Open main menu

Changes

no edit summary
{|class="wikitable" style= "background-color: #efefff; width: 100%;"
|
Read Summary of '''[[Concentration]]'''
|}
 
In our valuation of the movements of our consciousness this ability of concentration is rightly held to be one of the greatest powers of the human mentality. <ref>Sri Aurobindo. (2005). The divine and the undivine. In The life divine - I. http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-divine-and-the-undivine#p16</ref>
The concentration of an enlightened thought, will and heart turned in unison towards one vast goal of our knowledge, one luminous and infinite source of our action, one imperishable object of our emotion is the starting-point of the Yoga. And the object of our seeking must be the very fount of the Light which is growing in us, the very origin of the Force which we are calling to move our members. Our one objective must be the Divine himself to whom, knowingly or unknowingly, something always aspires in our secret nature.
There must be a large, many-sided yet single concentration of the thought on the idea, the perception, the vision, the awakening touch, the soul's realisation of the one Divine. There must be a flaming concentration of the heart on the seeking of the All and Eternal and, when once we have found him, a deep plunging and immersion in the possession and ecstasy of the All-Beautiful. There must be a strong and immovable concentration of the will on the attainment and fulfilment of all that the Divine is and a free and plastic opening of it to all that he intends to manifest in us. This is the triple way of the Yoga. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/self-consecration#p18</ref>
 
{|class="wikitable" style= "background-color: #efefff; width: 100%;"
|
Read Summary of '''[[Concentration]]'''
|}
 
=References=
1,727

edits