In Tune with the Cosmic Vibration
The Om that we speak of is not
merely a sound in the ordinary sense. It is not some noise that we make. Om
appears to be a sound only in its outermost expression, in its Vaikhari form,
but in its internal structure, it has a deeper relationship with things. The
whole universe is vibration ultimately, and not made up of objects, segregated
from one another. Modern science tells us today that the whole universe is
energy. There are no objects. There are no brick walls. There is not even the
sun, moon and stars. There is only a continuum of equilibrated, spread-out
energy everywhere, a four-dimensional continuum, they say. What is all this but
a vibration that they are speaking of?
The universe originated from a
vibration, The terms Nada, Bindu and Kala which one hears of in Tantric and
Hatha Yoga circles are only certain ways of mentioning the same process of the
manifestation of this original impersonal vibration gradually solidifying
itself, condensing more and more into concrete forms of visible objects, bodies
and personalities. So, the universe is a vibration, and not a bundle of things,
persons and objects. In the ultimate analysis, the universe does not exist at
all as it appears to our eyes; because, ultimately, in the Samadhi state, it
vanishes like a dream. And great scientists today have gone even to that
farthest limit of saying that the world is only a thought. It is not even a
vibration in any externalised manner. The vibrations are only mathematical concepts.
A terrifying conclusion, indeed, for a person who cannot understand what all
these mean!
Om is cosmic essentially, and
it is not merely a sound produced through the mouth. The so-called sound that
the Yoga student manifests, through his vocal organs as the chant of Om, is
only an attempt on his part to set himself in tune with the cosmic vibration
that is already there, even before he was born into this world.
All Yoga is nothing but an
endeavour, on our part, to set ourselves in tune with things as they really
are. In, Yoga, we do not try to modify things, or change things, in any way
whatsoever. Everything is perfect and all right in itself. The creation of God
is complete in every minute detail. It does not require any change. But, the
change is required on our side, because we are distracted individuals,
completely severed from this harmony of the Whole; and, divinity, spirituality,
religion, Yoga, whatever they may call it, is nothing but the art of our
self-attunement with this universal set-up of things. By the chant of Om, we
put forth an effort to subdue the distractions of our mind and nerves and our
entire personality.
The whole personality of the
individual normally tries to run away from Reality. We are every minute running
away from God in our perceptions of things and in our desires especially. And
this running away is visible in the interest that we take in the forms
external, believing that everything is different from everything else, so that
we have got particularised ideals and ideologies and interests in respect of
different persons and things. This externalising habit of the mind is
restrained gradually by various methods. And all these methods constitute Yoga.
And one method, among the many, is the chanting of Om.
The universe includes us. We
are not outside it. So, in our chant of Om, we try only to set up a vibration
within ourselves, at the root of our personality, a vibration corresponding to
that which is already there in the universe outside, so that in a very accurate
pronunciation of Om, deeply conducted with profound feeling, we become one with
all things for a second, as it were. That is why we feel such a joy. Joy is the
outcome of unity with objects, and when we are outside them, we are in grief.
So, we feel a sensation of identity of ourselves with the subliminal realities
at the back of all things by this profound and feelingful chant of Om that we
have to conduct everyday, for a protracted period, as a very regular Sadhana,
as a very essential part of our Sadhana.
Tasya
vuchakuh pranavah: This is a small Sutra of Patanjali. It means
that the designation of God or Isvara is Pranava or Om. In another Sutra,
Patanjali says: Tajjapas tad-artha-bhavanam. The
contemplation of the meaning of Om is to follow the chant of Om. When we recite
or chant Om, it does not mean that our mind will be remaining idle. No, it
concentrates itself: it feels the presence of a harmony with the whole
universe. One can do Japa of Om itself in any of the forms mentioned. It is the
highest of Mantras, and all the Mantras are included in Om: all languages
themselves are inside Om. So, in one place, the great author says that when we
go deep, very deep into the structure of sound, we may be able to know every
language in the world, even the languages of animals and birds. These are all
very difficult to achieve, but not impossible, if we are persistent and are
able to go beneath the level of our outer, physical and psychic personality.
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