Satsang
with Swamiji
Given by
Swami Satyananda Saraswati at the home of Mrs. Nancy Hausner, Kathmandu, Nepal,
February 1977.
In 1956
when we started the yoga fellowship, there was ignorance and misunderstanding
of yoga everywhere. When I was on my first world tour in 1968-1969, I found
that it was very difficult for people to understand what exactly yoga meant.
Some had vague and incomplete information and thought yoga was a kind of magic
or psychic feat. They were not able to understand or place yoga in the scheme
of their lives. So we started working in Monghyr, training sannyasins and
sending them all over the world in order to show people what yoga meant. Today
the work is going on and we have centres in Australia, Europe, America and the
South American countries.
More
interesting, however, are the series of scientific criticisms and evaluations of
yoga which have developed in recent years. Scientists and doctors all over the
world are now trying to understand how and why yoga has such a great influence
on the human body and mind. Researches conducted in the USSR, Poland, France,
England, America, Australia and also in India have proved beyond any doubt that
the practices of yoga are a scientific process by which physical and mental
diseases can be overcome. Yoga is not merely to tone up the body or reduce fat.
Now scientists are conducting research into the influence of yogic practices on
the brain wave patterns of individuals.
These
alpha, gamma, beta, delta and theta waves control human behaviour. Whether you
are angry or pleased, full of compassion or anxious and afraid, you are under
the influence of these waves. However, by creating particular waves you can
influence the brain. Yoga practices enable us to control the behaviour of these
brain wave patterns. In addition to the scientific experiments, which have been
made in many countries on brain wave therapy, medical experts have been talking
about the scientific effects of yoga practices on the nervous system.
The
sympathetic, parasympathetic and central nervous systems control our sense
activity, emotions, thoughts and fears. We are what our motor and sensory
cortex tell us to be. We are controlled by the nervous system. If it fails to
carry the impulses or is unable to control the impulses, then mental and
physical problems arise. Scientists today have come to the conclusion that most
of the diseases that are in the body have their origin in the mind via the
emotions. An emotional situation causes a mental vibration, a mental wave, and
through body-mind relationship this influence is transferred to the body in the
form of a disease, like asthma, diabetes or insomnia. People who want to get
rid of fat and have a beautiful figure must remember that the metabolism in the
body is controlled by the mind, which is influenced by the emotions. When you
are in the grip of fear, the adrenal glands secrete adrenaline directly into
the blood stream. This immediately affects the coronary artery and therefore
the heart. This can cause the anginal disease called heart pain.
Some of my
disciples are now working on Kirlian photography. The Kirlians were electronic
engineers who came to the conclusion that this physical body, which we see
through our naked eye, has radiations which we cannot see. These invisible
radiations are the electrical charges that are conducted by the body. The
Kirlians discovered how to photograph these radiations in a high voltage, high
frequency field.
When we
define yoga, we have to be very careful. Some people say that hatha yoga- the
physical part of yoga- is the definition. Others say no, meditation is yoga.
For some people hatha yoga, the physical part of yoga, is more important; for
others, meditation. But the effect of both is the same on the human body and
mind. What is achieved by meditation can also be achieved by hatha yoga and
vice versa. Hatha yoga is not only physical in nature. The practices of asana
and pranayama have immediate influence on the body, the endocrine glands and
the nervous system. Pranayama affects the psychic centres of the body. When the
body is purified, free from toxins, and your nervous system is capable of
carrying all the impulses throughout the body, the psychic centres awaken. So
even by practising hatha yoga a spiritual or semi-spiritual state can be
achieved. Others feel that the same thing can be accomplished by simple
meditation, and I agree. Meditation affects the whole metabolism. It can
control all the electrical impulses, the prana or the magnetism in the body by
which you live, talk, think and participate in all kinds of activities. So
meditation, raja yoga, is a very important part of yoga, and scientists have
conducted many experiments on people in meditation.
How does
meditation affect the rate of oxygen consumption and respiration? What happens
to skin resistance? Yoga is not merely a set of exercises, it is more than
that. One who practises yoga systematically can accelerate his spiritual
evolution.
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS
Q. I
thought that hatha yoga led to raja yoga, yet you say that they are equal?
A. Hatha
yoga is a part of raja yoga. Now, let me explain the term hatha yoga. Hatha
means 'vital' referring both to prana and mind (manas). Yoga means union and
harmony. Hatha yoga means mind and vital energy. This body is composed of
physical energy or prana and mental energy or mind. There must be a complete
balance and harmony between these twin forces within the body. In hatha yoga
balance is maintained between the vital and mental forces. If the vital forces
supersede the mental forces, one becomes very aggressive and violent, but if
the mental forces supersede the vital forces, then there is a lot of
impractical thinking, a lot of day dreaming, and people go crazy. They become
loony. The balance between the two is very important; therefore I personally do
not consider hatha yoga to be merely physical.
