Guest guest Posted November 8, 2005 Report Share Posted November 8, 2005 This is little long and possible to find in net, but serching need time:))) Basic info about Manas Chakra - Mind Lotus... ______________________________ Manasa Chakra! THE MIND CENTER The Tantric Lower Forehead Centre, called the Manas ( " Mind " ) Chakra, is said to have six petals, which although normally white assume the colours of the senses when they operate (according to the Indian systems, in addition to the five physical senses, there is " mind " constitutes the sixth sense, which is not the same as Clairvoyance or " Sixth Sense " ), and is black during sleep (unconsciousness). Despite the overlap, the Manas chakra is not the same as the Manas tattwa. It is associated with chitta, which represents consciousness or psyche in general, or even the subconscious and memory. Manas chakra, in the upper part of ajna chakra, is the center of your lower mental vehicle: instincts, impressions and habits. Near the Command Center (Ajna) is the Mind Center (Manas). It has six petals. Five represent the five forms of sensation (vishaya) and the sixth is the world of dream, or illusory knowledge (sambhrama jnana). Little beyond the ajna chakra in the manas mind centre or chakra where lies within chitrani nadi that runs through Sushuma nadi the dot or Bindo that is part of the Omkara at the centre of the ajna. The manas chakra has six petals one each for the five senses i.e. smell-earth, taste-water, form-fire, touch-air, and space–atmosphere and sixth one for sleep as colour of earth is yellow, water-white, fire-red, air-gray, space-white, and sleep-black, for it is the seat of consciousness where all modifications of mind are absorbed. Six petals are sound like higher vibrations of Elements and Om sound. Terminology: Tantric nada, manas, surya mandala, (inner sound and sunlight mandala) Vedic (late Upanishads): manas, mandala, jnananetra Puranic: not secified Position: above bindu pitha which is just above the pranava-bindu in ajna Petals: number six colour: normally white when mind is pure, but then assume sense colours (erthly-yellow, water-white, fire-red, white-ash, and full moon-white) when senses operate, and become night-heaven black in sleep! In the pericarp: Chitta (Counsciosness) ManasChakra and Labyrinth Think. Think-think Think again Think past Think future. And on and on and on. And so it goes, the mind, on and on, endlessly, thinking, thinking, thinking. It becomes such an ingrained habit that we never really even “think” about it. Have you ever taken up the process of meditation? Meditation is the method by which we begin to overthrow this unruly ruler and seek that calm center that lies at the very source of thought. You see, most of us never really even think about it. If we did, we would just continue doing what is the problem in the first place: endlessly chasing those thought-patterns. Most never realize how much we define (and thus limit) ourselves by this self-imposed cage of “think.” “Good” thoughts we like, and we build such a nice place to be in that we never even notice the cage and its limiting bars. “Bad” thoughts and painful thoughts are more limiting; we see the cage and usually flee it in search of greener “thought pastures.” This cage, this prison of thought, is what the ancient seers called manas, the thinking mind. It is the constant dialogue going on inside that never seems to end. A story driven by the very force of karma itself. Each time we attach to a thought (usually one we like) we reinforce the chance that it will occur again (and again). After all, we like it, it is our friend, right? Wrong. This force of attachment to thought-patterns, or samskaras, is the very source of samsara, or misery, itself. The meditator sees this and seeks something greater, beyond this self imposed prison of thought: the source of thought itself. The meditator enters the labyrinth of thought seeking a calm center, a beginning. Thus the meditator enters the manas-chakra. Manas, as we have already indicated, represents the “thinking” mind. If we trace thought back to where it came from we can then arrive at the source, emptiness (1). “Chakra” is a much abused term in new-age literature that can best be translated as “channel-wheel.” It represents the vortex where opposites meet, the playground where the dance of opposing forces occurs. In the center they meet. Here is where stillness is achieved. This “still point” is the center of the manas-chakra. (2) This chakra represents the course of meditation itself, from distractedness to calm center/unity. This journey has often been characterized as a struggle with the thinking mind, one of terse concentration, where the mind is forcibly fixed by the will’s firm grasp in the direction of inner peace. Nothing could be more misleading than this image of eyebrow knitting fixation. The mind can be calmed by the mere intention of center-seeking. And of course “monkey- mind” will wander, wandering only to be discovered in this wandering. The intention to center is repeated again and the mind finds a subtler circle to run upon. This process repeats itself, subtler and subtler, till “think” is even surpassed and the calm center is reached. This is the true inner labyrinth. Circle becoming inward seeking spiral; a spiral turning and reversing on itself in the ever present struggle between outward-going-mind and inward-going-mind. To the successful meditator, inward-seeking-mind wins out and real meditation is the prize. The successful yogin learns that there are many ways to attain this reconciliation of opposites: the inward verses outward going breath (until suspension of breathing and stillness is accomplished), or even by stilling the ever moving body. In the yogic world view, the equilibration of opposites is shown in their representation of the subtle, pranic, body. In this view the energy body is shown as a central unified column or sushumna flanked by two opposing solar and lunar channels. Rising on this central channel are the various chakras or channel-wheels where the opposing forces meet. The mind can pierce at any of these points and find a calm center; an eye at the center of the storm. The famous yogic maxim: " yatapinday yatapindah, " translates " as the macrocosm, so the microcosm, as the cosmic mind, so the individual mind, as the atom, so the universe, " is elegantly demonstrated in the other levels of expression of the manas-chakra. It can be seen to represent the inter-dimensional junction point between opposing earth-energy lines on the earth's surface, the meeting of downward spiraling cosmic energy and upward spiraling earth energy (water domes), the rising serpentine “Naga” intelligences (semi-divine serpent-beings) and the descending Devic or celestial intelligences or the superimposition of black-hole on white-hole. In yet another sense it is the entrapment of mind energy, mental patterns, in the very spirals of our own DNA: the genetic code (3). The levels of meaning are unending since the outer mirrors the inner and vice-versa, ad infinitum. My own interest in the labyrinth came years ago, after an initiation that involved the descent into the underworld/labyrinth. After the ritual initiation, I had an unusual dream: I stood at the entrance to a vast cavern, which I knew to be the entrance to the labyrinth. Since I had previously experienced the possibility of entering the underworld, but was usually paralyzed with fear at doing so, I recalled those moments as I once again faced the opportunity to enter. Instantly, as I collected my thoughts, a ray from a star struck the entrance way, piercing through the very rock, through the intricate maze of the labyrinth (which seemed to extend for miles) and to the center, the heart of the earth. It was as if someone had shattered the intensely claustrophobic metallic rocks of the maze, opening up a path to enter. My fear had passed, so I descended the steep path till I reached the end. What I saw at the end was one of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen. As I stood on the edge of a steep cliff, I looked out at the milky expanse of the stars, the brightest I ever remember seeing. Dancing amongst them were the colored orbs of the planets themselves. As I fixed my eyes on this wondrous sight, I could see the rays of light actually penetrating the very earth. I could feel a murmur, a vibration, as this took place through my feet. As I gazed at the walls of the cavern I could see the rays of cosmic light striking the cave walls. Eventually, the murmur would come again. As it did, it was as if the rock somehow moved or pulsated. It reminded me of the moment in the life cycle of a cell, where it gives its last throb before undergoing division. The rock would briefly liquefy at this moment, and take in the vibrations of the stars and planets, only to resolidify as the pulse faded. The rocks actually looked as if they were cellular, containing “genetic” material. It was then that I finally understood the formula V.I.T.R.I.O.L.