|
Yoga and Hypnotism
WHEN the mind is entirely passive, then
the force of Nature which works in the whole of animate and inanimate creation,
has free play; for it is in reality this force which works in man as well as in
the sun and star. There is no doubt of this truth whether in Hinduism or in
Science. This is the thing called Nature, the sum of cosmic force and energy,
which alone Science recognises as the source of all work and activity. This
also is the Prakriti of the Hindus to which under different names Sankhya and
Vedanta agree in assigning a similar position and function in the Universe. But
the immediate question is whether this force can act in man independently of
man`s individual will and initiative. Must it always act through his volition or
has it a power of independent operation ? The first real proof which Science
has had of the power of action independent of volition is the phenomena of
hypnotism. Unfortunately, the nature of hypnotism has not been properly
understood. It is supposed that by putting the subject to sleep the hypnotist
is able in some mysterious and unexplained way to substitute his will for the
subject`s. In a certain sense all the subject`s activities in the hypnotic
state are the results of his own volition, but that volition is not
spontaneous, it is used as a slave by the operator working through the medium
of suggestion. Whatever the hypnotist suggests that the subject shall think,
act or feel, he thinks, acts or feels, and whatever the hypnotist suggests that
the subject shall become, he becomes. What is it that gives the operator this
stupendous power ? Why should the mere fact of a man passing into this
sleep-condition suspend the ordinary reactions of mind and body and substitute
others at the mere word of the man who has said to him "sleep" ? It
is sometimes supposed that it is the superior will of the hypnotist which
overcomes the will of the other and makes it a slave. There are two strong
objections to this view. It does not appear to be true that it is the weak and
distracted will that is most easily hypnotised; on the contrary, the
strong concentrated mind forms a good subject. Secondly, if it were the
operator`s will using the will of the subject, then the results produced must
be such as the latter could himself bring about, since the capacities of the
instrument cannot be exceeded by the power working through the instrument. Even
if we sup- pose that the invading will brings with it its own force still the
results produced must not exceed the sum of its capacity plus the capacity of
the instrument. If they commonly do so, we must suppose that it is neither the
will of the operator nor the will of the subject nor the sum of these two wills
that is active, but some other and more potent force. This is precisely what we
see in hypnotic performance.
What is this force that
enables or compels a weak man to become so rigid that strong arms cannot bend
him; that reverses the operations of the senses and abrogates pain ? That
changes the fixed character of a man in the shortest of periods ? That is able
to develop power where there was no power, moral strength where there was
weakness, health where there was disease? That in its higher manifestations can
exceed the barriers of space and time and produce that far-sight, far-hearing
and far-thinking which shows mind to be an untrammelled agent or medium
pervading the world and not limited to the body which it informs or seems to
inform. The European scientist experimenting with hypnotism is handling forces
which he cannot understand, stumbling on truths of which he cannot give a true
account. His feet are faltering on the threshold of Yoga. It is held by some
thinkers, and not unreasonably if we consider these phenomena, that mind is all
and contains all. It is not the body which determines the laws of the body. It
is the ordinary law of the body that if it is struck, pierced or roughly
pressed, it feels pain. This law is created by the mind which associates pain
with these contacts, and if the mind changes its Dharma and is able to
associate with those contacts not pain but insensibility or pleasure, then they
will bring about those results of insensibility or pleasure and no other. The
pain and pleasure are not the result of the contact, neither is their seat in
the body; they are the result of association and their seat is in the mind.
Vinegar is sour, sugar sweet, but to the hypnotised mind vinegar can be sweet,
sugar sour. The sourness
or sweetness is not in the vinegar
or sugar, but in the mind. The heart also is the subject of the mind. My
emotions are like my physical feelings, the result of association, and my
character is the result of accumulated past experiences with their resultant
associations and reactions crystallising into habits of mind and heart summed
up in the word, character. These things like all the rest that are made of the
stuff of associations are not permanent or binding but fluid and mutable, .". sarve samskārāh"anityāh If my friend blames me,
I am grieved; that is an association and not binding. The grief is not the
result of the blame but of an association in the mind. I can change the
association so far that blame will cause me no grief, praise no elation. I can
entirely stop the reactions of joy and grief by the same force that created
them. They are habits of the mind, nothing more. In the same way though with
more difficulty I can stop the reactions of physical pain and pleasure so that
nothing will hurt my body. If I am a coward today, I can be a hero tomorrow.
The cowardice was merely the habit of associating certain things with pain and
grief and the shrinking from the pain and grief; this shrinking and the
physical sensations in the vital or nervous man which accompany it are called
fear and they can be dismissed by the action of the mind which created them.
All these are propositions which European science is even now unwilling to
admit, yet it is being proved more and more by the phenomena of hypnotism that
these effects can be temporarily at least produced by one man upon another; and
it has even been proved that disease can be permanently cured or character
permanently changed by the action of one mind upon another. The rest will be established
in time by the development of hypnotism.
