In India, the Candidates for Initiation
into the science of “Raja Yoga,” when
they apply to the Yogi Masters for instruction, are
given a series of lessons designed to enlighten them
regarding the nature of the Real Self, and to instruct
them in the secret knowledge whereby they may develop
the consciousness and realization of the real “I”
within them. They are shown how they may cast
aside the erroneous or imperfect knowledge regarding
their real identity.
Until the Candidate masters this instruction,
or at least until the truth becomes fixed in his consciousness,
further instruction is denied him, for it is held
that until he has awakened to a conscious realization
of his Actual Identity, he is not able to understand
the source of his power, and, moreover, is not able
to feel within him the power of the Will, which
power underlies the entire teachings of “Raja
Yoga.”
The Yogi Masters are hot satisfied
if the Candidate forms merely a clear intellectual
conception of this Actual Identity, but they insist
that he must feel the truth of the same must
become aware of the Real Self must
enter into a consciousness in which the realization
becomes a part of his everyday self in
which the realizing consciousness becomes the prevailing
idea in his mind, around which his entire thoughts
and actions revolve.
To some Candidates, this realization
comes like a lightning flash the moment the attention
is directed toward it, while in other cases the Candidates
find it necessary to follow a rigorous course of training
before they acquire the realization in consciousness.
The Yogi Masters teach that there
are two degrees of this awakening consciousness of
the Real Self. The first, which they call “the
Consciousness of the ’I’,” is the
full consciousness of real existence that comes
to the Candidate, and which causes him to know
that he is a real entity having a life not depending
upon the body life that will go on in spite
of the destruction of the body real
life, in fact. The second degree, which they
call “the Consciousness of the ’I am’,”
is the consciousness of one’s identity with
the Universal Life, and his relationship to, and “in-touchness”
with all life, expressed and unexpressed. These
two degrees of consciousness come in time to all who
seek “The Path.” To some it comes
suddenly; to others it dawns gradually; to many it
comes assisted by the exercises and practical work
of “Raja Yoga.”
The first lesson of the Yogi Masters
to the Candidates, leading up to the first degree,
above mentioned, is as follows: That the Supreme
Intelligence of the Universe the Absolute has
manifested the being that we call Man the
highest manifestation on this planet. The Absolute
has manifested an infinitude of forms of life in the
Universe, including distant worlds, suns, planets,
etc., many of these forms being unknown to us
on this planet, and being impossible of conception
by the mind of the ordinary man. But these lessons
have nothing to do with that part of the philosophy
which deals with these myriad forms of life, for our
time will be taken up with the unfoldment in the mind
of man of his true nature and power. Before man
attempts to solve the secrets of the Universe without,
he should master the Universe within the
Kingdom of the Self. When he has accomplished
this, then he may, and should, go forth to gain the
outer knowledge as a Master demanding its secrets,
rather than as a slave begging for the crumbs from
the table of knowledge. The first knowledge for
the Candidate is the knowledge of the Self.
Man, the highest manifestation of
the Absolute, as far as this planet is concerned,
is a wonderfully organized being although
the average man understands but little of his real
nature. He comprises within his physical, mental
and spiritual make-up both the highest and the lowest,
as we have shown in our previous lessons (the “Fourteen
Lessons” and the “Advanced Course").
In his bones he manifests almost in the form of mineral
life, in fact, in his bones, body and blood mineral
substances actually exist. The physical life
of the body resembles the life of the plant.
Many of the physical desires and emotions are akin
to those of the lower animals, and in the undeveloped
man these desires and emotions predominate and overpower
the higher nature, which latter is scarcely in evidence.
Then Man has a set of mental characteristics that are
his own, and which are not possessed by the lower
animals (See “Fourteen Lessons"). And in
addition to the mental faculties common to all men,
or rather, that are in evidence in a greater or lesser
degree among all men, there are still higher faculties
latent within Man, which when manifested and expressed
render Man more than ordinary Man. The unfoldment
of these latent faculties is possible to all who have
reached the proper stage of development, and the desire
and hunger of the student for this instruction is
caused by the pressure of these unfolding latent faculties,
crying to be born into consciousness. Then there
is that wonderful thing, the Will, which is but faintly
understood by those ignorant of the Yogi Philosophy the
Power of the Ego its birthright from the
Absolute.
