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Read Summary of '''[[Self Observation Summary|Self Observation]]'''
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= Importance of What is Self-Observation =
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">There are four necessities of man's self-expansion if he is not to remain this being We have in all functionings of the surface ignorance seeking obscurely after mentality four elements, the truth object of things and collecting and systematising fragments and sections mental consciousness, the act of knowledgemental consciousness, the small limited occasion and halfthe subject. In the self-competent creature experience of the cosmic Force which he now self-observing inner being, the object is in his phenomenal nature. He must know himself and discover and utilise all his potentialities: but to know himself and always some state or movement or wave of the world completely he must go behind his own and its exteriorconscious being, anger, he must dive deep below his own mental surface and the physical surface of Nature. This he can only do by knowing his inner mentalgrief or other emotion, hunger or other vitalcraving, physical and psychic being and its powers and movements and the universal laws and processes impulse or inner life reaction or some form of sensation, perception or thought activity. The act is some kind of the occult Mind mental observation and Life which stand behind the material front conceptual valuation of the universe….But this knowledge must be something more than a creed movement or wave or else a mystic revelation; his thinking mind must mental sensation of it in which observation and valuation may be able to accept it, to correlate it with the principle of things involved and the observed truth of the universe: this is the work of philosophyeven lost, and —so that in this act the field of mental person may either separate the truth of act and the spirit it can only be done object by a spiritual philosophy, whether intellectual in its method distinguishing perception or intuitiveconfuse them together indistinguishably. (The Mother, 18 June 1958) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0921/18memory-juneego-1958and-self-experience#p3p5</ref></span>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>The Upanishad tells us that the Self-existent has so set the doors of the soul that they turn outwards and most men look outward into the appearances of things; only the rare soul that is ripe for a calm thought and steady wisdom turns its eye inward, sees the Self and attains to immortality. To this turning of the eye inward psychological self-observation and ~</span><span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">analysis is a great and effective introduction. We can look into the inward of ourselves more easily than we can look into the inward of things external to us because there, in things outside us, we are in the first place embarrassed by the form and secondly we have no natural previous experience of that in them which is other than their physical substance….psychological self-knowledge is only the experience of the modes of the Self, it is not the realisation of the Self in its pure being. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-status-of-knowledge#p7</ref></spancenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The true and ultimateYou may have a mental power of observation, as distinguished from the immediate or intermediate importance a vital power of our observingobservation, reasoninga physical power of observation. When you observe ideas, inquiringfor instance, judging intelligence is that it prepares the human being for train of ideas, the right reception and right action logic of a Light from above which must progressively replace in him the obscure light from below that guides the animal..Man can bring an enlightened willideas, an enlightened thought and enlightened emotions to it is not altogether the difficult work same power of his self-development; he can more observation as when you look at a friend doing athletics and more subject to these more conscious and reflecting guides the inferior function of desire. In proportion as see whether he can thus master and enlighten is making his lower selfmovements correctly or not. That is, he the capacity of attention is man and no longer an animal. When he can begin to replace desire altogether by a still greater enlightened thought and sight and will there in touch with the Infiniteboth cases, consciously subject to but it works in a diviner will than his own, linked to a more universal and transcendent knowledge, he has commenced different field. It can't be said that it is one part of the ascent towards being observing the supermanothers; he it is the faculty of observation developing in each part of the being—that is on his upward march towards , the Divinefaculty of concentration and attention. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2306/self27-january-consecration1954#p17p34</ref></span>
= What to Observe =<center>~</center>
== Many voices This sensational thought-mind which is based upon sense, memory, association, first ideas and resultant generalisations or secondary ideas, is common to all developed animal life and mentality….The intelligence and will of the animal are involved in the sense-mind and therefore altogether governed by it and carried on its stream of sensations, sense-perceptions, impulses; it is instinctive. Man is able to use a reason and will, a self-observing, thinking and all-observing, an intelligently willing mind which is no longer involved in the sense-mind, but acts from above and behind it in its own right, with a certain separateness and freedom. He is reflective, has a certain relative freedom of intelligent will. He has liberated in himself and has formed into a separate power the buddhi. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/purification-intelligence-and-will#p4</ref> <center>~</center> The ordinary mind knows itself only as an ego with all the movements of the nature in a jumble and, identifying itself with these movements, thinks "I am doing this, feeling that, thinking, in joy or in sorrow etc." The first beginning of real self-knowledge is when you feel yourself separate from the nature in you and its movements and then you see that there are many parts of your being, many personalities each acting on its own behalf and in its own way. ==<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/28/the-psychic-being#p84</ref> <center>~</center> '''Active and Passive Observation'''  Your consciousness becomes a screen or mirror; but this is when you are in a state of contemplation, a mere observer; when you are active, it is like a searchlight. You have only to turn it on, if you want to see luminously and examine penetratingly anything in any place. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/30-june-1929#p7</ref> '''Observation is Not Discernment'''
