|
The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali
The Threads of Union
1. on
Contemplations
2. on Spiritual Disciplines
3. on Divine Powers
4. on Realizations
Before
beginning any spiritual text it is customary
to clear the mind of all distracting
thoughts, to calm the breath and to purify
the heart.
1.1 Now,
instruction in Union.
1.2. Union is restraining the
thought-streams natural to the mind.
1.3. Then the seer dwells in his own nature.
1.4. Otherwise he is of the same form as the
thought-streams.
1.5. The thought-streams are five-fold,
painful and not painful.
1.6. Right knowledge, wrong knowledge,
fancy, sleep and memory.
1.7. Right knowledge is inference, tradition
and genuine cognition.
1.8. Wrong knowledge is false, illusory,
erroneous beliefs or notions.
1.9. Fancy is following after word-knowledge
empty of substance.
1.10. Deep sleep is the modification of the
mind which has for its substratum
nothingness.
1.11. Memory is not allowing mental
impressions to escape.
1.12. These thought-streams are controlled
by practice and non-attachment.
1.13. Practice is the effort to secure
steadiness.
1.14. This practice becomes well-grounded
when continued with reverent devotion and
without interruption over a long period of
time.
1.15. Desirelessness towards the seen and
the unseen gives the consciousness of
mastery.
1.16. This is signified by an indifference
to the three attributes, due to knowledge of
the Indweller.
1.17. Cognitive meditation is accompanied by
reasoning, discrimination, bliss and the
sense of 'I am.'
1.18. There is another meditation which is
attained by the practice of alert mental
suspension until only subtle impressions
remain.
1.19. For those beings who are formless and
for those beings who are merged in unitive
consciousness, the world is the cause.
1.20. For others, clarity is preceded by
faith, energy, memory and equalminded
contemplation.
1.21. Equalminded contemplation is nearest
to those whose desire is most ardent.
1.22. There is further distinction on
account of the mild, moderate or intense
means employed.
1.23. Or by surrender to God.
1.24. God is a particular yet universal
indweller, untouched by afflictions,
actions, impressions and their results.
1.25. In God, the seed of omniscience is
unsurpassed.
1.26. Not being conditioned by time, God is
the teacher of even the ancients.
1.27. God's voice is
Om.
1.28. The repetition of
Om
should be made with an understanding of its
meaning.
1.29. From that is gained introspection and
also the disappearance of obstacles.
1.30. Disease, inertia, doubt, lack of
enthusiasm, laziness, sensuality,
mind-wandering, missing the point,
instability- these distractions of the mind
are the obstacles.
1.31. Pain, despair, nervousness, and
disordered inspiration and expiration are
co-existent with these obstacles.
1.32. For the prevention of the obstacles,
one truth should be practiced constantly.
1.33. By cultivating friendliness towards
happiness and compassion towards misery,
gladness towards virtue and indifference
towards vice, the mind becomes pure.
1.34. Optionally, mental equanimity may be
gained by the even expulsion and retention
of energy.
1.35. Or activity of the higher senses
causes mental steadiness.
1.36. Or the state of sorrowless Light.
1.37. Or the mind taking as an object of
concentration those who are freed of
compulsion.
1.38. Or depending on the knowledge of
dreams and sleep.
1.39. Or by meditation as desired.
1.40. The mastery of one in Union extends
from the finest atomic particle to the
greatest infinity.
1.41. When the agitations of the mind are
under control, the mind becomes like a
transparent crystal and has the power of
becoming whatever form is presented. knower,
act of knowing, or what is known.
1.42. The argumentative condition is the
confused mixing of the word, its right
meaning, and knowledge.
1.43. When the memory is purified and the
mind shines forth as the object alone, it is
called non-argumentative.
1.44. In this way the meditative and the
ultra-meditative having the subtle for their
objects are also described.
1.45. The province of the subtle terminates
with pure matter that has no pattern or
distinguishing mark.
1.46. These constitute seeded
contemplations.
1.47. On attaining the purity of the
ultra-meditative state there is the pure
flow of spiritual consciousness.
1.48. Therein is the faculty of supreme
wisdom.
1.49. The wisdom obtained in the higher
states of consciousness is different from
that obtained by inference and testimony as
it refers to particulars.
1.50. The habitual pattern of thought stands
in the way of other impressions.
1.51. With the suppression of even that
through the suspension of all modifications
of the mind, contemplation without seed is
attained.
End Part One.
Part Two - On
Spiritual Disciplines
2.1 Austerity,
the study of sacred texts, and the
dedication of action to God constitute the
discipline of Mystic Union.
