|
|
Generally
speaking, perhaps the greatest obstacle in the way of man's
progress is fear, a fear that is many-sided, multiform, self-contradictory,
illogical, unreasoning and often unreasonable. Of all fears
the most subtle and the most tenacious is the fear of death.
It is deeply rooted in the subconscient and it is not easy to
dislodge. It is obviously made up of several interwoven elements:
the spirit of conservatism and the concern for self-preservation
so as to ensure the continuity of consciousness, the recoil
before the unknown, the uneasiness caused by the unexpected
and the unforeseeable, and perhaps, behind all that, hidden
in the depths of the cells, the instinct that death is not inevitable
and that, if certain conditions are fulfilled, it can be conquered;
although, as a matter of fact, fear in itself is one of the
greatest obstacles to that conquest. For one cannot conquer
what one fears, and one who fears death has already been conquered
by it.
How
can one overcome this fear? Several methods can be used for
this purpose. But first of all, a few fundamental notions are
needed to help us in our endeavour. The first and most important
point is to know that life is one and immortal. Only the forms
are countless, fleeting and brittle. This knowledge must be
securely and permanently established in the mind and one must
identify one's consciousness as far as possible with the eternal
life that is independent of every form, but which manifests
in all forms. This gives the indispensable psychological basis
with which to confront the problem, for the problem remains.
Even if the inner being is enlightened enough to be above all
fear, the fear still remains hidden in the cells of the body,
obscure, spontaneous, beyond the reach of reason, usually almost
unconscious. It is in these obscure depths that one must find
it out, seize hold of it and cast upon it the light of knowledge
and certitude.
Thus
life does not die, but the form is dissolved, and it is this
dissolution that the physical consciousness dreads. And yet
the form is constantly changing and in essence there is nothing
to prevent this change from being progressive. Only this progressive
change could make death no longer inevitable, but it is very
difficult to achieve and demands conditions that very few people
are able to fulfill. Thus the method to be followed in order
to overcome the fear of death will differ according to the nature
of the case and the state of the consciousness. These methods
can be classified into four principal kinds, although each one
includes a large number of varieties; in fact, each individual
must develop his own system.
The
first method appeals to the reason. One can say that in the
present state of the world, death is inevitable; a body that
has taken birth will necessarily die one day or another, and
in almost every case death comes when it must: one can neither
hasten nor delay its hour. Someone who craves for it may have
to wait very long to obtain it and someone who dreads it may
suddenly be struck down in spite of all the precautions he has
taken. The hour of death seems therefore to be inexorably fixed,
except for a very few individuals who possess powers that the
human race in general does not command. Reason teaches us that
it is absurd to fear something that one cannot avoid. The only
thing to do is to accept the idea of death and quietly do the
best one can from day to day, from hour to hour, without worrying
about what is going to happen. This process is very effective
when it is used by intellectuals who are accustomed to act according
to the laws of reason; but it would be less successful for emotional
people who live in their feelings and let themselves be ruled
by them. No doubt, these people should have recourse to the
second method, the method of inner seeking. Beyond all the emotions,
in the silent and tranquil depths of our being, there is a light
shining constantly, the light of the psychic consciousness.
Go in search of this light, concentrate on it; it is within
you. With a persevering will you are sure to find it and as
soon as you enter into it, you awake to the sense of immortality.
You have always lived, you will always live; you become wholly
independent of your body; your conscious existence does not
depend on it; and this body is only one of the transient forms
through which you have manifested. Death is no longer an extinction,
it is only a transition. All fear instantly vanishes and you
walk through life with the calm certitude of a free man.
The
third method is for those who have faith in a God, their God,
and who have given themselves to him. They belong to him integrally;
all the events of their lives are an expression of the divine
will and they accept them not merely with calm submission but
with gratitude, for they are convinced that whatever happens
to them is always for their own good. They have a mystic trust
in their God and in their personal relationship with him. They
have made an absolute surrender of their will to his and feel
his unvarying love and protection, wholly independent of the
accidents of life and death. They have the constant experience
of lying at the feet of their Beloved in an absolute self-surrender
or of being cradled in his arms and enjoying a perfect security.
There is no longer any room in their consciousness for fear,
anxiety or torment; all that has been replaced by a calm and
delightful bliss.
But
not everyone has the good fortune of being a mystic.
Finally
there are those who are born warriors. They cannot accept life
as it is and they feel pulsating within them their right to
immortality, an integral and earthly immortality. They possess
a kind of intuitive knowledge that death is nothing but a bad
habit; they seem to be born with the resolution to conquer it.
But this conquest entails a desperate combat against an army
of fierce and subtle assailants, a combat that has to be fought
constantly, almost at every minute. Only one who has an indomitable
spirit should attempt it. The battle has many fronts; it is
waged on several planes that intermingle and complement each
other.
