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Read Summary of '''[[Perfection Summary|Perfection]]'''
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= What is Perfection? =
 
'''Perfection in General'''
 
Perfection is all that we want to become in our highest aspiration. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/15/perfection#p10</ref>
 
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Some people put perfection at the apex. It is generally thought that perfection is the maximum one can do. But I say that perfection is not the apex, it is not an extreme. There is no extreme—whatever you may do, there is always the possibility of something better, and it is exactly this possibility of something better which is the very meaning of progress. (The Mother, 30 December 1950) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/30-december-1950#p5</ref>
 
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The mundane perfection is sometimes conceived of as something outward, social, a thing of action, a more rational dealing with our fellow-men and our environment, a better and more efficient citizenship and discharge of duties, a better, richer, kindlier and happier way of living, with a more just and more harmonious associated enjoyment of the opportunities of existence. By others again a more inner and subjective ideal is cherished, a clarifying and raising of the intelligence, will and reason, a heightening and ordering of power and capacity in the nature, a nobler ethical, a richer aesthetic, a finer emotional, a much healthier and better-governed vital and physical being. Sometimes one element is stressed, almost to the exclusion of the rest; sometimes, in wider and more well-balanced minds, the whole harmony is envisaged as a total perfection. A change of education and social institutions is the outward means adopted or an inner self-training and development is preferred as the true instrumentation. Or the two aims may be clearly united, the perfection of the inner individual, the perfection of the outer living. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-integral-perfection#p2</ref>
= What is '''Elements of Perfection? ='''
Perfection It is all , then, this spiritual fulfilment of the urge to individual perfection and an inner completeness of being that we want to become mean first when we speak of a divine life. It is the first essential condition of a perfected life on earth, and we are therefore right in making the utmost possible individual perfection our highest aspirationfirst supreme business. The perfection of the spiritual and pragmatic relation of the individual with all around him is our second preoccupation; the solution of this second desideratum lies in a complete universality and oneness with all life upon earth which is the other concomitant result of an evolution into the gnostic consciousness and nature. But there still remains the third desideratum, a new world, a change in the total life of humanity or, at the least, a new perfected collective life in the earth-nature. This calls for the appearance not only of isolated evolved individuals acting in the unevolved mass, but of many gnostic individuals forming a new kind of beings and a new common life superior to the present individual and common existence. A collective life of this kind must obviously constitute itself on the same principle as the life of the gnostic individual. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1522/perfectionthe-divine-life#p10p19</ref>
The Divine is the perfection towards which we move. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/14/the-divine-and-man#p8~</refcenter>
Perfection is something which lacks nothing. The divine perfection is These three elements, a union with the supreme Divine in His entirety, which lacks nothing. The divine perfection is unity with the universal Self, and a supramental life action from this transcendent origin and through this universality, but still with the Divine individual as a wholethe soul-channel and natural instrument, from whom nothing has been taken away—so it is just constitute the opposite! For essence of the moralists integral divine perfection means all of the virtues that they representhuman being. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1024/aphorismthe-63integral-64-65#p24perfection?search=perfection</ref>
Some people put perfection at the apex. It is generally thought that perfection is the maximum one can do. But I say that perfection is not the apex, it is not an extreme. There is no extreme—whatever you may do, there is always the possibility of something better, and it is exactly this possibility of something better which '''Where is the very meaning Power of progress. (The Mother, 30 December 1950) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/30-december-1950#p5</ref>Perfection?'''
Where in the radically imperfect shall we find the principle and power of perfection? Mind rooted in division and limitation cannot provide it to us, nor can life and the body which are the energy and the frame of dividing and limiting mind. The principle and power of perfection are there in the subconscient but wrapped up in the tegument or veil of the lower Maya, a mute premonition emerging as an unrealised ideal; in the superconscient they await, open, eternally realised, but still separated from us by the veil of our self-ignorance. It is above, then, and not either in our present poise nor below it that we must seek for the reconciling power and knowledge.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-problem-of-life#p12</ref>
The characteristic law of Spirit is self-existent perfection and immutable infinity. It possesses always and in its own right the immortality which is the aim of Life and the perfection which is the goal of Mind. The attainment of the eternal and the realisation of that which is the same in all things and beyond all things, equally blissful in universe and outside it, untouched by the imperfections and limitations of the forms and activities in which it dwells, are the glory of the spiritual life. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-threefold-life#p7</ref>'''Divine Perfection'''
As you pursue this labour of purification and unification, you must at the same time take great care to perfect the external and instrumental part of your being. When the higher truth manifests, it must find in you a mind that The Divine is supple and rich enough to be able to give the idea that seeks to express itself a form of thought perfection towards which preserves its force and clarity. This thought, again, when it seeks to clothe itself in words, must find in you a sufficient power of expression so that the words reveal the thought and do not deform it. And the formula in which you embody the truth should be manifested in all your feelings, all your acts of will, all your actions, in all the movements of your being. Finally, these movements themselves should, by constant effort, attain their highest perfectionwe move. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/1214/the-sciencedivine-ofand-livingman#p6p8</ref>
But always the whole foundation of the gnostic life must be by its very nature inward and not outward. In the life of the spirit it is the spirit, the inner Reality, that has built up and uses the mind, vital being and body as its instrumentation; thought, feeling and action do not exist for themselves, they are not an object, but the means; they serve to express the manifested divine Reality within us: otherwise, without this inwardness, this spiritual origination, in a too externalised consciousness or by only external means, no greater or divine life is possible. In our present life of Nature, in our externalised surface existence, it is the world that seems to create us; but in the turn to the spiritual life it is we who must create ourselves and our world. In this new formula of creation, the inner life becomes of the first importance and the rest can be only its expression and outcome. It is this, indeed, that is indicated by our own strivings towards perfection, the perfection of our own soul and mind and life and the perfection of the life of the race. For we are given a world which is obscure, ignorant, material, imperfect, and our external conscious being is itself created by the energies, the pressure, the moulding operations of this vast mute obscurity, by physical birth, by environment, by a training through the impacts and shocks of life; and yet we are vaguely aware of something that is there in us or seeking to be, something other than what has been thus made, a spirit self-existent, self-determining, pushing the nature towards the creation of an image of its own occult perfection or Idea of perfection. There is something that grows in us in answer to this demand, that strives to become the image of a divine. Somewhat, and is impelled also to labour at the world outside that has been given to it and to remake that too in a greater image, in the image of its own spiritual and mental and vital growth, to make our world too something created according to our own mind and self-conceiving spirit, something new, harmonious, perfect. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p6~</refcenter>
A divine perfection of the human being is our aim. We must know then first what are the essential elements that constitute man's total perfection; secondly, what we mean by a divine as distinguished from a human perfection of our being. That man as a being is capable of self-development and of some approach at least to an ideal standard of perfection which his mind is able to conceive, fix before it and pursue, is common ground to all thinking humanity, though it may be only the minority who concern themselves with this possibility as providing the one most important aim of life.<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-integral-perfection#p1</ref>
The mundane perfection is sometimes conceived of as something outward, social, a thing of action, a more rational dealing with our fellow-men and our environment, a better and more efficient citizenship and discharge of duties, a better, richer, kindlier and happier way of living, with a more just and more harmonious associated enjoyment of the opportunities of existence. By others again a more inner and subjective ideal is cherished, a clarifying and raising of the intelligence, will and reason, a heightening and ordering of power and capacity in the nature, a nobler ethical, a richer aesthetic, a finer emotional, a much healthier and better-governed vital and physical being. Sometimes one element is stressed, almost to the exclusion of the rest; sometimes, in wider and more well-balanced minds, the whole harmony is envisaged as a total perfection. A change of education and social institutions is the outward means adopted or an inner self-training and development is preferred as the true instrumentation. Or the two aims may be clearly united, the perfection of the inner individual, the perfection of the outer living. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-integral-perfection#p2~</refcenter>
Perfection The characteristic law of all kinds is indeed good, as it Spirit is the sign of the pressure of the consciousness in the material world towards full self-expression in this or that limit, on this or that levelexistent perfection and immutable infinity. In a certain sense it is an urge of the Divine itself hidden It possesses always and in forms that tends in the lesser degrees of consciousness towards its own increasing self-revelation. Perfection of an object or a scene in inanimate Nature, animate perfection of strength, speed, physical beauty, courage or animal fidelity, affection, intelligence, perfection of art, music, poetry, literature,—perfection of right the immortality which is the intellect in any kind aim of mental activity, Life and the perfect statesman, warrior, artist, craftsman,—perfection in vital force and capacity, perfection in ethical qualities, character, temperament,—all have their high value, their place as rungs in the ladder of evolution, which is the seried steps goal of the spirit's emergenceMind. If one likes to call that spiritual because The attainment of this hidden urge behind it one can do so; it can at least be regarded as a preparation for the secret spirit's emergence. But thought eternal and knowledge can only proceed by making the necessary distinctions. Much confusion realisation of that which is created by neglecting them. This mental idealismthe same in all things and beyond all things, ethical development, religious piety equally blissful in universe and fervouroutside it, occult powers and feats have all been taken as spirituality untouched by the imperfections and the spiritual evolution kept tied to the moorings limitations of the planes of lesser consciousness forms and activities in which do indeed prepare it dwells, are the soul by experience for glory of the spiritual consciousness but are not themselves that. For perfection can only become truly spiritual when it is founded on the awakened spiritual consciousness and takes on its peculiar essencelife.<ref> http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2823/idealismthe-andthreefold-spiritualitylife#p1p7</ref>
==Perfection in the Mind==<center>~</center>
Man, the mental being, has an imperfect life because mind is not the first and highest power of consciousness of the Being; even if mind were perfected, there would be still something yet to be realised, not yet manifested. For what is involved and emergent is not a Mind, but a Spirit, and mind is not the native dynamism of consciousness of the Spirit; supermind, the light of gnosis, is its native dynamism. If then life has to become a manifestation of the Spirit, it is the manifestation of a spiritual being in us and the divine life of a perfected consciousness in a supramental or gnostic power of spiritual being that must be the secret burden and intention of evolutionary Nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p3</ref>
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Perfection of all kinds is indeed good, as it is the sign of the pressure of the consciousness in the material world towards full self-expression in this or that limit, on this or that level. In a certain sense it is an urge of the Divine itself hidden in forms that tends in the lesser degrees of consciousness towards its own increasing self-revelation. Perfection of an object or a scene in inanimate Nature, animate perfection of strength, speed, physical beauty, courage or animal fidelity, affection, intelligence, perfection of art, music, poetry, literature,—perfection of the intellect in any kind of mental activity, the perfect statesman, warrior, artist, craftsman,—perfection in vital force and capacity, perfection in ethical qualities, character, temperament,—all have their high value, their place as rungs in the ladder of evolution, the seried steps of the spirit's emergence. If one likes to call that spiritual because of this hidden urge behind it one can do so; it can at least be regarded as a preparation for the secret spirit's emergence. But thought and knowledge can only proceed by making the necessary distinctions. Much confusion is created by neglecting them. This mental idealism, ethical development, religious piety and fervour, occult powers and feats have all been taken as spirituality and the spiritual evolution kept tied to the moorings of the planes of lesser consciousness which do indeed prepare the soul by experience for the spiritual consciousness but are not themselves that. For perfection can only become truly spiritual when it is founded on the awakened spiritual consciousness and takes on its peculiar essence.<ref> http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/28/idealism-and-spirituality#p1</ref>
