01 - Message
02 - Perfection of the Body
03 - The Divine Body
04 - Supermind and the Life Divine
05 - Supermind and Humanity
06 - Supermind in the Evolution
07 - Mind of Light
08 - Supermind and Mind of Light
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Chapter 2
Perfection of the Body
The perfection of the body, as great a perfection as we can bring
about by the means at our disposal, must be the ultimate aim of physical
culture. Perfection is the true aim of all culture, the spiritual and
psychic, the mental, the vital and it must be the aim of our physical
culture also. If our seeking is for a total perfection of the being,
the physical part of it cannot be left aside; for the body is the material
basis, the body is the instrument which we have to use. Shariram khalu
dharmasadhanam, says the old Sanskrit adage, - the body is the means
of fulfilment of dharma, and dharma means every ideal which we can propose
to ourselves and the law of its working out and its action. A total
perfection is the ultimate aim which we set before us, for our ideal
is the Divine Life which we wish to create here, the life of the Spirit
fulfilled on earth, life accomplishing its own spiritual transformation
even here on earth in the conditions of the material universe. That
cannot be unless the body too undergoes a transformation, unless its
action and functioning attain to a supreme capacity and the perfection
which is possible to it or which can be made possible.
I have already indicated in a previous message a relative perfection
of the physical consciousness in the body and of the mind, the life,
the character which it houses as, no less than an awakening and development
of the body's own native capacities, a desirable outcome of the exercises
and practices of the physical culture to which we have commenced to
give in this Ashram a special attention and scope. A development of
the physical consciousness must always be a considerable part of our
aim, but for that the right development of the body itself is an essential
element; health, strength, fitness are the first needs, but the physical
frame itself must be the best possible. A divine life in a material
world implies necessarily a union of the two ends of existence, the
spiritual summit and the material base. The soul with the basis of its
life established in Matter ascends to the heights of the Spirit but
does not cast away its base, it joins the heights and the depths together.
The Spirit descends into Matter and the material world with all its
lights and glories and powers and with them fills and transforms life
in the material world so that it becomes more and more divine. The transformation
is not a change into something purely subtle and spiritual to which
Matter is in its nature repugnant and by which it is felt as an obstacle
or as a shackle binding the Spirit; it takes up Matter as a form of
the Spirit though now a form which conceals and turns it into a revealing
instrument, it does not cast away the energies of Matter, its capacities,
its methods; it brings out their hidden possibilities, uplifts, sublimates,
discloses their innate divinity. The divine life will reject nothing
that is capable of divinisation; all is to be seized, exalted, made
utterly perfect. The mind now still ignorant, though struggling towards
knowledge, has to rise towards and into the supramental light and truth
and bring it down so that it shall suffuse our thinking and perception
and insight and all our means of knowing till they become radiant with
the highest truth in their inmost and outermost movements. Our life,
still full of obscurity and confusion and occupied with so many dull
and lower aims, must feel all its urges and instincts exalted and irradiated
and become a glorious counterpart of the supramental super-life above.
The physical consciousness and physical being, the body itself must
reach a perfection in all that it is and does which now we can hardly
conceive. It may even in the end be suffused with a light and beauty
and bliss from the Beyond and the life divine assume a body divine.
But first the evolution of the nature must have reached a point at which
it can meet the Spirit direct, feel the aspiration towards the spiritual
change and open itself to the workings of the Power which shall transform
it. A supreme perfection, a total perfection is possible only by a transformation
of our lower or human nature, a transformation of the mind into a thing
of light, our life into a thing of power, an instrument of right action,
right use for all its forces, of a happy elevation of its being lifting
it beyond its present comparatively narrow potentiality for a self-fulfilling
force of action and joy of life. There must be equally a transforming
change of the body by a conversion of its action, its functioning, its
capacities as an instrument beyond the limitations by which it is clogged
and hampered even in its greatest present human attainment. In the totality
of the change we have to achieve, human means and forces too have to
be taken up, not dropped but used and magnified to their utmost possibility
as part of the new life.
