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The Individual Nature
Thus,
all individual experience is a form of error in some degree, though all error
becomes an element of perfection in the Absolute. The aim of the life of the
individual is to overcome the urge for organic reactions in relation to
external perceptible objects and to transcend itself in the all-comprehensive
Absolute, which is the essential reality of all individuals. These reactions
among individual natures are either unconscious or conscious. The unconscious
urges are termed instincts and the conscious ones are those which constitute
the rational processes in the individuals. Beyond these reactions of a twofold nature,
there is the supreme integrating principle, viz., intuition and direct
realisation of the highest essence of experience.
These
instinctive urges are powerful, and, being ingrained in the very constitution
of the individual, refuse to be easily subdued. The most powerful of these
involuntary unconscious urges are those of self-preservation and
self-reproduction. The instinct of self-preservation is sometimes wrongly
called 'food-seeking' instinct. Food is not the end that is sought by the individual;
food is only a means to the fulfilment of the will-to-live or the love of life
which is inherent in everyone, and which is the end. One does not desire to eat
food as an end in itself; the purpose of food and drink is living as an
individual personality, possessed of a body. This urge is not withinthe
control of the rational intellect, and overcomes the other urges by its
intensity of expression. It manifests itself in various forms, and has several
ramifications, primarily connected with, as well as secondarily related to it.
It tethers the individual to bodily life and thwarts all ordinary attempts at
turning a deaf ear to it. This instinct, this craving for life, this love of
individual personality can be overcome only in a higher understanding and
feeling relating to a wider experience transcending gross physicality and
distorted psychic personality. But any unwise meddling with this urge, without
properly understanding its deeper meaning, may make it run riot and ruin the
individual attempting to control it. Intimately connected with the
self-preservative urge is the self-reproductive urge, the nature of which has
to be analysed before any method of overcoming instincts may be discovered.
The
self-reproductive instinct is misnamed 'sex-instinct'. This urge has, really,
little to do with the sexual personality, as such; the sexual personality is
only a means to the propagation of the species, and it is this urge for the
production of a new individual of the species that makes use of sex as a cat's
paw. What becomes the object of craving is not sex, but the pleasure caused by
the release of the tension brought about by the urge for being instrumental in
bringing forth a new individual. Homosexual intercourse and fixation on objects
which do not help actual reproductionare only cases of perversion or
regression of this original urge, due either to a defect in the formation of
the sex glands, or to frustration and non-fulfilment. The aim of the urge for
reproduction is not to bring pleasure to the individual; its purpose is the
continuation of the species.
Those
characteristics of the sexual personality which become the source of attraction
for the opposite sex are merely the external indications of the development of
the gonad hormones which, through these indications, make known their maturity
and readiness for the act of the production of a new individual. This
attraction is not concerned with the pleasure of anyone, but is merely the
process of the externalisation of cellular and nervous vibration seeking
intercourse with the counterpart of the constitution of the attracted
individual. It is not the external feature or the form of the opposite sex that
is the source of attraction, but it is the meaning which is read in it by the
individual that gives value to it and forces the individual to conform itself
to that value. It is the suggestiveness and the expressiveness of the form that
evokes the stimulation and vibration of the entire constitution in its
counterpart. The more does something mean to one, the more is the value that
one attaches to it, and the more is one concerned with it. The reading of
meaning in the opposite sex is not a rational act of the individual, but it is
the 'general' urge of the species that materialises itself in a specific
individual as an involuntary instinct for physical action.
All
stimuli set the organism in vibration, and this disturbs its equilibrium. In
this process there is release of nervous energy, affecting not merely the body
but, to a great extent, even the mind. The pleasure that is experienced at the
time of being stimulated by an 'intended' external agency is really the warmth
and affection felt in yielding to an inner command of the physical nature, when
motor reactions take place in the organism, on account of the magnetic
properties called forth in it. What ravishes the personality and makes it leap
up in ecstasy at the time of a desirable objective reaction in the physical
world is the total disintegration of the parts of this organism and the peace
that follows as a consequence of the cessation of this disturbance, on the
fulfilment of the purpose of this reaction. All instinctive pleasure is
ultimately the recognition of harmony and equilibrium and joy in consciousness
on account of the banishing of disturbance in it by the fulfilment of the
meaning of the instinct through the possession and utilisation of the object
which plays the role of an agent in loosening and removing the nervous and
psychic tension created by the expression of the instinct.
