere study will not disclose their
deep sense, we must live them. A tree is best known by its fruit, and thus
living can only be an individual experience. Men differ from each other
especially by the quality of their imagination. Even the notions regarding our
perceptions of colour, sounds, odours differ widely from man to man. "De
gustibus non est disputandum." There is no discussing of tastes. Individual
notions regarding metaphysical realities are of necessity even more
differentiated.
For these reasons Bhakti Yoga leaves to each of us the choice of the image of
God most comfortable to his inner nature. Indian mythology is infinitely rich in
such images. What is important is that the image chosen contains the magic
forces apt to affect to a higher degree the emotions of the faithful. It is
recommended that the God-seeker keep his image of God to himself and do not
speak about it to anyone. It should be guarded like a tender plant until it has
grown strong. He who has attained knowledge can then dispense with the image.
Leaders of psychology today recognise that religious images can be a wall, a
safeguard against irruptions of the unconscious.
The goal of Bhakti Yoga consists of an intensification of the emotional forces
to such a degree that the faithful is raised step by step, until love of God has
grown to perfect and constant concentration on Him, to absorption in Him. It is
not sufficient to this end to go to church once a week or to think of God once
or twice a day. The goal of
Union
with the Divine Ground can only be reached when our consciousness is
constantly filled with the thought of God. "Love Him, love Him immeasurably,
exhaust the sources of your emotion, then one day, you will recognize that Love,
the Lover and the Loved One are One." The Bhakti who has reached the goal is not
bound to church or sect. These are only ways to God, but they are not God
themselves. Said Ramakrishna: "It is as with water, you can draw it in all kinds
of jugs, all kinds of forms, but the water is always the same."
The perfect Bhakti is liberated from desire and egotism. In him shines the light
of love. Love of God becomes love of the world and of all its creatures. The
"love thy neighbour as thyself" is for him a matter of course, since in his
neighbour he recognizes himself. The whole world, to him, is the expression, in
infinite language, of the Infinite.
Jnana Yoga - The Yoga of Discrimination
There is yet another path to God, the path of discrimination, the path of
understanding, of intellect, of reasoning. It is a path particularly familiar to
the Occidental mind, being the path of natural sciences. And these natural
sciences today have reached a limit beyond which our material knowledge is
threatened with annihilation. Science has discovered that in the infinitely big
as in the infinitely small the heretofore irrefutable law of causation, which
says that every event or phenomenon results from an adequate or antecedent
cause, is no longer valid. Here lies the real reason for the deep distress of
our times, the reason why philosophy and the arts carry the seal of decay.
Jnana Yoga turns from the consideration of the exterior world to that of the
world within us. The natural scientist would discover what moves matter; Jnana
Yoga seeks the secret of what moves us, the secret of what we call the
soul.
"The wise sees in himself the Atman,
Gazing inward, seeking what is eternal."
It is, in a way, the "know thyself" of the inscription at Delphi with which
Jnana Yoga is concerned. But it is not, as often in Occidental philosophy, a
question of knowing what we are, but rather a question of learning how to
be who we are.
The Vedanta praises the human intellect as one of the greatest gifts of God.
Like imagination, it is a path to Him. But with the intellect alone we are as
unable to reach God as with the emotions alone. For the Hindu this is no reason
to despise the intellect. To Hindu thought, a godless man is almost to be
preferred to one not making use of his reasoning powers.
Where Bhakti Yoga has followed the path of affirmation, of synthesis, so Jnana
Yoga follows the path of negation, of analysis. All the tools of our
consciousness are examined one by one, and one by one it is recognized: I am not
this, nor that. And thus, at last we arrive at the core of our being,
recognizing it as the "I".
The path of discriminative understanding is much more difficult than the path of
Love. It lacks the bridges of imagination. It is a rocky path along an abyss.
But it is just the same closer to our Western mode of thinking than any of the
other Yogas. Nevertheless it is almost as difficult to sum up the teachings of
Jnana Yoga as to sum up the results of all the Western systems of philosophy.
