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Yoga of Self-Perfection
(Equality)
11 - The Perfection of Equality
12 - The Way of Equality
13 - The Action of Equality |
The Way of Equality
It will appear from the description of
the complete and perfect equality that this equality has two sides.
It must therefore be arrived at by two successive movements. One will
liberate us from the action of the lower nature and admit us to the
calm peace of the divine being; the other will liberate us into the
full being and power of the higher nature and admit us to the equal
poise and universality of a divine and infinite knowledge, will of action,
Ananda. The first may be described as a passive or negative equality,
an equality of reception which fronts impassively the impacts and phenomena
of existence and negates the dualities of the appearances and reactions
which they impose on us. The second is an active, a positive equality
which accepts the phenomena of existence, but only as the manifestation
of the one divine being and with an equal response to them which comes
from the divine nature in us and transforms them into its hidden values.
The first lives in the peace of the one Brahman and puts away from it
the nature of the active Ignorance. The second lives in that peace,
but also in the Ananda of the Divine and imposes on the life of the
soul in nature the signs of the divine knowledge, power and bliss of
being. It is this double orientation united by the common principle
which will determine the movement of equality in the integral Yoga.
The effort towards a passive or
purely receptive equality may start from three different principles
or attitudes which all lead to the same result and ultimate consequence,
- endurance, indifference and submission. The principle of endurance
relics on the strength of the spirit within us to bear all the contacts,
impacts, suggestions of this phenomenal Nature that besieges us on every
side without being overborne by them and compelled to bear their emotional,
sensational, dynamic, intellectual reactions. The outer mind in the
lower nature has not this strength. Its strength is that of a limited
force of consciousness which has to do the best it can with all that
comes in upon it or besieges it from the greater whirl of consciousness
and energy which environs it on this plane of existence. That it can
maintain itself at all and affirm its individual being in the universe,
is due indeed to the strength of the spirit within it, but it cannot
bring forward the whole of that strength or the infinity of that force
to meet the attacks of life; if it could, it would be at once the equal
and master of its world. In fact, it has to manage as it can. It meets
certain impacts and Is able to assimilate, equate or master them partially
or completely, for a time or wholly, and then it has in that degree
the emotional and sensational reactions of joy, pleasure, satisfaction,
liking, love, etc., or the intellectual and mental reactions of acceptance,
approval, understanding, knowledge, preference, and on these its will
seizes with attraction, desire, the attempt to prolong, to repeat, to
create, to possess, to make them the pleasurable habit of its life.
Other impacts it meets, but finds them too strong for it or too dissimilar
and discordant or too weak to give it satisfaction; these are things
which it cannot bear or cannot equate with itself or cannot assimilate,
and it is obliged to give to them reactions of grief, pain, discomfort,
dissatisfaction, disliking, disapproval, rejection, inability to understand
or know, refusal of admission. Against them it seeks to protect itself,
to escape from them, to avoid or minimise their recurrence; it has with
regard to them movements of fear, anger, shrinking, horror, aversion,
disgust, shame, would gladly be delivered from them, but it cannot get
away from them, for it is bound to and even invites their causes and
therefore the results; for these impacts are part of life, tangled up
with the things we desire, and the inability to deal with them is part
of the imperfection of our nature. Other impacts again the normal mind
succeeds in holding at bay or neutralising and to these it has a natural
reaction of indifference, insensibility or tolerance which is neither
positive acceptance and enjoyment nor rejection or suffering. To things,
persons, happenings, ideas, workings, whatever presents itself to the
mind, there are always these three kinds of reaction. At the same time,
in spite of their generality, there is nothing absolute about them;
they form a scheme for a habitual scale which is not precisely the same
for all or even for the same mind at different times or in different
conditions. The same impact may arouse in it at one time and another
the pleasurable or positive, the adverse or negative or the indifferent
or neutral reactions.
The soul which seeks mastery may
begin by turning upon these reactions the encountering and opposing
force of a strong and equal endurance. Instead of seeking to protect
itself from or to shun and escape the unpleasant impacts it may confront
them and teach itself to suffer and to bear them with perseverance,
with fortitude, an increasing equanimity or an austere or calm acceptance.
