The Meaning of Siddhis
The science of siddhis, or psychic powers, has been known
throughout the world for thousands of years, as long as tantra has existed. One
can derive these powers from the practice of particular techniques, or they can
be gained through direct contact with the guru. When the guru blesses the
disciple by placing his hands on the disciple's head or back, then the
transformation begins to take place.
When this transformation is going on within you, your vision
expands into a new dimension. For example, you may be able to see someone
coming into the room who is not really physically present. This is not a ghost
or some spirit entity; nor are you hallucinating. Rather, it is a definite
change in the physiology of the physical body and in the conscious body which
enables you to have this experience.
Tolerating the experience
It is the same as when you have a thought of your wife, a
child who is abroad or sick, or a son who is yet to marry. Usually you can only
imagine them, but if your thoughts were to take gross, material form, and you
could actually see your son sitting right beside you, how would you react?
Would you be able to bear this experience?
Because you cannot tolerate or understand it, you are unable
to bear this type of experience. You have so much fear that you can easily make
yourself crazy. Fear brings imbalance to the mind and emotions, and when there
is too much it may also bring some sickness to the body. But these reactions
are not substantial; they are just superficial experiences, like the thoughts
which go on in your mind while you are sitting here listening to me.
Many people come to us when they lose a member of the family
that they love the most, whether it be father, mother, wife, daughter or son.
They ask us, 'Swamiji, please let me see him just one more time.' We tell them,
'He is dead and gone; you must try not to think about him.' But they continue
to plead, 'Please, just once!' Then we ask them, 'If I let you see, will you be
able to handle the experience?' They say, 'Yes'.
'Okay, then first do one thing. Tomorrow at midnight, go up
to the burial ground and bring back a branch of some plant, a piece of mud or a
stone. You just do this much and then I will show you this experience.' But the
very thought of doing this fills them with terrible fright.
You see, the mind and its promptings, urges and impulses, whether
instinctive or man-made, are so strong that you have to learn how to bear them.
This is called siddhi. Developing your mental power, your emotional power, or
even making your body healthy, these are all siddhis.
Perfection in small things
What you have heard about siddhis is not exact, and not the
right concept. You have been given either too high a concept about siddhis or
too low; neither are right. 'Siddha' means to fulfil, to perfect, as when it is
said in day to day life, 'You have to make your action siddha.' When you
perfect and complete something, that is siddhi.
For example, suppose you have a disease such as diabetes.
Now, for you, to cure this disease is to obtain a siddhi, the perfection of a
completely healthy state. How can we obtain this state, this little siddhi?
This is why we practise asana, pranayama, mudra, bandha, concentration, mantra
japa and the purification techniques of hatha yoga, such as neti, kunjal and
shankhaprakshalana. The little siddhis are not what you understand as miracles;
they are the result of perfection in one's practice. The best method of
attaining perfection is through regularity. Therefore, even if you practise
Sirshasana for only one and a half minutes, or shashankasana for three minutes
or just sing kirtan every evening, you should do it with absolute regularity.
You can fix the time to fit into your work and family situation, but then that
time should be kept every day. You should not get up today at 4 a.m. during
brahmamuhurta and then tomorrow at 9 a.m. and another day at midnight. This
type of irregularity just will not work.
The first niyama in yoga is to become niyamit, regular. It
is the greatest samyama, the greatest achievement. Be regular in all your
activities, not only sadhana. Be regular in bathing, eating and sleeping, which
none of you are. When you are irregular, then the body behaves in the same
manner.
Regularity works in the same way as crystallisation. When
you put a drop of water in a freezer, after fifteen days it will have grown in
size. And so it will happen in the course of time, perhaps after one year, that
you will notice many little changes in yourself. You will behave better with
your children and be more polite with your boss and subordinates, not trying to
hurt others physically or having bitter feelings mentally. These are all little
siddhis which will occur.
Memory siddhi
There is one simple pranayama which is very important and
useful, especially for business people who have a lot of responsibility. This
is brahmari pranayama, in which you plug your ears and shut the lips, separate
the teeth, and make the sound of Om, opening the mouth. The sound becomes like
the humming of a bee. After doing brahmari pranayama ten or eleven times, you
will find that you are not experiencing as much pain in the body as you felt
prior to the practice. Neither will you feel as angry or as insecure as you did
before. Why?
Because this little technique, inhaling deeply and then
producing the sound of Om with the breath, creates vibrations inside the body
which change the mental patterns of the brain. The brain has two hemispheres,
and they are always generating energy which flows in particular directions. If
you breathe deeply and produce the sound of Om in a certain way, then the
movement of this energy changes. This affects everything happening in the body,
right from the thoughts up to the secretions of the glands, If some secretions
are deficient then they are increased, and if they are in excess then they are
decreased. Everything is balanced.
What happens on the emotional level is that any agitation,
fatigue, fear or insecurity is calmed down and the thoughts become clear. Old,
long forgotten memories become fresh again, not the memories of death, violence
or unpleasant things, but of those things which you would like to remember. Of
course, you don't wish to be reminded of your work, of somebody who has died,
or of times when you have been insulted, hurt or harmed. No, that is the wrong
memory. But the pure memories come, keen and sharp. This is one of the small
siddhis, not one of the great, miraculous siddhis which you always hear about.