Such a sublimation of our present human powers of mind and life into
elements of a divine life on earth can be conceived without much difficulty;
but in what figure shall we conceive the perfection of the body? In
the past the body has been regarded by spiritual seekers rather as an
obstacle, as something to be overcome and discarded than as an instrument
of spiritual perfection and a field of the spiritual change. It has
been condemned as a grossness of Matter, as an insuperable impediment
and the limitations of the body as something unchangeable making transformation
impossible. This is because the human body even at its best seems only
to be driven by an energy of life which has its own limits and is debased
in its smaller physical activities by much that is petty or coarse or
evil; the body in itself is burdened with the inertia and inconscience
of Matter, only partly awake and, although quickened and animated by
a nervous activity, subconscient in the fundamental action of its constituent
cells and tissues and their secret workings. Even in its fullest strength
and force and greatest glory of beauty, it is still a flower of the
material Inconscience; the inconscient is the soil from which it has
grown and at every point opposes a narrow boundary to the extension
of its powers and to any effort of radical self-exceeding. But if a
divine life is possible on earth, then this self-exceeding must also
be possible.
In the pursuit of perfection we can start at either end of our range
of being and we have then to use, initially at least, the means and
processes proper to our choice. In Yoga the process is spiritual and
psychic; even its vital and physical processes are given a spiritual
or psychic turn and raised to a higher motion than belongs properly
to the ordinary life and Matter, as for instance in the Hathayogic and
Rajayogic use of the breathing or the use of Asana. Ordinarily a previous
preparation of the mind and life and body is necessary to make them
fit for the reception of the spiritual energy and the organisation of
psychic forces and methods, but this too is given a special turn proper
to the Yoga. On the other hand, if we start in any field at the lower
end we have to employ the means and processes which Life and Matter
offer to us and respect the conditions and what we may call the technique
imposed by the vital and the material energy. We may extend the activity,
the achievement, the perfection attained beyond the initial, even beyond
the normal possibilities but still we have to stand on the same base
with which we started and within the boundaries it gives to us. It is
not that the action from the two ends cannot meet and the higher take
into itself and uplift the lower perfection; but this can usually be
done only by a transition from the lower to a higher outlook, aspiration
and motive: this we shall have to do if our aim is to transform the
human into the divine life. But here there comes in the necessity of
taking up the activities of human life and sublimating them by the power
of the spirit. Here the lower perfection will not disappear; it will
remain but will be enlarged and transformed by the higher perfection
which only the power of the spirit can give. This will be evident if
we consider poetry and art, philosophic thought, the perfection of the
written word or the perfect organisation of earthly life: these have
to be taken up and the possibilities already achieved or whatever perfection
has already been attained included in a new and greater perfection but
with the larger vision and inspiration of a spiritual consciousness
and with new forms and powers. It must be the same with the perfection
of the body.
The taking up of life and Matter into what is essentially a spiritual
seeking, instead of the rejection and ultimate exclusion of them which
was the attitude of a spirituality that shunned or turned away from
life in the world, involves certain developments which a spiritual institution
of the older kind could regard as foreign to its purpose. A divine life
in the world or an institution having that for its aim and purpose cannot
be or cannot remain something outside or entirely shut away from the
life of ordinary men in the world or unconcerned with the mundane existence;
it has to do the work of the Divine in the world and not a work outside
or separate from it. The life of the ancient Rishis in their Ashramas
had such a connection; they were creators, educators, guides of men
and the life of the Indian people in ancient times was largely developed
and directed by their shaping influence. The life and activities involved
in the new endeavour are not identical but they too must be an action
upon the world and a new creation in it. It must have contacts and connections
with it and activities which take their place in the general life and
whose initial or primary objects may not seem to differ from those of
the same activities in the outside world. In our Ashram here we have
found it necessary to establish a school for the education of the children
of the resident sadhaks, teaching upon familiar lines though with certain
modifications and taking as part and an important part of their development
an intensive physical training which has given form to the sports and
athletics practised by the Jeunesse Sportive of the Ashram and of which
this Bulletin is the expression. It has been questioned by some what
place sports can have in an Ashram created for spiritual seekers and
what connection there can be between spirituality and sports. The first
answer lies in what I have already written about the connections of
an institution of this kind with the activities of the general life
of men and what I have indicated in the previous number as to the utility
such a training can have for the life of a nation and its benefit for
the international life. Another answer can occur to us if we look beyond
first objects and turn to the aspiration for a total perfection including
the perfection of the body.
