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- (Part 2 of 8)
-
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- YOGA FOR YAHOOS.
-
- SECOND LECTURE. YAMA.
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-
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. Stars and
- placental amniotes! And ye inhabitants of the ten thousand worlds!
-
- The conclusion of our researches last week was that the ultimate
- Yoga which gives emancipation, which destroys the sense of separate-
- ness which is the root of Desire, is to be made by the concentration
- of every element of one's being, and annihilating it by intimate
- combustion with the universe itself.
- I might here note, in parenthesis, that one of the difficulties
- of doing this is that all the elements of the Yogi increase in every
- way exactly as he progresses, and by reason of that progress.
- However, it is no use crossing our bridges until we come to them, and
- we shall find that by laying down serious scientific principles based
- on universal experience they will serve us faithfully through every
- stage of the journey.
- 2. When I first undertook the investigation of Yoga, I was
- fortunately equipped with a very sound training in the fundamental
- principles of modern science. I saw immediately that if we were to
- put any common sense into the business (science is nothing but
- instructed common sense), the first thing to do was to make a com-
- parative study of the different systems of mysticism. It was immedi-
- ately apparent that the results all over the world were identical.
- They were masked by sectarian theories. The methods all over the
- world were identical; this was masked by religious prejudice and
- local custom. But in their quiddity -- identical! This simple
- principle proved quite sufficient to disentangle the subject from the
- extraordinary complexities which have confused its expression.
- 3. When it came to the point of preparing a simple analysis of
- the matter, the question arose: what terms shall we use? The
- mysticisms of Europe are hopelessly muddled; the theories have
- entirely overlaid the methods. The Chinese system is perhaps the
- most sublime and the most simple; but, unless one is born a Chinese,
- the symbols are of really unclimbable difficulty. The Buddhist
- system is in some ways the most complete, but it is also the most
- recondite. The words are excessive in length and difficult to commit
- to memory; and generally speaking, one cannot see the wood for the
- trees. But from the Indian system, overloaded though it is by
- accretions of every kind, it is comparatively easy to extract a
- method which is free from unnecessary and undesirable implications,
- and to make an interpretation of it intelligible to, and acceptable
- by, European minds. It is this system, and this interpretation of
- it, which I propose to put before you.
- 4. The great classic of Sanskrit literature is the Aphorisms of
- Patanjali. He is at least mercifully brief, and not more than ninety
- or ninety-five percent of what he writes can be dismissed as the
- ravings of a disordered mind. What remains is twenty-four carat
- gold. I now proceed to bestow it.
- 5. It is said that Yoga has eight limbs. Why limbs I do not
- know. But I have found it convenient to accept this classification,
- and we can cover the ground very satisfactorily by classing our
- remarks under these eight headings.
- 6. These headings are: --
-
- 1. Yama.
- 2. Niyama.
- 3. Asana.
- 4. Pranayama.
- 5. Pratyahara.
- 6. Dharana.
- 7. Dhyana.
- 8. Samadhi.
-
- Any attempt to translate these words will mire us in a hopeless
- quag of misunderstanding. What we can do is to deal with each one in
- turn, giving at the outset some sort of definition or description
- which will enable us to get a fairly complete idea of what is meant.
- I shall accordingly begin with an account of Yama.
- Attend! Perpend! Transcent!
- 7. Yama is the easiest of the eight limbs of Yoga to define,
- and corresponds pretty closely to our word 'control.' When I tell
- you that some have translated it 'morality,' you will shrink appalled
- and aghast at this revelation of the brainless baseness of humanity.
- The word 'control' is here not very different from the word
- 'inhibition' as used by biologists. A primary cell, such as the
- amoeba, is in one sense completely free, in another completely
- passive. All parts of it are alike. Any part of its surface can
- ingest its food. If you cut it in half, the only result is that you
- have two perfect amoebae instead of one. How far is this condition
- removed in the evolutionary scale from trunk murders!
- Organisms developed by specialising their component structures
- have not achieved this so much by an acquisition of new powers, as by
- a restriction of part of the general powers. Thus, a Harley Street
- specialist is simply an ordinary doctor who says: 'I won't go out
- and attend to a sick person; I won't, I won't, I won't.'
- Now what is true of cells is true of all already potentially
- specialised organs. Muscular power is based upon the rigidity of
- bones, and upon the refusal of joints to allow any movement in any
- but the appointed directions. The more solid the fulcrum, the more
- efficient the lever. The same remark applies to moral issues. These
- issues are in themselves perfectly simple; but they have been com-
- pletely overlaid by the sinister activities of priests and lawyers.
- There is no question of right or wrong in any abstract sense
- about any of these problems. It is absurd to say that it is 'right'
- for chlorine to combine enthusiastically with hydrogen, and only in a
- very surly way with oxygen. It is not virtuous of a hydra to be
- hermaphrodite, or contumacious on the part of an elbow not to move
- freely in all directions. Anybody who knows what his job is has only
- one duty, which is to get that job done. Anyone who possesses a
- function has only one duty to that function, to arrange for its free
- fulfilment.
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
- 8. We shall not be surprised therefore if we find that the
- perfectly simple term Yama (or Control) has been bedevilled out of
- all sense by the mistaken and malignant ingenuity of the pious Hindu.
- He has interpreted the word 'control' as meaning compliance with
- certain fixed proscriptions. There are quite a lot of prohibitions
- grouped under the heading of Yama, which are perhaps quite necessary
- for the kind of people contemplated by the Teacher, but they have
- been senselessly elevated into universal rules. Everyone is familiar
- with the prohibition of pork as an article of diet by Jews and
- Mohammedans. This has nothing to do with Yama, or abstract right-
- eousness. It was due to the fact that pork in eastern countries was
- infected with the trichina; which killed people who ate pork impro-
- perly cooked. It was no good telling the savages that fact. Any
- way, they would only have broken the hygienic command when greed
- overcame them. The advice had to be made a universal rule, and
- supported with the authority of a religious sanction. They had not
- the brains to believe in trichinosis; but they were afraid of Jehovah
- and Jehannum. Just so, under the grouping of Yama we learn that the
- aspiring Yogi must become 'fixed in the non-receiving of gifts,'
- which means that if anyone offers you a cigarette or a drink of
- water, you must reject his insidious advances in the most Victorian
- manner. It is such nonsense as this which brings the science of Yoga
- into contempt. But it isn't nonsense if you consider the class of
- people for whom the injunction was promulgated; for, as we will be
- shown later, preliminary to the concentration of the mind is the
- control of the mind, which means the calm of the mind, and the Hindu
- mind is so constituted that if you offer a man the most trifling
- object, the incident is a landmark in his life. It upsets him
- completely for years.
- In the East, an absolutely automatic and thoughtless act of
- kindness to a native is liable to attach him to you, body and soul,
- for the rest of his life. In other words, it is going to upset him;
- and as a budding Yogi he has got to refuse it. But even the refusal
- is going to upset him quite a lot; and therefore he has got to become
- 'fixed' in refusal; that is to say, he has got to erect by means of
- habitual refusal a psychological barrier so strong that he can really
- dismiss the temptation without a quiver, or a quaver, or even a
- demisemiquaver of thought. I am sure you will see that an absolute
- rule is necessary to obtain this result. It is obviously impossible
- for him to try to draw the line between what he may receive and what
- he may not; he is merely involved in a Socratic dilemma; whereas if
- he goes to the other end of the line and accepts everything, his mind
- is equally upset by the burden of the responsibility of dealing with
- the things he has accepted. However, all these considerations do not
- apply to the average European mind. If someone gives me 200,000
- pounds sterling, I automatically fail to notice it. It is a normal
- circumstance of life. Test me!
- 9. There are a great many other injunctions, all of which have
- to be examined independently in order to find whether they apply to
- Yoga in general, and to the particular advantage of any given stu-
- dent. We are to exclude especially all those considerations based on
- fantastic theories of the universe, or on the accidents of race or
- climate.
- For instance, in the time of the late Maharajah of Kashmir,
- mahsir fishing was forbidden throughout his territory; because, when
- a child, he had been leaning over the parapet of a bridge over the
- Jhilam at Srinagar, and inadvertently opened his mouth, so that a
- mahsir was able to swallow his soul. It would never have done for a
- Sahib -- a Mlecha! -- to catch that mahsir. This story is really
- typical of 90% of the precepts usually enumerated under the heading
- Yama. The rest are for the most part based on local and climatic
- conditions, and they may or may not be applicable to your own case.
- And, on the other hand, there are all sorts of good rules which have
- never occurred to a teacher of Yoga; because those teachers never
- conceived the condition in which many people live today. It never
- occurred to the Buddha or Patanjali or Mansur el-Hallaj to advise his
- pupils not to practise in a flat with a wireless set next door.
- The result of all this is that all of you who are worth your
- salt will be absolutely delighted when I tell you to scrap all the
- rules and discover your own. Sir Richard Burton said: 'He noblest
- lives and noblest dies, who makes and keeps his self-made laws.'
- 10. This is, of course, what every man of science has to do in
- every experiment. This is what constitutes an experiment. The other
- kind of man has only bad habits. When you explore a new country, you
- don't know what the conditions are going to be; and you have to
- master those conditions by the method of trial and error. We start
- to penetrate the stratosphere; and we have to modify our machines in
- all sorts of ways which were not altogether foreseen. I wish to
- thunder forth once more that no questions of right or wrong enter
- into our problems. But in the stratosphere it is 'right' for a man
- to be shut up in a pressure-resisting suit electrically heated, with
- an oxygen supply, whereas it would be 'wrong' for him to wear it if
- he were running the three miles in the summer sports in the
- Tanezrouft.
- This is the pit into which all the great religious teachers have
- hitherto fallen, and I am sure you are all looking hungrily at me in
- the hope of seeing me do likewise. But no! There is one principle
- which carries us through all conflicts concerning conduct, because it
- is perfectly rigid and perfectly elastic: -- 'Do what thou wilt shall
- be the whole of the law.'
- So: it is not the least use to come and pester me about it.
- Perfect mastery of the violin in six easy lessons by correspondence!
- Should I have the heart to deny you? But Yama is different.
- Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. *That* is Yama.
- Your object is to perform Yoga. Your True Will is to attain the
- consummation of marriage with the universe, and your ethical code
- must constantly be adapted precisely to the conditions of your
- experiment. Even when you have discovered what your code is, you
- will have to modify it as you progress; 'remould it nearer to the
- heart's desire' -- Omar Khayyam. Just so, in a Himalayan expedition
- your rule of daily life in the valleys of Sikkim or the Upper Indus
- will have to be changed when you get to the glacier. But it is
- possible to indicate (in general terms expressed with the greatest
- caution) the 'sort' of thing that is likely to be bad for you.
- Anything that weakens the body, that exhausts, disturbs or inflames
- the mind is deprecable. You are pretty sure to find as you progress
- that there are some conditions that cannot be eliminated at all in
- your particular circumstances; and then you have to find a way of
- dealing with these so that they make a minimum of trouble. And you
- will find that you cannot conquer the obstacle of Yama, and dismiss
- it from your mind once and for all. Conditions favourable for the
- beginner may become an intolerable nuisance to the adept, while, on
- the other hand, things which matter very little in the beginning
- become most serious obstacles later on.
- Another point is that quite unsuspected problems arise in the
- course of the training. The whole question of the sub-conscious mind
- can be dismissed almost as a joke by the average man as he goes about
- his daily business; it becomes a very real trouble when you discover
- that the tranquillity of the mind is being disturbed by a type of
- thought whose existence had previously been unsuspected, and whose
- source is unimaginable.
- Then again there is no perfection of materials; there will
- always be errors and weaknesses, and the man who wins through is the
- man who manages to carry on with a defective engine. The actual
- strain of the work develops the defects; and it is a matter of great
- nicety of judgment to be able to deal with the changing conditions of
- life. It will be seen that the formula -- 'Do what thou wilt shall
- be the whole of the Law' has nothing to do with 'Do as you please.'