<span style=For the capacity of observation must not be confused with the capacity of discernment. Discernment is an intellectual capacity. Something like a judgment already enters into it, what we call "discrimination"background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">There are many voicesyou can distinguish between the origin of one thing and of another, and all are not divine; this may be only a voice the reciprocal value of desirethese things. All But that keeps one faithful ought to the Truth and insists be founded on peace, purity, devotion, sincerity, a spiritual change of the nature can be listened to with profit; the rest must be observed with discrimination and not followed blindlycorrect observation. Keep the fire The power of aspiration burningobservation comes first, but avoid all impatient hastediscernment follows. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/03/30/inner-voicesjune-and-indication1929#p7</ref>
== The three Guna’s What to Observe ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The idea of One can prepare the three essential modes body through a series of Nature is observations, studies, understandings,by showing it examples, making it understand things as one makes a creation of the ancient Indian thinkers and child understand them, either by observing its truth own movements―but generally, in this, one is not at once obvious, because it was the result comparatively blind!―or by observing those of long psychological experiment and profound internal experienceothers. Therefore without And in a long inner experiencemore general way, this preparation will be based on recognised studies, without intimate self-observation and intuitive perception of the Nature-forces it is difficult to grasp accurately or firmly utiliseon clear facts. Still Like this, for instance: that a certain broad indications may help the seeker on the Way number of Works to understandpersons, analyse and control by his assent or refusal the </span><span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">combinations of his own nature. These modes are termed placed in the Indian books qualitiesexactly similar circumstances, guṇasexperience, and are given the names sattva, rajaseach one of them, tamasvery different effects. Sattwa is the force of equilibrium and translates One may go even further: in quality as good and harmony and happiness and light; rajas is the force a given set of kinesis and translates in quality as struggle and effortdefinite circumstances, passion and action; tamas there is the force a certain number of inconscience and inertia and translates particular, definite individuals, in quality as obscurity apparently quite identical conditions, and incapacity and inaction. Ordinarily used for psychological self-analysis, these distinctions are valid also in physical Nature. Each thing and every existence in some the lower Prakriti contains them and its process and dynamic form effects are the result of the interaction of these qualitative powerscatastrophic, while others escape without any harm.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2308/the-three-modes4-ofjuly-nature1956#p2p15</ref>
= Process '''Parts of Self-Observation =the Being '''
<span style="background-color:transparentHave you ever practised distinguishing what comes from your mind, what comes from your vital, what comes from your physical?... For it is mixed up;color:#000000;">You project yourself on it is mixed up in the screen and then observe and see outward appearance. If you do not take care to distinguish, it makes a kind of soup, all that together. So it is moving there indistinct and how it moves and what happensdifficult to discover. You make a little diagram, it becomes so interesting then. And thenBut if you observe yourself, after a whilesome time you see certain things, when you are quite accustomed feel them to seeingbe there, you can go one step further and take a decision. Or even a still greater step: you organise—arrange, take up all like that, put each thing as though they were in its placeyour skin; for some other things you feel you would have to go within yourself to find out from where they come; for other things, organise in such a way that you begin have to go still further inside, or otherwise you have to rise up a straight movement with an inner meaninglittle: it comes from unconsciousness. And there are others; then you become conscious of your direction and are able must go very deep, very deep to say: "Very well, it will be thus; my life will develop in that way, because that find out from where they come. This is the logic of my being. Now, I have arranged all that within me, each thing has been put in its place, and so naturally just a central orientation is forming. I am following this orientation. One step more and I know what will happen to me for I myself am deciding itbeginning....". (The Mother ,29 July 1953) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/2910-julyjune-1953#p47p31</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">But you must begin when very small, and consciously, very consciously; you must begin with a see of observation of all '''Observing the movements in yourself, of their relation with others, of—precisely, of your degree of independence, real individuality, of knowing where impulses come from, where other movements come from: whether it is contagion from outside or something that arises from within yourself. A very profound study of all the movements in oneself is necessary in order to succeed simply in crystallising a being who is a little conscious, a little conscious. (The Mother,22 September 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/22-september-1954#p43</ref>Inner Being'''
