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EVOLUTIONARY QUIRKS, YAMA – NIYAMA & THE HUMAN BRAIN

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EVOLUTIONARY QUIRKS, YAMA – NIYAMA &

THE HUMAN

BRAIN

Yogacharini  Yogamani

Smt

MEENAKSHI DEVI BHAVANANI

ICYER at Ananda Ashram, Pondicherry,

India.

www.icyer.com

 

 

Many problems facing the

average individual are not their own personal

problems at all, but rather difficulties common to each and every member of the

human race.

In the long evolutionary unfoldment from the first form of life – the virus –

3.5 billion years ago, through the fishes (375 million years ago), the

amphibians (345 million) the reptiles (300 million) right up to the mammals (60

million years) the accumulated conditioned responses of various life forms to

environmental challenges have produced organisms which adapted and lived, or

failed to adapt, and died. The Highest Truth, the Greatest Success of the reptilian and animal kingdoms, is Survival. The “fit” live. The unfit die!

Forty thousand (or 100

thousand) years ago, a great evolutionary event occurred. A mysterious force

penetrated the dull, conditioned stimulus – response, pain – pleasure planes of

existence – and Manas – or Consciousness – manifested on the earth plane. A New Creature – a Being with the power to think, to reason

beyond its genetic inheritance – rose above animal – reptilian instincts. He /

She was called “Man” or “Human” – literally a “Being” which possesses “Manas” or Consciousness. The

force of that powerful evolutionary leap propelled the four – legged animal

onto two legs and prompted the growth of a new brain structure – the neo–cortex

and the pre-frontal lobes of the brain. Or, was it the other way around? Did

the new brain structure develop, enabling the New Being to manifest

Consciousness? Which came first? The chicken or the egg?

Whatever the cause –

effect sequence, this New Creature rose out of the

conditioning of millions of years of fish – amphibian – reptilian – mammalian

experiences. All these ancient instincts are still present in his brain

structure. These old instincts and conditioned responses enable his heart to

beat automatically, his breath to move in and out of his lungs systematically

21,600 times per day. These old sections of his brain enable him to digest his

food and eliminate it; to seek out a mate and procreate, to nurture his

off-spring and defend his family; to play and frolic in sheer exuberance of the

life force. These old remnants of a past long gone are still present in the New

Being’s “Old Brain” – the brain stem, the limbic system, the reptilian and

mammalian complexes. But it is here that a “snag” has developed – an “evolutionary lag” so to speak. These “old structures” prompt “ancient

responses”

to “modern challenges” often totally out of

proportion to the current situation. The old mammalian emotions produce

adrenalin surges which stimulate “fright – flight – fight” responses to life

and death challenges and appropriate physiological manifestations – the

emptying of bowels, bladder, sweaty palms and feet, rapid breath and heart

beats. This physiological change was useful when being pursued by a sabre –

tooth tiger but becomes extremely useless and even harmful when it is triggered

by the fact that one’s colleague at the office has gotten a promotion one

expected for oneself or when someone else snatches a much – needed train

reservation from right under one’s nose by cutting the queue. These relatively

“mundane threats” often prompt “life and death responses” such as rapid heart

beat, urination, adrenalin rushes with desire to attack etc. Usually, due to

social conditioning, these autonomic responses are curbed, but sometimes the

residues linger sub-consciously, causing undefined anxiety attacks, high blood

pressure, circulatory and respiratory disorders and so on. The old sections of the brain also trigger various other survival mechanisms – a sense of hierarchy in relationship to other

creatures, a drive for territorial conquests, a thirst for power, seeking

dominance in the herd; jealousy, rage, the killing instinct, desire to “eat or

be eaten” by the other. These are all ‘Blind passions”, the animal instincts so

vital to survival in the jungle which reign in these old segments of the brain.

