Chapter 26
The Science of Kriya Yoga
Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30
The science
of Kriya Yoga, mentioned so often in these pages, 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." A yogi who faithfully follows its technique is
gradually freed from karma or the universal chain of causation.
Because of
certain ancient yogic injunctions, I cannot give a full explanation of Kriya Yoga in the
pages of a book intended for the general public. The actual technique must be learned from
a Kriyaban or Kriya Yogi; here a broad reference must suffice.
Kriya Yoga is a
simple, psychophysiological method by which the 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 pure 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 dematerialize at will.
Kriya is an
ancient science. Lahiri Mahasaya received it from his guru, Babaji, who rediscovered and
clarified the technique after it had been lost in the Dark Ages.
"The
Kriya Yoga which I am giving to the world through you in this nineteenth century,"
Babaji told Lahiri Mahasaya, "is a revival of the same science which Krishna gave,
millenniums ago, to Arjuna, and which was later known to Patanjali, and to Christ, St.
John, St. Paul, and other disciples."
Kriya Yoga is
referred to by Krishna, India's greatest prophet, in a stanza of the Bhagavad Gita:
"Offering inhaling breath into the outgoing breath, and offering the outgoing breath
into the inhaling breath, the yogi neutralizes both these breaths; he thus releases the
life force from the heart and brings it under his control." The interpretation is:
"The yogi arrests decay in the body by an addition of life force, and arrests the
mutations of growth in the body by apan (eliminating current). Thus neutralizing decay and
growth, by quieting the heart, the yogi learns life control."
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, the father 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,
due to priestly secrecy and man's indifference, the sacred knowledge 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 heard in meditation.
Aum is the
Creative Word, the sound of the Vibratory Motor. Even the yoga-beginner soon inwardly
hears the wondrous sound of Aum. Receiving this blissful spiritual encouragement, the
devotee becomes assured that he is in actual touch with divine realms.
Patanjali
refers a second time to the life-control or Kriya technique thus: "Liberation can be
accomplished by that pranayama which is attained by disjoining the course of inspiration
and expiration."
St. Paul knew
Kriya Yoga, or a technique very similar to it, by which he could switch life currents to
and from the senses. He was therefore able to say: "Verily, I protest by our
rejoicing which I have in Christ, I die daily." By daily
withdrawing his bodily life force, he united it by yoga union with the rejoicing (eternal
bliss) of the Christ consciousness. In that felicitous state, he was consciously aware of
being dead to the delusive sensory 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-pump, must be freed for higher activities by
a method of calming 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 (medullary, 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, push 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 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 which nature
brings to pass in a million years. The Kriya short cut, of course, can be taken only by
deeply developed yogis. With the guidance of a guru, such yogis have carefully prepared
their bodies and brains to receive the power created by intensive practice.
The Kriya
beginner employs his yogic exercise only fourteen to twenty-eight 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 harmoniously 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
energythe first materially active expression of Spirit.
Kriya Yoga has
nothing in common with the unscientific breathing exercises taught by a number of
misguided zealots. Their attempts to forcibly hold breath in the lungs is not only
unnatural but decidedly unpleasant. Kriya, on the other hand, is accompanied from the very
beginning by an accession of peace, and by soothing sensations of regenerative effect in
the spine.
The ancient
yogic technique converts the breath into mind. By spiritual advancement, one is able to
cognize the breath as an act of minda 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 animals noted for their longevity have a respiratory rate which
is less than man's. The tortoise, for instance, who may attain the age of 300 years,
breathes only 4 times per minute.
The
rejuvenating effects of sleep are due to man's temporary unawareness of body and
breathing. 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 the six sub-dynamos of his spinal centers.
The sleeper thus dips unknowingly into the reservoir of cosmic energy which 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 undecaying light and keep them in a magnetized state. He scientifically makes breath
unnecessary, without producing the states of subconscious sleep or unconsciousness.
By Kriya, the
outgoing life force is not wasted and abused in the senses, but constrained to reunite
with subtler spinal energies. By such reinforcement of life, the yogi's body and brain
cells are electrified with the spiritual elixir. Thus he removes himself from studied
observance of natural laws, which can only take himby circuitous means as given by
proper food, sunlight, and harmonious thoughtsto a million-year Goal. It needs
twelve years of normal healthful living to effect even slight perceptible change in brain
structure, and a million solar returns are exacted to sufficiently refine the cerebral
tenement for manifestation of cosmic consciousness.
Untying the
cord of breath which binds the soul to the body, Kriya serves to prolong life and enlarge
the consciousness to infinity. The yoga method overcomes the tug of war between the mind
and the matter-bound senses, and frees the devotee to reinherit his eternal kingdom. He
knows his real nature is bound neither by physical encasement nor by breath, symbol of the
mortal enslavement to air, to nature's elemental compulsions.
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 toward the senses by the life currents.
