Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
13. Opposition of the Hostile Forces
Fragment ID: 4099
I am writing today about your son X and his illness if it can be called by that name. I shall state first in general terms the nature of the malady and its usual developments, that is to say, the normal course it takes when no psychic or spiritual force is brought in to remove it. Afterwards I shall indicate the two possible means of cure.
I think it is best for me to state the case in its
worst and not only in its best possible terms because it is necessary that you
should know the full truth and have the courage to face it. These cases are not
those of a truly physical malady, but of an attempt at possession from the vital
world; and the fits and other physical symptoms are signs, not of the malady
itself, but of the struggle of the natural being against the pressure of the
hostile influence. Such a case in a child of this age indicates some kind of
accumulation in the physical heredity creating an opportunity or a
predisposition of which the vital invasion takes advantage. It is especially the
physical consciousness and physico-vital which contain the germs or materials of
this predisposition. The physical being is always changing its constituents and
in each period of seven years a complete change is effected. If the symptoms of
this predisposition in the nature are detected and a wise influence and training
used by the parents to eradicate them and this is done so effectively that in
the first seven years no seeds of malady appear, then usually there is no
further danger. If on the contrary they manifest by the seventh year, then the
next period of seven years is the critical period and, ordinarily, the
case would be decided one way or the other by or before the fourteenth year.
There are normally three possible eventualities. The difficulty in dealing with the case of so young a child is that the mind is not developed and can give no help towards the cure. But as the mind develops in the second seven years it will, if it is not abnormally weak which I think is not the case here, react more and more against the influence. Aided by a good control and influence it may very well succeed in casting out the hostile intrusion and its pressure altogether. In that case the fits and other signs of the physical struggle pass away, the strange moral and vital tendencies fade out of the habits and the child becomes mentally, morally and physically a healthy normal being.
The second possibility is that the struggle between the natural being and the intruding being may not be decisive in the psychic sense, that is to say, the intruder cannot take full possession but also he cannot be thrown out entirely. In that case anything may happen, a shattered mind and health, the death of the body or a disturbed, divided and permanently abnormal nature.
The third and the worst possibility is that the intruding being may succeed and take entire possession. In that case the fits and other violent symptoms will disappear, the child may seem to be physically cured and healthy, but he will be an abnormal and most dangerous being incarnating an evil vital force with all its terrible propensities and gifted with abnormal powers to satisfy them.
In X’s case there is not as yet possession in the full sense of the word, but a strong pressure and influence indicated by the strange habits of which you have written. These are suggested and dictated by the intruding being and not proper to the boy himself. The fearlessness and security with which he does these things is inspired from the same source. But the fits prove that there is as yet no possession. There is a struggle indicated by them and a temporary hold which passes out again. He is evidently in the earlier part of the critical period. I have indicated the course normally taken by the illness, but it is not necessary to pass through it and take its risks. There are other means which can come to his help and effect a complete cure.
The first and easiest is to cure by hypnotic suggestion. This if properly
applied is an absolutely sure remedy. But in the first place it must be applied
by someone who is not himself under the influence of evil powers, as some
hypnotists are. For that obviously will make matters worse. Moreover, it must be
done by someone who has the proper training and knows thoroughly what he is
about; for a mistake might be disastrous. The best conditions would be if
someone like yourself who has a natural relation and already an influence over
the child could do it with the necessary training and knowledge.
The other means of cure is the use of spiritual power
and influence. If certain psycho-spiritual means could be used, this would be as
sure and effective as the other. But this is not possible because there is no
one there who has the right knowledge. The spiritual influence by itself can do
it but the working is likely to be slow. It must ordinarily be conveyed through
someone on the spot and you yourself are obviously the right instrument. What
you have to do is to keep the idea that I am sending to you power for this
object, to make yourself receptive to it and at the same time make your own will
and natural influence on the child a direct channel for it. The will must be a
quiet will, calm and confident and intent on its object, but without attachment
and unshaken by any amount of resistance and unalarmed and undiscouraged by the
manifestations of the illness. Your attitude to the child must be that of a calm
and firm protecting affection free from emotional weakness and disturbance. The
first thing is to acquire such an influence as to be able to repel the attack
when it comes and if it takes any hold to diminish steadily its force and the
violence of its manifestation. I understand from your letter that you have
already been able to establish the beginning of such an influence. But it must
be able to work at a distance as well as in his presence. Further you must
acquire the power of leaving a protection around him when you are absent.
Secondly, you must be able to convey to him a constant suggestion which will
gradually inhibit the strange undesirable habits of which you speak in your
letter. This, I may say, cannot be effectively done by any kind of external
coercion. For that is likely to make these impulses more violent. It must be a
will and
suggestion and silent influence. If you find the control increasing and these
habits diminishing, you can understand that the work of cure has begun. Its
completion may take some time because these vital beings are very sticky and
persistent and are always returning to the attack. The one thing which will make
the cure rapid is if the boy himself develops a will in his mind to change for
that will take away the ground of the hostile influence. It is because something
in him is amused and takes pleasure in the force which comes with the influence
that these things are able to recur and continue. This element in him calls the
invading presence back even when it has been centrally rejected. I shall of
course try to act directly on him as well as through you, but the
instrumentality of one on the spot greatly enforces and is sometimes
indispensable to the action.