CHAPTER
XIII.
HIGHER REASON AND JUDGMENT.
ANOTHER
requisite is Fearlessness. "What a tiresome rigmarole of requisites! I
know it all!" you may say. But you don't! I, too, thought so years ago.
You have to take them up and meditate upon them. Thus alone can they become
inwoven with your nature. Few people possess this virtue. It has to be
cultivated with assiduous zeal before you can proceed a step further. Now just
turn in and examine yourself in the calm light of reason. See! You have given
your body first place right along. You have grown quite fond of it. Your life
consists in taking care of and yielding to the demands of your physical nature.
No wonder then that you are still the slave of carnal tendencies. A force far
mightier than yourself seems to grip you, overbear your feeble will and whirl
you where it will. Resolve this moment to be chaste and continent in thought,
word and deed, and ten to one but that you will be faced by a veritable host of
evil forces forming around you a ring-pass-not from which you cannot affect an
escape; struggle, foam, fume and wrestle as you will. You fall into quicksand
which you would but cannot avoid. You have ever moved along lines of least
resistance. You fancied yourself in fine condition indeed! You laughed your
vacuous, unmanly, ignorant laugh against those who are ever serious, austere,
and plodding. You considered these as sorely ridden hacks who have naught of
the pleasures of life to engage them. Though you quailed abjectly beneath their
sad, stern glance, you shot witty things against them when their backs were turned.
You had even the impudence to admonish them against austere and abstemious
ways.
Now
the scales have dropped from your eyes: you who sat in the seat of the scornful
and passed judgment on others; How you wish somebody would come to your rescue
and lift you bodily out of this Pit of Trophet! But mere lifting won't do at
all. You will drift back again. You have to be born again. A spiritual
regeneration is called for. Serious introspection must be a constant virtue.
Why do you fear? Because you are afraid of Fear, your relentless Hierophant.
That is the causeless cause of fear. Secondly because you are so fond of your
skin. Thirdly because Nature won't let you off. Time was when you lived,
breathed and enjoyed evil. Your disgraceful past is reacting with all the
cumulative force of evil-doing and what is far more heinous, evil thinking. You
have been running in accustomed grooves. Now is the time to turn over a new
leaf. Your salvation lies in these: 1. First and foremost, resolve not to give
way to Fear, for there is Nothing to fear but Fear. Philosophy will come to
your help, as I hope to show you later on. 2. Then you must renounce your love
for the flesh. It is a hard task. But I can see no other way out. I shall tell
you the 'how' of it. It rests with you to accept or refuse. 3. Learn to be
patient under suffering. Your Karma must work itself out. But you can
neutralise its force in proportion to your earnestness in following my advice
to the letter. Now for the remedial aspect of philosophy.
The
aim of philosophy is to put an end to pain. Your fear has, back of it, a
shrinking from pain. Is pain then so unwelcome? Edward Carpenter in his
beautiful poem "Man and Satan" says "Every pain that I suffered
in one body became a power which I wielded in the next." The functions of
pain are fivefold. The nature of the Atman--the individualised self
incarnation--is all-blissfulness. Time is an excrescence. It is Not-self. The
law of evolution is Manifestation. There are two paths. The one is Pravritti.
It signifies "revolving towards." The other is "Nivritti:
revolving away." The vast mass of humanity are treading the former. The
powers of the soul must be turned outwards, focused upon the external world, in
order that it may acquire a knowledge of it. The soul is in rapture. It is ever inward-turned. In
order that it may wake up from its latent condition and find expression
physically, it must be impinged upon by pain. If there be a continued influx of
streams of bliss, no power would manifest.
When water is allowed its free course, it
flows on smoothly. But just put a bar across its onflow. How it struggles,
hisses and fumes in order to get rid of the barrier! Now you understand why the
will arms itself with sudden force when the lash of disgrace and contumely
stirs it up. The greater the stirring and the more continued the spasm of pain,
the deeper the impression left upon the memory, the fiercer the out-put of soul
energy. When it is a gentle twinge only, the soul turns over like the
proverbial sleepy boy and forgets it instantly. You repeat your folly. Now our
psychology fixes itself ever on the ultimate analysis of fact. Hence Vyasa in
his commentary on gives pain the first
seat as an important factor that goes to build up the Causal Body--the Karana
Sharira, or the receptacle in which lie all the seeds of actions--the proper
development of which blazes the way to Self-realisation.