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It For a larger mental being is not there within us, a larger inner vital being, even a larger inner subtle-physical retirement that is neededbeing other than our surface body-consciousness, and by entering into this or becoming it, identifying ourselves with it, we can observe the springs of our thoughts and feelings, but an inner detachment from the mental formations sources and vital desiresmotives of our action, the operative energies that build up our surface personality. To find For we discover and can know the real self above inner being that secretly thinks and within and live perceives in us, the vital being thatsecretly feels and acts upon life through us, not in the mind's conceptions or subtle-physical being that secretly receives and responds to the vital's reactionscontacts of things through our body and its organs. These must be observed Our surface thought, feeling, emotion is a complexity and looked at not as one's own confusion of impulsions from within and impacts from outside us; our reason, our organising intelligence can impose on it only an imperfect order: but as movements here within we find the separate sources of our mental, our vital and our physical energisms and can see clearly the pure operations, the distinct powers, the composing elements of each and their interplay in a surface ignorant natureclear light of self-vision. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3121/interactionsknowledge-withby-othersidentity-and-the-practice-ofseparative-yogaknowledge#p111p12</ref>
= Conditions for Self-Observation ='''The Three Modes of Nature'''
== Quiet Mind ==The idea of the three essential modes of Nature is a creation of the ancient Indian thinkers and its truth is not at once obvious, because it was the result of long psychological experiment and profound internal experience. Therefore without a long inner experience, without intimate self-observation and intuitive perception of the Nature-forces it is difficult to grasp accurately or firmly utilise. Still certain broad indications may help the seeker on the Way of Works to understand, analyse and control by his assent or refusal the combinations of his own nature. These modes are termed in the Indian books qualities, guṇas, and are given the names sattva, rajas, tamas. Sattwa is the force of equilibrium and translates in quality as good and harmony and happiness and light; rajas is the force of kinesis and translates in quality as struggle and effort, passion and action; tamas is the force of inconscience and inertia and translates in quality as obscurity and incapacity and inaction. Ordinarily used for psychological self-analysis, these distinctions are valid also in physical Nature. Each thing and every existence in the lower Prakriti contains them and its process and dynamic form are the result of the interaction of these qualitative powers. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-three-modes-of-nature#p2</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It is only when we follow the yogic process of quieting the mind itself that a profounder result of our self-observation becomes possible. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/indeterminates-cosmic-determinations-and-the-indeterminable#p12</ref>'''Dreams'''
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It Now the procedure to deal with dreams and the dreamland. First become conscious—conscious of your dreams. Observe the relation between them and the happenings of your waking hours. If you remember your night, you will be able to trace back very often the condition of your day to the condition of your night. In sleep some action or other is always going on in the quiet mind that the true observation your mental or vital or other plane; things happen there and knowledge comethey govern your waking consciousness.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2903/quiet21-andapril-calm1929#p40p6</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>A quiet mind does not mean that there will be no thoughts or mental movements at all, but that these will be on the surface and you will feel your true being within separate from them, observing but not carried away, able to watch and judge them and reject all that has to be rejected and to accept and keep to all that is true consciousness and true experience.~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/29/peace#p10</refcenter>
<span style="background-colorIt is a tremendous field of observation—there is no end to the discoveries you can make in your dreams. But there is one important point:transparent;color:#000000;">But if you remain must not go to sleep when you are very quiettired, only for if you observe—as though you were silently looking at somethingdo, you understand—then fall into a sort of unconsciousness in which dreams do whatever they like with you will begin seeing more precisely, and little by little distinguishing between different categories of thingsyou have no reaction. You will be able to know what one thing is and what another etc., whether it comes from Just as I said that you or from outsideshould not eat without having taken rest, whether it is on a material plane or on another planeI would advise everyone to rest before going to sleep. All this is learnt through a very quiet observation, quiet but very sharpAnd for that, you understand; because there are very tiny shades, very tiny, between different things, and when you get used must know how to distinguishing these nuances, you can discern exactly what it isrest. (The Mother,20 October 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0615/201-octoberfebruary-19541951#p46p14</ref>