But our mind is obscure, partial in its notions, misled by opposite surface appearances, divided between various possibilities; it is led in three different directions to any of which it may give an exclusive preference. Our mind, in its search for what must be, turns towards a concentration on our own inner spiritual growth and perfection, on our own individual being and inner living; or it turns towards a concentration on an individual development of our surface nature, on the perfection of our thought and outer dynamic or practical action on the world, on some idealism of our personal relation with the world around us; or it turns rather towards a concentration on the outer world itself, on making it better, more suited to our ideas and temperament or to our conception of what should be. On one side there is the call of our spiritual being which is our true self, a transcendent reality, a being of the Divine Being, not created by the world, able to live in itself, to rise out of world to transcendence; on the other side there is the demand of the world around us which is a cosmic form, a formulation of the Divine Being, a power of the Reality in disguise. There is too the divided or double demand of our being of Nature which is poised between these two terms, depends on them and connects them; for it is apparently made by the world and yet, because its true creator is in ourselves and the world instrumentation that seems to make it is only the means first used, it is really a form, a disguised manifestation of a greater spiritual being within us. It is this demand that mediates between our preoccupation with an inward perfection or spiritual liberation and our preoccupation with the outer world and its formation, insists on a happier relation between the two terms and creates the ideal of a better individual in a better world. But it is within us that the Reality must be found and the source and foundation of a perfected life; no outward formation can replace it: there must be the true self realised within if there is to be the true life realised in world and Nature. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p7~</refcenter>
== Perfection But always the whole foundation of the gnostic life must be by its very nature inward and not outward. In the life of the spirit it is the spirit, the inner Reality, that has built up and uses the mind, vital being and body as its instrumentation; thought, feeling and action do not exist for themselves, they are not an object, but the means; they serve to express the manifested divine Reality within us: otherwise, without this inwardness, this spiritual origination, in a too externalised consciousness or by only external means, no greater or divine life is possible. In our present life of Nature, in our externalised surface existence, it is the world that seems to create us; but in the turn to the spiritual life it is we who must create ourselves and our world. In this new formula of creation, the inner life becomes of the first importance and the rest can be only its expression and outcome. It is this, indeed, that is indicated by our own strivings towards perfection, the perfection of our own soul and mind and life and the perfection of the life of the race. For we are given a world which is obscure, ignorant, material, imperfect, and our external conscious being is itself created by the energies, the pressure, the moulding operations of this vast mute obscurity, by physical birth, by environment, by a training through the impacts and shocks of life; and yet we are vaguely aware of something that is there in us or seeking to be, something other than what has been thus made, a spirit self-existent, self-determining, pushing the nature towards the creation of an image of its own occult perfection or Idea of perfection. There is something that grows in us in answer to this demand, that strives to become the image of a divine. Somewhat, and is impelled also to labour at the world outside that has been given to it and to remake that too in a greater image, in the image of its own spiritual and mental and vital growth, to make our world too something created according to our own mind and self-conceiving spirit, something new, harmonious, perfect. <ref>http://incarnateword.in /cwsa/22/the Body ==-divine-life#p6</ref>
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Transformation As you pursue this labour of purification and unification, you must at the same time take great care to perfect the Body : The supramental perfection means that external and instrumental part of your being. When the body becomes conscioushigher truth manifests, it must find in you a mind that is filled with consciousness supple and rich enough to be able to give the idea that seeks to express itself a form of thought which preserves its force and clarity. This thought, again, when it seeks to clothe itself in words, must find in you a sufficient power of expression so that as this is the Truth consciousness words reveal the thought and do not deform it. And the formula in which you embody the truth should be manifested in all its your feelings, all your acts of will, all your actions, functionings etc. become by in all the power movements of the consciousness within it harmoniousyour being. Finally, these movements themselves should, luminousby constant effort, right and true—without ignorance or disorderattain their highest perfection. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2812/transformationthe-andscience-theof-bodyliving#p3p6</ref>
This is one of the things one discovers gradually as the body becomes ready for transformations. It is quite a remarkable instrument in the see that it can experience two contraries at the same time. There is a certain state of body-consciousness which brings things together, totalises things that in other states of consciousness alternate or even in certain others oppose each other. But if one has reached up there, in the vital and the mind, a development sufficient for harmonising opposites (that of course, is quite indispensable), when one has succeeded in doing this, there are moments when it alternates, you see, one thing comes after the other, while what is remarkable in the consciousness of the body is that it can feel ("feel", can we say "feel"?—"experience"—the word "aware" expresses it best) all things simultaneously, as though you were hot and cold at once, as though you were active and passive at once, and everything becomes like that. Then you begin to grasp the totality of movements ==Perfection in the cells. It is something much more concrete naturally, but much more perfect in the body than in any other part of the being. This means that if things continue in this way, it will be proved that the physical, material instrument is the most perfect of all. That is why perhaps it is the most difficult to transform, to perfect. But of all, it is the one most capable of perfection. (The Mother, 21 April 1954) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/21-april-1954#p31</ref>Mind==
As for The ethical mind becomes perfect in proportion as it detaches itself from desire, sense suggestion, impulse, customary dictated action and discovers a self of Right, Love, Strength and Purity in which it can live accomplished and make it the foundation of all its actions. The aesthetic mind is perfected in proportion as it detaches itself from all its cruder pleasures and from outward conventional canons of the question about aesthetic reason and discovers a self existent self and spirit of pure and infinite Beauty and Delight which gives its own light and joy to the illness, perfection in material of the physical plane aesthesis. The mind of knowledge is indeed part perfected when it gets away from impression and dogma and opinion and discovers a light of self-knowledge and intuition which illumines all the ideal workings of the Yogasense and reason, but all self-experience and world-experience. The will is perfected when it gets away from and behind its impulses and its customary ruts of effectuation and discovers an inner power of the Spirit which is the last item source of an intuitive and, so long as luminous action and an original harmonious creation. The movement of perfection is away from all domination by the fundamental change has not been made in lower nature and towards a pure and powerful reflection of the material consciousness to which being, power, knowledge and delight of the body belongs, one may have a certain perfection on other planes without having immunity Spirit and Self in the bodybuddhi. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3124/illnesspurification-intelligence-and-health#p57will</ref>
When the body has learned the art of constantly progressing towards an increasing perfection, we shall be well on the way to overcoming the inevitability of death. (The Mother, 16 January 1972) <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/16/16-january-1972#p1~</refcenter>
It The first need is precisely because the body decays, declines clarity and ends in a complete degradation that death becomes necessary. But if the body followed the progressive movement purity of the inner being, if it had intelligence. It must be freed from the same sense claims of progress and perfection as the psychic vital being, there would be no necessity for it which seeks to die. One year added to another need not bring a deterioration. It is only a habit impose the desire of Nature. It is only a habit the mind in place of what is happening at this moment. And that is exactly the cause truth, from the claims of death. One can foresee quite wellthe troubled emotional being which strives to colour, on the contrarydistort, that limit and falsify the movement for perfection which is at truth with the beginning hue and shape of life might continue under another formthe emotions. I have already told you that one does not foresee an uninterrupted growthIt must be free too from its own defect, for that would need changing the height inertia of the houses after some time! But this growth thought-power, obstructive narrowness and unwillingness to open to knowledge, intellectual unscrupulousness in height may be changed into a growth thinking, prepossession and preference, self-will in perfection: the perfection reason and false determination of the formwill to knowledge. All the imperfections Its sole will must be to make itself an unsullied mirror of the form may be gradually correctedtruth, its essence and its forms and measures and relations, a clear mirror, all the weaknesses replaced by strengtha just measure, all the incapacities by skill. Why should it not be like this? You do not think in that way because you have the habit a fine and subtle instrument of seeing things otherwise. But there is no reason why this should not happenharmony, an integral intelligence. (The Mother, 17 June 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0524/17the-power-of-junethe-1953#p36instruments</ref>
= How to Achieve Perfection? =<center>~</center>
The Master of But our works respects our nature even when he mind is transforming obscure, partial in its notions, misled by opposite surface appearances, divided between various possibilities; it; he works always through the nature and not by is led in three different directions to any arbitrary capriceof which it may give an exclusive preference. This imperfect nature of ours contains the materials of our perfection, but inchoate, distortedOur mind, misplaced, thrown together in disorder or a poor imperfect order. All this material has to its search for what must be patiently perfected, purified, reorganised, new-moulded turns towards a concentration on our own inner spiritual growth and transformedperfection, not hacked on our own individual being and hewn and slain inner living; or mutilatedit turns towards a concentration on an individual development of our surface nature, not obliterated by simple coercion on the perfection of our thought and denial. This outer dynamic or practical action on the world and we who live in it are his creation and manifestation, and he deals on some idealism of our personal relation with the world around us; or it and us in turns rather towards a way concentration on the outer world itself, on making it better, more suited to our narrow ideas and ignorant mind cannot understand unless it falls silent and opens temperament or to a divine knowledgeour conception of what should be. In our errors On one side there is the substance call of a truth our spiritual being which labours to reveal its meaning to is our groping intelligence. The human intellect cuts out true self, a transcendent reality, a being of the error and the truth with it and replaces it Divine Being, not created by another half-truth half-error; but the Divine Wisdom suffers our mistakes world, able to live in itself, to continue until we are able rise out of world to arrive at transcendence; on the truth hidden and protected under every false cover. Our sins are other side there is the misdirected steps demand of the world around us which is a seeking Power that aimscosmic form, not at sin, but at perfectiona formulation of the Divine Being, at something that we might call a divine virtuepower of the Reality in disguise. Often they are There is too the veils divided or double demand of a quality that has to be transformed our being of Nature which is poised between these two terms, depends on them and connects them; for it is apparently made by the world and delivered out of this ugly disguise: otherwiseyet, because its true creator is in ourselves and the world instrumentation that seems to make it is only the perfect providence means first used, it is really a form, a disguised manifestation of things, they would not have been suffered to exist or to continuea greater spiritual being within us. The Master of It is this demand that mediates between our works is neither a blunderer nor preoccupation with an indifferent witness nor inward perfection or spiritual liberation and our preoccupation with the outer world and its formation, insists on a dallier with happier relation between the two terms and creates the luxury ideal of unneeded evilsa better individual in a better world. He But it is within us that the Reality must be found and the source and foundation of a perfected life; no outward formation can replace it: there must be the true self realised within if there is wiser than our reason to be the true life realised in world and wiser than our virtueNature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2322/the-master-of-thedivine-worklife#p6p7</ref>
==PrerequisitesPerfection in the Vital==Then again there is the psychic prana, pranic mind or desire soul; this too calls for its own perfection. Here too the first necessity is a fullness of the vital capacity in the mind, its power to do its full work, to take possession of all the impulsions and energies given to our inner psychic life for fulfilment in this existence, to hold them and to be a means for carrying them out with strength, freedom, perfection. Many of the things we need for our perfection, courage, will-power effective in life, all the elements of what we now call force of character and force of personality, depend very largely for their completest strength and spring of energetic action on the fullness of the psychic prana. But along with this fullness there must be an established gladness, clearness and purity in the psychic life-being. This dynamis must not be a troubled, perfervid, stormy, fitfully or crudely passionate strength; energy there must be, rapture of its action it must have, but a clear and glad and pure energy, a seated and firmly supported pure rapture. And as a third condition of its perfection it must be poised in a complete equality. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-power-of-the-instruments</ref>