The
first and most important function of pain is to call out the activity-aspect of
the soul. Remember it has no permanent place. Take your cue and learn to love
exertion, and pain shall not come. The next function of pain is to
establish conditions in the physical
form. It organises the body aright. I have told you in my paper on "Man's
Divine Heritage" how the transition to peace must always be through
struggle and painful fighting. Says the Lord Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad
Gita:--1. That is like poison at first, but nectar at the end, that happiness
is declared Satvic, born of the of the
intellect due to Self-realisation. 2. That which arises from the contact of
object with sense, at first like nectar, but at the end like poison, that
happiness is declared to be Rajasic. 3. That happiness which begins and ends in
self-delusion arising from sleep, indolence and miscomprehension, that is
declared to be Tamasic. 4. There is no entity on earth, or again in heaven
among the Devas that is devoid of these three Gunas, born of . 5. Control of mind
and senses, austerity, purity, forbearance, and also uprightness, knowledge,
realisation, belief in the hereafter--these are the ways of the Satvic.
Thus
you see that the putting forth of positive effort, spoken of already, will go
to effectively shake out the grosser and coarsened forms of vibrations in the
body. Exertion will organise your brain, develop and unfold its powers. The
grind of intellectual training means pain in its exquisite form for the tamasic
man. Austere living is just what man hates. Sense-pleasures he eagerly seeks.
Just as exercise in the physical sense is painful to begin with, so it causes
more life to flow into your muscles, nerves and fibres; and development
results. Nothing has seemed to you more painful than the deliberate development
of the Will. It is most painful at first. Yet, if you have done it or if you
ever do it, you shall know that the harmonic poise of the Will-power is the
mightiest aspect of Power in man.
Well,
then, this is the third function of pain. It develops power. "Power is
pain transmuted."
Read
the life of Napoleon. There you see the finest manifestation of power. This man
small and insignificant of build commanded the rugged soldiers as if they were
infants. They were as wax in his hands. He could mould them as he wished. Take
this single instance. Napoleon hearing that the Bourbons were misgoverning his
country, returned from his exile at Elba. He had to give the guards the slip.
He returned with no forces. He was alone in the midst of his bitterest enemies,
the Bourbons. Troops were drawn up to fight him. The entire army had been
commanded to fire at his breast. They were standing--the Bourbon soldiers--with
their muskets levelled at his breast ready for the command "Aim."
Napoleon on foot, alone, undefended and unarmed, marched deliberately towards
the troops with measured tread, gazing directly into their eyes. The command to
"Fire" was shouted out. A single shot would have killed him. A fortune
would have awaited the man who fired it. If the army had obeyed the order no
less than forty thousand bullets would have entered Napoleon's breast. But this
man flinched not. He undid the buttons, bared his breast and stood within a few
yards facing them. The whole army wavered. How could they shoot this man?
"Fire!" "Fire!!" But how could they fire? They were under
this man's fascination. They were spell-bound. They couldn't fire. Not one man
obeyed the order. Not one, mark you, out of these thousands! They all threw
down their guns and ran to him, shouting "Vive l'Empereur!" Yet if
you turn to this man's early life, you see him imposing the most painful tasks
upon himself. For days he would go without sleep, rest and food, deeply
absorbed in study. His hard labours at his studies in early life dwarfed his
stature. His appearance at times, we read, was woeful to contemplate because of
his painful hardships. But then there was lightning in his eyes which burned
and flashed with the fire of his spirit. Truly, most truly, is "pain"
transmuted into "Power."
The
Yogi whose severe austerities strike you dumb with surprise and horror, tames
the lions and tigers of the forest simply by a look. In point of fact all
advanced Yogis have this and thousands of other such wonderful powers. The
fourth function is that pain purifies. "Slowly and resolutely as a fly
cleans its legs of the honey in which it has been caught--so remove thou, if it
be only for a time, every particle which sullies the brightness of thy mind. Return
into thyself content to give but asking no one--asking nothing."
Now
this cleansing process you set about only under the crucifixion of pain. Human
nature is obdurate. For ages the animal propensities have been developed.
