SECTION
FIVE
Transformation of the Subconscient and the Inconscient
SO
LONG as there is not the supramental change down to the subconscient, complete
and full, the lower nature has always a hold on some part of the being.
The subconscient difficulty is
the difficulty now − because the whole struggle in the general sadhana is
now there. It is in the subconscient, no longer in vital or conscious physical
that the resistance is all massed together.
The inner being does not depend
on the subconscient, but the outer has d epended on it for thousands of lives
− that is why the outer being and physical consciousness's habit of
response to the subconscient can be a formidable obstacle to the progress of
the sadhana and is so with most. It keeps up the repetition of the old movements,
is always pulling down the consciousness and opposing the continuity of the
ascent and bringing the old nature or else the tamas (non-illumination and
non-activity) across the descent. It is only if you live wholly and dynamically
in the inner being and feel the outer as a quite superficial thing that you can
get rid of the obstruction or minimise it until the transformation of the outer
being can be made complete.
The subconscient is a dark and
ignorant region, so that it is natural that the obscurer movements of the
Nature should have more power there. It is so indeed with all the lower parts
of the nature from the lower vital downwards. But it does send up
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good things also though more
rarely. It has in the course of the sadhana to be illumined and made a support
of the higher consciousness in the physical nature instead of a basis of the
instinctive lower movements.
The subconscient is to be
penetrated by the light and made a sort of bed-rock of truth, a store of right
impressions, right physical responses to the Truth. Strictly speaking, it will
not be subconscient at all, but a sort of bank of true values held ready for
use.
The work [of sadhana in the
subconscient] is of a general nature, not individual, but necessarily everyone
here is to some extent affected by it. If consciousness and light is not
brought into the subconscient, then there can be no change. For it is in the
subconscient that there are the seeds of all the old lower vital instincts and
movements and however much they may be cleared in the lower vital itself, they
may sprout up again from below. Also the subconscient is the secret basis of
the bodily consciousness. The subconscient must admit into itself the higher
consciousness and the Truth light.
It is only if the mind is silent
that the subconscient can be empty. What has to be done is to get all the old
ignorant un yogic stuff out of the subconscient.
If the subconscient is emptied,
it would mean that you have got beyond the ordinary consciousness and the
subconscient itself is prepared to be an instrument of the Truth.
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[First effects of the light
penetrating and changing the subconscient:]
1. The
subconscient begins to show more easily what is in it.
2. Things
rising from there come to the awareness of the mind before they can touch or
affect the consciousness.
3. The
subconscient becomes less the refuge of the ignorant and obscure movements and
more an automatic response of the material to the higher consciousness.
4. It gives
less covert and less passage to the suggestions of the hostile forces.
5. It is more easy to be
conscious in sleep and to have higher forms of dream experience. Hostile dreams
− e.g. sex-suggestions can be met and stopped in the dream itself and any
result like emission prevented.
6. A waking
will put on the dream state before sleeping becomes more and more effective.
The conscious parts have to be
prepared first − impossible to deal successfully with the subconscient
till then, except in points and details. Just as the musician has first to
learn the right principle and execution of his music with his mind and vital
(aesthetic) perception and will − and teach his fingers to execute it
− afterwards the subconscient in his fingers will learn its work and do
the right thing of itself − e.g. touching the right keys without his eyes
having to follow.
It is because the subconscient
being just below the physical, the enlightened physical can act on it directly
and completely in a way in which mind and vital cannot and by this direct
action can help to liberate the mind and vital also.
It is not a fact that formless
things can have no power − all
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that is necessary is that they
should have a force in them. The subconscient influences the body because all
in the body has developed out of the subconscient and all in itself still is
only half conscious and much of its action can be called subconscious. It is
therefore much more easily influenced by the subconscious than by the conscious
mind and conscious will or even the vital mind and vital will except in those
things in which a conscious mental or vital control has been established and
the subconscious itself has accepted it. If it were not so, man's control of
his actions and physical states would be complete, there would be no illness or
if there were, it would be immediately cured by mental action. But it is not
so. For that reason the higher consciousness has to be brought down, the body
and the subconscient enlightened by it and accustomed to obey its control.
