Guru Purnima Message 2012

When we go over to the Meditation Center for silent meditation at 9:00 pm, many people throughout North and South America will join us; at 10:00 pm in the New York area, 9:00 pm in this area and so on – so there is a Guru-field. Many people know of this Full Moon Meditation, but . . .

“I fell asleep.” “I forgot.” But you didn’t forget the movie on the TV. Is this how much you care for the source of knowledge, source of wisdom, source of that grace which can guide us, which can purify us, which can sanctify us?

The word “guru,” in etymological history, is connected to the word “great” and “gravity.” From the moment we are born we are looking for a guru, someone to teach us, to guide us. We are constantly asking: What is that? Who is that?

The ancient rishis sang out in wonder:

“Amī ya ṛkṣā nihitāsa uccā naktaṃ dadṛśre kuha cid diveyuḥ”
(Amee ya RkShaa nihitaasa uccaa naktam dadRshre kuha chid diveyuh)

“These stars that appear at night in the sky, where do they vanish to in the day?”

People ask:

“Ko addhā veda ka iha pra vocat kuta ājātā kuta iyaṃ visṛṣṭiḥ:
( Ko addhaa veda ka iha pra vocat kuta aa-jaataa kuta iyam vi-sRShTih
)

O, among all of humanity, who knows of this knowledge?  Who will tell us how we were born?  What is the source of this creation, this creation, the creation of our personality, the creation of our being?”

We ask these questions and we want intellectual answers, but intellectual answers are no answers. Intellectual answers raise more questions, and each answer raises more questions.

Only when the questions are resolved and the answer is a personal experience, a personal experience that we call in the ancient Upanishads, in the texts of the yoga tradition, ātma jñāna,aatma-jnaana, knowing the Self. Ātma-sākṣāt-kāra, aatma-saakShaatkaara, coming face-to-face and realizing this ātman, aatman, the being to whom no adjectives, no nouns, no verbs are attached, no names, no conditions, no spaces, no times, no histories, no futures – eternity alone, infinity alone.

Knowing that Infinite Self is the path of yoga that Guru grants us, shows us if you’d only listen, if you’d only follow, if you’d only practice. And when we truly aspire, truly – not as an occasional interest: “Oh, that was an interesting book. Oh, that was a nice one. I’ll read it for you.” No! Does it stop there? Hmmm?

When you truly aspire, a prayer rises in you. Many of you know the Mahā-mṛtyuñjaya prayer:

Om tryambakaṃ yajāmahe sugandhiṃ puṣṭi-vardhanam.
urvārukam iva bandhanāt mṛtyor mukṣīya māmṛtāt
(
Om tryambakam yajaamahe sugandhim puShTi-vardhanam
Urvaarukam iva bandhanaat mRtor mukSheeya maamRtaat)

The key word in that prayer I’ve never explained before. The key word in that prayer is mukṣīya [pronounced muksheeya]: “May I be freed.” “May I be liberated.”

Waking up, wake with the prayer: Mukṣīya! May I be liberated today!” Go to sleep at night, thinking “Mukṣīya! May I be liberated in a divine dream! May I be liberated in my sleep. May I wake up a liberated being. This morsel of food I eat, may I thereby, mukṣīyabe liberated, be freed from bondages, false concepts, names, conditions, pasts and futures, habituations, imprints that bind us, that tie us down.
In one of my favorite countries, Korea,among many people when they part from each other, the parting greeting is: “May you be liberated. May you be enlightened.”

May you be enlightened. May I be enlightened. When we truly thus aspire – truly!  Not an occasional desire: every now and take interest, drop into the church once a week, come to The Meditation Center . . . Ummm! . . . sometimes. Remember your mantra . . . Ummm! . . . every now and then.

When you truly aspire, when your hair roots cry out,

“Mukṣīya!
May I be freed!
May I be liberated!
May I be enlightened!
May I be freed!
May I be liberated!
May I be enlightened!”

Go aspiring tonight. Go to bed.  Forget what in the morning? Yes? No, wake up remembering. Go for your shopping. Come back laden with your groceries. Put the groceries down, sit down on the sofa, take a sigh and say, Mukṣīya! May I be liberated.” How about that? No need to memorize the whole 32-syllable mantra, just mukṣīya.

And how? How can that aspiration be fulfilled?