In the admission of an activity such as sports and physical exercises
into the life of the Ashram it is evident that the methods and the first
objects to be attained must belong to what we have called the lower
end of the being. Originally they have been introduced for the physical
education and bodily development of the children of the Ashram School,
and these are too young for a strictly spiritual aim or practice to
enter into their activities and it is not certain that any great number
of them will enter the spiritual life when they are of an age to choose
what shall be the direction of their future. The object must be the
training of the body and the development of certain parts of mind and
character so far as this can be done by or in connection with this training,
and I have already indicated in a previous number how and in what directions
this can be done. It is a relative and human perfection that can be
attained within these limits; anything greater can be reached only by
the intervention of higher powers, psychic powers, the power of the
spirit. Yet what can be attained within the human boundaries can be
something very considerable and sometimes immense: what we call genius
is part of the development of the human range of being, and its achievements,
especially in things of the mind and will, can carry us half-way to
the divine. Even what the mind and will can do with the body in the
field proper to the body and its life, in the way of physical achievement,
bodily endurance, feats of prowess of all kinds, a lasting activity
refusing fatigue or collapse and continuing beyond what seems at first
to be possible, courage and refusal to succumb under an endless and
murderous physical suffering, these and other victories of many kinds
sometimes approaching or reaching the miraculous are seen in the human
field and must be reckoned as a part of our concept of a total perfection.
The unflinching and persistent reply that can be made by the body as
well as the mind of man and by his life-energy to whatever call can
be imposed on it in the most difficult and discouraging circumstances
by the necessities of war and travel and adventure is of the same kind,
and their endurance can reach astounding proportions and even the inconscient
in the body seems to be able to return a surprising response.
The body, we have said, is a creation of the Inconscient and itself
inconscient or at least subconscient in parts of itself and much of
its hidden action; but what we call the Inconscient is an appearance,
a dwelling place, an instrument of a secret Consciousness or a Superconscient
which has created the miracle we call the universe. Matter is the field
and the creation of the Inconscient and the perfection of the operations
of inconscient Matter, their perfect adaptation of means to an aim and
end, the wonders they perform and the marvels of beauty they create,
testify, in spite of all the ignorant denial we can oppose, to the presence
and power of consciousness of this Superconscience in every part and
movement of the material universe. It is there in the body, has made
it and its emergence in our consciousness is the secret aim of evolution
and the key to the mystery of our existence.
In the use of such activities as sports and physical exercises for the
education of the individual in childhood and first youth, which should
mean the bringing out of his actual and latent possibilities to their
fullest development, the means and methods we must use are limited by
the nature of the body and its aim must be such relative human perfection
of the body's powers and capacities and the powers of mind, will, character,
action of which it is at once the residence and the instrument so far
as these methods can help to develop them. I have written sufficiently
about the mental and moral parts of perfection to which these pursuits
can contribute and this I need not repeat here. For the body itself
the perfections that can be developed by these means are those of its
natural qualities and capacities and, secondly, the training of its
general fitness as an instrument for all the activities which may be
demanded from it by the mind and the will, by the life-energy or by
the dynamic perceptions, impulses and instincts of our subtle physical
being which is an unrecognised but very important element and agent
in our nature. Health and strength are the first conditions for the
natural perfection of the body, not only muscular strength and the solid
strength of the limbs and physical stamina, but the finer, alert and
plastic and adaptable force which our nervous and subtle physical parts
can put into the activities of the frame. There is also the still more
dynamic force which a call upon the life-energies can bring into the
body and stir it to greater activities, even feats of the most extraordinary
character of which in its normal state it would not be capable. There
is also the strength which the mind and will by their demands and stimulus
and by their secret powers which we use or by which we are used without
knowing clearly the source of their action can impart to the body or
impose upon it as masters and inspirers.
