Mystical Guidelines to the Fine Art of Exploring
the Wonderful Within of Yourself
From the
Teachings of Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami, Founder of Hinduism Today
The
growth of the lotus flower is perhaps the best metaphor for the soul as it
unfolds in consciousness. It begins in the mud, like a soul caught up in the
instinctive nature; then it emerges into the water as a stem, like the soul
immersed in the intellect and emotions; and ultimately it appears above the
water as a bud, just as the soul awakens to its spiritual nature. For the soul,
this stage of the bud beginning to open as a beautiful flower marks the onset
of inner striving, seeking to know oneself and fathom the mysteries of life
through the introspective process of meditation. Meditation is an art, a
definite art, and well worth working for to become accomplished. It is not
easy, and yet it is not difficult. It only takes persistence, working day after
day to learn to control and train the outer as well as the subtle, inner
forces.
Meditation
is a long journey, a pilgrimage into the mind itself. Generally we become aware
that there is such a thing as meditation after the material world has lost its
attraction to us and previous desires no longer bind us to patterns of fear,
greed, attachment and ramification. We then seek through philosophy and
religion to answer the questions, "Who am I? Where did I come from? Where
am I going?" We ask others. We read books. We ponder and wonder. We pray.
We even doubt for a while that there is a Truth to be realized, or that we,
with all our seeming imperfection, can realize it if it does exist. Oddly
enough, this is the beginning of the meditator's journey on the path, for we
must empty ourselves fully before the pure, superconscious energies can flow
freely through us. Once this state of emptiness and genuine searching is
reached, we soon recognize the futile attempt to find Truth on the outside. We
vividly begin to know, from the depth of ourselves, a knowing we could not
explain or justify. We simply know that Reality, or the Self God, resides
within, and we must go within ourselves to realize it. Of itself, that knowing
is not enough. Even great efforts to meditate and vast storehouses of spiritual
knowledge are not enough. Many have tried to find the Truth this way. The Truth
is deeper and is discovered by the resolute devotee who dedicates his life to
the search; who lives a balanced life according to the yamas and niyamas, the
Vedic spiritual laws; who willingly undergoes change; who finds and obeys a
spiritual teacher, or satguru; and who learns precisely the disciplined art of
meditation. This, then, outlines the destination of the meditator's journey and
his means of travel.
One of
the first steps is to convince the subconscious mind that meditation is good
for us. We may want to meditate consciously, yet maintain fears or doubts about
meditation. Somewhere along the way, a long series of events occurred and, upon
reaction to them, awareness became externalized. We became geared to the
materialistic concepts of the external world. As we begin to feel that urgency
to get back within, the old patterns of thought and emotion, cause and effect,
naturally repeat themselves. For a while, the contents of the subconscious may
conflict with our concepts of what it is like to fully live spiritually. Our
habits will be undisciplined, our willpower ineffective. Quite often the
subconscious seems almost like another person, because it is always doing
something unanticipated.
In these
early stages, we must mould the areas that are different into a new lifestyle
so that there will be nothing in the subconscious that opposes what is in the
conscious or superconscious mind. Only when all three of these areas of consciousness
act in harmony can meditation be truly attained and sustained. For us to be
afraid of the subconscious is unwise, for it then holds a dominant position in
our life. The subconscious is nothing more than the accumulation of vibratory
rates of experience encountered by awareness when it was externalized, a
storehouse containing the past.
Remould
the Subconscious Mind
The
solution to subconscious confusion is to set a goal for ourselves in the
external world and to have a positive plan incorporating meditation daily as a
lifestyle within that goal. Through this positive initiative and daily effort
in meditation, awareness is centered within. We learn how to disentangle and
unexternalize awareness.
As soon
as strong initiative is taken to change our nature toward refinement, a new
inner process begins to take place. The forces of positive accomplishment from
each of our past lives begin to manifest in this one. The high points of a past
life, when something great has happened, become strung together. These merits
or good deeds are vibrations in the ether substance of our memory patterns,
because each one of us, right now, is a sum total of all previous experience.
All of the distractions of the external area of the mind begin to fade, and
positive meditation becomes easily attainable. It is not difficult to move our
individual awareness quickly within when distractions occur.