2.2 This discipline is practised for the
purpose of acquiring fixity of mind on the
Lord, free from all impurities and
agitations, or on One's Own Reality, and for
attenuating the afflictions.
2.3 The five afflictions are ignorance,
egoism, attachment, aversion, and the desire
to cling to life.
2.4 Ignorance is the breeding place for all
the others whether they are dormant or
attenuated, partially overcome or fully
operative.
2.5 Ignorance is taking the non-eternal for
the eternal, the impure for the pure, evil
for good and non-self as self.
2.6 Egoism is the identification of the
power that knows with the instruments of
knowing.
2.7 Attachment is that magnetic pattern
which clusters in pleasure and pulls one
towards such experience.
2.8 Aversion is the magnetic pattern which
clusters in misery and pushes one from such
experience.
2.9 Flowing by its own energy, established
even in the wise and in the foolish, is the
unending desire for life.
2.10 These patterns when subtle may be
removed by developing their contraries.
2.11 Their active afflictions are to be
destroyed by meditation.
2.12 The impressions of works have their
roots in afflictions and arise as experience
in the present and the future births.
2.13 When the root exists, its fruition is
birth, life and experience.
2.14 They have pleasure or pain as their
fruit, according as their cause be virtue or
vice.
2.15 All is misery to the wise because of
the pains of change, anxiety, and
purificatory acts.
2.16 The grief which has not yet come may be
avoided.
2.17 The cause of the avoidable is the
superimposition of the external world onto
the unseen world.
2.18 The experienced world consists of the
elements and the senses in play. It is of
the nature of cognition, activity and rest,
and is for the purpose of experience and
realization.
2.19 The stages of the attributes effecting
the experienced world are the specialized
and the unspecialized, the differentiated
and the undifferentiated.
2.20 The indweller is pure consciousness
only, which though pure, sees through the
mind and is identified by ego as being only
the mind.
2.21 The very existence of the seen is for
the sake of the seer.
2.22 Although Creation is discerned as not
real for the one who has achieved the goal,
it is yet real in that Creation remains the
common experience to others.
2.23 The association of the seer with
Creation is for the distinct recognition of
the objective world, as well as for the
recognition of the distinct nature of the
seer.
2.24 The cause of the association is
ignorance.
2.25 Liberation of the seer is the result of
the dissassociation of the seer and the
seen, with the disappearance of ignorance.
2.26 The continuous practice of
discrimination is the means of attaining
liberation.
2.27 Steady wisdom manifests in seven
stages.
2.28 On the destruction of impurity by the
sustained practice of the limbs of Union,
the light of knowledge reveals the faculty
of discrimination.
2.29 The eight limbs of Union are
self-restraint in actions, fixed observance,
posture, regulation of energy, mind-control
in sense engagements, concentration,
meditation, and realization.
2.30 Self-restraint in actions includes
abstention from violence, from falsehoods,
from stealing, from sexual engagements, and
from acceptance of gifts.
2.31 These five willing abstentions are not
limited by rank, place, time or circumstance
and constitute the Great Vow.
2.32 The fixed observances are cleanliness,
contentment, austerity, study and
persevering devotion to God.
2.33 When improper thoughts disturb the
mind, there should be constant pondering
over the opposites.
2.34 Improper thoughts and emotions such as
those of violence- whether done, caused to
be done, or even approved of- indeed, any
thought originating in desire, anger or
delusion, whether mild medium or intense- do
all result in endless pain and misery.
Overcome such distractions by pondering on
the opposites.
2.35 When one is confirmed in non-violence,
hostility ceases in his presence.
2.36 When one is firmly established in
speaking truth, the fruits of action become
subservient to him.
2.37 All jewels approach him who is
confirmed in honesty.
2.38 When one is confirmed in celibacy,
spiritual vigor is gained.
2.39 When one is confirmed in
non-possessiveness, the knowledge of the why
and how of existence is attained.
2.40 From purity follows a withdrawal from
enchantment over one's own body as well as a
cessation of desire for physical contact
with others.
2.41 As a result of contentment there is
purity of mind, one-pointedness, control of
the senses, and fitness for the vision of
the self.
2.42 Supreme happiness is gained via
contentment.
2.43 Through sanctification and the removal
of impurities, there arise special powers in
the body and senses.
2.44 By study comes communion with the Lord
in the Form most admired.
2.45 Realization is experienced by making
the Lord the motive of all actions.
2.46 The posture should be steady and
comfortable.
2.47 In effortless relaxation, dwell
mentally on the Endless with utter
attention.
2.48 From that there is no disturbance from
the dualities.
2.49 When that exists, control of incoming
and outgoing energies is next.