In so-called “modern civilized man” these “basic animal drives” have become

more subtle, but they still exist in the fiercely competitive worlds of

business, sports, media, religions, organizational power struggles, and of

course, politics. The need to “prove oneself the best, “ the “top dog” which is

so essential for success in any competitive activity can be traced right back

to the “Old Brain” and the organism’s primordial instinct to be “The Most Fit” so that it will win the “Sexual Sweepstakes” and ensure that its genes will be passed to

the next generation. The only difference between the behaviour of humans and

animals in these matters is that the drives become more abstract, more subtle

and various types of social restraints evolved by the culture keep them in

check.

The New Being, “The Man”, the “Human” who walks upright on the earth, also now possesses

consciousness, a beam of light in the dark world of instinctual reptilian – animal

existence. That “Light” enables the “New Being” to remember the past, to learn

new lessons above and beyond the walls of conditioned response, to forge new

responses to old environmental challenges. “Manas” or Consciousness can perceive beauty, can wonder at this

mysterious world, can create tools and shape its own environment. This “New

Being” can dominate and exploit lower life forms. Consciousness opened a huge

window to the universe. Man could now look at the sky and see the stars and the

great heavens. He could ponder his own fate and wonder at the mysteries of life

and death. He now had the power of abstraction and was freed of the prison of

sensory information alone.

This New Creature’s

brain weighed 1.5 kilos. It contained all the evolutionary lessons of nearly

400 million years of unfolding, from the fishes to the mammals in its

structure. That brain could be divided into two classifications – the “Old

Brain” which contained in function and structure – the impulses and instincts

of the reptilian and mammalian creatures - and “The New Brain” the Cerebral

Cortex, the Pre-Frontal Lobes – which made it possible for consciousness –

awareness – thinking – reasoning – analysis – discrimination – to manifest.

This “New Being” is

literally “half animal – half man”, a creature struggling towards the Light,

but chained to the past by the fetters of old primordial instincts and drives.

This conflict between the “devil” and the “God” within is the saga of all

evolutionary struggles, it is the “core story” of all the world’s great myths.

In Hindu parlance, it is the eternal conflict between the demons – Asuras – Rakshashas – those who “hate the light” and the Devas, the Suras, the Daityas,

the “lovers of light.” The Asuras

wallow in the darkness of animal – reptilian desires, passions and instincts.

The Suras revel in the light

of consciousness and all the refinement which it assures – the arts, moral and

ethical living, nobility of conduct, dignity of bearing, ideals, self-sacrifice

and magnanimity. This struggle – mirrored in all great world religions, all

great art, all the great human myths – is the struggle of every human to rise

out of his primordial past and dwell in his true God Like Nature.

This inherent human

problem – “the beast’s attempt to

become the beauty”

– is part of the Great Universal Scheme to unfold the individual soul – the

Jiva – leading it to its ultimate destination – Union

with the Universal – the Paramatma.

This is the great dramatic saga of the transformation of the “individual personality”

into the Universality.

This evolutionary saga

of each Jiva is systematically

analyzed in the Garuda Purana, said to be authored by

Maharishi Veda Vyasa who reported that the

teachings were taught to Ramaharshana,

who in turn taught Kashyapa,

who taught it to Garuda. This Purana states that the long

evolutionary journey of the Jiva

(individual soul) to union with Paramatma

(Universal Soul) takes 84,00,000 incarnations. That is, each Jiva must experience 84,00,000 different

physical forms before it achieves its final evolutionary state, Moksha, freedom from flesh – this

final transcendence, Kaivalya,

Yoga or Union of the Jiva with

Paramatma.

According to the Garuda Purana, 21, 00,000  “births” must take place in each of four

categories.

1.      The Jiva must be born 21,

00,000 times in forms born of seeds (plants) – Udbhija.

2.      The Jiva must be born 21,

00,000 times in forms born of sweat – Svedaja.

3.     

The Jiva must be born 21, 00,000 times in forms born from eggs – Andaja (birds, reptiles, fish)

4.     