(4) In India, temple architects will utilize this same principle to establish the foundation of a temple. A special yantra in the form of a labyrinth is used to stabilize the planetary beings (actually demons) associated with the maze and thus allow for the unimpeded invocation of the Gods/Goddesses. This would also explain the inclusion of labyrinths in the design of many cathedrals. The labyrinths act as a sophisticated kind of spirit trap, thus debilitating any malefic forces (see also The Gate of Algol). The labyrinth form is also connected with the underworld deity Yama, the Moon-bull (5)—the judge of the dead (his Western counterpart later became known as Minos, the Cretan form of Apis). In Tibet Yama is worshipped in the form of the yidam (Tibetan for " mind-protector " ) Yamantaka as a way to enter the Kalachakra, the Great Wheel of Time, which is the entrance way to the “hidden land” of Shambhala. The Kalachakra Tantra is an extensive system complete with its own methods of cosmology, astrology and, by extension, geomancy. As we tread this inward path, the path of the manas-chakra, the mind-vortex, other levels constantly arise to show us the inter-relatedness of all parts of nature. This labyrinth can be seen as a place of inner initiation, a place where the junction point between spirit and matter can be understood. It is the place where the heart of the earth and the heart of man intermingle. Implicit in that relationship is the relationship with the whole, the greater universe, of which, humankind is part. As the astronomers and cosmologists of today point out: we come from a star, the Sun. Indeed, our entire solar system comes from that same star. As inhabitants of this planet we built our bodies of the food derived from this star- stuff. Thus, we truly are of the stars. Those who passed before, without benefit of telescope or satellite, knew this. The labyrinth is but one reminder of this spiral way of return, this great cosmic mystery. Footnotes (1) Or as modern physicists would prefer, the 'unified field' or source of all diverse phenomenon such as light, gravity, and the forces of molecular attraction, the basis of all manifest creation. (2) There is an exacting similarity of the Manas-Chakra to the labyrinth of ancient Greece, along with that of medieval Europe. The question of origin may be a mute point as the discovery of such symbols is often known to occur simultaneously in very different places. However, since before history Greece was connected via trade routes to the Indo-Himalayan region; this is a plausible route for such cultural diffusion. Also note: the labyrinth of Knossos in Crete was called " Absolum " by its discoverer (Dr. Evans of Oxford). Absolum=Absolute, the ancient alchemists name for the philosophers stone. (3) Or as some may hasten to point out, the true significance of Astrology: the imbedding of cosmic rhythms on DNA. (4) A notariqon being the initials of the phrase: " Visitae InterioraTerrae Rectificando Invenies Occultum Lapidem, " : Visit the interior parts of the earth: by rectification thou shalt find the hidden stone. (5) Deities with the form of the bull are particularly ancient, dating to the Æon of Taurus, the time when the vernal Equinox coincided with the constellation Taurus. Shatchakra-bheda The piercing of the six chakra is one of the most important subjects dealt with in the Tantras, and is part of the practical yaga process of which they treat. Details of practice can only be learnt from a Guru, but generally it may be said that the particular is raised to the universal life, which as chit is realizable only in the sahasrara in the following manner: The jivatma in the subtle body, the receptacle of the five vital airs (pancha prana), mind in its three aspects of manas, ahangkara, and buddhi; the five organs of action (panchakarmendriya) and the five organs of perception (panchajnanendriya) is united with the Kulakundalini. The Kandarpa or Kama Vayu in the muladhara a form of the Apana Vayu is given a leftward revolution and the fire which is round Kundalini is kindled. By the vija " Hung, " and the heat of the fire thus kindled, the coiled and sleeping Kundalini is wakened. She who lay asleep around svayambhu-linga, with her coils three circles and a half closing the entrance of the brahma-dvara, will, on being roused, enter that door and move upwards, united with the jivatma. On this upward movement, Brahma, Savitri, Dakini-Shakti, the Devas, vija, and vritti, are dissolved in the body of Kundalini. The Mahimandala or prithivi is converted into the vija " Lang, " and is also merged in Her body. When Kundalini leaves the muladhara, that lotus which, on the awakening of Kundalini had opened and turned its flower upwards, again closes and hangs down-wards. As Kundalini reaches the svadhishthana-chakra, that lotus opens out, and lifts its flower upwards. Upon the entrance of Kundalini, Mahavishnu, Mahalakshmi, Sarasvati, Rakini Shakti, Deva, Matrikas, and vritti, Vaikunthadhama, Golaka, and the Deva and Devi residing therein are dissolved in the body of Kundalini. The prithivi, or " earth " vija " Lang, " is dissolved in apas, and apas converted into the vija vang remains in the body of Kundalini. When the Devi reaches the manipura chakra all that is in the chakra merges in Her body. The Varuna vija " vang " is dissolved in fire, which remains in the body of the Devi as the Vija " rang. " This chakra is called the Brahma-granthi (or knot of Brahma). The piercing of this chakra may involve considerable pain, physical disorder, and even disease. On this account the directions of an experienced Guru are necessary, and therefore also other modes of yoga have been recommended for those to whom they are applicable: for in such modes activity is provoked directly in the higher centre and it is not necessary that the lower chakras should be pierced. Kundalini next reaches the anahata chakra, where all which is therein is merged in Her. The vija of Tejas, " rang, " disappears in Vayu and Vayu converted into its vija " Yang " merges into the body of Kundalini. This chakra is known as Vishnu-granthi (knot of Vishnu). Kundalini then ascends to the abode of Bharati (or Sarasvati) or the vishuddha chakra. Upon Her entrance, Arddha-narishvara Shiva, Shakini, the sixteen vowels, mantra, etc., are dissolved in the body of Kundalini. The vija of Vayu, " yang, " is dissolved in akasha, which itself being transformed into the vija " hang, " is merged in the body of Kundalini. Piercing the lalana chakra, the Devi reaches the ajnachakra, where Parama Shiva, Siddha-Kali, the Deva, guna, and all else therein, are absorbed into Her body. The vija of akasha, " Hang, " is merged in the manas chakra, and mind itself in the body of Kundalini. The ajnachakra is known as Rudra-granthi (or knot of Rudra or Shiva). After this chakra has been pierced, Kundalini of Her own motion unites with Parama Shiva. As She proceeds upwards from the two-petalled lotus, the niralamba puri, pranava, nada, etc., are merged in Her. The Kundalini has then in her progress upwards absorbed in herself the twenty-four tattva commencing with the gross elements, and then unites Herself and becomes one. with Parama Shiva. This is the maithuna (coition) of the sattvika-pancha-tattva. The nectar which flows from such union floods the kshudrabrahmanda or human body. It is then that the sadhaka, forgetful of all in this world, is immersed in ineffable bliss. Thereafter the sadhaka, thinking of the vayu vija " yang " as being in the left nostril, inhales through Ida, making japa of the vija sixteen times. Then, closing both nostrils, he makes japa of the vija sixty-four times. He then thinks that the black " man of sin " (Papapurusha) in the left cavity of the abdomen is being dried up (by air), and so thinking he exhales through the right nostril Pingala, making japa of the vija thirty-two times. The sadhaka then meditating upon the red-coloured vija " rang " in the manipura, inhales, making sixteen japa of the vija, and then closes the nostrils, making sixteen japa. While making the japa he thinks that the body of " the man of sin " is being burnt and reduced to ashes (by fire). He then exhales through the right nostril with thirty-two japa. He then meditates upon the white chandravija " thang. " He next inhales through Ida, making japa of the vija sixteen times, closes both nostrils with japa done sixty-four times, and exhales through Pingala with thirty-two japa. During inhalation, holding of breath, and exhalation, he should consider that a new celestial body is being formed by the nectar (composed of all the letters of the alphabet, matrika-varna) dropping from the moon. In a similar way with the vija " vang, " the formation of the body is continued, and with the vija " lang " it is completed and strengthened. Lastly, with the mantra " So’hang, " the sadhaka leads the jivatma into the heart. Thus Kundalini, who has enjoyed Her union with Paramashiva, sets out on her return journey the way she came. As she passes through each of the chakra all that she has absorbed therefrom come out from herself and take their