What you write is correct. When
the physical consciousness has to be changed it is of course essential to work
in the subconscient, as it has a great influence on the physical which is very
dependent on it. The loss of consciousness comes naturally at first when the
subconscient is being worked upon. You have to be careful that it does not
become habitual. If you react with a will for the change of this tendency (no
struggle is needed) it will pass in time.
It [the subconscient
vital-physical] is not in touch with the psychic at all. It is full of
obscurity, not conscient, entirely ignorant.
The material is for the most part
subconscient − it depends upon the subtle parts for its waking
consciousness.
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It is good. Emptiness and silence
of the consciousness prepare the being to live within with the outer
consciousness only as a means of communication and action on the physical world
instead of living in the external only.
As there is a
superconscient (something above our present consciousness) above the head from
which the higher consciousness comes down into the body, so there is also a
subconscient (something below our consciousness) below the feet. Matter is
under the control of this power, because it is that out of which it has been
created—that is why matter seems to us to be quite unconscious. The material
body is very much under the influence of this power for the same reason; it is
why we are not conscious of what is going on in the body, for the most part.
The outer consciousness goes down into this subconscient when we are asleep,
and so it becomes unaware of what is going on in us when we are asleep except
for a few dreams. Many of these dreams rise up from the subconscient and are
made up of old memories, impressions etc. put together in an incoherent way.
For the subconscient receives impressions of all we do or experience in our lives
and keeps these impressions in it, sending up often fragments of them in sleep.
It is a very important part of the being, but we can do nothing much with it by
the conscious will. It is the higher Force working in us that in its natural
course will open the subconscient to itself and bring down into it its control
and light.
The
not-speaking mind is all right. It helps usually at this stage the
concentration of the being.
The dream you had was really a
rising up of past formations or impressions from the subconscient. All that we
do, feel or experience in life leaves an impression, a sort of essential memory
of itself in the subconscient and this can come up in dreams even long after
those feelings, movements or experiences have ceased in the conscious
being,—still more when they have been recent and are only now or lately thrown
away from the mind or vital. Thus long after one has ceased to think of old
acquaintances or
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relatives dreams about them go on
coming up from this source. So too when sex or anger no longer troubles the
conscious vital, dreams of sex or dreams of anger and strife can still rise. It
is only when the subconscient is cleared that they cease; meanwhile they are of
not much importance (provided one understands what they are and is not
affected) so long as the old movements are not allowed to recur or remain in
the waking state.
It [insincerity in the
subconscient vital] can only be dangerous if the waking mind accepts it. All
the same, so long as it remains in the subconscient, it keeps a seed of
possibility − so it must be got out altogether.
What is happening just now is
that there is a great uprush of the subconscient in which are the seeds or the
strong remnants of the habitual difficulties of the nature. But its character
is a confusion and obscurity without order or clear mental or other arrangement
− it is a confused depression,
discouragement, inability to progress − a feeling of what are we doing?
why are we here? how can we go on? will anything ever be attained? and along
with it old difficulties recurring in a confused and random but often violent
and distressing fashion.
You cannot
“begin” again; it would be too difficult a thing in this confusion. You have to
get back to the point at which you deviated. If you can get back to the Peace that
was coming and with it aspire to the freedom and wideness of the Purusha
consciousness forming a point d'appui of detachment and separation
from all this confusion of the subconscient Prakriti, then you will have a firm
ground to stand upon and proceed. But for that you must make your choice firmly
and refuse to be upset at every moment and diverted from it.
There is always a great deal to
do in the subconscient. But if
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you especially feel it [the need
of clearance in the subconscient] it must be that the time for clearing it has
come. If the other parts keep open and responsive this should not give too much
trouble.
All that is probably things that
rise from the subconscient − or perhaps the subconscient itself is being
worked upon to arrive at a state of light and peace. It sometimes enters into a
happy condition, sometimes into a neutral one, sometimes it raises up a
causeless sorrow. The movements of the subconscient take place even without
reason, of themselves, owing to the inherent habit in Nature, that is why the
grief is without discoverable cause. It is only because it is in the
subconscient that you cannot locate it. When the grief comes, you must
dissociate yourself from it and reject it, not taking it as your own, until it
ceases to come and call down the Mother's peace and Ananda in its place.
It is good; we will certainly
help you in the way you ask us.