This attitude, this discipline brings out three results, three powers
of the soul in relation to things. First, it is found that what was
before unbearable, becomes easy to endure; the scale of the power that
meets the impact rises in degree; it needs a greater and greater force
of it or of its protracted incidence to cause trouble, pain, grief,
aversion or any other of the notes in the gamut of the unpleasant reactions.
Secondly, it is found that the conscious nature divides itself into
two parts, one of the normal mental and emotional nature in which the
customary reactions continue to take place, another of the higher will
and reason which observes and is not troubled or affected by the passion
of this lower nature, does not accept it as its own, does not approve,
sanction or participate. Then the lower nature begins to lose the force
and power of its reactions, to submit to the suggestions of calm and
strength from the higher reason and will, and gradually that calm and
strength take possession of the mental and emotional, even of the sensational,
vital and physical being. This brings the third power and result, the
power by this endurance and mastery, this separation and rejection of
the lower nature, to get rid of the normal reactions and even, if we
will, to remould all our modes of experience by the strength of the
spirit. This method is applied not only to the unpleasant, but also
to the pleasant reactions; the soul refuses to give itself up to or
be carried away by them; it endures with calm the impacts which bring
joy and pleasure, refuses to be excited by them and replaces the joy
and eager seeking of the mind after pleasant things by the calm of the
spirit. It can be applied too to the thought-mind in a calm reception
of knowledge and of limitations of knowledge which refuses to be carried
away by the fascination of this attractive or repelled by dislike for
that unaccustomed or unpalatable thought-suggestion and waits on the
Truth with a detached observation which allows it to grow on the strong,
disinterested, mastering will and reason. Thus the soul becomes gradually
equal to all things, master of itself, adequate to meet the world with
a strong front in the mind and an undisturbed serenity of the spirit.
The second way is an attitude of
impartial indifference. Its method is to reject at once the attraction
or the repulsion of things, to cultivate for them aluminous impassivity,
an inhibiting rejection, a habit of dissociation and desuetude. This
attitude reposes less on the will, though will is always necessary,
than on the knowledge. It is an attitude which regards these passions
of the mind as things born of the illusion of the outward mentality
or inferior movements unworthy of the calm truth of the single and equal
spirit or a vital and emotional disturbance to be rejected by the tranquil
observing will and dispassionate intelligence of the sage. It puts away
desire from the mind, discards the ego which attributes these dual values
to things, and replaces desire by an impartial and indifferent peace
and ego by the pure self which is not troubled, excited or unhinged
by the impacts of the world. And not only is the emotional mind quieted,
but the intellectual being also rejects the thoughts of the ignorance
and rises beyond the interests of an inferior knowledge to the one truth
that is eternal and without change. This way too develops three results
or powers by which it ascends to peace.
First, it is found that the mind
is voluntarily bound by the petty joys and troubles of life and that
in reality these can have no inner hold on it, if the soul simply chooses
to cast off its habit of helpless determination by external and transient
things. Secondly, it is found that here too a division can be made,
a psychological partition between the lower or outward mind still subservient
to the old habitual touches and the higher reason and will which stand
back to live in the indifferent calm of the spirit. There grows on us,
in other words, an inner separate calm which watches the commotion of
the lower members without taking part in it or giving it any sanction.
At first the higher reason and will may be often clouded, invaded, the
mind carried away by the incitation of the lower members, but eventually
this calm becomes inexpugnable, permanent, not to be shaken by the most
violent touches, na duhkhena gurunapi vicalyate. This inner soul of
calm regards the trouble of the outer mind with a detached superiority
or a passing uninvolved indulgence such as might be given to the trivial
joys and griefs of a child, it does not regard them as its own or as
reposing on any permanent reality. And, finally, the outer mind too
accepts by degrees this calm and indifferent serenity; it ceases to
be attracted by the things that attracted it or troubled by the griefs
and pains to which it had the habit of attaching an unreal importance.
Thus the third power comes, an all-pervading power of wide tranquillity
and peace, a bliss of release from the siege of our imposed fantastic
self-torturing nature, the deep undisturbed exceeding happiness of the
touch of the eternal and infinite replacing by its permanence the strife
and turmoil of impermanent things, brahma-samsparsam atyantam sukham
asnute. The soul is fixed in the delight of the self, atmaratih in the
single and infinite Ananda of the spirit and hunts no more after outward
touches and their griefs and pleasures. It observes the world only as
the spectator of a play or action in which it is no longer compelled
to participate.