Because our
awareness lives in the physical body, we are aware of the physical body first.
Therefore we have to start with physical awareness. But if you are not
particularly aware of the physical body, if you have evolved to the mental
body, you must start from there. Hatha yoga concerns itself with the perfection
or the purification of the different portions of the physical body, while raja
yoga pertains to the mind. But remember that if you just sit for meditation
with an impure body, a vacillating mind and an unbalanced nervous system, you
will not really progress spiritually. So hatha yoga is a part of raja yoga.
Q. What is
tantra?
A. Actually
tantra is the aum of yoga. From tantra yoga has emerged. Tantra and yoga are
inseparable. Tantra goes side by side with the yogic practices. What we want in
life can be achieved by tantra and also by yoga. Tantra awakens the psychic
body, the kundalini shakti. Tantra is the system by which you liberate or separate
the two aspects of matter and consciousness, purusha and prakriti, or Shiva and
Shakti. Sometimes matter rules over consciousness and sometimes consciousness
rules over matter. When consciousness rules over matter, there is spiritual
vision. When matter rules over consciousness, there is creation. These twin
energies live and work together in total agreement with each other. As long as
matter and consciousness are united, existence continues in a set pattern. But
by the practice of tantra, you can separate matter from consciousness, prakriti
from purusha or Shakti from Shiva; then the awakening takes place. What we are
aware of within us is a combination of the two. We are aware of matter, the
material body, and mind, the 'I', the senses and the objects of perception. We
are aware of all these sections at the same time. By the practice of tantra the
awareness is withdrawn from all sections and centred on one point- I. That is
the separation of prakriti (matter) from purusha (spirit) and that is tantra. How
do you practise it? There are many ways. The most important part of tantra is
mantra and next comes kriya. With the help of mantra and kriya yoga you can
awaken the dormant potential power known as kundalini shakti. This is the prime
purpose, the ultimate reality in tantra and in human evolution.
Q. Do you
practise yoga all day long?
A. Yoga is
a part of life. Swamis live a yogic life for the evolution of body, mind and
consciousness. We do not practise yoga all day long. The hatha yoga and raja
yoga sciences are meant for householders, and not for renunciates. We do not
need to practise them. Yoga practices are for people who are under stress and
strain, who are facing emotional, psychological and physical problems in their
lives. Yoga practices are mainly for people who live and move in the world, who
have a worldly mind. They accumulate a lot of problems within themselves and
when they are unable to eliminate all those problems, they take the help of
yoga asanas, pranayama, meditation, etc. For swamis, yoga is not a practice. We
live a very natural life within ourselves and for us life is all fullness. In
the ashram we work, perhaps more than a householder does. Most of us get up at
three o'clock in the morning, and by four o'clock we are on duty. Those
sannyasins who work in the office, the printing press, the kitchen, report for
work at four a.m. For us, work is the most important thing in life, and the
work we do brings us great peace and pleasure. We don't study or practise yoga
for ourselves. Yoga practices are unnecessary for those who have accepted and
understood the mind. Householders and people who live in the world have to
practise yoga as a part of their daily routine in order to be able to face the
situations of life, but once you are free from those situations, you don't
really need yoga.
Q. What is
the goal of a sannyasin?
A. We have
only one goal- to serve the guru, to live for the guru, to work for the guru in
a peaceful and correct way with an unfettered mind. We don't create psychotic and
neurotic mental cobwebs around us. What we think, the pain and pleasure in
life, weren't there until we created them for ourselves. There are many mental
conditions that a human being creates for himself. Sannyasins have become aware
of this so they don't condition themselves. All the swamis live in a community
and work plenty, sometimes eighteen to twenty hours a day. The ultimate goal
which we know is the awareness of a greater reality beyond the body, beyond
this world. The dimensions are infinite, but we don't worry. We know that the
way we are going we will reach it; we are not neurotic about it. The evolution
of this self to the point of cosmic vision is our ultimate goal. For that it is
important that we live in a community with the guru, do a lot of karma yoga and
purify the mind. When the mind is purified, there is a spontaneous awakening, a
great unfolding of our vast dormant potential.
In an
ashram karma yoga is given very much importance. We work so hard that karma
yoga becomes our life. Only by making yoga part of one's life or one's whole
life can the maximum results be derived.
Q. What are
the stages of sannyas?