But while these mental and physical
things belong to Man, they are not the
Man himself. Before the Man is able to master,
control, and direct the things belonging to him his
tools and instruments he must awaken to
a realization of Himself. He must be able to distinguish
between the “I” and the “Not I.”
And this is the first task before the Candidate.
That which is the Real Self of Man
is the Divine Spark sent forth from the Sacred Flame.
It is the Child of the Divine Parent. It is Immortal Eternal Indestructible Invincible.
It possesses within itself Power, Wisdom, and Reality.
But like the infant that contains within itself the
sometime Man, the mind of Man is unaware of its latent
and potential qualities, and does not know itself.
As it awakens and unfolds into the knowledge of its
real nature, it manifests its qualities, and realizes
what the Absolute has given it. When the Real
Self begins to awaken, it sets aside from itself those
things which are but appendages to it, but which it,
in its half-waking state, had regarded as its Self.
Setting aside first this, and then that, it finally
discards all of the “Not I,” leaving the
Real Self free and delivered from its bondage to its
appendages. Then it returns to the discarded
appendages, and makes use of them.
In considering the question:
“What is the Real Self?” let us first stop
to examine what man usually means when he says “I.”
The lower animals do not possess this
“I” sense. They are conscious of
the outer world; of their own desires and animal cravings
and feelings. But their consciousness has not
reached the Self-conscious stage. They are not
able to think of themselves as separate entities, and
to reflect upon their thoughts. They are not
possessed of a consciousness of the Divine Spark the
Ego the Real Self. The Divine Spark
is hidden in the lower forms of life even
in the lower forms of human life by many
sheaths that shut out its light. But, nevertheless,
it is there, always. It sleeps within the mind
of the savage then, as he unfolds, it begins
to throw out its light. In you, the Candidate,
it is fighting hard to have its beams pierce through
the material coverings When the Real Self begins to
arouse itself from its sleep, its dreams vanish from
it, and it begins to see the world as it is, and to
recognize itself in Reality and not as the distorted
thing of its dreams.
The savage and barbarian are scarcely
conscious of the “I.” They are but
a little above the animal in point of consciousness,
and their “I” is almost entirely a matter
of the consciousness of the wants of the body; the
satisfaction of the appetites; the gratification of
the passions; the securing of personal comfort; the
expression of lust, savage power, etc. In
the savage the lower part of the Instinctive Mind is
the seat of the “I.” (See “Fourteen
Lessons” for explanation of the several mental
planes of man.) If the savage could analyze his thoughts
he would say that the “I” was the physical
body, the said body having certain “feelings,”
“wants” and “desires.”
The “I” of such a man is a physical “I,”
the body representing its form and substance.
Not only is this true of the savage, but even among
so-called “civilized” men of to-day we
find many in this stage. They have developed
powers of thinking and reasoning, but they do not
“live in their minds” as do some of their
brothers. They use their thinking powers for
the gratification of their bodily desires and cravings,
and really live on the plane of the Instinctive Mind.
Such a person may speak of “my mind,”
or “my soul,” not from a high position
where he looks upon these things from the standpoint
of a Master who realizes his Real Self, but from below,
from the point-of-view of the man who lives on the
plane of the Instinctive Mind and who sees above himself
the higher attributes. To such people the body
is the “I.” Their “I”
is bound up with the senses, and that which comes to
them through the senses. Of course, as Man advances
in “culture” and “civilization,”
his senses become educated, and are satisfied only
with more refined things, while the less cultivated
man is perfectly satisfied with the more material
and gross sense gratifications. Much that we call
“cultivation” and “culture”
is naught but a cultivation of a more refined form
of sense gratification, instead of a real advance in
consciousness and unfoldment. It is true that
the advanced student and Master is possessed of highly
developed senses, often far surpassing those of the
ordinary man, but in such cases the senses have been
cultivated under the mastery of the Will, and are
made servants of the Ego instead of things hindering
the progress of the soul they are made servants
instead of masters.
As Man advances in the scale, he begins
to have a somewhat higher conception of the “I.”