Even
the urge for self-reproduction may be explained in terms of the urge for
self-preservation. It is really the will-to-live of the individual of the
species to be manifested in the physical universe that asserts in what
is termed the self-reproductive urge. The parent becomes the medium of the
self-manifestation of a new individual, which is the intention of the physical
nature. The lower nature of any 'specific' individual has no control over this
instinct, because it is the intention of the 'general' nature or the species
which exceeds the natural powers of the former. The will-to-reproduce is only
the will-to-live of the would-be member of this physical universe. The
fulfilment of this will-to-live is not really the good or the delight of any
individual, but is only anexecution of the orders of the lower
diversified nature, the fulfilment of the purpose of the species as a whole,
which is wider than any individual in comprehensiveness. The will of the race
or the species supersedes all individual wills, and subjects these latter to
its own purposive rule. Sexual love or beauty has thus a reference to a need
extending beyond the individual and so it is stronger than any other form of
love known on earth. If anyone, however, is to know that the meaning of the
self-reproductive urge is not the pleasure or the good of oneself, but is only
a service done to a more powerful nature which makes use of everyone as its
drudge, no one would indulge in the fulfilment of this urge. Hence nature covers
the consciousness of the individual and steeps it in the delusion that the
purpose of the urge is the pleasure of the individual, by preventing the
discriminative understanding from functioning in it. This illusion is called
the 'instinct for sex', and this is the pleasure derived thereby!
These
self-expressing energies in individuals have a common source, an
original, form, and their sum is constant at all times; it never
decreases or increases; only it sometimes gets distributed in
unequal proportions due to disturbance of equilibrium in consciousness. This
sum-total of objectified energy is the matrix of all irrational and rational
urges. These externalising urges or tendencies to organic reactions are not cut
off even by the death of the physical body, for they are rooted in the very
principle of the psychic individuality. They cease to exist only when they are
absorbed into the Universal Consciousness, by the process of meditation on the
essential Selfhood of all individuals in it.
There
are certain minor instincts which are less powerful than those of
self-preservation and self-reproduction, but which, nevertheless, exert a great
influence on the personality and subject it to involuntary actions. The
self-assertive instinct is one among these. This instinct is meant either to
compensate for one's sense of inferiority, or to preserve one's thwarted power,
importance and distinction (many times merely imagined), or to expand one's ego
by adding to it qualifications from outside (though this addition is purely
artificial). It is the inherent tendency to preserve the complex of one's
psycho-physical organism. The gregarious instinct is another, which manifests
itself in love of company of the group to which one 'belongs'. This is the
instinct of identification of the group with one's self. Metaphysically, this
appears to be an unconscious expression of one's love for one's larger social
self or organism which comprises the individuals within it. But this love
ceases to be a virtue when one is unconscious of the existence of such a larger
self, and is merely goaded to love society independently of one's understanding
and will. The protective or the parental instinct expresses itself in the
biological attraction of the physical organism (influencing the mind, of
course) to its own 'other self'. This attraction ceases when its purpose, viz.,
protection of the offspring, is fulfilled. Parental love is one of the
manifestations of the biological nature of the individual, affiliated to the
purpose of the propagation of the individuals of the species.
All
urges, it is suggested, are ultimately a symptom of spirit calling spirit,
under the cloak of outward bondage to forms, objects, notions and actions.
The
desire to understand, or to know, is a rational urge. There are various forms
of this urge, working through different channels, but aiming at the fulfilment
of the desire to know. Sometimes, it is merely curiosity, and at other times,
it is a necessity felt on account of problems that have arisen in life, that
rouses in the individual the desire to know. At first, the knowledge that is
desired is only a means to vaster and higher acquisitions, and later on, it
becomes an end in itself. Except the desire for higher knowledge which is
self-existent, and the instinct for self-preservation (the latter when not
carried beyond the limit of real necessity), all these urges are outlets for
the externalisation of energy towards objects other than what is indispensable
to the individual for its self-evolution. Desire for knowledge, however, should
be called a supernatural urge, though it becomes really supernatural only in
the end, and involves some amount of effort and spending of energy in the
beginning stages. The highest self-existent knowledge is not really an urge,
but is the end of lower knowledge, and only this latter can be included among
urges.
