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GREAT SYSTEMS OF YOGA
THE TEN ORIENTAL YOGAS
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CHAPTER ONE
THE TEN ORIENTAL YOGAS
THERE is great interest in the Western world at the present time on
the subject of Oriental Occultism, and very rightly so, for the time
has come for it to be blended in with the practical material
civilization which has been so wonderfully developed in the modern
world. There will be two benefits in this blending—more success in
the outer world and more peace in the inner life. The time has gone
for any of us—East or West—to think of Occultism as an escape from
material reality and responsibility into some vague inner condition
in which one retreats from all that material life stands for. Rather
it is concerned in the purpose voiced by Emerson when he wrote: "To
make in matter home for mind." To make of this world a place where
consciousness can enjoy to the full all the powers of its own mind
and
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at the same time discover that there is more to the mind than is
commonly known—that is practical Occultism.
To know how the mind works we cannot do better than turn to the
ancient writers on what is called yoga—looking at all the principal
ancient schools of yoga, not only one or two of them. Of these there
are seven well-known surviving schools in India today, and in
addition to these our survey of Oriental Occultism would be
incomplete without allusion to three others—the Persian Sufis, the
Buddhist "Noble Way," and the Chinese and Japanese Zen. This makes
ten in all.
Many are the modern teachers of practical occultism or yoga, but all
of them can be classed as especially devoted to the methods of one
or other of these modes of practice.
Why have we at the outset associated the word yoga with occultism?
Because yoga is the practice of occult powers—or rather the
discovery and use of those powers residing unseen in the depths of
the human mind. The practice could begin with the formula, "We are
only part alive," and from that standpoint proceed to investigate
the Introspectional Psychology of the ancients, which they said
united them—yoga means union—with the latent possibilities and
unseen actualities of and beyond the mind. The
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[paragraph continues] Introspectional Psychology, all the ancient
teachers asserted, is justified by its results; it works.
That it should have been developed in elder times, in very peaceful
times, in the Orient, was very natural. In those very settled days
there were whole classes of society who had leisure to give to these
matters. There were not only solitary and silent
hermit-investigators, but also teachers with small schools, and
travelling lecturers, and occasional conferences of teachers
organized by the ancient rulers. But nowadays we have a phase of
material activity, most fully developed in America and now invading
the Orient itself, which leaves people with little energy or time to
carry on the studies in Introspectional Psychology in which many
people formerly immersed themselves—in which they were often at
fault when they made the delights of the mind a substitute for the
valuable experience of the whole estate of man. This modern activity
is such that very often people have nervous breakdowns of various
kinds. Many must be the material achievements left unfulfilled
because of the collapse of those who could originate them but could
not bear the strain of carrying them to their completion.
It is into this field of sorrow, lit up only occasionally by
success, that the Oriental occultism can be brought for the
discovery and use of the inner resources
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of the mind, increasing the power and improving the machinery of
thought, emotion and the will. That peace and power are two aspects
of one principle is one of the chief discoveries of the Oriental
occultist—a discovery within the reach of all reasonable persons.
It is not to be thought, however, that the ancient teachers alluded
to are proposing some sort of magic as a substitute for our present
method of doing things through the mechanism of a healthy body. That
the magic exists is true, and there is a long list of "psychic
powers" which manifest themselves in various degrees quite naturally
as the process of yoga goes on, but the teachers mostly refer to
these as not of great value, and advise against making the mind a
"playground" for them. In India there are many who can exhibit
varieties of hallucinatory or hypnotic effects, and also telepathy,
psychometry, clairvoyance, clairaudience, levitation, astral
travelling, transportation and apport, and similar occult or magical
arts. Indeed, some people with very little education in other
respects have been specially trained in one or more of these
faculties and powers, so that they are able to astonish the tourist
and earn a living by exhibiting these feats. But the real yogīs are
not interested in these. They are interested in mastering
environment and finding the ethical and spiritual forces and
experiences
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which are not only immature but positively infantile in most people.
It will be asked: "Why do not these more perfect men use both the
higher powers and the magics?" The answer is, "They do. They use
these constantly, but they do not display them, for they know that
very many persons would be tempted out of the regular course of
their evolution by the glamour of these faculties and powers. And
many would use them as only another additional means for exploiting
their fellow men." As to such matters as applying a healing
influence for body and mind—these can be as well used in silence as
with any display. I remember that one very respected Hindu
occultist, when questioned on this point said that if highly
successful and convincing demonstrations of the occult powers were
given, most people would be overcome by modesty and would want to
lean upon the demonstrator, others would be frightened, others would
call it the work of the devil, and some who had not seen for
themselves would call it all a fraud—but on the other hand those who
sincerely practice the yoga will invariably have before long some
convincing experiences of their own, useful for their own private
encouragement and essential benefit.