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The first necessity is some fundamental poise of the soul both in its essential This heart and its natural psychic being regarding and meeting the things, impacts and workings of Nature. This poise we shall arrive at by growing into a perfect equality, samatā. The self, spirit or Brahman is one in all and therefore one to all; it is, as is said in man shot through with the Gita which has developed fully this idea of equality and indicated its experience on at least one side threads of equality, the equal Brahman, samaṁ brahma; the Gita even goes so far in one passage as to identify equality and yoga, samatvaṁ yoga ucyate. That life instincts is to say, equality is the sign a thing of unity with the Brahman, mixed inconstant colours of becoming Brahmanemotion and soul vibrations, of growing into an undisturbed spiritual poise of being in the Infinite. Its importance can hardly be exaggerated; for it is the sign of our having passed beyond the egoistic determinations of our naturebad and good, of our having conquered our enslaved response to the dualitieshappy and unhappy, of our having transcended the shifting turmoil of the gunassatisfied and unsatisfied, of our having entered into the troubled and calm , intense and peace of liberationdull. Equality is a term of consciousness which brings into the whole of our being Thus agitated and nature the eternal tranquillity of the Infinite. Moreover, invaded it is the condition unacquainted with any real peace, incapable of a securely and perfectly divine action; the security and largeness steady perfection of the cosmic action of the Infinite is based upon and never breaks down or forfeits all its eternal tranquillitypowers. That too must be the character of the perfect spiritual action; to be equal and one to all things in spiritBy purification, understandingby equality, mind, heart and natural consciousness,—even in by the most physical consciousnesslight of knowledge,—and to make all their workings, whatever their outward adaptation to the thing to be done, always and imminuably full by a harmonising of the divine equality and calm must will it can be its inmost principle. That may be said brought to be the passive or basic, the fundamental a tranquil intensity and receptive side of equality, but there is also an active and possessive side, an equal bliss which can only come when the peace of equality is founded and which is the beatific flower of its fullnessperfection. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-elementspower-of-perfection#p2the-instruments</ref>
The next necessity of perfection is to raise all the active parts of the human nature to that highest condition and working pitch of their power and capacity, śakti, at which they become capable of being divinised into true instruments of the free, perfect, spiritual and divine action. For practical purposes we may take the understanding, the heart, the prana and the body as the four members of our nature which have thus to be prepared, and we have to find the constituent terms of their perfection. Also there is the dynamical force in us (vīrya) of the temperament, character and soul nature, svabhāva, which makes the power of our members effective in action and gives them their type and direction; this has to be freed from its limitations, enlarged, rounded so that the whole manhood in us may become the basis of a divine manhood, when the Purusha, the real Man in us, the divine Soul, shall act fully in this human instrument and shine fully through this human vessel. To divinise the perfected nature we have to call in the divine Power or Shakti to replace our limited human energy so that this may be shaped into the image of and filled with the force of a greater infinite energy, daivī prakṛti, bhāgavatī śakti. This perfection will grow in the measure in which we can surrender ourselves, first, to the guidance and then to the direct action of that Power and of the Master of our being and our works to whom it belongs, and for this purpose faith is the essential, faith is the great motor-power of our being in our aspirations to perfection,—here, a faith in God and the Shakti which shall begin in the heart and understanding, but shall take possession of all our nature, all its consciousness, all its dynamic motive-force. These four things are the essentials of this second element of perfection, the full powers of the members of the instrumental nature, the perfected dynamis of the soul nature, the assumption of them into the action of the divine Power, and a perfect faith in all our members to call and support that assumption, śakti, vīrya, daivī prakṛti, śraddhā. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-elements-of-perfection#p3~</refcenter>
==Process==The other side of perfection is a self-contained and calm and unegoistic Rudra-power armed with psychic force, the energy of the strong heart which is capable of supporting without shrinking an insistent, an outwardly austere or even, where need is, a violent action. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-power-of-the-instruments</ref>
"To work for your perfection == Perfection in the first step is to become conscious of yourself." (The Mother, 13 January 1951) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/13-january-1951#p16</ref>Body ==
To work for your perfection, When the first step is to become conscious of yourself, of the different parts of your being and their respective activities. You must learn to distinguish these different parts one from another, so that you may become clearly aware of body has learned the origin art of the movements that occur in you, the many impulses, reactions and conflicting wills that drive you to action. It is constantly progressing towards an assiduous study which demands much perseverance and sincerity. For man's nature, especially his mental nature, has a spontaneous tendency to give a favourable explanation for everything he thinks, feels, says and does. It is only by observing these movements with great care, by bringing them, as it were, before the tribunal of our highest ideal, with a sincere will to submit to its judgmentincreasing perfection, that we can hope to form in ourselves a discernment that never errs. For if we truly want to progress and acquire shall be well on the capacity of knowing the truth of our being, that is to say, what we are truly created for, what we can call our mission upon earth, then we must, in a very regular and constant manner, reject from us or eliminate in us whatever contradicts the truth of our existence, whatever is opposed way to it. In this way, little by little, all the parts, all overcoming the elements inevitability of our being can be organised into a homogeneous whole around our psychic centredeath. This work of unification requires much time to be brought to some degree of perfection. Therefore, in order to accomplish it, we must arm ourselves with patience and endurance(The Mother, with a determination to prolong our life as long as necessary for the success of our endeavour.16 January 1972) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/1216/the16-science-ofjanuary-living1972#p5p1</ref>
If in passing from one domain to another we renounce what has already been given us from eagerness for our new attainment, if in reaching the mental life we cast away or belittle the physical life which is our basis, or if we reject the mental and physical in our attraction to the spiritual, we do not fulfil God integrally, nor satisfy the conditions of His self-manifestation. We do not become perfect, but only shift the field of our imperfection or at most attain a limited altitude. However high we may climb, even though it be to the Non-Being itself, we climb ill if we forget our base. Not to abandon the lower to itself, but to transfigure it in the light of the higher to which we have attained, is true divinity of nature.<refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-destiny-of-the-individual#p9~</refcenter>
But we can attain to As for the highest without blotting ourselves out from question about the cosmic extension. Brahman preserves always Its two terms of liberty within and of formation withoutillness, perfection in the physical plane is indeed part of expression and the ideal of freedom from the expression. We alsoYoga, being Thatbut it is the last item and, can attain so long as the fundamental change has not been made in the material consciousness to which the same divine self-possession. The harmony of body belongs, one may have a certain perfection on other planes without having immunity in the two tendencies is the condition of all life that aims at being really divinebody. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2131/theillness-destiny-of-theand-individualhealth#p18p57</ref>
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An integral Yoga includes as a vital and indispensable element in its total and ultimate aim The physical being of man has always been felt by the conversion seekers of the whole being into perfection to be a higher spiritual consciousness great impediment and a larger divine existence. Our parts of will and action, our parts of knowledge, our thinking being, our emotional being, our being of life, all our self and nature must seek it has been the Divine, enter into the Infinite, unite habit to turn from it with the Eternal. But man's present nature is limitedcontempt, divided, unequal,—it is easiest for him denial or aversion and a desire to concentrate in suppress altogether or as far as may be the strongest part of his being body and follow a definite line of progress proper to his nature: only rare individuals have the strength to take a large immediate plunge straight into physical life. But this cannot be the sea of right method for the Divine Infinityintegral Yoga. Some therefore must choose The body is given us as a starting-point a concentration in thought or contemplation or the mind's one-pointedness instrument necessary to find the eternal reality totality of the Self in them; others can more easily withdraw into the heart to meet there the Divine, the Eternal: yet others are predominantly dynamic our works and active; for these it is best to centre themselves in the will and enlarge their being through works. United with the Self and source of all by their surrender of their will into its infinitybe used, guided in their works by the secret Divinity within or surrendered to the Lord of the cosmic action as the master and mover of all their energies of thoughtnot neglected, feelinghurt, act, becoming by this enlargement of being selfless and universal, they can reach by works some first fullness of a spiritual statussuppressed or abolished. But the path, whatever its point of starting, must debouch into a vaster dominion; If it must proceed in the end through a totality of integrated knowledgeis imperfect, emotionrecalcitrant, will of dynamic actionobstinate, perfection of so are also the being and the entire nature. In the supramental consciousnessother members, on the level of the supramental existence this integration becomes consummate; there knowledgevital being, will, emotion, the perfection of the self heart and mind and the dynamic nature rise each reason. It has like them to its absolute of itself be changed and all to their perfect harmony perfected and fusion with each other, to undergo a divine integrality, a divine perfectiontransformation. For the supermind is As we must get ourselves a Truth-Consciousness in which the Divine Realitynew life, new heart, fully manifestednew mind, no longer works with the instrumentation of the Ignorance; a truth of status of being which is absolute becomes dynamic so we have in a truth of energy and activity of the being which is self-existent and perfect. Every movement there is a movement of the self-aware truth of Divine Being and every part is in entire harmony with the whole. Even the most limited and finite action is in the Truth-Consciousness a movement of the Eternal and Infinite and partakes of the inherent absoluteness and perfection of the Eternal and Infinite. An ascent into the supramental Truth not only raises our spiritual and essential consciousness certain sense to that height but brings about build for ourselves a descent of this Light and Truth into all our being and all our parts of nature. All then becomes part of the Divine Truth, an element and means of the supreme union and oneness; this ascent and descent must be therefore an ultimate aim of this Yoganew body.<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2324/the-supermindpower-andof-the-yoga-of-works#p1instruments</ref>
Fundamentally, whatever be the path one follows—whether the path of surrender, consecration, knowledge—if one wants it to be perfect, it is always equally difficult, and there is but one way, one only, I know of only one: that is perfect sincerity, but perfect sincerity! (The Mother, 12 May 1954) <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/12-may-1954#p34~</refcenter>
If you said to yourself, my children, "We want to be as perfect instruments as possible to express Transformation and the divine Will in Body : The supramental perfection means that the world"body becomes conscious, then for is filled with consciousness and that as this instrument to be perfect, it must be cultivated, educatedis the Truth consciousness all its actions, trainedfunctionings etc. It must not be left like a shapeless piece become by the power of stone. When you want to build with a stone you chisel the consciousness within it; when you want to make a formless block into a beautiful diamondharmonious, you chisel it. Wellluminous, it is the same thing. When with your brain right and body you want to make a beautiful instrument for the Divine, you must cultivate it, sharpen it, refine it, complete what is missing, perfect what is theretrue—without ignorance or disorder. (The Mother, 13 May 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0528/13transformation-mayand-1953the-body#p18p3</ref>
There is a world of ideas without form and it is there that you must enter if you want to seize what is behind the words. So long as you have to draw your understanding from the forms of words, you are likely to fall into much confusion about the true sense; but if in a silence of your mind you can rise into the world from which ideas descend to take form, at once the real understanding comes. If you are to be sure of understanding one another, you must be able to understand in silence. There is a condition in which your minds are so well attuned and harmonised together that one perceives the thought of the other without any necessity of words. But if there is not this attunement, there will always be some deformation of your meaning, because to what you speak the other mind supplies its own significance. I use a word in a certain sense or shade of its sense; you are accustomed to put into it another sense or shade. Then, evidently, you will understand, not my exact meaning in it, but what the word means to you. This is true not of speech only, but of reading also. If you want to understand a book with a deep teaching in it, you must be able to read it in the mind's silence; you must wait and let the expression go deep inside you into the region where words are no more and from there come slowly back to your exterior consciousness and its surface understanding. But if you let the words jump at your external mind and try to adapt and adjust the two, you will have entirely missed their real sense and power. There can be no perfect understanding unless you are in union with the unexpressed mind that is behind the centre of expression. (The Mother, 26 May 1929) <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/26-may-1929#p21~</refcenter>
