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Psychic
Education and Spiritual Education
So
far we have dealt only with the education that can be given
to all children born upon earth and which is concerned with
purely human faculties. But one need not inevitably stop there.
Every human being carries hidden within him the possibility
of a greater consciousness which goes beyond the bounds of his
present life and enables him to share in a higher and a vaster
life. Indeed, in all exceptional beings it is always this consciousness
that governs their lives and organises both the circumstances
of their existence and their individual reaction to these circumstances.
What the human mental consciousness does not know and cannot
do, this consciousness knows and does. It is like a light that
shines at the centre of the being, radiating through the thick
coverings of the external consciousness. Some have a vague intimation
of its presence; a good many children are under its influence,
which shows itself very distinctly at times in their spontaneous
actions and even in their words. Unfortunately, since parents
most often do not know what it is and do not understand what
is happening in their child, their reaction to these phenomena
is not a good one and all their education consists in making
the child as unconscious as possible in this domain and concentrating
all his attention on external things, thus accustoming him to
think that they are the only ones that matter. It is true that
this concentration on external things is very useful, provided
that it is done in the proper way. The three lines of education—physcial,
vital and mental—deal with that and could be defined as the
means of building up the personality, raising the individual
out of the amorphous subconscious mass and making him a well-defined
self-conscious entity. With psychic education we come to the
problem of the true motive of existence, the purpose of life
on earth, the discovery to which this life must lead and the
result of that discovery: the consecration of the individual
to his eternal principle. Normally this discovery is associated
with a mystic feeling, a religious life, because it is mainly
the religions that have concerned themselves with this aspect
of life. But it need not necessarily be so: the mystic notion
of God may be replaced by the more philosophical notion of truth
and still the discovery will remain essentially the same, but
the road leading to it may be taken even by the most intransigent
positivist. For mental notions and ideas have only a very secondary
importance in preparing one for the psychic life. The important
thing is to live the experience; that carries with it its own
reality and force apart from any theory that may precede or
accompany or follow it, for most often theories are no more
than explanations that one gives to oneself in order to have,
more or less, the illusion of knowledge. Man clothes the ideal
or the absolute he seeks to attain with different names according
to the environment in which he is born and the education he
has received. The experience is essentially the same, if it
is sincere; it is only the words and phrases in which it is
formulated that differ according to the belief and the mental
education of the one who has the experience. All formulation
is thus only an approximation that should be progressive and
grow in precision as the experience itself becomes more and
more precise and co-ordinated. Still, to sketch a general outline
of psychic education, we must give some idea, however relative
it may be, of what we mean by the psychic being. One could say,
for example, that the creation of an individual being is the
result of the projection, in time and space, of one of the countless
possibilities latent in the supreme origin of all manifestation
which, through the medium of the one and universal consciousness,
takes concrete form in the law or the truth of an individual
and so, by a progressive development, becomes his soul or psychic
being.
I
must emphasise that what is stated briefly here does not claim
to be a complete exposition of the reality and does not exhaust
the subject—far from it. It is only a very summary explanation
for a practical purpose, to serve as a basis for the education
which we intend to consider now.
It
is through this psychic presence that the truth of an individual
being comes into contact with him and the circumstances of his
life. In most cases the presence acts, so to say, far behind
the veil, unrecognised and unknown; but in some, it is perceptible
and its action recognisable and even, in a very few, the presence
becomes tangible and its action fully effective. These go forward
in life with an assurance and a certitude all their own; they
are masters of their destiny. It is for the purpose of obtaining
this mastery and becoming conscious of the psychic presence
that psychic education should be practised. But for that there
is need of a special factor, the personal will. For till now,
the discovery of the psychic being and identification with it
have not been among the recognised subjects of education, and
although one can find in special treatises useful and practical
hints on the subject, and although in exceptional cases one
may have the good fortune of meeting someone who is capable
of showing the way and giving the help that is needed to follow
it, most often the attempt is left to one’s own personal initiative.
The discovery is a personal matter and a great determination,
a strong will and an untiring perseverance are indispensable
to reach the goal. Each one must, so to say, trace out his own
path through his own difficulties. The goal is known to some
extent, for most of those who have reached it have described
it more or less clearly. But the supreme value of the discovery
lies in its spontaneity, its ingenuousness, and that escapes
all ordinary mental laws. And that is why anyone wanting to
take up the adventure usually first seeks out some person who
has successfully undertaken it and is able to sustain him and
enlighten him on his way. Yet there are some solitary travellers
and for them a few general indications may be useful.
