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Your Spiritual Magnetism
by Swami Kriyananda
What differentiates a bar magnet from other bars of iron?
It's that its molecules are turned in a single direction,
producing a north-south polarity. In most bars, the molecules,
each with its own north-south polarity, are turned every
which way, in effect canceling one another out. It is when
the molecules are oriented in one direction that, with many
of them acting together, they acquire magnetic power. Magnetism
is generated, not created. Its presence is latent in every
piece of metal-indeed, on subtler levels of manifestation,
in everything. Thus, people can be magnetic; their magnetism
can cause others to feel toward them a strong attraction
or repulsion.
There are many kinds of magnetism. Our individual qualities
resemble the iron molecules in the sense that, if they are
focused on a single goal, they can produce seemingly miraculous
results. On the other hand, when they are directed haphazardly
they can render us ineffective. Magnetism is the key to
success in everything.
People will often say, "I keep trying to be good.
Why, then, do I constantly fail?" or, "I work
so hard to become competent in my own field of endeavor;
why can I not succeed?" or, "I try so hard to
overcome my bad habits; why do they keep on coming back,
like weeds?" To all of these questions the answer,
while perhaps unfortunate, is, "You have created failure
magnetism in yourself: You need to get enough of the citizens
among your inner population to support you; then only will
you be able to make the over-all change you desire. The
good side of the problem is that, when you succeed in converting
enough mental citizens to the side of goodness, they will
outnumber the unruly ones and will gradually win them over,
resulting in your rapid spiritual progress."
We must transform our faults into virtues. Angry outbursts,
uncontrollable at first, need to be rechanneled into positive
behavior. Incarnations-many of them, perhaps-may be required
for complete self-transformation.
Nevertheless, a journey of thousands of miles must begin
with a single step. Never should one become discouraged.
Discouragement itself is simply a characteristic to be fought
and conquered by the steady, indomitable pressure of resolute
courage. If one thinks, "I simply don't have that kind
of courage," know that you can develop it, in time.
Every human trait is born in the mind. There is nothing
man can achieve or even conceive that is inaccessible to
any other human being.
The Bhagavad Gita, however, teaches more than the need
to overcome our individual faults and weaknesses. It also
gives practical methods for sweeping every obstacle out
of the way. One such method is described in Chapter 4, Verse
35, where Krishna tells Arjuna of the importance of the
guru, or spiritual savior. A guru is more than a mere teacher.
The power of the guru can transfer his magnetism to that
disciple who tunes in to his consciousness. Thus, his magnetism
can help to transform every fault in the disciple into its
opposite virtue, by rechanneling the energy in the disciple's
spine-in a sense realigning the "molecules" of
tendencies and helping them, ever increasingly, to flow
upward. A river, when its flow is strong, dissolves any
eddies lingering along the bank, and causes those eddies
and any debris swirling in them to enter the river's powerful
flow down to the ocean. In similar fashion, a strong upward
flow of energy in the spine can dissolve all the "vrittis,"
or eddies of feeling, and carry them up to the spiritual
eye. Hence Patanjali's definition of yoga: "Yogas chitta
vritti nirodha (Yoga is the neutralization of the eddies,
or whirlpools, of feeling in the consciousness)." The
subtle help of a true, or Sat, guru can help the disciple
to transform his own tendencies and direct them all toward
God.
None of this can be accomplished, however, without the
disciple's active cooperation. This process, too, can be
hastened scientifically by yoga techniques, and particularly
by the great, ancient science of Kriya Yoga. The Bhagavad
Gita emphasizes repeatedly the importance of yoga, and hints
more than once at this highest of all yoga sciences. Indeed,
the scientific aspect of enlightenment underlies every teaching
in the Gita.
When an unmagnetized bar of metal is placed next to a bar
magnet, it gradually develops a magnetism of its own, as
its molecules realign themselves, similarly, in a north-south
direction. Such is the real power of the Satguru, or savior,
an essential aid to which my guru, Paramhansa Yogananda,
referred constantly. He completely endorsed the Indian tradition
that one must have a guru to find God. The part played by
the guru is not to make his disciples over in his own image,
but, by sharing his magnetism with them, to uplift their
consciousness. That influence helps to realign the "molecules"
of energy in their own bodies, and most particularly in
the spine, toward the "north" of the spine at
the spiritual eye and in the top of the head (the sahasrara).
None of this is to belittle the need for making painstaking
efforts to transform oneself. Indeed, the Bhagavad Gita
begins by recognizing the state of constant warfare in all
human beings between vice and virtue.
When one considers, however, the vast undertaking one faces
in overcoming even one deep-seated flaw, the task seems
endless. Think how long it takes for an alcoholic to overcome
even that one trait. Once he conquers that one weakness,
it is an occasion for celebration. The number of faults
every man needs to conquer seems almost overwhelming.
Think of that bar of iron. It contains billions of molecules,
probably. They cancel one another out by the fact of being
turned every which way. Now then, supposing one could labor
minutely on each molecule: Think how long it would take
to turn them all in a north-south direction. By the time
one had reached only a short distance in the process, and
was ready to start on the next level, it is quite within
the bounds of possibility for the first molecules to be
turning already in random directions again. There would
not yet be the magnetism to hold them to the right direction.
Apart from the guru's help, the other thing needed for
Self-realization is cooperation with him in the help he
gives. This above all is what is intended by working spiritually
on oneself. Self-transformation can be accomplished not
so much by laboring painstakingly to purify and spiritualize
every flaw, but above all by directing all one's energy
toward the spiritual eye. That upward flow of energy is
like a river, in this case flowing upward (not downward)
to the "mouth" of the spiritual eye, where the
soul merges at last into the sea of superconsciousness.
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