Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Letters
Fragment ID: 6433
(this fragment is largest or earliest found passage)
Sri Aurobindo — Chandrasekharam, Veluri
July 21, 1924
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To V. Chandrasekharam [3]1
[21 July 1924]
It is not easy to get into the silence.2 That is only possible by throwing
out the mental and vital activities. It is easier to let the silence
get into
you, i.e., to open yourself and let it descend. The way to do this and the way
to call down the higher powers is the same. It is to remain quiet at the time of
meditation, not fighting with the mind or making mental efforts to pull down the
power of the Silence but keeping only a silent will and aspiration for them. If
the mind is active, one has only to
learn to look at it, drawn back and not
giving any sanction from within, until its habitual or
mechanical activities
begin to fall quiet for want of support from within. If it is too persistent
, a
steady rejection without strain or struggle is the one thing to be done.
The mental attitude you are taking with regard to “the Lord is the Yogeswara” can be made a first
step towards this quietude.
Silence does not mean absence of experiences. It is an
inner silence and quietude in which all experiences happen without producing any
disturbance. It would be a great mistake to interfere with the images rising in
you. It does not matter whether they are mental or psychic. One must have
experience not only of the true psychic but of the inner mental, inner
vital and
subtle physical worlds or planes of consciousness. The occurrence of the images
is a sign that these are opening and to inhibit them would mean to inhibit the
expansion of consciousness and experience without which this Yoga cannot be
done.
All this is an answer to the points raised by your
letter. It is not meant that you should change suddenly what you are doing. It
is better to proceed from what you have attained which seems to be solid, if
small, and proceed quietly in the direction indicated.
1 Veluri Chandrasekharam (1896–1964) took his B.A. from Madras University, standing first in his class in philosophy. He often visited Pondicherry during the early 1920s, reading the Veda and practising yoga under Sri Aurobindo’s guidance. In 1928 he returned to his village in Andhra Pradesh, where he passed the remainder of his life.
2 This letter and the next were written by K. Amrita at Sri Aurobindo’s dictation or following his oral instructions. – Ed.
3 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: is to
4 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: let Silence
5 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: into
6 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: has to
7 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: and
8 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: is persistent
9 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: Lord as
10 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: made first
11 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: experiences
12 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: the inner
13 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: of images
14 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: in
15 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: though