several places in the chakra. In this manner she again reaches the muladhara, when all that is described to be in the chakras (see pp. lvii-lxiii) are in the positions which they occupied before her awakening. The Guru’s instructions are to go above the ajna-chakra, but no special directions are given; for after this chakra has been pierced the sadhaka can reach the brahmasthana unaided. Below the " seventh month of Shiva " the relationship of Guru and sishya ceases. The instructions of the seventh amnaya is not expressed (aprakashita). Manas or Mind There is a wide difference between the ordinary ideas about Mind and those found in Theosophy. Ordinarily the Mind is thought to be immaterial, or to be merely the name for the action of the brain in evolving thought, a process wholly unknown other than by inference, or that if there be no brain there can be no mind. A good deal of attention has been paid to cataloging some mental functions and attributes, but the terms are altogether absent from the language to describe actual metaphysical and spiritual facts about man. This confusion and poverty of words for these uses are due almost entirely, first, to dogmatic religion, which has asserted and enforced for many centuries dogmas and doctrines which reason could not accept, and secondly to the natural war which grew up between science and religion just as soon as the fetters placed by religion upon science were removed and the latter was permitted to deal with facts in nature. The reaction against religion naturally prevented science from taking any but a materialistic view of man and nature. So from neither of these two have we yet gained the words needed for describing the fifth, sixth, and seventh principles, those which make up the Trinity, the real man, the immortal pilgrim. The fifth principle is Manas, in the classification adopted by Mr. Sinnett, and is usually translated Mind. Other names have been given to it, but it is the knower, the perceiver, the thinker. The sixth is Buddhi, or spiritual discernment; the seventh is Atma, or Spirit, the ray from the Absolute Being. The English language will suffice to describe in part what Manas is, but not Buddhi, or Atma, and will leave many things relating to Manas undescribed. The course of evolution developed the lower principles and produced at last the form of man with a brain of better and deeper capacity than that of any other animal. But this man in form was not man in mind, and needed the fifth principle, the thinking, perceiving one, to differentiate him from the animal kingdom and to confer the power of becoming self-conscious. The monad was imprisoned in these forms, and that monad is composed of Atma and Buddhi; for without the presence of the monad evolution could not go forward. Going back for a moment to the time when the races were devoid of mind, the question arises, " who gave the mind, where did it come from, and what is it? " It is the link between the Spirit of God above and the personal below; it was given to the mindless monads by others who had gone all through this process ages upon ages before in other worlds and systems of worlds, and it therefore came from other evolutionary periods which were carried out and completed long before the solar system had begun. This is the theory, strange and unacceptable today, but which must be stated if we are to tell the truth about theosophy; and this is only handing on what others have said before. The manner in which this light of mind was given to the Mindless Men can be understood from the illustration of one candle lighting many. Given one lighted candle and numerous unlighted ones, it follows that from one light the others may also be set aflame. So in the case of Manas. It is the candle of flame. The mindless men having four elementary principles of Body, Astral Body, Life and Desire, are the unlighted candles that cannot light themselves. The Sons of Wisdom, who are the Elder Brothers of every family of men on any globe, have the light, derived by them from others who reach back, and yet farther back, in endless procession with no beginning or end. They set fire to the combined lower principles and the Monad, thus lighting up Manas in the new men and preparing another great race for final initiation. This lighting up of the fire of Manas is symbolized in all great religions and Freemasonry. In the east one priest appears holding a candle lighted at the altar, and thousands of others light their candles from this one. The Parsees also have their sacred fire which is lighted from some other sacred flame. Manas, or the Thinker, is the reincarnating being, the immortal who carries the results and values of all the different lives lived on earth or elsewhere. Its nature becomes dual as soon as it is attached to a body. For the human brain is a superior organism and Manas uses it to reason from premises to conclusions. This also differentiates man from animal, for the animal acts from automatic and so-called instinctual impulses, whereas the man can use reason. This is the lower aspect of the Thinker or Manas, and not, as some have supposed, the highest and best gift belonging to man. Its other, and in theosophy higher, aspect is the intuitional, which knows, and does not depend on reason. The lower, and purely intellectual, is nearest to the principle of Desire, and is thus distinguished from its other side which has affinity for the spiritual principles above. If the Thinker, then, becomes wholly intellectual, the entire nature begins to tend downward; for intellect alone is cold, heartless, selfish, because it is not lighted up by the two other principles of Buddhi and Atma. In Manas the thoughts of all lives are stored. That is to say: in any one life, the sum total of thoughts underlying all the acts of the life-time will be of one character in general, but may be placed in one or more classes. That is, the business man of today is a single type; his entire life thoughts represent but one single thread of thought. The artist is another. The man who has engaged in business, but also thought much upon fame and power which he never attained, is still another. The great mass of self-sacrificing, courageous, and strong poor people who have but little time to think, constitute another distinct class. In all these the total quantity of life thoughts makes up the stream or thread of a life's meditation -- " that upon which the heart was set " -- and is stored in Manas, to be brought out again at any time in whatever life the brain and bodily environments are similar to those used in engendering that class of thoughts. It is Manas which sees the objects presented to it by the bodily organs and the actual organs within. When the open eye receives a picture on the retina, the whole scene is turned into vibrations in the optic nerves which disappear into the brain, where Manas is enabled to perceive them as idea. And so with every other organ or sense. If the connection between Manas and the brain be broken, intelligence will not be manifested unless Manas has by training found out how to project the astral body from the physical and thereby keep up communication with fellowmen. That the organs and senses do not cognize objects, hypnotism, mesmerism, and spiritualism have now proved. For, as we see in mesmeric and hypnotic experiments, the object seen or felt, and from which all the effects of solid objects may be sensed, is often only an idea existing in the operator's brain. In the same way Manas, using the astral body, has only to impress an idea upon the other person to make the latter see the idea and translate it into a visible body from which the usual effects of density and weight seem to follow. And in hypnotism there are many experiments, all of which go to show that so called matter is not per se solid or dense; that sight does not always depend on the eye and rays of light proceeding from an object; that the intangible for one normal brain and organs may be perfectly tangible for another; and that physical effects in the body may be produced from an idea solely. The well-known experiments of producing a blister by a simple piece of paper, or preventing a real blistering plaster from making a blister, by force of the idea conveyed to a subject, either that there was to be or not to be a blister, conclusively prove the power of effecting an impulse on matter by the use of that which is called Manas. But all these phenomena are the exhibition of the powers of lower Manas acting in the astral Body and the fourth principle -- Desire, using the physical body as the field for the exhibition of the forces. It is this lower Manas which retains all the impressions of a life-time and sometimes strangely exhibits them in trances or dreams, delirium, induced states, here and there in normal conditions, and very often at the time of physical death. But it is so occupied with the brain, with memory and with sensation, that it usually presents but few recollections out of the mass of events that years have brought before it. It interferes with the action of Higher Manas