He begins to use his mind and reason, and he passes
on to the Mental Plane his mind begins to
manifest upon the plane of Intellect. He finds
that there is something within him that is higher
than the body. He finds that his mind seems more
real to him than does the physical part of
him, and in times of deep thought and study he is
able almost to forget the existence of the body.
In this second stage, Man soon becomes
perplexed. He finds problems that demand an answer,
but as soon as he thinks he has answered them the
problems present themselves in a new phase, and he
is called upon to “explain his explanation.”
The mind, even although not controlled and directed
by the Will, has a wonderful range, but, nevertheless,
Man finds himself traveling around and around in a
circle, and realizes that he is confronted continually
by the Unknown. This disturbs him, and the higher
the stage of “book learning” he attains,
the more disturbed does he become. The man of
but little knowledge does not see the existence of
many problems that force themselves before the attention
of the man of more knowledge, and demand an explanation
from him. The tortures of the man who has attained
the mental growth that enables him to see the new
problems and the impossibility of their answer, cannot
be imagined by one who has not advanced to that stage.
The man in this stage of consciousness
thinks of his “I” as a mental thing, having
a lower companion, the body. He feels that he
has advanced, but yet his “I” does not
give him the answer to the riddles and questions that
perplex him. And he becomes most unhappy.
Such men often develop into Pessimists, and consider
the whole of life as utterly evil and disappointing a
curse rather than a blessing. Pessimism belongs
to this plane, for neither the Physical Plane man
or the Spiritual Plane man have this curse of Pessimism.
The former man has no such disquieting thoughts, for
he is almost entirely absorbed in gratifying his animal
nature, while the latter man recognizes his mind as
an instrument of himself, rather than as himself,
and knows it to be imperfect in its present stage of
growth. He knows that he has in himself the key
to all knowledge locked up in the Ego and
which the trained mind, cultivated, developed and
guided by the awakened Will, may grasp as it unfolds.
Knowing this the advanced man no longer despairs,
and, recognizing his real nature, and his possibilities,
as he awakens into a consciousness of his powers and
capabilities, he laughs at the old despondent, pessimistic
ideas, and discards them like a worn-out garment.
Man on the Mental Plane of consciousness is like a
huge elephant who knows not his own strength.
He could break down barriers and assert himself over
nearly any condition or environment, but in his ignorance
of his real condition and power he may be mastered
by a puny driver, or frightened by the rustling of
a piece of paper.
When the Candidate becomes an Initiate when
he passes from the purely Mental Plane on to the Spiritual
Plane he realizes that the “I,”
the Real Self is something higher than
either body or mind, and that both of the latter may
be used as tools and instruments by the Ego or “I.”
This knowledge is not reached by purely intellectual
reasoning, although such efforts of the mind are often
necessary to help in the unfoldment, and the Masters
so use it. The real knowledge, however, comes
as a special form of consciousness. The Candidate
becomes “aware” of the real “I,”
and this consciousness being attained, he passes to
the rank of the Initiates. When the Initiate
passes the second degree of consciousness, and begins
to grow into a realization of his relationship to the
Whole when he begins to manifest the Expansion
of Self then is he on the road to Mastership.
In the present lesson we shall endeavor
to point out to the Candidate the methods of developing
or increasing the realization of this “I”
consciousness this first degree work.
We give the following exercises or development drills
for the Candidate to practice. He will find that
a careful and conscientious following of these directions
will tend to unfold in him a sufficient degree of
the “I” consciousness, to enable him to
enter into higher stages of development and power.
All that is necessary is for the Candidate to feel
within himself the dawn of the awakening consciousness,
or awareness of the Real Self. The higher stages
of the “I” consciousness come gradually,
for once on the Path there is no retrogression or
going backward. There may be pauses on the journey,
but there is no such thing as actually losing that
which is once gained on The Path.