According to Hindu philosophy, the world of our perceptions is not the same as
the world of reality. In order to grasp the "real" reality we must, therefore,
first examine the manner in which we arrive at our perceptions. We must examine
our five senses by means of which we arrive at our perceptions. We must examine
our five senses by means of which the exterior impressions are transmitted to
us. For the Hindu, these senses, touch, hearing, sight, taste and smell are
contrasted by five acting senses, the functions of which are breathing,
evacuating, digesting etc. ... But who is the "hearer of the hearing, the seer
of the seeing"? According to Eastern thought, we become conscious of the sense
impressions through a centre called Cittam, what we call the intellect.
This Cittam has three aspects, the ramifications of which it would be too
complicated to follow here. The idea is of an instrument which receives,
projects and registers at the same time. The following example will illustrate
the functioning of this instrument.
You meet a tiger and you run. The two, - seeing, running, follow so rapidly one
upon the other, that they seem one and we are not aware at all that the
perception of the tiger is followed by the projection: "Out there is an animal"
followed by the registration: "It is a tiger and a tiger is a dangerous animal"
whereupon follows the decision to run. The Cittam, the intellect, has three
aspects and reacts in different ways. A Hindu would but it this way: As a woman
can be a wife, mother and daughter at the same time, depending upon the
viewpoint, so the Cittam can be a perception, projection and registration,
depending on how it reacts. Another example: We hear the ticking of a clock. The
ear receives the sound waves and transmits the stimulus to the centre of
perception in the brain, called Indriya by the Indians. This centre receives the
stimulus and presents it to the Cittam. In the Cittam, or intellect, the
perception is registered: "I hear a noise." In another part of the intellect,
called Manas, this is organised in space and time: "I hear a ticking." Finally
in yet another part, the Buddhi, where lies the faculty of remembering and
classifying, the conclusion is drawn: "It is a clock which ticks."
Modern science is not sure as to whether an animal can remember consciously and
draw conclusions. For the Indians, it possesses this faculty at least in a
latent degree. The elephant is said to have it. But even then animals lack the
faculty of thinking in opposites and of forming abstract notions. And in this
faculty lies the fundamental difference between man and animal.
The first contrast that appears in the human mind or consciousness is that
between the "I" and the "non-I". A dog, in the above example, would say: "Toto
hears ticking", but not "I hear ticking." The acquisition of the I-consciousness
in man is probably of comparatively recent origin. Little children do not
possess it and have to learn it. Only then the originally one splits into two,
into the opposites of I and not-I, in things conscious and unconscious. Here
also begins the human development in the direction of the divine. Here lies the
origin of the symbol of the fruits from the tree of knowledge and the exile from
paradise. The I-consciousness is called Ahamkara by the Indians and it is the
motor which sets in motion our conscious will. To Indian wisdom this will is
threefold, in accordance with the division body, soul, spirit: Body, the will to
live; Soul, the I-will, the conscious will; Spirit, the cosmic, free will.
It is our conscious will which is, in the last analysis, responsible for our
destiny. One of the Upanishads (literally: secret teaching, the most mysterious
part of the Vedanta) says: "Man is made entirely of desire. As is his desire, so
is his will; as is his will, so is his action (Karma). And as his action, so he
will fare."
It is therefore on our conscious will that we must work if we wish to change our
destiny. If we give free reign to our bodily will to live, our libido, as the
psychoanalyst would call it, it will aim at the satisfaction of desire. This
satisfaction is achieved mostly at the expense of others. This is contrary to
the cosmic will. Our actions in the direction of the satisfaction of our desires
create a reaction on the part of the cosmic will in the form of a prevention of
our desires. Here lies the cause of all sorrow. All sorrow is prevented
wish-fulfillment. We shall suffer as long as we have not learned that our ego
cannot be satisfied at the expense of other egos. The egotistic will is not free
to do as it pleases. Real freedom lies beyond. When we finally grasp this fact
we can pray: "thy will be done".