As for the mood
that came on you, it comes up from the subconscient, where things of the old
nature sink when they are rejected. When moods come up like that, you have to
remain quiet and call the Mother till it is gone. After a time this power of
mechanical repetition without reason from the subconscient gets worn out and
disappears − then these moods come no more.
It is most probably something
that has come from outside and covered. This happens at this stage when the
working is in the physical and subconscient − for that is the nature of
these parts, to live in the external with the inner being covered up by a sort
of natural veil of obscurity. Therefore when one makes the opening through this
veil, it has a tendency to come back. When that happens, one has to remain
undisturbed and call down the Force and Light from above to remove the
obstacle. This must
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be done till the opening is
permanent and complete and no covering is possible.
It is always so with the
impressions left in the subconscient physical. One day they come as pale and
distant things, with no life in them, another they seem to get a certain force.
It depends on whether they are caught up by a current of force from the
universal or rise up of themselves with no force except what is left in them
from the past.
What must have happened was that
as the physical consciousness is now being worked upon, all the past
impressions (which usually remain in the subconsciousness and rise up from time
to time and meanwhile influence the thought and action and feelings without
being noticed) rose up in a mass and threw themselves on the consciousness.
This usually happens in order that the sadhak may see and reject them and get
liberated entirely (in the subconscious as well as the conscious parts) from
his physical past. That is why you felt afterwards the sense of release. The throat
is the centre of the externalizing mind (physical mind).
It is most probably from the
subconscient. When these memories arise, they should be treated on the basis
that they have arisen in order to be dissolved and dismissed, so that by their
persistent dissolution one may not be tied by the impressions in the
subconscient to the past (that is the machinery of Karma) but free for the
spirit's unbound future.
The best is
when you can get the true knowledge about it, why it happened and what purpose
it served; then it goes easily.
This review of the past is a very
good sign, for it usually comes
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when there is a preparation of
the physical consciousness and subconscient for change. One has not to regret
the stumbles of the past but look with a quiet eye and understand, for all came
− the stumbles included − as part of the necessary experience by
which the being learns and advances through error to the Light and through the
imperfections of Nature towards the divine perfection.
What you describe seems to be in
its nature an uncontrolled rushing up of the subconscient taking the form of a
mechanical recurrence of old thoughts, interests or desires with which the
physical mind is usually occupied. If that were all, the only thing would be to
reject them, detach yourself and let them pass till they quieted down. But I
gather from what you write that there is an attack, an obscure force using
these recurrences to invade and harass the mind and body. It would be helpful
if you could give an exact description of the main character of the thoughts
that come, what things and ideas they are concerned with etc. But in any case
the one thing to do is to open yourself to the Mother's force by aspiration,
thought of the Mother or any other way and let it drive out the attack. We
shall send Force continually till this is done. It will be better to let us
know every three days or so how you go on, for that will help to make the
action of the Force more precise.
These cravings and desires are
old habits of the physical which came to it from the universal Nature and which
it accepted and took as part of itself and its life. When these things are
rejected by the waking consciousness they try to take refuge in the
subconscient or else in what may be called the environmental consciousness and
from there they press upon the consciousness trying to recover their hold or
simply to recur for a time. If they are in the subconscient they come up most
usually in dreams, but they may also surge up into the waking consciousness. If
they
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come from the environment they
take the form of thought-suggestions or impulses or a vague restless or
disturbing pressure. It is probably this environmental pressure that you feel.
When the body is full of the new consciousness, Peace and Power at the same
time, then this outward pressure is felt but can no longer disturb and finally
it recedes to a distance (no longer pressing immediately on the physical mind
or body) and either gradually or rapidly disappears.
By
environmental consciousness I mean something that each man carries around him,
outside his body, even when he is not aware of it, − by which he is in
touch with others and with the universal forces. It is through this that the
thoughts, feelings etc. of others pass to enter into one − it is through
this also that waves of the universal force − desire, sex, etc. come in
and take possession of the mind, vital or body.
These thoughts that attack in
sleep or in the state between sleep and waking do not belong to any part of
your conscious being, but come either from the subconscient or from the
surrounding atmosphere through the subconscient. If they are thoughts you had
in the past and have thrown out from you, then what rises must be impressions
left by them in the subconscient—for all things thought, felt or experienced
leave such impressions which can rise from there in sleep. Or the thoughts can
have gone out from you into the environmental consciousness, that is, an
atmosphere of consciousness which we carry around us and through which we are
connected with universal Nature and from there they may be trying to return
upon you. As it is difficult for them to succeed in the waking state, they take
advantage of the absence of conscious control in sleep and appear there. If it
is something new and not yours, then it can be neither of these, but an attack
of some outside Force.
