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       # 2021-12-27 - Self-control by Swami Abhedānanda
       
       Every religion can be divided into two parts, one of which may be
       called the non-essential [exoteric] and the other the essential
       [esoteric].  Doctrines, dogmas, rituals, ceremonies, and mythologies
       of all the organized religious creeds come under the head of the
       non-essential.  It is not meant by this that they are useless; on the
       contrary, the very fact of their existence proves that they are
       helpful and necessary at certain stages of progress.  What I mean is,
       that it cannot be said that they are absolutely necessary for making
       one live a purely spiritual life.  A man or a woman may be highly
       spiritual without performing any of the rituals and ceremonies
       ordained, either by the scriptures of the world, or by any religious
       hierarchy.  A man or a woman may be truly religious without believing
       in any creed, doctrine, dogma, or mythology.  Those who think that
       these non-essentials are indispensable for attaining to the ultimate
       goal of religion, have not yet grasped the fundamental principles
       that underlie all religions; they mistake the non-essential for the
       essential; they cannot discriminate the one from the other; they lack
       the insight of spiritual illumination.  Those who understand the
       essentials of religion and strictly follow them in their every-day
       life do not disturb themselves about the non-essentials, these simple
       and sincere souls alone reach the goal of religion by the shortest
       way possible.
       
       The essentials of religion are principally two: Self-knowledge and
       Self-control.  Self-knowledge means knowledge of the higher Self, the
       divine nature of man; and self-control is the restraint of the lower
       self or selfish nature.  True knowledge of the divine Self comes when
       the lower self is subdued.  In ancient times, Greek philosophers
       understood these two as the essentials of religion, therefore over
       the temple entrance at Delphi the phrase "Know Thyself" was so
       conspicuously engraven.  Heraclitus, the ancient Greek philosopher,
       interpreted this motto, saving: "It behooves all men to know
       themselves and to exercise self-control"
       
       In India, the ancient Seers of Truth understood the essential part of
       religion so well that they tried their best to keep it separate from
       the non-essential part of the popular religion of the masses.  The
       result of such attempts was the discovery of the system of Yoga.  The
       system of Yoga deals entirely with the essentials of religion; it
       does not teach any dogma, creed, ritual, ceremony, or mythology.  Its
       main object is to teach mankind the different methods of attaining
       the knowledge of the true Self, and the practice of self-control.  A
       true Yogi is one who has perfect control over himself [or herself],
       and who has acquired self-knowledge.  The science of Yoga explains
       what self-control is, how it can be acquired, and what is the nature
       of self-knowledge.  A Yogi therefore reaches the ultimate goal of
       religion and spiritual perfection without wasting his [or her] energy
       in the practice of non-essentials.
       
       The non-essentials of religion are like a huge heap of husks, under
       which lies hidden the kernel of the essential truth: wherever there
       is too much of non-essentials, there prevail religious corruption,
       superstition, and false theology, the main object of which is to
       convince the ignorant masses that the heap of non-essential dogmas,
       doctrines, ceremonies, and rituals must be observed by all who wish
       to be religious.  But the science of Yoga, being free from dogmas,
       ceremonies, and rituals, suffers neither from corruption, nor from
       superstition, nor does it need any theology.  It is pure and simple.
       It welcomes to its fold all sincere and earnest souls who are
       searching for higher truth and spiritual life, and seeks to make them
       spiritual by giving the essentials of religion as their highest
       ideal.  It teaches them the method by which self-control and
       knowledge of the supreme self can be acquired.
       
       Self-control means the control of the lower self, or the animal
       nature of man, by developing the higher powers that are latent in the
       individual soul.  Having ascended the grades of evolution from the
       lower animals, man lives at first on the animal plane; then as he [or
       she] rises higher and higher, the latent powers of the soul gradually
       begin to manifest and overcome his [or her] animal tendencies.
       
       Self-control is not manifested in the character of any man who
       ignorantly obeys the dictates of the senses, and blindly serves the
       internal masters of passion, anger, greed, self-delusion, pride, and
       egotism.  Those who can control themselves, or check the mad rush of
       the mind toward sense objects, and who cease to obey those animal
       impulses which are standing like fierce enemies in the path of
       spiritual progress, enjoy undisturbed peace as long as they live,
       thus reaching the highest goal of freedom; but those who are
       constantly guided by sudden waves of passion, anger, pride, jealousy,
       and hatred, are always disturbed in their minds; they are restless
       and unhappy.  How can persons who are slaves of their senses expect
       happiness?  Happiness comes in the state of perfect freedom, and not
       in slavery; that freedom again can be acquired only through the
       practice of self-control, therefore those who desire to enjoy
       unbounded happiness and peace of mind on this earth should struggle
       for freedom by learning to practise self-control.
       