Set Goals
& New Patterns
This new
pattern of setting goals and meeting them strengthens the will. One such goal
is to perform sadhana every day without fail during a morning vigil period of
worship, japa, scriptural study and meditation. Daily meditation has to become
part of our lifestyle, not just a new something we do or study about. It must
become a definite part of us. We have to live to meditate. This is the only way
to reach the eventual goal on the path--the realization of the all-pervasive Sivam.
Deep meditation takes the power of our spiritual will, which is cultivated
through doing everything we do to perfection, through meeting the challenges of
our goals, and through its constant expression as we seek to do more than we
think we can each day. So, set your spiritual goals according to where you are
on the path. Set goals for deeper, more superconscious meditation, for a change
of your personality or outer nature, for better service to your fellow man, and
for a totally religious lifestyle.
Goals are
generally not used in spiritual life, because the inner mechanism of goal
setting is not clearly understood. Dynamic, successful people who go into
business for themselves have to have a positive, aggressive plan and keep their
lives in a good routine to achieve success. The most prominent among them begin
and end each day at a certain time in order to sustain the pressure of the
business world. We can and should approach the practice of meditation in a
similar way. Like the businessman, we want to succeed in our quest, the only
difference being the choice of an inner goal as opposed to the choice of an
outer goal, the fulfilment of which entangles us and further externalizes
awareness.
In the
early stages of meditation, it's very difficult to sit without moving, because
that has not been part of our lifestyle. The subconscious mind has never been
programmed to contentedly sit quietly. We didn't see our families doing that.
Perhaps we haven't seen anybody doing that. No example has been set. Therefore,
we have to be patient with ourselves and not sit for too long in the beginning.
Start by sitting for ten minutes without moving. In a few weeks, extend it to
twenty minutes, then a half hour. Thus we avoid being fanatical and allow the
subconscious to make its necessary adjustments.
These
adjustments are physical as well as emotional and intellectual. The nerve
currents rearrange themselves so that prolonged stillness and absence of
external activity is comfortable. Similarly, the philosophy of the path of
enlightenment fully penetrates every layer of the subconscious, adjusting
previous erroneous concepts of ourselves and enabling us to consciously intuit
various philosophical areas and know them to be right and true from our
personal experience of superconsciousness. This, then, may take a few years.
If we
plant a tree, we have to wait for it to grow and mature before we enjoy its
shade. So it is in meditation. We make our plans for beginning the practices of
meditation, then give ourselves enough time, several years, to fully adjust and
remould the subconscious mind. Living as we do in the externalized culture of
the West, we are conditioned to be in a hurry to get everything. When we try to
internalize awareness too quickly through various intense and sometimes
fanatical ways, we reap the reaction. Meditation goes fine for a brief span,
but then externalizes again according to the programming of our family and
culture.
To
permanently alter these patterns, we have to work gently to develop a new
lifestyle for the totality of our being--physically, emotionally,
intellectually and spiritually. This we do a little at a time. Wisdom tells us
that it cannot be done all at once. We have to be patient with ourselves. If we
are impatient on the path, failure is in view. We are going to fail, because
instant spiritual unfoldment is a fairy-tale concept. It is far better that we
recognize that there will be difficult challenges as the subconscious looms up,
with all of its conflicts and confusions, heavy and strong. When it does, we
must face them calmly, through spiritual journaling, vasana daha tantra. If our
eventual goal is clearly in mind and we have a positive step-by-step plan on
how to reach that goal, then we won't get excited when something goes wrong,
because we view our mental and emotional storms in their proper and temporary
perspective.
Face the
Barriers
Not only
does the subconscious create barriers in our own minds, it also draws to us the
doubts and worries of other people for us to face and resolve. There is such a
vast warehouse of negative conditioning against meditation that it is almost
useless to begin if we believe any of it at all. We have all heard a few of the
fears: "Something terrible must have happened to you as a child if you
want to go into that." "You don't love me anymore. That's why you
meditate--you're withdrawing." "You're just afraid of society and
responsibility. It's an escape from the real world that you can't cope
with." "You're going to be poor if you meditate. Everyone who
meditates is broke, you know." And so it goes, on and on.
