Yoga of the Body (Part-21) (Master Over the Prana)
13th September 2011
at Hall of Harmony, Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry, India.
at Hall of Harmony, Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry, India.
Duration : 41 Minutes
File Size : 39 MB
Format : MP3 (128kbps)
A short synopsis:
A crucial element in the
physical perfection is the mastery over the vital element. Prana is the energy
giver for all our activities, including the sadhana. The following talk
discusses some aspects of Pranayama, one of the traditional ways for this
mastery and its relation to the Integral Yoga
Yoga of the
Body
Mastery
over the Prana
Words of Sri Aurobindo
We can become aware of the existence and presence of the universal Shakti in the various forms of her power. At present we are conscious only of the power as formulated in our physical mind, nervous being and corporeal case sustaining our various activities. But if we can once get beyond this first formation by some liberation of the hidden, recondite, subliminal parts of our existence by Yoga, we become aware of a greater life force, a pranic Shakti, which supports and fills the body and supplies all the physical and vital activities,—for the physical energy is only a modified form of this force,—and supplies and sustains too from below all our mental action. This force we feel in ourselves also, but we can feel it too around us and above, one with the same energy in us, and can draw it in and down to aggrandise our normal action or call upon and get it to pour into us. It is an illimitable
The ordinary power by which we
govern the pranic energy is that of the embodied mind. But when we get clear
above the physical mind, we can get too above the pranic force to the
consciousness of a pure mental energy which is a higher formulation of the
Shakti. There we are aware of a universal mind consciousness closely associated
with this energy in, around and above us,—above, that is to say, the level of
our ordinary mind status,—giving all the substance and shaping all the forms of
our will and knowledge and of the psychic element in our impulses and emotions.
This mind force can be made to act upon the pranic energy and can impose upon
it the influence, colour, shape, character, direction of our ideas, our
knowledge, our more enlightened volition and thus more effectively bring our
life and vital being into harmony with our higher powers of being, ideals and
spiritual aspirations. In our ordinary state these two, the mental and the
pranic being and energies, are very much mixed up and run into each other, and
we are not able clearly to distinguish them or get a full hold of the one on
the other and so control effectively the lower by the higher and more
understanding principle. But when we take our station above the physical mind,
we are able then to separate clearly the two forms of energy, the two levels of
our being, disentangle their action and act with a clearer and more potent
self-knowledge and an enlightened and a purer will-power. Nevertheless the
control is not complete, spontaneous, sovereign so long as we work with the
mind as our chief guiding and controlling force. The mental energy we find to
be itself derivative, a lower and limiting power of the conscious spirit which
acts only by isolated and combined seeings, imperfect and incomplete
half-lights which we take for full and adequate light, and with a disparity
between the idea and knowledge and the effective will-power. And we are aware
soon of a far higher power of the Spirit and its Shakti concealed or above,
superconscient to mind or partially acting through the mind, of which all this
is an inferior derivation.
(The Synthesis of Yoga:
The Divine Shakti)
It is difficult, though not
impossible, to do the practice of Pranayam according to Patanjali’s system
without perfect bodily stillness. It can be done and has been done even while
walking about, but this is not so easy or usual. Now Pranayam in its proper
sense, the mastery of the vital force in oneself and Nature, is essential to
every Rajayogin, but it can be brought about by much simpler methods. The only
physical process that the Rajayogin finds helpful enough to be worth doing, is nadishuddhi
or purification of
the nerve system by regular breathing and this can be done while lying,
sitting, reading, writing, walking. This process has great virtues. It has a
wonderfully calming effect on the whole mind & body, drives out every
lurking disease in the system, awakens the yogic force accumulated in former
lives and, even where no such latent force exists, removes the physical
obstacles to the wakening of the Kundalini shakti.
But even this process is not
essential. The Rajayogin knows that by tranquillising the mind he can
tranquillise the body, by mastering the mind he can master both the body and
the prana. This is the great secret of the Rajayoga that mind is the master of
the body, creates it and conditions it, body is not the master, creator or
lawgiver of the mind. It may be said that the body at least affects the mind,
but this is the other discovery of the Rajayogin that the body need not in the
least affect the mind unless by our consent we allow it to do
so. The kumbhak or
natural cessation of the breathing is essential to the deeper kinds of Samadhi,
not to all; but even so he finds that by the cessation of the lawless
restlessness of the mind, which we mistakenly call thought, we can easily,
naturally and spontaneously bring about the cessation of the breathing, a calm,
effortless and perfect kumbhak. He therefore dispenses with physical processes,
easy or laborious, and goes straight to the root of the problem, the mind.
