>
THE MENTAL PLANES.
In our last lesson we told you something about the operation of the
mind outside
of the field of consciousness. In this lesson we will
attempt to classify these out-of-consciousness planes, by directing your
attention to the several mental planes above and below the plane of
consciousness. As we stated in the last lesson, over 90 per cent of our
mental operations are conducted outside of the field of consciousness,
so that the consideration of the planes is seen to be an important
subject.
Man is a Centre of Consciousness in the great One Life of the
Universe. His soul has climbed a great many steps before it reached its
present position and stage of unfoldment. And it will pass through many
more steps until it is entirely free and delivered from the necessity of
its swaddling clothes.
In his mental being man contains traces of all that has gone
before--all the experiences of himself and the great race movement of
which he is a part. And, likewise, his mind contains faculties and
mental planes which have not as yet unfolded into consciousness, and of
the existence of which he is but imperfectly aware. All of these mental
possessions, however, are useful and valuable to him--even the lowest.
The lowest may be used to advantage, under proper mastery, and are only
dangerous to the man who allows them to master him instead of serving
him as they should, considering his present stage of development.
In this consideration of the several mental planes we shall not
confine ourselves to the technical occult terms given to these several
planes, but will place them in general groups and describe the features
and characteristics of each, rather than branch off into long
explanations of the growth and reason of the several planes, which would
take us far away from the practical consideration of the subject.
Beginning at the lowest point of the scale we see that man has a
body. The body is composed of minute cells of protoplasm. These cells
are built up of countless molecules, atoms and particles of
matter--precisely the same matter that composes the rocks, trees, air,
etc., around him. The Yogi philosophy tells us that even the atoms of
matter have life and an elementary manifestation of mind, which causes
them to group together according to the law of attraction, forming
different elements, combinations, etc. This law of attraction is a
mental operation, and is the first evidence of mental choice, action and
response. Below this is Prana or Force, which, strictly speaking, is
also a manifestation of mind, although for convenience we designate it
as a separate manifestation of the Absolute.
And therefore we find that this law of attraction between the atoms
and particles of matter is a mental action, and that it belongs to man's
mental kingdom, because he has a body and this mental action is
continually going on in his body. So therefore this is the lowest mental
plane to be considered in the make-up of the man. This plane is, of
course, far sunken beneath the plane of consciousness, and is scarcely
identified with the personality of the man at all, but rather belongs to
the life of the whole, manifest in the rock as well as in the man.
But after these atoms have been grouped by the law of attraction and
have formed molecules of matter, they are taken possession of by a
higher mental activity and built up into cells by the mental action of
the plant. The life impulse of the plant begins by drawing to it certain
particles of inorganic matter--chemical elements--and then building them
into a single cell. Oh, mystery of the cell! The intellect of man is
unable to duplicate this wonderful process. The Mind Principle on the
Vegetative Plane, however, knows exactly how to go to work to select and
draw to itself just the elements needed to build up the single cell.
Then taking up its abode in that cell--using it as a basis of
operations, it proceeds to duplicate its previous performance, and so
cell after cell is added, by the simple reproductive process of division
and subdivision--the primitive and elemental sex process--until the
mighty plant is built up. From the humblest vegetable organism up to the
greatest oak the process is the same.
And it does not stop there. The body of man is also built up in just
this way, and he has this vegetative mind also within him, below the
plane of consciousness, of course. To many this thought of a vegetative
mind may be somewhat startling. But let us remember that every part of
our body has been built up from the vegetable cell. The unborn child
starts with the coalition of two cells. These cells begin to build up
the new body for the occupancy of the child--that is, the mind principle
in the cells directs the work, of course--drawing upon the body of the
mother for nourishment and supplies. The nourishment in the mother's
blood, which supplies the material for the building up of the child's
body, is obtained by the mother eating and assimilating the vegetable
cells of plants, directly or indirectly. If she eats fruit, nuts,
vegetables, etc., she obtains the nourishment of the plant life
directly--if she eats meat she obtains it indirectly, for the animal
from which the meat was taken built up the meat from vegetables. There
is no two ways about this--all nourishment of the animal and human
kingdom is obtained from the vegetable kingdom, directly or indirectly.