2.50 It may be external, internal, or
midway, regulated by time, place, or number,
and of brief or long duration.
2.51 Energy-control which goes beyond the
sphere of external and internal is the
fourth level- the vital.
2.52 In this way, that which covers the
light is destroyed.
2.53 Thus the mind becomes fit for
concentration.
2.54 When the mind maintains awareness, yet
does not mingle with the senses, nor the
senses with sense impressions, then
self-awareness blossoms.
2.55 In this way comes mastery over the
senses.
End Part Two
Part Three -
On Divine Powers
3.1 One-pointedness is steadfastness of the
mind.
3.2 Unbroken continuation of that mental
ability is meditation.
3.3 That same meditation when there is only
consciousness of the object of meditation
and not of the mind is realization.
3.4 The three appearing together are
self-control.
3.5 By mastery comes wisdom.
3.6 The application of mastery is by stages.
3.7 The three are more efficacious than the
restraints.
3.8 Even that is external to the seedless
realization.
3.9 The significant aspect is the union of
the mind with the moment of absorption, when
the outgoing thought disappears and the
absorptive experience appears.
3.10 From sublimation of this union comes
the peaceful flow of unbroken unitive
cognition.
3.11 The
contemplative transformation of this is
equalmindedness, witnessing the rise and
destruction of distraction as well as one-pointedness
itself.
3.12 The mind
becomes one-pointed when the subsiding and
rising thought-waves are exactly similar.
3.13 In this
state, it passes beyond the changes of
inherent characteristics, properties and the
conditional modifications of object or
sensory recognition.
3.14 The object
is that which preserves the latent
characteristic, the rising characteristic or
the yet-to-be-named characteristic that
establishes one entity as specific.
3.15 The
succession of these changes in that entity
is the cause of its modification.
3.16 By
self-control over these three-fold changes
(of property, character and condition),
knowledge of the past and the future arises.
3.17 The sound
of a word, the idea behind the word, and the
object the idea signfies are often taken as
being one thing and may be mistaken for one
another. By self-control over their
distinctions, understanding of all languages
of all creatures arises.
3.18 By
self-control on the perception of mental
impressions, knowledge of previous lives
arises.
3.19 By
self-control on any mark of a body, the
wisdom of the mind activating that body
arises.
3.20 By
self-control on the form of a body, by
suspending perceptibility and separating
effulgence therefrom, there arises
invisibility and inaudibilty.
3.21 Action is
of two kinds, dormant and fruitful. By
self-control on such action, one portends
the time of death.
3.22 By
performing self-control on friendliness, the
strength to grant joy arises.
3.23 By
self-control over any kind of strength, such
as that of the elephant, that very strength
arises.
3.24 By
self-control on the primal activator comes
knowledge of the hidden, the subtle, and the
distant.
3.25 By
self-control on the Sun comes knowledge of
spatial specificities.
3.26 By
self-control on the Moon comes knowledge of
the heavens.
3.27 By
self-control on the Polestar arises
knowledge of orbits.
3.28 By
self-control on the navel arises knowledge
of the constitution of the body.
3.29 By
self-control on the pit of the throat one
subdues hunger and thirst.
3.30 By
self-control on the tube within the chest
one acquires absolute steadiness.
3.31 By
self-control on the light in the head one
envisions perfected beings.
3.32 There is
knowledge of everything from intuition.
3.33
Self-control on the heart brings knowledge
of the mental entity.
3.34 Experience
arises due to the inability of discerning
the attributes of vitality from the
indweller, even though they are indeed
distinct from one another. Self-control
brings true knowledge of the indweller by
itself.
3.35 This
spontaneous enlightenment results in
intuitional perception of hearing, touching,
seeing and smelling.
3.36 To the
outward turned mind, the sensory organs are
perfections, but are obstacles to
realization.
3.37 When the
bonds of the mind caused by action have been
loosened, one may enter the body of another
by knowledge of how the nerve-currents
function.
3.38 By
self-control of the nerve-currents utilising
the lifebreath, one may levitate, walk on
water, swamps, thorns, or the like.
3.39 By
self-control over the maintenance of breath,
one may radiate light.
3.40 By
self-control on the relation of the ear to
the ether one gains distant hearing.
3.41 By
self-control over the relation of the body
to the ether, and maintaining at the same
time the thought of the lightness of cotton,
one is able to pass through space.
3.42 By
self-control on the mind when it is
separated from the body- the state known as
the Great Transcorporeal- all coverings are
removed from the Light.
3.43 Mastery
over the elements arises when their gross
and subtle forms,as well as their essential
characteristics, and the inherent attributes
and experiences they produce, is examined in
self-control.