It is to be hoped that as you have rejected
them, they will not come again, but if they do, then you must put a conscious
will before going to sleep that they should not come. A suggestion of that kind
on the subconscient is often successful, if not at
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once, after a time; for the
subconscient learns to obey the will put upon it in the waking state.
What is taking place, the
subsiding of the surge of subconscient thoughts and movements, and their
pressure on the mind, is just what ought to take place. It is not a suppression
or pulling back into the subconscient, it is an expulsion from the conscious
self into which it has arisen. It is true that something more may rise from the
subconscient, but it will be what is still left there. What is now rejected, if
it goes anywhere and is not abolished, will go not into the subconscient but
into the surrounding consciousness which one carries around him − once
there it no longer belongs to oneself in any way and if it tries to return it
will be as foreign matter which one has not to accept or allow any longer.
These are the two last stages of rejection by which one gets rid of the old
things of the nature, they go down into the subconscient and have to be got rid
of from there or they go out into the environmental consciousness and are no
longer ours.
The idea that
one should let what rises from the subconscient go on repeating itself till it
is exhausted is not the right idea. For that would needlessly prolong the
troubled condition and might be harmful. When these things rise they have to be
observed and then thrown out, not kept.
Sri Aurobindo was unable up till
now to answer your letter... but these
answers, given below point by point, are still sent as he thinks they may be of
use to you for your future sadhana:
1. “Ugly
scenes” etc.—
This must be
something rising up from the subconscient in which there are many strange
things of the kind − or else it is formations thrown on the lower vital
consciousness from the corresponding plane in universal Nature where there are
forces which take delight in dirt and ugliness and all kinds of
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perversities. In either case a
steady detached rejection is the reaction required.
2. There is no
objection to using one's bed as \=asana.
3. Sex trouble—
This is a quite usual phenomenon
when one stops sexual activity and rejects it in the conscious mind and vital.
It takes refuge in the subconscient where the mind has no direct control and
comes up in the form of dreams causing emission. That lasts so long as the
subconscient itself is not cleared. This can sometimes be done by putting a
strong will or, if possible, a concrete current of Force on the sex-centre
before sleeping against this thing happening. The success is not always
immediate, but if effectively done it tends first to reduce frequency and
finally stop it.
These things
(accumulation of urine, hot stimulating food etc.) are all predisposing or
auxiliary causes or can be so. There is often as described a rhythm in this
subconscient urge − it happens at a particular time in the month or else
after a fixed period of time (week, fortnight, month, six months).
4.
Classifications of Samadhi in Vedanta—
For this yoga
these divisions are not so important.
5. Experience
of Samadhi—
It is not indispensable
at this stage; but if it comes of itself, it can be allowed to develop. But
experience in the waking state is more important for this yoga. Samadhi is a
help for reaching the inner depths of the consciousness. One is able to go more
easily by it inward below the surface being to get into direct contact with
other supraphysical planes of experience, to pass into other worlds and return,
to contact happenings distant in space and time, to see what is in the
supraconscient and to enter into what is supraconscient to our mental status.
6. The cosmic
Consciousness; the psychic—
These things
cannot be sufficiently dealt with in a short compass. The ordinary
consciousness of man is confined to his own individuality − he can enter
into the consciousness of others and of the universe only by indirect means or
a superficial and incomplete apprehension, by sense experience, contacts of
emotional sympathy, mental concepts, analogy with his own
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movements, inference. In yoga at
a certain point this limitation breaks down, the consciousness enlarges itself,
becomes directly aware of the Cosmic Self and knows the individual self to be
one with it; of the Cosmic Energy and meets directly the action of the cosmic
forces; of the cosmic mind, life, matter and feels first a contact of its
individual mind, life, body with them, then a unity in which one's own
individual mentality, vitality, physicality is felt as only a part of the
universal, a wave of the ocean, a dynamo receiving and formulating the universal
forces. Finally, the individual melts into the cosmic Consciousness, the whole
world is felt in oneself and oneself suffused through the world − it is
the cosmic Consciousness, Mind, Life, material Energy that works through the
individual function. The separate ego either does not exist or is only a
convenience for the universal Spirit and its action. This is the complete
consummation of the cosmic Consciousness, but in its fullness it is not common,
belonging properly to what we may call the overmind realisation; but a constant
partial and growing experience of it or an increasing contact with the cosmic
Consciousness is a normal part of yoga.
