The Characteristics of a Mantra by
Avadhutika Ananda Mitra Acarya
The mantra is like a rocket engine that propels the mind
beyond the "gravitational fields" of the lower
levels of consciousness, through all the turbulence of the
subconscious mind, to the superconscious - and beyond. Thus,
a correct process of meditation involves the generation
of immense psychic energy through intense concentration
on the mantra.
Some systems of meditation which involve internal repetition
of certain sounds, advise the meditators not to concentrate
on them. Such techniques are quite relaxing and refreshing,
but for spiritual elevation, concentration is essential
- the intense effort to focus the mind on the mantra. Like
the farmer whose mind was concentrated on his sick son,
or the chemist concentrated on his research, or the medium
concentrated on her crystal ball - the fixed attention of
the mind on any object of thought will produce the necessary
internal energy to elevate the mind to subtler levels. Experiments
on Ananda Marga meditators whose process begins with concentration
have shown that, rather than being asleep or passively relaxed,
their bodies and minds are in a state of intense physiological
activation: more energy, rather than less, is flowing through
them.
THREE QUALITIES
OF A MANTRA:
PULSATIVE
What is the special effect of the mantra,
that by focusing the mind on it, one can transcend the ignorance
and illusions of the lower mind?
A mantra must have three qualities to hold the restless
mind steady, to energise it, and to transport it to subtler
realms. It must be pulsative, incantative and ideative.
First, it must be pulsative. It must be of two syllables
so that it can flow rhythmically with the breathing, for
the breathing has a profound effect upon the state of one's
consciousness. You may have noticed that whenever you are
angry or upset, your breathing is fast and short; but when
you are absorbed in any task, you naturally breathe slowly
and deeply.
The functioning of breathing is closely associated with
the flow of vital energy in the body, called prana, which
in turn greatly affects the mind. If the breathing is fast
and irregular, the prana becomes unsteady and agitated;
the mind becomes disturbed and perception and thinking are
unclear. Thus control of breathing pranayama is an important
part of yoga training. The more the breathing is slowed
and regulated, the greater the composure in the prana, and
the greater the concentration and control of the mind.
Once there was a minister who had greatly displeased his
king. As punishment, the king ordered him imprisoned in
the top of a very high tower, and the minister was left
there to perish. That night, the minister's faithful wife
came to the tower, crying, to see if there was any way she
could help him escape. He told her to return to the tower
the following night, bringing with her a long rope, some
string, some silken thread, a beetle, and a pot of honey.
Wondering at this strange command, the wife obeyed, and
the next night brought him the desired articles. The minister
directed her to tie the silken thread firmly around the
beetle's leg, then to smear its feelers with a drop of honey
and place it on the tower wall, with its head pointing upward.
Attracted by the scent of the honey, the beetle crawled
slowly up the wall, drawing the silken thread behind it.
Hours later, it reached the top, and the minister caught
it and untied the silken thread. Then he told his wife to
tie the other end of the thread, dangling on the ground,
to the long string. The minister then pulled up the thread
until he could grasp the end of the string. Next he instructed
her to tie the rope to the other end of the string, and
pulling up the string, he grabbed the rope and tied it to
the tower window - and slid down to freedom.
The silken thread is the motion of breathing the string
is the prana or vital energy, and the rope is the mind.
By controlling the motion of breathing, we can gain control
over the prana; by controlling the prana, we can control
the mind. Then we attain liberation from all bondages.
Thus the mantra must be of two syllables so that its slow
and rhythmic internal chanting will serve to slow the breathing,
steady the prana, and calm and control the restless wandering
of the mind.
THE SECOND QUALITY OF A MANTRA: INCANTATIVE
The second quality is incantative. The
mantra must have a certain sound, a certain vibrational
pattern so that when it is chanted internally, it will elevate
the individual's own vibration, or "entitative rhythm".
Each entity of this creation has its own particular entitative
rhythm, its own note in the universal harmony. From pulsing
quasars to oscillating electrons - from the ultrasonic melody
of mountain ranges to the ceaseless reverberation of the
creatures, singing and drumming, whirring and clicking,
laughing and crying - all the notes are orchestrated in
a vast cosmic concert.