Unless drastic methods be employed they are impossible of subjugation. There is
nothing like pain as a teacher. Because first it is a purifier. Once your
nature has been passed through the fire of suffering it will have known the
serious side of life. It will represent sterner stuff than the mere gibbering,
imitative tendencies of the ape.
Next
pain is a discipliner of mind and body. Now if you remember all this, you will
be patient under suffering. You will not tug and pull, gnash your teeth and
break down. You will be indifferent alike to pain and pleasure. For as you
study and meditate, as wisdom opens out to your vision, you shall see that
there is ever a cause behind. You shall go on calmly working for higher ends,
not waiting for release as a condition of work.
Then
there are other reasons why you should not give way to fear. Says Professor
James "There is no sort of consciousness whatever, be it sensation,
feeling or idea, which does not directly and of itself discharge into some
motor effect." Says Tichner "It is a rule without exception that
every mental process has in its condition a bodily process, some change in the
central nervous system and more particularly in the cerebral cortex. No
psychosis without neurosis. There is no mental state which has not a peculiar
nervous state corresponding to it." A Mental Healer of wide influence says
"Just as truly as faith is a talisman by which we can successfully
conjure, so is fear a palsy by which disaster is insured." Rev. Tarley T.
Womer tells us the following story: It is said that a certain man tried to kill
his wife by throwing her from a boat while they were crossing a river. The
woman kept herself from sinking by holding on to the side of the boat. In his
furious rage the man struck her with an axe and severed two of her fingers. But
somehow, she was rescued and later on a reconciliation was affected and they
lived together happily. But for several succeeding generations every male child
that was born to the family had two fingers missing.
Your
thoughts effect your body just as they shape your destiny. Fear thoughts,
worrisome and melancholy thoughts destroy brain cells and smash down the tissue
walls, take the light out of your eyes, poison your blood, lower your vitality
and write O Coward! Coward!! on your forehead. Whereas the positive will is a
strong shield from which all destructive forces glance off like so many wisps
of straw. So long as we cling to this body, we give the spirit but small chance
of asserting itself. Our thoughts are bound to the physical and carnal side of
life. Our eyes have the mud of materialism in them. But just register a vow
that you will ever contemplate and stand by the Spirit, and try ever to realise
it and the heavens will clear out for you. Life, though serious and stern,
shall reflect power; shall shed healing and flash with the light of the Spirit.
If not, why not? Because, sir, you are still not earnest, still animalised. I
say "It is possible. Perfectly possible." I have a right to say it. I
have seen it with my own eyes. Others do it. Why can't you? Nature's laws are
rigid and uniform in their working. What one-man can-do others must be able to
do. Instead of one man, thousands of the children of India are doing it.
All
aspirants after Occultism have to set before themselves as a first step the
conquest of the physical nature. The Sanyasin is not permitted to remain under
the same roof for more than a day;--at the most three days. He has given up his
body. He knows it is the mortal, the grosser side of his nature. He trains it
after certain methods; purifies and subdues it, that done, he is free. He is
non-attached. He is the master. He can turn the full current of his life-forces
upon a single thought, and so vitalise it with the electric principle in
himself that it shall have all the potency of the charged wires of a dynamo.
There
has gone out a foolish and unpardonable impression from some ignorant Western
writers that the Yogi is an air-fed, emaciated, human wreck. Yes! You Westerns
would give way under these practices. You who are such staunch believers in
nourishment and nutrition could hardly believe the Swami Dharmananda Mahavarati
when he says: In the beginning of the year 18. I formed the acquaintance of a
Yogi who was then in his 260th year. In another year on my way from Afghanistan
I was highly delighted at seeing a woman (a Yogini) whose age could be
ascertained from her eyelashes which grew again but had not turned grey. She
was about 500 years old! Barth on yoga exercises says "I conscientiously
observed they can only end in folly and idiocy." Professor Huxley calls
them delusions! The face of Vivekananda is not a strange one to my American
readers. Is that inspiring appearance indicative of mental aberration? Now
listen to his account of himself: Many times I have been in the jaws of death,
starving, footsore and weary; for days and days I had had no food! and often
could walk no farther; I would sink down under a tree and life would seem
ebbing away. I could not speak, I could scarcely think, but at last the mind
would revert to the idea: "I have no fear of death; I never hunger nor
thirst. The whole of nature cannot crush me; it is my servant. Assert thy
strength, thou Lord of Lords! Regain thy lost empire! Arise and walk and stop
not, and I would rise up, reinvigorated, and here am I, living today. This is
our Swamin! Strong as a rock and one of India's Yogis. This man lived in
mountain caves for years. He climbed over the mountains on foot to Thibet. He
is by no means a solitary instance. Now reader! If you are wise, you will
meditate day after day on these things. The practical lessons will follow. In
the meantime fear not."