The seeker This is one of the integral things one discovers gradually as the body becomes ready for transformations. It is quite a remarkable instrument in the see that it can experience two contraries at the same time. There is a certain state of knowledge must be free from attachment to action and equally free from attachment to inaction. Especially must any tendency to mere inertia of mind or vitality or body be surmounted-consciousness which brings things together, and if totalises things that habit is found growing on the nature, the will in other states of the Purusha must be used to dismiss itconsciousness alternate or even in certain others oppose each other. EventuallyBut if one has reached up there, a state arrives when in the life vital and the body perform as mere instruments the will mind, a development sufficient for harmonising opposites (that of the Purusha course, is quite indispensable), when one has succeeded in the mind without any strain or attachmentdoing this, there are moments when it alternates, you see, without their putting themselves into one thing comes after the action with that inferiorother, eager and often feverish energy which while what is remarkable in the nature of their ordinary working; they come to work as forces of Nature work without the fret and toil and reaction characteristic consciousness of life in the body when is that it is not yet master of the physical. When can feel ("feel", can we attain to this perfectionsay "feel"?—"experience"—the word "aware" expresses it best) all things simultaneously, as though you were hot and cold at once, then action as though you were active and inaction become immaterialpassive at once, since neither interferes with and everything becomes like that. Then you begin to grasp the freedom totality of movements in the soul or draws it away from its urge towards cells. It is something much more concrete naturally, but much more perfect in the Self or its poise body than in any other part of the Selfbeing. But This means that if things continue in this state of perfection arrives later in way, it will be proved that the Yoga and till then physical, material instrument is the law most perfect of moderation laid down by the Gita all. That is the best for us; too much mental or physical action then why perhaps it is not good since excess draws away too much energy and reacts unfavourably upon the spiritual condition; too little also is not good since defect leads most difficult to a habit of inaction and even to an incapacity which has afterwards transform, to be surmounted with difficultyperfect. Still, periods But of absolute calmall, solitude and cessation from works are highly desirable and should be secured as often as possible for that recession it is the one most capable of the soul into itself which is indispensable to knowledgeperfection. (The Mother, 21 April 1954) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2306/the-release-from-subjection-to21-theapril-body1954#p8p31</ref>
The calm established in the whole being must remain the same whatever happens, in health and disease, in pleasure and in pain, even in the strongest physical pain, in good fortune and misfortune, our own or that of those we love, in success and failure, honour and insult, praise and blame, justice done to us or injustice, everything that ordinarily affects the mind. If we see unity everywhere, if we recognise that all comes by the divine will, see God in all, in our enemies or rather our opponents in the game of life as well as our friends, in the powers that oppose and resist us as well as the powers that favour and assist, in all energies and forces and happenings, and if besides we can feel that all is undivided from our self, all the world one with us within our universal being, then this attitude becomes much easier to the heart and mind. But even before we can attain or are firmly seated in that universal vision, we have by all the means in our power to insist on this receptive and active equality and calm. Even something of it, alpam api asya dharmasya, is a great step towards perfection; a first firmness in it is the beginning of liberated perfection; its completeness is the perfect assurance of a rapid progress in all the other members of perfection. For without it we can have no solid basis; and by the pronounced lack of it we shall be constantly falling back to the lower status of desire, ego, duality, ignorance. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-action-of-equality#p5~</refcenter>
The divine existence It is of precisely because the nature not only of freedombody decays, but of purity, beatitude declines and perfectionends in a complete degradation that death becomes necessary. An integral purity which shall enable on But if the one hand body followed the perfect reflection progressive movement of the divine Being in ourselves and on inner being, if it had the other the perfect outpouring same sense of its Truth progress and Law in us in perfection as the terms of life and through the right functioning of the complex instrument we are in our outer partspsychic being, there would be no necessity for it to die. One year added to another need not bring a deterioration. It is the condition only a habit of an integral libertyNature. Its result It is an integral beatitude, in which there becomes possible only a habit of what is happening at once the Ananda of all this moment. And that is in exactly the world seen as symbols cause of death. One can foresee quite well, on the contrary, that the Divine and movement for perfection which is at the Ananda beginning of life might continue under another form. I have already told you that which is one does not-world. And it prepares foresee an uninterrupted growth, for that would need changing the integral perfection height of our humanity as the houses after some time! But this growth in height may be changed into a type growth in perfection: the perfection of the Divine in form. All the conditions imperfections of the human manifestationform may be gradually corrected, a perfection founded on a certain free universality of beingall the weaknesses replaced by strength, of love and joy, of play of knowledge and of play of will in power and will in unegoistic actionall the incapacities by skill. This integrality also can Why should it not be attained by like this? You do not think in that way because you have the integral Yogahabit of seeing things otherwise. But there is no reason why this should not happen. (The Mother, 17 June 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2305/the-synthesis-of17-thejune-systems1953#p19p36</ref>
The way to attain to this perfect consciousness is to increase your actual consciousness beyond its present grooves and limits, to educate it, to open it to the Divine Light and to let the Divine Light work in it fully and freely. But the Light can do its full and unhindered work only when you have got rid of all craving and fear, when you have no mental prejudices, no vital preferences, no physical apprehensions or attractions to obscure or bind you. (The Mother, 30 June 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/30-june-1929#p8</ref>= Why Do We Need Perfection? =
==DifficultiesFor Discovering the Truth of Living==
For the awakened individual the realisation of his truth of being and his inner liberation and perfection must be his primary seeking,—first, because that is the call of the Spirit within him, but also because it is only by liberation and perfection and realisation of the truth of being that man can arrive at truth of living. A perfected community also can exist only by the perfection of its individuals, and perfection can come only by the discovery and affirmation in life by each of his own spiritual being and the discovery by all of their spiritual unity and a resultant life unity. There can be no real perfection for us except by our inner self and truth of spiritual existence taking up all truth of the instrumental existence into itself and giving to it oneness, integration, harmony. As our only real freedom is the discovery and disengagement of the spiritual Reality within us, so our only means of true perfection is the sovereignty and self-effectuation of the spiritual Reality in all the elements of our nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p37</ref>
No man is perfect; the vital is there and the ego is there to prevent it. It is only when there is the total transformation of the external and the internal being down to the very subconscient, that perfection is possible. Till then imperfection will remain as our common heritage. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/the-subconscient-and-the-integral-yoga#p2~</refcenter>
In the lower grades of the ascension the new assumptionThere is a Reality, the integration into a higher principle truth of consciousness, remains incomplete: the mind cannot wholly mentalise life all existence which is greater and more abiding than all its formations and mattermanifestations; there are considerable parts of the life being to find that truth and Reality and the body which remain live in it, achieve the realm most perfect manifestation and formation possible of it, must be the submental and the subconscient secret of perfection whether of individual or inconscientcommunal being. This Reality is one serious obstacle there within each thing and gives to the mind's endeavour towards the perfection each of the nature; for the continued share its formations its power of the submental, the subconscient being and inconscient in the government value of the activities, by bringing in another law than that of the mental being, enables the conscious vital and the physical consciousness also to reject the law laid upon them by the mind and to follow their own impulses and instincts in defiance of the mental reason and the rational will of the developed intelligence. This makes it difficult for the mind to go beyond itself, to exceed its own level and spiritualise the nature; for what it cannot even make fully conscious, cannot securely mentalise and rationalise, it cannot spiritualise, since spiritualisation The universe is a greater and more difficult integration. No doubt, by calling in the spiritual force, it can establish an influence and a preliminary change in some parts manifestation of the natureReality, especially in the thinking mind itself and in the heart which is nearest to its own province: but this change there is not often a total perfection even within limits and what it does achieve is rare and difficult. The spiritual consciousness using truth of the mind is employing an inferior means anduniversal existence, even though it brings in a divine light into the mindPower of cosmic being, a divine purity, passion, ardour into the heart an all-self or imposes world-spirit. Humanity is a spiritual law upon the life, this new consciousness has to work within restrictions; for the most part it can only regulate formation or check the lower action manifestation of the life and rigorously control Reality in the body, but these members, even if refined or mastereduniverse, do not receive their spiritual fulfilment or undergo a perfection and transformation. For that it there is necessary to bring in a higher dynamic principle which is native to the spiritual consciousness truth and by whichself of humanity, thereforea human spirit, it can act in its own law and completer natural light and power and impose them upon the membersa destiny of human life. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-ascentdivine-towards-supermindlife#p16p36</ref>
The egoism of the instrument can be as dangerous or more dangerous to spiritual progress than the egoism of the doer. The ego==For Self-sense is contrary to spiritual realisation, so how can any kind of ego be a thing to be encouraged? As for the magnified ego, it is one of the most perilous obstacles to release and perfection. There should be no big I, not even a small one. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/ego-Progress and-its-forms#p54</ref>Fulfillment==
= Why =In the Dhammapada: a supreme disinterestedness and a supreme liberation is to follow the discipline of self-perfection, the march of progress, not with a precise end in view but because this march of progress is the profound law and the purpose of earthly life, the truth of universal existence and because you put yourself in harmony with it, spontaneously, whatever the result may be. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/the-brahmin#p43</ref>
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But if you remain For one who wants to grow in self-perfection, there are no great or small tasks, none that consciousness are important or unimportant; all are equally useful for one who aspires for progress and look from there, then you begin to understand something of the truthself-mastery. And this consciousness has to be so total, It is said that even if things come directly against you, even the physical movement of someone coming to beat you (you must not allow him to kill you, no; you have perhaps to do one only does well what one is necessary not to get killed)interested in doing. This is true, but if you are yourself it is truer still that one can learn to find interest in this perfect consciousness and have no personal reactioneverything one does, well, I give you even in what appear to be the guarantee most insignificant chores. The secret of this attainment lies in the other cannot kill youurge towards self-perfection. He will not be able Whatever occupation or task falls toyour lot, even if he tries. He you must do it with a will not be able to beat youprogress; whatever one does, even if he tries. Only, you one must not have only do it as best one can but strive to do it better and better in a single violent or wrong vibrationconstant effort for perfection. In this way everything without exception becomes interesting, you understand? Even if there is just a little false vibration, that opens from the door and most material chore to the thing enters most artistic and all goes wrongintellectual work. You must The scope for progress is infinite and can be fully conscious, have applied to the full knowledge, the perfect mastery over everything, the clear vision of the Truth—and perfect peacesmallest thing. (The Mother, 20 May 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0512/20the-four-austerities-and-the-mayfour-1953liberations#p54p17</ref>
… one may act with a perfect knowledge of what should be done, and without intervention—the least intervention—of the reasoning mind. The mind is silent: it simply looks on and listens in order to register things, it does not act. (The Mother, 23 December 1953) <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/23-december-1953#p8~</refcenter>
