Paramahansa Yogananda - Teaching the airplane route
by Life Positive
Paramahansa Yogananda is universally known for his book Autobiography Of A Yogi, which transformed several lives and which for many westerners has been the first contact with spirituality. A spiritual classic in its own right, this perennial bestseller talks of miracles and godmen, of Indian wisdom and practices. All through, however, Yogananda's generous, humane spirit shines forth.
It was in the USA that he made his mark as a master, and stayed on,
unlike Swami Vivekananda who stormed the country but returned to India. There,
he popularized the ancient tradition of Kriya Yoga , even tracing its roots to the Bhagavad Gita and the teachings
of Jesus Christ. During his 30 years in the USA, he founded the Self-Realization
Fellowship and established many SRF
centers to spread his basic philosophy of divine love and goal of self-realization.
Born Mukunda Lal Ghosh in 1893, in Gorakhpur, India, he had a strong
desire to go to the Himalayas since early childhood. But he met his
guru, Sri Yukteshwar
Giri, a disciple of Lahiri
Mahasaya , in the streets of Varanasi. After 10 years of discipleship
in Giri's ashram in Serampore, West Bengal, Mukunda joined the
monastic order in 1915. He entered mahasamadhi, a yogi's final
conscious exit from the body, in Los Angeles. In India his work and
mission is carried on by the Yogoda Satsang
Society with its headquarters in Ranchi. Excerpts from his book
Autobiography of a Yogi:
THE SCIENCE OF KRIYA YOGA
The science of kriya yoga became widely known
in modern India through the instrumentality of Lahiri Mahasaya,
my guru's guru. The Sanskrit root of kriya is
kri, to do, to act and react; the same root is found
in the word karma, the natural principle of cause and
effect. Kriya yoga is thus "union (yoga)
with the Infinite through a certain action or rite (kriya)".
A yogi who faithfully practices the technique is gradually
freed from karma or the lawful chain of cause-effect
equilibrium.
Because of certain ancient yogic injunctions, I may not give
a full explanation of kriya yoga in a book intended
for the general public. The actual technique should be learned
from an authorized kriyaban (kriya yogi) of Yogoda
Satsanga Society/Self-Realization Fellowship.
Here a broad reference must suffice.
Kriya yoga is a simple, psychophysiological method
by which human blood is decarbonized and recharged with oxygen.
The atoms of this extra oxygen are transmuted into life current
to rejuvenate the brain and spinal centers. By stopping the
accumulation of venous blood, the yogi is able to lessen
or prevent the decay of tissues. The advanced yogi
transmutes his cells into energy. Elijah, Jesus, Kabir
and other prophets were past masters in the use of kriya
or a similar technique by which they caused their bodies to
materialize at will.
Kriya is an ancient science. Lahiri Mahasaya received
it from his great guru, Babaji (the immortal Mahavatar
Baba), who rediscovered and clarified the technique after
it had been lost in the dark ages. Babaji renamed it, simply,
Kriya Yoga.
"The Kriya Yoga that I am giving to the world through
you in this nineteenth century," Babaji told Lahiri Mahasaya, "is
a revival of the same science that Krishna gave millenniums ago to
Arjuna; and that was later known to Patanjali, and Christ, and to
St. John, St Paul and other disciples."
Kriya Yoga is twice referred to by Lord Krishna (one
of the gods of the Hindu pantheon) in the Bhagavad Gita. One stanza
reads: "Offering the inhaling breath into the exhaling breath, and
offering the exhaling breath into the inhaling breath, the yogi
neutralizes both breaths; thus he releases prana from the heart
and brings life force under his control." The interpretation: "The
yogi arrests decay in the body by securing an additional supply
of prana (life force) through quieting the action of the lungs
and heart; he also arrests mutations of growth in the body by control
of apana (eliminating current). Thus neutralizing decay and
growth, the yogi learns life force control."
Another
stanza in the Gita states: "That meditation-expert (muni) becomes eternally
free who, seeking the Supreme Goal, is able to withdraw from external phenomena
by fixing his gaze within the mid-spot of the eyebrows and by neutralizing the
even currents of prana and apana within the nostrils and lungs;
and to control his sensory mind and intellect; and to banish desire, fear and
anger."