The road to freedom, the road to free action outside the chain of cause and
effect is, paradoxically, an abstention from action, a negative will, the
negation of our Ahamkara, the egotistical reaction in us. Every action which is
contrary to our ego, every action of love is not bound to the chain of cause and
effect and sets us free. In asceticism we find the highest expression of the
negation of the egoistical will.
This "rendering conscious" of our ego-will, this mastery, this overcoming alone
gives us the possibility of changing our character and thereby changing our
destiny. In this change lies possibly our evolution towards a higher state in
nature. The heightening of our consciousness through mental analysis is the way
to liberation of Jnana Yoga.
We sometimes say in retrospect: "I did not mean to do this," and thereby condemn
an action of ours performed on impulse. The force which condemns our action is
our conscience. Our conscience looks upon us from a distance. It lies between
existence and the real, inner self. Here man has reached the world of abstract
ideas. Here is freedom. But the conscience is not yet "the seer of seeing, the
hearer of hearing." Eternally unchanged and unchangeable, the Seer stands
behind, or above the psychic organism, called lingam, or soul and of which the
conscience is only the highest part. The Self, however, is the Seer and Hearer,
the Spectator of Life. Indians call this nucleus of being the Atman, the Self.
It reflects the impressions of the soul, but is not affected by them. For the
self all things are one. This ultimate entity of man is not touched by
opposites; these are felt only by the egotistical will, the small I. The Atman
is real and eternal. And thus, according to the path of Janana, when we have
finally realized who it is that hears, feels, that asks etc., then we are free
from the illusion that the impressions of our senses have any reality
whatsoever. According to this view, the knowledge we acquire by means of our
brain is only a transitory stage, a stepping-stone to true knowledge which lies
in the Atman, the "knower of knowledge". The knower is the Atman, the world of
outer impressions is Maya, illusion. The Atman, the Self, the Divine Ground of
Being is pure spirit and has no part of matter, or Maya.
The same conclusion has been drawn by Christian mystics and by the founder of
Christian Science, Mary Baker Eddy. This shows that the great religious truths
are everywhere closely related, that in all races and at all times the reality
of man is the same.
And thus finally the path of Jnana Yoga arrives at the goal of Oneness. The
Atman, the Self is God, the ultimate reality. He is one and undivided in every
man. All creation is only a manifestation, a form of Brahman, a quality, an
attribute of God, nothing else. Only as long as we believe to be of this
world can the world have power over us. Once this error is recognized we are
free. We have come out of freedom, are bound for a while and we return to
freedom. Freedom is not a place, however, but a condition. There is no place
where there could be freedom, every place being bound to space and this subject
to the laws of space. And that is why Jesus Christ says: "The Kingdom is in
you".
Raja Yoga - The Royal Path
Ramakrishna, one of the great modern sages of India (1833-86) sums up Raja Yoga
as follows: "Raja Yoga leads to the realization of the Absolute through
concentration and meditation. It has eight steps. The first is Yama,
which consists of non-injuring, truthfulness, non-covetousness, chastity, and
the non-receiving of gifts. The second is Niyama which includes
austerities, forbearance, contentment, faith in the Supreme Being, charity,
study and self-surrender to the supreme will. The practice of various physical
postures is comprised in Asana, the third step, while Pranayama,
the art of breathing, constitutes the fourth. The fifth is Pratyahara and
consists of making the mind introspective and one-pointed. Concentration or
Dharana is the next. Dhyana or meditation is the seventh, and
Samadhi, or the state of super-consciousness the eighth." This is a bare
outline, of course.
Raja Yoga is the Royal Path, the path of realization, for which all other Yogas
were only a preparation. In a way, it combines the practice of all others.
In Hatha Yoga we have endeavored to eliminate the obstacles which our
body could put in the way to realization; in Karma Yoga we have
purified our actions; in Bhakti Yoga we have intensified our
emotions and the power of love as levers to attain super-consciousness;
in Jnana Yoga we have analyzed our mental mechanism and have
arrived at the conclusion that none of the instruments of our mind is, in
itself, a sure support for real knowledge.