Perfection is not a static state, it is an equilibrium. But a progressive, dynamic equilibrium. One may go from perfection to perfection. There can come a state from which it would not be necessary to descend to a lower rung in order to go farther; at the moment the march of Nature is like that, but in this new state, instead of being obliged to go back to be able to start again, one can walk always forward, without ever stopping. As things are, one comes to a certain point and, as human beings as they are at present cannot progress indefinitely, one must pass to a higher species or leave the present species and create another. The human being as he is at the moment cannot attain perfection unless he gets out of himself—man is a transitional being. In ordinary language it may be said: "Oh, this man is perfect", but that is a literary figure. The maximum a human being can attain just now is an equilibrium which is not progressive. He may attain perhaps a static equilibrium but all that is static can be broken for lack of progress. (The Mother, 30 December 1950) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/30-december-1950#p19</ref>
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All life is a secret Yoga, an obscure growth of Nature towards the discovery and fulfilment of the divine principle hidden in her which becomes progressively less obscure, more self-conscient and luminous, more self-possessed in the human being by the opening of all his instruments of knowledge, will, action, life to the Spirit within him and in the world. Mind, life, body, all the forms of our nature are the means of this growth, but they find their last perfection only by opening out to something beyond them, first, because they are not the whole of what man is, secondly, because that other something which he is, is the key of his completeness and brings a light which discovers to him the whole high and large reality of his being.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-integral-perfection?search=perfection</ref>
 
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The condition to be aimed atOur soul's dissatisfaction with imperfection as a law of life upon earth, its aspiration towards the real achievement elimination of Yogaall imperfections from our nature, the final perfection and attainment, for which all else is not only in a preparationheaven beyond where it would be automatically impossible to be imperfect, is but here and now in a consciousness in which it is impossible life where perfection has to do anything without the Divine; for thenbe conquered by evolution and struggle, if you are without the Divine, the very source as much a law of your action disappearsour being as that against which they revolt; knowledgethey too are divine, power—a divine dissatisfaction, all are gonea divine aspiration. But In them is the inherent light of a power within which maintains them in us so long as you feel that the powers you use are your own, you will Divine may not miss only be there as a hidden Reality in our spiritual secrecies but unfold itself in the Divine supportevolution of Nature. (The Mother, 28 April 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0321/28the-aprildivine-and-the-1929undivine#p14p8</ref>
All life that has still this Inconscience for its basis is stamped with the mark of a radical imperfection; for even if it is satisfied with its own type, it is a satisfaction with something incomplete and inharmonious, a patchwork of discords: on the contrary, even a purely mental or vital life might be perfect within its limits if it were based on a restricted but harmonious self-power and self-knowledge. It is this bondage to a perpetual stamp of imperfection and disharmony that is the mark of the undivine; a divine life, on the contrary, even if progressing from the little to the more, would be at each stage harmonious in its principle and detail: it would be a secure ground upon which freedom and perfection could naturally flower or grow towards their highest stature, refine and expand into their most subtle opulence. All imperfections, all perfections have to be taken into view in our consideration of the difference between an undivine and a divine existence: but ordinarily, when we make the distinction, we do it as human beings struggling under the pressure of life and the difficulties of our conduct amidst its immediate problems and perplexities; most of all we are thinking of the distinction we are obliged to make between good and evil or of that along with its kindred problem of the duality, the blend in us of happiness and suffering. When we seek intellectually for a divine presence in things, a divine origin of the world, a divine government of its workings, the presence of evil, the insistence on suffering, the large, the enormous part offered to pain, grief and affliction in the economy of Nature are the cruel phenomena which baffle our reason and overcome the instinctive faith of mankind in such an origin and government or in an all-seeing, all-determining and omnipresent Divine Immanence. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-divine-and-the-undivine#p2~</refcenter>
It is only if our nature develops beyond itself, if it becomes a nature of self-knowledge, mutual understanding, unity, a nature of true being and true life that the result can be a perfection of ourselves and our existence, a life of true being, a life of unity, mutuality, harmony, a life of true happiness, a harmonious and beautiful life. If our nature is fixed in what it is, what it has already become, then no perfection, no real and enduring happiness is possible in earthly life; we must seek it not at all and do the best we can with our imperfections, or we must seek it elsewhere, in a supraterrestrial hereafter, or we must go beyond all such seeking and transcend life by an extinction of nature and ego in some Absolute from which this strange and unsatisfactory being of ours has come into existence. But if in us there is a spiritual being which is emerging and our present state is only an imperfection of half-emergence, if the Inconscient is a starting-point containing in itself the potency of a superconscience and supernature which has to evolve, a veil of apparent Nescience in which that greater consciousness is concealed and from which it has to unfold itself, if an evolution of being is the law, then what we are seeking for is not only possible but part of the eventual necessity of things. It is our spiritual destiny to manifest and become that supernature,—for it is the nature of our true self, our still occult, because unevolved, whole being. A nature of unity will then bring inevitably its life-result of unity, mutuality, harmony. An inner life awakened to a full consciousness and to a full power of consciousness will bear its inevitable fruit in all who have it, self-knowledge, a perfected existence, the joy of a satisfied being, the happiness of a fulfilled nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p23</ref>
Our soul's dissatisfaction == To Grow in the Spiritual Oneness== His physical being will be one with all material Nature, his vital being with imperfection as a law the life of life upon earththe universe, its aspiration towards his mind with the elimination of all imperfections from our naturecosmic mind, not only his spiritual knowledge and will with the divine knowledge and will both in a heaven beyond where itself and as it would pours itself through these channels, his spirit with the one spirit in all beings. All the variety of cosmic existence will be automatically impossible changed to him in that unity and revealed in the secret of its spiritual significance. For in this spiritual bliss and being he will be imperfect, but here one with That which is the origin and continent and inhabitant and spirit and now constituting power of all existence. This will be the highest reach of self-perfection.<ref>http://incarnateword.in a life where /cwsa/24/the-elements-of-perfection</ref> <center>~</center> So long as he remains in the world-existence, this perfection has to be conquered by evolution must radiate out from him,—for that is the necessity of his oneness with the universe and struggleits beings, —in an influence and action which help all around who are as much a law capable of our being as that against it to rise to or advance towards the same perfection, and for the rest in an influence and action which they revolt; they too are divinehelp,—a divine dissatisfactionas only the self-ruler and master man can help, in leading the human race forward spiritually towards this consummation and towards some image of a greater divine aspirationtruth in their personal and communal existence. In them is the inherent He becomes a light and power of a power within the Truth to which maintains them in us so that the Divine may not only be there as he has climbed and a hidden Reality in our spiritual secrecies but unfold itself in the evolution of Naturemeans for others’ ascension. <ref>httpttp://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2124/the-divineperfection-andof-the-undivine#p8mental-being?search=perfection</ref> = How to Achieve Perfection? =
The Master of our works respects our nature even when he is transforming it; he works always through the nature and not by any arbitrary caprice. This imperfect nature of ours contains the materials of our perfection, but inchoate, distorted, misplaced, thrown together in disorder or a poor imperfect order. All this material has to be patiently perfected, purified, reorganised, new-moulded and transformed, not hacked and hewn and slain or mutilated, not obliterated by simple coercion and denial. This world and we who live in it are his creation and manifestation, and he deals with it and us in a way our narrow and ignorant mind cannot understand unless it falls silent and opens to a divine knowledge. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-master-of-the-work#p6</ref>
For one who wants to grow in self-perfection, there are no great or small tasks, none that are important or unimportant; all are equally useful for one who aspires for progress and self-mastery. It is said that one only does well what one is interested in doing. This is true, but it is truer still that one can learn to find interest in everything one does, even in what appear to be the most insignificant chores. The secret of this attainment lies in the urge towards self-perfection. Whatever occupation or task falls to your lot, you must do it with a will to progress; whatever one does, one must not only do it as best one can but strive to do it better and better in a constant effort for perfection. In this way everything without exception becomes interesting, from the most material chore to the most artistic and intellectual work. The scope for progress is infinite and can be applied to the smallest thing. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/12/the-four-austerities-and-the-four-liberations#p17</ref>==Prerequisites==
The first necessity is some fundamental poise of the soul both in its essential and its natural being regarding and meeting the things, impacts and workings of Nature. This poise we shall arrive at by growing into a perfect equality, samatā. The self, spirit or Brahman is one in all and therefore one to all; it is, as is said in the Gita which has developed fully this idea of equality and indicated its experience on at least one side of equality, the equal Brahman, samaṁ brahma; the Gita even goes so far in one passage as to identify equality and yoga, samatvaṁ yoga ucyate. That is to say, equality is the sign of unity with the Brahman, of becoming Brahman, of growing into an undisturbed spiritual poise of being in the Infinite. Its importance can hardly be exaggerated; for it is the sign of our having passed beyond the egoistic determinations of our nature, of our having conquered our enslaved response to the dualities, of our having transcended the shifting turmoil of the gunas, of our having entered into the calm and peace of liberation. Equality is a term of consciousness which brings into the whole of our being and nature the eternal tranquillity of the Infinite. Moreover, it is the condition of a securely and perfectly divine action; the security and largeness of the cosmic action of the Infinite is based upon and never breaks down or forfeits its eternal tranquillity. That too must be the character of the perfect spiritual action; to be equal and one to all things in spirit, understanding, mind, heart and natural consciousness,—even in the most physical consciousness,—and to make all their workings, whatever their outward adaptation to the thing to be done, always and imminuably full of the divine equality and calm must be its inmost principle. That may be said to be the passive or basic, the fundamental and receptive side of equality, but there is also an active and possessive side, an equal bliss which can only come when the peace of equality is founded and which is the beatific flower of its fullness. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-elements-of-perfection#p2</ref>
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The next necessity of perfection is to raise all the active parts of the human nature to that highest condition and working pitch of their power and capacity, śakti, at which they become capable of being divinised into true instruments of the free, perfect, spiritual and divine action. For practical purposes we may take the understanding, the heart, the prana and the body as the four members of our nature which have thus to be prepared, and we have to find the constituent terms of their perfection. Also there is the dynamical force in us (vīrya) of the temperament, character and soul nature, svabhāva, which makes the power of our members effective in action and gives them their type and direction; this has to be freed from its limitations, enlarged, rounded so that the whole manhood in us may become the basis of a divine manhood, when the Purusha, the real Man in us, the divine Soul, shall act fully in this human instrument and shine fully through this human vessel. To divinise the perfected nature we have to call in the divine Power or Shakti to replace our limited human energy so that this may be shaped into the image of and filled with the force of a greater infinite energy, daivī prakṛti, bhāgavatī śakti. This perfection will grow in the measure in which we can surrender ourselves, first, to the guidance and then to the direct action of that Power and of the Master of our being and our works to whom it belongs, and for this purpose faith is the essential, faith is the great motor-power of our being in our aspirations to perfection,—here, a faith in God and the Shakti which shall begin in the heart and understanding, but shall take possession of all our nature, all its consciousness, all its dynamic motive-force. These four things are the essentials of this second element of perfection, the full powers of the members of the instrumental nature, the perfected dynamis of the soul nature, the assumption of them into the action of the divine Power, and a perfect faith in all our members to call and support that assumption, śakti, vīrya, daivī prakṛti, śraddhā. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-elements-of-perfection#p3</ref>
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...perfection of our instrumental nature... the perfection of the intelligence, heart, vital consciousness and body, the perfection of the fundamental soul powers, the perfection of the surrender of our instruments and action to the divine Shakti, depend at every moment of their progression on a... power that is covertly and overtly the pivot of all endeavour and action, faith, śraddhā. The perfect faith is an assent of the whole being to the truth seen by it or offered to its acceptance, and its central working is a faith of the soul in its own will to be and attain and become and its idea of self and things and its knowledge, of which the belief of the intellect, the heart’s consent and the desire of the life mind to possess and realise are the outward figures.