All of you know the Gāyatrī mantra:

OM bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ (in the Earth, Sky and Heaven)
tat savitur vareṇyaṃ bhargo devasya dhīmahi. dhiyo yo naḥ pracodayāt.

(OM bhoor bhuvah svah. Tat savitur vareNyam
bhargo devasya dheemahi. Dhiyo yo nah pracodayaat.)

Just like the key word in Mahā-mṛtyuñjaya mantra is mukṣīya, the key word in Gāyatrī Mantra is dhīmahi Pronounced dheemahi): “May we meditate,” and thereby may I be liberated. Dhīmahiand mukṣīya. You want your prayer of mukṣīya answered? Okay, then dhīmahi What more do you want to know?

But it is a path in which, if your aspiration is a true one, self-purification will happen.

The great Shaṅkarāchārya, who revived our Saṁnyāsī (sanyasi – monastic  order of Swamis) 1200 years ago, wrote voluminous works, and one of his books is, Upadeśa-sāhasrī, upadesha-saahasree, the Book of A Thousand Homilies.

He says the guru’s task is to impart knowledge. But then he has to assess why the knowledge is not taking root. Why is not the disciple grasping, understanding, following the path?

He has to figure out what are the causes, what are the reasons that the child who is his disciple is not rising. So in that particular passage, the great Shaṅkarāchārya explains what you have to look for (paraphrase):

Is this person indulging in non-virtue?
Is he too worldly?
Is he lazy?
Is he being negligent?
The teaching he has heard about discriminating between the eternal and the transient. has that teaching taken root in him so he is not choosing the transient, he is choosing the eternal?
Is he too much involved with constantly thinking of worldly matters?
Is he subject to pride of his group, caste, country, nation?
What is his pride?
What is his ego?

Once the guru has identified that, he says, then create in him the opposite virtues: non-anger, non-violence, non-pride, non-ego – cultivate those.

The guru is like a mother’s womb, hiraṇya-garbha,HiranYa-garbha, the Golden Womb. When the guru light shines, it is like the whole universe is filled with a brilliant golden light. It is the teaching light of the universe; in the West it is called the Holy Spirit, the teaching spirit. It is that teaching spirit to which, on this full moon day, we pay homage.

Our swamis have spoken to you. I have a few other swamis, I have one or two very capable ones in India. I wish it was possible to get visas for them to come and guide you here, but it is not possible.

When I enter my vow of silence, they will continue teaching. Five years of silence starting on March 10th next year (2013), and people are asking me, “Who will guide us?

All these people have been guided. Swami Ritavan has been with me for the last 42 years. Ma Radha has been under Swami Rama for the last 42 years. And many others: Swami Nitya, and there are others.

But let me explain to you that in our tradition, silence is the true teaching. The real teaching is in silence. I invite you to come to the Ashram and be steeped in that silence. We specialize on the art of silence in our ashram.

We specialize on many sciences: the teachings of it, the philosophy of yoga, and the texts, and we have a research lab which is testing, recording brain waves and conditions arising out of meditation, and Śrī Vidyā, shree-vidyaa, which is not easily taught. But our core teaching now is the science of silence. People do not realize that there is a science to silence. I invite you for that.

We will go over the Meditation Center now, because at 9:00 p.m. We sit in silent meditation for an hour with the rest of the entire North American and South American community.

And, what are the two key words that I have given you today? Yes! Mukṣīyaand dhīmahi.

Will you absorb these two words and let them become your aspiration, your desire, your longing?

  • This word I am about to speak, does it lead to liberation?
  • Is it conducive to meditation?
  • This emotion that I’m about to indulge in and express, does it lead to liberation – my liberation and the liberation of others?
  • Is it conducive to my meditation and the meditation of others?

That is your test: continuous self-purification. I wish you that purification, and true entry into the gateway of silence.

We have kept today’s guided meditation short, but when you sit for silent meditation, expand on that. Each stage that I led you through, expand on that over time.

People ask why we don’t meditate here in this building. Because that space at The Meditation Center is sacred. Sacred means that there is a Guru presence. And our Gurudeva, Swami Rama of the Himalayas, consecrated that place.

I am hoping that in eight years’ time, when you celebrate 50 years of The Meditation Center – I will be 88 – that maybe I will come and join you. And you will decide for that space to remain sacred and devoted to the teaching and practicing of meditation for another 50 years after that. And that is for you to decide, to determine, to make possible.