As can be seen in a consideration of the eight steps of Raja Yoga, it is
a discipline of the mind through self-analysis and self-control. Above
all, as shown in Jnana Yoga, it is the conscious will which must be disciplined.
Our thinking and feeling must be strictly controlled. We must begin to learn
that the essential things do not happen outside of us, but inside, in the world
of our representations. This is, of course, no easy task for a brain used to
register impressions coming from the outside world. The brain must now learn
that our outer perceptions are only shadows. Paul Brunton reports how an Indian
Yogi, questioned by him compared our thinking to an ox-cart in a dark passage
under a mountain. Turn the cart around and it will take you back into the light.
In a way, it is this turning round of our way of thinking which is Raja Yoga.
In order to accomplish this feat we must first learn to concentrate our thought.
The importance of concentration is self-evident even to our Occidental way of
thinking. None of the wonders of our technical civilization could have been
achieved without the most intensive concentration of mind on the part of some
scientist or other. Is it unreasonable to believe that the self-same power of
concentration could penetrate also the serets of the world within us?
In Indian philosophy, man is sometimes likened to a king who looks out upon the
world from his carriage. The body is the carriage, the senses are the horses,
the intellect is represented by the reins, reason by the coachman. The king who
takes in the passing scene, passively, only seeing, percieving, he is the Atman,
our higher Self.
In Hatha Yoga we have learned how to bring the unconscious activities of our
body under the control of the conscious mind. We now must learn to govern our
senses. The senses convey to us, in an uninterrupted chain, the impressions of
the outside world, keeping our brain busy in absorbing and digesting these
sense-impressions. Only in deep sleep does it rest.
But it happens that the senses remain insensible to outside impressions even
during the waking state. When we are completely absorbed by an interesting book,
for example, we hear and see nothing of what occurs around us. Or perhaps we see
and hear, but do not react. It is therefore a question of attention whether we
react or not. It should, therefore, be possible to withdraw our attention
consciously, voluntarily from certain sense-impressions, or to concentrate
attention on one of them to the exclusion of all others. This is the first of
Raja Yoga, called Pratyahara.
This is most speedily accomplished in exerting one of the senses to the utmost.
We become all ear, for instance. We listen with all our might to our heartbeat.
After some practice we shall be able to control our sense of hearing to such an
extent that we can withdraw it at will and work tranquilly in the midst of
bedlam. Newspapermen who work in the noisy city-room of a big newspaper practise
Pratyahara without knowing it! In the same manner, we can educate the nose not
to smell, the eyes not to see, yes, even to the extent of commanding the
nerve-ends not to transmit a sensation such as pleasure or pain.
Once we have achieved such control we can go a step further and try to control
not only the senses, but also our intellect, the Cittam, the thinking process.
We generally assume that we do the thinking, while, as a matter of fact,
something thinks in us. We do not know how the thoughts come to us. To stop the
film which unrolls itself inside us is mightily difficult. This is why Indians
compare the intellect to a monkey, always in senseless agitation. This agitation
is the welling-up in our consciousness of memories and impressions that have
been buried in the great storehouse of the unconscious mind. This is due to the
fact that most of the time we live in a completely unconscious manner.
All we think, all we do leaves a trace, not unlike an odour which clings to our
being and the sum total of which constitutes our character. What we are, what we
would like to be is the consequence of the impressions on which we have dwelled
in the past. To the Indian, it is clear that we ourselves have built our
character in the course of many previous incarnations, and that it is in our
power to remodel it in cultivating henceforth constructive thoughts and habits.
But how can we master the unconscious sense-impressions, which in the long run
can constitute our character? The answer is that in order to deal with them, we
must first learn to recognize them.
For the Indian, the Cittam, the intellect is a vibratory state; it vibrates in
accordance with wave-length and frequency of the object it perceives. In a
similar way, he also explains the association of ideas. A certain object, let us
say a red flower excites a certain vibration; other perceptions arise in the
memory, perceptions which once excited the same vibration in the intellect. Thus
arises a chain of associations. The idea of Raja Yoga now is to increase the
vibratory capacity of the intellect in order to overcome its innate laziness.
