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PEOPLE are apt to think
that meditation to be successful must be accompanied by some astral
phenom- enon-seeing forms, colours, hearing sounds, bells, and so
forth. Even some purely physical sensations-a shiver along the spine,
a tingling in the finger tips-those examples have come to me, and
they are hailed with delight and proclaimed on the housetops, to
the dismay of those who have had no such experiences, and therefore
consider their own meditations as failures.
Surely, such trivial and often foolish manifestations
do not constitute a suc- cessful meditation. They are rather an
obstacle, because they draw the attention away from the inner realities.
It is better to see and hear nothing on the psychic planes, so that
the consciousness, wholly turned inwards, may reach communion with
the Divine and gradually unify the personal self with the Ego consciousness.
Those who say they can see no results are sometimes
more successful than they imagine, for those near and dear to them
see them grow in patient understanding, in greater peace; and that
is a proof that the intuitional principle, the buddhi, as we say
in Theosophy, is being slowly released in meditation and is filtering
down into the brain consciousness.
Let us now consider a few of the requirements
for successful meditation. The first is that we shall be thoroughly
convinced of the creative power of thought. Unless we have the conviction
that we are actually doing something, meditation will be a mere
form. We profess to believe in the power of thought, we speak about
it, we teach it, but the way we forget all about it when difficulties
confront us and indulge in depressing or destructive thoughts, in
worries great and small, shows that it is mere lip-belief. It reminds
me of the people who go to church, or the temple, and so on, as
a matter of course, singing hymns or repeating prayers, and then
go back home to their ordinary and usual lives, forgetting all about
it.
I have often wished we could see the astral and
mental creatures we send out into the world. But it is perhaps merciful
that we do not, for the sense of our responsibility might crush
us.
So in order to meditate successfully, we
must be convinced that it is a powerful.
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