because just at the present point of evolution, Desire and all corresponding powers, faculties, and senses are the most highly developed, thus obscuring, as it were, the white light of the spiritual side of Manas. It is tinted by each object presented to it, whether it be a thought-object or a material one. That is to say, Lower Manas operating through the brain is at once altered into the shape and other characteristics of any object, mental or otherwise. This causes it to have four peculiarities. * First, to naturally fly off from any point, object, or subject; * second, to fly to some pleasant idea; * third, to fly to an unpleasant idea; * fourth, to remain passive and considering naught. The first is due to memory and the natural motion of Manas; the second and third are due to memory alone; the fourth signifies sleep when not abnormal, and when abnormal is going toward insanity. These mental characteristics all belonging to Lower Manas, are those which the Higher Manas, aided by Buddhi and Atma, has to fight and conquer. Higher Manas, if able to act, becomes what we sometimes call Genius; if completely master, then one may become a god. But memory continually presents pictures to Lower Manas, and the result is that the Higher is obscured. Sometimes, however, along the pathway of life we do see here and there men who are geniuses or great seers and prophets. In these the Higher powers of Manas are active and the person illuminated. Such were the great Sages of the past, men like Buddha, Jesus, Confucius, Zoroaster, and others. Poets, too, such as Tennyson, Longfellow, and others, are men in whom Higher Manas now and then sheds a bright ray on the man below, to be soon obscured, however, by the effect of dogmatic religious education which has given memory certain pictures that always prevent Manas from gaining full activity. In this higher Trinity, we have the God above each one; this is Atma, and may be called the Higher Self. Next is the spiritual part of the soul called Buddhi; when thoroughly united with Manas this may be called the Divine Ego. The inner Ego, who reincarnates, taking on body after body, storing up the impressions of life after life, gaining experience and adding it to the divine Ego, suffering and enjoying through an immense period of years, is the fifth principle -- Manas -- not united to Buddhi. This is the permanent individuality which gives to every man the feeling of being himself and not some other; that which through all the changes of the days and nights from youth to the end of life makes us feel one identity through all the period; it bridges the gap made by sleep; in like manner it bridges the gap made by the sleep of death. It is this, and not our brain, that lifts us above the animal. The depth and variety of the brain convolutions in man are caused by the presence of Manas, and are not the cause of mind. And when we either wholly or now and then become consciously united with Buddhi, the Spiritual Soul, we behold God, as it were. This is what the ancients all desired to see, but what the moderns do not believe in, the latter preferring rather to throw away their own right to be great in nature, and to worship an imaginary god made up solely of their own fancies and not very different from weak human nature. This permanent individuality in the present race has therefore been through every sort of experience, for Theosophy insists on its permanence and in the necessity for its continuing to take part in evolution. It has a duty to perform, consisting in raising up to a higher state all the matter concerned in the chain of globes to which the earth belongs. We have all lived and taken part in civilization after civilization, race after race, on earth, and will so continue throughout all the rounds and races until the seventh is complete. At the same time it should be remembered that the matter of this globe and that connected with it has also been through every kind of form, with possibly some exceptions in very low planes of mineral formation. But in general all the matter visible, or held in space still unprecipitated, has been molded at one time or another into forms of all varieties, many of these being such as we now have no idea of. The processes of evolution, therefore, in some departments, now go forward with greater rapidity than in former ages because both Manas and matter have acquired facility of action. Especially is this so in regard to man, who is the farthest ahead of all things or beings in this evolution. He is now incarnated and projected into life more quickly than in earlier periods when it consumed many years to obtain a " coat of skin. " This coming into life over and over again cannot be avoided by the ordinary man because Lower Manas is still bound by Desire, which is the preponderating principle at the present period. Being so influenced by Desire Manas is continually deluded while in the body, and being thus deluded is unable to prevent the action upon it of the forces set up in the life time. These forces are generated by Manas, that is, by the thinking of the life time. Each thought makes a physical as well as mental link with the desire in which it is rooted. All life is filled with such thoughts, and when the period of rest after death is ended Manas is bound by innumerable electrical magnetic threads to earth by reason of the thoughts of the last life, and therefore by desire, for it was desire that caused so many thoughts and ignorance of the true nature of things. An understanding of this doctrine of man being really a thinker and made of thought will make clear all the rest in relation to incarnation and reincarnation. The body of the inner man is made of thought, and this being so it must follow that if the thoughts have more affinity for earth-life than for life elsewhere a return to life here is inevitable. At the present day Manas is not fully active in the race, as Desire still is uppermost. In the next cycle of the human period Manas will be fully active and developed in the entire race. Hence the people of the earth have not yet come to the point of making a conscious choice as to the path they will take; but when in the cycle referred to, Manas is active, all will then be compelled to consciously make the choice to right or left, the one leading to complete and conscious union with Atma, the other to the annihilation of those beings who prefer that path. MIND -- GENERAL " Mind is the intelligent part of the Cosmos...[it contains] the plan of the Cosmos...brought over from a prior period of manifestation, which added to its ever-increasing perfectness, and no limit can be set to its evolutionary possibilities in perfectness...the plan has been laid down in the universal mind; the original force comes from spirit; the basis is matter--which is in fact invisible--Life sustains all the forms requiring life, and Akasa is the connecting link [Fohat] between matter on one side and spirit-mind on the other. OCEAN, pp. 14-16. Manas (Sk) Lit., " the mind, " the mental faculty which makes of man an intelligent and moral being, and distinguishes him from the mere animal; a synonym of Mahat. Esoterically, however, it means, when unqualified, the Higher Ego, or the sentient reincarnating Principle in man. When qualified it is called by Theosophists Buddhi-Manas or the Spiritual Soul in contradistinction to its human reflection--Kama-Manas. " GLOS. 292 " ...it is also necessary to admit the existence of soul, and the comparative unimportance of the body in which it dwells. For, Patanjali holds that Nature exists for the soul's sake [PAT., p.26]...he lays down that the real experiencer and knower is the soul and not the mind, it follows that the Mind, designated either as " internal organ, " or " thinking principle, " while higher and more subtle than the body, is yet only an instrument used by the Soul in gaining experience...He shows that the mind is, as he terms it, " modified " by any object or subject brought before it, or to which it is directed... " PATANJALI - YOGA-SUTRAS, Introduction. p. xiii Mahat(Sk.) Lit., " The great one. " The first principle of Universal Intelligence and Consciousness. In the Puranic philosophy the first product of root-nature or Pradhana (the same as Mulaprakriti); the producer of Manas the thinking principle, and of Ahankara, egotism or the feeling of " I am I " (in the lower Manas). T. GLOS. 210 " ...Divine Mind is, and must be, before differentiation takes place. It is called the divine ideation, which is eternal in its Potentiality and periodical in its Potency, when it becomes Mahat, Anima Mundi or Universal Soul...each of these conceptions has its most metaphysical, most material, and also intermediate aspects. " TRANSACTIONS of the BLAVATSKY LODGE, p. 4 " Buddhi is the Immortal Ego. Buddhi cannot be described. It is feeling, the accumulated experiences--all our experience is in feeling. Manas is the Higher Mind, that part of the Buddhi which is in action; the creative power of Buddhi. There is a continuous line of experience as Perceivers--all beings are Perceivers. They are limited by the power of their self-created instruments. In all perceptions is the quality of the instrument through which that perception comes. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS, . p. 6 Buddhi(Sk.) Universal Soul or Mind. Mahabuddhi is a name of Mahat (see " Alaya " ); also the spiritual Soul in man (the 6th principle), the vehicle of Atma, exoterically the 7th. T. GLOS., p. 67 Maha-Buddhi(Sk) Mahat. Alaya: The Intelligent Soul of the World. T. GLOS., p. 1 Cosmic Buddhi, the emanation of the Spiritual Soul: Alaya, is the vehicle Mahat only when that Buddhi corresponds to Prakriti. Then it is called Maha-Buddhi. This Buddhi differentiates through 7 planes, whereas the Buddhi in man is the vehicle of Atman, which vehicle is of the essence of the highest plane of Akasa and therefore does not differentiate. The difference between Manas and Buddhi in man is the same as the difference between the Manasaputra and the Ah-hi in Kosmos. T. GLOS., p. 199 " The mind might be likened to a telescope in use by Man, the Perceiver, in order to be able to perceive the nature of the things about him. He can act only in accord with what he perceives through the telescope. If the telescope is not properly adjusted or out of focus, the perceptions will be out of true, and wrong action will follow...[we have to learn] the proper adjustment and focusing of the instrument upon which right perception and action depend. " FRIENDLY PHILOSOPHER, p. 143 [ see OCEAN, p. 53-4, KEY, p. 129 ] " ...there exists in Nature a triple evolutionary scheme, for the formation of the three principal Upadhis; or rather three separate schemes of evolution, which in our system are inextricably interwoven and interblended at every point. These are the Monadic (or spiritual), the intellectual, and the physical evolutions. These three are the finite aspects or the reflections on the field of Cosmic Illusion of ATMA, the seventh, the ONE REALITY... 2. The Intellectual, represented by the Manasa-Dhyanis (the Solar Devas, or the Agnishwatta Pitris) the " givers of intelligence and consciousness " to man... (182) It is the Manasa-Dhyanis who fill the gap, and they represent the evolutionary power of Intelligence and Mind, the link between " Spirit " and " Matter " --in this Round. " SD I 181-2 HIGHER ASPECT OF THE LOWER MANAS " Man is a perfected animal, but before he could have reached perfection even on the animal plane, there must have dawned on him the light of a higher plane. Only the perfected animal can cross the threshold of the next higher, of the human plane, and as he does so there shines upon him the ray from the supra-human plane. Therefore, as the dawn of humanity illumines the animal plane, and as a guiding star lures the Monad to higher consciousness, so the dawn of divinity illuminates the (28) human plane, luring the monad to the supra-human plane of consciousness.... Man...is however, " the vehicle of a fully developed Monad, self-conscious and deliberately following its own line of progress... WQJ Articles, I p. 27-8 (see ISIS I 305, SD I 571-2, HPB ART III 440-1, HPB ART II 271) CONSCIOUSNESS IN MAN " ... " Mind " is manas, or rather its lower reflection, which, whenever it disconnects itself, for the time being, with kama, becomes the guide of the highest mental faculties, and is the organ of the free-will in physical man.... " HPB ARTICLES, Vol. II, p. 13 That which is known as you is the result of one continuous existence of an entity. Your present body and your soul (or the personality) are the results of a series of existences. Your Karma is a result of co-existence. The individuality, or spirit, is the cause of the soul and personality, or what is called " you. " You are the manifestation of an entity and are the result of many appearances of that entity upon this stage of action in various personalities. WQJ Articles, Vol. II, p. 452 " Happy is the man physically pure, for if his external soul (astral body, the image of the body) is pure, it will strengthen the second (the lower Manas), or the soul which is termed by him the higher mortal soul, which, though liable to err from its own motives, will always side with reason against the animal proclivities of the body. In other words, the ray of our Higher Ego, the lower Manas, has its higher light, the reason or rational powers of the Nous, to help it in the struggle with Kamic desires. The lusts of man arise in consequence of his perishable material body, so do other diseases, says Plato... " HPB ARTICLES, Vol. I, p. 27-8 [ see VOICE p. 12 fn ] " Man is a perfected animal, but before he could have reached perfection even on the animal plane, there must have dawned on him the light of a higher plane. Only the perfected animal can cross the threshold of the next higher, of the human plane, and as he does so there shines upon him the ray from the supra-human plane. Therefore, as the dawn of humanity illumines the animal plane, and as a guiding star lures the Monad to higher consciousness, so the dawn of divinity illuminates the human plane, luring the monad to the supra-human plane of consciousness.... Man...is however, " the vehicle of a fully developed Monad, self-conscious and deliberately following its own line of progress... " WQJ ART I 27-8 (see ISIS I 305, SD I 571-2, HPB ART III 440-1, HPB ART II 271) PERSONALITY -- LOWER MANAS PersonalityIn Occultism--which divides man into 7 principles, considering him under three aspects of the divine, the thinking or the rational, and the animal man--the lower quaternary or the purely astro-physical being; while by Individuality is meant the Higher Triad, considered as a Unity. Thus the Personality embraces all the characteristics and memories of one physical life, which the Individuality is the imperishable Ego which re-incarnates and clothes itself in one personality after another. T. GLOS. p. 252 " The astral through Kama (desire) is ever drawing Manas down into the sphere of material passions and desires. But if the better man or Manas tries to escape the fatal attraction and turns its aspirations to Atma-Spirit--the Buddhi (Ruach) conquers and carries Manas with it to the realm of eternal Spirit. " S D I p. 244-5 " The life principle acts from the time of fetal existence until death. The lower principles are fed continuously during that time from the astral plane; that which constitutes the individual monad reincarnates at the time of birth, but whether or not the highest principles may assimilate with the germ during a lifetime, and to which extent they will either assimilate or be lost, will depend on the will and the exertions of the individual. " THEOS. ART. & NOTES, p. 118-9 " That which is known as you is the result of one continuous existence of an entity. Your present body and your soul (or the personality) are the results of a series of existences. Your Karma is a result of co-existence. The individuality, or spirit, is the cause of the soul and personality, or what is called " you. " You are the manifestation of an entity and are the result of many appearances of that entity upon this stage of action in various personalities. " WQJ ART., II, p. 452 WHAT IS MANAS? SOME SECRET DOCTRINE STATEMENTS COSMIC Ideation focussed in a principle or upadhi (basis) results as the consciousness of the individual Ego. Its manifestation varies with the degree of upadhi, e.g., through that known as Manas it wells up as Mind-Consciousness. (I, 329 footnote). Occult Science has been teaching for ages that Akasa ... the fifth universal Cosmic Principle (to which corresponds and from which proceeds human Manas) is ... creative in its physical nature, correlative in its grossest aspects and portions, immutable in its higher principles. ... In its higher aspect it is the Soul of the World; in its lower -- the DESTROYER. (I, 13 foot-note). " Follow the law of analogy " -- the Masters teach. ... Manas is triple; ... i.e., as a principle per se, which gravitates, in its higher aspect, to Atma-Buddhi, and follows, in its lower nature, Kama, the seat of terrestrial and animal desires and passions. (II, 254 foot-note ). Manas is immortal, because after every new incarnation it adds to Atma-Buddhi something of itself, and thus, assimilating itself to the Monad, shares its immortality. .... The astral through Kama (desire) is ever drawing Manas down into the sphere of material passions and desires. But if the better man or Manas tries to escape the fatal attraction and turns its aspirations to Atma -- Spirit -- then Buddhi ... conquers, and carries Manas with it to the real of eternal Spirit. (I, 243-245). The mind is Manas ... for it is Manas that springs from Ahamkara or (Universal) Self-Consciousness, as Manas in the microcosm springs from Mahat, or Maha-Buddhi (Buddhi, in man). For Manas is dual, and ... " is serving both for sense and action, is an organ by affinity, being cognate with the rest. " " The rest " means, here, that Manas, our fifth principle (the fifth, because the body was named the first, which is the reverse of the true philosophical order) is in affinity both with