Guest guest Posted April 12, 2005 Report Share Posted April 12, 2005 Some time in the past we were blessed with an attachement that described the siddhis resulting from practicing yama and niyama. The diskette I saved that on is unrecoverable and I no longer have the email account where I received that posting. Would someone please be so kind as to share that information again? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 13, 2005 Report Share Posted April 13, 2005 SaiRam, I think, the following message contain answers to your question. Also, pl look into the website http://www.vedamu.org/VedicLiterature/English/Tatsat/tatsat.asp. Regards Kutumba lanka ---- -Original Message----- reet [reet.priiman (AT) neti (DOT) ee] Friday, December 12, 2003 2:42 PM SaiDISC [satGuru Discussion] Tat Sat (The Path of Yoga). 18 - a Light and Love to all Another way of realization is through practices of yoga. The word Yoga is derived from the Sanskrit verbal root yuj, meaning to yoke - to join. Yoga is the method that joins, that unites. What is joined is the finite spirit with the Supreme Spirit, or an individual to his ethical ideal. Yoga means not only this joining, but also the methods or practices leading to the joining. Yoga is essentially inward looking. Since mind and senses are by nature outward looking, special discipline is needed to look inward. For the inward look, the object is the mind itself, but not what passes in the mind. Mind is never self-conscious according to Pathanjali, and is always the object of some consciousness. The ultimate consciousness, which is the seer, the on-looker, the witness of everything that happens in me and outside me, is my self. By realizing it, I accomplish two things - my own spiritual uplift when I realize the deeper level of my being and an explanation of the intelligibility for the world. The yogi is to seek perfection in the universe. An aspirant attains yoga when he has freed his mind from the worldly desires. It is attained when the yogi fulfills existence in God. The world is the Brahman; the world is God; the world is Truth; the world is Bliss. By yoga we can rise out of falsehood into truth, out of weakness into force, out of pain and grief into bliss, out of bondage into freedom, out of death into immortality, out of darkness into light, out of confusion into purity, out of imperfection into perfection, out of self-division into unity, out of Maya into God. Only that which aims at possessing the fullness of God is purna-yoga. The seeker of the divine perfection is the purna-yogi. Yoga may be used for many purposes. Many of its physical practices keep the body healthy and active. The mental practices purify the mind, clear it of all dross and enable it to receive the reflection of the Spirit in its purity. Physical control is subservient to the vital, and control of the vital principle is subservient to the spiritual. The methods of control of voluntary and involuntary functions of the body are considered together Hatayoga, a means to mental and body control. In Hatayoga the instrument is the body and life. Each type of yoga in its process has the character of the instrument it uses. Thus, the process of Hatayoga is psychophysical. The process of Raja- yoga is mental and physic. The way of knowledge is spiritual and cognitive. The way of devotion or bhakti-yoga is spiritual, emotional and aesthetic. The way of works or karma-yoga is spiritual and dynamic by action. Each is guided in the ways of its own characteristic power. But all power, in the end, is really soul-power. The practice of Yoga involves at every stage genuine, not fanciful and artificial, self-analysis. The self-analysis leads to genuine phenomenological and existential self-analysis. It results in reaching the core of the self - the atman. The different levels of samadhi are the different levels of the atman itself leading ultimately to its pure, essential being. The ways of obtaining ultimate spiritual realization are based on an analytical understanding of the levels of our psychophysical being. True understanding of man and his universe enables him to chalk out the right conduct he has to follow. But "true views" (samyak-darsanas) implies a true analysis of man's self-conscious being until the greatest possible depths are reached. Samadhi is not merely concentration of mind transcended, on an object or idea. Its essence is the concentration of man's diversified being as such, ultimately resulting in self-realization. Pathanjali is the architect of the philosophy of Yoga and Self-realization through Psychophysical practices. He defines Yoga as the stopping of the five functions of Reason - the sources of valid knowledge, false knowledge, empty concepts, sleep and memory. The stopping of the functions is a difficult task as the nature of Reason is to be active ever. When it does not perform any function, it tends to sleep, which is also its function. If it is to function, the concept is that it meditates on God which leads to salvation. According to him, God is omniscient and is untouched by the five afflictions - ignorance, egoity, desire (want), hate and fear of death. Meditation on God involves repeating His name, thinking its meaning. Then mind becomes inward looking. Meditation is to lead to samadhi. It means the settling down of Reason (chitta, Buddhi) on something. Settling down implies peace and steadiness. It is the settling down of Reason in Itself. When all functions of the Reason including sleep are stopped, the Reason stays in itself. But Reason is conscious and its consciousness is due to the reflection of the Cosmic Person. The reflection, with no object to know, stays in its original nature. This staying of rational consciousness in it is the samadhi. This is the aim of yoga. When this rational consciousness does not stay in itself, the knower in it identifies itself with the functions of the Reason and assumes its forms. The final samadhi is the staying of the Cosmic Person in Him, not even as the knower. This is the stage of final liberation while in body. The earlier samadhi is only the beginning, the gateway to the final one. In the final stage, the three attributes of Prakrti will be in perfect harmony, maintaining perfect equilibrium. Samadhi is the state in which all the desires and hopes concerning the world have ceased, which is free from sorrow, fear and desire, and by which the self rests in itself. The enlightened ones are forever in samadhi, even though they engage themselves in the affairs of the world. The states of samadhi - the first and the final - cannot be had merely through physical and mental exercises. The most important preliminary is the purification of one's Reason, which is the "I-am". To obtain these faculties one is to practise friendliness with generous people, compassion for those in distress, affection instead of jealously for those who are