And the cell action in the child is identical with the cell action in
the plant. Cells constantly reproducing themselves and building
themselves up into bodily organs, parts, etc., under the direction and
guidance of the mind principle. The child grows in this way until the
hour of birth. It is born, and then the process is but slightly changed.
The child begins to take nourishment either from the mother's milk or
from the milk of the cow, or other forms of food. And as it grows larger
it partakes of many different varieties of food. But always it obtains
building material from the cell life of the plants.
And this great building up process is intelligent, purposeful, to a
wonderful degree. Man with his boasted intellect cannot explain the real
"thingness" of the process. A leading scientist who placed the
egg of a small lizard under microscopical examination and then watched
it slowly develop has said that it seemed as if some hand was tracing
the outlines of the tiny vertebrae, and then building up around it.
Think for a moment of the development of the germ within the egg of the
humming-bird, or the ant, or the gnat, or the eagle. Every second a
change may be noticed. The germ cell draws to itself nourishment from
the other part of the egg, and then it grows and reproduces another
cell. Then both cells divide--then subdivide until there are millions
and millions and millions of cells. And all the while the building up
process continues, and the bird or insect assumes shape and form, until
at last the work is accomplished and the young bird emerges from the
egg.
And the work thus commenced continues until the death of the animal.
For there is a constant using-up and breaking-down of cell and tissue,
which the organism must replace. And so the vegetative mind of the
plant, or insect, or animal, or man, is constantly at work building up
new cells from the food, throwing out worn-out and used-up material from
the system. Not only this, but it attends to the circulation of the
blood in order that the materials for the building up may be carried to
all parts of the system. It attends to the digestion and assimilation of
the food--the wonderful work of the organs of the body. It attends to
the healing of wounds, the fight against disease, the care of the
physical body. And all this out of the plane of consciousness--in the
infant man the animal world, the vegetable kingdom--ever at work,
untiring, intelligent, wonderful. And this plane of mind is in man as
well as in the plant, and it does its work without aid from the
conscious part of man, although man may interfere with it by adverse
conscious thought, which seems to paralyze its efforts. Mental Healing
is merely the restoring of normal conditions, so that this part of the
body may do its work without the hindrance of adverse conscious thought.
On this plane of the mind is found all of the vital functions and
operations. The work is done out-of-consciousness, and the consciousness
is aware of this part of the mind only when it makes demands upon the
conscious for food, etc. On this plane also resides the elementary
instinct that tends toward reproduction and sexual activity. The demand
of this part of the mind is always "increase and multiply,"
and according to the stage of growth of the individual is the mandate
carried out, as we shall see presently. The elementary impulses and
desires that we find rising into the field of consciousness come from
this plane of the mind. Hunger, thirst and the reproductive desires are
its messages to the higher parts of the mind. And these messages are
natural and free from the abuses and prostitution often observed
attached to them by the intellect of man in connection with his
unrestrained animal impulses. Gluttony and unnatural lust arise not from
the primitive demand of this plane of the mind--for the lower animals
even are free from them to a great extent--but it is reserved for man to
so prostitute these primitive natural tendencies, in order to gratify
unnatural and artificial appetites, which serve to frustrate nature
rather than to aid her.
As Life advanced in the scale and animal forms appeared on the scene
new planes of mind were unfolded, in accordance to the necessity of the
living forms. The animal was compelled to hunt for his food--to prey
upon other forms, and to avoid being preyed upon by others. He was
compelled to struggle for the unfoldment of latent powers of his mind
that would give him means to play his part in the scheme of life. He was
compelled to do certain things in order to live and reproduce his kind.
And he demanded not in vain. For there came to him slowly an unfolding
knowledge of the things necessary for the requirements of his life. We
call this Instinct. But, pray remember, by Instinct we do not mean the
still higher something that is really rudimentary Intellect that we
notice in the higher animals. We are speaking now of the unreasoning
instinct observed in the lower animals, and to a certain degree in man.