== Silence ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It is really an As the inner silence that is needed—a something silent within that looks at outer talk and action but feels it as something superficialconsciousness grows by sadhana, these dream experiences increase in number, clearness, coherence, not as itself accuracy and is quite indifferent after some growth of experience and untouched by it. It consciousness, we can bring forces , if we observe, come to support speech understand them and action or it their significance to our inner life. Even we can stop them by withdrawal or it training become so conscious as to follow our own passage, usually veiled to our awareness and memory, through many realms and the process of the return to the waking state. At a certain pitch of this inner wakefulness this kind of sleep, a sleep of experiences, can let them go on and observe without being involved or movedreplace the ordinary subconscient slumber. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3130/speechthree-experiences-of-the-andinner-yogabeing#p76p6</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">...You must be able to silence your head absolutely and be completely detached, not to have (for example, when you are looking for the solution of a problem), not to have already in your head the solution that seems to you right or the best or most profitable. That must not be there. You must become absolutely like a blank paper, with nothing on it. And you proceed in that way, with a very sincere aspiration to know the truth, without assuming beforehand that it will be like this or like that; because otherwise you will see only your own formation. The very first condition is that the head must keep completely silent during the time one is observing. (The Mother , 30 September 1953) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/30-september-1953#p13</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:[[#000000;">To silence the mind it is not enough top|Back to throw back each thought as it comes, that can only be a subordinate movement. One must get back from all thought and be separate from it, a silent consciousness observing the thoughts if they come, but not oneself thinking or identified with the thoughts. Thoughts must be felt as outside things altogether. It is then easier to reject thoughts or let them pass without their disturbing the quietude of the mind. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/interactions-with-others-and-the-practice-of-yoga#p99</ref>Contents]]
= Right Attitude for Why is Self-Observation Important? =
== Witness Attitude ==...if he [man] is not to remain this being of the surface ignorance seeking obscurely after the truth of things and collecting and systematising fragments and sections of knowledge, the small limited and half-competent creature of the cosmic Force which he now is in his phenomenal nature. He must know himself and discover and utilise all his potentialities: but to know himself and the world completely he must go behind his own and its exterior, he must dive deep below his own mental surface and the physical surface of Nature. This he can only do by knowing his inner mental, vital, physical and psychic being and its powers and movements and the universal laws and processes of the occult Mind and Life which stand behind the material front of the universe. ...But this knowledge must be something more than a creed or a mystic revelation; his thinking mind must be able to accept it, to correlate it with the principle of things and the observed truth of the universe: this is the work of philosophy, and in the field of the truth of the spirit it can only be done by a spiritual philosophy, whether intellectual in its method or intuitive. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/09/18-june-1958#p3</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>Have you never felt this? As though you were a little behind or above things, and were looking at them taking place but were not doing anything yourself? Witness means an observer, someone who looks on and does not act himself. So, when the mind is very quiet, one can withdraw a little in this way from circumstances and look at things as though he were a witness, a spectator, and not participating in the action himself. This gives you a great detachment, a great quietude, and also a very precise see of the value of things, because it cuts the attachment to action. When you know how to do this with yourself, when you can withdraw and watch yourself acting, you learn many things about yourself. When you are all mixed up and take part in the action, you do not observe yourself acting, you don't know what you are like. But when you draw back and look at yourself, you can perceive many imperfections which you wouldn't have seen otherwise. (The Mother,13 October 1954) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/13-october-1954#p2</refcenter>
To work for your perfection, 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 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 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 judgment, that we can hope to form in ourselves a discernment that never errs. For if we truly want to progress and acquire 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 to it. In this way, little by little, all the parts, all the elements of our being can be organised into a homogeneous whole around our psychic centre. 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, with a determination to prolong our life as long as necessary for the success of our endeavour. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/12/the-science-of-living#p5</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>It has been seen that a most effective way of purification is for the mental Purusha to draw back, to stand as the passive witness and observe and know himself and the workings of Nature in the lower, the normal being; but this must be combined, for perfection, with a will to raise the purified nature into the higher spiritual being. When that is done, the Purusha is no longer only a witness, but also the master of his prakriti, īśvara. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-action-of-the-divine-shakti#p7</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The witness Purusha in … if each element which comes with its ignorance, its unconsciousness, its egoism, is put before the mind will to change and one remains awake, compares, observes , studies and slowly acts, that the inadequacy becomes infinitely interesting, one makes marvellous and quite unexpected discoveries. One finds in oneself lots of his effortsmall hidden folds, all little things one had not seen at the inadequacy in fact beginning; one undertakes a sort of man's life inner chase, goes hunting into small dark corners and nature arises from the separation and the consequent struggletells oneself: "What, I was like that! This was there in me, want of knowledgeI am harbouring this little thing"—sometimes so sordid, want of harmonyso mean, want of onenessso nasty. It is essential for him to grow out of separative individualityAnd once it has been discovered, to universalise himselfhow wonderful! One puts the light upon it and it disappears and you no longer have those reactions which made you so sad before, when you used to make himself one with the universe. This unification can be done only through the soul by making our soul of mind one with the universal Mindsay, our soul of life one with the universal Life-soul, our soul of body one with the universal soul of physical Nature"Oh! I shall never get there. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2404/the-perfection-of-the19-mentalapril-being1951#p15p14</ref>