CHAPTER
XIV.
CONQUEST
OF FEAR.
"There is Nothing to Fear But Fear."
Fear
is one of the cardinal emotions that result from the play of certain forces in
the human personality. Our emotional nature is not our Self. I was amused to
read in a Phrenological magazine various remarks from certain learned
Westerners on the nature and attributes of the Soul. The question was
"What is the Soul?" One of the writers insisted upon having this
theory accepted by his readers: that the soul has its seat in the organs of Philoprogenitive
Ness and Friendship. Another one defines these two words as (1) Parental Love
and (2) Sociability and Union of Friends. To my readers the fallacy of their
statements ought to be quite plain. Our emotions, Love (in the lower phases),
Hate, Anger, Fear, etc., bear a direct relation to the external world. When the
Intellect dwells upon a desire with a view to externalise or realise the
latter, emotion results. It is thus the reaction of the Ego upon
sense-impressions received from the objective universe. They have a purely
physio-psychological origin and must not be confused with our Soul-processes
which are due to the Divine Urge from within, ever impelling the Spirit to
express itself upon matter through more and more improved types of personality.
Stop right now and understand: Your mission was to energise upon matter, to be
master and not slaves. But instead of setting about your business like a master
you took hold of the wrong end of the stick and became attached, nay,
identified yourself with your forms. This is the supreme tragedy of Maya: Man
forgot himself.
What
was the result? Ignorance;--and that developed fear. Just view yourself from a
physical standpoint. What are you? Are you any more than a geometrical point, a
mere human atom in a sea of tremendous forces that could crush you--the form of
flesh--in no time. There are monsters--seismic disturbances, cataclysms,
earthquakes, famines, gravity, lightning and what not! I need hardly mention
the Halley's comet scare to illustrate my point. There is no escaping it that
way. Consider yourself as a sack of blood, bone, muscle, cell-stuff and nerve
force and you are eternally damned.
No,
the remedy lies the other way. That remedy is a sovereign remedy. You must give
up your life, if you are to live truly. Sri Krishna taught it in the Gita. He
called it Vairagya: Dispassion: Non-attachment: Renunciation. Here is the
antidote. Open your Gita and read, "Weapons pierce not the Real Man nor
doth the fire burn him; the water affected him not; nor the wind drieth him,
nor bloweth him away. For he is impregnable and impervious to these things of
change--he is eternal, permanent, unchangeable and unalterable--and Real."
You
must understand your own nature, if you are to be Fearless. How? You will at
once ask me that question. My answer is: Learn to draw inwards and upwards. The
lower mind ever darts outwards. This is the sense-born brain that you read of
in Western works on Psychology generally. It rests on sensation. It is
enthralled by the limitations of temperament, heredity, environment, and the
sheaths and clogs of organization. It can only function on the plane of
Instinctivity. The way to conquer this mind was pointed out in the Gita when
Arjuna complained that it was impetuous, hard to crib as the wind, ever moving
outwards, ever restless. The warrior prince was famed for his prowess; had
faced strong foes and vanquished them; yet even he cowered before the impetuous
rush of this mind; even he broke down in despair. Why not?
Look
at the so-called great men of modern times. How full of pride and
approach-me-at-your-peril sort of hauteur they are! Just watch them when their
"material" or "social" self stands threatened by some
approaching danger. Gone is their inflated self-esteem. The whip has not yet
been applied; yet they shrink before the terrors of their imagination. Let me
say once more, that the worldly man, the purse-proud man, is proud and
conceited because his mind is befogged with the fumes of ignorance; a moment
shall come when he shall have to face the terrors of his animal soul! then he
must fight on his individual strength; he will cry for help from outside but
none shall come; the world of the senses which ensnared his mind so long, shall
drop away; and the Higher Self must then overcome the Lower. Many are the
birth-pangs, but the end,--the goal--justifies the means.