This Instinctive plane of mentality causes the bird to build its nest
before its eggs are laid, which instructs the animal mother how to care
for its young when born, and after birth; which teaches the bee to
construct its cell and to store up its honey. These and countless other
things in animal life, and in the higher form of plant life, are
manifestations of Instinct--that great plane of the mind. In fact, the
greater part of the life of the animal is instinctive although the
higher forms of animals have developed something like rudimentary
Intellect or Reason, which enables them to meet new conditions where
Intellect alone fails them.
And man has this plane of mind within him, below consciousness. In
fact the lower forms of human life manifest but little Intellect, and
live almost altogether according to their Instinctive impulses and
desires.
Every man has this Instinctive mental region within him and from it
are constantly arising impulses and desires to perplex and annoy him, as
well as to serve him occasionally. The whole secret consists in whether
the man has Mastery of his lower self or not.
From this plane of the mind arise the hereditary impulses coming down
from generations of ancestors, reaching back to the cavemen, and still
further back
into the animal kingdom. A queer storehouse is this. Animal
instincts--passions, appetites, desires, feelings, sensations, emotions,
etc., are there. Hate, envy, jealousy, revenge, the lust of the animal
seeking the gratification of his sexual impulses, etc., etc., are there,
and are constantly intruding upon our attention until we have asserted
our mastery. And often the failure to assert this mastery comes from an
ignorance of the nature of the desire, etc. We have been taught that
these thoughts were "bad" without being told _why_, and we
have feared them and thought them the promptings of an impure nature, or
a depraved mind, etc. This is all wrong. These things are not
"bad" of themselves--they came to us honestly--they are our
heritage from the past. They belong to the animal part of our nature,
and were necessary to the animal in his stage of development. We have
the whole menagerie within us, but that does not mean that we should
turn the beasts loose upon ourselves or others. It was necessary for the
animal to be fierce, full of fight, passionate, regardless of the rights
of others, etc., but we have outgrown that stage of development, and it
is ignoble for us to return to it, or to allow it to master us.
This lesson is not intended as a discourse upon Ethics or morals. We
do not intend going into a discussion of the details of "Right and
Wrong," for we have touched upon that phase of the subject in other
works. But we feel justified in calling your attention to the fact that
the human mind intuitively recognizes the "Rightness" of the
living up to that which comes to us from the highest parts of the
mind--the highest product of our unfoldment. And it likewise intuitively
recognizes the "Wrongness" of the falling back into that which
belongs to the lower stages of our mentality--to the animal part of us,
that is our heritage from the past and that which has gone before.
While we may be puzzled about many details of morals and ethics and
may not be able to "explain" why we consider certain things
right or wrong, we still intuitively feel that the highest
"Right" of which we are capable is the acting out of that
which is coming to us from the highest pole of our mental being, and
that the lowest "Wrong" consists in doing that which carries
us back to the life of the lower animals, in so far as mentality is
concerned. Not because there is anything absolutely "Wrong" in
the mental processes and consequent of the animals in themselves--they
are all right and perfectly natural in the animals--but we intuitively
recognize that for us to fall back to the animal stage is a "going
backward" in the scale of evolution. We intuitively shrink at an
exhibition of brutality and animality on the part of a man or woman. We
may not know just why, but a little reflection will show us that it is a
sinking in the evolutionary scale, against which the spiritual part of
us revolts and protests.
But this must not be construed to mean that the advanced soul looks
upon the animal world with disgust or horror. On the contrary, there is
nowhere to be found a higher respect for animal life and being than
among the Yogi and other advanced souls. They delight in watching the
animals filling their places in life--playing out their parts in the
divine scheme of life. Their animal passions and desires are actions
viewed sympathetically and lovingly by the advanced soul, and nothing
"Wrong" or disgusting is seen there. And even the coarseness
and brutality of the savage races are so regarded by these advanced
souls. They see everything as natural according to the grade and degree
of development of these people.