We have said that it is the accumulation of unconscious memories and
preconceived opinions which constitute our character. We can only change it by
changing our thinking habits. We must swim against the stream and that is hard.
All we have lived, all we have experienced we must experience once more in
reverse; we must make it conscious in order to overcome it. The reader will be
struck with the similarity of this method to the methods of psychoanalysis. It
goes to show that Hindu wisdom knew about psychology and the unconscious mind
thousands of years ago. There is an important difference, however. The
psychoanalyst unravels the past experiences of his patient and, having led him
through the maze of the accumulated and repressed memories, some of which may
have caused mental havoc, lets it go at that and many a time a cure is effected,
because the unconscious has been made conscious, the patient has understood what
caused the disturbance and may not make the same mistakes again. Raja Yoga
follows the same method, but when it has unraveled the past, when it has made
conscious what was unconscious, it bids us to return to the centre from which we
have started; it bids us to return to God.
We can master the sense-impressions, our memories, conscious and unconscious in
two ways. The first method is to make these memories conscious again. This is
the method of psychoanalysis, as we have seen. We know how dangerous the
unconscious memories can become; they are roots of neuroses and psychoses.
A lovely Indian fable tells of a king to whom his subjects daily brought
presents. These were carried to his treasure house. Among the people who thus
offered their gifs there was a Yogi who every day presented the king with a
beautiful fruit. The king did not estimate this offering any too highly, but
accepted it nevertheless and with the other presents accumulated the fruit in
his treasury. Now it happened that one day a child was with the king when the
Yogi arrived to make his offering, a beautiful apple. The king, smilingly, gave
the apple to the child, a little girl, who immediately began to eat it. All of a
sudden she gave a cry of surprise: her teeth had struck on something hard.
Carefully she took a few more bites and, lo and behold, she uncovered a
glittering jewel, a wonderful sapphire. The king was struck with wonder and
commanded his treasurer to see what had become of all the other fruit. It had
all rotted away. Where it had been stored, there rose a glittering heap of
precious jewels. The treasury is our unconscious mind.
But, alas, not all the impressions and memories that lie in that storehouse are
jewels, although many of the impressions slumbering there are recognized at
their real value only after we have made them conscious again. Into this
storehouse we must, above all, bring some order, and then we must see that we do
not, in the future, store in it anything without having first carefully examined
it. We must learn to live attentively, consciously.
The film of which we have spoken before, the uninterrupted projection of the
sense-impressions which constitutes our thinking process, obscures the pure
vision of reality. If we were able to stop the ever running film-band for only a
very little while, we would see all things in clear outline. We would learn
again to think intuitively; we would learn again to think not with the brain,
but with the pineal gland, by the ancients called the "eye of God". Here is how
Webster defines the pineal gland: "Pineal gland or body; a small organ about the
size of a pea, situated in the brain of vertebrates above the third ventricle.
It is supposed to be a rudimentary organ of sense, presumably of sight and, as
such, to be a vestige of a dorsal median eye found in some fossils and present,
in an imperfect form, known as the pineal eye, in some existing animals." A
rudimentary organ of sense. ... Descartes, the french philosopher, as recently
as the seventeenth century throught it an "organ of the soul", while our
so-called "modern" science sees in it merely a hormonal control organ. It is,
nevertheless, probable that the phenomena of clairvoyance and telepathy, among
others, are a function of this gland.
In Indian tradition, the pineal gland is a most important organ. The highest
states of consciousness depend on it - intuition, beatitude and Godlikeness. All
of the Yoga exercises, in the last analysis, have the purpose of eliminating the
predominance of the brain and of self-consciousness and of attaining the cosmic
consciousness through a reactivation of the pineal gland.