This “I” consciousness,
even in its highest stages, is but a preliminary step
toward what is called “Illumination,” and
which signifies the awakening of the Initiate to a
realization of his actual connection with and relation
to the Whole. The full sight of the glory of the
“I,” is but a faint reflected glow of
“Illumination.” The Candidate, once
that he enters fully into the “I” consciousness,
becomes an “Initiate.” And the Initiate
who enters into the dawn of Illumination takes his
first step upon the road to Mastery. The Initiation
is the awakening of the soul to a knowledge of its
real existence the Illumination is the revelation
of the real nature of the soul, and of its relationship
with the Whole. After the first dawn of the “I”
consciousness has been attained, the Candidate is
more able to grasp the means of developing the consciousness
to a still higher degree is more able to
use the powers latent within him; to control his own
mental states; to manifest a Centre of Consciousness
and Influence that will radiate into the outer world
which is always striving and hunting for such centres
around which it may revolve.
Man must master himself before he
can hope to exert an influence beyond himself.
There is no royal road to unfoldment and power each
step must be taken in turn, and each Candidate must
take the step himself, and by his own effort.
But he may, and will, be aided by the helping hand
of the teachers who have traveled The Path before
him, and who know just when that helping hand is needed
to lift the Candidate over the rough places.
We bid the Candidate to pay strict
attention to the following instruction, as it is all
important. Do not slight any part of it, for we
are giving you only what is necessary, and are stating
it as briefly as possible. Pay attention, and
follow the instruction closely. This lesson must
be mastered before you progress. And it must be
practiced not only now, but at many stages of the
journey, until full Initiation and Illumination is
yours.
RULES AND EXERCISES DESIGNED TO AID THE CANDIDATE IN HIS INITIATION.
The first instruction along the line
of Initiation is designed to awaken the mind to a
full realization and consciousness of the individuality
of the “I.” The Candidate is taught
to relax his body, and to calm his mind and to meditate
upon the “I” until it is presented clearly
and sharply before the consciousness. We herewith
give directions for producing the desired physical
and mental condition, in which meditation and concentration
are more readily practiced. This state of Meditation
will be referred to in subsequent exercises, so the
Candidate is advised to acquaint himself thoroughly
with it.
STATE OF MEDITATION. If possible,
retire to a quiet place or room, where you do not
fear interruption, so that your mind may feel secure
and at rest. Of course, the ideal condition cannot
always be obtained, in which case you must do the
best you can. The idea is that you should be able
to abstract yourself, so far as is possible, from
distracting impressions, and you should be alone with
yourself in communion with your Real Self.
It is well to place yourself in an
easy chair, or on a couch, so that you may relax the
muscles and free the tension of your nerves. You
should be able to “let go” all over, allowing
every muscle to become limp, until a feeling of perfect
peace and restful calm permeates every particle of
your being. Rest the body and calm the mind.
This condition is best in the earlier stages of the
practice, although after the Candidate has acquired
a degree of mastery he will be able to obtain the physical
relaxation and mental calm whenever and wherever he
desires.
But he must guard against acquiring
a “dreamy” way of going around, wrapped
in meditation when he should be attending to the affairs
of life. Remember this, the State of Meditation
should be entirely under the control of the Will,
and should be entered into only deliberately and at
the proper times. The Will must be master of this,
as well as of every other mental state. The Initiates
are not “day dreamers,” but men and women
having full control of themselves and their moods.
The “I” consciousness while developed
by meditation and consciousness, soon becomes a fixed
item of consciousness, and does not have to be produced
by meditation. In time of trial, doubt, or trouble,
the consciousness may be brightened by an effort of
the Will (as we shall explain in subsequent lessons)
without going into the State of Meditation.
THE REALIZATION OF THE “I.”
The Candidate must first acquaint himself with the
reality of the “I,” before he will be able
to learn its real nature. This is the first step.
Let the Candidate place himself in the State of Meditation,
as heretofore described. Then let him concentrate
his entire attention upon his Individual Self, shutting
out all thought of the outside world, and other persons.
Let him form in his mind the idea of himself as a
real thing an actual being an
individual entity a Sun around which revolves
the world. He must see himself as the Centre
around which the whole world revolves. Let not
a false modesty, or sense of depreciation interfere
with this idea, for you are not denying the right
of others to also consider themselves centres.
You are, in fact, a centre of consciousness made
so by the Absolute and you are awakening
to the fact. Until the Ego recognizes itself as
a Centre of Thought, Influence and Power, it will
not be able to manifest these qualities.