It is only when these advanced souls view the degeneracies of
"civilized" life that they feel sorrow and pain. For here they
see instances of devolution instead of evolution--degeneration instead
of regeneration and advancement. And not only do they know this to be
the fact, but the degenerate specimens of mankind themselves feel and
know it. Compare the expression of the animal or savage going through
their natural life actions and performances. See how free and natural
are their expressions, how utterly apart are evidences of wrong doing.
They have not as yet found out the fatal secret of Good and Evil--they
have not as yet eaten the forbidden fruit. But, on the contrary, look
into the faces of the degenerates and fallen souls of our civilized
life. See the furtive glance and the self-consciousness of
"Wrong" evident in every face. And this consciousness of
"Wrong" bears heavily upon these people--it is heavier than
the punishments heaped upon them That nameless something called
"conscience" may be smothered for a while, but sooner or later
it comes to light and demands the pound of flesh from its victim.
And yet you will say that it seems hard to think that the same thing
can be Right in one person and Wrong in another. This seems like a hard
saying and a dangerous doctrine, but it is the Truth. And man
instinctively recognizes it. He does not expect the same sense of moral
responsibility in a young child, or in a savage, that he does in a
mature, developed, civilized man. He may restrain the child and the
savage, for self-protection and the welfare of all, but he realizes the
distinction, or at least should do so. And not only is this true, but as
man advances in the scale he casts off many ideas of "Wrong"
that he once held, having outgrown the old ideas and having grown into
new conceptions. And the tendency is always upward and onward. The
tendency is constantly from Force and Restraint toward Love and Freedom.
The ideal condition would be one in which there were no laws and no
necessity for them--a condition in which men had ceased to do wrong
because they had outgrown the desire rather than from fear or restraint
or force. And while this condition as yet seems afar off, there is
constantly going on an unfoldment of higher planes and faculties of the
mind, which when once fully manifest in the race will work a complete
revolution in ethics and laws and government--and for the better, of
course. In the meantime Mankind moves along, doing the best it can,
making a steady though slow progress.
There is another plane of the mind which is often called the
"Instinct," but which is but a part of the plane of the
Intellect, although its operations are largely below the field of
consciousness. We allude to what may be called the "Habit
Mind," in order to distinguish it from the Instinctive Plane. The
difference is this: The Instinctive plane of mind is made up of the
ordinary operations of the mind below the plane of the Intellect, and
yet above the plane of the Vegetative mind--and also of the acquired
experiences of the race, which have been transmitted by heredity, etc.
But the "Habit Mind" contains only that which has been placed
there by the person himself and which he has acquired by experience,
habit, and observation, repeated so often until the mind knows it so
well that it is carried below the field of consciousness and becomes
"second nature," and akin to Instinct.
The text books upon psychology are filled with illustrations and
examples of the habit phase or plane of the mental operations, and we do
not think it necessary to repeat instances of the same kind here.
Everyone is familiar with the fact that tasks which at first are learned
only by considerable work and time soon become fixed in some part of the
mind until their repetition calls for little or no exercise of conscious
mental operation. In fact, some writers have claimed that no one really
"learns" how to perform a task until he can perform it almost
automatically. The pupil who in the early stages of piano playing finds
it most difficult to control and manage his fingers, after a time is
able to forget all about his fingering and devote his entire attention
to the pages of his music, and after this he is able to apparently let
his fingers play the entire piece of music by themselves without a
thought on his part. The best performers have told us that in the
moments of their highest efforts they are aware that the
out-of-conscious portion of their mind is doing the work for them, and
they are practically standing aside and witnessing the work being done.
So true is this that in some cases it is related that if the performer's
conscious mind attempts to take up the work the quality is impaired and
the musician and the audience notice the difference.
The same thing is true in the case of the woman learning to operate
the sewing machine. It is quite difficult at first, but gradually it
grows to "run itself." Those who have mastered the typewriter
have had the same experience. At first each letter had to be picked out
with care and effort. After a gradual improvement the operator is
enabled to devote her entire attention to the "copy" and let
the fingers pick out the keys for themselves. Many operators learn rapid
typewriting by so training the habit mind that it picks out the
letter-keys by reason of their position, the letters being covered over
in order to force the mind to adapt itself to the new requirements. A
similar state of affairs exists wherever men or women have to use tools
of any kind. The tool soon is recognized by the mind and used as if it
were a part of the body, and no more conscious thought is devoted to the
manipulation than we devote to the operation of walking, which, by the
way, is learned by the child only by the expenditure of time and labor.