Now
turn to Shri Krishna's reply, which alone can solve this riddle for you:
Without doubt, O Mighty-armed, the mind is hard to curb and restless but it may
be curbed by constant practice (Abhyasa) and dispassion (Vairagya). The student
must renounce, once for ever, all that pertains to his Lower Self and thus pull
up the weeds that crowd the soil of his mind. The supreme result of Renunciation
is that it enables you to leap from your present position, where there are a
thousand strings tugging at your heart; and prepares the way for the inrush of
higher, loftier thoughts. By practice is meant constant and unremitting effort
at control of the mind, which, by the way, is a science by itself and may be
handled later on.
Now,
brother, renounce mentally, all attachment to impermanent ends. Dedicate
yourself to the Higher Life. The more completely you can do so, the greater the
influx of light, the clearer your vision spiritually. You fear because you are
laboring under the evil suggestions of your brain-born intellect. As you
succeed in "giving up," your soul shall expand and burst asunder' the
clinging chains of the senses,' which breed Fear through Ignorance. Resolve, to
be perfectly "Fearless" and so shall you be according to the strength
of your resolution.
THE GOAL OF THE YOGI AND LEVITATION
SURAGHO-THE LONG-LIVED YOGI THE SECRET OF HIS LONGEVITY
QUEEN CHUNDALAI, THE GREAT YOGIN
THE POWER OF DHARANA, DHIYANA, AND SAMYAMA YOGA.
THE POWER OF THE PRANAYAMA YOGA.
KUNDALINI, THE MOTHER OF THE UNIVERSE.
TO THE KUNDALINI—THE MOTHER OF THE UNIVERSE.
Yoga Vashist part-1 -or- Heaven Found by Rishi Singh Gherwal
Shakti and Shâkta -by Arthur Avalon (Sir John Woodroffe),
Mahanirvana Tantra- All- Chapter -1 Questions relating to the Liberation of Beings
Tantra of the Great Liberation
श्वेतकेतु और उद्दालक, उपनिषद की कहानी, छान्द्योग्यापनिषद, GVB THE UNIVERSITY OF VEDA
यजुर्वेद मंत्रा हिन्दी व्याख्या सहित, प्रथम अध्याय 1-10, GVB THE UIVERSITY OF VEDA
उषस्ति की कठिनाई, उपनिषद की कहानी, आपदकालेमर्यादानास्ति, _4 -GVB the uiversity of veda
वैराग्यशतकम्, योगी भर्तृहरिकृत, संस्कृत काव्य, हिन्दी व्याख्या, भाग-1, gvb the university of Veda
G.V.B. THE UNIVERSITY OF VEDA ON YOU TUBE
इसे भी पढ़े- इन्द्र औ वृत्त युद्ध- भिष्म का युधिष्ठिर को उपदेश
इसे भी पढ़े - भाग- ब्रह्मचर्य वैभव
Read Also Next Article- A Harmony of Faiths and Religions
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वैदिक इतिहास संक्षीप्त रामायण की कहानीः-
वैदिक ऋषियों का सामान्य परिचय-1
वैदिक इतिहास महाभारत की सुक्ष्म कथाः-
वैदिक ऋषियों का सामान्य परिचय-2 –वैदिक ऋषि अंगिरस
वैदिक विद्वान वैज्ञानिक विश्वामित्र के द्वारा अन्तरिक्ष में स्वर्ग की स्थापना
राजकुमार और उसके पुत्र के बलिदान की कहानीः-
पुरुषार्थ और विद्या- ब्रह्मज्ञान
संस्कृत के अद्भुत सार गर्भित विद्या श्लोक हिन्दी अर्थ सहित
श्रेष्ट मनुष्य समझ बूझकर चलता है"
पंचतंत्र- कहानि क्षुद्रवुद्धि गिदण की
कनफ्यूशियस के शिष्य चीनी विद्वान के शब्द। लियोटालस्टा
कहानी माधो चमार की-लियोटलस्टाय
पर्मार्थ कि यात्रा के सुक्ष्म सोपान
जीवन संग्राम -1, मिर्जापुर का परिचय
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