We do
have to answer these objections for the subconscious and thus settle all doubts
within ourselves. Of course, the results of meditation will themselves convince
the subconscious of the benefit of inner sadhana as we bring forth perceptive
insights, renewed energy, a happy and balanced life and spiritual attainment.
Negative conditioning breaks down as we prove to ourselves according to our own
experience that it was wrong. Such conditioning is inhibiting to some and has
to be corrected. To counteract it, we can ask ourselves, "Why? What is it
all about? How did I attract these problems? Do I still have such doubts in my
subconscious, consciously unknown?" We can further ask, "Who has done
the conditioning? What was their life like? Were they happy people?"
Finally, from our own positive efforts to cognize, we actually remold the
subconscious, erase false concepts and become free.
The mind
in its apparently endless confusion and desires leads us by novelty from one
thing to the next. The reaction to this causes the miseries of the world, and
the miseries of the world happen inside of people. But occasionally we have to
call a halt to the whole thing and get into ourselves. That's the process of
meditation. It's an art. It's a faculty we have within ourselves which, when
developed, gives a balance and a sense to life. And everyone, whether they know
it or not, is searching, trying to find out what life is all about.
So many
people tell me, "Oh, I would like to study yoga, but I just don't have the
time," "I can't get quiet enough," or "The kids make too
much noise," or some excuse like that. They don't realize that you don't
become quiet automatically. Becoming quiet is a systematic process. You become
quiet systematically. It might take you two weeks of practice before you can
sit down and feel that you've made any progress at all, or even feel like
sitting down and trying to become quiet. But it's one of those things you
eventually have to do. You get up and cook breakfast because you have to eat.
You are hungry. And when you become hungry enough to get quiet within yourself,
you will do so automatically. You will want to. And then what happens? You will
sit down, and your mind will race. Say, "Mind, stop!" and see how
fast you can make your mind stop and become quiet. Say, "Emotions, you are
mind-controlled," and see how quiet you become.
Establish
the Right Conditions
We now
come to the practical aspects of meditation. In the beginning, it is best to
find a suitable room that is dedicated solely to meditation. If you were a
carpenter, you would get a shop for that purpose. You have a room for eating, a
room for sleeping. Now you need a separate room just for the purpose of
meditation. When you find it, wash the walls and ceiling, wash the windows.
Prepare a small altar if you like, bringing together the elements of earth,
air, fire and water. Establish a time for your meditations and meet those times
strictly. There will be days when you just don't feel like meditating. Good.
Those are often the best days, the times when we make strong inner strides. The
finest times to meditate are six in the morning, twelve noon, six in the evening,
and twelve midnight. All four of these times could be used, or just choose one.
The period of meditation should be from ten minutes to one-half hour to begin
with.
By
sitting up straight, with the spine erect, we transmute the energies of the
physical body. Posture is important, especially as meditation deepens and
lengthens. With the spine erect and the head balanced at the top of the spine,
the life force is quickened and intensified as energies flood freely through
the nerve system. In a position such as this, we cannot become worried,
fretful, depressed or sleepy during our meditation. But if we slump the
shoulders forward, we short-circuit the life energies. In a position such as
this, it is easy to become depressed, to have mental arguments with oneself or
another, or to experience unhappiness. So, learn to sit dynamically, relaxed
and yet poised. The full-lotus position, with the right foot resting on the
left thigh and the left foot above, resting on the right thigh, is the most
stable posture to assume, hands resting in the lap, right hand on top, with the
thumbs touching.
Control
Thinking with Your Breathing
The first
observation you may have when thus seated for meditation is that thoughts are
racing through the mind substance. You may become aware of many, many thoughts.
Also the breath may be irregular. Therefore, the next step is to transmute the
energies from the intellectual area of the mind through proper breathing, in
just the same way that proper attitude, preparation and posture transmuted the
physical-instinctive energies. Through regulation of the breath, thoughts are
stilled and awareness moves into an area of the mind which does not think, but
conceives and intuits.
