An advice was given by a
wise elderly to a youngster who had inflated expectations from people where he
would be going: “… don't be satisfied with a psychic opening; you need to rise
to the higher mental levels as well.” This kind of advice prompted a seeker
to check with the Mother. What she says is given in the following. She is
emphatic about the psychic coming forward and guiding us: “There
is … only one remedy: be on your guard, hold fast to the psychic, do not allow
anything in your consciousness to slip in between your psychic and yourself,
close your ears and your understanding to all other suggestions and rely only
on the psychic.”
[Education, CWM, Vol. 12, p.
47; originally published in the Bulletin of Physical Education, November 1952]
Already future teachers and future students are
beginning to arrive, some from outside, new to the climate and customs of the
country. They are arriving in the Ashram for the first time and know nothing of
its life or its customs. Some of them come with a mental aspiration, either to
serve or to learn; others come in the hope of doing yoga, of finding the Divine
and uniting with Him; finally there are those who want to devote themselves entirely
to the divine work upon earth. All of them come impelled by their psychic
being, which wants to lead them towards self-realisation.
They come with their psychic in front and ruling their
consciousness; they have a psychic contact with people and things. Everything
seems beautiful and good to them, their health improves, their consciousness
grows more luminous; they feel happy, peaceful and safe; they think that they
have reached their utmost possibility of consciousness. This peace and fullness
and joy given by the psychic contact they naturally find everywhere, in
everything and everybody. It gives an openness towards the true consciousness
pervading here and working out everything. So long as the openness is there,
the peace, the fullness and the joy remain with their immediate results of
progress, health and fitness in the physical, quietness and goodwill in the
vital, clear understanding and broadness in the mental and a general feeling of
security and satisfaction. But it is difficult for a human being to keep up a
constant contact with his psychic. As soon as he settles down and the freshness
of the new experience fades away, the old person comes back to the surface with
all its habits, preferences, small manias, shortcomings and misunderstandings;
the peace is replaced by restlessness, the joy vanishes, the understanding is
blinded and the feeling that the place is the same as everywhere else creeps
in, because one has become what one was everywhere else. Instead of seeing only
what has been accomplished, he becomes aware more and more and almost
exclusively of what has yet to be done; he becomes morose and discontented and
blames people and things instead of blaming himself. He complains of the lack
of comfort, of the unbearable climate, of the unsuitable food that makes his
digestion painful. Taking support from Sri Aurobindo’s teaching that the body is an indispensable basis for
the yoga, that it should not be neglected and that, on the contrary, great care
should be given to it, the physical consciousness concentrates almost
exclusively on the body and tries to find ways of satisfying it. This is
practically impossible, for, with a very few exceptions, the more it is given,
the more it demands. Besides, the physical being is ignorant and blind; it is
full of false notions, preconceived ideas, prejudices and preferences. Indeed,
it cannot deal effectively with the body. Only the psychic consciousness has
the knowledge and the insight needed to do the right thing in the right way.
You
might well ask, what is the remedy for this state of affairs? For here we are
going round in a vicious circle, since the whole trouble comes from drawing
away from the psychic and only the psychic can find the solution to the
problems. There is consequently only one remedy: be on your guard, hold fast to
the psychic, do not allow anything in your consciousness to slip in between
your psychic and yourself, close your ears and your understanding to all other
suggestions and rely only on the psychic.
Usually, those who become conscious of their psychic
being expect that it will liberate them from vital and physical attractions and
activities; they seek to escape from the world in order to live in the joy of
contemplation of the Divine, and in the immutable peace of constant contact
with Him. The attitude of those who want to practise Sri Aurobindo’s integral yoga is
quite different. When they have found their psychic being and are united with
it, they ask it to turn its gaze towards the physical being in order to act on it
with the knowledge that comes from the contact with the Divine, and to
transform the body so that it may be able to receive and manifest the divine
consciousness and harmony.
This is the goal of our efforts here; this will be the
culmination of your studies in the International University Centre. So, to all
those who come to join the University Centre, I shall say once more: never
forget our programme and the deeper reason of your coming here. And if in spite
of all your efforts the horizon sometimes darkens, if hope and joy fade away,
if enthusiasm flags, remember that it is a sign that you have drawn away from
your psychic being and lost contact with its ideal. In this way you will avoid
making the mistake of throwing the blame on the people and things around you
and thus quite needlessly increasing your sufferings and your difficulties.