God Bless you all. May Gurudeva bless you, grant you grace, mukṣīyaand for that, dhīmahiWith the grace of the Guru: śrīṁ gurave namaḥ. (Shreem gurave namah.)


Editor’s Note

This is a transcription of the lecture part of the Guru Purnima evening address by Swamiji on 3rd July 2012 at St. Maron’s Church, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Purusharthas: The Four Purposes of Life

When I got the “job” to talk about “the four purposes of life,” I was puzzled.

As far as I understand, each one of us has a purpose in life; that’s why we are here on this planet! A divine spark, surrounded by subtle mind-stuff – yes, you could call it Purusha – chose this incarnation, infused by life energy (prana) and called it “me,” as far as time, space, family, problems, and joys are concerned. I am here, we are here because there is something to work out, something to learn in the school that we call life on earth.

But then I realized that the topic has an added meaning in the context of Indian, cultural, and spiritual context, here the ‘purpose’ of life is summarized in four Purusharthas.

If we look at the word, I am sure you can easily recognize the word “Purusha” in it. Let’s say it means the indweller of this body, soul, consciousness, core energy – around which all your other personality stuff sticks … until it dissolves again. (That is another topic.) I like to think of this in the metaphor of fire. Ultimate consciousness is like a fire and the part that is the cause with which “I” am identified as “me” is the spark of that fire. Now, let’s not enter the discussion of whether the whole Fire is called Purusha, or just the spark; we can leave that to thousands of years of scholarship quibbles.

The second part of the word Purushartha is “artha”. It refers to that which is gained, be it wealth/experience/health or…whatever! The point to be aware of is that we look at this through the eyes of a certain philosophy. Reality is shaped by our basic thought matrix. Yes, how we experience reality is dependent on what mind-makeup we wear, what shapes the pattern of the matrix we look through (which in turn is shaped by the society we live in). In Yoga we are called to be aware of our mind-make up, and that, of course, includes what we feed our mind.

In this way we need to be alert to what the ‘mind–makeup was and is; and what “food we feed it.” Just as the food we eat builds our body and mind, so we build our own perspective, our own matrix through which we experience the world. Swami Rama talked about building one’s own philosophy of life. He said:

You are the architect of your life. You build your own philosophy and construct your own attitudes.

We study Yogic, Indian philosophy…thus we feed our mind certain patterns of thinking, which, of course, have implications. So when we talk, in the traditional Indian context of Purushartha, it refers to the general goal of human existence from a certain perspective. In this way, for the traditional Indian (Vedic) society, there are four such purushārthas, namely:

  • Dharma: “(religious, social and/or moral) righteousness, both spiritual and ritual”
  • Artha: “(material and/or financial) prosperity as well as pursuit of meaning”
  • Kāma: “(material) pleasure “
  • Moksha: “(spiritual) liberation; or renunciation as well as detachment”

Over the long history, there have been different ways these have been considered. In the earlier texts, there were three dharma , kāma, artha; later ones include the notion of moksha . At times artha and kama have been grouped together as the lower goals (to be fulfilled first), and the higher goals: dharma and moksha.

The details of this system and its unfoldment we find in the traditions of the Dharmaśāstras and the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata. These are relatively later than the Vedas (how much later, varies…anything from a couple of thousand years to 500…who knows). The prime scripture of the Dharmashastras is the Dharma sutras.

You soon will see why I was so careful in the beginning. These scriptures describe what dharma is basically as “how a Brahmin male should conduct himself” (there are but few general issues). How life is to be conducted from the beginning, with the initiations the male child receives, etc. Yes, there are a few general issues described, but mainly it details duties, rites, rules, and responsibilities for the male Brahmin.
Now in our “day and age”… this seems a very limited culturally bound portrait. What about the other groups in society? What about women???? Dharma is described in these base scriptures as right behavior in terms of ritual moral and social spheres of behavior for men and for priests. At times there is even conflict, or should I better say, incongruity with the Vedas.

It is hard to underestimate the importance of this. Because there is in many ways not only a difference in that society ‘then…and now’, but there is a difference in the perspective of the mind-make-up in the oriental mind (I choose a word wider than India) for the relationship of the individual to society and the so-called “Western mind”. These are two quite different perspectives.

In the Orient, especially in ancient Indian society, the focus is entirely on the society, the ways, structures, and belief systems of a particular society must be maintained!! Therefore if an individual misbehaves…it can be ‘sacrificed’; if the family has a problem, the individual’s happiness or even life can be sacrificed. If a village is having a problem, the family might well be sacrificed; if the tribe/clan/community is in difficulties the village might well be sacrificed. And so on.