Atma-Buddhi and with the four lower principles. Hence, our teaching: namely, that Manas follows Atma-Buddhi to Devachan, and that the lower (dregs, the residue of) Manas remains with Kama rupa, in Limbus, or Kama-loka, the abode of the " Shells. " (I, 334). " Manas is dual -- lunar in the lower, solar in its upper portion, " says a commentary. That is to say, it is attracted in its higher aspect towards Buddhi, and in its lower descends into, and listens to the voice of its animal soul full of selfish and sensual desires; and herein is contained the mystery of an adept's as of a profane man's life, as also that of the post-mortem separation of the divine from the animal man. (II, 495-6). The human Ego is neither Atman nor Buddhi, but the higher Manas: the intellectual fruition and the efflorescence of the intellectual self-conscious Egotism -- in the higher spiritual sense. The ancient works refer to it as Karana Sarira on the plane of Sutratma, which is the golden thread on which, like beads, the various personalities of this higher Ego are strung. (II, 79). It is a strange law of Nature that, on this plane, the higher (Spiritual) Nature should be, so to say, in bondage to the lower. Unless the Ego takes refuge in the Atman, the ALL-SPIRIT, and merges entirely into the essence thereof, the personal Ego may goad it to the bitter end. This cannot be understood unless the student makes himself familiar with the mystery of evolution, which proceeds on triple lines -- spiritual, psychic and physical. (II, 109). It is the Fifth and Fourth principles -- Manas and Kama rupa -- that contain the dual personality: the real immortal Ego (if it assimilates itself to the two higher) and the false and transitory personality, the mayavi or astral body, so-called, or the animal-human Soul -- the two having to be closely blended for purposes of a full terrestrial existence. (II, 241-2). It does not mean that Monads entered forms in which other Monads already were .... but their " Egos, " or Manas ... had to pass through earthly human experiences to become all-wise, and be able to start on the returning ascending cycle. The Monads are not discrete principles, limited or conditioned, but rays from that one universal absolute Principle. The entrance into a dark room through the same aperture of one ray of sunlight following another will not constitute two rays, but one ray intensified. It is not in the course of natural law that man should become a perfect septenary being, before the seventh race in the seventh Round. Yet he has all these principles latent in him from his birth. Nor is it part of the evolutionary law that the Fifth principle (Manas), should receive its complete development before the Fifth Round. All such prematurely developed intellects (on the spiritual plane) in our Race are abnormal. ... Even in the coming seventh Race, at the close of this Fourth Round, while our four lower principles will be fully developed, that of Manas will be only proportionately so. This limitation, however, refers solely to the spiritual development. The intellectual, on the physical plane, was reached during the Fourth Root-Race. (II, 167). .... the conscious Manas [is] the connecting link between Spirit and Matter, heaven and earth. (II, 98). .... Manas, Mind and Self-consciousness. In each of us that golden thread of continuous life -- periodically broken into active and passive cycles of sensuous existence on Earth, and super-sensuous in Devachan -- is from the beginning of our appearance upon this earth. It is the Sutratma, the luminous thread of immortal impersonal monadship, on which our earthly lives or evanescent Egos are strung as so many beads. ... it is our Mind -- our tempter and Redeemer, our intelligent liberator and Saviour from pure animalism. Without this principle -- the emanation of the very essence of the pure divine principle Mahat (Intelligence), which radiates direct from the Divine mind -- we would be surely no better than animals. ... Without this quickening spirit, or human Mind or soul, there would be no difference between man and beast ... (II, 513). COMPILER'S NOTE: The following is a separate item which followed the above article but was on the same page. I felt it was useful to include it here: POWER OF THOUGHT Man, made of thought, occupant only of many bodies from time to time, is eternally thinking. His chains are through thought, his release due to nothing else. His mind is immediately tinted or altered by whatever object it is directed to. By this means the soul is enmeshed in the same thought or series of thoughts as is the mind.... Every thought leaves a seed in the mind or manas of the thinker, no matter how fugitive the thought was. The whole sum of such small seeds will go to make up a larger seed for thought, and thus constitute a man of this, that, or the other general character. Thoughts, then, are highly important, for, as the Buddha said, we are made up of thought and built of thought; as we think, so we act and will act, and as we act and think so will we suffer or rejoice, and the whole world with us. The Mind Mind? What is the nature of mind in reality? Where is it? Everyone is trying to find the One Supreme Brahmn using his own mind. But, how can a human mind find Him without really understanding his own individual mind? In Kuljam Swaroop, Mahamati says, “This creation itself is the play of mind. It is the mind (in the form of Lord Brahma) which creates the world. It is the mind (in the form of Lord Vishnu) which sustains the world. It is the mind (in the form of Shiva) which destroys the world. In brief, the entire creation of five Tatwas, three Gunas and fourteen Lokas is the play of mind. There is everything in the mind, there is nothing in it! It is empty, but the Brahmn also resides in it. The mind can be an excellent tool, which can be utilized to attain the salvation. Only that person can understand the mind upon who has descended the divine grace of the Supreme Brahmn.” In brief, to understand our own mind, we have to understand all the minds, and the levels where an individual’s mind can ascend. Then only, the question of ascending to the Eternal Bliss arises. The four aspects of inner sense (Antah karan): In order, the scriptures talk about the following four aspects (lower-to-higher): Manas (Mind), Chit (faculty of cognition or reflection), Buddhi (Intellect), and Ahankaar (Ego). These are the four internal or psychic organs. These four faculties exist among all humans, Kshar Purusha, and even the Akshar Brahmn. It is important to understand these psychic organs, including mind, before we continue further. * Buddhi is an intellectual aspect of the cosmic Mind, and represents the faculty of determination and judgement. * Ahankaar or Ego is an aspect of the cosmic mind. It is the cause of the five Tanmatras, the mind and all the senses. It’s an effect of the Moh-Tatwa. “Eko asmi bahu Shyam” is the root Ego (of Kshar Purusha Adi Narayana) hidden behind this creation. * Lord Pran Nath has recognized Manas and Chit as two distinct faculties; whereas, Bhagvad Gita, Samkhya and Yoga System regard Manas and Chit as one and the same faculty. Major world scriptures and philosophers have failed to explain fully the nature and the origin of mind. Why? In absence of the spotless Tartam Knowledge, mind has been described as beginning less and endless, as God and devil, as life and death, as colorless or colorful, existent or nonexistent. How can a human mind completely understand these higher categories of mind? To understand the mind, many philosophers even suggested putting a stop to conceptual thinking. Whatever they experienced, they called it the original mind-they even named it ‘Buddha’ or ‘Tao!’ But none explained the mind in relation to this creation-from an individual level to the cosmic level. The five categories of mind: In Kuljam Swaroop, Mahamati explains these five categories of the mind: * The highest realm of mind is Avyakrit Brahmn. This is the mind of Akshar Brahmn. Vedas have called this highest mental consciousness as ‘Neti Neti.’ In absence of Tartam Knowledge, the same consciousness is mistakenly regarded as the integral component of ‘Sachidanand,’ the Supreme Brahmn. Maharshis attaind this level of supreme mental consciousness. * Lord Adi Narayana is the dreaming mind of Avyakrit Brahmn. Human mind can rise only up to this level. * Lord Vishnu is the mind of Lord Adi Narayana. * Narada is the mind of Lord Vishnu. He is the one whose mind works through all the living beings, called Jivas, of this Creation. * Minds of each individual living being or a Jiva, also called Physical mind (Sthul Manas). Mana, mana thein treigun, ta thein thir char sab uttpan | (KS, Pragat Wani) In addition to the above explained categories of mind, Kuljam Swaroop also talks of the following two broad categories of the mind. * Mijaji Dil- those who are nonbelievers or believers of Kshar Purusha or his lower spiritual forms. In general, Jiva Srishti falls under this category. * Haqiqi Dil - those Brahmn Srishti souls who are always attached to the One Supreme Truth God. Narada is the mind of Lord Vishnu: Scriptures reveal two different aspects of Narada who is regarded as the mind of Lord Vishnu. As we discussed earlier, Narada is the mind of Lord Vishnu; and Narada is the one whose mind works through all the Jivas of this Creation. Narada is, in fact, Lord Vishnu’s devotee angel. He is regarded as the form of Lord Vishnu’s mind (Manas). The minds of all creatures (Jivas), including humans, are regarded as the images of Narada. The two aspects of Narada are: * The positive aspect of mind that inspires one to do or think well, about God (generally, about Lord Vishnu or Kshar Purusha Adi Narayana as Supreme Lord), and * The negative aspects of mind that make one think badly, makes one nonbeliever or prevents one from attaining true understanding about spiritual wisdoms. This negative aspect of mind is also called ‘Satan’ or ‘Ableis’ in Koran and Bible. Therefore, in scriptures, we find both these aspects of the same personality ‘Narada,’ recognized as the Over-mind of all Jivas. we understood the mind and its different levels. The seeker must also note that our goal is to attain the Eternal Bliss, which is even beyond the reach of all these mental planes. To rise beyond these realms of mind, the Blessings of the Supreme Lord is essential. His Divine Grace, when descends upon a qualified soul, that individual soul can rise to the State of Supreme Bliss. In the next chapter, we will learn about the Imperishable Akshar Brahmn and Aksharateet Supreme Brahmn. Suddha Manas And Asuddha Manas Through the discriminating mind, the lower mind is powerfully mastered by the wise. " Uddharet-atmana-atmanam-Let him raise the self by the Self. " (Gita, VI-5) The Two Kinds Of Mind Suddha Manas or Sattvic mind (pure mind) and Asuddha (impure) Manas or the instinctive mind or desire-mind as it is called are the two kinds of mind according to Upanishadic teaching. There is the lower mind filled with passion. There is the higher mind filled with Sattva (purity). There are two minds. You will have to make it into one-Sattvic mind only-if you want to meditate. It is through the higher or Sattvic mind that you will have to control the lower or instinctive mind of passions and emotions. There are two kinds of Buddhi also-Vyavaharic Buddhi and pure Buddhi. There are two kinds of Aham or Ahankara, viz., Suddha Aham which identifies with Brahman (Sat-Chit-Ananda) and Asuddha Aham which identifies with the body. There are two kinds of Sankalpa (resolve, conation), viz., Suddha Sankalpa (thoughts of God) and Asuddha Sankalpa (thoughts of body and the world). The Asuddha Manas which creates Asuddha Sankalpa, the Vyavaharic Buddhi and Asuddha Ahankara-all these three form a vicious circle. These three work in co-operation. The seed of the mind is Ahankara. Mind is merely a bundle of thoughts. Of all thoughts, the 'I' thought is the root thought. It is the first thought also that emanated from the mind. Therefore, mind is only the thought 'I'. Buddhi is the basis of Ahankara. It is Buddhi that forces you to identify yourself with the physical body. It is Buddhi that creates difference (Bheda) and Nana Bhava (the idea of many in the world). Characteristics Of The Sattvic Mind A Sattvic mind like solitude, silence, simple living, high thinking, study of spiritual books, philosophical discussions, concentration of mind and company of Sadhus, Mahatmas and Sannyasins. A stainless mind can be judged through speech, face and eyes. Through these expressions, the opinion can be formed whether a person has stainless mind. Higher desires, noble aspirations, lofty ideals, true religious feeling, mercy, sympathy, pure unselfish love, devotion, Vichara (Atmic enquiry), inspiration, genius-all come from the higher, pure Sattvic mind. Suddha Manas (pure mind) is Brahman itself. It is an embodiment of purity itself. Characteristics Of The Rajasic Mind A Rajasic mind likes crowded cities, much talking, luxurious life, low thinking, the company of women, study of romantic novels, eating dainty dishes and selfish works. Instinctive mind is the lower, impure Kama Manas with desires, passions and appetities. The vast majority of persons have this instinctive mind only. Even the so-called civilised and educated persons live on the plane of the instinctive mind. Their senses are very sharp and acute and they run after more refined things for their sense-gratification. They identify themselves with the physical body and the senses. They have no idea of the subtle Atman which is entirely distinct from the body and the Indriyas. Their 'I' is the physical, gross body only though they know that there is a mind. Sensual enjoyment brings on diseases and destroys the power of discrimination (Viveka). It makes the mind Malina (impure). Therefore, shun Vishayabhoga (sensual enjoyment). Try to realise the Self within wherein lies eternal bliss and immortality. Sattvic Mind Needed For Atma-Vichara A sharp, subtle, one-pointed, Sattvic (pure) mind is needed for Atma-Vichara (enquiry into Atman or the Supreme Spirit) and study of Upanishads. A gross mind or practical (Vyavaharic) Buddhi with selfishness and lust is absolutely unfit for Vichara and philosophical ratiocination. Selfishness clouds understanding. Selfishness is the bane of life. The mind of a worldling is ever ready to absorb sexual thoughts. It cannot imbibe subtle, philosophical ideas. It is callous and cannot vibrate properly to take in philosophical ideas. You can drive a nail in clay, but not in a stone. The mind has to be purified by Nishkama Karma, Japa, Pranayama and other spiritual Sadhanas. Mind is compared to a mirror. If the mirror is dirty, you cannot see your face clearly. Similarly, if the mind-mirror is dirty (full of Mala, impurities-Kama, Krodha, Lobha, etc.), you cannot see God clearly; you cannot see the Self clearly. The light of Brahman cannot shine efficiently. Clean it up with effort daily, through spiritual Sadhana, meditation, strenuous Nishkama Karma Yoga, devotion, etc. You will realise God. " Manasaiva-anudrashtavyam " is the utterance of the Srutis. Brahman is to be seen by the mind. Here 'mind' means the Suddha Manas (pure mind). Brahman can be seen by a mind which is equipped with the four means of salvation; which is rendered subtle and pure by the practice of Sama, Dama, Yama and Niyama; which is furnished with the sacred instructions of a qualified Guru and which does Sravana (hearing), Manana (reflection) and Nididhyasana (constant musing). Should the pure mind concentrate itself for some time through a study of Jnana Sastras, association with the wise and an uninterrupted practice of meditation, then in such persons developing Jnana, a divine vision will dawn in which there will be a direct cognition of the one Reality. Slay The Impure Mind The enemy of Atman is the impure mind, which is replete with excessive delusion and a host of thoughts. This mischievous and powerful imp of lower mind is the generator of all pains and all fears and the destroyer of all noble, spiritual wealth. Your real enemy is this impure mind only which is full of delusion, Trishnas, Vasanas and host of other impurities. Lest this enemy of mind should spoil you in diverse ways through the " enjoyments " of the many " pleasures " in this world, slay it in the hope of getting eternal bliss and spiritual illumination. Destroy the lower Asuddha (impure) Manas through the higher Suddha Manas. Destroy your instinctive mind through discrimination and help of your higher, Sattvic mind. Then and then alone will you get eternal, infinite peace and bliss of Atman. Then alone will you become a Jivanmukta. Sattvic minds and Rajasic minds move in diametrically opposite directions. Sattvic mind unifies. Instinctive mind separates and divides. Voice from the instinctive mind will mislead you. Purify the mind and hear the voice of conscience (Sattvic mind). You will have to develop the Sattvic part of the mind by annihilating the lower, impure, instinctive mind. If the lower mind is done away with through the higher mind alone, then only will you have eternal happiness and peace. Then alone will you attain Moksha, supreme knowledge and perennial bliss. Slay this mind through constant Vichara and meditation on Om and rest in your own Svarupa, Sat-Chit-Ananda state. How To Purify The Mind As one iron shapes another iron, the pure mind of a person which makes efforts in the virtuous path should correct and mould his impure mind. Mind is unfailingly rendered pure through true, virtuous and pure actions and constant Satsanga (association with the wise). Speaking the truth and practice of Daya (pure compassion) are very great purifiers of mind. All lofty aspirations, all-embracing tendencies and pity-all go a long way in increasing the Sattvic material of the mind. The higher Manas is developed. Sacrifice, gift, compassion, study of the Vedas and speaking the truth: these five are purifying. The sixth is penance well-practised. The last one is highly purifying. Pilgrimage to sacred places is also purifying. You come in contact with holy