What is meant
in the terminology of the yoga by the psychic is the soul element in the
nature, the pure psyche or divine nucleus which stands behind mind, life and
body (it is not the ego) but of which we are only dimly aware. It is a portion
of the Divine and permanent from life to life, taking the experience of life
through its outer instruments. As this experience grows it manifests a
developing psychic personality which insisting always on the good, true and
beautiful, finally becomes ready and strong enough to turn the nature towards
the Divine. It can then come entirely forward, breaking through the mental,
vital and physical screen, govern the instincts and transform the nature.
Nature no longer imposes itself on the soul, but the soul, the Purusha, imposes
its dictates on the nature.
Your practice of psycho-analysis
was a mistake. It has, for the time at least, made the work of purification
more complicated,
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not easier. The psycho-analysis
of Freud is the last thing that one should associate with yoga. It takes up a
certain part, the darkest, the most perilous, the unhealthiest part of the
nature, the lower vital subconscious layer, isolates some of its most morbid
phenomena and attributes to it and them an action out of all proportion to its
true role in the nature. Modern psychology is an infant science, at once rash,
fumbling and crude. As in all infant sciences, the universal habit of the human
mind − to take a partial or local truth, generalise it unduly and try to
explain a whole field of Nature in its narrow terms − runs riot here.
Moreover, the exaggeration of the importance of suppressed sexual complexes is
a dangerous falsehood and it can have a nasty influence and tend to make the
mind and vital more and not less fundamentally impure than before.
It is true that
the subliminal in man is the largest part of his nature and has in it the
secret of the unseen dynamisms which explain his surface activities. But the
lower vital subconscious which is all that this psycho-analysis of Freud seems
to know, − and even of that it knows only a few ill-lit corners, − is
no more than a restricted and very inferior portion of the subliminal whole.
The subliminal self stands behind and supports the whole superficial man; it
has in it a larger and more efficient mind behind the surface mind, a larger
and more powerful vital behind the surface vital, a subtler and freer physical
consciousness behind the surface bodily existence. And above them it opens to
higher superconscient as well as below them to lower subconscient ranges. If
one wishes to purify and transform the nature, it is the power of these higher
ranges to which one must open and raise to them and change by them both the
subliminal and the surface being. Even this should be done with care, not
prematurely or rashly, following a higher guidance, keeping always the right
attitude; for otherwise the force that is drawn down may be too strong for an
obscure and weak frame of nature. But to begin by opening up the lower
subconscious, risking to raise up all that is foul or obscure in it, is to go
out of one's way to invite trouble. First, one should make the higher mind and
vital strong and firm and full of light and peace from above; afterwards one
can open up or even dive into the subconscious with
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more safety and some chance of a
rapid and successful change.