But what are the practical steps which lead to such control? In order to
control, to dominate the unrolling of the film of consciousness the first step
is to become aware of the fact of the "unrolling". We can only control what has
become conscious. As a first aid to this process of making conscious the
thinking and feeling of our organism, the Yoga student learns to re-examine and
re-evaluate the events of the day, every night before going to sleep. He begins
with the very last impression and unrolls one after the other back to the
beginning. Thus: "I have extinguished the light ... before that I went to bed
... before that I cleaned my teeth ... before that I undressed ... before that I
wound my watch ..." and so through the events of the day. This is not as easy as
it sounds. It is more than probable that you will go to sleep long before you
have come to the end of your examination, but at least part of the "Samskara",
the sense-impressions, have been made conscious and will not come to disturb
your sleep in anxiety dreams.
This exercise has been likened to the practice of scales by a pianist. We
thereby learn to dominate the impressions, instead of being dominated by them.
We begin to be master in our own house. During this exercise we remember at
will, and only through memory, through our past do we know who and what we are.
He who remembers, knows himself through his former ations, judges himself in
these actions and, looking back, realizes why certain things had to happen to
him and not to another, what he could learn thereby, what new possibilities open
up before him. Memory is multiplication of the one who remembers; he owns not
only the present, but also the past; he has mastered a part of time.
It is thought that if we can extend our memory over the day, the week, the
month, the year, and the years back to our childhood to the thresholdd of birth,
we can step across the threshold to remember the events of our former lives. Our
human reason may not be able to comprehend this, but who could doubt that a
personality of the spiritual purity of a Buddha did not lie when he affirmed
that in this way he had become conscious of four of his former incarnations?
One thing is certain: In trying to recall to memory the events of a single day
in all its detail, we realize what tremendous power of concentration would be
needed in order to recall the events of a whole life, not to speak of former
lives. But to seize clearly and sharply in consciousness only the events of the
previous day will immeasurably refine and sharpen our powers of memory and
consciousness. We gradually learn to understand the causalities, the why of the
events in our life. We begin to realize that we are the makers of our destiny.
Meditation on the events of the past day also helps to awaken our
unconscious memory and offers an answer to questions which we have been asking
ourselves, to problems which have been torturing us; it is a sort of
self-analysis.
As long as we have not learned to make conscious all of our sense impressions,
or consciously to direct them, they will constantly reappear on the surface of
the mind, like bubbles on a swamp, at the very moment we seek to quiet our
intellect in meditation. We, therefore, must find yet another method to
subjugate them. Buddha, whose teachings are a sort of combination Karma Yoga,
Raja Yoga, recommends that we discipline the chaotic flux of impressions, that
we categorically reject all undesirable ones the second they present themselves
at the door of consciousness. This is not to be confused with repression.
Repression is only a partly conscious act; we repress an idea through cowardice,
through conventionality etc. ... When we consciously reject an idea, in
the sense of Buddha's recommendation, we do so by a conscious moral decision. To
"reject" is to be understood as to "replace". We replace the undesirable idea by
a desirable one. The higher idea has a higher frequency, higher vibrations; in
cultivating the higher idea, we gain power over the lower one. Buddha puts it in
these words: "The same, O monks, as a mason with a fine wedge drives out, pushes
out, beats out a bigger wedge, so a monk when he seizes upon an idea in
connection with which base and unworthy considerations obtrude themselves,
images of lust, of hate, of illusion, he shall replace them by other, worthy
images." The student thus constantly keeps his unconscious mind under control
and lifts the sense-impressions into the light of consciousness. This extension
of the consciousness is the first phase of Raja Yoga.
"With a clear conscience let us arm ourselves, clearly conscious in coming and
going, clearly conscious in mounting and descending, clearly conscious in eating
and in drinking, in chewing and in tasting, clearly conscious in eliminating,
clearly conscious in standing and in walking, in sleeping and in waking, in
speaking and in keeping silent, thus, O my monks, you should practise well."