persons there. You can have good Satsanga. Charity, Japa, Nishkama Karma, Yajna, Agnihotra, Brahmacharya, Sandhya, Tirtha-Yatra, Dama, Sama, Yama, Niyama, Svadhyaya, Tapas, Vrata, service of saints-all tend to purify the mind. There will be, doubtless, unalloyed bliss in the mind thus purified. A Mantra purifies the mind. Mere repetition of a Mantra, parrot-like, has very little effect. It has some benefit. It must be repeated with Bhava (feeling). Then it produces wonderful effects. The Mantra, unless inspired with the powerful will-force of one's own mind, cannot produce much effect. Study of philosophical works, right thinking, exercise of good and noble emotions, prayers and beneficent endeavours and, above all, regular and strenuous meditation are the means to improve the mind. These will bring about the rapid evolution of the mind. When the mind is purified, a hole is formed in the centre through which purity, light and knowledge flow from Brahman. A goldsmith converts 10 carat gold into 15 carat gold by adding acids and burning it several times in the crucible. Even so, you will have to purify your sensuous mind through concentration and reflection on the words of your spiritual preceptor and the Upanishadic sentences, meditation, Japa or silent repetition of the Name of the Lord, etc. It takes a long time to purify Harital (yellow oxide of arsenic orpiment). It has to be soaked in cow's urine for seven days, in lime water for ten days and in milk for seven days. Then it has to be burnt out hundred and eight times before a Bhasma or proper oxide (ash) is obtained. Even so, it takes a long time to effect Chitta-Suddhi, purity of mind. Severe Tapascharya (austerity) is needed. As a result of purification of the mind, it becomes more sensitive, gets easily disturbed by a sound or shock and feels any pressure acutely. An aspirant must be sensitive and yet have the body and nerves completely under his control. The greater the sensitiveness becomes, the more difficult is the task; there are many noises which pass unheeded by an ordinary person, but which are torture to one who is very sensitive. You must do your best to get over this oversensitiveness. Initiation Of Pure Mind Leads To Quiescence Purification is the first part of Yoga. When purification is over, the natural tendency of the mind is to go towards liberation, Moksha. If only a disciple whose mind is cleansed of all its impurities, is initiated into the sacred mysteries by a Guru, then his mind will get complete quiescence. He will enter into a Nirvikalpa state. The Nirvikalpa state is termed Asamvedana. Freeing the Mind This article was transcribed from the September 2001 issue of “The Theosophical Movement,” a publication of Theosophy Company (India). Often we are unable to understand what the mind is. And, when we speak of controlling it, we do not understand who or what controls it, or what control means. We need to make these points clear to ourselves. We get tied up in words. What are words? Simply sounds and letters, or characters which convey ideas, either abstract or concrete? These ideas we may understand or we may not understand. The word " cup, " for instance, brings to us the memory of a concrete object that we know and use; " aspiration " brings to us a feeling of upliftment; words such as " Absolute " and " Consciousness " we find difficult to understand, for we have not experienced them. How can we " experience " consciousness or mind or other abstract, spiritual concepts? Let us think. When we see a person, are we not using the power of consciousness to perceive him through the medium of our eyes? Are we not " aware " of him? This awareness can be purely material; it can affect the emotions; or it can affect the will. Therefore our awareness or consciousness is of a threefold quality. H.P.B. says that " Mind is a name given to the sum of the states of Consciousness grouped under Thought, Will and Feeling. " So we are " experiencing " consciousness all our waking life. But so is an animal. It sees, it has feelings and will power; then how does our mind differ from the mind of an animal? Do all people react in the same way to perceptions? Do all dogs react in the same way to perceptions? We can easily see that there is a far greater divergence of individual reaction in the human kingdom than in the animal. The animal reacts differently within the limits of instinct. Man reacts according to his materiality or intellectuality or spirituality. What makes the difference? Man is a spiritual being and his mind is but a ray of his own spiritual individuality. It is this ray of mind with which each one is concerned in his daily life, for it gives him the feeling of personal identity or " I-ness. " It uses the senses and sense-organs to perceive the world in which he lives; it makes him aware of his emotional nature and of his ideas. Without it he would not be able to look forward to emotions that are pleasant, or backward to those that were pleasant. The same with unpleasant emotions. It is strange, is it not, that we seem to get as much " pleasure " in recalling unpleasant things and events as pleasant ones! Otherwise, why should we wallow in the memory of unpleasant things or happenings? Here we have an example of Kama as an octopus grasping and controlling the mind and sullying the otherwise pure faculty of awareness. For, what is mind? It is colourless in itself, being merely " awareness, " and is coloured by the modifications it constantly undergoes by reason of the limiting thoughts or feelings or ideas on which it is dwelling. Some of this colouring is brought over from past lives, but some is acquired in the present life. Hence we are told first to free the mind from Kama. The Voice of the Silence tells us not to let the senses make a " playground " of the mind. What frees the mind, what prevents the senses from making of it a playground? We need to consider carefully what it means to free the mind from Kama, to take the mind away from Kama. It is in the grip of Kama. How can it get free but by coming out of that grip? Therefore the mind has to free itself. It has to cease to be aware of Kama (evil emotions, desires, volition, etc.), which it will do when it realizes that it can free itself from the limitations imposed by Kama. It has to become aware of itself and ask the question, " Who am I ? " Let us look at Manas. Manas is the " conscious principle of the Monad, " we are told; and the Monad is a unified triad, Atma-Buddhi-Manas. Therefore it has three aspects: the will aspect (Atma), the feelings or compassion aspect (Buddhi), and the thought aspect (Manas). Atma and Buddhi are reflected in Manas, however dimly. Manas Taijasi is Manas illuminated and activated by Buddhi. Manas flooded by Atma is Will, Spiritual Will in action. Lower Manas is a ray or Higher Manas and is therefore also threefold. When clothed in the three lower principles it reflects these lower three—prana, feeling, and sense impressions. Manas gets deluded by the information the senses bring to it. When the senses make a playground of it, it is bewitched; when it gets so enmeshed that it knows of nothing but the lower principles, it manifests as the lower will in action, as obstinacy, brute force and selfishness. What is meant by the senses making a playground of the mind is that they " play, " amuse themselves and strengthen their wishes by thinking about their reactions. Hence the first stage of freeing the mind is to find out what mind is and what binds it. Once it realizes that is bound, it can begin to free itself. A difficult task this, for passion will not let go of the mind, selfishness will not give up its plotting and planning to gain its desires. Lower Manas is that which gives the sense of " I-ness, " of an entity, a being, to the personality. It is limited by its skandhas, but the skandhas are not it; it is modified by its thoughts and ideas, but it is not them; it is deluded by senses and sense-organs, but it is not these either. It is a ray of Atma-Buddhi-Manas. When it unites itself with its higher aspect, the Higher Manas, the two become one. This union is prevented because of the colouring given to it by the lower vehicles. If we can tear ourselves from these until we become onlookers of them and then use them—that is to say, if that in us which is Atma-Buddhi-Manas can see itself as separate from them, then can it free itself. While we think that Kama must let go of Manas we shall never succeed. But when we know that it is Manas that must refuse to obey Kama, we have a starting point. Then comes the next stage. The will aspect of Manas comes into play when we realize why we have to free the mind. i.e., for the good of all. Then compassion and love take the place of feelings, and even the lower Manasic ray becomes Taijasi—shining. ______ ________________________________ HIMAVANT The Layayogachakras-Group Owner! _______ Join to: - prema-dharma- http://www.himavanti.org http://www.himawanti.org _______ Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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