Having determined our goal, the next problem before us is to
find out means for the realization of the object. Sages and teachers have
elaborately dealt with the subject. They have laid down various forms of
practices or 'Sadhanas', helpful for the attainment of what they put forth as
the final goal. But for the realization of God, the Indeterminate Absolute or
Para Brahma we have to adopt means, which lead us to the complete negation. Our
goal of life, as discussed in the previous chapter is the final stage where we
are nearest to the Superactive Centre or Zero, which is the primeval cause of
the entire manifestation and to which everything will ultimately return after
Maha Pralaya (complete dissolution). To acquire this state we have ourselves to
become zero. No doubt we shall reach that point in natural course at the time of
Maha Pralaya, but what we strive for, is to acquire it as early as possible in
order to save ourselves from the miseries of innumerable lives. Just as Maha
Pralaya or complete dissolution is essential for the return of everything to the
origin, similarly for our return to the point we must bring about our Pralaya
(destruction) or acquire a state of complete dissolution of all things of our
own making. It means we have to be free from all our belongings and assume the
same naked form in which we were at the time of creation. Our belongings are a
pile of Samskaras (impressions) with their resultant effects in the form of
complexities and the diverse coverings, which we have gathered round the soul
and which are the results of our thoughts and actions. We possess mental and
intellectual faculties, which are all active. Our mind determines the actions of
the body. We see, hear, feel and understand things. We begin to like or dislike
them. Desires gradually begin to creep in and affect our actions. The rings go
on multiplying and we exert ourselves for the fulfillment of desires. A desire,
when satisfied generally creates another to follow in its place. We are seldom
free from them even for a moment. We see most of the things with an idea of
having them. These desires mould our physical and mental actions and lead to the
formation of Samskaras (impressions), adding thus more and more coverings to the
soul. Fresh desires every moment and our efforts to satisfy them lead to
continuous additions. Their impressions remain on our
causal body so long as
they are not wiped off through the process of 'Bhog'. The completion of the Bhog
of all the Samskaras, formed every moment cannot ordinarily be possible during
the whole life. Thus when our life comes to a close we still have a lot of
samskaras in store within us. These very Samskaras become the cause of our
rebirth, in order to offer us an opportunity to complete their Bhog, but
unfortunately, instead of finishing them we add more than those we have
exhausted.
Another serious obstruction in our path is caused by our sufferings and
miseries. Almost every one in the world complains of the miseries he is faced
with and which he wants to do away with. But he neglects the right means. He
thinks fulfillment of desires to be the only way of removing miseries. But that
is not the solution. Miseries are commonly considered to be detestable, but
there have been sages who voluntarily courted miseries, thinking them to be a
boon and have often prayed to God for them. The mystery of the problem will be
clear if we look into the origin of miseries. Soul possesses consciousness as a
result of God's will to effect creation. The soul likewise began to form its own
tiny creation and gathered round it things of its own creation. Now a stir, a
motion (i.e., unrest or disturbance) was the main factor in bringing about the
creation. Similarly for the tiny creation of the soul too, unrest or disturbance
is indispensable. We also possess the force of will, which we apply to impart
power to the factors necessary for setting up this creation. They appear before
us in the form of joy or sorrow, comfort or misery. The mind, too, being
constantly active creates within us liking for the one and dislike for the
other, introducing the two extremities of a thing. Thus miseries come into
existence. This is all the creation of the human mind, which results from our
ignorance of the right relationship of things. Our passions, emotions and
impulses too contribute a good deal in aggravating the troubles and at times
cause fierce tempest strong enough to threaten a complete wreck. We generally
attribute its causes to circumstances. But it is a wrong notion. Mind is the
centre of this outer expansion of man in the form of human body and everything,
which is exhibited through the medium of the body, proceeds from the centre, the
mind. If our mind comes to a harmonious state, circum-stances and environments
will have no effect on it and there will be no disturbance within. Peace and
tranquility shall reign all through under all circumstances. Passions,
excitements and desires will lose their intensity and sorrow, joy or misery will
disappear from the view. Our desires are the main cause of miseries. So the only
solution of miseries is the curtailment of desires. Fewer the desires, lesser
shall be our miseries. But to become desire less is another problem. Desires
form a network, which we are entangled in. The more we try to get rid of it,
tighter become the fibres of the net. The only way to free us from the
entanglements is to divert our attention from them and fix our eyes on the very
Real thing. If we cultivate a habit of remaining unmindful of them, they will
soon begin to disappear from our view and consequently our miseries will be
minimised. Reality alone will remain constantly before our eyes and everything
else will lose its charm or significance.