There are
vast and powerful systems of breathing that can stimulate the mind, sometimes
to excess. Deep meditation requires only that the breath be systematically
slowed or lengthened. This happens naturally as we go within, but can be
encouraged by a method of breathing called kalibasa in Shum, my language of
meditation. During kalibasa, the breath is counted, nine counts as we inhale,
hold one count, nine counts as we exhale, hold one count. The length of the
beats, or the rhythm of the breath, will slow as the meditation is sustained,
until we are counting to the beat of the heart, hridaya spanda pranayama. This
exercise allows awareness to flow into an area of the mind that is intensely
alive, peaceful, blissful and conceives the totality of a concept rather than
thinking out the various parts.
Control
of the breath, to be learned properly, might take months or even years. That's
all right. If you were learning to play a musical instrument, it would take
months or even years to perfect the basic principles of making chords and
putting chords together into a melody. There is no hurry. Hurry is the age we
want to bypass when we meditate. The control of the breath is exactly the same
as the control of awareness, so it is good to be patient in the early stages
and perfect each element of practice.
During
meditation, the breath, the heartbeat, metabolism--it all slows down, just like
in sleep. You know, deep meditation and deep sleep are extremely similar.
Therefore, the practice of pranayama--regulation of the breath and the pranas,
the currents of the body, should really be mastered first. In the very same
way, the dancer doesn't just start out dancing. He starts out exercising first.
He may exercise strenuously for a year before he begins to really dance. The
pianist doesn't sit down at the piano and start with a concert. He starts with
the scales and with the chords. He starts by limbering his fingers, by
perfecting his rhythm and posture. Meditation has to be taught like one of the
fine arts. It's only the finely refined person who can really learn to
meditate. Not everyone who wants to meditate can learn to meditate. Not
everyone who wants to learn to dance or to play the piano can learn how to
really, really do it. We need this preparation of the physical body so that the
physical and emotional bodies behave themselves while you are in a deep state
of meditation.
Your
breath will slow down until you almost seem to stop breathing. Sometimes you
do, and you're breathing with an inner breath. You have to educate yourself to
that so it doesn't make you fearful and bring you out of meditation with a jerk
and a gasp, which can then inhibit you. You can get fearful in meditation. So,
good basics must be learned for one to become a deep meditator. You can spend
hours or years working with the breath. Find a good teacher first, one who
keeps it simple and gentle. You don't need to strain. Start simply by slowing
the breath down. Breathe by moving the diaphragm in stead of the chest. This is
how children breathe, you know. So, be a child. If you learn to control the
breath, you can be master of your awareness.
As we
learn to breathe rhythmically and from the diaphragm, we also release tensions
in the solar plexus. We learn to be spontaneous and free on the inside, and
life force runs through us in an uninhibited way. We achieve and learn to
maintain contentment, santosha. All of these things come through the simple
techniques we practice while in meditation. But the practice of meditation is
not the end. It is the total being of man that is the end to be sought for--the
well-rounded, content, spontaneous being that is totally free.
Going
Within, Four Easy Steps
After you
have quieted the body, and the breath is flowing regularly, close your eyes.
Close your ears and shut off the external sense perceptions. As long as you are
aware of sights and sounds on the outside, you are not concentrated. It is a
fallacy to think you have to find a totally silent place before you can go
within. When your senses are stilled, you don't hear any sounds. You're in a
state of silence. You don't hear a car that passes, you don't hear a bird that
sings, because your awareness has shifted to different perceptions. It helps,
but it's not necessary, to have a totally silent place. This is not always
possible, so it is best not to depend on outer silence. We must discover
silence within ourselves. When you are reading a book that is extremely
interesting, you are not hearing noises around you. You should be at least that
interested in your meditations.
Having
thus quieted the outer forces, we are prepared to meditate. Just sitting is not
enough. To meditate for even ten or fifteen minutes takes as much energy as one
would use in running around a city block three times. A powerful meditation
fills and thrills us with an abundance of energy to be used creatively in the
external world during the activities of daily life. Great effort is required to
make inner strides. We must strive very, very hard and meet each inner
challenge.