In my book The Occult Training of the Hindus, published some years
ago in Madras, and recently
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reprinted there, I presented a brief survey of this subject,
resulting from my long residence in India, during which I was
chiefly interested in studying these matters. In that book I have
told of my acquaintance and friendship with many of these exponents
of yoga, and how I thus learned that all over the country there are
tens of thousands of people who give part of their day to the
pursuit of the methods of the ancient occult teachers, although they
are engaged in modern occupations. There is in India, I would say, a
vein of practicality in these matters which most Western persons
just do not understand.
In the present small volume, intended to bring these matters more to
the attention of the West, I am making use again of much of the
material in that book, without feeling it necessary to employ
quotation marks. This has been done considerably in Chapters 2 to 6.
Chapters 7 to 9 are entirely newly written.
Let us begin then with the statement that the seven well-known
varieties of yoga practice among the Hindus can be listed as
follows:—
1. The Rāja Yoga of Patanjali.
2. The Karma and Buddhi Yoga of Shrī Krishna.
3. The Gnyāna Yoga of Shrī Shankarāchārya.
4. Hatha Yoga.
5. Laya Yoga.
6. Bhakti Yoga.
7. Mantra Yoga.
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These seven can be classified in two groups—the first three being
called varieties of rāja-yoga and the last four varieties of hatha-yoga.
The adjective rāja means "kingly" because the man becomes king or
master of his own faculties. The last four emphasize the importance
of material aids, by working largely on the outside or on the
"terrestrial man," which is composed of the body along with its
bundle of habitual emotions and memories and knowledge.
The rāja-yogī maintains that the inner powers of the mind can never
be enhanced by any external means, but only by their own exercise.
Here the law of growth from within is paramount. By the use of
thought, thought grows. This is true also of love and the will.
There is no other way in which these growths can be obtained. A
realization of this fact sets the novice on his own feet, and cures
him at the outset of any tendency to lean or depend upon others,
even upon experts and teachers he may admire.
Still, this exercise can be hindered or at least made very difficult
by any bad condition of the body in such matters as nervous
disorders, irregular breathing, bad balance, and undue tension. The
hatha-yogīs of the more intellectual kind accede to the proposition
that all higher growth is from within, but still say "No rāja
without hatha" because they find that
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bodies generally require some preparation. The thorough-going
rāja-yogīs however, generally reply that there is rāja without hatha,
and in fact that rāja-yoga if properly done will itself put the body
in order, for the mind influences the body even if the body cannot
influence the mind. Still there is no harm, they often add, in just
a little hatha-yoga as well, provided that the aspirant does not
fall into a state of dependence on anything or any person, and does
not seek merely the comforts of the body, emotions and knowledge, or
make his purpose the increase of his power with a view to gain in
these three fields.
The term hatha-yoga, when used strictly, refers specifically only to
the fourth school on our list, for it is specially devoted to
breathing practices, dealing with the incoming and outgoing—or ha
and tha breaths. But the term is quite elastic and portions of the
remaining three groups of teachings are generally included, to
supplement the breathing exercises of the hatha-yoga schools.
Inasmuch as all the four schools operate by external means they are
all classable as in the general field of hatha-yoga, as they all
work on the body and environment.
One of the great gains of modern yoga is that the "hair shirt" has
been entirely given up. The new race is not afraid of the world. It
does not regard it as evil or of the devil. Modern man can trust
himself
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amidst all the lures. He can handle them and be their master. He
knows his own powers and can very well judge the results of his use
of them. He can envisage a metaphysical goal and also be aware of
the metaphysical in the physical as he goes along. He feels that
whatever he may gain by any exercise or experience in his will, his
goodwill and his intelligence is all to the good, quite apart from
any so-called material gain, and there is no objection to that in
addition. If he is caught up in any interests, enthusiasms or
excitements—as he is—he knows not to go too far, and that he will
come out of them richer in character, even if a bit scarred. He
knows that time will heal all the wounds and ripen the character. So
in the field of yoga today he is not in fear of missing anything,
nor dependent upon a particular guide, but will choose his exercises
with all the natural confidence with which he can choose a good
cigar. He asks for information, not gifts, nor orders, and here the
Orient spreads it out before him for his choice. According to
individual temperament each will choose, and then travel in the way
that suits him best.
from: Great Systems of Yoga