The Jiva must be born 21, 00,000 times in forms born of womb (mammals) – Jarayuja

All these experiences in different kinds of living creatures produce

more and more elaborate “brain structures”, as the brain accumulates forms and

functions, becoming more subtle, more complex, more sophisticated with each

succeeding incarnation, until finally, the physical structure is capable of

manifesting Consciousness (Manas) in the human being.

But, when the Jiva reaches the level of “mankind”, the human

manifestation, the Jiva must face several hurdles, several inherent problems,

several obstacles. This is a kind of “evolutionary lag”, in which Consciousness

is impeded in its upwards flow almost as though the Divine is testing the

ability of the organism to withstand the shock of Cosmic Consciousness. The

great Maharishi Patanjali in his Yoga Sutra has very succinctly dealt with these “evolutionary problems.” Patanjali

has called these “hurdles” as “Kleshas”, “hindrances” or “obstacles” on the spiritual path and has listed

them as five in number.

 

According to Maharishi Patanjali these Pancha Kleshas are:

1. Avidya – ignorance or the inability to perceive the real nature of things;

submersion in the blindness of animal instincts and passions,

2. Asmita – egoism, false identification with the perishable body, the sense of

“I – ness,” “Me-ness” and “Mine – ness;” the sense of individuality which gives

rise to the need to dominate and destroy others (eat or be eaten).

3. Raga – attraction

the animal’s drive to pursue pleasure;

4. Dwesha, the animal’s

desire to avoid pain (aversion);

5. Abinivesha (clinging to life; the instinct for self preservation, the survival

instinct).

 

How brilliantly the ancient sage 2,500 years ago analyzed the essential

human conundrum, the quintessence of the human enigma, the essential “Knot of Human Bondage” – a creature torn between its bestial urges, and the calls of its

Divine Nature. These “Kleshas” are sometimes translated most correctly as “Knots of the Heart.” One could even term them “Knots of the Soul – Spirit.” Patanjali considered the Kleshas as the root cause of all human

suffering – conflict, problems and difficulties.

When the animal rises up onto two legs and the skull expands forwards,

when the pre-frontal lobes develop and consciousness is able to find a suitable

instrument through which to manifest, an entirely new element – enters into the

evolutionary scheme of things. The New Creature can utilize this consciousness

to accelerate its own evolution into a higher form of being. It is no longer a

prisoner of past conditioning. It has broken free from the inexorable chain of

cause – effect (Karma). It now has the potentiality for freedom. It can now

make aware choices in its responses to environmental stimuli and challenges. It

is no longer a Pasu (an animal or literally, one who is bound by a Pasa, a

noose – the noose being the nervous system and brain totally conditioned by

stimulus – response actions based on pleasure and pain). It is then that “Yoga” or “The

Unitive Impulse” may be embraced and one may literally “lift

oneself by one’s own boot straps” or in the words of Lord Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita, “Lift the self by the Self.”

The “New Creature” may now evolve itself consciously by cutting

asunder, the “Knots of the Heart”, the Kleshas, as enumerated by Patanjali.

Avidya or Ignorance may be

destroyed by conscious seeking for higher and higher levels of Truth. One must

free oneself of blind animal passions, and consciously strive towards nobility

of living. Asmita or Ego must be transcended by realizing that “the sense of I-ness is an

illusion”, that in Reality, there is only Oneness. When personality fades away,

Universality emerges. Raga – the lure of pleasure must be

seen for the false mistress that it is and the horror of pain Dwesha must also be seen

as an imposter, unworthy of fear. The human rises above these eternal dualities

and heeds the cautionary advice of the Katha Upanishad – “Do not mistake the pleasant for the good.” Finally, one must

“root out” the animal desire to “survive at all costs” by realizing that one is

“not the body” but in actuality, one’s true being is the Universal Spirit which

can never die.

How marvelously Patanjali has analyzed the root problems of the human

condition.

Interestingly enough, a modern psychologist – philosopher, Ken Keyes in

his book ROAD

MAP TO LIFE LONG HAPPINESS has come to similar conclusions

using different terms and taking another route.

