Chapter XIII
Developing One-pointedness
For novices in spiritual
practice, concentration appears to be very difficult to attain because, after
some progress is won, they do not usually keep up the practice. Instead, they
give it up; even though they do not have peace of mind on days when they desist
from spiritual practice.
Monkey meditation: harmful to spiritual progress
The mind plans and
executes innumerable deeds and roams over vast expanses, all in the twinkling
of an eye! It operates with unimaginable speed. It conceives an object and
dallies with it a little, but it soon discards it for another more attractive
object toward which it flees and about which it begins to worry!
If, however, the
aspirant does not struggle to achieve this one-pointedness but leaves the mind
to itself, following its vagaries from this to that and that to this, the
process deserves to be called monkey-meditation (markata dhyana) — a type of meditation that is indeed
very harmful to spiritual progress.
Force the mind to be one-pointed
In short, the chief
purpose of concentration and meditation is to minimize the travels of the mind
and force it to stay in one place. Holding it on that fixed stage, one should
continue the spiritual practice for a long time. Then there is no limit to the
peace and joy that one can have.
For example, when you
meditate on a table, your thoughts dwell on the wood, the size and measurements,
the style, the mode of manufacture, etc. No other thought pertaining to
anything else should be allowed. If the thought hovers round a cot, the idea of
a table becomes hazy, and the cot is also imagined incompletely. Both get
confused.
The state of mind must
be single pointed. So too, when the Lord’s form is meditated upon, the mind
must dwell upon the form of each part and its beauty and splendor, and these
ideas must be coordinated and combined into the complete picture.
That is the modus
operandi of meditation. Persistent performance of this meditation will result
in the emergence of a particular form. Contemplating on that form, looking at
it and seeing it for days and days, finally a stage will be reached when the
form will disappear, and you will forget yourself. That is the super-conscious
(samadhi) stage.
In that stage, if one
feeling or ideation alone persists, it is called the superconscious state with
ideation (savikalpa-samadhi).
If no feeling or thought persists, it becomes what Patanjali, in the text on
raja-yoga (Rajayoga-sastra),
designated as the end of ideation (bhava-nasana).
While doing meditation,
the mind should not be allowed to wander away from the target. Whenever it
flies off at a tangent, it must be led back to the form meditated upon.
Finally, if you so
desire, all things can be subsumed in that form itself. Nevertheless, only one
form must be meditated upon in the beginning. You should not change daily from
one to another. Again, during the spiritual practice, you should not indulge in
thoughts about things you do not like, that cause pain, or that shake your
faith. If any such peep in, learn gradually to welcome them as beneficial and
seek to grasp the good in them, instead of the bad.
Introspection
Swami has elaborately dealt with “single
pointedness” in meditation, in today’s post.
Whether it is Bhakti Marga or
Dhyana/Jnana Marga, this is the stage after which the real meditation takes
off.
Mind runs into 1000 different thoughts
because of the factors that influence our mind, broadly understood as our
vasanas or deep rooted impressions and our attachment (Raga or Dvesha, Positive
or negative attachment).
That is why, in all path, at the initial
stages, an object is given as our goal, whether it is the enchanting form of Krishna
in path of devotion or it is Jyothi or light, in the path of Jnana or any other
object.
This is the intermediate stage in
meditation process and only after the single pointed devotion is achieved, the
real dhyana, the real experience in meditation begins to unfold itself.
Swami Rama has clearly given the difference between Dharana (Single pointed meditation) and Dhyana ( the real expansion that takes place once Dharana is achieved.
He says,
“There is difference in
dhyana and dharana. Dharana means making mind one pointed. Dhyana means
expanding that one-pointed mind to Universality. Dhyana is expansion. Dharana
is narrowing down.
When all the waves of
the ocean are swallowed by one wave that is called Dharana. You see. When there
are no desires, no thoughts disturbing your one thought, which is thought of
determination, that is called dhyana. Dhyana means expansion. That expansion
should lead you to the Eternal, that leads you to samadhi.”
Love.