Krishna also relates that it was he, in a former incarnation,
who communicated the indestructible yoga to an ancient illuminato, Vivasvat,
who gave it to Manu, the great legislator. He, in turn, instructed Ikshwaku, founder
of India's solar warrior dynasty. Passing thus from one to another, the royal
yoga was guarded by the rishis until the coming of the materialistic
ages. Then, because of priestly secrecy and man's indifference, the sacred lore
gradually became inaccessible.
Kriya Yoga is mentioned twice by the ancient sage Patanjali ,
foremost exponent of yoga ,
who wrote: "Kriya Yoga consists of body discipline,
mental control, and meditating on Aum." Patanjali speaks of
god as the actual cosmic sound of Aum that is heard in meditation.
Aum is the creative word, the whir of the vibratory motor,
the witness of divine presence. Even the yoga beginner may
soon inwardly hear the wondrous sound of Aum. Through this
blissful spiritual encouragement, he becomes convinced that he is
in communion with supernal realms.
Patanjali refers a second time to the Kriya technique or
life-force control thus: "Liberation can be attained by that pranayama,
which is accomplished by disjoining the course of inspiration and expiration."
St. Paul knew Kriya Yoga, or a similar technique, by which
he could switch life currents to and from the senses. He was therefore
able to say: "I protest by our rejoicing which I have in Christ, I die
daily." By a method of centering inwardly all bodily life force (which
ordinarily is directed only outwardly, to the sensory world, thus lending
it a seeming validity), St. Paul experienced daily a true yoga union with
the "rejoicing" (bliss) of the Christ Consciousness. In that felicitous
state he was conscious of being "dead" to or freed from sensory delusions,
the world of maya.
In the initial states of God-contact (sabikalpa samadhi) the devotee's
consciousness merges with the cosmic spirit; his life force is withdrawn
from the body, which appears "dead" or motionless and rigid. The yogi
is fully aware of his bodily condition of suspended animation. As
he progresses to higher spiritual states (nirbikalpa samadhi),
however, he communes with god without bodily fixation; and in his ordinary
waking consciousness, even in the midst of exacting worldly duties.
"Kriya Yoga is an instrument through which human evolution
can be quickened," Sri Yukteswar explained to his students. "The ancient
yogis discovered that the secret of cosmic consciousness is
intimately linked with breath mastery. This is India's unique and deathless
contribution to the world's treasury of knowledge. The life force, which
is ordinarily absorbed in maintaining the heart action, must be freed
for higher activities by a method of claming and stilling the ceaseless
demands of the breath."
The Kriya Yogi mentally directs his life energy to revolve,
upward and downward, around the six spinal centers (medullar, cervical,
dorsal, lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal plexuses), which correspond to the
twelve astral signs of the zodiac, the symbolic cosmic man. One-half minute
of revolution of energy around the sensitive spinal cord of man effects
subtle progress in his evolution; that half-minute of Kriya equals
one year of natural spiritual unfoldment.
The astral
system of a human being, with six (twelve by polarity) inner constellations revolving
around the sun of the omniscient spiritual eye, is interrelated with the physical
sun and the twelve zodiacal signs. All men are thus affected by an inner and an
outer universe. The ancient rishis discovered that man's earthly and heavenly
environment, in twelve-year cycles, pushes him forward on his natural path. The
scriptures aver that man requires a million years of normal, diseaseless evolution
to perfect his human brain sufficiently to express cosmic consciousness.
One thousand Kriya practiced in eight and a half
hours gives the yogi, in one day, the equivalent of one thousand
years of natural evolution: 365,000 years of evolution in one year. In
three years a Kriya Yogi can thus accomplish by intelligent
self-effort the same result that nature brings to pass in a million years.
The Kriya shortcut, of course, can be taken only by deeply
developed yogis. With the guidance of a guru, such yogis
have carefully prepared their body and brain to withstand the power generated
by intensive practice.
The Kriya beginner employs his yogic technique only fourteen
to twenty-four times, twice daily. A number of yogis achieve emancipation
in six or twelve or twenty-four or forty-eight years. A yogi who
dies before achieving full realization carries with him the good karma
of his past Kriya effort; in his new life he is naturally
propelled toward his infinite goal.
