The First movement or stir (ksobha) on the
surface of the Tam is also called the First Mind
(Manas) of God. It is also Nature. This First
Mind, which is thrown up from the bosom of Tam,
is a powerful jerk and following the analogy of
Anar or Fire-flying on all sides, throws up
infinite sparks each of which appears to the
Vision as an eternal entity continuously
shooting out. This has been described as
Visphulinga in the Upanisads. Bergson also uses
this example to explain the process of creative
evolution. These sparks behave as rays (amsas)
as well as atoms (anus). Each of these forms a
world that is supporting systems of other atoms
and amsas. The more peripheral appear to
condense and become gross, solid and heavy,
whereas the less peripheral are subtler and
lighter. The central force however continues to
be supporting all these infinite rays and is
exceedingly subtle, though tremendous in its
energy which is Consciousness of the superfinest
order. In one sense All process is of this
First Mind (manas). As it manifests, its
spiritual subtle condition is the inner layer
and its gross or material condition is the
outer. The inner is the psychic, and the outer
the material physical form. There is both
parallelity and interaction between the two.
Normally parallel, at points of twist or crisis
or change there is interaction that brings about
the change in both. There also happens in deeper
crisis the complete volte face, the psychic
becomes awakened and the physical gets
subordinated. This condition is the process
known as conversion. The individual reveals
nearness to the centre, and there is similarity
with the Ultimate or identity in some measure.
The First Mind thus provides the manifestation
of the potential grossness in all subtle being,
even as it reveals the subtle, underlying or
hidden by the gross. This principle is a general
or universal principle - the Mind is the cause
of bondage as well as of freedom. The Samkhya
darsana stated this in the form that Nature is
the cause of man's bondage as well as of his
freedom.
The uniformity of the processes of Nature
reveals also that what is true of the atom or
amsa is equally true of the vast and the whole -
as is the minutest so is the largest. The finite
repeats the Infinite. The microcosm is the
repetition of the macrocosm. If one knows the
atom, he can know the Atman or Brahman.
The universality of the operation of the Mind
is also clear from its different levels. The
levels themselves seem to have been formed by a
series of inversions; such that the higher level
seems to be the lower inverted. The inversions
take place naturally even as could be seen in
the wavy character of all rays of light, of
energy, and even of flowing water. The general
principle of invertendo would help a lot to
dissipate the inability to understand the
existence of heterogeneity in a world of
Oneness.
Secondly, the inversions at the points of
inversion reveal a twist or a knot that almost
shuts off the flow of the higher into the lower
or the inner to the outer, and vice versa. It is
this that preserves the several levels from
totally disappearing. In fact, there develops
always a residual existence, or remainder of the
higher, which does not wholly become the lower
because it can not. Therefore, it is that there
is the so called preeminence of the cause over
the effect, the excess of it so to speak, which
cannot totally pass over into the
effect-condition.
The third principle is when the mind forms,
or becomes, or flows into the lower conditions
or levels. Not only does it become grosser and
twisted, it is also seen to take the form of
rings or circles, concentric in character owing
to the Central Ksobha being in a state of
superfine Central rotation. All motions are not
only wavy and vibratory but also circular and
concentric. These concentric circles enclosing
each other are one unit falling into One great
circle of Rings. Sri Ram Chandra states that all
organic and other bodies (including the
inorganic) are assuming shapes different from
one another owing to the pressures and needs of
interacting activities though, on inner
analysis, they possess all the rings.
According to the Vision there are, around the
Centre, infinite point-cells in the plenum of
the Ksobha; then there are seven Major Rings;
then eleven Rings of Egoism; and finally five
Rings of Maya. Expressing this in another way,
there is the Centre which is circumscribed and
surrounded, in a sense, by the Central Region.
The Parabrahmanda comes around it farther from
the Centre and the Central Region. The Brahmanda
or Cosmic Worlds envelop this and then come the
areas of individual bodies, pinda-pradesas. Each
is supported by a level of consciousness, and is
experienced by any one who is awakened to their
existence by transmission of the Transcendental
Centre-Force.