The source of this ceaseless rhythmic movement is the Infinite
Consciousness, soundless and still, the ocean of peace.
Undisturbed by any vibration, it flows in an infinite straight
line through eternity.
The ancient sages, who had merged their minds in this sea
of unexpressed Consciousness, realised that the universe
is a vibrational play of varied waves with different wavelengths.
By their intutional powers, they came to understand the
laws of universal harmonics governing this vibrational flow,
and they developed a subtle science of sound to affect the
rhythms of creation - without any mechanical apparatus.
Indian music, developed by the great yoga master, Shiva,
over seven thousand years ago, was one branch of that science.
The classical ra'gas, or musical scales, are so subtly attuned
to the rhythms of nature that each raga is to be played
or sung only in a certain season and at a certain time of
the day, to produce a specific emotional effect in the musician
and audience. One raga is played only at dawn in the spring,
to evoke the mood of universal love, another is sung only
during the evening in summer, to arouse compassion; still
another only during midday in the rainy season, to summon
courage.
It is said that the masters of music had control over not
only human emotions, but all natural manifestations as well
they could produce heat and rainfall at will, and the vibrations
of their voices alone would cause finely-tuned musical instruments
to resonate in accompaniment! Historical documents describe
the remarkable powers possessed by Tansen, the 16th Century
court musician of Akbar the Great. Commanded by the Emperor
to sing a night raga while the sun was overhead, Tansen's
vibrational song instantly caused the whole palace to become
enveloped in darkness.
But the subtlest of all these sciences of sound was the
science of mantra. The masters knew that each individual's
entitative rhythm vibrates at a particular frequency. Like
many instruments in a symphony playing in harmony, the combination
of all the various "bio-rhythms" of mind and body
(psychic waves, heart?eat, metabolic rate, etc.) produces
the individual's particular "melody". If this
individual melody is raised to subtler and slower frequencies,
it ultimately becomes infinite - and the mind merges in
boundless Cosmic Consciousness.
Through long inner experimentation, the yogis developed
a series of powerful sounds or mantras which, when chanted
internally, resonate with the individual's entitative rhythm
and gradually transform it into the infinite straight line
of Supreme Peace.
These sounds originated from inside their own bodies, and
were systematised into the oldest alphabet and language
on earth - Sanskrit.
SANSKRIT: THE HUMAN BODY'S ETERNAL SONG
Close your eyes for a moment and just listen.
What did you hear? Even when we are in a "quiet"
environment, so many sounds bombard our ears : the dull
drone of machines, distant voices carried on the wind, birdsongs,
telephones, construction noises, traffic it seems impossible
to escape external noise in this modern world.
But if we can withdraw our minds from these external sounds,
we will hear much subtler, inner vibrations. In the absolute
stillness of soundproof chambers in scientific laboratories,
insulated from all external noise, some people have been
able to hear some of these intemal sounds : a high-pitched
resonance, and a deep throbbing the vibrations of their
own nervous system, and the pulsing of their blood.
Thousands of years ago, yogis meditating in the utter silence
of caves or mountains, were able to withdraw their minds
not only from external sounds, but from the noises of the
physical body as well. They could then focus their minds
on centres of subtle energy inside them. Along the spine
and in the brain, there are seven psychic energy centres
or chakras which control the functioning ofmind and body.
Most human beings are unaware of these chakras, but when
the mind and body become more refined through meditation,
these subtle energy centres can be perceived and controlled.
The chakras have been described by enlightened saints and
mystics of all spiritual paths and cultures - by Buddhists,
ancient Chinese, Hindus, Tantriks, Christian and Jewish
mystics*, Sufis, and Native American Indians. Recently,
science has detected them as well. Sensitive instruments
have measured energy emanations (beyond frequencies which
are known to come from biochemical, anatomic systems), surging
from the surface of the body at the exact locations of the
chakras.'~
Those ancient yogis who directed their inner ear toward
these energy centres, were able to hear the subtle vibrations
emanating from each 9f them - 49 different vibrations in
all. Then they spoke them aloud, and each of these subtle
inner sounds became one letter of the Sanskrit alphabet
Thus, the Sanskrit language - sometimes called "the
mother of all languages" - was developed from the externalised
sounds of our subtle internal energies. It is the human
body's eternal song.
