Sunday, November 3, 2013

(Nov 3,2013 ) Spiritual Message for the Day – The Aspiration for Spiritual Life

The Aspiration for Spiritual Life
Divine Life Society Publication: The Path to Freedom: Mastering the Art of Total Perception by Swami Krishnananda


 
We have a general idea of God, of the world, of life, of Self-realization or God-realization, but when it comes to actual experience in day-to-day life, we realize that the mind stands apart from Reality. Sadhana is nothing but this adjustment of the mind with Truth.

Sadhana is not merely the concentration of mind on God at the very outset. Before we understand God, we find ourselves in the necessity to understand ourselves. We appear to have a very appreciable knowledge of God and His creation but very poor knowledge of our own self, due to which it is that we suffer in life. Pleasures and sufferings are connected with ourselves, and not with God.

We mostly think that the objects are away from us. The object of the mind is not connected with the mind physically, materially or in reality.

Whatever be the sadhana that we practice, whether it is kirtana or bhajana, japa or meditation, all these hinge upon this relation of the mind and its objects. When we chant kirtana, for example, it is not merely a word that we utter or a sound that we make; it has an object. It is not merely a mental operation that goes on when we are meditating; it has an object. We are not merely moving about here and there; our activities have an object. We will find that every blessed thing that we do in this world, psychologically or physically, has a counterpart as an object.

No one tries to dig a well for water when the house is on fire. To try to do sadhana late in life, when everything is settled economically and physically, would be a folly because sadhana is not as easy as people imagine. It is not just commencing something at once. Even a business we cannot commence so easily. There are many factors involved in anything we do; and particularly in spiritual practice, the most important factor being our own self.

The more we grow in the consciousness of spirituality, the more also do we realize the intimacy that subsists between ourselves and our objects – the intimacy in an inner sense, not an external or social sense. We do not suddenly become celestials or gods. The Puranas tell us that we have passed through 84 lakhs of yonis or births. We have been every blessed thing in this world before becoming human beings. This is what our scriptures say. Scientists all say that we have passed through various stages of evolution from matter to life, from life to mind, and from mind to intellect. From the pure inorganic level we came to the biological, and from the biological we came to the psychological and the rational.

Very mysterious, minute and subtle is this process of evolution. We have been growing psychologically, and not merely physically, organically and biologically. The earliest state of the mind is supposed to be that in which it gets lodged with matter, where there is no such thing as psychology at all. It is only inorganic matter. Fire is in the matchstick, but we cannot see the fire. It is totally absorbed in the matchstick, which must be rubbed in order that it may be ignited. The condition of mind wherein it is inseparable from matter is the crudest form of matter. It evolves gradually, where it tries to extricate itself from the clutches of matter, and it begins to assert its independence, slowly, though not fully. It does not succeed in its assumption of independence, but it refuses to be totally controlled by the laws of matter.

The life principle that is manifest in plants and trees is the first assertion of independence of mind over matter, while in inorganic material it was apparently not there at all; for all practical purposes, it was dead. So in the human level we seem to be at an advantage over all other aspects of creation – animal, plant and inorganic levels. We have a freedom of our own. Although man is small compared to the gigantic machinery of the cosmos, he has a power in him on account of the psychological transcendence that he has achieved. He knows the workings of the mind better than the animal does.

Though scientifically it is true that we are superior beings, we sometimes have fears which haunt us. One reason for the increase in the fear in humanity is a peculiar characteristic in us which is absent in the animal, on account of which they are a little more blessed than man: egoism. It is not merely self-consciousness; it is self-assertiveness – assertiveness to the opposition to others and in others’ well-being.

Just as the mind is a part of our being, the ego is also a part of us. We cannot separate the mind from our self, and so also we cannot separate the ego from our self. We are the mind, we are the intellect, we are the ego. We sum up all these elements in a single term ‘I’ which includes mind, intellect, ego and all other psychological functions in the evolution of the human mind.

In spiritual practice, you will realize that it is egoism that acts as the greatest of oppositions, more than even the senses and the other psychological functions.

We have the power and the freedom to do this or that, to choose one alternative or the other. When freedom is given to a person who does not know how to exercise freedom properly, it becomes a cause of bondage. Vision and action have to go together. A gun is good in its own way, and a sword has its own purpose, but we cannot hand them over to a baby. Power corrupts, as they say, when vision is lacking. First we have to realize where we are. The freedom with which man has been endowed is expected to be utilized to evolve further into higher understanding. But if human freedom is mixed up with human ego, then evolution can be retarded at the human level. We confuse the human ideal and aspiration with the animal way of perception. One of the animal ways of thinking is: “The world is absolutely unconnected with me, and has nothing to do with me.”  

Spiritual life is supposed to commence with viveka, or understanding. The first understanding that blossoms forth is the understanding of the fact that there is some sort of connection between ourselves and the world.

The spiritual aspiration, the spiritual consciousness, rises like a small tendril, a small plant, and flashes forth like a spark and he becomes restless. This restlessness is the commencement of the spiritual consciousness in human life. When the sense of having enough with things arises, we may be sure that the spiritual is awakening in us. It is just awakening; the child is not yet born, but yet there is a possibility of it being born.

This goes also by the name of vairagya, scriptures say: a distaste that we feel for the ordinary satisfactions of life. It is a lack of taste for things, and has nothing to do with the physical distance of objects from things. It is not that we cannot get things, but rather that we do not want them. There is a sharp distinction between vairagya and frustration – when we cannot get a thing, it is frustration, but when we can have it but do not want it, this is vairagya.

Vairagya is the absence of longing. Nothing can be more difficult than to realize the distinction between the sense of spiritual discontent, divine discontent, and the submerged desires of the human mind.

Many a time, our desires seem to lie buried, with none on the surface, but it does not mean that there are no desires. Desires can lie dormant like a coiled serpent but when anything touches them, immediately they expand themselves into furious activity. This is exactly what desires do.

So vairagyas, as the scriptures tell us, are of two kinds: the vairagya of the person who has been through the ruts of life, passed through many a suffering. That is one sort of maturity which the mind reaches and attains a kind of vairagya.

But there are some who are born with a longing for the eternal, though they might have not physically come in contact with tempting objects. This is the most stable kind of vairagya; but even the earlier one should get stabilized by the aspiration planted in the mind of the seekers by deep thought and the understanding of the nature of things.

The first stage in the development of spiritual aspiration is an inherent sense of dissatisfaction with everything in this world, and longing for things which are not visible to the eyes. This is viveka and vairagya, understanding and dispassion combined, and here is planted the sapling of true spiritual life.

Excerpts from:
The Aspiration for Spiritual Life: The Path to Freedom: Mastering the Art of Total Perception by Swami Krishnananda
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