The individual person has their place, hence their goals of life…within a certain set of social rules, which are to be fulfilled. Even now in India… the clan, the village, and the cast determine much of the behavior of the people!

In the West, the focus is not so defining on the community/ the society but much more on the goal of the individual to find and fulfill his own life’s goal. I am not saying this is better than that; I am merely highlighting the differences because from here dharma, one’s duties are somewhat different!

The duties in Indian society are strongly focused on family, village, and social strata, i.e. cast, etc. You are born into a certain family and thus you have a certain duty shaped by that, i.e. Arjuna was born a Kshatriya so it was his dharma, his duty to be a warrior, including killing people! As a warrior it was not wrong to do so, he was merely an instrument of the divine will.

One is born, into a certain set of circumstances and stays there, fulfilling one’s dharma there! i.e. one is to follow the rules and rites of that group.

A similar understanding is had in the Jewish Tradition. There is a story in the Old Testament (which can serve as a pointed example): A man is found picking up sticks on the Sabbath. So Moses is asked what to do with him, the man has violated the dharma of the society! So Moses asks God; God answers: He should be stoned to death, he has broken the ritual law!

Often the word dharma is translated as virtue, but cultures differ, and what is a virtue in one, might not be a virtue in another.

In the traditional Hindu society, then and now … just as in the Jewish traditional society…, virtue meant obeying the laws of rites and customs of society. The function of these laws and rituals was to bind the individual into the group/caste/ family/ faith (and the benefit of it is that things are preserved!)

The way of fulfilling our duty in the Western context is based on a very different mental frame. Religion and obligations have a different places. We might be born into a set of circumstances, but have a choice to grow or opt-out! We can choose the religion, we choose the rites and rituals, and we choose what we want to do with our lives.

Yes, we have incarnated with certain lessons to learn; (just as in India), but we are self-responsible for learning it, walking that path, or choosing a different one…especially once we have learned from it! (To some extent, of course, we too, due to our mental matrix, follow the pattern of the society which builds our matrix, but there is a noteworthy difference. It is hidden… thus more difficult to know, but once known easier to escape).

This difference we also find in the different understanding that the word dharma has in Buddhism: there it refers to the individual’s “suchness”, intrinsic beingness… the tree has the dharma of treeing….so the dharma of the individual is much more concerned with the individual finding its way to its true goal/ nature, the Divine within.

One could say: In the ‘Hindu-Indian’ society attention is first paid to kama and artha; and later to the individual’s “dharma” and moksha. Where in the Buddhist tradition (and maybe in the Western matrix), dharma has more the flavor of walking to Moksha…however that word is understood!

I propose to step out of the narrow confines and try to go beyond these limitations and find the meaning of the Purusharthas that is valid across time and space. From this angle: what do the four aspects /goals for human life, dharma, artha, kama, and moksha, mean?

Artha

The purpose of one’s life; in order to fulfill the purpose of our incarnation, we need a stable foundation in the world. For that, we need to have a good look at ourselves, what our tendencies, talents, desires are and where our desires come from, which of these need to be fulfilled to progress. One could say: what lessons we need to learn in the school of life which would serve as a foundation to be able to progress to secondary school or university.

In order to build these foundations, the Purusharthas tell us, we need to be taking care of our needs. In agreement with psychology, we could say: Artha is gathering the means to fulfill our basic needs for food and shelter, for safety. In the Vedic society especially, but not exclusively this issue is solved within the social strata; i.e. the group looks after its own! Gathering the means to support one’s need, in our modern materialistic world generally means “earning/having money to provide the essentials.” Artha refers to recognizing this level of physical or material need and says: it has to be taken care of! As long as we live in the world, in a physical body… we need some measure of material wealth, to look after it… be it concerning food, or shelter.

As with many things, the scale, or depth is questionable. Each person has some measure of insecurity, propelling him/her to satisfy these base needs in a different way. (For example, in some societies these base needs include fathering a son!)

Insecurity, lacking any of the above is not a comfortable feeling, it distracts from progressing to the higher goals. On this base level providing security is the goal.