       The attainment of self-control is easy for those who have learned to
       study their own minds, and who, after discovering their weaknesses,
       try to reform their own characters.  Like the lower animals, the
       natural tendency of human beings is to seek pleasure and to avoid
       pain.  As long as [one] lives in the darkness of ignorance, and
       cannot trace the causes which make [one] happy or unhappy, and as
       long as [one] does not understand whether happiness and pleasure come
       from external objects or from within, so long [one] fails to be
       master of [one's self].  Right discrimination of the conditions which
       make one happy or unhappy is the surest guide in the path which leads
       to the attainment of self-control.
       
       Now let us examine the present conditions of our minds.  They are
       naturally attracted by the objects which are pleasing to the senses,
       or which help in fulfilling the purposes and desires that are
       extremely strong in us.  The majority of mankind are attached to
       those objects which give pleasure, both sensuous and mental.  They
       are never attached to anything or anybody where they do not find
       pleasure.  In the same manner it can be shown that the natural
       tendency of the mind is also to get away from pain.  The eyes are
       pleased to look at the beautiful colour which attracts them, the ears
       are pleased to hear sweet words, melodious notes, and good music.  We
       like to smell sweet fragrance, and to taste the things pleasing to
       the palate.
       
       Yet that which is pleasing to the senses of one man may give pain to
       another.  [So many of our tastes are relative to our culture.] ...
       The same colour or same sound or taste which is pleasing to one, may
       be a source of intense discomfort to another.  This shows that
       pleasure and pain are not the inherent properties of the objects of
       senses, but that they depend upon the conditions of the mind and body
       which come in direct contact with those objects.
       
       Mind has tremendous power over the body.  If a certain idea gets
       possession of the mind it affects the body and produces corresponding
       changes in the whole system.  The same mind which found pleasure in a
       certain thing at one time, dislikes the very sight of that thing if
       new ideas happen to get a hold upon it.  [Thus our taste for food can
       change over time.  We can get used to a different style and then we
       say that we have acquired a taste for it.  This also seems to be the
       premise of CBT: that our stress and suffering are caused by our own
       beliefs and thoughts.]  Therefore, it can be said that there is
       nothing in the universe from which all individuals can derive
       absolute pleasure or absolute pain, or that can even please the same
       individual at all times.  Those who seek pleasure from the objects of
       senses cannot stick to one particular enjoyment at the time.  If they
       try to enjoy the same thing day after day, they will soon tire of it;
       satiety is the inevitable result, and with that comes loss of
       interest.  [Unless they are trapped in addiction.]
       
       Suppose a lady who is passionately fond of the opera should
       constantly hear the same opera day and night, without hearing or
       doing anything else, she would surely tire of it in a few days.
       Constant change of the objects of pleasure is absolutely necessary
       for those people who seek pleasure from the external world.  It is
       for this reason that many people who are too poor to afford much
       variety in their pleasure delude themselves by thinking that wealth
       would give them all they desire, and envy those who possess large
       fortunes, foolishly believing that the rich must be always happy.  In
       this way, they often fail to enjoy the pleasures within their reach,
       thus making their life a burden.  They fail to understand that wealth
       has its own trials, that are often only little more bearable than the
       ills of poverty.  The truth is that true happiness can only belong to
       [one] who can control [one's] mind.  The practice of self-control
       would be a great blessing to all these unhappy people; it would make
       their lives happier and better worth living.
       
       Before we can control the natural tendency of the mind to seek
       pleasure in external objects, we must know that the feeling of
       pleasure depends upon the feeling of pain.  If we do not have any
       feeling of pain whatever, we cannot enjoy a pleasant feeling.
       Pleasure is pleasure only when it stands in relation to the feeling
       of pain.  Whenever we compare one sensation or feeling with another,
       we find one more pleasing than the other; the less pleasing one is
       ordinarily called painful.  The tendency of our mind is to seek
       objects that are more pleasing than those which we already possess,
       or happen to enjoy, and the moment we find a thing which we think
       would produce a more agreeable sensation than the things we now have,
       we crave to possess it.  Having satisfied the craving, if after
       comparison we discover that the latter is not better than the former,
       we remain as unsatisfied as before, and may even wish to go back to
       the former condition.  Thus we can understand that although pleasures
       and pain may arise in different individuals from their contact with
       the same objects of senses, the natural tendency of mind is to seek
       pleasure and avoid pain.  We are attached to those objects from
       relation with which we derive pleasure, but the moment these cease to
       yield us gratification, we become indifferent to the very things we
       so eagerly desired; sometimes we grow to hate them and wish to get
       away from them.
       