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/faith-and-shakti?search=perfection</ref>
The condition to be aimed at, the real achievement of Yoga, the final perfection and attainment, for which all else is only a preparation, is a consciousness in which it is impossible to do anything without the Divine; for then, if you are without the Divine, the very source of your action disappears; knowledge, power, all are gone. But so long as you feel that the powers you use are your own, you will not miss the Divine support. (The Mother, 28 April 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/28-april-1929#p14</ref>
==Process==
===By Education and Training===
== Consciousness If you said to yourself, my children, "We want to be as perfect instruments as possible to express the divine Will in the world", then for this instrument to be perfect, it must be cultivated, educated, trained. It must not be left like a shapeless piece of stone. When you want to build with a stone you chisel it; when you want to make a formless block into a beautiful diamond, you chisel it. Well, it is the same thing. When with your brain and Perfection ==body you want to make a beautiful instrument for the Divine, you must cultivate it, sharpen it, refine it, complete what is missing, perfect what is there. (The Mother, 13 May 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/13-may-1953#p18</ref>
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This power of the soul over its nature is of the utmost importance in the Yoga of self-perfection; if it did not exist, we could never get by conscious endeavour and aspiration out of the fixed groove of our present imperfect human being; if any greater perfection were intended, we should have The way to wait for Nature attain to effect it in her own slow or swift process of evolution. In the lower forms of being the soul accepts this complete subjection perfect consciousness is to Natureincrease your actual consciousness beyond its present grooves and limits, but as to educate it rises higher in the scale, it awakes to a sense of something in itself which can command Nature; but it is only when open it arrives at self-knowledge that this free will and control becomes a complete reality. The change effects itself through process of nature, not therefore by any capricious magic, but an ordered development and intelligible process. When complete mastery is gained, then the process by its self-effective rapidity may seem a miracle to the intelligence, but it still proceeds by law of the truth of Spirit,—when the Divine within us by close union of our will Light and being with him takes up to let the Yoga Divine Light work in it fully and acts as the omnipotent master of the naturefreely. For But the Divine is our highest Self Light can do its full and the self unhindered work only when you have got rid of all Naturecraving and fear, when you have no mental prejudices, no vital preferences, the eternal and universal Purushano physical apprehensions or attractions to obscure or bind you. (The Mother, 30 June 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2403/the-psychology-of30-selfjune-perfection1929#p8</ref>
= Individual Perfection =<center>~</center>
== Perfect Individual ==Fundamentally, whatever be the path one follows—whether the path of surrender, consecration, knowledge—if one wants it to be perfect, it is always equally difficult, and there is but one way, one only, I know of only one: that is perfect sincerity, but perfect sincerity! (The Mother, 12 May 1954) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/12-may-1954#p34</ref>
A child should never be scolded. I am accused ===By Becoming Conscious of speaking ill of parents! But I have seen them at work, you see, and I know that ninety per cent of parents snub a child who comes spontaneously to confess a mistake: "You are very naughty. Go away, I am busy"—instead of listening to the child with patience and explaining to him where his fault lies, how he ought to have acted. And the child, who had come with good intentions, goes away quite hurt, with the feeling: "Why am I treated thus?" Then the child sees his parents are not perfect—which is obviously true of them today—he sees that they are wrong and says to himself: "Why does he scold me, he is like me!" (The Mother, 8 January 1951) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/8-january-1951#p31</ref>Oneself===
In "To work for your perfection the Dhammapada: a supreme disinterestedness and a supreme liberation first step is to follow the discipline become conscious of self-perfection, the march of progress, not with a precise end in view but because this march of progress is the profound law and the purpose of earthly life, the truth of universal existence and because you put yourself in harmony with it." (The Mother, spontaneously, whatever the result may be. 13 January 1951) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0304/the13-january-brahmin1951#p43p16</ref>
If this is our evolutionary destiny, it remains for us to see where we stand at this juncture in the evolutionary progression,—a progression which has been cyclic or spiral rather than in a straight line or has at least journeyed in a very zigzag swinging curve of advance,—and what prospect there is of any turn towards a decisive step in the near or measurable future. In our human aspiration towards a personal perfection and the perfection of the life of the race the elements of the future evolution are foreshadowed and striven after, but in a confusion of half-enlightened knowledge; there is a discord between the necessary elements, an opposing emphasis, a profusion of rudimentary unsatisfying and ill-accorded solutions. These sway between the three principal preoccupations of our idealism,—the complete single development of the human being in himself, the perfectibility of the individual, a full development of the collective being, the perfectibility of society, and, more pragmatically restricted, the perfect or best possible relations of individual with individual and society and of community with community. An exclusive or dominant emphasis is laid sometimes on the individual, sometimes on the collectivity or society, sometimes on a right and balanced relation between the individual and the collective human whole. One idea holds up the growing life, freedom or perfection of the human individual as the true object of our existence,—whether the ideal be merely a free self-expression of the personal being or a self-governed whole of complete mind, fine and ample life and perfect body, or a spiritual perfection and liberation. In this view society is there only as a field of activity and growth for the individual man and serves best its function when it gives as far as possible a wide room, ample means, a sufficient freedom or guidance of development to his thought, his action, his growth, his possibility of fullness of being. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p34~</refcenter>
It To work for your perfection, the first step isto become conscious of yourself, then, this spiritual fulfilment of the urge to individual perfection and an inner completeness different parts of your being and their respective activities. You must learn to distinguish these different parts one from another, so that we mean first when we speak you may become clearly aware of the origin of the movements that occur in you, the many impulses, reactions and conflicting wills that drive you to action. It is an assiduous study which demands much perseverance and sincerity. For man's nature, especially his mental nature, has a divine lifespontaneous tendency to give a favourable explanation for everything he thinks, feels, says and does. It is only by observing these movements with great care, by bringing them, as it were, before the first essential condition tribunal of our highest ideal, with a perfected life on earthsincere will to submit to its judgment, and that we are therefore right can hope to form in making ourselves a discernment that never errs. For if we truly want to progress and acquire the utmost possible individual perfection our first supreme business. The perfection capacity of knowing the spiritual and pragmatic relation truth of the individual with all around him our being, that is to say, what we are truly created for, what we can call our second preoccupation; the solution of this second desideratum lies mission upon earth, then we must, in a complete universality very regular and oneness with all life upon earth which is constant manner, reject from us or eliminate in us whatever contradicts the other concomitant result truth of an evolution into the gnostic consciousness and natureour existence, whatever is opposed to it. But there still remains the third desideratumIn this way, a new worldlittle by little, a change in all the total life of humanity orparts, at all the least, elements of our being can be organised into a new perfected collective life in the earth-naturehomogeneous whole around our psychic centre. This calls for the appearance not only work of unification requires much time to be brought to some degree of isolated evolved individuals acting perfection. Therefore, in the unevolved massorder to accomplish it, but of many gnostic individuals forming a new kind of beings we must arm ourselves with patience and endurance, with a new common life superior determination to the present individual and common existence. A collective prolong our life of this kind must obviously constitute itself on the same principle as long as necessary for the life success of the gnostic individualour endeavour. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2212/the-divinescience-lifeof-living#p19p5</ref>
== Perfection in Work ==<center>~</center>
You will If in passing from one domain to another we renounce what has already been given us from eagerness for our new attainment, if in reaching the mental life we cast away or belittle the physical life which is our basis, or if we reject the mental and physical in our attraction to the spiritual, we do not fulfil God integrally, nor satisfy the conditions of His self-manifestation. We do not become more and more perfect , but only shift the field of our imperfection or at most attain a limited altitude. However high we may climb, even though it be to the Non-Being itself, we climb ill if we forget our base. Not to abandon the lower to itself, but to transfigure it in your work as the consciousness grows, increaseslight of the higher to which we have attained, widens and is enlightenedtrue divinity of nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1421/progressthe-anddestiny-perfectionof-inthe-workindividual#p1p9</ref>
In all action, all work done, the degree of perfection depends upon the degree of consciousness. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/14/progress-and-perfection-in-work#p3~</refcenter>
Perfection in In the work process of this change there must be by the very necessity of the effort two stages of its working. First, there will be the personal endeavour of the human being, as soon as he becomes aware by his soul, mind, heart of this divine possibility and turns towards it as the aimtrue object of life, but to prepare himself for it is only by and to get rid of all in him that belongs to a very patient effort lower working, of all that stands in the way of his opening to the spiritual truth and its power, so as to possess by this liberation his spiritual being and turn all his natural movements into free means of its self-expression… The second stage of this can Yoga will therefore be obtaineda persistent giving up of all the action of the nature into the hands of this greater Power, a substitution of its influence, possession and working for the personal effort, until the Divine to whom we aspire becomes the direct master of the Yoga and effects the entire spiritual and ideal conversion of the being. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1424/progressthe-andintegral-perfection-in-work#p19?search=perfection</ref>
Open But if you remain in that consciousness and look from there, then you begin to understand something of the truth. And this consciousness has to be so total, that even if things come directly against you, even the physical movement of someone coming to beat you (you must not allow him to kill you, no; you have perhaps to do what is necessary not to get killed), but if you are yourself more in this perfect consciousness and more have no personal reaction, well, I give you the guarantee the other cannot kill you. He will not be able to, even if he tries. He will not be able to beat you, even if he tries. Only, you must not have a single violent or wrong vibration, you understand? Even if there is just a little false vibration, that opens the door and the Divine's force thing enters and your work will progress steadily towards perfectionall goes wrong. You must be fully conscious, have the full knowledge, the perfect mastery over everything, the clear vision of the Truth—and perfect peace. (The Mother, 20 May 1953) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/1405/progress-and-perfection20-inmay-work1953#p21p54</ref>
Let nothing short of perfection be your ideal in work and you are sure to become a true instrument of the Divine. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/14/progress-and-perfection-in-work#p25~</refcenter>
There must be order This power of the soul over its nature is of the utmost importance in the Yoga of self-perfection; if it did not exist, we could never get by conscious endeavour and harmony aspiration out of the fixed groove of our present imperfect human being; if any greater perfection were intended, we should have to wait for Nature to effect it in workher own slow or swift process of evolution. Even what is apparently In the lower forms of being the soul accepts this complete subjection to Nature, but as it rises higher in the most insignificant thing must be done with perfect perfectionscale, with it awakes to a sense of cleanlinesssomething in itself which can command Nature; but it is only when it arrives at self-knowledge that this free will and control becomes a complete reality. The change effects itself through process of nature, beautynot therefore by any capricious magic, harmony but an ordered development and orderintelligible process. When complete mastery is gained, then the process by its self-effective rapidity may seem a miracle to the intelligence, but it still proceeds by law of the truth of Spirit,—when the Divine within us by close union of our will and being with him takes up the Yoga and acts as the omnipotent master of the nature. For the Divine is our highest Self and the self of all Nature, the eternal and universal Purusha. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1424/progressthe-andpsychology-perfectionof-inself-workperfection#p26p8</ref>
