The Five Psychological Perfections
The Five Psychological Perfections
There is not one psychological perfection but five, like the five petals of this flower. We have said they are: sincerity, faith, devotion, aspiration and surrender. But as a matter of fact every time I give this flower it is not always the same psychological perfection, it is something very fluid, depending on the circumstances and the need of people.
Who remembers this?
(Counting the petals)
One, two, three, four, five psychological perfections. What are the
five psychological perfections?....
So,
if someone knows it, he can tell us, we'll compare....
Aspiration, devotion, sincerity and faith.
That makes only four, so far.
And surrender.
Sincerity or Transparency
In any case, what is always there, in all combinations and to
whomever I give it, the first among them all is
sincerity. For if there is no sincerity, one cannot advance
even by half a step. So that is the first, and it is always
there.
But it is possible to translate it
by another word, if you prefer it, which would be "transparency".
I shall explain this word: Someone is in front of me and I am looking
at him; I look into his eyes. And if this person is sincere or
"transparent", through his eyes I go down and I see his
soul - clearly. But - this is precisely the experience - when I look
at somebody and see a little cloud, then I continue, I see a screen,
and then sometimes it is a wall, and afterwards it is something quite
black; and all this must be crossed, and holes bored in order to go
through: and even then I am not sure if at the last minute I may not
find myself before a door of bronze so thick that I shall never get
through and see his soul; so, of such a person I can immediately say
that he is not sincere. But I can also say, figuratively, that he is
not transparent. That is the first thing.
Faith or
Trust in the Divine
There is a
second, which is obviously, as indispensable if you want to go
forward; it is to have faith. Or another word, which seems more
limited but is for me more important, because (it is a question of
experience) if your faith is not made of a complete trust in the
Divine, well, you may very easily remain under the impression that
you have faith and yet be losing all trust in the divine Power or
divine Goodness, or the Trust the Divine has in you. These are the
three stumbling-blocks:
Those who have
what they call an unshakable faith in the Divine, and say, "It
is the Divine who is doing everything, who can do everything; all
that happens in me, in others, everywhere, is the work of the Divine
and the Divine alone", if they follow this with some kind of
logic, after some time they will blame the Divine for all the most
terrible wrongs which take place in the world and make of Him a real
demon, cruel and frightful - if they have no trust.
Or again, they do have faith, but tell themselves, "Well, I have
faith in the Divine, but this world, I see quite well what it's like!
First of all, I suffer so much, don't I? I am very unhappy, far more
unhappy than all my neighbours" - for one is always far more
unhappy than all one's neighbours - "I am very unhappy and,
truly, life is cruel to me.
But then the
Divine is divine. He is All Goodness, All-Generosity, All-Harmony, so
how is it that I am so unhappy? He must be powerless; otherwise being
so good how could He let me suffer so much"
That is the second stumbling-block.
And the third: there are people who have what may be called a warped
and excessive modesty or humility and who tell themselves, "Surely
the Divine has thrown me out. I am good for nothing. He can do
nothing with me, the only thing for me is to give up the game, for He
finds me unworthy of Him!"
So,
unless one adds to faith a total and complete trust in the Divine
Grace, there will be difficulties. So both are necessary....
Devotion
or Gratitude that the Divine Exists
Now, we have put "devotion" in this series. Yes, devotion
is all very well, but unless it is accompanied by many other things
it too may make many mistakes. It may meet with great
difficulties.
You have devotion, and you
keep your ego. And then your ego makes you do all sorts of things out
of devotion, things which are terribly egoistic. That is to say, you
think only of yourself, not of others, nor of the world, nor of the
work, nor of what ought to be done - you think only of your devotion.
And you become tremendously egoistic. And so, when you find out that
the Divine, for some reason, does not answer to your devotion with
the enthusiasm you expected of Him, you despair and fall back into
the same three difficulties I was just speaking about: either the
Divine is cruel - we have read that, there are many such stories, of
enthusiastic devotees who abuse the Divine because He is no longer as
gentle and near to them as before. He has withdrawn, "Why hast
Thou deserted me? Thou hast abandoned me, 0 monster!... They don't
dare to say this, but think it, or else they say, "Oh! I must
have made such a serious mistake that I am thrown out", and they
fall into despair.
But there is another
movement which should constantly accompany devotion.... That kind of
sense of gratitude that the Divine exists; that feeling of a
marvelling thankfulness which truly fills you with a sublime joy at
the fact that the Divine exists, that there is something in the
universe which is the Divine, that it is not just the monstrosity we
see, that there is the Divine, the Divine exists. And each time that
the least thing puts you either directly or indirectly in contact
with this sublime Reality of divine existence, the heart is filled
with so intense, so marvellous a joy, such a gratitude as of all
things has the most delightful taste.