The practice of visual representations of a high nature creates a favourable
vibrations, favourable states of consciousness. The same is true, according to
Indian tradition, of the repetition of certain sentences and words. The Indian
believes that in thse words and phrases lies the experience of many thousands of
years, of innumerable former incarnations of millions of men, creating again and
again the atmosphere and the vibrations which they had when first used. It is
not absolutely necessary to understand the meaning of the word or phrase; its
sound alone will create the favourable frequency of vibration. The best known of
these sacred syllables is
OM
, or AUM, the meditation on which is said to lead to salvation. Its
perfection is due to the fact that it comprises all the consonants and vowels,
all other words from alpha to omega. The sounding of the final M is considered
the most important. In the same way the Yogi meditates on the phrase: "Om
mani padme hum", ("O jewel
in the lotus blossom") as a Christian would meditate on the phrase: "God is
love." or "the peace that passes all understanding". The sounding of the phrase
is accompanied by meditation on its meaning. Since this murmur meditation may
easily lead to a sort of trance which has nothing in common with real
liberation, it must be used with great care and discretion. The
Yoga aphorisms of Patanjali recommended in
its stead a systematic practice of concentration, then of meditation, finally
leading to a contemplation. In this way, consciousness is not lulled to sleep.
Thus after we have learned to discipline our senses, we have learned to control
the sequence of our representations, trying to analyse our unconscious mind,
rendering it conscious as far as possible.
After this stage, we have consciously created a representation and held it in
our mind, excluding all other representations. This is what is called
concentration.
When we now endeavour to state everything we know about the object held in our
mind, when we oblige our thinking to turn around this object and to look at it
from all sides, and when finally we go with our mind to the very centre of this
object (med-itari, going to the middle), we call it meditation.
But still we are here and the object is there. Our mind is still in movement and
says: "Here am I and what is there is not I." Should we succeed in extending our
I to the object, ie. not only to represent and comprehend the object, but also
to feel it, then we get into contemplation. Then I and the object have
become one.
And finally, should we succeed in overcoming our ego, in dropping the object
with which we have become one, in dropping, therefore, ourselves, then we have
freed ourselves of the world of representation and are in the Absolute. This is
not hypnosis, since we are doing it in full consciousness. This condition is
known as Samadhi. Concentration, Meditation, Contemplation, Samadhi, -
this, in brief, is the path of Raja Yoga.
In trying this mental exercise, it is advantageous to select an object which
attracts us, which has our fullest sympathy, something beautiful, for instance.
It is evident that if our emotions help us in concentrating on the chosen
object, that concentration will be made much easier and much deeper. Indians
choose with predelicition the flower of the lotus. Apart from being beautiful,
the lotus flower also has symbolic significance for an Indian, which makes it
all the more attractive to him. A Western student might choose the rose instead.
There is no doubt that consciously or unconsciously all the great creative
artists have used concentration and meditation in the elaboration of their
works. Without it, artistic and creative activity, in general, is unthinkable.
As to contemplation,
St John
of the Cross describes it as follows: "The soul is steeped in
deep forgetfulness; it knows not where it was or what it has done and it seems
to it that no time at all has passed. And so it is really in this forgetfulness
many hours may go by; when the soul awakens, it seems that only a minute has
passed."
With our intellect alone we are only able to grasp the world, to understand the
world in a one-sided sort of way. In conscious contemplation the fullness of
life and the wisdom of the ages are near; in it we transcend the limits of our
appearance. When we have reached this condition which we might call the
intuitive state, for moments first, then for longer and longer periods and
finally at will, then we have reached the sources of being. And at this stage,
the effort is made by us is helped by a force, an attraction from within, grace.
"Knock and it shall be opened."
Development from then on is rapid, since the notion of time does not exist any
more. In contemplation, the body is fully relaxed, every muscle, even the face,
and the contemplative smiles the smile we see on the faces of the departed, the
really living, released from the tensions of their egotistical self. In this
state prayers are heard and answered. It is also the state in which we can most
efficiently make suggestions for our welfare. Now we feel what we think and
think what we feel. In contemplation, the consciousness of the body wanes, the
consciousness of the Self grows and gathers itself in a centre.
From contemplation to Samadhi, ecstasy, is only a small step. When even
questions cease, when soul and body are fully relaxed, the last stage is
reached. Here God knocks at our door. The state of blessedness cannot be
described with words.