Ken Keyes argues that in the long course of evolution, the “Old Brain” and the “New

Brain” developed over vastly different periods of time.

Thus, he postulates, there is an essential “lack of communication” between the

“old” (reptilian - mammalian) brain and the “new” (conscious, neo-cortex) parts

of the brain. This is because the “old brain” developed over the course of 60

to 375 million years and hence is “powerful”, well-set in its ways. Its

habitual responses to environmental survival challenges are strong and

automatic – “kill or be killed.” Whereas, the “New Brain” the human

consciousness is only 40 to 100 thousand years old, and hence “the new boy on

the block.” This lack of communication between the two brains has produced what

Ken Keyes calls the “Five

Quirks” which he postulates cause most of the problems

one faces in life.

Ken Keyes analyses these quirks us follows.

1.     

The “Object Quirk” – the animal

brain sees objects only in a very vague, hazy, general sense and not in a

specific sense. It views objects and classifies them as to how they may fulfill

its needs or in what way they may threaten its safety. Thus, it confuses

different people and things. It sees everything generally as friend or foe,

provider of food or as a sexual possibility. It does not need to see any object

with specific characteristics. For example, it does not choose a mate on

personal charm or elevated character but simply as a means to gratify sex

drive. Other objects – other creatures – are important only as means to satisfy

basic needs.

2.     

The Time Quirk – Keyes says

the “Old Brain” has no time sense. It does not perceive past or future. It lives

only in the present moment. It “eats or is eaten.” There is no sense of

tomorrow or yesterday. Everything is immediate, now, urgent. Every experience

is in “The Eternal Now.”

3.     

Unsafe Stranger Quirk – The “Old

Brain” views all strangers with suspicion. The “unknown stranger” is a possible

threat to survival or a competitor for resources. Any creature “different” from

oneself and one’s species is a potential threat.

4.     

Unchanging Entity Quirk – To the

“Old Brain” incapable of perceiving subtleties, everything remains the same – a

tree is always a tree. It does not perceive the various changes, which all

things pass through. It sees all things as “unchanging.” The perception of the

subtleties of change are not necessary for survival.

5.     

Adaptable Memory Quirk – The animal

does not need memory. The only memory necessary is what enables it to survive.

Hence, what it remembers can be “adjusted” to whatever best helps it to

survive. There is no objective truth. The only “Truth” to the animal brain is

“survival of the fittest.”

What Keyes is trying to point out, is that the way in which animals and

reptiles perceive the world is a much dimmer, less precise, less clear,

survival – oriented perception totally geared to survival. This is much less

than that available to the conscious mind. The “Old Brain” is fuelled by

emotional responses. The basic motivating emotion is fear. The other important

drives – sex, survival instinct, herd mentality, dominance, power struggles,

nurturing and being nurtured – are all tied to the organism’s basic need to

survive at all costs and fear of death or extinction.

For example, the “Object Quirk” manifests in human

experience when a person in the past was abused by a red-haired woman and

hence, in future, always has a dislike for red-haired women. The “Old Brain”

cannot see the possibility that all red-haired women will not abuse it.

The Time

Quirk manifests itself in human behaviour in this

manner: when one experiences unhappiness, one feels one is “always unhappy.”

This may cause one to perceive another person as “always angry”, even though

the person may only be angry at that moment. Witness how many husband-wife or

parent-child quarrels begin with the words… ‘You always do this…”

The “Unsafe

Stranger Quirk” is evidenced in the suspicion that people feel

when a foreigner enters their circle, or someone of a different religion a

different race, a different culture etc comes into their social circle. There

is an instinctual fear, even though that person may be perfectly harmless.