The system of
getting rid of things by anubhava can
also be a dangerous one; for on this way one can easily become more entangled
instead of arriving at freedom. This method has behind it two well-known
psychological motives. One, the motive of purposeful exhaustion, is valid only
in some cases, especially when some natural tendency has too strong a hold or
too strong a drive in it to be got rid of by vicāra or by the process of rejection and the substitution of
the true movement in its place; when that happens in excess, the sadhak has
sometimes even to go back to the ordinary action of the ordinary life, get the
true experience of it with a new mind and will behind and then return to the
spiritual life with the obstacle eliminated or else ready for elimination. But
this method of purposive indulgence is always dangerous, though sometimes
inevitable. It succeeds only when there is a very strong will in the being
towards realisation; for then indulgence brings a strong dissatisfaction and
reaction, vairāgya, and the will
towards perfection can be carried down into the recalcitrant part of the
nature
The other
motive for anubhava is of a more
general applicability; for in order to reject anything from the being one has
first to become conscious of it, to have the clear inner experience of its
action and to discover its actual place in the workings of the nature. One can
then work upon it to eliminate it, if it is an entirely wrong movement, or to
transform it if it is only the degradation of a higher and true movement. It is
this or something like it that is attempted crudely and improperly with a
rudimentary and insufficient knowledge in the system of psycho-analysis. The
process of raising up the lower movements into the full light of consciousness
in order to know and deal with them is inevitable; for there can be no complete
change without it. But it can truly succeed only when a higher light and force
are sufficiently at work to overcome, sooner or later, the force of the
tendency that is held up for change. Many, under the pretext of anubhava, not only raise up the adverse
movement, but support it with their consent instead of rejecting it, find
justifications for continuing or repeating it and so go on playing with it,
indulging its return, eternising it; afterwards when they want to get rid of
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it, it has got such a hold that
they find themselves helpless in its clutch and only a terrible struggle or an
intervention of divine grace can liberate them. Some do this out of a vital
twist or perversity, others out of sheer ignorance; but in yoga, as in life,
ignorance is not accepted by Nature as a justifying excuse. This danger is
there in all improper dealings with the ignorant parts of the nature; but none
is more ignorant, more perilous, more unreasoning and obstinate in recurrence
than the lower vital subconscious and its movements. To raise it up prematurely
or improperly for anubhava is to risk
suffusing the conscious parts also with its dark and dirty stuff and thus
poisoning the whole vital and even the mental nature. Always therefore one
should begin by a positive, not a negative experience, by bringing down
something of the divine nature, calm, light, equanimity, purity, divine
strength into the parts of the conscious being that have to be changed; only
when that has been sufficiently done and there is a firm positive basis, is it
safe to raise up the concealed subconscious adverse elements in order to
destroy and eliminate them by the strength of the divine calm, light, force and
knowledge. Even so, there will be enough
of the lower stuff rising up of itself to give you as much of the anubhava as you will need for getting
rid of the obstacles; but then they can be dealt with with much less danger and
under a higher internal guidance.
I find it difficult to take these
psycho-analysts at all seriously when they try to scrutinise spiritual
experience by the flicker of their torch-lights, − yet perhaps one ought
to, for half-knowledge is a powerful thing and can be a great obstacle to the
coming in front of the true Truth. This new psychology looks to me very much
like children learning some summary and not very adequate alphabet, exulting in
putting their a-b-c-d of the subconscient and the mysterious underground
super-ego together and imagining that their first book of obscure beginnings
(c-a-t cat, t-r-e-e tree) is the very heart of the real knowledge. They look
from down up and explain the higher lights by the lower obscurities; but the
foundation of these things is above and not
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below, upari budhna eşām. The superconscient, not
the subconscient, is the true foundation of things. The significance of the
lotus is not to be found by analysing the secrets of the mud from which it
grows here; its secret is to be found in the heavenly archetype of the lotus
that blooms for ever in the Light above. The self-chosen field of these
psychologists is besides poor, dark and limited; you must know the whole before
you can know the part and the highest before you can truly understand the
lowest. That is the promise of the greater psychology awaiting its hour before
which these poor gropings will disappear and come to nothing.
II
There is another cause of the
general inability to change which at present afflicts the sadhak. It is because
the sadhana, as a general fact, has now and for a long time past come down to
the Inconscient; the pressure, the call is to change in that part of the nature
which depends directly on the Inconscient, the fixed habits, the automatic
movements, the mechanical repetitions of the nature, the involuntary reactions
to life, all that seems to belong to the fixed character of a man. This has to
be done if there is to be any chance of a total spiritual change. The Force
(generally and not individually) is working to make that possible, its pressure
is for that, − for, on the other levels, the change has already been made
possible (not, mind you, assured to everybody). But to open the Inconscient to
light is a herculean task; change on the other levels is much easier. As yet
this work has only begun and it is not surprising that there seems to be no
change in things or people. It will come in time, but not in a hurry.
As for
experiences, they are all right but the trouble is that they do not seem to
change the nature, they only enrich the consciousness − even the
realisation, on the mind level, of the Brahman seems to leave the nature almost
where it was, except for a few. That is why we insist on the psychic
transformation as the first necessity − for that does change the nature
− and its chief instrument is bhakti, surrender, etc.