meritorious, and indifference towards the evil of evildoers. It is significant that the preparation for achieving the states of samadhi is based on ethical action. To obtain the steadiness of mind, the seeker may follow any method he considers suitable to himself. One easy method is to meditate on God he loves. Another method is to meditate on the "I-am" consciousness, the ontological Reason itself. When one is able to fix one's mind, it passes through five stages. First, the Reason becomes agitated and restless. Second, it becomes torpid when greater effort is made to fix it. It tends to fall asleep. Third, it becomes distracted when still greater effort is made. Fourth, it becomes concentrated on the object of meditation if the effort is not given up. Fifth, it becomes restrained and its functions stop when the mind is steady at that level. The last two levels are conducive to samadhi. The practice of samadhi is really very difficult. To be able to practise samadhi is to go against the very nature of Prakrti, which is ever in change. So Pathanjali recommends eight steps to be practised, generally one after the other. The earlier has to be started before the latter, and the latter makes the earlier perfect. The eight steps are: self-control (yama), regulation of life by rules (niyama), bodily postures (asanas), breath -control (pranayama), withdrawal of senses from objects (pratyahara), fixing the mind on an object (dharana), meditation (dhyana) and samadhi. Samadhi is the stage where Reason is completely absorbed in the object; that the object alone stands and cognition disappears. There is no sense, no awareness of being aware of the object. At this stage, the inner structure of the object reveals itself completely. It may be a physical object, one's own mind with its layers of the Unconscious or another's mind. It may be anything. Of the above eight steps of Yoga, the last three are said to be inner and the first five external to Yoga. The ultimate (final stage of) samadhi may be that in, which the potencies of the world are totally destroyed. The practice of the first five steps leads to the next three steps ending in that state of samadhi that retains the seeds of worldliness. But this samadhi leads, in its turn, to the ultimate samadhi where the potencies of the world are totally lost and the Self realized. Pathanjali divides samadhi - the absolutely original state, as it is the reflection of the pure state of the Purusa - into two primary kinds. The first is the samadhi in the known or with the known as being known as an object. The second is the samadhi in the unknown or without the known as an object. The former has the consciousness of the object as an object. The latter is without such consciousness. The ego, which is also a pattern of similar pulsations of Prakrti, is stopped, checked and merged in rational consciousness - "am-ness" in its pure state. Reason in which the 'I', as the ego, is absorbed is the pure "I-am" or "am-ness", not merely "is-ness" which is third personal and may not have the significance of the self-conscious being. Pathanjali also makes the distinction between the "determinate" and the "indeterminate" samadhi. The determinate is the one, which has a shape, a form, a formation. The indeterminate is the one in which no shapes are perceived as objects. The yoga enables the seeker to realize the identity of his particular being with the whole world of nature (Prakrti) just as he realizes his identity with his physical body. He can have as much control over the world, as over his body. The extraordinary powers resulting from such a control are not supernatural, but natural. He has to distinguish himself from every aspect of Prakrti, realize his separateness from it, then enter it and be one with it, without at the same time losing his discriminatory power attained, and then controls its movements from within. The first requirement is a kind of detachment from Prakrti, which results in its control. As the final realization of such discriminatory oneness with the evolutes of Prakrti arises, at every stage, some extraordinary powers are attained. The achievement of siddhis or these psychic powers is dependent upon four factors - time, place, action and means. Among these, action or effort holds the key to all endeavors. All achievements are possible through the practice of pranayama. At the end of the ultimate samadhi, the cognition of the seeker (yogi) is always truth. It is direct intuition of anything in the world like the intuition of the existence of one's body. How much of the cosmos can be known depends on the perfection of the samadhi. But one can obtain other powers (siddhis) by following other methods of concentration, at different levels. Some obtain these powers simply at birth, as samskaras of the previous births. Some obtain them through incantations, some through penance and some others through samadhi. By concentrating on the three moments of change - past, present and future, one can obtain knowledge of the past and the future. By concentrating on the relation of the word, the object and the cognition of the object, one can obtain the power of knowing the meaning of words and sounds made by any living creature. By concentrating on the samskaras of one's own Reason, one can know one's past births. By concentrating on the relation between the expression on the face of another and his mind, one can have knowledge of what transpires in the mind of that man. By concentrating on the form of one's own or another's body, the body can be made invisible. By concentrating on objects as they appear, as they are in themselves, on the subtle elements that constitute them, on their qualities, etc. one conquers all the elements and obtains the powers such as becoming infinitesimally small (anami), becoming infinitely large (mahima), becoming infinitesimally light (laghima), becoming infinitesimally heavy (gurutvam), the power of touching anything at any distance (prapti), obtaining anything desired (prakamya), lordship over everything (isitva) and control over everything (vasitva). These powers are called the Ashta - siddis, the most important ones. There is other less important powers realized, called Riddhis. <Probing further and further into the scientific attainments of the sages of ancient India, the construction of Vimanas, vehicles capable of flying in space, is described by Sage Bharadwaja. Mental Science had advanced so much that they could reproduce what had happened or predict what would happen.> (Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba. Sathya Sai Vahini. Eternal Truths). Bow to the ancient great saints who inherited Vedas to humanity. To be continued. Source - References: Shri Satya Sai Veda Pratishtan http://www.vedamu.org/VedicLiterature/English/Tatsat/tatsat.asp. Chapter 21a, b. Namaste - Reet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.