Therefore even the tiniest particle enfolds
all the levels of consciousness. In one sense it
epitomises its entire development or
manifestation. The return to the awareness of
all these proceeds outwardly by seeing Nature,
and in respect of inwardness through intuition
or central seeing. (The Samkhya scope of
manifestation starts with Nature in its subtlest
undifferentiated condition, though it is said to
enfold all the three forces or constituents of
sattva, rajas and tamas. The first is the vast
manifestation called Mahat, which differentiates
into many soul-making or individuating points
beginning the individual creation. The
development of manifestation proceeds from
awareness towards activity which tends to lose
awareness and ends up in knowing, doing and
being known and done. This concept is seen among
the Jains who hold that activity deposits matter
called pudgala and is capable of infiltrating
the consciousness or jiva as centre, and
building around it a karma-sarira that limits
the movement and freedom of the individual soul
or centre (jiva). Modern physics is aware of
this twofold character of all matter - it is
both a particle and a wave (wavicle). The
interconvertibility of these is one of the major
discoveries of Modern Physics. In ancient tantra
sastra this is the basic conception of the
subtlest movement becoming gross or solid
matter. It is also seen that matter requires
motion, though it is inwardly congealed motion -
a motion in terrible bond of repetition, in
which consciousness has become thoroughly
veiled, waiting to be released by an external
force of highest intensity.
Sri Ramchandra's Rajayoga thus explains,
simply, the actuality of this double process -
the consciousness-force gradually descending and
becoming matter, and matter gradually ascending
and becoming consciousness-force.)
Picture
It is in the yogic consciousness that we
begin to observe these twofold processes
operating in many ways. The lower mind has to be
quietened or restrained from flowing out and
canalised to flow into the higher mind. The
luminous, upward movement to the higher levels
of mind, from pinda to Brahmanda, is discerned
as rising from the heart. The heart is the
physiological centre of flow of blood to all
organs. Its contents, or constituents determine
the health or ill-health of men. Men suffer from
all sorts of pressure, or lack of it, at the
heart and are in mortal agony. He who would cure
the man must cure his heart. The heart is the
place of the cittavrtti (mind-modifications) or
the lower mind, even as the stomach is the seat
of the lower mind along with the genital organs
or the muladharasvadhisthana, which is said to
be the seat of Kundalini. The heart is to be
regulated or subdued and calmed, and this can be
done either by suppressing all thoughts by force
of practice and restraints as prescribed by some
of the schools of self-control, or by
concentration, or by introducing the higher
consciousness of the Master into the heart - a
sort of injection to restore the inner peace and
balance. It is, in other words, the specific
work of psychic therapy or treatment done by the
competent Guru. In one sense it can be
experienced even as physical process in
transmission, and is not mere imagination - a
kind of thought of a lower level leading to a
hallucination. The transformation of the
affective, or emotional, or feeling state is the
first step of this experience of transmission of
the supramental or superfine consciousness into
the heart. The flow of this force all through
the body later reveals the lightness and also
immateriality of the body felt during
meditations under this transmissional guidance.
(Sri Ram Chandra writes:- "The heart is the
field for the working of the mind and when
samskaras descend for Bhoga, the process of
bhoga starts at the heart appearing in the form
of network. I did visualise it in clear form.
The forehead is the place of citta. They are not
identical. The vibrations start from citta-lake
and come down to the point A of the heart. They
are, therefrom, diverted towards the lower
region of the heart as marked (L) in "Efficacy
of Raja Yoga" and also towards the region of
Atma (the 2nd point opposite to the heart).
Generally the force of the vibrations is
stronger in the left than in the right part
(Atma region); the teacher in Sri Ramchandra's
Rajayoga makes the vibrations in the Atma region
stronger than in the left side of the heart.")
It is through this process that one also
resolves the dualism between motion and matter
or even mind and matter. Further, it is with the
help of this consciousness-force, which is also
called "Thought", that one removes the material
or dark obstructions or dross within the system,
either by throwing out or by burning the dross
with the 'heat' produced by this transmission.
The force is further brought into action by
means of concentrated or willed thought. All
these reveal the fact that Thought, as power of
consciousness, is of the very nature of manifest
Reality. The higher thought is used to subdue,
determine and guide the lower ones; and the
highest thought is used to dissolve the products
of thought which are what we know in the gross
condition of the organs and matter.
Pranayama, as breath-control, hardly helps
the calming of the heart. The real prana is not
the solid breath but transcendental force of the
Centre. Mere regulations of breath through the
nostrils Pingala and Ida do not lead anywhere
towards purification - removal or throwing out
of karma-matter in the system.
The ancients used to say that the
sense-organs are out-turned (parancikhani) and
are made for adaptation to the environment or,
in Samkhya language, for experiencing the outer
world. It was also taken for granted that this
leads to misery through desire for these
objects. So it was suggested that one should
develop internal vision (Pratyak-jnana or
drsti). The sense must be in-turned. How this is
to be done is a big problem. We have, of course,
teachers of Yoga who have somehow contrived to
suggest ways and means of doing this. In
abhyasa, this is done by suggesting their merger
in the thought that is higher. They then develop
a new way of seeing without the senses. It may
be suggested that this is very much like the
dreams which are caused by inner stimulation;
and obviously the dreams we see, or hear, or
feel, are not external objects at all. But
according to Sri Ramchandra's Rajayoga the
Superfine Thought introduced into the heart as
prana (life-breath, prima vital) makes this
inwardness immediately possible. Of course
objects then would reveal new dimensions.
Further, we almost enter into a new world where
thought-name-thing are interconvertible,
co-present, and this is a very great gain to
universal consciousness.
In meta-psychology we are not interested in
the structure of the organs, and their knowing,
feeling and willing, but in the transmutation or
transformation of outer experience that binds
and limits, into inner experience that illumines
and liberates man from his bondage to all that
he knows, feels and wills. By Thought we go
beyond thought.
Thought takes a leap back into its
indescribable Source and merges into it, even as
it leaps out of it and emerges into the worlds
and individuals.
The basic concept of Sri Ramchandra
Rajayoga's psychology, or meta-psychology, is
the manas. From earliest Vedic times manas was
an accepted concept of prakrti, and all
evolution was potential in its being. It was
thus the matrix of creative evolution. Sri Ram
Chandra has, in an article on Manas, clearly
presented its value and nature. He has, in
another context, also stated that while other
types of Yoga, including Samkhya, have held that
manas must be brought to a stand-still or even
abolished, and one should arrive at the state of
amanska (non-mind), the proper and free
utilisation of it by making it flow unmodified
and untwisted in our life is to be advocated.
Similarly he considers the ego (ahankara) as
important help, and not an impediment to
righteous and natural living. The ego has become
a bar to higher naturalness only in so far as it
has been made to cling to one form of manas, or
one formation or ring of it. As different from
Sri Aurobindo, who has made the arresting
aphorism "Ego was the helper, ego is the bar",
Sri Ram Chandra states that ego too is
essentially necessary for life and continues to
be valuable for spiritual being in embodied
existence, if only we could make it again the
real instrument and organ of the Pure Being or
Nature. It is an eternal entity and is
invaluable. All that has happened is that it is
linked up with an ego-sense - a twist or vivarta
of the real ego, which is transcendental reality
in the Centre.
Therefore, manas, ahamkara, buddhi and citta
are several phases of the original Nature.
Thus, too, the final emancipation of the ego
(moksa) happens when nature or manas merges in
the Centre which is below it, or substands it,
and supports it. It is then that the ego merges
in the Centre rather than in the manas. A
significant possibility of moksa, here within
the many rings of manas, is when the laya or
mergence or oneness is attained with the Centre
itself in its closest proximity with prakrti and
nature. The solution of this problem lies only
through an attainment of the condition of the
primary, or primal, manas in its transcendent
aspect, which alone can reveal the mystery of
svarupa-laya in Brahman from which there is no
return to the condition even of prakrti or manas
involvement.
The concept of dhi is at the back of the idea
of Dhyana (Dhi-yana) which takes one beyond the
lower levels of aspiration and enjoyment. It is
sometimes identified with manas, or as a
modification of manas. But it appears that this
is the direct spiritual force of the Centre, a
little different from the manas itself, since it
is the inward-going force rather than the
externally moving force. This makes for subtlety
rather than grossness of presentation. It is
centrifugal rather than centripetal. This force
was used in dhyana or buddhi-yoga or utterance
of the Vedic Gayatri - dhiyo yo nah prachodayat
- which is called upon to ignite the inner ego
of the individual that has turned upon its past
outward movement stricken by misery,
frustration, and deceit in enjoyment.