The
starting-point is to seek in yourself that which is independent
of the body and the circumstances of life, which is not born
of the mental formation that you have been given, the language
you speak, the habits and customs of the environment in which
you live, the country where you are born or the age to which
you belong. You must find, in the depths of your being, that
which carries in it a sense of universality, limitless expansion,
unbroken continuity. Then you decentralise, extend and widen
yourself; you begin to live in all things and in all beings;
the barriers separating individuals from each other break down.
You think in their thoughts, vibrate in their sensations, feel
in their feelings, live in the life of all. What seemed inert
suddenly becomes full of life, stones quicken, plants feel and
will and suffer, animals speak in a language more or less inarticulate,
but clear and expressive; everything is animated by a marvellous
consciousness without time or limit. And this is only one aspect
of the psychic realisation; there are others, many others. All
help you to go beyond the barriers of your egoism, the walls
of your external personality, the impotence of your reactions
and the incapacity of your will.
But,
as I have already said, the path to that realisation is long
and difficult, strewn with snares and problems to be solved,
which demand an unfailing determination. It is like the explorer’s
trek through virgin forest in quest of an unknown land, of some
great discovery. The psychic being is also a great discovery
which requires at least as much fortitude and endurance as the
discovery of new continents. A few simple words of advice may
be useful to one who has resolved to undertake it.
The
first and perhaps the most important point is that the mind
is incapable of judging spiritual things. All those who have
written on this subject have said so; but very few are those
who have put it into practice. And yet, in order to proceed
on the path, it is absolutely indispensable to abstain from
all mental opinion and reaction.
Give
up all personal seeking for comfort, satisfaction, enjoyment
or happiness. Be only a burning fire for progress, take whatever
comes to you as an aid to your progress and immediately make
whatever progress is required.
Try
to take pleasure in all you do, but never do anything for the
sake of pleasure.
Never
get excited, nervous or agitated. Remain perfectly calm in the
face of all circumstances. And yet be always alert to discover
what progress you still have to make and lose no time in making
it.
Never
take physical happenings at their face value. They are always
a clumsy attempt to express something else, the true thing which
escapes our superficial understanding.
Never
complain of the behaviour of anyone, unless you have the power
to change in his nature what makes him act in this way; and
if you have the power, change him instead of complaining.
Whatever
you do, never forget the goal which you have set before you.
There is nothing great or small once you have set out on this
great discovery; all things are equally important and can either
hasten or delay its success. Thus before you eat, concentrate
a few seconds in the aspiration that the food you are about
to eat may bring your body the substance it needs to serve as
a solid basis for your effort towards the great discovery, and
give it the energy for persistence and perseverance in the effort.
Before
you go to sleep, concentrate a few seconds in the aspiration
that the sleep may restore your fatigued nerves, bring calm
and quietness to your brain so that on waking you may, with
renewed vigour, begin again your journey on the path of the
great discovery.
Before
you act, concentrate in the will that your action may help or
at least in no way hinder your march forward towards the great
discovery.
When
you speak, before the words come out of your mouth, concentrate
just long enough to check your words and allow only those that
are absolutely necessary to pass, only those that are not in
any way harmful to your progress on the path of the great discovery.
To
sum up, never forget the purpose and goal of your life. The
will for the great discovery should be always there above you,
above what you do and what you are, like a huge bird of light
dominating all the movements of your being.
Before
the untiring persistence of your effort, an inner door will
suddenly open and you will emerge into a dazzling splendour
that will bring you the certitude of immortality, the concrete
experience that you have always lived and always shall live,
that external forms alone perish and that these forms are, in
relation to what you are in reality, like clothes that are thrown
away when worn out. Then you will stand erect, freed from all
chains, and instead of advancing laboriously under the weight
of circumstances imposed upon you by Nature, which you had to
endure and bear if you did not want to be crushed by them, you
will be able to walk on, straight and firm, conscious of your
destiny, master of your life.
And
yet this release from all slavery to the flesh, this liberation
from all personal attachment is not the supreme fulfilment.
There are other steps to climb before you reach the summit.
And even these steps can and should be followed by others which
will open the doors to the future. These following steps will
form the object of what I call spiritual education.
But
before we enter on this new stage and deal with the question
in detail, an explanation is necessary. Why is a distinction
made between the psychic education of which we have just spoken
and the spiritual education of which we are about to speak now
? Because the two are usually confused under the general term
of "yogic discipline", although the goals they aim at are very
different: for one it is a higher realisation upon earth, for
the other an escape from all earthly manifestation, even from
the whole universe, a return to the unmanifest.
So
one can say that the psychic life is immortal life, endless
time, limitless space, ever-progressive change, unbroken continuity
in the universe of forms. The spiritual consciousness, on the
other hand, means to live the infinite and the eternal, to be
projected beyond all creation, beyond time and space. To become
conscious of your psychic being and to live a psychic life you
must abolish all egoism; but to live a spiritual life you must
no longer have an ego.