When we
go into meditation, what do we meditate upon? What do we think about during
meditation? Usually the sincere devotee will have a guru, or spiritual guide,
and follow his instructions. He may have a mantra, or mystic sound, which he
concentrates upon, or a particular technique or attitude he is perfecting. If
you have no guru or specific instructions, then here is a raja yoga exercise
that can enhance inner life, making it tangibly real and opening inner doors of
the mind. Use it to begin each meditation for the rest of your life.
1. Feel
the Body's Warmth: Simply
sit, quiet the mind, and feel the warmth of the body. Feel the natural warmth
in the feet, in the legs, in the head, in the neck, in the hands and face.
Simply sit and be aware of that warmth. Feel the glow of the body. This is very
easy, because the physical body is what many of us are most aware of. Take
five, ten or fifteen minutes to do this. There is no hurry. Once you can feel
this warmth that is created by the life force as it flows in and through the
body's cells, once you can feel this all over the body at the same time, go
within to the next step.
2. Become
Aware of the Nerve Currents: The second step is to feel the nerve currents of the body. There are
thousands of miles of nerve currents in each of us. Don't try to feel them all
at once. Start with the little ones, with the feeling of the hands, thumbs
touching, resting on your lap. Now feel the life force going through these
nerves, energizing the body. Try to sense the even more subtle nerves that
extend out and around the body about three or four feet. This may take a long
time. When you have lo cated some of these nerves, feel the energy within them.
Tune into the currents of life force as they flow through these nerves. This is
a subtle feeling, and most likely awareness will wander into some other area of
the mind. When this happens, gently bring it back to your point of
concentration, to feeling the nerves within the body and the energy within the
nerves.
3. Feel
the Power Within the Spine: The third step takes us deeper inside, as we become dynamically aware
in the spine. Feel the power within the spine, the powerhouse of energy that
feeds out to the external nerves and muscles. Visualize the spine in your
mind's eye. See it as a hollow tube or channel through which life energies
flow. Feel it with your inner feelings. It's there, subtle and silent, yet
totally intense. It is a simple feeling. We can all feel it easily. As you feel
this hollow spine filled with energy, realize that you are more that energy
than you are the physical body through which it flows, more that pure energy
than the emotions, than the thought force. Identify yourself with this energy
and begin to live your true spiritual heritage on this Earth. As you dive
deeper into that energy, you will find that this great power, your sense of
awareness and your willpower are all one and the same thing.
4. Become
Aware of Awareness: The
fourth step comes as we plunge awareness into the essence, the center of this
energy in the head and spine. This requires great discipline and exacting
control to bring awareness to the point of being aware of itself. This state of
being totally aware that we are aware is called kaif. It is pure awareness, not
aware of any object, feeling or thought. Go into the physical forces that
flood, day and night, through the spine and body. Then go into the energy of
that, deeper into the vast inner space of that, into the essence of that, into
the that of that, and into the that of that. As you sit in this state, new
energies will flood the body, flowing out through the nerve system, out into
the exterior world. The nature becomes very refined in meditating in this way.
Once you are thus centered within yourself, you are ready to pursue a
meditation, a mantra or a deep philosophical question.
Tame
Distraction
Throughout
your inner investigations in meditation, cling to the philosophical principle
that the mind doesn't move. Thoughts are stationary within the mind, and only
awareness moves. It flows from one thought to another, as the free citizen of
the world travels through each country, each city, not attaching himself
anywhere. When you are able, through practice, to sit for twenty minutes
without moving even one finger, your superconscious mind can begin to express
itself. It can even reprogram your subconscious and change past patterns of
existence. That is one of the wonderful things about inner life. That's why
it's inner life--it happens from the inside.
If you
just sit and breathe, the inner nerve system of the body of your psyche, your
soul, begins to work on the subconscious, to mold it like clay. Awareness is
loosened from limited concepts and made free to move vibrantly and buoyantly
into the inner depths where peace and bliss remain undisturbed for centuries.
However, if you move even a finger, you externalize the entire nervous system.
Like shifting gears from high to low, you change the intensity of awareness,
and the outer nerve system then is active. Superconscious programming ceases,
awareness returns to the body and the senses, and the external mind takes over.
