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Re: [meditation-266] Meditation

From: Frank Y.
Sent on: Tuesday, May 25, 2010, 10:56 AM
Wow - this is simply and beautifully explained?yet very inspiring. It clarifies a lot. Unfortunately, the word in meditation in the English language has so many meanings - as many as cults/traditions or even as many as people. If you close your eyes and think anything (repeat mantra, count breath, say a spiritual statement of any religion or guru)?or even not think anything at all - it is called meditation. I think the best way is the one that works for you, and then change it to a better one if and when you change?to?suit the new you.

On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 10:34 PM, Stefan <[address removed]> wrote:
?

There are two words used in English to express the Indian idea of?dhyana, ''meditation'' and ''contemplation''.???Meditation?means properly the concentration of the mind on a single train of ideas which work out a single subject.??Contemplation?means regarding mentally a single object, image, idea so that the knowledge about the object, image or idea may arise naturally in the mind by force of the concentration.? Both these things are forms of dhyana, for the principle of dhyana is mental concentration whether in thought, vision or knowledge. There are other forms of dhyana. There is a passage in which Vivekananda advises you to stand back from your thoughts, let them occur in your mind as they will and simply observe them and see what they are. This may be called concentration in self-observation.

This form leads to another, the emptying of all thought out of the mind so as to leave it a sort of pure vigilant blank on which the divine knowledge may come and imprint itself, undisturbed by the inferior thoughts of the ordinary human mind and with the clearness of a writing in white chalk on a blackboard.? You will find that the Gita speaks of this rejection of all mental thought as one of the methods of yoga and even the method it seems to prefer.? This may be called the dhyana of liberation, as it frees the mind from slavery to the mechanical process of thinking and allows it to think or not to think, as it pleases and when it pleases, or to choose its own thoughts or else to go beyond thought to the pure perception of Truth called in our philosophy Vijnana.

Meditation is the easiest process for the human mind, but the narrowest in its results; contemplation more difficult, but greater; self-observation and liberation from the chains of Thought the most difficult of all, but the widest and greatest in its fruits.? One can choose any of them according to one's bent and capacity.

The perfect method is to use them all, each in its own place and for its own object; but this would need a fixed faith and firm patience and a great energy of Will in the self-application to the yoga.

Sri Aurobindo