There are two great forces in the universe, silence and
speech. Silence prepares, speech creates. Silence acts, speech
gives the impulse to action. Silence compels, speech
persuades. The immense and inscrutable processes of the world
all perfect themselves within, in a deep and august silence,
covered by a noisy and misleading surface of sound--the stir
of innumerable waves above, the fathomless resistless mass of
the ocean's waters below. Men see the waves, they hear the
rumour and the thousand voices and by these they judge the
course of the future and the heart of God's intention; but in
nine cases out of ten they misjudge. Therefore it is said that
in History it is always the unexpected that happens. But it
would not be the unexpected if men could turn their eyes from
superficies and look into substance, if they accustomed
themselves to put aside appearances and penetrate beyond them
to the secret and disguised reality, if they ceased listening
to the noise of life and listened rather to its
silence.
The greatest exertions are made with the breath held in;
the faster the breathing, the more the dissipation of energy.
He who in action can cease from breathing,--naturally,
spontaneously,--is the master of Prana, the energy that acts
and creates throughout the universe. It is a common experience
of the Yogin that when thought ceases, breathing ceases,--the
entire kumbhak effected by the Hathayogin with infinite
trouble and gigantic effort, establishes itself easily and
happily,--but when thought begins again, the breath resumes
its activity. But when the thought flows without the
resumption of the inbreathing and outbreathing, then the Prana
is truly conquered. This is a law of Nature. When we strive to
act, the forces of Nature do their will with us; when we grow
still, we become their master. But there are two kinds of
stillness--the helpless stillness of inertia, which heralds
dissolution, and the stillness of assured sovereignty which
commands the harmony of life. It is the sovereign stillness
which is the calm of the Yogin. The more complete the calm,
the mightier the yogic power, the greater the force in action.
In this calm, right knowledge comes. The thoughts of men
are a tangle of truth and falsehood, satyam and anritam. True
perception is marred and clouded by false perception, true
judgment lamed by false judgment, true imagination distorted
by false imagination, true memory deceived by false memory.
The activity of the mind must cease, the chitta be purified, a
silence fall upon the restlessness of Prakriti, then in that
calm, in that voiceless stillness illumination comes upon the
mind, error begins to fall away and, so long as desire does
not stir again, clarity establishes itself in the higher
stratum of the consciousness compelling peace and joy in the
lower. Right knowledge becomes the infallible source of right
action. Yogah karmasu kaushalam.
The knowledge of the Yogin is not the knowledge of the
average desire-driven mind. Neither is it the knowledge of the
scientific or of the worldly-wise reason which anchors itself
on surface facts and leans upon experience and probability.
The Yogin knows God's way of working and is aware that the
improbable often happens, that facts mislead. He rises above
reason to that direct and illuminated knowledge which we call
vijñanam. The desire-driven mind is emmeshed in the intricate
tangle of good and evil, of the pleasant and the unpleasant,
of happiness and misfortune. It strives to have the good
always, the pleasant always, the happiness always. It is
elated by fortunate happenings, disturbed and unnerved by
their opposite. But the illuminated eye of the seer perceives
that all leads to good; for God is all and God is
sarvamangalam. He knows that the apparent evil is often the
shortest way to the good, the unpleasant indispensable to
prepare the pleasant, misfortune the condition of obtaining a
more perfect happiness. His intellect is delivered from
enslavement to the dualities.
Therefore the action of the Yogin will not be as the action
of the ordinary man. He will often seem to acquiesce in evil,
to avoid the chance of relieving misfortune, to refuse his
assent to the efforts of the noble-hearted who withstand
violence and wickedness; he will seem to be acting pishacavat.
Or men will think him jada, inert, a stone, a block, because
he is passive, where activity appears to be called for;
silent, where men expect voicefulness; unmoved, where there is
reason for deep and passionate feeling. When he acts, men will
call him unmatta, a madman, eccentric or idiot; for his
actions will often seem to have no definite result or purpose,
to be wild, unregulated, regardless of sense and probability
or inspired by a purpose and a vision which is not for this
world. And it is true that he follows a light which other men
do not possess or would even call darkness; that what is a
dream to them, is to him a reality; that their night is his
day. And this is the root of the difference that, while they
reason, he knows.
To be capable of silence, stillness, illuminated passivity
is to be fit for immortality--amritatvaya kalpate. It is to be
dhira, the ideal of our ancient civilisation, which does not
mean to be tamasic, inert and a block. The inaction of the
tamasic man is a stumbling-block to the energies around him,
the inaction of the Yogin creates, preserves and destroys; his
action is dynamic with the direct, stupendous driving-power of
great natural forces. It is a stillness within often covered
by a ripple of talk and activity without,--the ocean with its
lively surface of waves. But even as men do not see the
reality of God's workings from the superficial noise of the
world and its passing events, for they are hidden beneath that
cover, so also shall they fail to understand the action of the
Yogin, for he is different within from what he is outside. The
strength of noise and activity is, doubtless, great,--did not
the walls of Jericho fall by the force of noise? But infinite
is the strength of the stillness and the silence, in which
great forces prepare for action.
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The
strength of stillness
There are two
great forces in the universe, silence and speech.
Silence prepares, speech creates. Silence acts, speech
gives the impulse to action. Silence compels, speech
persuades
But there are two kinds of
stillness--the helpless stillness of inertia, which
heralds dissolution, and the stillness of assured
sovereignty which commands the harmony of life. It is
the sovereign stillness which is the calm of the Yogin.
The more complete the calm, the mightier the yogic
power, the greater the force in action.
The
activity of the mind must cease, the chitta be purified,
a silence fall upon the restlessness of Prakriti, then
in that calm, in that voiceless stillness illumination
comes upon the mind, error begins to fall
away...
To be capable of silence, stillness,
illuminated passivity is to be fit for
immortality--amritatvaya kalpate. It is to be dhira, the
ideal of our ancient civilisation, which does not mean
to be tamasic, inert and a block.
-Sri
Aurobindo |
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