By sitting still again at this point, it is just a matter of a few minutes for
the forces to quiet and awareness to soar in and in once again. Sitting quietly
in this state, you will feel when the superconscious nerve system begins to work
in the physical body. You may feel an entirely different flow through your
muscles, your bones and your cells. Let it happen.
As you
sit to meditate, awareness may wander into past memories or future happenings.
It may be distracted by the senses, by a sound or by a feeling of discomfort in
the body. This is natural in the early stages. Gently bring awareness back to
your point of concentration. Don't criticize awareness for wandering, for that
is yet another distraction. Distractions will disappear if you become intensely
interested and involved in your meditation. In such a state you won't even feel
the physical body. You have gone to a movie, read a book or sat working on a
project on your computer that was so engrossing you only later discovered your
foot had fallen asleep for a half hour because it was in an awkward position.
Similarly, once we are totally conscious on the inside, we will never be
distracted by the physical body or the outside.
If
distractions keep coming up in meditation over a long period of time, then
perhaps you are not ready to meditate. There has to be a point where
distractions stop. Until then you are hooked very strongly into the instinctive
or intellectual area of the mind, and the whole idea of meditation won't
inspire you very much. Therefore, you need something to spur you on inwardly.
In Hinduism when this occurs, the grace of the satguru is sought. By going to
your guru openly, you receive darshana, a little extra power that moves
awareness permanently out of the areas of distraction. You are then able to sit
in inner areas for long periods of time. Distractions become fewer and fewer,
for he has wrenched you out of the instinctive and intellectual areas and
changed the energy flow within your body. Learn from Your Sleep.
Get into
the habit of meditating before sleep each night. If you catch yourself dropping
off to sleep while sitting for meditation, know that your meditation is over.
The best thing to do is to deliberately go to sleep, because the spiritual
power is gone and has to be invoked or opened up again. After getting ready for
bed, sit in the lotus position and have a dynamic meditation for as long as you
can. When you feel drowsy, you may deliberately put your body to sleep in this
way. Mentally say to yourself, "Prana in the left leg, flow, go to sleep.
Prana in the right leg, flow, go to sleep. Prana in the left arm, flow, go to
sleep. Prana in the right arm, flow, go to sleep. Torso prana, flow, go to
sleep. Head filled with inner light, go to sleep." The first thing you
know, it's morning.
The whole
dream and sleep world is very interesting. Often we go into inner planes of
consciousness at night. How do you know if you have been in meditation all
through the night, studying at the inner-plane school in higher states of mind?
You will wake up all of a sudden with no interim period of sleepiness. You wake
up invigorated. There you are, as if you came out of nowhere back into external
consciousness. Otherwise, you wake up through the subconscious dream world. You
feel a little off-key, and you know that you have been in the dream or astral
world or the realms of intellectual aggressiveness much of the night. Striving
yoga students do go into inner-plane meditation schools for short periods of
time during their sleeping hours. This occurs when the mind is a well-trained
mind, a keen mind, a crystal-clear mind.
Perhaps
by this time you have seen the clear white light, or less intense inner light,
and you have seen how crystal clear and sharp it is. Each thought, each
feeling, each action has to be crystal clear and sharp to maintain and bring
through a balance of your consciousness to the external world. When this
happens, you have control over these states of consciousness, so much so that
you are your own catalyst, and you can slide into higher states and out to
external states of consciousness without being disturbed by one or the other.
When we
act and react in daily affairs, we dream at night. We are living in the
external or the aggressive magnetic force, called pingala. Thus, we dream in
pictures. Should a yogi live in the passive force, the magnetic indrawn force,
called ida, he feels and emotes on the astral plane. He would have a fretful,
eventful night, an emotional night. He would not dream in pictures as much as
he would in feeling. When one is living in the pure spiritual force, sushumna,
the primary life force, he flows from sleep into meditation. The meditator
should strive to put his body to sleep consciously and deliberately, after
balancing the external and internal magnetic forces. So, whether he is lying
down in his body or sitting in the lotus posture, he is in deep meditation,
going to schools of learning and schools of spiritual unfoldment within his own
mind. In the morning, many of my students remember inner-plane class activities
which occurred during the night, not as a dream but as their own experience.
So, you can meditate while you sleep, but don't sleep while you are meditating!
Clear the
Subconscious
After you
have practiced meditation for some time, your inner vision will become keen and
clear. For a while there may be the feeling of arrival, that you have at last
conquered life's cycles, that you are pure now and free at last. But soon,
layer by layer, your past will begin to unfold itself to you as your
subconscious mind shows you in vivid, pictorial form all the vibratory rates
you have put into it in this life. Like a tape recorder, it begins to play back
the patterns and vibrations of previous cause and effect.
Since
some of these memories and actions may not have been complimentary, you may try
to avoid looking at them. The more you avoid facing them, the more apparent
they will become. You might think that everyone is seeing them, but they are
not. This natural phase of spiritual unfoldment can be a pitfall, for these
associations and attachments of the past seem temporarily attractive as they
pass before the mind's eye. Old desires, old friends, old and comfortable
habits you thought were gone now come up to tempt awareness, to pull it back
into a seemingly desirable past. This event should not be taken too seriously.
It is natural and necessary, but you must avoid a fear of the process, which,
in order to stop the unpleasant feedback, often brings people to stop their efforts
at meditation. This is not the time to stop meditating. Nor is it the time to
avoid the past. It is the time to fully review each year of your life that led
you to where you are now.
As you
remain inwardly poised, watching the images of life but remaining detached,
they gradually fade away, leaving awareness free to dive ever deeper into
superconscious realms. This sometimes intense experience brings you into
renewed desire to live the kind of life that does not produce distorted images.
You become religious and consciously shape up your lifestyle according to the
yamas and niyamas, so that the reverberation of each action is positive in the
subconscious. You have seen the uncomplimentary results of living according to
the moods and emotions of the instinctive mind and the senses, and that
experience has taught a great lesson. In reviewing life according to this new
guideline, you may change your profession, your address, your diet and values.
You will undoubtedly find new friends, for it is essential to associate with
people that are of good character. Choose your friends carefully, but don't get
too closely attached. People clinging to people is one of the biggest
deterrents to the life of meditation.
Generally
as soon as someone gets on the path and starts meditating, he wants to tell
everyone else how to do it even before he has learned himself. This socializing
never produces inner results. Keep your meditation abilities and activities to
yourself. Don't talk about inner things with anyone but your guru. When it
comes others' time to turn within, they will do so naturally, just as you did.
That is the law.
Live a
Harmonious Life
Good
interpersonal relationships help the meditator a great deal, and meditation
helps keep those relations harmonious. When we get along nicely with others,
meditation becomes easy. If we have problems with other people, if we argue or
disagree mentally and verbally, we must work exceedingly diligently in order to
regain the subtlety of meditation. Poor interpersonal relationships are one of
the biggest barriers, for they antagonize awareness, causing it to flow through
the instinctive and intellectual forces. This puts stress and strain on the
nerve system and closes inner doors to superconsciousness.
If we
cannot get along with our fellow man, whom we watch closely, observing the
expressions on his face and the inflections of his voice, how will we ever get
along with the forces of the subconscious, which we cannot see, or the refined
superconscious areas of the inner mind, when we face them in meditation?
Obviously, we must conquer and harmonize all our relationships--not by working
to change the other person, but by working with that other person within our self,
for we are only seeing in him what is in us. He becomes a mirror. We cannot
allow the unravelling of the relationship by attempted outer manipulation,
discussion or analysis to become a barrier to deeper meditation. Instead, we
must internalize everything that needs change, work within ourselves and leave
other people out of it. This helps to smooth interpersonal relationships; and
as these relationships improve, so does our ability to meditate.
Our nerve
system is just like a harp. It can be played by other people. They can cause
many tones to be heard in our nerve system. All styles of music can be played
on a harp, but no matter what kind of music is played, the harp remains the
same. People can do all sorts of things to our nervous system, and make
patterns of tone and color appear. This does not hurt the nervous system. It,
like the harp, remains the same. The same nervous system can be played by our
superconscious or by our passions. We can experience beautiful knowledge from
within, which is the outgrowth of good meditation abilities, or experience a
mental argument with another person. All tones are played at different times
through the same nervous system. We want our nervous system to be played from
the inside out through the beautiful rhythm of superconsciousness. This is
bliss. We do not want to allow other people to affect our nerve system in a
negative way, only in a positive way. That is why it is imperative for those on
the path to be in good company.