In our society, money is the most important worldly resource to provide us with security (food and shelter) so that’s what people want – desperately. The amount of desperation is many times directly proportional to the extent of insecurity within. We can’t think of life anymore without money, for it is also a means for getting enjoyment and comforts of life “which we need”.

Nevertheless, every person must be taught the art of acquiring money/wealth to have a certain sense of physical safety. Hopefully, this can be done in a way that is compatible with the person’s nature and beneficial to society. The problem of human tendencies is, however, that as soon as the base level is achieved one finds new avenues of insecurities, because money can never completely answer the problem of providing security. As soon as one gets it, one worries about how to protect this hard-earned money itself; i.e. one remains insecure.

The task of artha remains and hopefully progresses to gaining that which is beyond the material level which makes it safe and secure. Keep inquiring about yourself until you become really secure within.

So you acquire wealth and a measure of stability, then what? Now allow me to make a cartoon of the old Vedic society: “share it with – the church, ah sorry, – with the priests, the ruling strata, the religious people in power – in order to keep the society going.”

There is another way: once you made money, more than you need, help those who haven’t got enough to buy food, shelter, medicine, etc. Use it to care for humanity (rather than a specific society) as we are all One humanity as Swami Rama points out!

Kama

The second Purushartha is Kama, referring to pleasure. Kama has to do with the fulfillment of desires in the world. Without deep, latent desires (samskaras) there would be no incarnation. There is something you “want to get out of this incarnation”. “Kama” is different from “karma.” The meaning of “karma” is “action” and refers to the playing out of our deep impressions of attraction and aversion. Kama is the enlivened desire that springs forth from those latent conditionings. To say that these are not there and that they all must be renounced is virtually not practical. Desires must be acknowledged and reasonably fulfilled with mindfulness so as to move towards freedom from them, not adding to a continuous cycle of fulfilling and intensifying.

So Kama refers to the art of enjoying pleasures. Having acquired some money, and having got some security the next step for everyone is to use this money for your comfort, enjoy yourself and enjoy fulfilling your duties and responsibilities.

But as with artha, there is a higher level to it. Kama is not there for its own sake, but to free you from the need to be bound by it. Being fully present, and fully available to enjoy is the secret.

I am reminded of the often-told story of Swami Veda asking: Do you know how to sip orange juice. ??? Once you experienced and satisfied your desires and hankerings after egoistic pleasures you are available for higher experiences and a higher purpose. Move on!

Dharma

Now as the base needs are covered, we touch on Dharma, we touch on the purpose, the individual purpose of life. We have provided security, we have enjoyed what there is to enjoy in life, and now we can inquire into the deeper purpose within the context of our existence.

One of my teachers summed it up: ‘first obligation is to fulfill, – is to your parents, then to society, then to your teacher/wise man/the dharma teachers…. then to your Higher Self.’

For this we have to learn to listen, to observe ourselves, and our reactions, we have to observe others as what we see in them is like a mirror for ourselves; beyond that, we have to tune into the environment and find ourselves; we have to listen to the song of our soul within the universe. With that alignment, we get closer to the awareness of “how I fit into the multidimensional web of the universe.” From there I can become aware and fulfill my unique task/purpose, paint my unique picture, fulfill my existence in this context, and naturally flow with a calm clear mind to Truth, God, and the Divine.

Dharma has been called natural law, harmony, truth, duty, wisdom, and the inherent nature of things: Our place in the web of existence. The word “dharma” is from dhri, meaning to hold together, to sustain. It’s a two-way thing, my point in the web holds the web together, and the web holds me in my place.

To live in dharma is to live with our individual nature to be in accord with the whole of the flow of things, in harmony with life itself.

To live one’s dharma, is to live taking care of yourself so that you can take care of others. As SVB said many times… take the least and give the most… that is the right dharmic life.

Everything in this universe is connected in an infinite many dimensional Web, man cannot exist alone; so dharma makes us sensitive to the connectedness, to the need of others, on all levels, in all aspects and parts of the world/existence. We are one whole. Awareness of dharma, helps us to expand our family, and brings about a holistic vision! NOT LIMITED to our society, or clan our family, but to all!!!!

The moment we see the whole world as one great existence, we also become sensitive to a supreme intelligence, that is inherent to this great Web in which we exist. Thus dharma wakes us up to the higher, wider Totality – you may call it God. We partake in this Web that is HIS/HER body. Live in this “Divine Matrix,” in a spirit of surrender & love.