       Our minds are constantly seeking new objects of pleasure through the
       gates of the senses, and attach themselves to every fresh object that
       promises to give us a pleasant feeling or sensation While this
       attachment lasts, the mind becomes a slave to it.  If anything
       happens to come in the way and prevent the mind from enjoying a
       particular pleasure, the mind tries to overcome the obstacle.  The
       stronger the opposing power, the greater is the mental struggle to
       subdue it.  If the desire be very strong and we cannot succeed in
       gratifying it by ordinary means, we often get enraged and adopt more
       violent measures, thus losing all possibility of a peaceful state of
       mind.
       
       That simple desire for enjoyment takes the form of a ruling passion,
       agitates the whole mind, and manifests in the form of anger and
       unrest.  In that agitated state of the mind, we lose the sense of
       right and wrong, memory grows dull, understanding gets confused, we
       lose foresight and act like brutes.  Passion is the stronger form of
       desire, the same strong desire, when acting under opposition, takes
       the form of anger.  Desire is the first stage, passion is the second
       stage, and the third stage is anger.
       
       Passion and anger, again, lead to hatred, jealousy, and many other
       wicked feelings which are expressed outwardly in the form of vicious
       acts.  [One] who can control [one's] mind from being disturbed by
       passion and anger, has obtained self-control.  The control of
       passions and anger comes when the mind does not seek pleasure from
       external objects, but learns by experience that pleasure which can be
       derived through the senses, is very transient; it lasts for a few
       seconds only, and its true source is not in the object itself, but
       depends mostly upon the mental and physical conditions of the enjoyer.
       
       We have seen that passion and anger are the second and third stages
       of desire, these desires, according to the Yogis, remain in the
       subconscious plane of our minds.  Here a question arises: What is the
       cause of these desires?  A Yogi, trying to trace the cause of
       desires, says that they are the outcome of the dormant impressions in
       our minds, or the awakened state of these impressions.  [A Yogi]
       further says that when we enjoy any external object through our
       senses, our minds are impressed with certain changes which are
       produced while we are in direct contact with the thing.  When we eat
       an apple, the impression of its taste is left in the mind.  When we
       hear a musical note, an impression of the note, pleasant or
       unpleasant, remains in the mind.  Similarly, all the impressions
       which the external objects leave in the mind, will remain there in a
       seed form or dormant state, by the law of persistence of force.  None
       of them will be lost; whatever things we have enjoyed or suffered in
       our lives are stored up in that seed form, or in the form of dormant
       impressions.  These dormant impressions are the causes of our desires.
       
       [In my experience these impressions are symbols, or thought-forms in
       my mind.  They are different than sensations and English words.  They
       are like a private language.  They are the substance of dreams and
       imagination.]
       
       Some of the Western psychologists have supported this theory of the
       Yogis.  Professor Beneke says in his Elementary Psychology: "What has
       once been produced in the soul continues still to exist, even when it
       has ceased to be excited.  That which was conscious merely becomes
       unconscious, or lives in the internal substance of the soul."  Sir
       William Hamilton admits the existence of the latent impressions when
       he says: "The whole we are conscious of, is constructed out of what
       we are not conscious of."  He explains the psychic activity of the
       subconscious plane by comparing the chain of impressions or thoughts
       with a row of billiard balls, of which, if struck at one end, only
       the last one moves, the vibration being merely transmitted through
       the rest.  But a Yogi says that these dormant impressions are the
       seeds or real cause of desires.
       
