Dharamshala,
India: Photo by Anagha M.
India: Photo by Anagha M.
I teach a course
called Zen and the Executive Mind in one of the top business schools in India. Zen
means meditation and meditation is something to be practiced rather than
discussed; and naturally, practice of meditation is central to the course. A common
difficulty practitioners of meditation run into is their inability to achieve
inner silence – not just my students, but all meditators all over the world
face this problem. It is for this reason that one of the most frequently asked
questions about meditation is about the difficulty to control the mind, to
control the thoughts in the mind during meditation. In fact, as you move into
meditation, the mind appears to become more restless, more chaotic. It is only partly true though; the other part
is that normally we are not aware of the chaos in the mind, but in meditation
we become aware of it. In this short article, we are going to take a look at
how we can achieve inner silence in meditation and retain that inner silence
throughout the day.
One of the first
mistakes we make is to believe that the moment we sit down to meditate the mind
will immediately become quiet, still. Stillness of the mind is the end of
meditation, not its starting point. In the journey of meditation, thoughts are
going to be with us for a long, long time. In fact, even when we reach the highest
peaks of meditation, which happens only to deeply committed meditators,
thoughts will still be there in the mind. Meditation literature speaks of two
kinds of samadhi, the highest peak of meditation – savikalpa samadhi and
nirvikalpa samadhi. Even at the stage of savikalpa samadhi, vikalpas will be
there in the mind. That is what the word savikalpa samadhi means – samadhi with
vikalpas. In this state there still are thoughts, ideas, and so on in the mind,
though they do not disturb the meditator.
It is only in nirvikalpa samadhi that the mind becomes completely still,
silent. There are no more thoughts, no ideas, nothing, except pure awareness
itself. In that state, in the words of my parama guru, Swami Sivananda
Saraswati, “the mind loses its own consciousness and
becomes identical with the object of meditation”.
So if even in the lower samadhi the mind
has thoughts and ideas in it, how can we expect the mind to become still with a
few days or weeks of sitting in meditation, a few minutes a day? Our expectations
become our enemy, the enemy of our achieving meditative stillness.
For meditation is not something that we can
rush into, but something we gently float into, something that happens to us –
and happens on its own, like sleep that comes on its own. There is nothing we
can do to make it happen, except let it happen and surrender to it when it
happens. The more we struggle to make sleep happen to us, the more we try to
force sleep to come to us, the more it evades us. It happens when we relax,
when we let go of all struggles, all efforts. Exactly in the same way,
meditation happens when we let go of all efforts, all struggles, and do not
even wait for it, but just let go. There is no other way for meditation to
happen to us.
Yam esha vrinute tasya sa vivrunute tanum
svam – says the Up0anishad. It reveals itself only to the one whom it chooses,
even as a shy bride reveals her body only to the one whom she chooses for
herself. And the requirement to be chosen is to let go – let go of thoughts, of
worries, of plans, of the list of things to do, the deadlines.
And above all, to let go of the need to be
in control, for the time being at least. My years of experience with meditation
tells me that people who have a need to be always in control are the ones that
have the hardest time getting into meditation.
But what happens if you want to let go but
are not able to do it because thoughts keep coming into your mind? What happens
when you sit in meditation and try to let go of your worries, your thoughts,
your problems, all that keep you away from inner silence but instead of inner
silence, what you have is a mad, chaotic rush of thoughts and images, madder
and more chaotic than before you sat down to meditate?
Struggling to stop the thoughts is useless
because the struggle itself becomes another obstruction. Worrying about it is
useless, because the very worry becomes an obstruction. The only thing we can
do really is develop what masters call the witness attitude, sakshi bhava.
A book that influenced me deeply and changed
my life forever when I was in my early teens is Herman Hesse’s Siddhartha, the
story of a boy in ancient India, at the time of the Buddha, with the same name
Buddha had when he was a prince. Young Siddhartha joins numerous spiritual
traditions that flourished in India at that time, including that of Buddha,
meets Buddha personally, but he is not able to reach inner stillness.
Eventually, as an old man, towards the end of his life, while working as a ferry
man taking people across a river, it is by watching the river flowing by that
he finds inner silence.
That is exactly what we have to do. Thoughts
will be there when we sit down to meditate, there will worries, plans,
deadlines, all kinds of things. Rather than fighting them, just become a
watcher, a witness. You become Siddhartha and let your mind become the flowing
river. You become the sky and let your mind become the clouds floating by.
This can do wonders for you.
Yes, it will take time, but slowly you will
find the thoughts in your mind are losing their feverishness, a kind of serenity
is coming to them. It is like a torrent becoming a serene flow. From then on
the journey is smoother. And when you discover inner silence, you will find
there is nothing in existence more beautiful than that.
The Mundaka Upanishad has this hauntingly beautiful
mantra:
Dwa suparna sayuja sakhaya
Samanam vriksham parishaswajate;
Tayor anyah pippalam swadu atti
Anashnan anyo abhijakashiti.
There are two birds perched on a tree,
friends, always together; of these two, one keeps eating the sweet fruits of
the tree, the other keeps watching on.
As the Upanishad says, we are the bird that
keeps eating the fruits of the tree – the pleasant and unpleasant experiences
of life – and at the same time we are the bird that keeps on watching, uninvolved,
just witnessing. What is to be done in meditation is to become the bird that
watches on, at least for the duration of sitting in meditation.