Total absence of sufferings and miseries in life is, however, impossible and
unnatural. In fact they are rather meant for our betterment. They are just like
bitter pills of medicine given to a patient to restore health. The misuse of
even the best thing creates trouble. So is the case with miseries. Proper
utility of everything at the proper time and in the proper way is sure to bring
forth good results in the long run. Miseries are really our best guide, which
make our path smooth. To a man in ordinary sphere of life, miseries are very
helpful for his making. Referring to domestic troubles and miseries of a worldly
life my Master used to say, "Our home is the training ground of patience and
endurance. To endure calmly the adversities of a household life is for us the
greatest penance, which is the noblest of all other forms of penances. What we
have, therefore, to do under the circumstances is not to give way to the feeling
of anger or grief but to assume an unquestioning attitude thinking that we
ourselves are in the wrong for which we have to forbear with a cool mind.
Solitary life in a forest and aloofness from all worldly concerns may be, to
some, the means of cultivating patience and forbearance but to us, the taunts
and rebukes of our friends and relations is the greatest penance and the surest
means of success." In fact, to put up coolly with miseries and troubles
contributes much to our betterment; hence they are valuable assets to our
progress. It is only by their wrong use that we spoil their effect and thus get
deprived of their best advantages.
Renunciation or non-attachment is no doubt an essential stage in realization and
we can never be free from the entanglements of Maya unless we cultivate
non-attachment. But it does not mean severing our connection with home, the
family and all worldly concerns and taking up the life of a religious mendicant.
I do not agree with those who hold the view that the only means of cultivating
non-attachment is to get away from home and family and retire to a solitary
corner discarding all worldly ties. Renunciation effected by such forced means,
is seldom found to be genuine, for it is just possible that in spite of their
apparent forced detachment from the world, they may still inwardly be clinging
to it. No doubt as a householder we have to look after many things, we have to
support our family, we have to provide for the education of our children, we
have to look to their wants and necessities, we have to protect them from heat
and cold, from trouble and sickness and so on. For these necessities we earn and
possess money and property. The real evil is only our undue attachment with
things, which we are associated with. This is main cause of our sufferings. But
if we are able to do everything in life thinking it to be our duty without any
feeling of attraction or repulsion we are in a way free from worldly ties and
have renounced the world in the true sense although we possess and make use of
many things. Everything we possess shall, then, seem to be a sacred trust from
the Supreme Master, for the discharge of the duties entrusted to us.
Renunciation truly means non-attachment with worldly objects and not the
non-possession of things. Thus a household life in which possession of things
and worldly ties are indispensable is no impediment in the way of renunciation
and consequently of realization, only if one is not unduly attached to the
objects he is connected with. There are numerous examples of saints having
attained the highest degree of perfection leading a household life all through.
Renunciation is in fact a condition or an inner state of mind, which brings to
our view the transitory and changing character of things and creates a feeling
of non-attachment with such objects. His eyes are fixed every moment on Reality,
which is unchanging and eternal, and he is free from feeling of attraction and
repulsion. This is Vairagya (renunciation) in the true sense of the term. When
we have achieved this state of mind we are free from desires. We feel contented
with what is available to us. The end of desires means the stopping of the
formation of Samskaras. What remains now is only to undergo the effect (Bhog) of
the previously formed samskaras (impressions) that are to be worked out during
the course of our life. Nature too helps us in the work by creating field for
Bhog in order to remove the impressions of our thoughts and actions from the causal body. When those coverings melt away we begin to assume finer forms of
existence.