The difference between
Yoga and hypnotism is that what hypnotism does for a man through the agency of
another and in the sleeping state, Yoga does for him by his own agency and in
the waking state. The hypnotic sleep is necessary in order to pre- vent the
activity of the subject`s mind full of old ideas and associations, from
interfering with the operator.
In the waking state he
would naturally refuse to experience sweetness in vinegar or sourness in sugar
or to believe that he can change from disease to health, cowardice to heroism
by a mere act of faith; his established association would rebel
violently and successfully against such contradictions of universal experience.
The force which transcends matter would be hampered by the obstruction of
ignorance and attachment to universal error. The hypnotic sleep does not make
the mind a tabula rasa, but it renders it passive to everything but the
touch of the operator. Yoga similarly teaches passivity of the mind so that the
will may act unhampered by the samskāras, or old associations. It is
these samskāras, the habits formed by experience in the body, heart or
mind, that form the laws of our psychology. The associations of the mind are
the stuff of which our life is made. They are more persistent in the body than
in the mind and there- fore harder to alter. They are more persistent in the
race than in the individual; the conquest of the body and mind by the
individual is comparatively easy and can be done in the space of a single life,
but the same conquest by the race involves the development of ages. It is
conceivable, however, that the practice of Yoga by a great number of men and
persistence might bring about profound changes in human psychology and, by stamping
these changes into body and brain through heredity, evolve a superior race
which would endure and by the law of the survival of the fittest eliminate the
weaker kinds of humanity. Just as the rudimentary mind of the animal has been
evolved into the fine instrument of the human being so the rudiments of higher
force and faculty in the present race might evolve into the perfect buddhi
of the Yogin.
so. eva"Yo yacchraddhah ."sah According as is a man`s
fixed and complete belief, that he is, not immediately always but sooner or
later, by the law that makes the psychical tend inevitably to express itself in
the material. The will is the agent by which all these changes are made and old
samskāras replaced by new, and the will cannot act without faith. The question
then arises whether mind is the ultimate force or there is another which
communicates with the outside world through the mind. Is the mind the agent or
simply the instrument? If the mind be all, then it is only animals that can
have the power to evolve; but this does not accord with the laws of the world
as we know them. The tree evolves, the clod evolves, everything evolves. Even in animals it is evident that mind
is not all in the sense of being the ultimate force in nature. It seems to be
all, only because that which is all expresses itself in the mind and passes
everything through it for the sake of manifestation. That which we call mind is
a medium which pervades the world. Otherwise we could not have the
instantaneous and electrical action of mind upon mind of which human experience
is full and of which the new phenomena of hypnotism, telepathy, etc., are only
fresh proofs. There must be contact, there must be interpenetration if we are
to account for these phenomena on any reasonable theory. Mind therefore is held
by the Hindus to be a species of subtle matter in which ideas are waves or
ripples and it is not limited by the physical body which it uses as an
instrument. There is an ulterior force which works through this subtle medium
called mind. An animal species develops, according to the modern theory, under
the subtle influence of the environment. The environment sup- plies a need and
those who satisfy the need develop a new species which survives because it is
more fit. This is not the result of any intellectual perception of the need nor
of a resolve to develop the necessary changes, but of a desire, often though
not always, a mute, inarticulate and unthought desire. That desire attracts a
force which satisfies it. What is that force ? The tendency of psychical desire
to manifest in the material change is one term in the equation; the force which
develops the change in response to the desire is another. We have a will beyond
mind which dictates the change, we have a force beyond mind which affects it.
According to Hindu philosophy, the will is the Jiva, the Purusha, the Self in
the a"ānandakos acting through vijñāna,
universal or transcendental mind; this is what we call spirit. The force is
Prakriti or Shakti, the female principle in Nature which is at the root of all
action. Behind both is the single Self of the universe which contains both Jiva
and Prakriti, spirit and material energy. Yoga puts these ultimate existences
within us in touch with each other and by stilling the activity of the samskāras
or associations in mind and body, enables them to act swiftly, victoriously and
as the world calls it, miraculously. In reality, there is no such thing as a
miracle; there are only laws and processes which are not yet understood.
Yoga
is therefore no dream, no illusion of mystics. It is known that we can alter
the associations of mind and body temporarily and that the mind can alter the
conditions of the body partially. Yoga asserts that these things can be done
permanently and completely. For
the body, conquest of disease, pain and material obstructions, for the mind,
liberation from bondage to past experience and the heavier limitations of space
and time, for the heart victory over sin and grief and fear, for the spirit
unclouded bliss, strength and illumination, this is the gospel of Yoga, this is
the goal to which Hinduism points humanity.
- Sri Aurobindo
The harmony of virtue, vol.3
www.sriaurobindoashram.com
|