From Early Cultural Writings
Words of the Mother
But for us who want an integral realization, are all
these mantras and this daily japa really a help, or do they also shut us in?
It gives discipline. It’s an almost subconscious
discipline of the character more than of thought.
Especially at the beginning, Sri Aurobindo used to
shatter to pieces all moral ideas (you know, as in the Aphorisms, for
example). He shattered all those things, he shattered them, really shattered
them to pieces. So there’s a whole
group of youngsters’ here who were brought up with this idea that ‘we
can do whatever we want, it doesn’t matter in the least!’ – that they need not
bother about all those concepts of ordinary morality. I’ve had a hard time
making them understand that this morality can be abandoned only for a higher
one ... So, one has to be careful not to give them the Power too soon.
It’s an almost physical discipline.
Moreover, I have seen that the japa has an organizing effect on the
subconscient, on the inconscient, on matter, on the body’s cells – it takes
time, but by persistently repeating it, in the long run it has an effect. It is
the same principle as doing daily exercises on the piano, for example. You keep
mechanically repeating them, and in the end your hands are filled with
consciousness – it fills the body with consciousness….
Are you doing it without instructions?
There's a traditional way of doing it, I know the formula.
How does it go?
The time varies. You inhale through the left nostril for
let's say 4 seconds, then you hold your breath for 16 seconds, raising the
diaphragm and closing all the openings; after 16 seconds you exhale for 8
seconds through the other nostril.
Are these the "official"
figures?
Yes; I mean that's the proportion: inhale 4, hold 16, exhale
8.
Sixteen?
It has to be double the exhalation. If you do 8, then it's
8-32-16.
I did it myself for years, using the
same system: inhale, hold, exhale, remain empty. But holding the lungs empty is
said to be dangerous, so I don't advise it. I did it for years. Without knowing
it, Sri Aurobindo and I did it nearly the same way, along with all sorts of
other things that aren't supposed to be done! This is to tell you that the
danger is mainly in what you think. In the course of certain movements, both of
us made the air go out through the crown of the head – apparently that's only
to be done when you want to die! (Mother laughs) It didn't kill us.
No, the "danger" is MAINLY
a thought formation.
You can achieve excellent control of
the heart. But I never practiced it violently, never strained myself. I think
holding for 16 is too long. I used to do it simply like this: breathe in very
slowly to the count of 4, then hold for 4 like this (I still have the knack of
it!), lifting the diaphragm and lowering the head56 (Mother bends her neck),
closing everything and exerting pressure (this is an almost instantaneous
cure for hiccups – it's handy!). Then while I held the air, I would make it
circulate with the force (because it contained force, you see) and with the
peace as well; and I would concentrate it wherever there was a physical
disorder (a pain or something wrong somewhere). It's very effective. The way I
did it was: inhale, hold, exhale and empty – you are completely empty. It's
very useful; very handy for underwater swimmers, for instance!
I had trouble breathing in slowly
enough – that's a bit hard. I began with 4 and eventually managed to do 12. I
did 12-12-12-12. It took me months to reach that, it can't be done quickly. To
breathe in very slowly and hold all that air isn't easy.
No, it's not at all dangerous, at
least if you don't overdo it. If you do it simply.... I think some people
practice pranayama with the idea of gaining "powers." That idea of
gaining powers fouls it up more than anything. But if you do it simply as a
help to your progress, there's no danger.
At any rate, Sri Aurobindo and I
both did a lot of things considered dangerous, and absolutely nothing happened
to us. Not that it's necessary to do dangerous things, but nothing happened to
us, so it all depends on how you do them.
But instead of doing equal amounts
of time, it might be better to do less for inhaling and more for holding the
breath. The holding part is extremely interesting! When the air is inside,
let's say you have a headache or a sore throat or a pain in your arm, anything
– then you take the air ... (Mother demonstrates) and direct it to the
unwell part ... very, very helpful and pleasant and interesting. You see the
force go to the spot, settle in and stay there, all sorts of things.
I do my japa in the morning, at noon, and in the evening.
You can lie down on a mat, look at a flower or a
patch of sky if there's any to see …..And if you do your pranayama along with
this "relaxation" you will notice yourself growing extremely strong –
storing, storing, storing up energies. And then if you have to make an effort,
there's nothing to it – it's as easy as pie.
From the Agenda