Here
also, in spiritual education, the goal you set before you will
assume, in the mind’s formulation of it, different names according
to the environment in which you have been brought up, the path
you have followed and the affinities of your temperament. Those
who have a religious tendency will call it God and their spiritual
effort will be towards identification with the transcendent
God beyond all forms, as opposed to the immanent God dwelling
in each form. Others will call it the Absolute, the Supreme
Origin, others Nirvana; yet others, who view the world as an
unreal illusion, will name it the Only Reality and to those
who regard all manifestation as falsehood it will be the Sole
Truth. And every one of these expressions contains an element
of truth, but all are incomplete, expressing only one aspect
of that which is. Here too, however, the mental formulation
has no great importance and once you have passed through the
intermediate stages, the experience is identical. In any case,
the most effective starting-point, the swiftest method is total
self-giving. Besides, no joy is more perfect than the joy of
a total self-giving to whatever is the summit of your conception:
for some it is the notion of God, for others that of Perfection.
If this self-giving is made with persistence and ardour, a moment
comes when you pass beyond the concept and arrive at an experience
that escapes all description, but which is almost always identical
in its effects. And as your self-giving becomes more and more
perfect and integral, it will be accompanied by the aspiration
for identification, a total fusion with That to which you have
given yourself, and little by little this aspiration will overcome
all differences and all resistances, especially if with the
aspiration there is an intense and spontaneous love, for then
nothing can stand in the way of its victorious drive.
There
is an essential difference between this identification and the
identification with the psychic being. The latter can be made
more and more lasting and, in certain cases, it becomes permanent
and never leaves the person who has realised it, whatever his
outer activities may be. In other words, the identification
is no longer realised only in meditation and concentration,
but its effects are felt at every moment of one’s life, in sleep
as well as in waking.
On
the other hand, liberation from all form and the identification
with that which is beyond form cannot last in an absolute manner;
for it would automatically bring about the dissolution of the
material form. Certain traditions say that this dissolution
happens inevitably within twenty days of the total identification.
Yet it is not necessarily so; and even if the experience is
only momentary, it produces in the consciousness results that
are never obliterated and have repercussions on all states of
the being, both internal and external. Moreover, once the identification
has been realised, it can be renewed at will, provided that
you know how to put yourself in the same conditions.
This
merging into the formless is the supreme liberation sought by
those who want to escape from an existence which no longer holds
any attraction for them. It is not surprising that they are
dissatisfied with the world in its present form. But a liberation
that leaves the world as it is and in no way affects the conditions
of life from which others suffer, cannot satisfy those who refuse
to enjoy a boon which they are the only ones, or almost the
only ones, to possess, those who dream of a world more worthy
of the splendours that lie hidden behind its apparent disorder
and widespread misery. They dream of sharing with others the
wonders they have discovered in their inner exploration. And
the means to do so is within their reach, now that they have
arrived at the summit of their ascent.
From
beyond the frontiers of form a new force can be evoked, a power
of consciousness which is as yet unexpressed and which, by its
emergence, will be able to change the course of things and give
birth to a new world. For the true solution to the problem of
suffering, ignorance and death is not an individual escape from
earthly miseries by self-annihilation into the unmanifest, nor
a problematical collective flight from universal suffering by
an integral and final return of the creation to its Creator,
thus curing the universe not by abolishing it, but a transformation,
a total transfiguration of matter brought about by the logical
continuation of Nature’s ascending march in her progress towards
perfection, by the creation of a new species that will be to
man what man is to the animal and that will manifest upon earth
a new force, a new consciousness and a new power. And so will
begin a new education which can be called the supramental education;
it will, by its all-powerful action, work not only upon the
consciousness of individual beings, but upon the very substance
of which they are built and upon the environment in which they
live.
In
contrast with the types of education we have mentioned previously,
which progress from below upwards by an ascending movement of
the various parts of the being, the supramental education will
progress from above downwards, its influence spreading from
one state of being to another until at last the physical is
reached. This last transformation will only occur visibly when
the inner states of being have already been considerably transformed.
It is therefore quite unreasonable to try to recognise the presence
of the supramental by physical appearances. For these will be
the last to change and the supramental force can be at work
in an individual long before anything of it becomes perceptible
in his bodily life.
To
sum up, one can say that the supramental education will result
no longer in a progressive formation of human nature and an
increasing development of its latent faculties, but in a transformation
of the nature itself, a transfiguration of the being in its
entirety, a new ascent of the species above and beyond man towards
superman, leading in the end to the appearance of a divine race
upon earth.
The
Mother
fromBulletin,
February 1952
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