All Life Is Yoga: The Inward Movement In Yoga

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All Life Is Yoga: The Inward Movement In Yoga
Schriftart:Kleiner AaGrößer Aa

Omsriaurobindomira




All



Life



Is



Yoga



“All life is Yoga.” – Sri Aurobindo





The Inward Movement

In Yoga



Sri Aurobindo | The Mother








SRI AUROBINDO

DIGITAL EDITION










Copyright 2019



AURO MEDIA

Verlag und Fachbuchhandel

Wilfried Schuh



eBook Design








SRI AUROBINDO DIGITAL EDITION

Germany, Berchtesgaden



ALL LIFE IS YOGA

The Inward Movement in Yoga

 Selections from the Works of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother Second edition 2019 ISBN 978-3-937701-90-5








© Photos and selections of the works of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother:

Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust

Puducherry, India








Flower on the cover:

Ipomoea cairica.

 Light rose purple or light mauve. Spiritual significance and explanation given by the Mother: 

Detachment from all that is not the Divine

 A single occupation, a single aim, a single joy – the Divine.





Publisher’s Note



This is one in a series of some e-books created by SRI AUROBINDO DIGITAL EDITION and published by AURO MEDIA under the title

All Life Is Yoga

. Our effort is to bring together, from Sri Aurobindo and the Mother, simple passages with a practical orientation on specific subjects, so that everyone may feel free to choose a book according to his inner need. The topics cover the whole field of human activity, because true spirituality is not the rejection of life but the art of perfecting life.



While the passages from Sri Aurobindo are in the original English, most of the passages from the Mother (selections from her talks and writings) are translations from the original French. We must also bear in mind that the excerpts have been taken out of their original context and that a compilation, in its very nature, is likely to have a personal and subjective approach. A sincere attempt, however, has been made to be faithful to the vision of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. These excerpts are by no means exhaustive.



Bringing out a compilation from the writings of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother, which have a profound depth and wideness unique, is a difficult task. The compiler’s subjective tilt and preferences generally result in highlighting some aspects of the issues concerned while the rest is by no means less significant. Also without contexts of the excerpts the passages reproduced may not fully convey the idea – or may be misunderstood or may reduce a comprehensive truth into what could appear like a fixed principle.



The reader may keep in mind this inherent limitation of compilations; compilations are however helpful in providing an introduction to the subject in a handy format. They also give the readers a direct and practical feel of some of the profound issues and sometimes a mantric appeal, musing on which can change one’s entire attitude to them.



The excerpts from the writings of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother carry titles and captions chosen by the editor, highlighting the theme of the excerpts and, whenever possible, borrowing a phrase from the text itself. The sources of the excerpts are given at the end of each issue.



We hope these compilations will inspire the readers to go to the complete works of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother and will help them to mould their lives and their environments towards an ever greater perfection.



“True spirituality is not to renounce life, but to make life perfect with a Divine Perfection.” – The Mother



* * *





Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Publisher’s Note

Quotation from Sri Aurobindo

THE INWARD MOVEMENT IN YOGA

1. Our Outer Life

2. Reversal of Consciousness

3. The Inward Movement

4. An Indispensable Step for Yoga

5. It leads to True Universality – Not Imprisonment in the Personal Self

6. How to Develop the Inner Consciousness

7. Some Guidance

8. More Guidance

9. Entry in the Inmost Being

10. Awakening of the Inner Being in Sleep

11. Examples of Inner Consciousness

12. Results of Entry

APPENDIX

References

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Start Reading










Sri Aurobindo





Man lives mostly in his surface mind, life and body but there is an inner being within him with greater possibilities to which he has to awake – for it is only a very restricted influence from it that he receives now and that pushes him to a constant pursuit of a greater beauty, harmony, power and knowledge. The first process of Yoga is therefore to open the ranges of this inner being and to live from there outward, governing his outward life by an inner light and force. In doing so he discovers in himself his true soul which is not this outer mixture of mental, vital and physical elements but something of the Reality behind them, a spark from the one Divine Fire. He has to learn to live in his soul and purify and orientate by its drive towards the Truth the rest of the nature. There can follow afterwards an opening upward and descent of a higher principle of the Being. — Sri Aurobindo



* * *





THE INWARD MOVEMENT IN YOGA






Chapter 1

Our Outer Life

At the Basis of Our Outward Existence



Words of Sri Aurobindo



It is a mistake to think that we live physically only or only with the outer mind and life. We are all the time living and acting on other planes of consciousness, meeting others there and acting upon them, and what we do and feel and think there, the forces we gather, the results we prepare have an incalculable importance and effect, unknown to us, upon our outer life. Not all of it comes through, and what comes through takes another form in the physical – though sometimes there is an exact correspondence; but this little is at the basis of our outward existence. All that we become and do and bear in the physical life is prepared behind the veil within us. It is therefore of immense importance for a Yoga which aims at the transformation of life to grow conscious of what goes on within these domains, to be master there and be able to feel, know and deal with the secret forces that determine our destiny and our internal and external growth or decline.



*





External Personality and the Real Self



Words of Sri Aurobindo



...this little mind, vital and body which we call ourselves is only a surface movement and not our “self” at all. It is an external bit of personality put forward for one brief life and for the play of the Ignorance. It is equipped with an ignorant mind stumbling about in search of fragments of truth, an ignorant vital rushing about in search of fragments of pleasure, an obscure and mostly subconscious physical receiving the impacts of things and suffering rather than possessing a resultant pain or pleasure. All that is accepted until the mind gets disgusted and starts looking about for the real Truth of itself and things, the vital gets disgusted and begins wondering whether there is not such a thing as real bliss and the physical gets tired and wants liberation from itself and its pains and pleasures. Then it is possible for this little ignorant bit of surface personality to get back to its real Self...

 



The real Self is not anywhere on the surface but deep within and above. Within is the soul supporting an inner mind, inner vital, inner physical in which there is a capacity for universal wideness and with it for the things now asked for, – direct contact with the Truth of self and things, taste of a universal bliss, liberation from the imprisoned smallness and sufferings of the gross physical body. Even in Europe the existence of something behind the surface is now very frequently admitted, but its nature is mistaken and it is called subconscient or subliminal, while really it is very conscious in its own way and not subliminal but only behind the veil.



*





A Fear of the Materialistic Thinker



Words of Sri Aurobindo



The materialistic thinker, erecting an opposition between the extrovert and the introvert, holds up the extrovert attitude for acceptance as the only safety: to go inward is to enter into darkness or emptiness or to lose the balance of the consciousness and become morbid; it is from outside that such inner life as one can construct is created, and its health is assured only by a strict reliance on its wholesome and nourishing outer sources, – the balance of the personal mind and life can only be secured by a firm support on external reality, for the material world is the sole fundamental reality. This may be true for the physical man, the born extrovert, who feels himself to be a creature of outward Nature; made by her and dependent on her, he would lose himself if he went inward: for him there is no inner being, no inner living. But the introvert of this distinction also has not the inner life; he is not a seer of the true inner self and of inner things, but the small mental man who looks superficial

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