THE THINKING PRINCIPLE, MINDFULNESS AND THE CULTURE OF CONCENTRATION
We
are all a prey to those fears that tend to disrupt the very instrument by means
of which true concentration may be attained; but it may be attained. The
peculiar power and nature of concentration is that, when complete, the
attention can be placed on any subject or object to the exclusion of every
other for any given length of time; and this thinking principle – this mind of
ours which has been flitting about – can be used to shape itself to the object
gazed upon, to the nature of the subject thought about.
While the mind takes
the shape of the object, we get from that shape the form, the characteristics
of every kind that flow from it; and when our inquiry is complete, we are able to
know everything that can be known of the subject or object. Such a height of
concentration we can easily see is not to be attained by intermittent efforts,
but by efforts made from "a firm position assumed" with the end in
view. All efforts made from that basis are bound to be of avail; every effort
made from the point of view of the spiritual man counts, because it makes the
body subservient to the thinking principle.
Other
things come about from that true power of concentration. We begin to open up
the channels that reach from our brains to the astral body, and from the astral
body to the inner man. Then, that which is temporary tends to become a part of
that which is eternal. All the planes become synthesized from above down, and
all the vestures of the soul which we have evolved from the past become in
accord with each other. It is just like the tumblers in a lock: when they work
together, the lock works accurately. So we have to bring all the sheaths of the
soul into exact accord, and that we can do only by taking the position of the
spiritual being and acting as such.
The
height of concentration is possible to us, but not on a selfish basis. The
concentration of the brain mind stands beside true concentration as a rush
light beside the sun. True concentration is, first of all, a position assumed
out of regard for the end in view of union with the Higher Self. That is the
highest Yoga. Concentration upon the Self is true concentration. And
concentration must be attained before we can ever reach that stage where
eternal knowledge of every kind is ours to the last degree; before we shall
once more resume and wield those powers which are the heritage of all.
Robert
Crosbie's essays, along with those of H.P. Blavatsky, Raghavan Iyer, and
William Q. Judge, may be found in their unexpurgated and original form at the
Theosophy Trust Memorial Library at https://theosophytrust.org/theosophy.
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