The perfection of the work done is much more important than its bulk or the bigness of its scope. <refcenter>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/14/progress-and-perfection-in-work#p38~</refcenter>
An integral Yoga includes as a vital and indispensable element in its total and ultimate aim the conversion of the whole being into a higher spiritual consciousness and a larger divine existence. Our parts of will and action, our parts of knowledge, our thinking being, our emotional being, our being of life, all our self and nature must seek the Divine, enter into the Infinite, unite with the Eternal. But man's present nature is limited, divided, unequal,—it is easiest for him to concentrate in the strongest part of his being and follow a definite line of progress proper to his nature: only rare individuals have the strength to take a large immediate plunge straight into the sea of the Divine Infinity. Some therefore must choose as a starting-point a concentration in thought or contemplation or the mind's one-pointedness to find the eternal reality of the Self in them; others can more easily withdraw into the heart to meet there the Divine, the Eternal: yet others are predominantly dynamic and active; for these it is best to centre themselves in the will and enlarge their being through works. United with the Self and source of all by their surrender of their will into its infinity, guided in their works by the secret Divinity within or surrendered to the Lord of the cosmic action as the master and mover of all their energies of thought, feeling, act, becoming by this enlargement of being selfless and universal, they can reach by works some first fullness of a spiritual status. But the path, whatever its point of starting, must debouch into a vaster dominion; it must proceed in the end through a totality of integrated knowledge, emotion, will of dynamic action, perfection of the being and the entire nature. In the supramental consciousness, on the level of the supramental existence this integration becomes consummate; there knowledge, will, emotion, the perfection of the self and the dynamic nature rise each to its absolute of itself and all to their perfect harmony and fusion with each other, to a divine integrality, a divine perfection. For the supermind is a Truth-Consciousness in which the Divine Reality, fully manifested, no longer workswith the instrumentation of the Ignorance; a truth of status of being which is absolute becomes dynamic in a truth of energy and activity of the being which is self-existent and perfect. Every movement there is a movement of the self-aware truth of Divine Being and every part is in entire harmony with the whole. Even the most limited and finite action is in the Truth-Consciousness a movement of the Eternal and Infinite and partakes of the inherent absoluteness and perfection of the Eternal and Infinite. An ascent into the supramental Truth not only raises our spiritual and essential consciousness to that height but brings about a descent of this Light and Truth into all our being and all our parts of nature. All then becomes part of the Divine Truth, aspiration towards Perfection is true spiritualityan element and means of the supreme union and oneness; this ascent and descent must be therefore an ultimate aim of this Yoga. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1423/progressthe-supermind-and-perfectionthe-yoga-inof-workworks#p45p1</ref>
=== Practical Tips for Perfection in Work By Learning to be a Witness===
Do ...we find ourselves to be not the mind, but a mental being who stands behind the action of the embodied mind, not worry about mistakes in worka mental and vital personality,—personality is a composition of Nature,—but a mental Person,manomaya puruṣa. Often you imagine that things are badly done by you when really you have done them very well; We become aware of a being within who takes his stand upon mind for self-knowledge and world-knowledge and thinks of himself as an individual for self-experience and world-experience, for an inward action and an outward-going action, but even if there are mistakesis yet different from mind, life and body. First, he has the intuition of himself as someone observing the action of the mind; it is nothing to be sad aboutsomething which is going on in him and yet before him as an object of his regarding knowledge. This self-awareness is the intuitive sense of the witness Purusha, sākṣī. Let Witness Purusha is a pure consciousness who watches Nature and sees it as an action reflected upon the consciousness grow—only and enlightened by that consciousness, but in itself other than it.To enter into identity with that Spirit must then be his way to control and lordship. He can do it passively by a sort of reflection and receiving in the divine his mental consciousness , but then he is there only a mould, channel or instrument, not a possessor or participant in the power. He can arrive at identity by an entire perfectionabsorption of his mentality in inner spiritual being, but then the conscious action ceases in a trance of identity. The more you surrender To be active master of the nature he must evidently rise to some higher supramental poise where there is possible not only a passive, but an active identity with the Divine, controlling spirit. To find the more will there way of rising to this greater poise and be the possibility self-ruler, Swarat, is a condition of his perfection in you. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2924/practicalthe-concernsperfection-of-inthe-mental-work#p39being?search=perfection</ref>
Someone who is learning to paint or play music or write and does not like to have his mistakes pointed out by those who already know—how is he to learn at all or reach any perfection of technique? <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/29/practical-concerns-in-work#p45</ref>===By Developing Detachment===
== Perfection The seeker of the integral state of knowledge must be free from attachment to action and Interequally free from attachment to inaction. Especially must any tendency to mere inertia of mind or vitality or body be surmounted, and if that habit is found growing on the nature, the will of the Purusha must be used to dismiss it. Eventually, a state arrives when the life and the body perform as mere instruments the will of the Purusha in the mind without any strain or attachment, without their putting themselves into the action with that inferior, eager and often feverish energy which is the nature of their ordinary working; they come to work as forces of Nature work without the fret and toil and reaction characteristic of life in the body when it is not yet master of the physical. When we attain to this perfection, then action and inaction become immaterial, since neither interferes with the freedom of the soul or draws it away from its urge towards the Self or its poise in the Self. But this state of perfection arrives later in the Yoga and till then the law of moderation laid down by the Gita is the best for us; too much mental or physical action then is not good since excess draws away too much energy and reacts unfavourably upon the spiritual condition; too little also is not good since defect leads to a habit of inaction and even to an incapacity which has afterwards to be surmounted with difficulty. Still, periods of absolute calm, solitude and cessation from works are highly desirable and should be secured as often as possible for that recession of the soul into itself which is indispensable to knowledge. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-release-from-relation with Others ==subjection-to-the-body#p8</ref>
...man is separated in his mind, his life, his body from the universal and therefore, even as he does not know himself, is equally and even more incapable of knowing his fellow-creatures. He forms by inferences, theories, observations and a certain imperfect capacity of sympathy a rough mental construction about them; but this is not knowledge. Knowledge can only come by conscious identity, for that is the only true knowledge,—existence aware of itself. We know what we are so far as we are consciously aware of ourself, the rest is hidden; so also we can come really to know that with which we become one in our consciousness, but only so far as we can become one with it. If the means of knowledge are indirect and imperfect, the knowledge attained will also be indirect and imperfect. It will enable us to work out with a certain precarious clumsiness but still perfectly enough from our mental standpoint certain limited practical aims, necessities, conveniences, a certain imperfect and insecure harmony of our relations with that which we know; but only by a conscious unity with it can we arrive at a perfect relation. Therefore we must arrive at a conscious unity with our fellow-beings and not merely at the sympathy created by love or the understanding created by mental knowledge, which will always be the knowledge of their superficial existence and therefore imperfect in itself and subject to denial and frustration by the uprush of the unknown and unmastered from the subconscient or the subliminal in them and us. But this conscious oneness can only be established by entering into that in which we are one with them, the universal and the fullness of the universal exists consciently only in that which is superconscient to us, in the Supermind: for here in our normal being the greater part of it is subconscient and therefore in this normal poise of mind, life and body it cannot be possessed. The lower conscious nature is bound down to ego in all its activities, chained triply to the stake of differentiated individuality. The Supermind alone commands unity in diversity. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-problem-of-life#p9</ref>===By Developing Equality===
To make The calm established in the whole being must remain the same whatever happens, in health and disease, in pleasure and in pain, even in the effort for one's strongest physical pain, in good fortune and misfortune, our own perfection or that of those we love, in success and failure, honour and insult, praise and not blame, justice done to be disturbed us or injustice, everything that ordinarily affects the mind. If we see unity everywhere, if we recognise that all comes by any mistake the divine will, see God in others but reply all, in our enemies or rather our opponents in the game of life as well as our friends, in the powers that oppose and resist us as well as the powers that favour and assist, in all energies and forces and happenings, and if besides we can feel that all is undivided from our self, all the world one with us within our universal being, then this attitude becomes much easier to the heart and mind. But even before we can attain or are firmly seated in that universal vision, we have by all the means in our power to insist on this receptive and active equality and calm. Even something of it, alpam api asya dharmasya, is a great step towards perfection; a silent will for their first firmness in it is the beginning of liberated perfection also ; its completeness is always the right attitudeperfect assurance of a rapid progress in all the other members of perfection. For without it we can have no solid basis; and by the pronounced lack of it we shall be constantly falling back to the lower status of desire, ego, duality, ignorance. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3124/problemsthe-inaction-humanof-relationsequality#p9p5</ref>
You stop short at the perfection that others should realise and you are seldom conscious ===By Purification of the goal you should be pursuing yourself. If you are conscious of it, well then, begin with the work which is given to you, that is to say, realise what you have to do and do not concern yourself with what others do, because, after all, it is not your business. And the best way to the true attitude is simply to say, "All those around me, all the circumstances of my life, all the people near me, are a mirror held up to me by the Divine Consciousness to show me the progress I must make. Everything that shocks me in others means a work I have to do in myself." <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/10/aphorism-8#p15</ref>Nature===
And perhaps if one carried true ...purification is an essential means towards self-perfection . All these impurities and inadequacies result in oneselfvarious kinds of limitation and bondage: but there are two or three primary knots of the bondage,—ego is the principal knot, one would discover —from which the others derive. These bonds must be got rid of; purification is not complete till it brings about liberation. Besides, after a certain purification and liberation has been effected, there is still the conversion of the purified instruments to the law of a higher object and utility, a large, real and perfect order of action. By the conversion man can arrive at a certain perfection of fullness of being, calm, power and knowledge, even a greater vital action and more often in othersperfect physical existence. One result of this perfection is a large and perfected delight of being, Ananda. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1024/aphorismthe-perfection-8#p16of-the-mental-being?search=perfection</ref>
For The divine existence is of the nature not only of freedom, but of purity, beatitude and perfection. An integral purity which shall enable on the awakened individual one hand the realisation perfect reflection of his truth the divine Being in ourselves and on the other the perfect outpouring of being its Truth and his inner liberation Law in us in the terms of life and perfection must be his primary seekingthrough the right functioning of the complex instrument we are in our outer parts,—firstis the condition of an integral liberty. Its result is an integral beatitude, because in which there becomes possible at once the Ananda of all that is in the call world seen as symbols of the Spirit within him, but also because it is only by liberation Divine and perfection and realisation of the truth Ananda of being that man can arrive at truth of livingwhich is not-world. A perfected community also can exist only by And it prepares the integral perfection of its individuals, and perfection can come only by our humanity as a type of the discovery and affirmation Divine in life by each the conditions of his own spiritual being and the discovery by all of their spiritual unity and human manifestation, a resultant life unity. There can be no real perfection for us except by our inner self and truth founded on a certain free universality of spiritual existence taking up all truth being, of the instrumental existence into itself love and giving to it onenessjoy, integration, harmony. As our only real freedom is the discovery of play of knowledge and disengagement of the spiritual Reality within us, so our only means play of true perfection is the sovereignty will in power and self-effectuation of the spiritual Reality will in all unegoistic action. This integrality also can be attained by the elements of our natureintegral Yoga. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2223/the-divinesynthesis-of-the-lifesystems#p37p19</ref>
