Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Himself and the Ashram
The Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo. Volume 35
Sadhana before Coming to Pondicherry in 1910
Early
Experiences
This-Worldliness and Other-Worldliness
One thing I feel I must say in connection with your
remark about the soul of India and X’s observation about “this stress on
this-worldliness to the exclusion of other-worldliness”. I do not quite
understand in what connection his remark was made or what he meant by
this-worldliness, but I feel it necessary to state my own position in the
matter. My own life and my Yoga have always been, since my coming to India, both
this-worldly and other-worldly without any exclusiveness on either side. All
human interests are, I suppose, this-worldly and most of them have entered into
my mental field and some, like politics, into my life, but at the same time,
since I set foot on Indian soil on the Apollo Bunder in Bombay, I began to have
spiritual experiences, but these were not divorced from this world but had an
inner and intimate bearing on it, such as a feeling of the Infinite pervading
material space and the Immanent inhabiting material objects and bodies. At the
same time I found myself entering supraphysical worlds
and planes with influences and an effect from them upon the material plane, so I
could make no sharp divorce or irreconcilable opposition between what I have
called the two ends of existence and all that lies between them. For me all is
the Brahman and I find the Divine everywhere. Everyone has the right to throw
away this-worldliness and choose other-worldliness only and if he finds peace by
that choice he is greatly blessed. I, personally, have not found it necessary to
do this in order to have peace. In my Yoga also I found myself moved to include
both worlds in my purview, the spiritual and the material, and to try to
establish the divine Consciousness and the divine Power in men’s hearts and in
earthly life, not for personal salvation only but for a life divine here. This
seems to me as spiritual an aim as any and the fact of this life taking up
earthly pursuits and earthly things into its scope cannot, I believe, tarnish
its spirituality or alter its Indian character. This at least has always been my
view and experience of the reality and nature of the world and things and the
Divine: it seemed to me as nearly as possible the integral truth about them and
I have therefore spoken of the pursuit of it as the integral Yoga. Everyone is,
of course, free to reject and disbelieve in this kind of integrality or to
believe in the spiritual necessity of an entire other-worldliness excluding any
kind of this-worldliness altogether, but that would make the exercise of my Yoga
impossible. My Yoga can include indeed a full experience of the other worlds,
the plane of the supreme Spirit and the other planes in between and their
possible effects upon our life and material world; but it will be quite possible
to insist only on the realisation of the supreme Being or Ishwara even in one
aspect, Shiva, Krishna as Lord of the world and Master of ourselves and our
works or else the universal Sachchidananda, and attain to the essential results
of this Yoga and afterwards to proceed from them to the integral results if one
accepted the ideal of the divine life and this material world conquered by the
Spirit. It is this view and experience of things and of the truth of existence
that enabled me to write The Life Divine and Savitri. The
realisation of the Supreme, the Ishwara, is certainly the essential thing; but
to approach him with love and devotion and bhakti,
to
serve him with one’s works and to know him, not necessarily by the intellectual
cognition, but in a spiritual experience, is also essential in the path of the
integral Yoga.
28 April 1949