The modern psychologists recognize the mind
to have the functions of cognition, affection
and volition, but do not pay as much importance
to the ego or personality which colours the
three processes and is basic to all reactional
and actional systems. Further, though they
recognize the three-fold states of the human
individual such as waking, dreaming and
sleeping, their analysis of these is anything
but complete or sound. These three conditions,
as well as the three modes of consciousness,
are, at their very base, dependent on the ego.
The ego-awareness is identified by some with
embodied existence, whereas there is every
likelihood that it is something more than that -
that is to say, the ego seems to have more
bodies than one, such as the causal and astral,
and the ego consciousness or awareness includes
the awareness proceeding from the deepest or
innermost body to the outermost visible body.
This is well known in Indian psychological and
eschatological thought.
The ego is the plurality nucleus fulgurated
from the Centre, and lasts as long as the Centre
is in this poise of stir (ksobh). The ego-made
bodies are indeed many as the ego activities
seem to take on many - as many as eleven poises,
or conditions, or modifications. Each one of
these may be said to form a ring or body. In the
Nivrtti or Yoga, the lower bodies are slowly
integrated or merged in the higher, till all are
absorbed in the last form of the ego. This
ego-awareness, and awareness of its eleven
rings, however does not arise normally until the
five material or apparently non-ego bodies are
dropped. In Sri Ramchandra's Rajayoga it is
possible on psychically crossing these outermost
five rings.
Firstly, we are aware of the physical bodies;
then we become aware of the eleven ego-bodies
(astral bodies); and then alone do we become
aware of the spiritual nature which again is
without ego in the embodied form, but is
spiritual Being in essence as well as existence.
The interesting part of the formation of
these bodies, and the changes from subtle to
gross or vice versa, lies in the discovery of
the concept of knots or brackets which make for
the changes. Just as in the transformations of
solids into liquids and liquids into gases there
are critical points which make for the
transformation of one kind of energy into
another kind, the brackets or knots (granthis)
or cakras (wheels) make for the formation of the
one cell into many kinds of cells. Thus the
human body has several kinds of organisations or
systems such as the supra-cortical, cortical,
nervous cells, the blood corpuscles, and
hormones, bone and muscle cells, all of which
have developed from one original or primary cell
- which, perhaps, is itself a product of two or
three kinds of force or potentialities.
The psychological development of the human
being as a spiritual person is, therefore,
conditioned by the understanding of the higher
principle of energy which has to enter into the
very scheme of existence in its lowest and
grossest form, and make for the harmonised
working of the several levels of Being,
understood as the physical, and the spiritual.
Functioning in unison, inner transformation
makes for the flow of spiritual energy all
through the system, maintaining their being and
activity rather than abolishing or annihilating
them. The brackets and rings or cakras and knots
(granthis) have to be firstly cleaned and then
inter-connected in terms of the deepest and
innermost energy of the Spirit (prana). The
understanding of the nature of man becomes
possible only through this inner activity of
prana which gives rise to intuitive awareness of
the Highest or central spirit and its nature.
The atomistic method of understanding human
psychology is useful more for physiology than
for real psychology. The breaking-up of the
organism into different systems, each
autonomous, is very much akin to the concept of
a whole as composed of parts. It is true that
this concept has been invaluable, and actually
operative, in the field of mechanics and matter;
but the moment one becomes aware that even the
smallest particle of matter is an organism, and
is dynamic in nature, it becomes necessary to
deal with the whole of the material realm in
terms of the organic conception. This biological
view of reality reveals the important principle
of translation or transformation of energy both
in the ascent and the descent, and how their
integration is also achieved by a third force.
It is this concept of the organic that leads
further to the evolution or subtle development
of the mental and the supramental order of
consciousness or energy which is such as to make
for awareness, imagination, intuition, and the
desire and the seeking to go beyond the body
itself. True religious cognition develops only
when desire for existence beyond the body occurs
- desire for the growth beyond the conditions
and limitations of the material and vital
bodies. Sometimes the desire is known to be the
activity of the mind, but even this is
transcended when one becomes aware of the cosmic
desires or universal truths.
Such being the case, the psychology that
limits itself to human activity or reactivity,
and the imagination which is riveted to
practical purposes of survival and continuance
in the human body, are very limited ones, if not
truncated ones. The spiritual, psychic endeavour
transcends these boundaries and seeks to know
man, or the ego, as a universal or
super-universal reality, amenable to direct
intuition of the Ultimate Reality.
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