Dharma teaches that the creation is so orderly, beautiful, and purposeful that we cannot in our wildest dreams think that we are separate from it. Look upon the whole creation as a great, grand orchestra that is already presenting beautiful music; we are part of the orchestra and should be sensitive to the harmony and tune ourselves to it.

Just as only that person can enjoy the music who becomes sensitive to it, so also only that person can enjoy holistic living who sees basic harmony and order around.

Acceptance of being the great Web and in it having to play our part, being in God as God… we could say….is the real essence of dharma. This acceptance prepares us for our real goal in life, called Moksha. The general and personal Goal is to reach the state Moksha or Kaivalya in Yogic terms.

Moksha

Moksha is the final liberation from all of the deep driving impressions that continually play out in the mind and the world, that keep causing us to come and go from bodily form to bodily form. Moksha means that the deep conditionings no longer bind us. Moksha is freedom from the bondage of the ropes of karma that seem to bind us.

Moksha is the direct experience of the Absolute Truth or Reality, along with the total setting aside of all false identities of who we think we are. Self-realization, the direct experience of our true nature as pure consciousness, Purusha or Atman is one stage, once that experience permanently transcends all conditionings – moksha is reached.

Thus Moksha is freedom from all limitations: so far we looked at what we need to take care of in terms of security and pleasure here in this life (each of us in our own unique way), then we start seeing ourselves as beings in the web of the existence; once we realize our relationships in that web and have learned to take care of others, with respect and love – then we realize, we are the WEB. What more is there?

For that last step, we need Grace. We may even have become great humanitarians, but still, it’s not all. The Great Vedic thinkers know that ultimately even that great desire for Moksha has to go. When that desire, when that desire too has become redundant, such a person will be happy always and everywhere. “You are that”; this is what the Upanishads tell us: you are the Web, not just the point on the crossing of threads.

The four Purusharthas

The four Purusharthas can be described as stage posts of awareness. Understand and inquire into yourself, into your being, and into your Sadhana, and check whether you live aware of the highest goals of life…and that at all times, while you are acting and being in this world!

Hari OM

 

Like a Tortoise Withdrawing His Limbs

2.58 When, like a tortoise withdrawing his limbs, one withdraws each and all of the senses from their objects, his wisdom is established.

When one gives up his desires, a whole new horizon of awareness opens to him. But those who hold on to their desires are not able to experience the higher dimensions of life. Fulfilling desires gives birth to many more desires, and there is no end to that cycle. When one learns to give up desires, however, he is elevated to the next step of experience. There is a mental law that if you give up what you have, you receive something new. That principle sustains life. If we do not give up the carbon dioxide and used up gases by exhaling, we cannot survive at all; we must exhale in order to inhale. In order to survive and to receive, we have to give up. Give up first; only then will you receive. This law continues to help one until the last breath of life. The student is always afraid and hesitant about giving up, for he is attached to all the things that he thinks belong to him. His false sense of possessiveness is a great enemy on the path of unfoldment. One must learn to have courage and give up what he has in order to receive that which is glorious and beautiful, limitless and infinite.

One of the most important things to be given up is attachment to sensory experience. Withdrawal of the mind from the senses(pratyahara) is given a great deal of importance in the path of meditation, but no book specifically describes this process. Students think it is something that will make them passive, but that is incorrect. It is a skill to have complete control and command over the senses, which are employed by the mind to go to the external world and perceive things. The senses create a serious disturbance, for it is their inherent nature to jump from one object to another, compelled by the charms and temptations of the external world. The mind is disturbed and dissipated by such input and is unable to conceive of things as they are. Furthermore the perceived objects are a source of distraction and dissipation; they create serious obstacles and obstructions for the sadhaka in his attempts to fathom higher levels of consciousness. Therefore it is important to withdraw one’s senses from the world of objects. This is not withdrawal from the world or from one’s duties. It is learning to gather one’s scattered energy. Withdrawal of the senses is an essential part of sadhana.

There is a very serious problem with the habitual way of perception; the senses have no capacity or ability to know things as they are. They can only have a partial glimpse of an object. That partial view of the object is charming and compelling, and it disorganizes and distorts the human mind. It only gives an inkling of delight and is not able to provide long lasting joy because the senses have limited powers to know objects as they are.