== Being Sincere and Impartial ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">For that If you must be absolutely sincere and impartial. You must observe yourself as if you were observing and criticising a third person. You must not start with an idea had that this is your life's missionobservation (from the inner spiritual, this is your particular capacitynot the outer intellectual and ethical viewpoint), this then it would be comparatively easy for you are to do or that get out of your difficulties; for instance you are would find at once where this irrational impulse to doflee away came from and it would not have any hold upon you. Of course, in this lies your talent or genius, etc. That will carry all that can only be done to the best effect when you away stand back from the right track. It is not the liking or disliking play of your external being, your mental or vital nature and become the Witness-Control or physical choice that determines the true line of your growthSpectator-Actor Manager. Nor should But that is what happens when you take up the opposite attitude and say, "I am good for nothing in this matter, I am useless in that one; it is not for me." Neither vanity and arrogance nor kind of self-depreciation and false modesty should move youseeing posture. As I said, you must be absolutely impartial and unconcerned. You should be like a mirror that reflects the truth and does not judge. (The Mother ,12 November 1952) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1531/12mental-difficulties-and-novemberthe-need-of-1952quietude#p6p23</ref>
== Being Vigilant ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">One can be quietThe true and ultimate, as distinguished from the immediate or intermediate importance of our observing, reasoning, happyinquiring, cheerful without judging intelligence is that it prepares the human being all that for the right reception and right action of a Light from above which must progressively replace in a him the obscure light or shallow way—and from below that guides the happiness need not animal. ...Man can bring any vital reaction. All that you need an enlightened will, an enlightened thought and enlightened emotions to do is the difficult work of his self-development; he can more and more subject to be observant these more conscious and vigilant,—watchful so that you may not give assent to wrong movements or reflecting guides the return inferior function of the old feelings, darkness, confusion etcdesire. Not fearIn proportion as he can thus master and enlighten his lower self, but vigilancehe is man and no longer an animal. If you remain vigilant, then When he can begin to replace desire altogether by a still greater enlightened thought and sight and will in touch with the increase of the Force upholding youInfinite, consciously subject to a power of self-control diviner will comethan his own, linked to a power to see more universal and reject transcendent knowledge, he has commenced the wrong turn or ascent towards the superman; he is on his upward march towards the wrong reaction when it comesDivine.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3123/fearself-consecration#p12p17</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">But you have only How to observe yourselves... you can observe yourself, catch yourself at least a hundred times a day, with a mind which decides everything, knows everything, judges everything, knows very well what is good, what bad, what is true, what false, what is right... And also how one should act, what this person should have done, how to resolve that problem.... All men know, you see... If they were at the head of governments, for instance, they would know very well how to manage everything! But people don't listen to them... that's all! (The Mother,21 July 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/21-july-1954#p40</ref>Observe Oneself? =
== Becoming Aware But you must begin when very small, and consciously, very consciously; you must begin with a sense of Desire ==observation of all the movements in yourself, of their relation with others, of—precisely, of your degree of independence, real individuality, of knowing where impulses come from, where other movements come from: whether it is contagion from outside or something that arises from within yourself. A very profound study of all the movements in oneself is necessary in order to succeed simply in crystallising a being who is a little conscious, a little conscious. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/22-september-1954#p43</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>For that you must observe yourself very, very attentively, and if there is anything in you which produces something like a small intense vibration, then you may be sure that there lies a desire. For example, you say, "This food is necessary for me"—you believe, you imagine, you think that you need such and such a thing and you find the necessary means to obtain the thing. To know if it is a need or a desire, you must look at yourself very closely and ask yourself, "What will happen if I cannot get the thing?" Then if the immediate answer is, "Oh, it will be very bad", you may be sure that it is a matter of desire. It is the same for everything. For every problem you draw back, look at yourself and ask, "Let us see, am I going to have the thing?" If at that moment something in you jumps up with joy, you may be certain there is a desire. On the other hand, if something tells you, "Oh, I am not going to get it", and you feel very depressed, then again it is a desire. (The Mother, 25 January 1951) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/25-january-1951#p3</refcenter>