Among the natural qualities and powers of the body which can be thus
awakened, stimulated and trained to a normal activity we must reckon
dexterity and stability in all kinds of physical action, such as swiftness
in the race, dexterity in combat, skill and endurance of the mountaineer,
the constant and often extraordinary response to all that can be demanded
from the body of the soldier, sailor, traveller or explorer to which
I have already made reference, or in adventure of all kinds and all
the wide range of physical attainment to which man has accustomed himself
or to which he is exceptionally pushed by his own will or by the compulsion
of circumstance. It is a general fitness of the body for all that can
be asked from it which is the common formula of all this action, a fitness
attained by a few or by many, that could be generalised by an extended
and many-sided physical education and discipline. Some of these activities
can be included under the name of sports; there are others for which
sports and physical exercises can be an effective preparation. In some
of them a training for common action, combined movement, discipline
are needed and for that our physical exercises can make one ready; in
others a developed individual will, skill of mind and quick perception,
forcefulness of life-energy and subtle physical impulsion are more prominently
needed and may even be the one sufficient trainer. All must be included
in our conception of the natural powers of the body and its capacity
and instrumental fitness in the service of the human mind and will,
and therefore in our concept of the total perfection of the body.
There are two conditions for this perfection, an awakening in as great
an entirety as possible of the body consciousness and an education,
an evocation of its potentialities, also as entire and fully developed
and, it may be, as many-sided as possible. The form or body is, no doubt,
in its origin a creation of the Inconscient and limited by it on all
sides, but still of the Inconscient developing the secret consciousness
concealed within it and growing in light of knowledge, power and Ananda.
We have to take it at the point it has reached in its human evolution
in these things, make as full a use of them as may be and, as much as
we can, further this evolution to as high a degree as is permitted by
the force of the individual temperament and nature. In all forms in
the world there is a force at work, unconsciously active or oppressed
by inertia in its lower formulations, but in the human being conscious
from the first, with its potentialities partly awake, partly asleep
or latent: what is awake in it we have to make fully conscious; what
is asleep we have to arouse and set to its work; what is latent we have
to evoke and educate. Here there are two aspects of the body consciousness,
one which seems to be a kind of automatism carrying on its work in the
physical plane without any intervention of the mind and in parts even
beyond any possibility of direct observation by the mind or, if conscious
or observable, still proceeding or capable of continuing, when once
started, by an apparently mechanical action not needing direction by
the mind and continuing so long as the mind does not intervene.
There are other movements taught and trained by the mind which can yet
go on operating automatically but faultlessly even when not attended
to by the thought or will; there are others which can operate in sleep
and produce results of value to the waking intelligence. But more important
is what may be described as a trained and developed automatism, a perfected
skill and capacity of eye and ear and the hands and all the members
prompt to respond to any call made on them, a developed spontaneous
operation as an instrument, a complete fitness for any demand that the
mind and life-energy can make upon it. This is ordinarily the best we
can achieve at the lower end, when we start from that end and limit
ourselves to the means and methods which are proper to it. For more
we have to turn to the mind and life-energy themselves or to the energy
of the spirit and to what they can do for a greater perfection of the
body. The most we can do in the physical field by physical means is
necessarily insecure as well as bound by limits; even what seems a perfect
health and strength of the body is precarious and can be broken down
at any moment by fluctuations from within or by a strong attack or shock
from outside: only by the breaking of our limitations can a higher and
more enduring perfection come. One direction in which our consciousness
must grow is an increasing hold from within or from above on the body
and its powers and its more conscious response to the higher parts of
our being. The mind pre-eminently is man; he is a mental being and his
human perfection grows the more he fulfils the description of the Upanishad,
a mental being, Purusha, leader of the life and the body. If the mind
can take up and control the instincts and automatisms of the life-energy
and the subtle physical consciousness and the body, if it can enter
into them, consciously use and, as we may say, fully mentalise their
instinctive or spontaneous action, the perfection of these energies,
their action too become more conscious and more aware of themselves
and more perfect. But it is necessary for the mind too to grow in perfection
and this it can do best when it depends less on the fallible intellect
of physical mind, when it is not limited even by the more orderly and
accurate working of the reason and can grow in intuition and acquire
a wider, deeper and closer seeing and the more luminous drive of energy
of a higher intuitive will. Even within the limits of its present evolution
it is difficult to measure the degree to which the mind is able to extend
its control or its use of the body's powers and capacities and when
the mind rises to higher powers still and pushes back its human boundaries,
it becomes impossible to fix any limits: even, in certain realisations,
an intervention by the will in the automatic working of the bodily organs
seems to become possible.
