Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Volume II - Part 1
Fragment ID: 11326
See letter itself (letter ID: 1529)
Sri Aurobindo — Nirodbaran Talukdar
January 21, 1936
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The fact that you don’t feel a force does not prove that it is not there. The steam-engine does not feel a force moving it, but the force is there. A man is not a steam-engine? He is very little better, for he is conscious only of some bubbling on the surface which he calls himself and is absolutely unconscious of all the subconscient, subliminal, superconscient forces moving him. (This is a fact which is being more and more established by modern psychology though it has got hold only of the lower forces and not the higher, so you need not turn up your rational nose at it.) He twitters intellectually (= foolishly) about the surface results and attributes them all to his “noble self”, ignoring the fact that his noble self is hidden far away from his own vision behind the veil of his dimly sparkling intellect and the reeking fog of his vital feelings, emotions, impulses, sensations and impressions. So your argument is utterly absurd and futile. Our aim is to bring the secret forces out and unwalled into the open so that instead of getting some shadows or lightnings of themselves out through the veil or being wholly obstructed, they may “pour down” and “flow in a river”. But to expect that all at once is a presumptuous demand which shows an impatient ignorance and inexperience. If they begin to trickle at first, that is sufficient to justify the faith in a future downpour. You admit that you once or twice felt “a force coming down and delivering a poem out of me” (your opinion about its worth or worthlessness is not worth a cent, that is for others to pronounce). That is sufficient to blow the rest of your Jeremiad into smithereens; it proves that the force was and is there and at work and it is only your sweating Herculean labour that prevents you feeling it. Also it is the trickle that gives assurance of the possibility of the downpour. One has only to go on and by one’s patience deserve the downpour or else, without deserving, stick on till one gets it. In Yoga itself the experience that is a promise and foretaste but gets shut off till the nature is ready for the fulfilment is a phenomenon familiar to every Yogin when he looks back on his past experience. Such were the brief visitations of Ananda you had some time before. It does not matter if you have not a leechlike tenacity – leeches are not the only type of Yogins. If you can stick anyhow or get stuck that is sufficient. The fact that you are not Sri Aurobindo (who said you were?) is an inept irrelevance. One needs only to be oneself in a reasonable way and shake off the hump when it is there or allow it to be shaken off without clinging to it with a “leechlike tenacity” worthy of a better cause.
1 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: must
2 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: view
3 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: enough
4 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: the assurance
5 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: slide
6 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: until
7 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: yoga
8 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: itself
9 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: fulfilment. This is
10 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: yogi
11 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: sometimes
12 SABCL, volume 22; Letters of Sri Aurobindo. 2 Ser.: yogis
Current publication:
Sri Aurobindo. Letters on Yoga. II // CWSA.- Volume 29. (≈ 22-24 vol. of SABCL).- Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 2013.- 522 p.
Other publications: