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| The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali - Book 1 - The Problem of Union |
| 33. The peace of the chitta (or mind stuff) can be brought about through the practice of sympathy, tenderness, steadiness of purpose, and dispassion in regard to pleasure or pain, or towards all forms of good or evil. |
| In this sutra we are dealing with the physical body,
which undergoes experiences on the physical plane and which utilises the brain
consciousness. The tendency of that body is towards all other objective forms, and it is
apt (in its unregenerate state) to gravitate with facility towards material objects. The
nature of those objects will be dependent upon the point in evolution of the experiencing
ego. This must be carefully remembered [76] when studying this sutra, otherwise there will
be a misapprehension of the final clause. Discriminative action must ever be taken with
reference to all demonstrations of good and evil force, and the law works in this
connection, but emancipation from all the physical forms which that energy may take,
eventuates when dispassion towards these objective forms is practiced. It might be useful
if we note that the sympathy dealt with concerns our relation to all other
pilgrims, or towards the fourth kingdom in nature; tenderness covers our relation
to the animal or third kingdom; steadiness of purpose deals with our relation to
the Hierarchy of the planet, and dispassion concerns our attitude to all the
reactions of the lower personal self. The comprehensiveness of this sutra is therefore
apparent and concerns all the brain vibrations of the disciple. The physical body is consequently looked upon as a vehicle for the expression of:
Thus peace is achieved, peace of the chitta or mind stuff, peace of the brain reactions and eventually complete quiet and calm. The idea is well covered by Charles Johnston in the words of his translation of this sutra, "The psychic nature [77] moves to gracious peace," and the man expresses wholesomeness, a rounded out nature, and complete sanity of thought and act. All bodily disability is in this way overcome, and wholeness expresses the nature of the manifestation. |
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