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Questioner:
I am a Frenchman by birth and domicile and since about ten years I have been
practicing Yoga.
Maharaj:
After ten years of work are you anywhere nearer your goal?
Q: A little nearer, maybe. It is hard work, you
know.
M: The Self is near and the way to it is easy.
All you need doing is doing nothing.
Q: Yet I found my sadhana very
difficult.
M: Your sadhana is to be. The
doing happens. Just be watchful. Where is the difficulty in remembering that
you are? Your are all the time.
Q: The sense of being is there all the time --
no doubt. But the field of attention is often overrun by all sorts of mental
events -- emotions, images, ideas. The pure sense of being is usually crowded out.
M: What is your procedure for clearing the mind
of the unnecessary? What are your means, your tools for the purification of the
mind?
Q: Basically, man is afraid. He is afraid of
himself most. I feel I am like a man who is carrying a bomb that is going to
explode. He cannot defuse it, he cannot throw it away. He is terribly
frightened and is searching frantically for a solution, which he cannot find.
To me liberation is getting rid of this bomb. I do not know much about the
bomb. I only know that it comes from early childhood. I feel like the
frightened child protesting passionately against not being loved. The child is
craving for love and because he does not get it, he is afraid and angry.
Sometimes I feel like killing somebody or myself. This desire is so strong that
I am constantly afraid. And I do not know how to get free from fear.
You see there is a difference between a
Hindu mind and a European mind. The Hindu mind is comparatively simple. The
European is a much more complex being. The Hindu is basically sattvic.
He does not understand the Europeans restlessness, hid tireless pursuit of
what he thinks needs be done; his greater general knowledge.
M: His reasoning capacity is so great, that he
will reason himself out of all reason! His self-assertiveness is due to his
reliance on logic.
Q: But thinking, reasoning is the minds normal
state. The mind just cannot stop working.
M: It may be the habitual state, but it need not
be the normal state. A normal state cannot be painful, while a habit often leads
to chronic pain.
Q: If it is not the natural, or normal state of
mind, then how to stop it? There must be a way to quieten the mind. How often I
tell myself: enough, please stop, enough of this endless chatter of sentences
repeated round and round! But my mind would not stop. I feel that one can stop
it for a while, but not for long. Even the so-called spiritual people use
tricks to keep their mind quiet. They repeat formulas, they sing, pray, breathe
forcibly or gently, shake, rotate, concentrate, meditate, chase trances,
cultivate virtues -- working all the time, in order to cease working, cease
chasing, cease moving. Were it not so tragic, it would be ridiculous.
M: The mind exists in two states: as water and
as honey. The water vibrates at the least disturbance, while the honey, however
disturbed, returns quickly to immobility.
Q: By its very nature the mind is restless. It
can perhaps be made quiet, but it is not quiet by itself.
M: You may have a chronic fever and shiver all
the time. It is desires and fears that make the mind restless. Free from all
negative emotions it is quiet.
Q: You cannot protect the child from negative
emotions. As soon as it is born it learns pain and fear. Hunger is a cruel
master and teaches dependence and hate. The child loves the mother because she
feeds it and hates her because she is late with food. Our unconscious mind is
full of conflicts, which overflow into the conscious. We live on a volcano; we
are always in danger. I agree that the company of people whose mind is peaceful
has a very soothing affect, but as soon as I am away from them, the old trouble
starts. This is why I come periodically to India to seek the company of my
Guru.
M: You think you are coming and going, passing
through various states and moods. I see things as they are, momentary events,
presenting themselves to me in rapid succession, deriving their being from me,
yet definitely neither me nor mine. Among phenomena I am not one, nor subject
to any. I am independent so simply and totally, that your mind, accustomed to
opposition and denial, cannot grasp it. I mean literally what I say; I do not
need oppose, or deny, because it is clear to me that I cannot be the opposite
or denial of anything. I am just beyond, in a different dimension altogether. Do
not look for me in identification with, or opposition to something: I am where
desire, and fear are not. Now, what is your experience? Do you also feel that
you stand totally aloof from all transient things?
Q: Yes, I do -- occasionally. But at once a sense
of danger sets in, I feel isolated, outside all relationship with others. You
see, here lies the difference in our mentalities. With the Hindu, the emotion
follows the thought. Give a Hindu an idea and his emotions are roused. With the
Westerner it is the opposite: give him an emotion and he will produce an idea.
