Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Himself and the Ashram
CWSA 35
Fragment ID: 8424
(this fragment is largest or earliest found passage)
Sri Aurobindo — Unknown addressee
October 26, 1935
Passages from Lights on Yoga [5]
You write in Lights on Yoga that the subconscient “receives obscurely the impressions of all things and stores them up in itself” [p. 11]. Where then are stored all the words, images and thoughts that we say come out of memory? What is the difference between storing in memory and this subconscient storing?
The clear memory of words, images and thoughts is an action of the conscious mind, not the unconscious. Of course the memory goes behind, so to speak, in the back part of the mind, but it can be brought out. Also the memory can be lost or defaced, so that one remembers wrongly or forgets altogether, but that is still an imperfect action of the conscious mind, not an action of the subconscious. What the subconscious keeps is a mass of impressions, not of clear or exact images and these can come up as in dreams in an incoherent jumble distorted altogether or else in the waking state as a mechanical recurrence or repetition of the same suggestions, impulses (subconscient vital) or sensations. There is a recognisable difference between the two functionings.
26 October 1935
Current publication:
[Largest or earliest found passage: ]
Sri Aurobindo. Letters on Himself and the Ashram // CWSA.- Volume 35. (≈ 26 vol. of SABCL).- Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 2011.- 658 p.
Other publications: