“Perfection is the true aim of
all culture, the spiritual and psychic, the mental, the vital and it must be
the aim of our physical culture also. If our seeking is for a total perfection
of the being, the physical part of it cannot be left aside; for the body is the
material basis, the body is the instrument which we have to use. Sar ̄ıram khalu
dharmasa ̄dhanam, says the old Sanskrit adage, the body is the means of
fulfilment of dharma, and dharma means every ideal which we can propose to
ourselves and the law of its working out and its action.
A total perfection is the
ultimate aim which we set before us, for our ideal is the Divine Life which we
wish to create here, the life of the Spirit fulfilled on earth, life
accomplishing its own spiritual transformation even here on earth in the
conditions of the material universe. That cannot be unless the body too
undergoes a transformation, unless its action and functioning attain to a
supreme capacity and the perfection which is possible to it or which can be made
possible.”
The Supramental Manifestation,
SABCL, Vol. 16, p. 5
Supramental Influence in the Cells
Yet Light is there; it stands at Nature’s doors:
It holds a torch to lead the traveller in.
It holds a torch to lead the traveller in.
It waits to be kindled in our secret cells;
It is a star lighting an ignorant sea,
A lamp upon our poop piercing the night.
It is a star lighting an ignorant sea,
A lamp upon our poop piercing the night.
Sri Aurobindo, Savitri
Mother, how can the functioning of the body “attain
to a supreme capacity”?
Precisely by transformation.
This implies a total transformation. Sri Aurobindo speaks about it later in
what follows.
For the moment, our body is
simply a doubtful improvement on the animal body, for if we have gained from a
certain point of view, we have lost from another. It is certain that from the
point of view of purely physical capacities many animals are superior to us.
Unless by a special culture and transformation we succeed in really
transforming our capacities, it could be said that from the point of view of
strength and muscular power a tiger or a lion is far superior to us. From the
point of view of agility a monkey is far superior to us; and, for instance, a
bird can travel without needing any exterior mechanism or plane, which is not
yet possible for us... and so on. And we are bound by the animal necessities of
the functioning of our organs; so long as we depend, for instance, on material
food, on absorbing matter in such a crude form, we shall be quite inferior
animals.
Therefore, I don’t want to
anticipate what we are going to read, but all this purely animal functioning of
our body, all this part which is exactly the same as in animal life — that we
depend for life on the circulation of the blood and to have blood we need to
eat, and so on, and all that this implies — these are terrible limitations and
bondages! As long as material life depends on that, it is obvious that we won’t
be able to divinise our life. So, we must assume that animality in the human
being should be replaced by another source of life, and this is quite
conceivable — not only conceivable but partially realisable; and this is
obviously the aim we ought to set before ourselves if we want to transform
matter and make it capable of expressing divine qualities.
In the very, very old traditions
— there was a tradition more ancient than the Vedic and the Chaldean which must
have been the source of both — in that ancient tradition there is already
mention of a “glorious body” which would be plastic enough to be transformed at
every moment by the deeper consciousness: it would express that consciousness,
it would have no fixity of form. It mentioned luminosity: the constituent
matter could become luminous at will. It mentioned a sort of possibility of
weightlessness which would allow the body to move about in the air only by the
action of will-power and by certain processes of control of the inner energy,
and so on. Much has been said about these things.
I don’t know if
there ever were beings on earth who had partially realised this, but in a very
small way there have been partial instances of one thing or another, examples
which go to prove that it is possible. And following up this idea, one could go
so far as to conceive of the replacement of material organs and their functioning
as it now is, by centres of concentration of force and energy which would be
receptive to the higher forces and which, by a kind of alchemy, would use them
for the necessities of life and the body. We already speak of the different
“centres” in the body — this knowledge is very widespread among people who have
practised yoga — but these centres could be perfected to the point where they
replace the different organs by a direct action of the higher energy and
vibrations on matter. Those who have practised occultism well enough, in its
most integral form, it could be said, know the process of materialisation of
subtle energies and can put them in contact with physical vibrations. Not only
is it something that can be done, but it is something which is done. And
all that is a science, a science which must itself be perfected, completed, and
which will obviously be used for the creation and setting in action of new
bodies which will be able to manifest the supramental life in the material
world.
But, as Sri Aurobindo
says, before this can be done, it is good to utilise all that we have in order
to increase and make more exact the control of physical activities. It is very
obvious that those who practise physical culture scientifically and with
coordination acquire a control over their bodies that’s unimaginable for
ordinary people. When the Russian gymnasts came here, we saw with what ease
they did exercises which for an ordinary man are impossible, and they did them
as if it was the simplest thing in the world; there was not even the least sign
of effort! Well, that mastery is already a great step towards the
transformation of the body. And these people who, I could say, are materialists
by profession, used no spiritual method in their education; it was solely by
material means and an enlightened use of human will that they had achieved this
result. If they had added to this a spiritual knowledge and power, they could
have achieved an almost miraculous result.... Because of the false ideas
prevalent in the world, we don’t usually see the two things together, spiritual
mastery and material mastery, and so one is always incomplete without the
other; but this is exactly what we want to do and what Sri Aurobindo is going
to explain: if the two are combined, the result can reach a perfection that’s
unthinkable for the ordinary human mind, and this is what we want to attempt.
(CWM,
Volume 9, Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust, Puducherry)
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