90. Paul Brunton. Part two
Next day the swami took Paul Brunton to the hill of Arunachala
where the Maharishee lived. The Maharishee had come to that hill about thirty
years ago, as a young man of seventeen, and never left that place even for a
day. A mysterious force pulled him from his home. He left family, studies, and
arrived at Arunachala without money. He sat in meditation, naked, near the
temple, and talked to no one for three years. He was persuaded by the priests
to wear a loin cloth. After sometime he moved to a cave in the hill and pursued
his trance like state for several years. He would go to the village and beg for
food. His fame spread. He now lived in a shed (hall). He talked extremely
little and sat and slept on a divan in a corner of the hall. Visitors came
everyday and sat in semicircles on the red-tiled floor at a respectable
distance from the Maharishee.
Brunton saw a man seated in a rigid posture on the divan,
completely immobile, gazing outside. After one hour, Brunton was convinced that
the Maharishee was in a trance. After one hour of sitting in the hall, Brunton
became aware that a deep peace had come upon his soul. All the questions he had
prepared in his mind to ask from Maharishee were gone. He did not feel any need
for questions.
Brunton had two interviews with the Maharishee. He asked the
Maharishee whether he could help him to experience enlightenment, or if his
search for Truth was a mere delusion?
After some preliminaries, the Maharishee replied “there is only
one thing to be done……look into your own self……..”
He further added “Through deep reflection on the nature of
one’s self, and through constant meditation, light can be found.”
Brunton asked that what was the average time required for
such a quest.
Maharishee replied that there was no average. It depended on
the maturity of the seeker’s mind, gunpowder lighted at once whereas much time
was needed to light coal.
That night, in the hall, Brunton fell in half-sleep and had
a vivid dream:
‘He had become a boy of five, and was holding the hand of
Maharishee, who had become a tall towering figure. They climbed the hill of
Arunachala………………………………….Maharishee looked at him and he at Maharishee………………he
felt a change occurring in him………………………..all his previous fears, desires changed
into nothingness……an indescribable peace fell upon him………………………………….
Maharishee bade him look down. To his astonishment he found
the Western hemisphere sprawled far below, with millions of people………………
Maharishee’s distinct voice comes in his ears: ‘ when you go
back , you shall have this peace which you now feel…………………..but you shall have
to forget your self…………….and turn it
over to THAT’
He woke up. He met Maharishee’s eyes. Maharishee was fixedly
looking into his eyes.
On his second interview he learnt some more pearls of
wisdom:
‘Maharishee said that every person was ever wanting
happiness. …………………………Therefore man’s true nature was happiness…………………….his
unconscious search for happiness was the search for his true self. The true self was imperishable;
therefore when he finds it, he finds everlasting happiness.
When a man finds his true self, something else arises from
the depth of his being, which takes possession of him. That something is
eternal, divine, and infinite.
Happiness and true self were identical.’
He also became fully convinced that a mysterious power
arises from the Maharishee which imparts peace and tranquility over others
Brunton resumed his travels of India. In Benares, one of the
holiest cities of Hinduism, he heard of an astrologer who was very good in his
craft. Since Brunton did not believe in astrology, he was intrigued, and
decided to give it a test. He went to the astrologer’s house with a friend. He
was startled by the death-like countenance, incredibly lean body, and unearthly
slow movements of Sudhei Babu, the astrologer. They discussed some subjects.
Sudhei Babu invited him for more talk, next day.
Sudhei Babu told him that he was in possession of some parts
of a thousands of year old book called Brahma Chinta, written by the sage Bhrigu.
It taught a different form of yoga than any other. In this yoga, the spirit of
Bhrigu guides the practitioner. One does not need any teacher; one’s own soul
becomes his teacher. The purpose of this
yoga was to go into a ‘Holy Trance ‘. In that condition, man becomes free from
his surroundings. He discovers the soul as a real living thing within himself;
its bliss, peace and power overwhelms him. When one enters into the sacred
trance, a kind of vacuum is created in the mind; God…………………………the soul, the
higher power, fills this vacuum. There is intense happiness. One feels a great
love for the whole of creation.
“Once, during the sacred trance, I saw Jesus.”
Sudhei Babu taught Brunton this secret yoga over the next
several days
To be continued
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