Kriya, controlling the mind directly through the life force, is the easiest, most
effective, and most scientific avenue of approach to the Infinite. In contrast to the
slow, uncertain "bullock cart" theological path to God, Kriya may justly be
called the "airplane" route.
The yogic
science is based on an empirical consideration of all forms of concentration and
meditation exercises. Yoga enables the devotee to switch off or on, at will, life current
from the five sense telephones of sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch. Attaining this
power of sense-disconnection, the yogi finds it simple to unite his mind at will with
divine realms or with the world of matter. No longer is he unwillingly brought back by the
life force to the mundane sphere of rowdy sensations and restless thoughts. 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.
The life of
an advanced Kriya Yogi is influenced, not by effects of past actions, but solely by
directions from the soul. The devotee thus avoids the slow, evolutionary monitors of
egoistic actions, good and bad, of common life, cumbrous and snail-like to the eagle
hearts.
The superior
method of soul living frees the yogi who, shorn of his ego-prison, tastes the deep air of
omnipresence. The thralldom of natural living is, in contrast, set in a pace humiliating.
Conforming his life to the evolutionary order, a man can command no concessionary haste
from nature but, living without error against the laws of his physical and mental
endowment, still requires about a million years of incarnating masquerades to know final
emancipation.
The
telescopic methods of yogis, disengaging themselves from physical and mental
identifications in favor of soul-individuality, thus commend themselves to those who eye
with revolt a thousand thousand years. This numerical periphery is enlarged for the
ordinary man, who lives in harmony not even with nature, let alone his soul, but pursues
instead unnatural complexities, thus offending in his body and thoughts the sweet sanities
of nature. For him, two times a million years can scarce suffice for liberation.
Gross man
seldom or never realizes that his body is a kingdom, governed by Emperor Soul on the
throne of the cranium, with subsidiary regents in the six spinal centers or spheres of
consciousness. This theocracy extends over a throng of obedient subjects: twenty-seven
thousand billion cellsendowed with a sure if automatic intelligence by which they
perform all duties of bodily growths, transformations, and dissolutionsand fifty
million substratal thoughts, emotions, and variations of alternating phases in man's
consciousness in an average life of sixty years. Any apparent insurrection of bodily or
cerebral cells toward Emperor Soul, manifesting as disease or depression, is due to no
disloyalty among the humble citizens, but to past or present misuse by man of his
individuality or free will, given to him simultaneous with a soul, and revocable never.
Identifying
himself with a shallow ego, man takes for granted that it is he who thinks, wills, feels,
digests meals, and keeps himself alive, never admitting through reflection (only a little
would suffice!) that in his ordinary life he is naught but a puppet of past actions
(karma) and of nature or environment. Each man's intellectual reactions, feelings, moods,
and habits are circumscribed by effects of past causes, whether of this or a prior life.
Lofty above such influences, however, is his regal soul. Spurning the transitory truths
and freedoms, the Kriya Yogi passes beyond all disillusionment into his unfettered Being.
All scriptures declare man to be not a corruptible body, but a living soul; by Kriya he is
given a method to prove the scriptural truth.
"Outward
ritual cannot destroy ignorance, because they are not mutually contradictory," wrote
Shankara in his famous Century of Verses. "Realized knowledge alone destroys
ignorance. . . . Knowledge cannot spring up by any other means than inquiry. 'Who am I?
How was this universe born? Who is its maker? What is its material cause?' This is the
kind of inquiry referred to." The intellect has no answer for these questions; hence
the rishis evolved yoga as the technique of spiritual inquiry.
Kriya Yoga is
the real "fire rite" often extolled in the Bhagavad Gita. The purifying fires of
yoga bring eternal illumination, and thus differ much from outward and little-effective
religious fire ceremonies, where perception of truth is oft burnt, to solemn chanted
accompaniment, along with the incense!
The advanced
yogi, withholding all his mind, will, and feeling from false identification with bodily
desires, uniting his mind with superconscious forces in the spinal shrines, thus lives in
this world as God hath planned, not impelled by impulses from the past nor by new
witlessnesses of fresh human motivations. Such a yogi receives fulfillment of his Supreme
Desire, safe in the final haven of inexhaustibly blissful Spirit.
The yogi
offers his labyrinthine human longings to a monotheistic bonfire dedicated to the
unparalleled God. This is indeed the true yogic fire ceremony, in which all past and
present desires are fuel consumed by love divine. The Ultimate Flame receives the
sacrifice of all human madness, and man is pure of dross. His bones stripped of all
desirous flesh, his karmic skeleton bleached in the antiseptic suns of wisdom, he is clean
at last, inoffensive before man and Maker.
Referring to yoga's sure and methodical efficacy, Lord Krishna praises the technological yogi in the following words: "The yogi is greater than body-disciplining ascetics, greater even than the followers of the path of wisdom (Jnana Yoga), or of the path of action (Karma Yoga); be thou, O disciple Arjuna, a yogi!"