In order to control our thoughts and actions we have to look to the proper
working of the mind, which is never at rest even for a moment. I have often
heard religious teachers railing at it in bitterest terms, ascribing all bad
names to it and proclaiming it to be our worst enemy. The reason is quite plain.
They think it to be the cause of all evil within us, and consequently they
advise people to crush it and not to follow its biddings. But generally people
find it a hard task to restrain the diverse activities of the mind, or to
disregard its biddings. Their theoretical advice and lectures in this respect
are, therefore, not of much avail to them and almost none of those attending
their lectures has ever been able to achieve the object in a practical way.
Besides the present circumstances and the environments too contribute much
towards the ever-increasing activities of the individual mind. Almost everyone,
today, feels his life to be a hard struggle for existence confronting acute
problems of poverty, insecurity, distress and rivalry and it is almost
impossible to keep himself free from its effects. The result is the constant
unrest and disturbance of mind. We breathe in the same thing from the atmosphere
and are consequently led away by circumstances and surroundings. Our individual
mind has become the weathercock, turning its face at every blast towards the
direction in which the wind blows. The real hero in the struggle is one, who
braves them courageously and keeps oneself free from their effect.
I, no doubt, agree with those who say that every evil has its origin in the mind
and which alone is, therefore, responsible for it, though at the same time I may
remind them that it is the very same mind that leads us to virtue and also helps
us to realize our highest self. So it is not every evil alone that proceeds from
the mind but also every good. Hence those who condemn it in the bitterest terms
have no justification for it at all. It is really only due to the defective
moulding of the mind, and what is actually required, is not the crushing or the
killing of the mind but merely its proper training. The mind is like the
pendulum of a clock. A clock goes all right so long as the movement of the
pendulum is regulated. If it is disturbed the clock is out of order. Similarly
for this human clock it is necessary that the movement of the mind be well
regulated and adjusted. The methods to mould the mind and regulate its
activities are also very simple. Really we have spoiled the mind ourselves by
allowing it to wander about aimlessly during leisure hours. The practice has
continued for years and it has now become almost its second nature. If we now
try to control the mind by putting it under restraint we meet with little
success. The more we try to suppress it by force, the more it rebounds and
counteracts causing greater disturbance. The proper method to control the
activities of the mind is to fix it on one sacred thought just as we do in
meditation, and dispel from it everything unwanted or superfluous. In course of
time after constant practice, the mind gets disciplined and regulated and much
of the inner disturbance is eliminated. The best course to free you from
unwanted ideas is to treat them as uninvited guests and remain unmindful of
them. They will then wither away like un-watered plants and ultimately the same
sacred thought will remain predominant. The only way to accomplish it is,
therefore, meditation under the guidance of a capable master. By constant
practice in meditation the mind will become calm and peaceful and the unwanted
ideas will cease to trouble you. I often hear beginners complaining about the
wandering of the mind during meditation. From the very first day they expect
that during their practice at meditation the mind should remain at a standstill
but when they find different ideas and thoughts haunting their mind they feel
greatly perturbed. I must clear it to them that it is not the suspended
condition of the mind we are striving for in our practice, but only the moulding
of its multifarious activities. We do not want to stop its normal working but
only to bring it to a regulated and disciplined state. If the activities of the
mind are stopped from the very beginning, we probably do not stand in need of
practising meditation at all. Meditation is the only process to achieve that
end. Concentration is its natural result in due course. The proper method is to
meditate all along remaining quite unmindful of the foreign ideas and thoughts
coming to our mind during that time. Mental struggle to keep off the unwanted
ideas often proves unsuccessful for it causes a strong reaction which is often
impossible for man of ordinary capabilities to overcome and which is sometimes
likely to result in serious mental disturbance or even insanity. It may be
possible for those who by leading a life of celibacy have gained sufficient ojas
(lustre) to cope successfully with the flow of thoughts and to withstand the
effect of their reaction, but for ordinary man it is almost an impossibility. If
instead of struggling to keep off ideas we only remain unmindful of them, very
soon they will lose their effect and cease troubling us. They will then be only
like dogs barking after a caravan which goes forward without paying any heed to
them. When we are attentive to ideas to check them, concentration is naturally
there which breeds power and thus they become stronger.
A most common excuse advanced by certain people today is that they are too busy
to devote any time to meditation or similar other practice. But "the busiest man
has the greatest leisure" is a well-known saying. I think a man has more time to
his disposal than there is work for him to do. Their complaint of the scarcity
of time is due only to its wrong adjustment. If we utilize our time to the best
advantage we shall never have cause to complain that it is short or scarce.
There are others who are a bit frank to admit that it is not for want of time
that they remain away from devotional duties but for their habitual negligence
and sluggishness that they cannot overcome. To them I would say that they are
probably never negligent or sluggish in their trade or profession, which they
attend to with full zeal in spite of all personal inconvenience and even
illness, only because some monetary gain or profit is in view. Their longing for
the material gain turns them unmindful of their inconvenience or illness,
similarly if our longing (or Lagan) for the realization of the goal is great,
our negligent or sluggish habits will not stand in the way of our efforts or
progress. If we go through the history of ancient sages we find that they had
sacrificed all the comforts of life for the sake of attaining Reality. They led
a life of austerity and penance, undergoing every kind of hardship and trouble
for the sake of the object so dear to their heart. Intense longing for the goal
made them blind to everything else and they remained firm on the path not
minding the difficulties and reverses that came across their way. Such an
intense longing for the object and an iron will to achieve the goal is
absolutely necessary to ensure complete success. I may assure you that you can
win laurels in the spiritual field if only you turn you attention towards God
and proceed with will, faith and confidence, no matter how adversely you may be
placed in, surrounded by all the worries and miseries of a household life. Your
busy life will then offer no hindrance in your way. Generally people go
hesitatingly towards God, thinking themselves to be too incapable and weak to
achieve the real thing. A powerful will made at the very first step and
maintained all through, shall never fail to achieve complete success. Half the
distance is crossed if a man enters the field with a firm mind. Difficulties and
dejections will melt away at a mere glance and the path of success will be made
smooth. Indecisive attitude leads to half-hearted efforts and generally results
in mere partial success or more often in failure. Our firm will enables us,
automatically to draw in power from unknown sources, for the accomplishment of
the task. A firm will supplemented by an ever-increasing impatience or yearning
to achieve the object will enhance the force of our effort and we shall thereby
remain in constant touch with the same real thing, catching every hint conducive
to our spiritual well-being and progress. Impatience or constant restlessness to
reach the goal in the shortest possible time is, thus, by far the most important
factor that contributes to our speedy success. We must not rest even for a while
till we have gained the real object, the eternal peace and calmness. Intense
longing for an object naturally creates restlessness for it and we have no peace
till we achieve the desired object. It is, therefore, a very essential thing and
must be cultivated by whatever means possible. Thus for gaining the eternal
peace we cultivate within us restlessness and impatience at the preliminary
stage. It may look strange at the very face of it when I ask you to cultivate
the very thing we want to do away with but it is the only way to achieve sure
and speedy success. The restlessness thus created is temporary and different in
character from the ordinary restless condition of the mind. It is finer and more
pleasant. It creates an inlet in our heart for the divine current to flow in and
smoothens our passage to the kingdom of God. If you thrust a man down into the
water you find that he makes desperate efforts to free himself from your grip.
It is only because his impatience to get out of water at once increases his
force of effort and he does not rest till he is out of water. Similarly such
desperate efforts caused by extreme impatience to reach the goal at once, will
quicken our steps on the path of realization and ensure easy success in the
least possible time. That is the easiest and the most efficient means of speedy
success.