The body of the average man is like a fifty-watt lamp, which cannot accommodate
the billion watts of power roused by an excessive practice of Kriya.
Through gradual and regular increase of the simple and foolproof methods
of Kriya, man's body becomes astrally transformed day by
day, and is finally fitted to express the infinite potentials of cosmic
energy, which constitutes the first materially active expression of spirit.
Kriya Yoga has nothing in common with the unscientific breathing
exercises taught by a number of misguided zealots. Attempts to hold breath
forcibly in the lungs are unnatural and decidedly unpleasant. Kriya
practice, on the other hand, is accompanied from the very beginning by
feelings of peace and by soothing sensations of regenerative effect in
the spine.
The ancient yogic technique converts the breath into mind-stuff. By spiritual
advancement, one is able to cognize the breath as a mental concept, an
act of mind: a dream breath.
Many illustrations could be given of the mathematical relationship between
man's respiratory rate and the variations in his states of consciousness.
A person whose attention is wholly engrossed, as in following some closely
knit intellectual argument, or in attempting some delicate or difficult
physical feat, automatically breathes very slowly. Fixity of attention
depends on slow breathing; quick or uneven breaths are an inevitable accompaniment
of harmful emotional states: fear, lust, anger. The restless monkey breathes
at the rate of 32 times a minute, in contrast to man's average of 18 times.
The elephant, tortoise, snake, and other creatures noted for their longevity
have a respiratory rate that is less than man's. The giant tortoise, for
instance, which may attain the age of three hundred years, breathes only
four times a minute.
The rejuvenating effects of sleep are due to man's temporary unawareness
of body and breathing. During sleep one's breath flows more slowly and
evenly. The sleeping man becomes a yogi; each night he unconsciously
performs the yogic rite of releasing himself from bodily identification
and of merging the life force with healing currents in the main brain
region and in the six subdynamos of his spinal centers. Unknowingly, the
sleeper is thus recharged by the cosmic energy that sustains all life.
The voluntary yogi performs a simple, natural process consciously,
not unconsciously like the slow-paced sleeper. The Kriya Yogi
uses his technique to saturate and feed all his physical cells with undecayable
light and thus to keep them in a spiritually magnetized condition. He
scientifically makes breathing unnecessary, and does not enter (during
his hours of practice) the negative states of sleep, unconsciousness,
or death.
In men under Maya or natural law, the flow of life energy is towards the
outward world; the currents are wasted and abused in the senses. The practice
of Kriya reverses the flow; life force is mentally guided
to the inner cosmos and becomes reunited with subtle spinal energies.
By such reinforcement of life force, the yogi's body and brain cells are
renewed by a spiritual elixir.
Through proper food, sunlight, and harmonious thoughts, men that are led
only by nature and her divine plan will achieve Self-realization
in a million years. Twelve years of normal healthful living are required
to effect even slight refinements in brain structure; a million solar
returns are exacted to purify the cerebral tenement sufficiently for manifestation
of cosmic consciousness. A Kriya Yogi, however, by use of
a spiritual science, removes himself from the necessity for a long period
of careful observance of natural laws.
Untying the cord of breath that binds the soul of the body, Kriya
serves to prolong life and to enlarge the consciousness to infinity. The
yoga technique overcomes the tug of war between the mind and the
matter-entangled senses, and frees the devotee to re-inherit his eternal
kingdom. He knows then that his real being is bound neither by physical
encasement nor by breathsymbol of mortal man's enslavement to air,
to nature's elemental compulsions. Master of his body and mind, the Kriya
Yogi ultimately achieves victory over the "last enemy,"
Death.
So shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men;
And Death once dead, there's no more dying then.
Introspection, or "sitting in the silence," is an unscientific way of
trying to force apart the mind and senses, tied together by the life force.
The contemplative mind, attempting its return to divinity, is constantly
dragged back towards the senses by the life currents. Kriya,
controlling the mind directly through the life force, is the easiest,
most effective, and most scientific avenue or approach to the infinite.
In contrast to the slow, uncertain "bullock cart" theological path to
god, Kriya Yoga may justly be called the "airplane" route.