And in proportion as it recognizes its position as
a centre, so will it be able to manifest its qualities.
It is not necessary that you should compare yourself
with others, or imagine yourself greater or higher
than them. In fact, such comparisons are to be
regretted, and are unworthy of the advanced Ego, being
a mark and indication of a lack of development, rather
than the reverse. In the Meditation simply ignore
all consideration of the respective qualities of others,
and endeavor to realize the fact that YOU are a great
Centre of Consciousness a Centre of Power a
Centre of Influence a Centre of Thought.
And that like the planets circling around the sun,
so does your world revolve around YOU who are its
centre. It will not be necessary for you to argue
out this matter, or to convince yourself of its truth
by intellectual reasoning. The knowledge does
not come in that way. It comes in the shape of
a realization of the truth gradually dawning upon
your consciousness through meditation and concentration.
Carry this thought of yourself as a “Centre
of Consciousness Influence Power”
with you, for it is an occult truth, and in
the proportion that you are able, to realize it so
will be your ability to manifest the qualities named.
No matter how humble may be your position no
matter how hard may be your lot no matter
how deficient in educational advantages you may be still
you would not change your “I” with the
most fortunate, wisest and highest man or woman in
the world. You may doubt this, but think for a
moment and you will see that we are right. When
you say that you “would like to be” this
person or that, you really mean that you would
like to have their degree of intelligence, power,
wealth, position, or what not. What you want
is something that is theirs, or something akin to it.
But you would not for a moment wish to merge your
identity with theirs, or to exchange selves.
Think of this for a moment To be the other person
you would have to let yourself die, and instead
of yourself you would be the other person.
The real you would be wiped out of existence,
and you would not be you at all, but would
be he.
If you can but grasp this idea you
will see that not for a moment would you be willing
for such an exchange. Of course such an exchange
is impossible. The “I” of you cannot
be wiped out. It is eternal, and will go on,
and on, and on, to higher and higher states but
it always will be the same “I.” Just
as you, although a far different sort of person from
your childhood self, still you recognize that the same
“I” is there, and always has been there.
And although you will attain knowledge, experience,
power and wisdom in the coming years, the same “I”
will be there. The “I” is the Divine
Spark and cannot be extinguished.
The majority of people in the present
stage of the race development have but a faint conception
of the reality of the “I.” They accept
the statement of its existence, and are conscious
of themselves as an eating, sleeping, living creature something
like a higher form of animal. But they have not
awakened to an “awareness” or realization
of the “I,” which must come to all who
become real centres of Influence and Power. Some
men have stumbled into this consciousness, or a degree
of it, without understanding the matter. They
have “felt” the truth of it, and they have
stepped out from the ranks of the commonplace people
of the world, and have become powers for good or bad.
This is unfortunate to some extent, as this “awareness”
without the knowledge that should accompany it may
bring pain to the individual and others.
The Candidate must meditate upon the
“I,” and recognize it feel
it to be a Centre. This is his first
task. Impress upon your mind the word “I,”
in this sense and understanding, and let it sink deep
down into your consciousness, so that it will become
a part of you. And when you say “I,”
you must accompany the word with the picture of your
Ego as a Centre of Consciousness, and Thought, and
Power, and Influence. See yourself thus, surrounded
by your world. Wherever you go, there goes the
Centre of your world. YOU are the Centre, and
all outside of you revolves around that Centre.
This is the first great lesson on the road to Initiation.
Learn it!
The Yogi Masters teach the Candidates
that their realization of the “I” as a
Centre may be hastened by going into the Silence, or
State of Meditation, and repeating their first name
over slowly, deliberately and solemnly a number of
times. This exercise tends to cause the mind to
centre upon the “I,” and many cases of
dawning Initiation have resulted from this practice.
Many original thinkers have stumbled upon this method,
without having been taught it. A noted example
is that of Lord Tennyson, who has written that he
attained a degree of Initiation in this way.
He would repeat his own name, over and over, and the
same time meditating upon his identity, and he reports
that he would become conscious and “aware”
of his reality and immortality in short
would recognize himself as a real center of
consciousness.
We think we have given you the key
to the first stage of meditation and concentration.