The
first battle to be fought is already formidable: it is the mental
battle against a collective suggestion that is massive, overwhelming,
compelling, a suggestion based on thousands of years of experience,
on a law of Nature that does not yet seem to have had any exception.
It translates itself into this stubborn assertion: it has always
been so, it cannot be any different; death is inevitable and
it is madness to hope that it can be anything else. The concert
is unanimous and till now even the most advanced scientist has
hardly dared to sound a discordant note, a hope for the future.
As for the religions, most of them have based their power of
action on the fact of death and they assert that God wanted
man to die since he created him mortal. Many of them make death
a deliverance, a liberation, sometimes even a reward. Their
injunction is: submit to the will of the Highest, accept without
revolt the idea of death and you shall have peace and happiness.
In spite of all this, the mind must remain unshakable in its
conviction and sustain an unbending will. But for one who has
resolved to conquer death, all these suggestions have no effect
and cannot affect his certitude which is based on a profound
revelation.
The
second battle is the battle of the feelings, the fight against
attachment to everything one has created, everything one has
loved. By assiduous labour, sometimes at the cost of great efforts,
you have built up a home, a career, a social, literary, artistic,
scientific or political work, you have formed an environment
with yourself at the centre and you depend on it at least as
much as it depends on you. You are surrounded by a group of
people, relatives, friends, helpers, and when you think of your
life, they occupy almost as great a place as yourself in your
thought, so much so that if they were to be suddenly taken away
from you, you would feel lost, as if a very important part of
your being had disappeared.
It
is not a matter of giving up all these things, since they make
up, at least to a great extent, the aim and purpose of your
existence. But you must give up all attachment to these things,
so that you may feel capable of living without them, or rather
so that you may be ready, if they leave you, to rebuild a new
life for yourself, in new circumstances, and to do this indefinitely,
for such is the consequence of immortality. This state may be
defined in this way: to be able to organise and carry out everything
with utmost care and attention and yet remain free from all
desire and attachment, for if you wish to escape death, you
must not be bound by anything that will perish.
After
the feelings come the sensations. Here the fight is pitiless
and the adversaries formidable. They can sense the slightest
weakness and strike where you are defenceless. The victories
you win are only fleeting and the same battles are repeated
indefinitely. The enemy whom you thought you had defeated rises
up again and again to strike you. You must have a strongly tempered
character, an untiring endurance to be able to withstand every
defeat, every rebuff, every denial, every discouragement and
the immense weariness of finding yourself always in contradiction
with daily experience and earthly events.
We
come now to the most terrible battle of all, the physical battle
which is fought in the body; for it goes on without respite
or truce. It begins at birth and can end only with the defeat
of one of the two combatants: the force of transformation and
the force of disintegration. I say at birth, for in fact the
two movements are in conflict from the very moment one comes
into the world, although the conflict becomes conscious and
deliberate only much later. For every indisposition, every illness,
every malformation, even accidents, are the result of the action
of the force of disintegration, just as growth, harmonious development,
resistance to attack, recovery from illness, every return to
the normal functioning, every progressive improvement, are due
to the action of the force of transformation. Later on, with
the development of the consciousness, when the fight becomes
deliberate, it changes into a frantic race between the two opposite
and rival movements, a race to see which one will reach its
goal first, transformation or death. This means a ceaseless
effort, a constant concentration to call down the regenerating
force and to increase the receptivity of the cells to this force,
to fight step by step, from point to point against the devastating
action of the forces of destruction and decline, to tear out
of its grasp everything that is capable of responding to the
ascending urge, to enlighten, purify and stabilise. It is an
obscure and obstinate struggle, most often without any apparent
result or any external sign of the partial victories that have
been won and are ever uncertain - for the work that has been
done always seems to need to be redone; each step forward is
most often made at the cost of a setback elsewhere and what
has been done one day can be undone the next. Indeed, the victory
can be sure and lasting only when it is total. And all that
takes time, much time, and the years pass by inexorably, increasing
the strength of the adverse forces.
All
this time the consciousness stands like a sentinel in a trench:
you must hold on, hold on at all costs, without a quiver of
fear or a slackening of vigilance, keeping an unshakable faith
in the mission to be accomplished and in the help from above
which inspires and sustains you. For the victory will go to
the most enduring.
There
is yet another way to conquer the fear of death, but it is within
the reach of so few that it is mentioned here only as a matter
of information. It is to enter into the domain of death deliberately
and consciously while one is still alive, and then to return
from this region and re-enter the physical body, resuming the
course of material existence with full knowledge. But for that
one must be an initiate.
The
Mother
from "On Education"
|
|