The third way is that of submission,
which may be the Christian resignation founded on submission to the
will of God, or an unegoistic acceptance of things and happenings as
a manifestation of the universal Will in time, or a complete surrender
of the person to the Divine, to the supreme Purusha. As the first was
a way of the will and the second a way of knowledge, of the understanding
reason, so this is a way of the temperament and heart and very intimately
connected with the principle of Bhakti. If it is pushed to the end,
it arrives at the same result of a perfect equality. For the knot of
the ego is loosened and the personal claim begins to disappear, we find
that we are no longer bound to joy in things pleasant or sorrow over
the unpleasant; we bear them without either eager acceptance or troubled
rejection, refer them to the Master of our being, concern ourselves
less and less with their personal result to us and hold only one thing
of importance, to approach God, or to be in touch and tune with the
universal and infinite Existence, or to be united with the Divine, his
channel, instrument, servant, lover, rejoicing in him and in our relation
with him and having no other object or cause of joy or sorrow. Here
too there may be for some time a division between the lower mind of
habitual emotions and the higher psychical mind of love and self-giving,
but eventually the former yields, changes, transforms itself, is swallowed
up in the love, joy, delight of the Divine and has no other interests
or attractions. Then all within is the equal peace and bliss of that
union, the one silent bliss that passes understanding, the peace that
abides untouched by the solicitation of lower things in the depths of
our spiritual existence.
These three ways coincide in spite
of their separate starting-points, first, by their inhibition of the
normal reactions of the mind to the touches of outward things, bahya-sparsan,
secondly, by their separation of the self or spirit from the outward
action of Nature. Bat it is evident that our perfection will be greater
and more ernbracingly complete, if we can have a more active equality
which will enable us not only to draw back from or confront the world
in a detached and separated calm, but to return upon it and possess
it in the power of the calm and equal Spirit. This is possible because
the world, Nature, action are not in fact a quite separate thing, but
a manifestation of the Self, the All-Soul, the Divine. The reactions
of the normal mind are a degradation of the divine values which would
but for this degradation make this truth evident to us, - a falsification,
an ignorance which alters their workings, an ignorance which starts
from the involution of Self in a blind material nescience. Once we return
to the full consciousness of Self, of God, we can then put a true divine
value on things and receive and act on them with the calm, joy, knowledge,
seeing will of the Spirit. When we begin to do that, then the soul begins
to have an equal joy in the universe, an equal will dealing with all
energies, an equal knowledge which takes possession of the spiritual
truth behind all the phenomena of this divine manifestation. It possesses
the world as the Divine possesses it, in a fullness of the infinite
light, power and Ananda.
All this existence can therefore
be approached by a Yoga of positive and active in place of the negative
and passive equality. This requires, first, a new knowledge which is
the knowledge of unity, - to see all things as oneself and to see all
things in God and God in all things. There is then a will of equal acceptance
of all phenomena, all events, all happenings, all persons and forces
as masks of the Self, movements of the one energy, results of the one
power in action, ruled by the one divine wisdom; and on the foundation
of this will of greater knowledge there grows a strength to meet everything
with an untroubled soul and mind. There must be an identification of
myself with the self of the universe, a vision and a feeling of oneness
with all creatures, a perception of all forces and energies and results
as the movement of this energy of my self and therefore intimately my
own; not, obviously, of my ego-self which must be silenced, eliminated,
cast away, - otherwise this perfection cannot come,.- but of a greater
impersonal or universal self with which I am now one. For my personality
is now only one centre of action of that universal self, but a centre
intimately in relation and unison with all other personalities and also
with all those other things which are to us only impersonal objects
and forces : but in fact they also are powers of the one impersonal
Person (Purusha), God, Self and Spirit. My individuality is his and
is no longer a thing incompatible with or separated from universal being;
it is itself universalised, a knower of the universal Ananda and one
with and a lover of all that it knows, acts on and enjoys. For to the
equal knowledge of the universe and equal will of acceptance of the
universe will be added an equal delight in all the cosmic manifestation
of the Divine.
Here too we may describe three results
or powers of the method. First, we develop this power of equal acceptance
in the spirit and in the higher reason and will which respond to the
spiritual knowledge. But also we find that though the nature can be
induced to take this general attitude, there is yet a struggle between
that higher reason and will and the lower mental being which clings
to the old egoistic way of seeing the world and reacting to its impacts.