MANTRA TRANSFORMS THE ENTITATIVE RHYTHM
The yogis then combined these powerful
sounds into mantras which are attuned to the universal rhythms
of the cosmos. For thousands of years, these mantras were
never written down, lest they be misused by unworthy power-seekers,
but were passed down directly from guru to disciple. Even
today, they must be learned personally from a qualified
teacher of Ananda Marga; for different individuals, with
different entitative rhythms, will receive different mantras
for concentration. Thus, people of all nationalities, regardless
of their language, will use Sanskrit mantras for meditation,
because Sanskrit is the universal language for self-realisation.
The repeated chanting of the subtle inner music of the mantra
(the "incantative rhythm") in meditation vibrates
the chakras and stills the restlessness of the mind:
Gradually, the meditator's entitative rhythm slows down
in resonance with the mantra
Finally, it is transformed into the straight line cosmic
rhythm, and merges into the eternally still and serene sea
of Cosmic Consciousness, the goal of all yoga practice.
THE THIRD QUALITY OF A MANTRA :
IDEATIVE
The mantra is not only a vibratory, pulsating
sound that harmonises all the rhythms of the mind arid body
with the Supreme Rhythm, it has a specific expansive meaning
as well.
Yogis have taught for centuries the simple truth : "As
you think, so you become." It is now an accepted psychological
fact that the mind becomes like its object of ideation.
Many experiments have shown that our consciousness tends
to merge or identify with any focus of attention that is
maintained for a sufficient period. Thus visualisations
and affirmations will gradually transform our minds according
to their object of concentration.
Understanding that people are often limited by the negative
or inferior ideas they have of themselves, psychologists
attempt to change our "self-image" and thus to
completely transform our personality. In one experiment,
a man - sweating and straining as hard as he could - could
only lift 150 kg. of weight. Then he was hypnotised, and
the hypnotist repeated, "You are the strongest man
in the world you have tremendous strength!" Under hypnosis,
he lifted 200 kg. without the slightest strain or difficulty.
Today, the "power of positive thinking," positive
affirmations and creative visualisations are being used
by many people all over the world to become more successful,
more popular, more wealthy. But the goal of yoga is not
so narrow or limited as worldly success or wealth. It is
nothing less than infinity - the infinite expansion of one's
mind to merge with the Supreme Consciousness.
Thus, the process of meditation also employs a repeated
affirmation - the meaning of the mantra "I am Infinite
Consciousness" "I am one with That." Actually,
this is the reality - on the highest levels of our being,
we are infinite and we always have been; we only do not
realise it because we identify with our small egos, with
the limited lower levels of our minds.
So by daily practice, by the constant ideation, "I
am That," we gradually lessen our false identification
with our body and lower mind, and identify with the blissful
Self within. As the mind gradually, imperceptibly expands
through higher and higher layers, one glorious day we become
completely free from all the bondages of ego and realise
that we are not this body, we are not this mind, we are
not this imperfect personality - we are infinite. We are
the Supreme Consciousness. In that moment, we go beyond
the mantra - beyond pulsation, beyond vibration, beyond
ideation - and in breathless silence, we dissolve into ecstatic
union with the origin of all.
Sooner or later, we will all experience it - it is the birthright
of every human being. Each person is a channel for infinite
power and energy and knowledge - a vessel to be filled with
this never-ending bliss. The revelations of dreams, hypnosis,
hallucinations, creative flashes, and intuitional foresight
have given us some idea of the limitless resources of our
inner spaces. Now we must check the external drift of our
minds and turn our awareness in upon itself so we can explore
the Kingdom of Light within.
"The Supreme Consciousness is
inside you like butter in milk; churn your mind through
meditation and He will appear - you will see that the resplendence
of the Supreme Consciousness illumines your whole inner
being. He is like a subterranean river in you. Remove the
sands of mind and you will find the clear, cool waters within."
--Shrii Shrii Anandamurti