One
special feature to be noted, however, in the functioning of the urge for
knowledge is that it can be valid only on a dualistic basis, and so it
involves, to some extent, a directing of energy to something which is external
to consciousness. On account of this reason, it can be included among the
several urges in the individual, though the higher knowledge, which is not a
means to any other end, but is an end in itself, cannot be called an individual
urge, for this latter is not directed to anything external, but is itself
self-existence. What is meant by the rational urge is, therefore, not the
self-existent independent absolute knowledge, but the aspiration to know, the
desire to understand, the tendency to outgrow limited knowledge.
Except
the longing for knowledge, all urges or instincts are to be subdued and
transformed into the integrating energy of the higher consciousness, for these natural
urges of the physical nature are inconsistent with the higher aspiration for
the unity of consciousness in the Universal Being. The art of overcoming these
instincts which are antagonistic to spiritual seeking consists, ultimately, in
certain processes which are related to the essential nature of Consciousness
itself. The end being the realisation of supreme oneness, the means to it has
to bear an intimate relation to it.
Self-Transcendence
The
transmutation of the individual constitution is necessary for the experience of
the Absolute, and this can be achieved by recognising the true nature of the
relation existing between the individual and the Absolute, as detailed in the
foregoing pages. All forms of the externalisation of energy, which are called
urges, instincts, etc., are ultimately movements of consciousness in the
direction of the not-self. There can be no individual urge when consciousness
ceases to function in this way. The way of self-control, therefore, is that of
the recession of the modes of the objectified consciousness to their wider and
deeper source, which functionally converge and merge in the Absolute. Only a
conscious endeavour on the part of the individual to outgrow itself, to rise
above particularity, can bring about this great achievement and realisation.
For this, clear understanding, dispassionate feeling, longing for freedom, and
perseverance are necessary.
Study,
reflection and meditation are the processes of the method of
self-transcendence. A careful study and analysis of the nature of experience,
under the guidance of an able spiritual teacher, is indispensable for
meditation on the spiritual Reality. The defects involved in relative
experience, and the fact of its being finally centred in and reducible to the
reality of the Absolute, are to be discovered, in order that attachment to
external forms of experience may be withdrawn, and all energy be focussed on
the supreme Self-consciousness. The nature of instinctive reactions and blind
urges have to be clearly understood before any attempt to control them may be
made. No practice can be of any lasting value, if it is not preceded by a
correct knowledge of the inner anatomy and constitution of the meaning and
method of that practice. One must act only after knowing how to act, why to act
and what the act really is. Action must be based on a knowledge thereof. This
knowledge, on which all spiritual practices are based, is the forerunner of
dispassion for all externalisation towards things. True renunciation is not the
abandonment of any 'thing', but the relinquishment of the thingness in things,
the objectness in objects, the externality in experience, the projectedness in
consciousness. This renunciation is the condition of the supreme fulfilment in
the Absolute. There can be no hope of this ultimate realisation without the
total surrender of personality and all its concomitants to this one goal. The
moment this surrender is done, attachments cease, the mind becomes calm, the
senses are abstracted from forms, passions subside, consciousness gets
concentrated, joy ensues, and an immense strength is felt within. All these are
the results of an attunement of the individual to Reality, the coalescence of
all forces with it, the dissolution in it of all distinction and objectivity.
By this act the individual draws sustenance from and becomes the Universal
Centre. The actual experience is possible through intense meditation on it.
Every
act of one's life should become an expression of conscious contemplation on the
Absolute. Unless all acts are based on this consciousness, there cannot be any
ultimate value in these acts. The Absolute is the life-principle of all things,
acts and thoughts, and so, without it, everything becomes lifeless and devoid
of meaning. Spirituality is a state of consciousness; it is not merely certain
forms of action. When consciousness is properly trained to exist in this
harmony, all acts become universal processes, and cease to be individual
efforts directed towards a phenomenal end. It is the duty of everyone in all
one's conscious states to attempt to unity oneself with the Absolute, and
perform one's duties with the consciousness of this unity. Such an individual
is a sage, the supremely blessed one. The very presence of this hallowed being
exerts a magnetic spiritual influence on the entire environment. "This universe
is his; and, indeed, he is the universe," says the Upanishad. This is the
glorious consummation of life.
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