The “Unchanging

Entity Quirk” manifests when people cannot see that those

around them are constantly changing, that they are not what they were

yesterday. A thief may have reformed himself, but others may always perceive

him as “a thief.” The husband may have overcome his bad habit, but the wife

cannot see him anew. The Adjustable Memory Quirk occurs when

people deliberately or unconsciously “re-arrange” their memories to support or

justify their emotions or desires. For example, a couple who wish to divorce

may “adjust their memories’ to “remember” only the “bad times” or the “bad

characteristics” of their partners.

Man’s close relations

with the animal and reptilian kingdoms has found its way even into common

expressions. Reptiles are cold blooded. They do not experience emotions. This

is why few people like to have reptiles as pets. Reptiles sense threats from

predators and act – fighting or fleeing. They sense a possible prey to dine

upon, and attack.. But, they do not feel fear. They do not nurture their young.

They re-act only on the level of the survival instinct according to the

characteristic responses of their particular species. They do not possess

individuality, but rather, exist in a generality. This is why it is often said

of a person who has done something particularly cruel – “he / she is cold

blooded” or “the murder was committed in cold blood” or “he / she is a snake in

the grass.” The reptilian complex – associated with the brain stem, has its own

efficiency. It regulates respiration; it digests food; it makes the heart beat.

It enables us to react swiftly to real or imagined threats. But, it does not

feel. The mammalian brain, younger by several hundred million years to the

reptilian, has well developed emotions. Fear, love, hatred, jealousy, rage, are

part of its workings. Desires motivate behaviour of mammals; desire to nurture

or be nurtured; desire for sex; for power; for domination or submission; desire

to protect one’s own territory; the herd instinct with all its emotional power

plays are very much mammalian instincts. “Faithful as a dog”; “brave as a lion”

(lion-hearted); cunning as a fox; strong as an elephant are common expressions

of the character traits of various animals. The fierce protective maternal love

of animals is well known, as is the male’s jealousy of anyone who dares

encroach his sexual territory. Animals die in battles over territorial

dominance. These are all emotions and desires which rage in the animal brain.

At that level of evolution, all these drives are necessary to keep the genetic

flow moving from one generation of the organism to the next. Survival tactics:

Nature’s way of ensuring that “life goes on” by providing an autonomic

motivating power.

Animals are

prisoners of their genes. They are incarnated into a conditioned, stimulus –

response programming and they have no choice, but to follow their instincts.

Man, the New

Being, the first “Conscious Organism” has the power of choice. He / she may now

act, and choose, rather than re-act. The human has the power to think, to recall

past situations and compare them to the present reality. Man has the power of

reason which frees him from the instinctive responses to challenge which is the

mode of behaviour of the reptilian and mammalian kingdom. But the power of the

unconscious emotions and instincts rising from the “Old Brain” in a kind of

“evolutionary lag” sometimes overpowers the “Rational Brain” and causes “The

New Being” to react in an “irrational manner.” Man as a social, conscious being

has lifted himself from the jungle environment with its moment to moment

dangers and constant life – and – death challenges. He no longer faces

challenges to his very survival on a constant basis. His life is relatively

secure on the physical level (barring wars and other unusual circumstance). Yet,

his “Old Brain” is hard wired to react as though every threat (physical or

psychological) is a life – and – death matter. Hence, even psychological

challenges, or innocuous frictions trigger off “Old Brain” extreme responses,

especially on the emotional level.

 

Many old desires and

instincts still exist in a subtle level – sexual rivalry, power struggles,

territorial conflicts – the only difference being that the “animal in us” now

wears a coat and tie and stands on two legs.

These concepts may be elaborated. At present it is enough to simply

point out that often in human relationships and in other situations, the old

animal and reptilian autonomic responses and reactions cloud the “human” or

conscious perception. The “Old Brain” reacts out of conditioning.

It is heavily “loaded” with emotions which are part of the mammalian complex,

and hence, “unconscious.” The “New Brain” has the power “to act” after considering the reality of the present situation, and using

discrimination, rationality and deliberation to choose consciously its actions

in any given circumstances.