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The sunlit path can only be
followed if the psychic is constantly or usually in front or if one has a
natural spirit of faith and surrender or a face turned habitually towards the
sun or psychic predisposition (e.g. a faith in one's spiritual destiny) or, if
one has acquired the psychic turn. That does not mean that the sunlit man has
no difficulties; he may have many, but he regards them cheerfully as “all in
the day's work”. If he gets a bad beating, he is capable of saying, “Well, that
was a queer go but the Divine is evidently in a queer mood and if that is his
way of doing things, it must be the right one; I am surely a still queerer
fellow myself and that, I suppose, was the only means of putting me right.” But
everybody can't be of that turn, and surrender which would put everything right
is, as you say, difficult. At least it is difficult to do completely. That is
why we do not insist on total surrender at once, but are satisfied with a
little to begin with, the rest to grow as it can.
I have
explained to you why so many people (not by any means all) are in this gloomy
condition, dull and despondent. It is the tamas, the inertia of the
Inconscient, that has got hold of them. But also it is the small physical vital
which takes only an interest in the small and trivial things of the ordinary
daily and social life and nothing else. When formerly the sadhana was going on
on the higher levels (mind, higher vital, etc.), there was plenty of vigour and
verve and interest in the details of the Ashram work and life as well as in an
inner life; the physical vital was carried in the stream. But for many this has
dropped; they live in the unsatisfied vital physical and find everything
desperately dull, gloomy and without interest or issue. In their inner life the
tamas from the Inconscient has created a block or a bottle-neck and they do not
find any way out. If one can keep the right condition and attitude, a strong
interest in work or a strong interest in sadhana, then this becomes quiescent.
That is the malady. Its remedy is to keep the right condition and to bring
gradually or, if one can, swiftly, the light of the higher aspiration into this
part of being also, so that whatever the conditions of the environment, it may
keep, it also, the right poise. Then the sunlit path would seem less
impossible.
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The extreme acuteness of your
difficulties is due to the yoga having come down against the bed-rock of
Inconscience which is the fundamental basis of all resistance in the individual
and in the world to the victory of the Spirit and the Divine Work that is
leading toward that victory. The difficulties themselves are general in the
Ashram as well as in the outside world. Doubt, discouragement, diminution or
loss of faith, waning of the vital enthusiasm for the ideal, perplexity and a
baffling of the hope for the future are the common features of the difficulty.
In the world outside there are much worse symptoms such as the general increase
of cynicism, a refusal to believe in anything at all, a decrease of honesty, an
immense corruption, a preoccupation with food, money, comfort, pleasure, to the
exclusion of higher things, and a general expectation of worse and worse things
awaiting the world. All that, however acute, is a temporary phenomenon for
which those who know anything about the workings of the world-energy and the
workings of the Spirit were prepared. I myself foresaw that this worst would
come, the darkness of night before the dawn; therefore I am not discouraged. I
know what is preparing behind the darkness and can see and feel the first signs
of its coming. Those who seek for the Divine have to stand firm persist in
their seeking; after a time, the darkness will fade and begin to disappear and
the Light will come.
I know that this is a time of
trouble for you and everybody. It is so for the whole world. Confusion,
trouble, disorder and upset everywhere is the general state of things. The
better things that are to come are preparing or growing under a veil and the worse
are prominent everywhere. The one thing is to hold on and hold out till the
hour of light has come.
I am afraid I can hold out but
cold comfort − for the present at least − to those of your
correspondents who are lamenting the present state of things. Things are bad,
are growing worse and
Page ─ 1611
may at any time grow worst or
worse than worst if that is possible − and anything, however paradoxical,
seems possible in the present perturbed world. The best thing for them is to
realise that all this was necessary because certain possibilities had to emerge
and be got rid of, if a new and better world was at all to come into being: it
would not have done to postpone them for a later time. It is, as in yoga, where
things active or latent in the being have to be put into action in the light so
that they may be grappled with and thrown out or to emerge from latency in the
depths for the same purificatory purpose. Also they can remember the adage that
night is darkest before dawn and that the coming of dawn is inevitable. But
they must remember too that the new world whose coming we envisage is not to be
made of the same texture as the old and different only in pattern, and that it
must come by other means − from within and not from without; so the best
way is not to be too much preoccupied with the lamentable things that are
happening outside, but themselves to grow within so that they may be ready for
the new world, whatever the form it may take.
Remain firm through the darkness;
the light is there and will conquer.
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