Your ideas are very attractive -- intellectually, but emotionally I do not
respond.
M: Set your intellect aside. Don't use it in
these matters.
Q: Of what use is an advice which I cannot
carry out? These are all ideas and you want me to respond feelingly to ideas,
for without feelings there can be no action.
M: Why do you talk of action? Are you acting
ever? Some unknown power acts and you imagine that you are acting. You are
merely watching what happens, without being able to influence it in any way.
Q: Why is there such a tremendous resistance in
me against accepting that I just can do nothing?
M: But what can you do? You are like a patient
under anaesthetics on whom a surgeon performs an operation. When you wake up
you find the operation over; can you say you have done something?
Q: But it is me who has chosen to submit to an
operation.
M: Certainly not. It is your illness on one side
and the pressure of your physician and family on the other that have made you
decide. You have no choice, only the illusion of it.
Q: Yet I feel I am not as helpless as you make
me appear. I feel I can do everything I can think of, only I do not know how.
It is not the power I lack, but the knowledge.
M: Not knowing the means is admittedly as bad as
not having the power! But let us drop the subject for the moment; after all it
is not important why we feel helpless, as long as we see clearly that for the
time being we are helpless.
I am now 74 years old. And yet I feel
that I am an infant. I feel clearly that in spite of all the changes I am a
child. My Guru told me: that child, which is you even now, is your real self (swarupa).
Go back to that state of pure being, where the 'I am' is still in its purity
before it got contaminated with 'this I am' or 'that I am'. Your burden is of
false self-identifications -- abandon them all. My Guru told me -- 'Trust me. I
tell you; you are divine. Take it as the absolute truth. Your joy is divine,
your suffering is divine too. All comes from God. Remember it always. You are
God, your will alone is done'. I did believe him and soon realized how
wonderfully true and accurate were his words. I did not condition my mind by
thinking: 'I am God, I am wonderful, I am beyond'. I simply followed his
instruction which was to focus the mind on pure being 'I am', and stay in it. I
used to sit for hours together, with, nothing but the 'I am' in my mind and
soon peace and joy and a deep all-embracing love became my normal state. In it
all disappeared -- myself, my Guru, the life I lived, the world around me. Only
peace remained and unfathomable silence.
Q: It all looks very simple and easy, but it is
just not so. Sometimes the wonderful state of joyful peace dawns on me and I
look and wonder: how easily it comes and how intimate it seems, how totally my
own. Where was the need to strive so hard for a state so near at hand? This
time, surely, it has come to stay. Yet how soon it all dissolves and leaves me
wondering -- was it a taste of reality or another aberration. If it was reality,
why did it go? Maybe some unique experience is needed to fix me for good in the
new state and until the crucial experience comes, this game of hide and seek
must continue.
M: Your expectation of something unique and
dramatic, of some wonderful explosion, is merely hindering and delaying your
self-realization. You are not to expect an explosion, for the explosion has
already happened -- at the moment when you were born, when you realized yourself
as being-knowingfeeling. There is only one mistake you are making: you take
the inner for the outer and the outer for the inner. What is in you, you take
to be outside you and what is outside, you take to be in you. The mind and
feelings are external, but you take them to be intimate. You believe the world
to be objective, while it is entirely a projection of your psyche. That is the
basic confusion and no new explosion will set it right. You have to think
yourself out of it. There is no other way.
Q: How am I to think myself out when my
thoughts come and go as they like. Their endless chatter distracts and exhausts
me.