       Let us suppose that the mind substance is like a sea, that the
       surface is the conscious plane, and that the dormant impressions lie
       deep below surface.  Here we should remember that anything that
       remains in a dormant state, is bound to manifest when the conditions
       become favourable.  Forced by their inward nature, when the dormant
       impressions begin to manifest, they may be said to rise up slowly
       from the bottom of the sea of mind in the form of minute bubbles.  We
       may call this bubble the subtle state of desire, or the awakened
       impression.  Then it gradually rises to the surface and appears
       larger and larger in size.  Let us call this bubble state of the
       awakened impression, desire, then the bubble of desire, after playing
       on the surface of the mental sea for some time, bursts there and
       takes the form of a wave, and agitates the whole sea of mind,
       transforming it into one mass of impulse.  The mind becomes restless,
       peace is disturbed, power of discrimination becomes dull, we do not
       know whether good or bad results will follow should we yield to the
       impelling impulse, we are forcibly driven headlong toward the object
       of desire, whatever it be, mental (like ambition, pride, etc.), or
       merely sensuous.  In fact, our controlling power having been overcome
       by that wave of desire, we can no longer call it desire.  It
       temporarily takes the form of a ruling passion, or strong impulse.
       That tremendous impulse controls our nerves, muscles, and the whole
       body, struggle to gratify this longing, only to find, when we have
       attained the thing and gratified the longing, that the satisfaction
       is but brief.  The tempest that wrecked our self-control gradually
       subsides, and the particular desire that provoked it returns again to
       its dormant state; then a temporary peace of mind is regained and we
       remain happy for a time.
       
       In the meanwhile another dormant impression gets ready to appear in
       the form of a bubble.  Slowly it rises up from the subconscious to
       the conscious plane, and the same process is repeated.  This
       ever-recurring series of desires and their temporary gratification
       forms the daily life of all such persons as have not learned to
       control their minds.  When this fleeting peace of mind, or so-called
       happiness, has been secured, the desire subsides into a dormant state
       for a longer or shorter period.  This process is continuously going
       on in each mind at every moment.  Suppose a person is invited to a
       dinner party, where [one] partakes of something very delicious which
       [one] never tasted before and which [one] likes immensely.  Do you
       think that the impression of that taste will be lost as soon as the
       dinner is over?  Certainly not; it will remain in the mind and
       engender a desire for the same thing again; the memory will recall
       that impression and it will become the cause of a fresh desire.  In
       this manner it can be shown that every new impression is the cause or
       seed of a new desire.
       
       When [someone] begins to drink intoxicating liquors [one] feels a
       peculiar sensation; it drives away [one's] dullness, exhilarates
       [one], excites [one's] nervous system, and makes [one] happy for the
       time being.  After the effect of the stimulant is over, the
       impression of the agreeable feeling it produced is left in [one's]
       mind; for some time it remains latent, then it rises up in the form
       of a desire, or bubble, to the surface of [one's] mental sea.  Rising
       to the surface, it bursts and produces a wave, or impulse, which
       intensifies the desire and leads [one] to drink again.  The fresh
       exhilaration creates another impression, which stamps itself upon the
       former, and the process goes on with increasing frequency With every
       fresh yielding to desire, the old impression is deepened, until the
       series of stored-up impressions becomes so strong that it forms a
       part of [one's] nature and becomes what we call habit.  Similar
       processes have produced all varieties of habits, good and bad, which
       we find in different people in different countries.  A kindred
       process produces what we call instinct in the lower animals.
       
       The stored-up impressions of one life are not lost by the death of
       the body, but will remain latent for some time and will become the
       causes of future desires in another life.  Each one of us is born
       with the stored-up impressions of [our] past birth, which will
       re-appear in the form of various tendencies, desires, and habits.
       This is the explanation of the wide variations we see in members of
       the same family, for which heredity alone, or even heredity plus
       environment, fails to account.  As the number of impressions
       increases, desires also increase, as has been said; if we allow the
       desires to rise up and play in our minds, they will take the forms of
       passion and anger, disturb mental peace, create new impressions, and
       be in turn the causes of fresh desires.  Thus, there is no hope of
       controlling the mind by mere gratification of desires.  There is no
       hope of satiating the craving for enjoyment by getting the objects of
       pleasures, this is simply putting fuel on fire, or oil on flames.
       The more we enjoy, the more will desires increase.  Foolish people,
       who have never analyzed their minds, indulge their desires and seek
       pleasure from outside objects.  No one has succeeded in attaining
       self-control by being a slave to desires, nor has any one become free
       from desires by gratifying them.  Therefore, a Yogi says: "As fire is
       not quenched by butter, so the fire of desire will never be put out
       by the objects of pleasure.  The more butter is poured on a fire, the
       more it will flare up; similarly, the more the objects of desire are
       indulged, the more the desires will increase.  If a person were to
       possess all the objects upon this earth, still [one's] greed would
       not stop, [one] would seek something more."  Do you suppose that a
       [person] who works hard to become a millionaire will ever be
       satisfied with [one's] possessions and cease to acquire more? [That
       person] will go on seeking to add to them as long as [one] will live.
       A poor [person] desires to be rich, a rich [person] desires to be a
       millionaire, and a millionaire wants to be a multi-millionaire, and
       so on; where is there any rest?  Where is there happiness?  When will
       [one's] thirst for possessions or enjoyment cease?  Will [one] ever
       acquire control over [one's] mind?  Perhaps not in this life.
       
       Thirst for enjoyment is the real disease in us; its various symptoms
       are passions, ambition, pride, hatred, jealousy, anger, etc.
       Tremendous mental strength and will-power are required to control the
       restless mind from taking the forms of waves of passion and anger.
       The perfect restlessness of the mind of an ordinary person who is the
       slave to [their] desires and passions has been vividly described by a
       Yogi, the poet could not find a better illustration than to compare
       it with a monkey, who is restless by nature, then thinking this was
       not quite enough, [that poet] added drunken monkey, stung by a
       scorpion.  When any one is stung by a scorpion, [one] jumps about
       from place to place for nearly two days, so you can imagine the
       restlessness of that poor monkey; still the poet found something
       lacking in the simile, so [they] completed it by saying: "At last the
       monkey was possessed by a demon."  Is there any expression by which
       we can describe the wretched state of that poor monkey?  Such is the
       ordinary state of our mind.  Naturally it is restless, but it becomes
       more so when it drinks the wine of ambition, still more when it is
       stung by the scorpion of jealousy; but the climax is reached when the
       demon of pride enters the mind and takes possession of it.  In such a
       case, how difficult it is to bring the mind under control.  To
       conquer mind is more difficult than to conquer the whole world.
       [That person] is the greatest hero and the real conqueror of the
       world who has conquered [their] own mind.  "[The person] that ruleth
       [their own] spirit is greater than he who taketh a city."  A Yogi
       says: "If one [person] conquers in battle a thousand times a thousand
       [other people], and if another conquers [their own self, then the
       latter] is the greatest of conquerors."  Therefore we should pay
       special attention to the study of the mind; we should learn to
       analyze its nature and constantly watch over its various
       modifications, trying to develop and strengthen the will-power.
       
       A Yogi develops [their] will-power by daily practice; [one] rouses up
       the higher powers and continues to fight against [one's] greatest
       enemies with firmness and determination until [one] accomplishes
       [this] end.  Perfect self-control of a Yogi is that state of mind
       where no desires or passions of any kind disturb the peace and
       tranquillity of [one's] soul.  Such a state can be acquired more
       easily by removing the bubbles of desires before they take the wave
       form of passions, that is, by attacking them while they are in their
       weak state.  This can be done either by right discrimination of the
       nature of desire or by comparing the transitory pleasure which
       results from our contact with the objects of senses, with the serene,
       peaceful mind which is undisturbed by desires or passions.  We should
       also remember that the highest ideal of our life is not pleasure of
       the senses, nor slavery to desires and passions, but the attainment
       of mastery over the lower self, and the manifestation of the supreme
       Self.
       
       There is another way of obtaining self-control, through concentration
       and meditation.  Concentrate your mind upon the supreme Self and do
       not let it be disturbed by any other thought or desire at that time.
       Those who have read the Light of Asia will remember that when Buddha
       sat in meditation under the Bo tree all the dormant impressions began
       to rise in his mind.  They are described as the attendants of Mara,
       the personified evil thought.  But Buddha said: "It is better to die
       on the battlefield while fighting with enemy than to be defeated and
       forced to live like a slave, seeking little bits of sense pleasures
       and enjoyments."  With such a strong determination Buddha became
       master of himself; whosoever will display similar determination of
       purpose and strength of character, will surely attain perfect
       self-control.  They alone who have acquired self-control enjoy
       eternal peace and happiness in this life and attain the goal of all
       religions, the knowledge of the divine Self.
       
       author: Abhedānanda, Swami, 1866-1939
 (TXT) detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Swami_Abhedananda
       tags:   ebook,non-fiction,spirit,yoga
       title:  The Complete Works of Swami Abhedānanda, Volume 1
 (HTM) source: https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.188738/page/n25/mode/1up
       
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