Wherever limitations recede and in proportion as they recede, the body
becomes a more plastic and responsive and in that measure a more fit
and perfect instrument of the action of the spirit. In all effective
and expressive activities here in the material world the cooperation
of the two ends of our being is indispensable. If the body is unable
whether by fatigue or by natural incapacity or any other cause to second
the thought or will or is in any way irresponsive or insufficiently
responsive, to that extent the action fails or falls short or becomes
in some degree unsatisfying or incomplete. In what seems to be an exploit
of the spirit so purely mental as the outpouring of poetic inspiration,
there must be a responsive vibration of the brain and its openness as
a channel for the power of the thought and vision and the light of the
word that is making or breaking its way through or seeking for its perfect
expression. If the brain is fatigued or dulled by any clog, either the
inspiration cannot come and nothing is written or it fails and something
inferior is all that can come out; or else a lower inspiration takes
the place of the more luminous formulation that was striving to shape
itself or the brain finds it more easy to lend itself to a less radiant
stimulus or else it labours and constructs or responds to poetic artifice.
Even in the most purely mental activities the fitness, readiness or
perfect training of the bodily instrument is a condition indispensable.
That readiness, that response too is part of the total perfection of
the body.
The essential purpose and sign of the growing evolution here is the
emergence of consciousness in an apparently inconscient universe, the
growth of consciousness and with it growth of the light and power of
the being; the development of the form and its functioning or its fitness
to survive, although indispensable, is not the whole meaning or the
central motive. The greater and greater awakening of consciousness and
its climb to a higher and higher level and a wider extent of its vision
and action is the condition of our progress towards that supreme and
total perfection which is the aim of our existence. It is the condition
also of the total perfection of the body. There are higher levels of
the mind than any we now conceive and to these we must one day reach
and rise beyond them to the heights of a greater, a spiritual existence.
As we rise we have to open to them our lower members and fill these
with those superior and supreme dynamisms of light and power; the body
we have to make a more and more and even entirely conscious frame and
instrument, a conscious sign and seal and power of the spirit. As it
grows in this perfection, the force and extent of its dynamic action
and its response and service to the spirit must increase; the control
of the spirit over it also must grow and the plasticity of its functioning
both in its developed and acquired parts of power and in its automatic
responses down to those that are now purely organic and seem to be the
movements of a mechanic inconscience. This cannot happen without a veritable
transformation, and a transformation of the mind and life and very body
is indeed the change to which our evolution is secretly moving and without
this transformation the entire fullness of a divine life on earth cannot
emerge. In this transformation the body itself can become an agent and
a partner. It might indeed be possible for the spirit to achieve a considerable
manifestation with only a passive and imperfectly conscious body as
its last or bottommost means of material functioning, but this could
not be anything perfect or complete. A fully conscious body might even
discover and work out the right material method and process of a material
transformation. For this, no doubt, the spirit's supreme light and power
and creative joy must have manifested on the summit of the individual
consciousness and sent down their fiat into the body, but still the
body may take in the working out its spontaneous part of self-discovery
and achievement. It would be thus a participator and agent in its own
transformation and the integral transformation of the whole being; this
too would be a part and a sign and evidence of the total perfection
of the body.
If the emergence and growth of consciousness is the central motive of
the evolution and the key to its secret purpose, then by the very nature
of that evolution this growth must involve not only a wider and wider
extent of its capacities, but also an ascent to a higher and higher
level till it reaches the highest possible. For it starts from a nethermost
level of involution in the Inconscience which we see at work in Matter
creating the material universe; it proceeds by an Ignorance which is
yet ever developing knowledge and reaching out to an ever greater light
and ever greater organisation and efficacy of the will and harmonisation
of all its own inherent and emerging powers; it must at last reach a
point where it develops or acquires the complete fullness of its capacity,
and that must be a state or action in which there is no longer an ignorance
seeking for knowledge but Knowledge self-possessed, inherent in the
being, master of its own truths and working them out with a natural
vision and force that is not afflicted by limitation or error. Or if
there is a limitation, it must be a self-imposed veil behind which it
would keep truth back from manifestation in Time but draw it out at
will and without any need of search or acquisition in the order of a
right perception of things or in the just succession of that which has
to be manifested in obedience to the call of Time.