Before passing on, let us quote from one of the old
Hindu Masters. He says, regarding this matter:
“When the soul sees itself as a Centre surrounded
by its circumference when the Sun knows
that it is a Sun, and is surrounded by its whirling
planets then is it ready for the Wisdom
and Power of the Masters.”
THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE INDEPENDENCE
OF THE “I” FROM THE BODY. Many of
the Candidates find themselves prevented from a full
realization of the “I” (even after they
have begun to grasp it) by the confusing of the reality
of the “I” with the sense of the physical
body. This is a stumbling block that is easily
overcome by meditation and concentration, the independence
of the “I” often becoming manifest to the
Candidate in a flash, upon the proper thought being
used as the subject of meditation.
The exercise is given as follows:
Place yourself in the State of Meditation, and think
of YOURSELF the Real “I” as
being independent of the body, but using the body
as a covering and an instrument. Think of the
body as you might of a suit of clothes. Realize
that you are able to leave the body, and still be
the same “I.” Picture yourself as
doing this, and looking down upon your body.
Think of the body as a shell from which you may emerge
without affecting your identity. Think of yourself
as mastering and controlling the body that you occupy,
and using it to the best advantage, making it healthy,
strong and vigorous, but still being merely a shell
or covering for the real “You.” Think
of the body as composed of atoms and cells which are
constantly changing, but which are held together by
the force of your Ego, and which you can improve at
Will. Realize that you are merely inhabiting the
body, and using it for your convenience, just as you
might use a house.
In meditating further, ignore the
body entirely, and place your thought upon the Real
“I” that you are beginning to feel to be
“you,” and you will find that your identity your
“I” is something entirely apart
from the body. You may now say “my body”
with a new meaning. Divorce the idea of your
being a physical being, and realize that you are above
body. But do not let this conception and realization
cause you to ignore the body. You must regard
the body as the Temple of the Spirit, and care for
it, and make it a fit habitation for the “I.”
Do not be frightened if, during this meditation, you
happen to experience the sensation of being out of
the body for a few moments, and of returning to it
when you are through with the exercise. The Ego
is able (in the case of the advanced Initiate) of
soaring above the confines of the body, but it never
severs its connection at such times. It is merely
as if one were to look out of the window of a room,
seeing what was going on outside, and drawing in his
head when he wishes. He does not leave the room,
although he may place his head outside in order to
observe what is doing in the street. We do not
advise the Candidate to try to cultivate this sensation but
if it comes naturally during meditation, do not fear.
REALIZING THE IMMORTALITY AND INVINCIBILITY
OF THE EGO. While the majority accept on faith
the belief in the Immortality of the Soul, yet but
few are aware that it may be demonstrated by the soul
itself. The Yogi Masters teach the Candidates
this lesson, as follows: The Candidate places
himself in the State of Meditation, or at least in
a thoughtful frame of mind, and then endeavors to
“imagine” himself as “dead” that
is, he tries to form a mental conception of himself
as dead. This, at first thought, appears a very
easy thing to imagine, but as a matter of fact it
is impossible to do so, for the Ego refuses
to entertain the proposition, and finds it impossible
to imagine it. Try it for yourself. You
will find that you may be able to imagine your body
as lying still and lifeless, but the same thought
finds that in so doing You are standing and
looking at the body. So you see that You
are not dead at all, even in imagination, although
the body may be. Or, if you refuse to disentangle
yourself from your body, in imagination, you may think
of your body as dead but You who refuse to
leave it are still alive and recognize the
dead body as a thing apart from your Real Self.
No matter how you may twist it you cannot imagine
yourself as dead. The Ego insists upon being
alive in any of these thoughts, and thus finds
that it has within itself the sense and assurance
of Immortality. In case of sleep or stupor resulting
from a blow, or from narcotics or anaesthetics, the
mind is apparently blank, but the “I” is
conscious of a continuity of existence. And so
one may imagine himself as being in an unconscious
state, or asleep, quite easily, and sees the possibility
of such a state, but when it comes to imagining the
“I” as dead, the mind utterly refuses
to do the work. This wonderful fact that the soul
carries within itself the evidence of its own immortality
is a glorious thing, but one must have reached a degree
of unfoldment before he is able to grasp its full
significance.