My associates have often enquired from me the method for creating such type of
restlessness within them. I may tell them that intense love for the object will
automatically lead them to it. When we are in deep love, we shall naturally feel
impatient to secure nearness with the loved object. When we are greatly in love
with any of the worldly objects its idea comes to our mind again and again, and
we think of it over and over again. Now in order to develop Divine love in our
heart we have only to reverse the process. If we remember God frequently or for
the most part of the day, we will automatically develop love for Him, which if
continued with earnestness will create impatience in our heart to secure union
at the earliest. Another way of developing love with God is to play the part of
a lover as if you are enacting a drama. But it is only for those who are almost
incapable of finer means. The method though artificial will shortly bring you to
reality and feeling of true love and impatience will begin to agitate your
heart.
The most important factor in realization is self -confidence in our own capacity
and power to achieve success. It is absurd to think, even for a moment, that we
are in any way too weak or deficient to acquire the highest state of perfection
ever attained so far even by the greatest sages of the past. We must march on
the path of realization like a brave soldier with full faith and confidence, not
minding the difficulties or reverses. Dejections and disappointments weaken our
will and shatter our firmness. We should meet reverses with a brave heart and
should never give way to the feeling of despondency which is the worst drawback
and the deadliest poison to spiritual life.
One of the essentials in the making of a man engaged in spiritual pursuit is
moderation. It is a very wide term and covers every phase of human activity. It
means balance in all senses and faculties, nothing more or less than what is
naturally required at the time for any specific purpose without its slightest
impression on the mind. Generally, today, we find moderation disturbed in almost
all cases. The reason mainly is that we attach undue importance to whatever
thing comes to our view and we strengthen it by the force of our thought with
the result that it grows stronger over all others. We cultivate this habit and
apply it to different things with varying intensity. The result that follows is
nothing but disturbance and mental conflict and it is the root cause of all our
troubles and miseries. Realization is not possible unless moderation and balance
are restored. It corresponds closely with the very real thing which existed at
the time of creation, when everything was in a perfectly balanced state. Now
after the lapse of time, degeneration crept in. Our senses and faculties lost
the balance and everything went into disorder. What we have to do now is to
control our senses and faculties in order to restore moderation in them. To
cultivate moderation we have to pay special attention to external ways of life
too, e.g., gentle and polite language, courteous dealing, sympathy and love with
fellow beings, reverence to elders, unrevengeful nature and so on. These habits
are greatly helpful in our making. Moderation is a characteristic of nature. If
we gain complete moderation we are in a way in conformity with nature and it is
the very essence of spirituality.
Lastly the most important and unfailing means of success is the prayer. It
connects our link with God to whom we surrender ourselves with love and
devotion. In prayer we stand before Him as a humble suppliant presenting to Him
our true state and completely resigning ourselves to His will. This is the true
form of prayer and as true devotees we must also feel satisfied with the Will of
the Master. It is a folly to pray to God for petty worldly ends except in most
exceptional cases when peace of mind is greatly disturbed for want of bare
necessities. We should always pray to the supreme Master the Omnipotent and the
Omniscient alone with a mind totally absorbed in love and submission to Him
forgetting even ourselves altogether. This is the proper way of offering prayer,
which in such a state seldom goes unrewarded. I have dealt with this point more
elaborately in my book, Commentary on Ten Commandments of Sahaj Marg.
In the end I may also bring home to your mind that there are different forms and
practices for achieving the end. They might lead you on the path of realization
to some distance, but how far, I do not propose to discuss here. I leave it to
the judgement and the experience of the readers themselves. But I assure you
positively that it is Raja Yoga and the Raja Yoga alone that can lead you on to
your ultimate destination or the highest point of human approach where you are
in perfect harmony with nature, assuming your absolute and pure form. No other
form or practice can bring forth such results. It is, therefore, essential to
have recourse to this science if you aim at the highest point. The help and
support of a truly worthy guide is of course, the essential factor and at the
same time a serious problem of the day too, but a true seeker, I assure you,
shall never fail to find him. |