- It is much more difficult to comply with the Law of Thelema than
- to follow out slavishly a set of dead regulations. Almost the only
- point of emancipation, in the sense of relief from a burden, is just
- the difference between Life and Death.
- To obey a set of rules is to shift the whole responsibility of
- conduct on to some superannuated Bodhisattva, who would resent you
- bitterly if he could see you, and tick you off in no uncertain terms
- for being such a fool as to think you could dodge the difficulties of
- research by the aid of a set of conventions which have little or
- nothing to do with actual conditions.
- Formidable indeed are the obstacles we have created by the
- simple process of destroying our fetters. The analogy of the con-
- quest of the air holds excellently well. The things that worry the
- pedestrian worry us not at all; but to control a new element your
- Yama must be that biological principle of adaptation to the new
- conditions, adjustment of the faculties to those conditions, and
- consequent success in those conditions, which were enunciated in
- respect of planetary evolution by Herbert Spencer and now generalised
- to cover all modes of being by the Law of Thelema.
- But now let me begin to unleash my indignation. My job -- the
- establishment of the Law of Thelema -- is a most discouraging job.
- It is the rarest thing to find anyone who has any ideas at all on the
- subject of liberty. Because the Law of Thelema is the law of liber-
- ty, everybody's particular hair stands on end like the quills of the
- fretful porpentine; they scream like an uprooted mandrake, and flee
- in terror from the accursed spot. Because: the exercise of liberty
- means that you have to think for yourself, and the natural inertia of
- mankind wants religion and ethics ready-made. However ridiculous or
- shameful a theory or practice is, they would rather comply than
- examine it. Sometimes it is hook-swinging or Sati; sometimes consub-
- stantiation or supra-lapsarianism; they do not mind what they are
- brought up in, as long as they are well brought up. They do not want
- to be bothered about it. The Old School Tie wins through. They
- never suspect the meaning of the pattern on the tie: the Broad
- Arrow.
- You remember Dr. Alexandre Manette in 'A Tale of Two Cities.'
- He had been imprisoned for many years in the Bastille, and to save
- himself from going mad had obtained permission to make shoes. When
- he was released, he disliked it. He had to be approached with the
- utmost precaution; he fell into an agony of fear if his door was left
- unlocked; he cobbled away in a frenzy of anxiety lest the shoes
- should not be finished in time -- the shoes that nobody wanted.
- Charles Dickens lived at a time and in a country such that this state
- of mind appeared abnormal and even deplorable, but today it is a
- characteristic of 95 per cent of the people of England. Subjects
- that were freely discussed under Queen Victoria are now absolutely
- taboo; because everyone knows subconsciously that to touch them,
- however gently, is to risk precipitating the catastrophe of their
- dry-rot.
- There are not going to be many Yogis in England, because there
- will not be more than a very few indeed who will have the courage to
- tackle even this first of the eight limbs of Yoga: Yama.
- I do not think that anything will save the country: unless
- through war and revolution, when those who wish to survive will have
- to think and act for themselves according to their desperate needs,
- and not by some rotten yard-stick of convention. Why, even the skill
- of the workman has almost decayed within a generation! Forty years
- ago there were very few jobs that a man could not do with a jack-
- knife and a woman with a hair-pin; today you have to have a separate
- gadget for every trivial task.
- If you want to become Yogis, you will have to get a move on.
- Lege! Judica! Tace!
-
- Love is the law, love under will.
-
-
- e
- beginner may become an intolerable nuisance to the adept, while, on
- the other hand, things which matter very little in the beginning
- become most serious obstacles later on.
- Another point is that quite unsuspected problems arise in the
- course of the training. The whole question of the sub-conscious mind
- can be dismissed almost as a joke by the average man as he goes about
- his daily business; it becomes a very real trouble when you discover
- that the tranquillity of the mind is being disturbed by a type of
- thought whose existence had previously been unsuspected, and whose
- source is unimaginable.
- Then a