M: Watch your thoughts as you watch the street
traffic. People come and go; you register without response. It may not be easy
in the beginning, but with some practice you will find that your mind can
function on many levels at the same time and you can be aware of them all. It
is only when you have a vested interest in any particular level, that your
attention gets caught in it and you black out on other levels. Even then the
work on the blacked out levels goes on, outside the field of consciousness. Do
not struggle with your memories and thoughts; try only to include in your field
of attention the other, more important questions, like 'Who am l?' 'How did I
happen to be born?' 'Whence this universe around me?'. 'What is real and what
is momentary?' No memory will persist, if you lose interest in it, it is the
emotional link that perpetuates the bondage. You are always seeking pleasure,
avoiding pain, always after happiness and peace. Don't you see that it is your
very search for happiness that makes you feel miserable? Try the other way:
indifferent to pain and pleasure, neither asking, nor refusing, give all your
attention to the level on which 'I am' is timelessly present. Soon you will
realize that peace and happiness are in your very nature and it is only seeking
them through some particular channels, that disturbs. Avoid the disturbance,
that is all. To seek there is no need; you would not seek what you already
have. You yourself are God, the Supreme Reality. To begin with, trust me, trust
the Teacher. It enables you to make the first step -- and then your trust is
justified by your own experience. In every walk of life initial trust is
essential; without it little can be done. Every undertaking is an act of faith.
Even your daily bread you eat on trust! By remembering what I told you you will
achieve everything. I am telling you again: You are the all-pervading, all
transcending reality. Behave accordingly: think, feel and act in harmony with
the whole and the actual experience of what I say will dawn upon you in no
time. No effort is needed. Have faith and act on it. Please see that I want
nothing from you. It is in your own interest that l speak, because above all
you love yourself, you want yourself secure and happy. Don't be ashamed of it,
don't deny it. It is natural and good to love oneself. Only you should know
what exactly do you love. It is not the body that you love, it is Life
--perceiving, feeling, thinking, doing, loving, striving, creating. It is that
Life you love, which is you, which is all. Realize it in its totality, beyond
all divisions and limitations, and all your desires will merge in it, for the
greater contains the smaller. Therefore find yourself, for in finding that you
find all.
Everybody is glad to be. But few know the
fullness of it. You come to know by dwelling in your mind on 'I am', 'I know',
'I love' -- with the will of reaching the deepest meaning of these words.
Q: Can I think 'I am God'?
M: Don't identify yourself with an idea. If you
mean by God the Unknown, then you merely say: 'I do not know what I am'. If you
know God as you know your self, you need not say it. Best is the simple feeling
'I am'. Dwell on it patiently. Here patience is wisdom; don't think of failure.
There can be no failure in this undertaking.
Q: My thoughts will not let me.
M: Pay no attention. Don't fight them. Just do
nothing about them, let them be, whatever they are. Your very fighting them
gives them life. Just disregard. Look through. Remember to remember: 'whatever
happens -- happens because I am'. All reminds you that you are. Take full
advantage of the fact that to experience you must be. You need not stop
thinking. Just cease being interested. It is disinterestedness that liberates.
Don't hold on, that is all. The world is made of rings. The hooks are all
yours. Make straight your hooks and nothing can hold you. Give up your
addictions. There is nothing else to give up. Stop your routine of
acquisitiveness, your habit of looking for results and the freedom of the
universe is yours. Be effortless.
Q: Life is effort. There are so many things to
do.
M: What needs doing, do it. Don't resist. Your
balance must be dynamic, based on doing just the right thing, from moment to
moment. Don't be a child unwilling to grow up. Stereotyped gestures and
postures will not help you. Rely entirely on your clarity of thought, purity of
motive and integrity of action. You cannot possibly go wrong . Go beyond and
leave all behind.
Q: But can anything be left for good?
M: You want something like a round-the-clock
ecstasy. Ecstasies come and go, necessarily, for the human brain cannot stand
the tension for a long time. A prolonged ecstasy will burn out your brain,
unless it is extremely pure and subtle. In nature nothing is at stand-still,
everything pulsates, appears and disappears. Heart, breath, digestion, sleep
and waking -- birth and death everything comes and goes in waves. Rhythm,
periodicity, harmonious alternation of extremes is the rule. No use rebelling
against the very pattern of life. If you seek the Immutable, go beyond
experience. When I say: remember 'I am' all the time, I mean: 'come back to it
repeatedly'. No particular thought can be mind's natural state, only silence.
Not the idea of silence, but silence itself. When the mind is in its natural
state, it reverts to silence spontaneously after every experience or, rather,
every experience happens against the background of silence.
Now, what you have learnt here becomes
the seed. You may forget it -- apparently. But it will live and in due season
sprout and grow and bring forth flowers and fruits. All will happen by itself.
You need not do anything, only don't prevent it.