3.44 Thereby
one may become as tiny as an atom as well as
having many other abilities, such as
perfection of the body, and non-resistence
to duty.
3.45 Perfection
of the body consists in beauty, grace,
strength and adamantine hardness.
3.46 By
self-control on the changes that the
sense-organs endure when contacting objects,
and on the power of the sense of identity,
and of the influence of the attributes, and
the experience all these produce- one
masters the senses.
3.47 From that
come swiftness of mind, independence of
perception, and mastery over primoridal
matter.
3.48 To one who
recognizes the distinctive relation between
vitality and indweller comes omnipotence and
omniscience.
3.49 Even for
the destruction of the seed of bondage by
desirelessness there comes absolute
independence.
3.50 When
invited by invisible beings one should be
neither flattered nor satisfied, for there
is yet a possibility of ignorance rising up.
3.51 By
self-control over single moments and their
succession there is wisdom born of
discrimination.
3.52 From that
there is recognition of two similars when
that difference cannot be distinguished by
class, characteristic or position.
3.53 Intuition,
which is the entire discriminative
knowledge, relates to all objects at all
times, and is without succession.
3.54 Liberation
is attained when there is equal purity
between vitality and the indweller.
End Part Three
Part Four - On
Realizations
4.1 Psychic powers arise by birth, drugs,
incantations, purificatory acts or
concentrated insight.
4.2
Transformation into another state is by the
directed flow of creative nature.
4.3 Creative
nature is not moved into action by any
incidental cause, but by the removal of
obstacles, as in the case of a farmer
clearing his field of stones for irrigation.
4.4 Created
minds arise from egoism alone.
4.5 There being
difference of interest, one mind is the
director of many minds.
4.6 Of these,
the mind born of concentrated insight is
free from the impressions.
4.7 The
impressions of unitive cognition are neither
good nor bad. In the case of the others,
there are three kinds of impressions.
4.8 From them
proceed the development of the tendencies
which bring about the fruition of actions.
4.9 Because of
the magnetic qualities of habitual mental
patterns and memory, a relationship of cause
and effect clings even though there may be a
change of embodiment by class, space and
time.
4.10 The desire
to live is eternal, and the thought-clusters
prompting a sense of identity are
beginningless.
4.11 Being held
together by cause and effect, substratum and
object- the tendencies themselves disappear
on the dissolution of these bases.
4.12 The past
and the future exist in the object itself as
form and expression, there being difference
in the conditions of the properties.
4.13 Whether
manifested or unmanifested they are of the
nature of the attributes.
4.14 Things
assume reality because of the unity
maintained within that modification.
4.15 Even
though the external object is the same,
there is a difference of cognition in regard
to the object because of the difference in
mentality.
4.16 And if an
object known only to a single mind were not
cognized by that mind, would it then exist?
4.17 An object
is known or not known by the mind, depending
on whether or not the mind is colored by the
object.
4.18 The
mutations of awareness are always known on
account of the changelessness of its Lord,
the indweller.
4.19 Nor is the
mind self-luminous, as it can be known.
4.20 It is not
possible for the mind to be both the
perceived and the perceiver simultaneously.
4.21 In the
case of cognition of one mind by another, we
would have to assume cognition of cognition,
and there would be confusion of memories.
4.22
Consciousness appears to the mind itself as
intellect when in that form in which it does
not pass from place to place.
4.23 The mind
is said to perceive when it reflects both
the indweller (the knower) and the objects
of perception (the known).
4.24 Though
variegated by innumerable tendencies, the
mind acts not for itself but for another,
for the mind is of compound substance.
4.25 For one
who sees the distinction, there is no
further confusing of the mind with the self.
4.26 Then the
awareness begins to discriminate, and
gravitates towards liberation.
4.27
Distractions arise from habitual thought
patterns when practice is intermittent.
4.28 The
removal of the habitual thought patterns is
similar to that of the afflictions already
described.
4.29 To one who
remains undistracted in even the highest
intellection there comes the equalminded
realization known as The Cloud of Virtue.
This is a result of discriminative
discernment.
4.30 From this
there follows freedom from cause and effect
and afflictions.
4.31 The
infinity of knowledge available to such a
mind freed of all obscuration and property
makes the universe of sensory perception
seem small.
4.32 Then the
sequence of change in the three attributes
comes to an end, for they have fulfilled
their function.
4.33 The
sequence of mutation occurs in every second,
yet is comprehensible only at the end of a
series.
4.34 When the
attributes cease mutative association with
awarenessness, they resolve into dormancy in
Nature, and the indweller shines forth as
pure consciousness. This is absolute
freedom.
|