The Candidate is advised to investigate
the above statement for himself, by meditation and
concentration, for in order that the “I”
may know its true nature and possibilities, it must
realize that it cannot be destroyed or killed.
It must know what it is before it is able to manifest
its nature. So do not leave this part of the teaching
until you have mastered it. And it is well occasionally
to return to it, in order that you may impress upon
the mind the fact of your immortal and eternal nature.
The mere glimmering of this conception of truth will
give you an increased sense of strength and power,
and you will find that your Self has expanded and
grown, and that you are more of a power and Centre
than you have heretofore realized.
The following exercises are useful
in bringing about a realization of the invincibility
of the Ego its superiority to the elements.
Place yourself in the State of Meditation,
and imagine the “I” as withdrawn from
the body. See it passing through the tests of
air, fire and water unharmed. The body being
out of the way, the soul is seen to be able of passing
through the air at will of floating like
a bird of soaring of traveling
in the ether. It may be seen as able to pass
through fire without harm and without sensation, for
the elements affect only the physical body, not the
Real “I.” Likewise it may be seen
as passing through water without discomfort or danger
or hurt.
This meditation will give you a sense
of superiority and strength, and will show you something
of the nature of the real “I.” It
is true that you are confined in the body, and the
body may be affected by the elements, but the knowledge
that the Real “I” is superior to the body superior
to the elements that affect the body and
cannot be injured any more than it can be killed,
is wonderful, and tends to develop the full “I”
consciousness within you. For You the
Real “I” are not body.
You are Spirit. The Ego is Immortal and Invincible,
and cannot be killed and harmed. When you enter
into this realization and consciousness, you will
feel an influx of strength and power impossible to
describe. Fear will fall from you like a worn-out
cloak, and you will feel that you are “born
again.” An understanding of this thought,
will show you that the things that we have been fearing
cannot affect the Real “I,” but must rest
content with hurting the physical body. And they
may be warded off from the physical body by a proper
understanding and application of the Will.
In our next lesson, you will be taught
how to separate the “I” from the mechanism
of the mind how you may realize your mastery
of the mind, just as you now realize your independence
of the body. This knowledge must be imparted
to you by degrees, and you must place your feet firmly
upon one round of the ladder before you take the next
step.
The watchword of this First Lesson
is “I.” And the Candidate must enter
fully into its meaning before he is able to progress.
He must realize his real existence independent
of the body. He must see himself as invincible
and impervious to harm, hurt, or death. He must
see himself as a great Centre of Consciousness a
Sun around which his world revolves. Then will
come to him a new strength. He will feel a calm
dignity and power, which will be apparent to those
with whom he comes in contact. He will be able
to look the world in the face without flinching, and
without fear, for he will realize the nature and power
of the “I.” He will realize that
he is a Centre of Power of Influence.
He will realize that nothing can harm the “I,”
and that no matter how the storms of life may dash
upon the personality, the real “I” the
Individuality is unharmed. Like a
rock that stands steadfast throughout the storm, so
does the “I” stand through the tempests
of the life of personality. And he will know
that as he grows in realization, he will be able to
control these storms and bid them be still.
In the words of one of the Yogi Masters:
“The ‘I’ is eternal. It passes
unharmed through the fire, the air, the water.
Sword and spear cannot kill or wound it. It cannot
die. The trials of the physical life are but
as dreams to it. Resting secure in the knowledge
of the ‘I,’ Man may smile at the worst
the world has to offer, and raising his hand he may
bid them disappear into the mist from which they emerged.
Blessed is he who can say (understandingly) ’I’.”
So dear Candidate, we leave you to
master the First Lesson. Be not discouraged if
your progress be slow. Be not cast down if you
slip back a step after having gained it. You
will gain two at the next step. Success and realization
will be yours. Mastery is before. You will
Attain. You will Accomplish. Peace be with
you.
MANTRAMS (AFFIRMATIONS) FOR THE FIRST LESSON
“I” am a Centre. Around me revolves
my world.
“I” am a Centre of Influence and Power.
“I” am a Centre of Thought and Consciousness.
“I” am Independent of the Body.
“I” am Immortal and cannot be Destroyed.
“I” am Invincible and cannot be Injured.