This ‘power of choice”

is concomitant to “consciousness.” The animal –

reptile is not “free” to choose – it is bound by the noose (Pasa)

of its conditioned stimulus – response mechanism. If it is threatened, it will

flee or fight. These are the only options open to it.

This power to reflect,

to see the situation in the present moment freed of all past conditioning, and

then to consciously choose the appropriate response is the essence of Yama –

Niyama, the Moral and Ethical System on which Ashtanga Yoga is based.

 Maharishi Patanjali rightly puts

Yama and Niyama as the first of

eight steps on the ladder of conscious evolution of Ashtanga Yoga. Without

perfection in this aspect of human life, he says, conscious evolution is not

possible. He codifies Yama into five basic principles: Ahimsa – nonviolence; Asteya – non-stealing; Satya – Truthfulness; Brahmacharya – control of sexual

urge. Aparigraha – non greed. One can summarize the five Yamas in a succinct

manner “Yama” means “restraint”, restraint of the animal – reptilian – “Old Brain instincts” at all

levels, both gross and subtle.

Non-harmfulness, non-stealing, control of sexual urge, non-greed and

seeing the “truth” or “Reality” without the obscuration of dim animal – based

perception strikes at the core root of animal – reptilian instincts and roots

them out of the human nature.

Niyama, the second stage of Ashtanga Yoga includes Saucha, cleanliness; Santhosha – Contentment; Tapa – austerities,

discipline; Swadhyaya – Self–study Ishwara Pranidhana – Submission to the Cosmic Will or obedience to Cosmic Law. Niyama may be succinctly

summarized as practices, which “cultivate the Higher Nature”, the humane nature, the Divine Nature. Niyama or observances Nurture

consciousness.

Yama, thus, is restraint of the instincts and

impulses rising from the “Old Brain.” Yama

is the control of the unconsciousness. Niyama

is reinforcing through various practices and observances the higher

consciousness, the light, the divine characteristics which will hasten one’s

evolution into more advanced states of being. Niyama is the cultivation of consciousness.

Swadhyaya – the Fourth Niyama –

Self-Study – is also the process of examining the primordial conditioning of

our “Old Brain” and recognizing these ancient impulses in their modern clothing

– irrational fears of abandonment, fear of strangers, projection of bad

experiences with a particular type of person (say, a blond boy friend) onto all

blond men; generalizing all people into categories of whether they can satisfy

particular needs (like sex, nurturing, power fulfillments) etc or not. Seeing

the world and the people around us as “unchanging”, not viewing them as they

actually are. So many emotional problems rise because of this evolutionary lag

between the “Old Brain” and the “New Brain.”

Hence, the Yama and Niyama are “no-option Yoga.” We have no choice. If

we want to grow, to evolve out of our reptilian – mammalian past into the truly

human, Divine Nature, we must restrain the primordial instincts (Yama) and

consciously reinforce our Divine Nature (awareness and consciousness) with the

observances and practice of Niyama.

The Yama and Niyama are

the necessary principles to be studied, reflected upon and adhered to as part

of the evolutionary development of the human brain. The restraints and observance purify and refine the brain structure,

making it a fit instrument, capable of “tuning into Cosmic Consciousness.”

Eventually this “purified brain” will refine itself sufficiently to merge the

individuality (Jiva) with the Universality (Paramatma) – the goal of Yoga (Union).

The long evolutionary meandering through the flesh of 8,400,000

incarnations can thus be shortened. One may rise out of the blind bestial

passions in the darkness of unconscious ignorance to the radiant Divine

Consciousness of a truly Enlightened Being. The long journey is shortened, and

the goal, so long distant, becomes a living reality. The dewdrop slips into the

shining sea! The “devil” is vanquished by the Deva. The beast becomes the

beauty. The old, old story has a happy ending!

-- Yogacharya Dr Ananda Balayogi BhavananiChairman: ICYER and Yoganjali Natyalayam25, II Cross, Iyyanar Nagar, Pondicherry, Indiawww.icyer.com and www..org

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