A. When we
become sannyasins, for the first few years we live with a guru and try to
imbibe the best from him. We seek his guidance for a particular period, which
is traditionally twelve years, and after this we become mendicants. We leave
the ashram and then we are on our own. Having been trained by the guru for a
period of twelve years, we have become very responsible thinkers. We know how
to live without being caught up in the maya or the temptations. For some period
we keep on walking just like beggars. I have been to Kathmandu a number of
times just like a beggar, sleeping somewhere in a tent, on a lawn or in some
wayside hut. I've gone to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Burma and Ceylon- walking, by
train, by bullock cart. So by living with many people and having a lot of
experiences, we come to understand the way people think, how and why they
suffer, the purpose of life and what exactly evolution means. By meeting
thousands of people for a number of years, we come to a conclusion as to what
should be done. Then we establish ourselves at one particular place and the
disciples gather around.
At that
point I had a vision and in my mind came yoga. I was never a yoga fanatic. My
personal spiritual life consisted of total surrender. This is my nature and
right from childhood I had always envisioned surrender as the higher reality.
But still when I was moving all over India, Ceylon, Afghanistan, Nepal and
Burma, I realised that yoga was the need of the people. So I started teaching
yoga. Now everybody is doing it. There are many swamis, however, who do not
involve themselves with establishments or organisations. They just want to live
an independent life. That's another way.
Q. What
does God mean to sannyasins?
A. We feel
that God is within us; God is the subtle or spirit body in everyone. When you
have illumination within you, you don't seek it any more. God is a symbol for
the beginner, but one who is illumined has found God within. When you start
school, you begin with A B C D, however, an older student who already knows the
alphabet shouldn't be put into kindergarten. For a beginner the symbol, a
cross, flower, lingam, etc. is necessary. But when awareness is deep, grand and
magnificent, then what need is there for symbols?
Everything
depends upon one's own awareness. If you want to enter into the temple of God,
in the beginning, of course, you can do it externally, but that alone will not
bring you to God. Visiting temples is like going to kindergarten. The high
temple, Shiva's real dwelling, is only found within. The outer temples only
symbolise what is found inside. The external holy places and shrines are built
of brick and mortar on the basis of the envisioned model that people have
experienced within themselves. A Shiva temple or any outer shrine is only an
expression of what is found within.
So it is
very important to know the way to the inner shrine. Only by entering the inner
shrine can you know the God, the deity dwelling there. Once you have had a vision
of the deity within your temple, which is not material, not brick and mortar,
then why go to outer shrines? Temples and shrines are necessary in the
beginning, but there is a period when one has to transcend them because they
are symbols. As long as you are aware of them you are within the boundaries of
the mind. In order to experience reality one has to transcend these boundaries,
because God is beyond the limited, finite mind. In order to know him, you have
to transcend the mind. There are many techniques, which lead to the point or
brink where you have to jump over the mind, but I don't think that anyone can
teach us how to make this jump. Up to this point your yoga practices, the
practices your guru has given you, kriya yoga, singing or any spiritual
practice, can help you. But beyond this point there is no spiritual practice,
no yoga practice that can help you, and no book has been written on it.
People have
tried using LSD and ganja, but that's not transcending the mind, not jumping
over the mind, not spiritual evolution. That's just escaping the mind for the
time being. These drugs dull the mind, and that's all. Most of the people who
come to me have had LSD and so many things, but their minds are very dull.
Only one
thing can help- grace. But what is grace? Nobody knows. It is like a
helicopter. So all our spiritual pursuits and religious practices only take us
to the edge of this boundary of material consciousness. Up to that point
everybody can teach you but to take you beyond surpasses all human power. You
alone must find the way.
Q. What is
the difference between states of consciousness caused by drugs and meditation?
A. It is a
fact that drug-induced experience totally deprives one of any control- one is
helplessly tossed about by the emotions. Meditation, however, is a creative
process, which converts the chaos of uncontrolled feelings, thoughts and
volitions into a centre of integrated psychic faculties in the depth of
consciousness.
Moreover,
the deleterious effects of drugs, physiologically and psychologically, result
in deterioration of mental powers. Meditation is impossible unless you are
ready for an expansion of consciousness, and not every person is ready. Drugs,
however, can take one to an experience for which he is not ready. The
experience depends on the contents of the individual mind. The same drug may
give one person a wonderful new experience, and another a very frightening
experience which overwhelms him.
Yoga is the
safe and sure method of attaining mystical experiences, for it initially cleans
out and remoulds the whole mind and the personality. It is based on the rich
experiences of yogis throughout the ages, as well as modern scientific
research.
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