It is astonishing how many things we do "automatically" in
this way. Writers have called our attention to the fact that the average
man cannot consciously inform you how he puts on his coat in the
morning--which arm goes in first, how the coat is held, etc. But the
habit mind knows--knows very well. Let the student stand up and put on
his coat in the regular way, following the leadings of the habit mind.
Then, after removing it, let him attempt to put it on by inserting the
other arm first, for instance. He will be surprised to find out how
awkward it will be for him, and how completely he has been depending
upon the habit mind. And tomorrow morning let him find out which shoe
the habit mind has been putting on him first and then try to reverse the
order and notice how flurried and disturbed the habit mind will become,
and how frantically it will signal to the conscious mind:
"Something wrong up there!" Or try to button on your collar,
reversing the order in which the tabs are placed over the button--right
before left, or left before right, as the case may be, and notice the
involuntary protest. Or, try to reverse the customary habit in walking
and attempt to swing your right arm with the movement of your right leg,
and so on, and you will find it will require the exercise of great will
power. Or, try to "change hands" and use your knife and fork.
But we must stop giving examples and illustrations. Their number is
countless.
Not only does the habit mind attend to physical actions, etc., but it
also takes a hand in our mental operations. We soon acquire the habit of
ceasing to consciously consider certain things, and the habit mind takes
the matter for granted, and thereafter we will think automatically on
those particular questions, unless we are shaken out of the habit by a
rude jolt from the mind of someone else, or from the presentation of
some conflicting idea occasioned by our own experience or reasoning
processes. And the habit mind hates to be disturbed and compelled to
revise its ideas. It fights against it, and rebels, and the result is
that many of us are slaves to old outgrown ideas that we realize are
false and untrue, but which we find that we "cannot exactly get rid
of." In our future lessons we will give methods to get rid of these
old outgrown ideas.
There are other planes of mind which have to do with the phenomena
known as "psychic," by which is meant the phases of psychic
phenomena known as clairvoyance, psychometry, telepathy, etc., but we
shall not consider them in this lesson, for they belong to another part
of the general subject. We have spoken of them in a general way in our
"Fourteen Lessons in Yogi Philosophy, etc."
And now we come to the plane of mind known to us as Intellect or the
Reasoning Faculties. Webster defines the word Intellect as follows: The
part or faculty of the human soul by which it knows, as distinguished
from the power to feel and to will; the thinking faculty; the
understanding. The same authority defines the word Reason as follows:
"The faculty or capacity of the human mind by which it is
distinguished from the intelligence of the inferior animals." We
shall not attempt to go into a consideration of the conscious Intellect,
for to do so we would be compelled to take up the space of the remaining
lessons of the course, and besides, the student may find extended
information on this subject in any of the text books on psychology.
Instead we will consider other faculties and planes of mind which the
said text books pass by rapidly, or perhaps deny. And one of these
planes is that of Unconscious Reasoning, or Intellect. To many this term
will seem paradoxical, but students of the unconscious will understand
just what is meant.
Reasoning is not necessarily conscious in its operations, in fact, a
greater part of the reasoning processes are performed below or above the
conscious field. In our last lesson we have given a number of examples
proving this fact, but a few more remarks may not be out of place, nor
without interest to the student.
In our last lesson you will see many instances stated in which the
sub-conscious field of the Intellect worked out problems, and then after
a time handed to the conscious reason the solution of the matter. This
has occurred to many of us, if not indeed to all of us. Who has not
endeavored to solve a problem or question of some sort and after
"giving it up" has had it suddenly answered and flashed into
consciousness when least expected. The experience is common to the race.