There are three serious obstacles that interfere with one’s ability to have a comprehensive view of the objects of the world: (1) the mind remains clouded; (2) the clouded mind uses incompetent senses to know the objects of the world; (3) the objects of the world change continually. These three problems lead to self-delusion, and one’s ignorance regarding the objects of the world is not dispelled. There is an inborn desire in the human mind and heart to know what is real and what is illusory. But ordinarily the mind does not knowhow to do that. No matter how much training is given to the senses, the senses do not have the capacity to see things as they are. With the desire to experience the whole as it really is, the mind searches for a different approach, one that does not rely on the senses. It is only with pure reason that the mind can know the nature of the objects of the world, for due to their shallow nature, the senses can never peep into the secrets of the unknown side of the objects. No matter how powerful are the instruments used to see the objects, they fail, for they have no power to reveal the true nature of the objects of the world.

There is a systematic method that one can apply to purify the mind so that there is clarity in his knowing. One can focus the mind on one single object – it can be concrete or abstract, large or small – so that the mind withdraws itself from the senses. When the mind is voluntarily isolated and under perfect control, it attains one-pointedness. And if that one-pointedness is turned inward, it becomes a useful means on one’s inward journey to another way of knowing. The human being is a miniature world, so by turning inward and examining himself, one can examine the nature of the universe. The natural tendency of the senses is to lead the mind to the objects of the world. The method that we are explaining is a very beneficial and useful voluntary effort that enables one to see, examine, and verify the nature of the objects of the world. And at the same time it makes one realize that the objects of the world do not hold any quality to charm and tempt the mind, for temptations and charms are created by the false input of the limited senses.

The concentrated power of the mind has the ability to know without the help of the senses. In the inner world, the mind does not even need the help of the brain. The brain is only a medium for the energy called mind. It is a powerhouse, not the power; it is a distribution center but not the energy. Many modern physicists do not accept this theory, for they know only one method: applying sophisticated instruments to amplify sensory experiences. When one uses such instruments to study mental functions, they fail, for these instruments can only measure the superficial workings of the brain. Those who follow this method nevertheless contend that the brain is the mind, and that if they can develop the instruments to study the brain’s functioning they will be able to understand the mind. They are like the blind man who holds the tail  of the elephant and contends that an elephant is like a snake because its tail feels like one.

Modern technology and scientific knowledge are valid as far as the external world is concerned. But there is another exact science that helps one know the unknown dimensions of life. The Samkhya system of philosophy has given birth to yogic science. It is far more advanced and methodical that modern technology and the scientific method that is being used to probe into the microscopic and macroscopic levels of the physical universe.

Because of the limited nature of the senses and the foibles of the mind, one builds his own concepts, which offer a distorted picture of the world. The mind is a huge catalog of conceptions, and it uses these to create a philosophy that is neither reliable nor trustworthy. In order to avoid self-delusion, the sadhaka should understand the importance of voluntary withdrawal of the senses, and then he should make the mind one-pointed and turn it inward. There he will find a higher knowledge that is not contaminated by either the senses or the distracted and dissipated mind.

According to yoga philosophy and psychology, the human being goes through two distinct stages in his journey to Self-awakening. The first stage is traditionally referred to as evolution. In this process consciousness travels from its subtle most aspect through ever more gross aspects of existence, obscuring all awareness of oneself as pure Consciousness. In the second stage, which is traditionally referred to involution, one reverses direction: he turns inward and commences a journey in which he rediscovers and experience sever more subtle aspects of his being, finally coming to relize himself as pure Consciousness. Sensory withdrawal is one of the first important steps in the process of involutions, a voluntary withdrawal in which the human mind is turned within. The sadhaka goes against the process of evolution and that is like going against the currents of a river. One needs to be well equipped for such an undertaking, for his habits and past experiences continually pull the mind outward. A method of concentration must be carefully devised that leads one to a meditative state and then finally to the source and center of consciousness. The withdrawal of the senses is a step forward in the path of meditation. Without it, the unknown part of life cannot be revealed to the human being. One-half is already known, but only the knowledge of the glorious missing half makes one’s knowledge complete and perfect.


Editor’s Note

An excerpt from Perennial Psychology of the Bhagavad Gita by Swami Rama, published 1985 by the Himalayan International Institute of Yoga Science and Philosophy of the U.S.A. (Pandit Usharbudh Arya provided the translation of the Sanskrit text.

It is also available at other booksellers and is available on Kindle, Nook, and some other e-books.

Through used bookstores, you may be fortunate enough to find an edition printed in 1985.