Then we find that these two, though at first confused, mingled together,
alternating, acting on each other, striving for possession, can be divided,
the higher spiritual disengaged from the lower mental nature. But in
this stage, while the mind is still subject to reactions of grief, trouble,
an inferior joy and pleasure, there is an increased difficulty which
does not act to the same extent in a more sharply individualised Yoga.
For not only does the mind feel its own troubles and difficulties, but
it shares in the joys and griefs of others, vibrates to them in a poignant
sympathy, feels their impacts with a subtle sensitiveness, makes them
its own; not only so, but the difficulties of others are added to our
own and the forces which oppose the perfection act with a greater persistence,
because they feel this movement to be an attack upon and an attempt
to conquer their universal kingdom and not merely the escape of an isolated
soul from their empire. But finally, we find too that there comes a
power to surmount these difficulties; the higher reason and will impose
themselves on the lower mind, which sensibly changes into the vast types
of the spiritual nature; it takes even a delight in feeling, meeting
and surmounting all troubles, obstacles and difficulties until they
are eliminated by its own transformation. Then the whole being lives
in a final power, the universal calm and joy, the seeing delight and
will of the Spirit in itself and its manifestation.
To see how this positive method
works, we may note very briefly its principle in the three great powers
of knowledge, will and feeling. All emotion, feeling, sensation is a
way of the soul meeting and putting effective values on the manifestations
of the Self in nature. But what the self feels is a universal delight,
Ananda. The soul in the lower mind on the contrary gives it, as we have
seen, three varying values of pain, pleasure and neutral indifference,
which tone by gradations of less and more into each other, and this
gradation depends on the power of the individualised consciousness to
meet, sense, assimilate, equate, master all that comes in oil it from
all of the greater self which it has by separative individualisation
put outside of it and made as if not-self to its experience. But all
the time, because of the greater Self within us, there is a secret soul
which takes delight in all these things and draws strength from and
grows by all that touches it, profits as much by adverse as by favourable
experience. This can make itself felt by the outer desire soul, and
that in fact is why we have a delight in existing and can even take
a certain kind of pleasure in struggle, suffering and the harsher colours
of existence. But to get the universal Ananda all our instruments must
learn to take not any partial or perverse, but the essential joy of
all things. In all things there is a principle of Ananda, which the
understanding can seize on and the aesthesis feel as the taste of delight
in them, their rasa; but ordinarily they put upon them instead arbitrary,
unequal and contrary values: they have to be led to perceive things
in the light of the spirit and to transform these provisional values
into the real, the equal and essential, the spiritual Rasa. The life-principle
is there to give this seizing of the principle of delight, rasa-grahana,
the form of a strong possessing enjoyment, bhoga, which makes the whole
lifebeing vibrate with it and accept and rejoice in it; but ordinarily
it is not, owing to desire, equal to its task, but turns it into the
three lower forms, - pain and pleasure, sukha-bhoga duhkha-bhoga, and
that rejection of both which we call insensibility or indifference.
The Prana or vital being has to be liberated from desire and its inequalities
and to accept and turn into pure enjoyment the rasa which the understanding
and aesthesis perceive. Then there is no farther obstacle in the instruments
to the third step by which all is changed into the full and pure ecstasy
of the spiritual Ananda.
In the matter of knowledge, there
are again three reactions of the mind to things, ignorance, error and
true knowledge. The positive equality will accept all three of them
to start with as movements of a self-manifestation which evolves out
of ignorance through the partial or distorted knowledge which is the
cause of error to true knowledge. It will deal with the ignorance of
the mind, as what it is psychologically, a clouded, veiled or wrapped-up
state of the substance of consciousness in which the knowledge of the
all-knowing Self is hidden as if in a dark sheath; it will dwell on
it by the mind and by the aid of related truths already known, by the
intelligence or by an intuitive concentration deliver the knowledge
out of the veil of the ignorance. It will not attach itself only to
the known or try to force all into its little frame, but will dwell
on the known and the unknown with an equal mind open to all possibility.
So too it will deal with error; it will accept the tangled skein of
truth and error, but attach itself to no opinion, rather seeking for
the element of truth behind all opinions, the knowledge concealed within
the error, - for all error is a disfiguration of some misunderstood
fragments of truth and draws its vitality from that and not from its
misapprehension; it will accept, but not limit itself even by ascertained
truths, but will always be ready for new knowledge and seek for a more
and more integral, a more and more extended, reconciling, unifying wisdom.
