THE MIND: ITS MYSTERIES AND CONTROL - 36. THE MIND COMPARED - Sri Swami Sivananda - The Mind: Its Mysteries and Control - HQ Full Book.
The Mind Compared
Sri Swami Sivananda, in his profound work "The Mind: Its Mysteries and Control," delves into the intricate workings of the human mind, offering vivid comparisons to illustrate its tendencies, struggles, and methods of control. Chapter 36, titled "The Mind Compared," is a masterful exploration of the mind's nature, characterized by its restlessness, unpredictability, and immense potential when properly directed.
Restless Like a Ghost
The mind is likened to a ghost, ever restless and demanding engagement. Through an allegorical story, Sivananda describes a teacher who, through mantra-psychic power, subdues a ghost. This ghost, insatiable and relentless, demands continuous tasks, threatening to devour the teacher if left idle even for a moment. The teacher’s guru advises a clever solution: install a greased wooden post and instruct the ghost to climb up and down perpetually. This tale underscores the essential lesson that the mind, like the ghost, must be kept constantly engaged in purposeful activities such as mantra repetition, meditation, self-study, service, devotional singing, prayer, or breath-control. Only through constant engagement can one achieve mastery over the restless mind and establish oneself in physical and mental celibacy.
Scatters Like Mercury
The mind’s activity is compared to mercury spilled on the ground. Just as mercury splits into countless fragments, scattering in all directions and resisting collection, so too does the mind dissipate its energy toward myriad sensual objects. This scattering weakens the mind, making it challenging to harness its full potential. However, through spiritual practices and cultivating dispassion, the dispersed mental rays can be collected and directed toward a single, focused purpose.
Shameless as a Street Dog
The mind is also likened to a shameless, wounded street dog, wandering from door to door despite repeated rejection and harm. Like the dog that continually returns to the same doors despite being beaten, the mind persistently chases after sensual pleasures, even when such pursuits lead to pain and sorrow. Sivananda emphasizes that the mind must be disciplined and redirected toward its true source, the Supreme Brahman. By chanting “Om” with devotion and feeling, the mind can be made to taste the infinite bliss of the Self, ultimately finding rest in its original abode of eternal peace.
Jumps Like a Tennis Ball
The mind’s tendencies are likened to a tennis ball, which leaps high into the sky only to plummet back to the ground. Similarly, during meditation, the novice mind briefly ascends to divine contemplation but quickly falls back into old patterns of worldly thoughts. Sivananda advises persistence. Just as a tennis ball can be hit upward again with renewed effort, so too must the meditator continually lift the mind toward higher realms of divine consciousness.
Reflects Like a Mirror
The mind functions like a mirror, reflecting Reality—the Supreme Brahman—within it. However, the clarity of this reflection depends on the purity of the mind. Just as a tainted or imperfect mirror distorts the image it reflects, selfish desires, passions, and latent impurities cloud the mind, obscuring the revelation of Truth. Spiritual aspirants must practice introspection and eliminate these impurities to ensure a clear and accurate reflection of Reality. Sivananda illustrates this with an example: just as a dog mistakes its reflection in a mirror for another dog, so too does man, blinded by ignorance, perceive others as separate from himself, leading to hatred and jealousy.
Oscillates Like a Pendulum
The aspirant’s mind...