Realize
that You Are Wonderful
Now we
are in a new age. Everything is changing. Everything is different. We must
believe that we can change by using our powers of meditation, for we are here,
on the surface of this Earth, to value and fulfil our existence. Value yourself
and your fellow man. Say to yourself again and again, "I am the most
wonderful person in the whole world!" Then ask yourself, "Why?
Because of my unruly subconscious? Not necessarily. Because of what I know
intellectually? Not so. I am the most wonderful person in the world because of
the great spiritual force that flows through my spine, head and body, and the
energy within that, and the That within that."
Know full
well that you can realize the very essence of this energy in this life. Feel
the spine and the power within it that gives independence, enthusiasm and control.
Then say to yourself, over and over, "I am a wonderful person," until
you can fully and unreservedly believe it. Lean on your own spine. Depending on
the greatness within is the keynote of this new age. Get your willpower going.
If you find an unruly part of your nature, reprogram it, little by little,
using the yamas and niyamas as your guideline. Live a dynamic, God-like life
every day. Dance with Siva, live with Siva and merge with Siva. Get into this
area of the mind called meditation. Make it a fundamental part of your life,
and all forms of creativity, success and greatness will find expression in your
life. Everyone is on this planet for one purpose. That purpose will be known to
you through your powers of meditation, through seeing and then finally
realizing your Self at the very core of the universe itself.
Enjoy
Unbridled Inspiration
Concentration
has to be practiced and perfected before meditation can begin. If you find that
you are sitting and trying not to fall asleep for a half hour, you have only
accomplished sitting and trying not to go to sleep for half an hour--and
perhaps refraining from scratching your nose when it begins to itch. But that
cannot be called meditation. Meditation is a transforming state of mind,
really. A person once said to me, "Well, I concentrate my mind by reading
a book, and when I'm reading, I don't hear a thing." This is not
concentration, but attention, the first step to concentration. Concentration is
thinking about one definite thing for a given length of time until you begin to
understand what you are thinking about. What should we concentrate upon? Start
with any solid object. Take your watch, for instance. Think about your watch.
Think about the crystal. Think about the hands. Let your mind direct itself
toward the mechanism of your watch, and then observe how your mind, after a few
moments, begins to wander and play tricks on you. You may start thinking about
alarm clocks or a noise in the street.
Each time
your concentration period is broken by a distraction, you must start all over
again. Breathe deeply and coordinate all the energies of your body so that you
are not distracted by an itch or a noise. Direct your awareness once again to
your watch. Before you know it, you will be thinking about a movie you saw four
weeks ago and living through all the fantasies of it again without realizing
that ten minutes of your time has gone by. Be careful and gentle with your
awareness, however. Bring it back to the object of your concentration in a
firm, relaxed manner and say to yourself, "I am the master of my
thought." Eventually, your awareness will begin to do just what you want
it to.
Once you
are able to direct your awareness, without wavering, upon one object, you will
begin to understand what you are concentrating upon, and you will find that
this state of understanding is the beginning of your meditation. You are more
alive in this state than you were in the noisy condition of your mind before
you began to concentrate, and you come forth from your meditation a little
wiser than you were before you went in.
The next
state of consciousness, which is attained when meditation has been perfected,
is contemplation. In the contemplative state of awareness you will feel the
essence of all life pouring and radiating through your body and through the
object you have been meditating upon. When contemplation is sustained, the
final step is samadhi, and that is finding or becoming your true Self, which is
beyond all conditions of your mind, all phases of consciousness. Only after you
have attained samadhi can you answer the question "Who am I?" from
your own experience. Only then will you know that you are all-pervasive, and
finally, in the deepest samadhi, that you are causeless, timeless, spaceless
and that you have been able to realize this through a balance of your awakened
inner and outer consciousness, a bringing together of the forces of your mind
in yoga, or union.