Awakening ajna chakra
Many people practise tantra and yoga only to achieve the
great siddhis. But by the practice of such simple techniques as brahmari pranayama,
such siddhis also come. When an aspirant begins to practise sadhana- mantra
japa, concentration, dhyana or pranayama, he awakens many categories of powers
which are residing within him. We are the powerhouse; we are full of energy
which is awakened and begins to function when we practise sadhana.
This energy is conducted in the nadis, the system of psychic
nerve channels throughout the body. The rishis and munis tell us that the body
contains 72,000 nadis. There are ten main ones and among these, three are most
important. Kabir even sings about them. They correspond to the sympathetic,
parasympathetic and central nervous systems of modern physiology, but in tantra
they are called ida, pingala and sushumna, and in vedic mythology they are
known as Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati.
These nerve channels do not flow in a perfectly straight
path, or have direct connections to the brain; they junction in various places
in the spinal cord. In tantra, these junctions are called chakras. There are
thousands of chakras in many locations in the body, but only seven are widely
known: mooladhara, swadhisthana, manipura, anahata, vishuddhi, ajna and
sahasrara. They contain the hidden faculties in man.
We can categorise these hidden faculties in terms of the
three gunas: tamasic, rajasic and sattvic. When you awaken mooladhara and
swadhisthana chakras, tamoguni qualities such as hatred, jealousy, love and
compassion are awakened. These are low faculties. However, the higher faculties
of satoguna unfold when you awaken ajna chakra, which is located in the brain
in the region of the pineal gland, behind the eyebrow centre at the top of the
spinal cord. Along with these higher faculties comes the knowledge of the
siddhis.
Brahmari pranayama affects all of the chakras to some
extent, but its major influence is on ajna chakra. Therefore, when you awaken
ajna chakra by the practice of this pranayama, many siddhis arise. You may be
able to experience somebody who is a thousand miles away as if he is in the
same room speaking to you. He can be saying something there, and you can be
hearing the same thing here. This is a great siddhi.
Mantra japa and the power of the mind
There is no power which can be compared to the power of the
mind. Our ancestors, the rishis and munis, tell us in the scriptures that the
power of powers can summon the whole universe. It can create thousands of
universes. What else is there to say? The power of powers can make you enter
the state of shoonya, void. It can enable a person to duplicate himself into
many identical bodies as in the raslila or play of Krishna, by which He created
thousands of images of himself for all his gopis.
If you can make your thoughts keen and sharp, they will be
more effective than a thousand suns in burning a little blade of straw. But to
increase the power of thought, you must do mantra japa. During mantra japa you
don't focus on your thoughts, you just watch the mantra continuously. If you
fix your attention on the thoughts, the mantra gets left behind. So you must
concentrate on the mantra and don't worry about the thoughts. The thoughts will
gain momentum and become extremely powerful, but when you keep repeating the
mantra, they lose their speed and cannot fly you away from the conscious plane.
In this way, you become more conscious, and your thoughts stronger. When your
thoughts become more positive, accurate and sensitive, then you can order your
mind to think in a certain manner and it will think in that way. You can tell
your mind to move an object without touching it, and it will move it.
Regaining the ancient science
You may have heard this referred to as telekinesis by the
Russian or American scientists, but you may not recognise it as part of Indian
culture which has existed for thousands of years. In tantra we call it
indrajal. It is displayed everywhere in the markets and bazaars. When it comes
from abroad with a complicated scientific name it sounds more respectable, but
in our markets there are many jaduwalas, or magicians, who can perform even
greater feats than the adepts in the west. We have all seen how the circuswalas
and jaduwalas can even cut off someone's head and then join it on again.
But if you go to other countries and announce that 'I can do
indrajal,' no one will come to you. Even in India, if you go to intellectual
people and scientists and tell them you can perform indrajal, they will tell
you to go away. But if you say you know telekinesis everybody will come,
because the mentality today is like that.
Recently, I heard that in Europe and America people can bend
spoons just by concentrating their thought power. This is not such a very big
thing. But what is that power by which a person's head can be severed and then
rejoined and the person still lives?
How do people swallow swords without being injured? Their
throat is still intact where the sword goes in. Does it really go in and how is
it that it does not hurt the intestines or the throat? Or perhaps it is not a
sword at all? In that case, what is that power which is able to make everybody
see a sword being swallowed?
Our perceptions can be altered; we cannot be certain that
what we are seeing is true. Suppose I have a red flower. It still remains red,
but I can make everybody see it as blue even though it has not changed colour.
In tantric terminology this ability is called najarband.
Acupuncture has also been going on in India throughout
history; we can read about it in the scriptures. Acupuncture went from India to
China and now they are sending it back to teach us. But if you go to our
villages and they offer to give you acupuncture, you are afraid, and don't want
it. Just as here in India, only one or two decades ago, people were afraid to
learn yoga and tantra.
Tantra is such a magnificent science, but people have not
understood it. They have only heard criticism and exaggeration. They have not
wanted to imbibe the vast knowledge it comprises- about life, death,
conscience, self and the supreme Self, Atma and Paramatma. Therefore, you must
try to appreciate and understand the greatness of your own culture, your own science,
your own tradition.
Even if you don't accept the fact, nevertheless it is your
own country which has preserved this great knowledge. It may not have preserved
the knowledge of how to kill or hurt others which is being revived in the world
today, but it has certainly preserved the knowledge of how to know yourself,
experience tranquillity, and realise God. For the people of India, this is the
goal of life, to awaken the spirituality which lies within. In no other country
do people think like this.
~ October 1981, Yoga Magazine of Bihar School of Yoga