We have to recognise once more that the individual exists not in himself alone but in the collectivity and that individual perfection and liberation are not the whole sense of God's intention in the world. The free use of our liberty includes also the liberation of others and of mankind; the perfect utility of our perfection is, having realised in ourselves the divine symbol, to reproduce, multiply and ultimately universalise it in others. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-threefold-life#p30</ref>===By Cultivating Faith===
The best way There is one kind of faith demanded as indispensable by the integral Yoga and that may be described as faith in God and the Shakti, faith in the presence and power of helping others the Divine in us and the world, a faith that all in the world is the working of one divine Shakti, that all the steps of the Yoga, its strivings and sufferings and failures as well as its successes and satisfactions and victories are utilities and necessities of her workings and that by a firm and strong dependence on and a total self-surrender to transform oneself. Be perfect the Divine and you will be to his Shakti in a position us we can attain to bring oneness and freedom and victory and perfection to the world. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1424/helping-othersfaith-and-the-world#p12shakti?search=perfection</ref>
There is a Reality, a truth of all existence which is greater and more abiding than all its formations and manifestations; to find that truth and Reality and live in it, achieve ===By Silencing the most perfect manifestation and formation possible of it, must be the secret of perfection whether of individual or communal being. This Reality is there within each thing and gives to each of its formations its power of being and value of being. The universe is a manifestation of the Reality, and there is a truth of the universal existence, a Power of cosmic being, an all-self or world-spirit. Humanity is a formation or manifestation of the Reality in the universe, and there is a truth and self of humanity, a human spirit, a destiny of human life. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-divine-life#p36</ref>Mind===
=== When Man Becomes Perfect… ===There is a world of ideas without form and it is there that you must enter if you want to seize what is behind the words. So long as you have to draw your understanding from the forms of words, you are likely to fall into much confusion about the true sense; but if in a silence of your mind you can rise into the world from which ideas descend to take form, at once the real understanding comes. If you are to be sure of understanding one another, you must be able to understand in silence. There is a condition in which your minds are so well attuned and harmonised together that one perceives the thought of the other without any necessity of words. But if there is not this attunement, there will always be some deformation of your meaning, because to what you speak the other mind supplies its own significance. I use a word in a certain sense or shade of its sense; you are accustomed to put into it another sense or shade. Then, evidently, you will understand, not my exact meaning in it, but what the word means to you. This is true not of speech only, but of reading also. If you want to understand a book with a deep teaching in it, you must be able to read it in the mind's silence; you must wait and let the expression go deep inside you into the region where words are no more and from there come slowly back to your exterior consciousness and its surface understanding. But if you let the words jump at your external mind and try to adapt and adjust the two, you will have entirely missed their real sense and power. There can be no perfect understanding unless you are in union with the unexpressed mind that is behind the centre of expression. (The Mother, 26 May 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/26-may-1929#p21</ref>
Man, too, becomes perfect only when he has found within himself that absolute calm and passivity of the Brahman and supports by it with the same divine tolerance and the same divine bliss a free and inexhaustible activity. Those who have thus possessed the Calm within can perceive always welling out from its silence the perennial supply of the energies that work in the universe. It is not, therefore, the truth of the Silence to say that it is in its nature a rejection of the cosmic activity. The apparent incompatibility of the two states is an error of the limited Mind which, accustomed to trenchant oppositions of affirmation and denial and passing suddenly from one pole to the other, is unable to conceive of a comprehensive consciousness vast and strong enough to include both in a simultaneous embrace. The Silence does not reject the world; it sustains it. Or rather it supports with an equal impartiality the activity and the withdrawal from the activity and approves also the reconciliation by which the soul remains free and still even while it lends itself to all action. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/reality-omnipresent#p5</ref>
= More Difficulties on the Path to Perfection= No man is perfect; the vital is there and the ego is there to prevent it.It is only when there is the total transformation of the external and the internal being down to the very subconscient, that perfection is possible.Till then imperfection will remain as our common heritage. =<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/the-subconscient-and-the-integral-yoga#p2</ref>
=== Ease, Difficulty and Perfection ===<center>~</center>
You must not cherish The egoism of the illusion that if you want instrument can be as dangerous or more dangerous to follow spiritual progress than the egoism of the straight pathdoer. The ego-sense is contrary to spiritual realisation, if you are modest, if you seek purity, if you are disinterested, if you want so how can any kind of ego be a thing to lead a solitary existence and have a clear judgmentbe encouraged? As for the magnified ego, things will become easy.... It it is quite one of the contrary! When you begin most perilous obstacles to advance towards inner release and outer perfection. There should be no big I, the difficulties start at the same timenot even a small one. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0331/impurityego-and-its-forms#p29p54</ref>
=== Morality, Diversity and Perfection ===<center>~</center>
If you have understood this, you The thing to which he has given his assent and set his mind and heart and will be ready to understand the differenceachieve, the great difference between spirituality and morality, two things that are constantly confused with each other. The spiritual life, divine perfection of the life of Yogawhole human being, has for its object is apparently an impossibility to grow into the divine consciousness and for its result to purifynormal intelligence, intensify, glorify and perfect what since it is in you. It makes you a power for manifesting of opposed to the Divine; it raises the character actual facts of each personality to its full value life and brings it to its maximum expression; will for this is part of the Divine plan. Morality proceeds long be contradicted by a mental construction andimmediate experience, as happens with a few ideas of what is good all far-off and what is notdifficult ends, sets up an ideal type into which all must force themselves. This moral ideal differs in its constituents and its ensemble at different times and different places. And yet it proclaims itself as a unique type, a categoric absolute; it admits of none other outside itself; it does not even admit a variation within itself. All are to be moulded according to its single ideal pattern, everybody is to be made uniformly and faultlessly denied too by many who have spiritual experience but believe that our present nature is the same. It is because morality is sole possible nature of this rigid unreal nature man in the body and that it is in its principle and its working only by throwing off the contrary of the spiritual earthly life. The spiritual life reveals the one essence in or even all, but reveals too its infinite diversity; it works for diversity in oneness and for individual existence that we can arrive at either a heavenly perfection in that diversityor the release of extinction. (The Mother, 4 August 1929) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0324/4faith-augustand-1929#p6shakti?search=perfection</ref>
=== Conflicts and Perfection ===<center>~</center>
If there were no such resistanceIn the lower grades of the ascension the new assumption, the integration into a higher principle of consciousness, remains incomplete: the mind cannot wholly mentalise life and matter; there would be nothing whatever to conquer are considerable parts of the life being and the body which remain in the world, for realm of the submental and the world would be harmonious, a constant passage from subconscient or inconscient. This is one serious obstacle to the mind's endeavour towards the perfection to another instead of the conflict which it is—a game nature; for the continued share of hazards the submental, the subconscient and various possibilities inconscient in which the Divine faces real oppositiongovernment of the activities, by bringing in another law than that of the mental being, real difficulty enables the conscious vital and often real temporary defeat on the way physical consciousness also to reject the law laid upon them by the final victory. It is just this reality mind and to follow their own impulses and instincts in defiance of the mental reason and the rational will of the whole play that developed intelligence. This makes it no mere jestdifficult for the mind to go beyond itself, to exceed its own level and spiritualise the nature; for what it cannot even make fully conscious, cannot securely mentalise and rationalise, it cannot spiritualise, since spiritualisation is a greater and more difficult integration. The Divine Will actually suffers distortion No doubt, by calling in the moment spiritual force, it touches can establish an influence and a preliminary change in some parts of the nature, especially in the hostile forces thinking mind itself and in the Ignorance. Hence we must never slacken our efforts heart which is nearest to its own province: but this change is not often a total perfection even within limits and what it does achieve is rare and difficult. The spiritual consciousness using the world mind is employing an inferior means and bring about , even though it brings in a divine light into the mind, a divine purity, passion, ardour into the heart or imposes a different order. We must be vigilant spiritual law upon the life, this new consciousness has to co-operate with work within restrictions; for the most part it can only regulate or check the lower action of the Divine life and rigorously control the body, but these members, even if refined or mastered, do not placidly think receive their spiritual fulfilment or undergo a perfection and transformation. For that whatever happens it is always necessary to bring in a higher dynamic principle which is native to the best. All depends spiritual consciousness and by which, therefore, it can act in its own law and completer natural light and power and impose them upon the personal attitudemembers. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0322/knowledge-by-unity-with-the-divine-the-divineascent-will-in-thetowards-worldsupermind#p5p16</ref>
<div style=== Perfection and Harmony ==="text-align: center;">
It is possible to escape from the problem otherwise; for, admitting always the essential Presence, we One man’s perfection still can endeavour to justify the divinity of the manifestation by correcting the human view of perfection or putting it aside as a too limited mental standard. We may say that not only is the Spirit in things absolutely perfect and divine, but each thing also is relatively perfect and divine in itself, in its expression of what it has to express of the possibilities of existence, in its assumption of its proper place in the complete manifestation. Each thing is divine in itself because each is a fact and idea of the divine being, knowledge and will fulfilling itself infallibly in accordance with the law of that particular manifestation. Each being is possessed of the knowledge, the force, the measure and kind of delight of existence precisely proper to its own nature; each works in the gradations of experience decreed by a secret inherent will, a native law, an intrinsic power of the self, an occult significance. It is thus perfect in the relation of its phenomena to the law of its being; for all are in harmony with that, spring out of it, adapt themselves to its purpose according to the infallibility of the divine Will and Knowledge at work within the creature. It is perfect and divine also in relation to the whole, in its proper place in the whole; to that totality it is necessary and in it it fulfils a part by which the perfection actual and progressive of the universal harmony, the adaptation of all in it to its whole purpose and its whole sense is helped and completed. If to us things appear undivine, if we hasten to condemn this or that phenomenon as inconsistent with the nature of a divine being, it is because we are ignorant of the sense and purpose of the Divine in save the world in its entirety. Because we see only parts and fragments, we judge of each by itself as if it were the whole, judge also the external phenomena without knowing their secret sense; but by doing so we vitiate our valuation of things, put on it the stamp of an initial and fundamental error. Perfection cannot reside in the thing in its separateness, for that separateness is an illusion; perfection is the perfection of the total divine harmony. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2134/the-divinefinding-andof-the-undivine#p6soul</ref></div> '''Content Curated by Prema Sankar'''
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