While the majority of us have noticed these things, we have regarded
them as exceptional and out of the general rule. Not so, however, with
students of the mental planes. The latter have recognized these planes
of reason, and have availed themselves of their knowledge by setting
these unconscious faculties to work for them. In our next lesson we will
give directions to our students regarding this accomplishment, which may
prove of the greatest importance to those who will take the trouble to
practice the directions given. It is a plan that is known to the
majority of men who have "done things" in the world, the
majority of them, however, having discovered the plan for themselves as
the result of a need or demand upon the inner powers of mind.
The plane of mind immediately above that of Intellect is that known
as Intuition. Intuition is defined by Webster as follows: "Direct
apprehension or cognition; immediate knowledge, as in perception or
consciousness, involving no reasoning process; quick or ready insight or
apprehension." It is difficult to explain just what is meant by
Intuition, except to those who have experienced it--and these people do
not need the explanation. Intuition is just as real a mental faculty as
is Intellect--or, to be more exact, is just as much a collection of
mental faculties. Intuition is above the field of consciousness, and its
messages are passed downward, though its processes are hidden. The race
is gradually unfolding into the plane of Intuition, and the race will
some day pass into full consciousness on that plane. In the meantime it
gets but flashes and glimpses from the hidden region. Many of the best
things we have come from that region. Art, music, the love of the
beautiful and good poetry, the higher form of love, spiritual insight to
a certain degree, intuitive perception of truth, etc., etc., come from
this region. These things are not reasoned out by the intellect, but
seem to spring full born from some unknown region of the mind.
In this wonderful region dwells Genius. Many, if not all of the great
writers, poets, musicians, artists and other examples of genius have
felt that their power came to them from some higher source. Many have
thought that it emanated from some being kindly to them, who would
inspire them with power and wisdom. Some transcendent power seemed to
have been called into operation, and the worker would feel that his
product or creation was not his handiwork, but that of some outside
intelligence. The Greeks recognized this something in man, and called it
man's "Daemon." Plutarch in his discourse on the daemon that
guided Socrates speaks of the vision of Timarchus, who, in the case of
Trophonius, saw spirits which were partly attached to human bodies, and
partly over and above them, shining luminously over their heads. He was
informed by the oracle that the part of the spirit which was immersed in
the body was called the "soul," but that the outer and
unimmersed portion was called the "daemon." The oracle also
informed him that every man had his daemon, whom he is bound to obey;
those who implicitly follow that guidance are the prophetic souls, the
favorites of the gods. Goethe also spoke of the daemon as a power higher
than the will, and which inspired certain natures with miraculous
energy.
We may smile at these conceptions, but they are really very close to
the truth. The higher regions of the mind, while belonging to the
individual, and a part of himself, are so far above his ordinary
consciousness that to all intents and purposes messages from them are as
orders from another and higher soul. But still the voice is that of the
"I," speaking through its sheaths as best it is able.
This power belongs to every one of us, although it manifests only in
the degree that we are able to respond to it. It grows by faith and
confidence, and closes itself up, and withdraws into its recesses when
we doubt it and would question its veracity and reality. What we call
"originality" comes from this region. The Intuitive faculties
pass on to the conscious mind some perception of truth higher than the
Intellect has been able to work out for itself, and lo! it is called the
work of genius.
The advanced occultist knows that in the higher regions of the mind
are locked up intuitive perceptions of all truth, and that he who can
gain access to these regions will know everything intuitively, and as a
matter of clear sight, without reasoning or explanation. The race has
not as yet reached the heights of Intuition--it is just beginning to
climb the foothills. But it is moving in the right direction. It will be
well for us if we will open ourselves to the higher inner guidance, and
be willing to be "led by the Spirit." This is a far different
thing from being led by outside intelligence, which may, or may not, be
qualified to lead. But the Spirit within each of us has our interests at
heart and is desirous of our best good, and is not only ready but
willing to take us by the hand and lead us on. The Higher Self is doing
the best it can for our development and welfare, but is hampered by the
confining sheaths. And alas, many of us glory in these sheaths and
consider them the highest part of ourselves. Do not be afraid to let the
light of the Spirit pierce through these confining sheaths and dissolve
them. The Intuition, however, is not the Spirit, but is one of its
channels of communication to us. There are other and still higher planes
of mind, but the Intuition is the one next in the line of unfoldment,
and we should open ourselves to its influence and welcome its unfoldment.