This can only come in its fullness by rising to the ideal supermind,
and therefore the equal seeker of truth will not be attached to the
intellect and its workings or think that all ends there, but be prepared
to rise beyond, accepting each stage of ascent and the contributions
of each power of his being, but only to lift them into a higher truth.
He must accept everything, but cling to nothing, be repelled by nothing
however imperfect or however subversive of fixed notions, but also allow
nothing to lay hold on him to the detriment of the free working of the
Truth-Spirit. This equality of the intelligence is an essential condition
for rising to the higher supramental and spiritual knowledge.
The will in us, because it is the
most generally forceful power of our being, - there is a will of knowledge,
a will of life, a will of emotion, a will acting in every part of our
nature, - takes many forms and returns various reactions to things,
such as incapacity, limitation of power, mastery, or right will, wrong
or perverted will, neutral volition, - in the ethical mind virtue, sin
and non-ethical volition, - and others of the kind. These too the positive
equality accepts as a tangle of provisional values from which it must
start, but which it must transform into universal mastery, into the
will of the Truth and universal Right, into the freedom of the divine
Will in action. The equal will need not feel remorse, sorrow or discouragement
over its stumblings; if these reactions occur in the habitual mentality,
it will only see how far they indicate an imperfection and the thing
to be corrected, - for they are not always just indicators, - and so
get beyond them to a calm and equal guidance. It will see that these
stumblings themselves are necessary to experience and in the end steps
towards the goal. Behind and within all that occurs in ourselves and
in the world, it will look for the divine meaning and the divine guidance;
it will look beyond imposed limitations to the voluntary self-limitation
of the universal Power by which it regulates its steps and gradations,
- imposed on our ignorance, self-imposed in the divine knowledge, -
and go beyond to unity with the illimitable power of the Divine. All
energies and actions it will see as forces proceeding from the one Existence
and their perversions as imperfections, inevitable in the developing
movement, of powers that were needed for that movement; it will therefore
have charity for all imperfections, even while pressing steadily towards
a universal perfection. This equality will open the nature to the guidance
of the divine and universal Will and make it ready for that supramental
action in which the power of the soul in us is luminously full of and
one with the power of the supreme Spirit.
The integral Yoga will make use
of both the passive and the active methods according to the need of
the nature and the guidance of the inner spirit, the Antaryamin. It
will not limit itself by the passive way, for that would lead only to
some individual quietistic salvation or negation of an active and universal
spiritual being which would be inconsistent with the totality of its
aim. It will use the method of endurance, but not stop short with a
detached strength and serenity, but move rather to a positive strength
and mastery, in which endurance will no longer be needed, since the
self will then be in a calm and powerful spontaneous possession of the
universal energy and capable of determining easily and happily all its
reactions in the oneness and the Ananda. It will use the method of impartial
indifference, but not end in an aloof indifference to all things, but
rather move towards a high-seated impartial acceptance of life strong
to transform all experience into the greater values of the equal spirit.
It will use too temporarily resignation and submission, but by the full
surrender of its personal being to the Divine it will attain to the
all-possessing Ananda in which there is no need of resignation, to the
perfect harmony with the universal which is not merely an acquiescence,
but an embracing oneness, to the perfect instrumentality and subjection
of the natural self to the Divine by which the Divine also is possessed
by the individual spirit. It will use fully the positive method, but
will go beyond any individual acceptance of things which would have
the effect of turning existence into a field only of the perfected individual
knowledge, power and Ananda. That it will have, but also it will have
the oneness by which it can live in the existence of others for their
sake and not only for its own and for their assistance and as one of
their means, an associated and helping force in the movement towards
the same perfection. It will live for the Divine, not shunning world-existence,
not attached to the earth or the heavens, not attached either to a supracosmic
liberation, but equally one with the Divine in all his planes and able
to live in him equally in the Self and in the manifestation.
Sri Aurobindo
in "The Synthesis of Yoga" - Part 4: The Yoga of Self-Perfection
SABCL Volume 21- Pages 681-692
published by Sri
Aurobindo Ashram - Pondicherry
diffusion by SABDA
or
Lotus Light Publications
U.S.A.
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