This would mean an entry or approach into what might be called a truth-consciousness
self-existent in which the being would be aware of its own realities
and would have the inherent power to manifest them in a Time-creation
in which all would be Truth following out its own unerring steps and
combining its own harmonies; every thought and will and feeling and
act would be spontaneously right, inspired or intuitive, moving by the
light of Truth and therefore perfect. All would express inherent realities
of the spirit; some fullness of the power of the spirit would be there.
One would have overpassed the present limitations of mind: mind would
become a seeing of the light of Truth, will a force and power of the
Truth, Life a progressive fulfilment of the Truth, the body itself a
conscious vessel of the Truth and part of the means of its self-effectuation
and a form of its self-aware existence. It would be at least some initiation
of this Truth-consciousness, some first figure and action of it that
must be reached and enter into a first operation if there is to be a
divine life or any full manifestation of a spiritualised consciousness
in the world of Matter. Or, at the very least, such a Truth-consciousness
must be in communication with our own mind and life and body, descend
into touch with it, control its seeing and action, impel its motives,
take hold of its forces and shape their direction and purpose. All touched
by it might not be able to embody it fully, but each would give some
form to it according to his spiritual temperament, inner capacity, the
line of his evolution in Nature: he would reach securely the perfection
of which he was immediately capable and he would be on the road to the
full possession of the truth of the Spirit and of the truth of Nature.
In the workings of such a Truth-consciousness there would be a certain
conscious seeing and willing automatism of the steps of its truth which
would replace the infallible automatism of the inconscient or seemingly
inconscient Force that has brought out of an apparent Void the miracle
of an ordered universe, and this could create a new order of the manifestation
of the Being in which a perfect perfection would become possible; even
a supreme and total perfection would appear in the vistas of an ultimate
possibility. If we could draw down this power into the material world,
our agelong dreams of human perfectibility, individual perfection, the
perfectibility of the race, of society, inner mastery over self and
a complete mastery, governance and utilisation of the forces of Nature
could see at long last a prospect of total achievement. This complete
human self-fulfilment might well pass beyond limitations and be transformed
into the character of a divine life. Matter after taking into itself
and manifesting the power of life and the light of mind would draw down
into it the superior or supreme power and light of the spirit and in
an earthly body shed its parts of inconscience and become a perfectly
conscious frame of the spirit. A secure completeness and stability of
the health and strength of its physical tenement could be maintained
by the will and force of this inhabitant; all the natural capacities
of the physical frame, all powers of the physical consciousness would
reach their utmost extension and be there at command and sure of their
flawless action. As an instrument the body would acquire a fullness
of capacity, a totality of fitness for all uses which the inhabitant
would demand of it far beyond anything now possible. Even it could become
a revealing vessel of a supreme beauty and bliss, - casting the beauty
of the light of the spirit suffusing and radiating from it as a lamp
reflects and diffuses the luminosity of its indwelling flame, carrying
in itself the beatitude of the spirit, its joy of the seeing mind, its
joy of life and spiritual happiness, the joy of Matter released into
a spiritual consciousness and thrilled with a constant ecstasy. This
would be the total perfection of the spiritualised body.
All this might not come all at once, though such a sudden illumination
might be possible if a divine Power and Light and Ananda could take
their stand on the summit of our being and send down their force into
the mind and life and body illumining and remoulding the cells, awaking
consciousness in all the frame. But the way would be open and the consummation
of all that is possible in the individual could progressively take place.
The physical also would have its share in that consummation of the whole.
There would always remain vistas beyond as the infinite Spirit took
up towards higher heights and larger breadths the evolving Nature, in
the movement of the liberated being towards the possession of the supreme
Reality, the supreme existence, consciousness, beatitude. But of this
it would be premature to speak: what has been written is perhaps as
much as the human mind as it is now constituted can venture to look
forward to and the enlightened thought understand in some measure. These
consequences of the Truth-consciousness descending and laying its hold
upon Matter would be a sufficient justification of the evolutionary
labour. In this upward all-uplifting sweep of the Spirit there could
be a simultaneous or consecutive downward sweep of the triumph of a
spiritualised Nature all-including, all-transmuting and in it there
could occur a glorifying change of Matter and the physical consciousness
and physical form and functioning of which we could speak as not only
the total but the supreme perfection of the body.
Bulletin - April 1949
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