Above the plane of Intuition is that of the Cosmic Knowing, upon
which we will find the consciousness of the Oneness of All. We have
spoken of this plane in our lesson on the Unfoldment of Consciousness.
When one is able to "conscious" on this plane--this exalted
plane of mind--he is able to see fully, plainly and completely that
there is One Great Life underlying all the countless forms and shapes of
manifestation. He is able to see that separateness is only "the
working fiction of the Universe." He is able to see that each Ego
is but a Centre of Consciousness in the great Ocean of Life--all in
pursuance of the Divine Plan, and that he is moving forward toward
higher and higher planes of manifestation, power and individuality, in
order to take a greater and grander part in the Universal work and
plans.
The Cosmic Knowing in its fulness has come to but few of the race,
but many have had glimpses, more or less clear, of its transcendent
wonder, and others are on the borderland of this plane. The race is
unfolding gradually, slowly but surely, and those who have had this
wonderful experience are preparing others for a like experience. The
seed is being sown, and the harvest will come later. This and other
phases of the higher forms of consciousness are before the race. The
individuals who read this lesson are perhaps nearer to it than they
think; their interest in the lessons is an indication of that hunger of
the soul which is a prophecy of the satisfaction of the cry for
spiritual bread. The Law of Life heeds these cries for aid and
nourishment and responds accordingly, but along the lines of the highest
wisdom and according to the _real requirements_ of the individual.
Let us close this lesson with a quotation from "Light on the
Path," which bears directly upon the concluding thought. Read it
carefully and let it sink down deep into your inner consciousness, and
you will feel the thrill of joy that comes to him who is nearing the
goal.
"Look for the flower to bloom in the silence that follows the
storm; not till then.
"It shall grow, it will shoot up, it will make branches and
leaves, and form buds while the storm lasts. But not until the entire
personality of the man is dissolved and melted--not until it is held by
the divine fragment which has created it, as a mere subject for grave
experiment and experience--not until the whole nature has yielded and
become subject unto its higher self, can the bloom open. Then will come
a calm such as comes in a tropical country after the heavy rain, when
nature works so swiftly that one may see her action. Such a calm will
come to the harassed spirit. And in the deep silence the mysterious
event will occur which will prove that the way has been found. Call it
by whatever name you will. It is a voice that speaks where there is none
to speak, it is a messenger that comes--a messenger without form or
substance--or it is the flower of the soul that has opened. It cannot be
described by any metaphor. But it can be felt after, looked for, and
desired, even among the raging of the storm. The silence may last a
moment of time, or it may last a thousand years. But it will end. Yet
you will carry its strength with you. Again and again the battle must be
fought and won. It is only for an interval that nature can be
still."
* * * * *
The concluding three lessons of this series will be devoted to a
practical course of instruction in the development of the hidden planes
of the mind, or rather, in the development of the power of the
individual to master the same and make use of them in his life. He will
be taught to master the lower principles, not only in the surmounting of
them, but in the transmitting of the elemental forces toward his higher
ends. Power may be obtained from this part of the mind, under the
direction of the Will. And the student will be told how to set the
unconscious Intellect to work for him. And he will be told how to
develop and train the Will. We have now passed the line between the
theoretical and the practical phases of the subject, and from now on it
will be a case of train, develop, cultivate and apply. Knowing what lies
back of it all, the student is now prepared to receive the instructions
which he might have misused before. Peace be with thee all.
MANTRAM (AFFIRMATION).
I AM THE MASTER OF MY SOUL.
Suggested Further Reading
| Source:
A Series of Lessons in Raja Yoga, by Yogi Ramacharaka(
1862-1932). This text is in public domain and reproduced and
reformatted by Jayaram V for Hinduwebsite.com. While we have made
every effort to reproduce the text correctly we do not accept any
responsibility for any errors or omissions or inaccuracies in the
reproduction of this text.
|
|