There is nothing which gives you a joy equal to that of gratitude.
One hears a bird sing, sees a lovely flower, looks at a little child,
observes an act of generosity, reads a beautiful sentence, looks at
the setting sun, no matter what, suddenly this comes upon you, this
kind of emotion - indeed so deep, so intense - that the world
manifests the Divine, that there is something behind the world which
is the Divine.
So I find that devotion
without gratitude is quite incomplete, gratitude must come with
devotion.
Courage
or Aspiration
I remember that once we
spoke of courage as one of the perfections; I remember having written
it down once in a list. But this courage means having a taste for the
supreme adventure. And this taste for supreme adventure is aspiration
- an aspiration which takes hold of you completely and flings you,
without calculation and without reserve and without a possibility of
withdrawal, into the great adventure of the divine discovery, the
great adventure of the divine meeting, the yet greater adventure of
the divine Realisation; you throw yourself into the adventure without
looking back and without asking for a single minute, "What's
going to happen?" For if you ask what is going to happen, you
never start, you always remain stuck there, rooted to the spot,
afraid to lose something, to lose your balance.
That's why I speak of courage - but really it is aspiration. They go
together. A real aspiration is something full of courage.
And now, surrender. In English the word is "surrender",
there is no French word which gives exactly that sense. But Sri
Aurobindo has said - I think we have read this - that surrender is
the first and absolute condition for doing the yoga. So, if we follow
what he has said, this is not just one of the necessary qualities: it
is the first attitude indispensable for beginning the yoga. If one
has not decided to make a total surrender, one cannot begin.
But for this surrender to be total, all these qualities are
necessary.
Endurance or Perseverance
And I add
one more - for so far we have only four - I add endurance. For, if
you are not able to face difficulties without getting discouraged and
without giving up, because it is too difficult; and if you are
incapable... well, of receiving blows and yet continuing, of
"pocketing" them, as they say - when you receive blows as a
result of your defects, of putting them in your pocket and continuing
to go forward without flagging - you don't go very far; at the first
turning where you lose sight of your little habitual life, you fall
into despair and give up the game.
The
most... how shall I put it? the most material form of this is
perseverance. Unless you are resolved to begin the same thing over
again a thousand times if need be... You know, people come to me in
despair, "But I thought it was done and now I must begin again!"
And if they are told, "But that's nothing, you will probably
have to begin again a hundred times, two hundred times, a thousand
times; you take one step forward and think you are secure, but there
will always be something to bring back the same difficulty a little
farther on. You think you have solved the problem, you must solve it
yet once again; it will turn up again looking just a little
different, but it will be the same problem", and if you are not
determined that: "Even if it comes back a million times, I shall
do it a million times, but I shall go through with it", well,
you won't be able to do the yoga. This is absolutely
indispensable.
People have a beautiful
experience and say, "Ah, now this is it!..." And then it
settles down, diminishes, gets veiled, and suddenly something quite
unexpected, absolutely commonplace and apparently completely
uninteresting comes before you and blocks your way. And then you say,
"Ah! what's the good of having made this progress if it's going
to start all over again? Why should I do it? I made an effort, I
succeeded, achieved something, and now it's as if I had done nothing!
It's indeed hopeless." For you have no endurance.
If one has endurance, one says, "It's all right. Good. I shall
begin again as often as necessary; a thousand times, ten thousand
times, a hundred thousand times if necessary, I shall begin again -
but I shall go to the end and nothing will have the power to stop me
on the way."
This is most necessary.
Most necessary.
So here's my proposal; we put surrender first, at the top of the
list, that is, we accept what Sri Aurobindo has said - that to do the
integral yoga one must first resolve to surrender entirely to the
Divine, there is no other way, this is the way. But after that one
must have the five psychological virtues, five psychological
perfections, and we say that these perfections are:
1.
Sincerity or Transparency;
2. Faith or Trust (Trust in the
Divine, naturally);
3. Devotion or Gratitude;
4.
Courage or Aspiration;
5. Endurance or Perseverance.
One form of endurance is faithfulness, faithfulness to one's
resolution - being faithful. One has taken a resolution, one is
faithful to one's resolution. This is endurance.
There you are.
If one persists, there
comes a time when one is victorious. Victory is to the persistent.
THE MOTHER
commented by Vladimir on Dec 14, 2009