Another help is to cultivate the daivi
sampad that the sixteenth chapter of the Gita speaks of – positive virtues such
as fearlessness, purity of mind, self-mastery, uprightness and so on. The Gita
advises us to develop samata – equanimity – in success and failure, while
dealing with pleasant and unpleasant people, with enemies and friends. That too
helps a lot. Patanjali speaks of the need to begin meditation by cultivating
the five yamas and the five niyamas – non-violence, truthfulness, non-stealing,
abstinence from over-indulgence, non-possessiveness, cleanliness, contentment,
discipline, self-study and surrender to existence.
What Inner Silence Can Do For Us
“When you are still, you find that your perception of life is at its
purest,” says Ron Rothbun, in The Way Is
Within. One of the first things inner stillness does for us is to make our
perceptions keener and clearer. This is true about mental perceptions as well
as about physical perceptions. I do not
think it needs to be explained that when our mind is disturbed, our perceptions
are distorted. The mind is like a mirror and everything we see, we see through
it, in it. Just as the distorted mirrors you find a village fair elongates or
flattens out or in other ways distort your image falling in them, when the mind
is restless, not at peace, all our perceptions are distorted. A case in point
is what one of my students did on a pilgrimage to Kailas-Manas Sarovar. He was
upset because he had to stay back at Manas and couldn’t proceed to Kailas and
when the tent in which he was staying at Manas caught fire, instead of pouring
water to douse it, he emptied a can of kerosene oil over it. Many of us have
made terrible road accidents because our mind was not still while driving.
Under pressure even great executives take wrong decisions. It has been known
for airport traffic control personnel to become the cause of airplane accidents
because their minds were upset under stress. The timeless Vedantic metaphor of
rajju-sarpa-bhranti is a beautiful example for how our perceptions are
distorted when the mind is not still. In semi-darkness, we see a piece of rope
lying on the floor and because we are afraid, the mind has lost its stillness,
we mistake it for a snake and scream in terror.
When your mind is still, it becomes easier to get into what modern
psychology calls the flow state. And similarly, when you get into the flow
state, your mind becomes still. In a way we can say flow is a state of still
mind. Flow is what sportsmen frequently speak of as the zone. In flow your
efficiencies increase manifold, you are ccompletely involved in what you are
doing, totally focused, entirely concentrated. Your mind experiences no
distractions, even when highly distracting events happen right next to you as
in the case of a neurosurgeon who remained focused on the brain surgery he was
doing in spite of the roof collapsing behind him. You have great inner clarity.
There are no confusions, no doubts. In flow you know exactly what needs to be
done, your perceptions attain absolute clarity. You feel absolutely challenged, fully engaged
and you experience a feeling of ecstasy, a sense of rapture, so that the work
itself becomes self-motivating, without a need for other rewards, as happens to
a mountaineer, for instance, when he tackles a dangerous cliff.
George Leonard, author of The
Ultimate Athlete, speaks of a sportsman’s experience of being in the zone,
in the flow state: “Long distance runner Michael Spino was training one rainy
day along dirt and asphalt. After the first mile, he realized something
extraordinary was happening; he had run the mile in four and a half minutes
with no sense of pain or exertion whatever. He ran on, carried by a huge
momentum. It was as if the wet roads, the oncoming cars, the honking horns did
not exist. Gradually, his body lost all weight and resistance. He became the
wind itself. Daydreams and fantasies disappeared. All that remained to remind
him of his own existence was “a feeling of guilt for being able to do this.”
What Spino is speaking about is the experience of countless people
engaged in all kinds of activities: an executive in the boardroom, a salesman
dealing with a customer, a teacher in the classroom, a cook in the kitchen, a
woodcutter splitting wood, a gardener mowing grass, people doing a million
other things. Because flow is a state available to us all, if only we can make
our mind still, have inner silence, while engaged in the activities of our
life.
Tibetan psychology, deep, profound, based on the insights of countless
yogis over millennia, speaks of our two minds: the lower mind that it calls sem
and the higher mind, rig. In the words of Sogyal Rinpoche, author of The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying,
sem is “the discursive, dualistic, thinking mind…that thinks, plots, desires,
manipulates, that flares up in anger, that creates and indulges in waves of
negative emotions and thoughts, that has to go on and on asserting, validating,
and confirming its existence by fragmenting, conceptualizing, and solidifying
experience.” Sem is the mind as we know it, the mind that masters liken to a
candle flame in an open doorway, constantly flickering, subject to every
passing external influence.
Apart from this mind, we also have what is called rig, the higher mind,
what Indian spiritual psychology calls prajna, chit, chiti – “the primordial,
pure, pristine awareness that is at once intelligent, cognizant, radiant, and
always awake.”
The wisdom of yoga, the wisdom of the east, teaches us that sem has no
intelligence and all intelligence belongs to rig. The intelligence of the
ordinary mind, the lower mind, of sem, is the intelligence of rig reflected on
it. And just as the reflection of the sky in a lake will be clear when the
water is clear and disturbed when the water is disturbed, when sem is still, it
can reflect the intelligence of rig beautifully and when it is disturbed, we
have either very little intelligence or confused intelligence. Inner stillness
is the state where our sem is still and reflects intelligence perfectly, giving
us keen perceptions, great imagination, superb creativity and sound memory.
Just one more thing. Life becomes beautiful, the world is beautiful,
only when our mind is still. When your mind is upset, say because you have just
received the pink slip, the beautiful sunset is no more beautiful, the
delightful movie is no more delightful, nor is the grand concert in the best
hall in the city any good. And when your mind is still, the entire world is
beautiful – a simple walk on grass becomes an unforgettable experience, sipping
coffee from a cup becomes wonderful and you are mesmerized by the calls of a
bird from a distant tree and the chirping of a cricket at night – which I can hear
at this moment!
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