== Becoming Conscious ==You project yourself on the screen and then observe and see all that is moving there and how it moves and what happens. You make a little diagram, it becomes so interesting then. And then, after a while, when you are quite accustomed to seeing, you can go one step further and take a decision. Or even a still greater step: you organise—arrange, take up all that, put each thing in its place, organise in such a way that you begin to have a straight movement with an inner meaning. And then you become conscious of your direction and are able to say: "Very well, it will be thus; my life will develop in that way, because that is the logic of my being. Now, I have arranged all that within me, each thing has been put in its place, and so naturally a central orientation is forming. I am following this orientation. One step more and I know what will happen to me for I myself am deciding it....". <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/29-july-1953#p47</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>But a time comes when instead of doing things automatically, impelled by a consciousness and force of which one is quite unaware—a time comes when one can observe what goes on in oneself, study one's movements, find their causes, and at the same time begin to exercise a control first over what goes on within us, then on the influence cast on us from outside which makes us act, in the beginning altogether unconsciously and almost involuntarily, but gradually more and more consciously; and the will can wake up and react. Then at that moment, the moment there is a conscious will capable of reacting, one may say, "I have become conscious." This does not mean that it is a total and perfect consciousness, it means that it is a beginning: for example, when one is able to observe all the reactions in one's being and to have a certain control over them, to let those one approves of have play, and to control, stop, annul those one doesn't approve of. (The Mother, 28 November 1956) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/08/28-november-1956#p19</refcenter>
= Limitations If one begins to find out, to understand what a feeling is and what a thought is, and how it works, then one can already go quite far on the path with that. One must at the same time observe how his feelings and thoughts have an action on the body, what the reciprocity is. And then, there is another exercise which consists in looking into oneself for what is persistent, what is lasting, something which makes one say "I", and which is not the body. For obviously, when one was very small, and then when each year one grows up, if one takes fairly long distances, for example a distance of Selfabout ten years, they are very different "I"s from what one was when as small as this (gesture), and then what one is now; it is difficult to say that it is the same person, you see. If one takes only this, still there is something which has the feeling of always being the same person. So one must reflect, seek, try to understand what it is. This indeed can lead you far on the path. Then if one also studies the relation between these different things—between thoughts, feelings, their action on the body, the reciprocal action of the body on these things—and also what it is that says "I" permanently, what it is that can trace a curve in the movement of the being, if one seeks carefully enough, it leads you quite far. Naturally if one seeks far enough and with enough persistence, one reaches the psychic. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/07/9-march-Observation =1955#p23</ref>
== Surface Level Observation ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">As a general rule, with It is not a few very rare exceptions, men are content to observe more or less accurately everything physical retirement that happens around themis needed, but an inner detachment from the mental formations and vital desires. To find the real self above and sometimes within themselves, and to classify all these observations according to one superficial system of logic or another. And they call this organisation, these systemslive in that, "knowledge". It has never occurred to them, they have not even begun to perceive that all in the mind's conceptions or the things they see, touch, feel, experience, are false appearances vital's reactions. These must be observed and looked at not reality itselfas one's own but as movements of a surface ignorant nature. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1031/aphorisminteractions-with-others-and-the-practice-of-7yoga#p3p111</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>It is evident that our state on the surface is indeed a state of knowledge, so far as it goes, but a limited knowledge enveloped and invaded by ignorance and, to a very large extent, by reason of its limitation, itself a kind of ignorance, at best a mixed knowledge-ignorance. It could not be otherwise since our awareness of the world is born of a separative and surface observation with only an indirect means of cognition at its disposal; our knowledge of ourselves, though more direct, is stultified by its restriction to the surface of our being, by an ignorance of our true self, the true sources of our nature, the true motive-forces of our action. It is quite evident that we know ourselves with only a superficial knowledge,—the sources of our consciousness and thought are a mystery; the true nature of our mind, emotions, sensations is a mystery; our cause of being and our end of being, the significance of our life and its activities are a mystery: this could not be if we had a real self-knowledge and a real world-knowledge. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/knowledge-by-identity-and-separative-knowledge#p7</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">One throws oneself out When we are in contact with the Divine or in contact with an inner knowledge and vision, we begin to see all the time; circumstances of our life in a new light and can observe how they all tended without our knowing it towards the time one livesgrowth of our being and consciousness, as it weretowards the work we had to do, outside oneself, in such a superficial sensation towards some development that it is almost as though one were outside oneself. As soon as one wants even had to observe oneself a littlebe made, control oneself a little, simply know —not only what is happeningseemed good, one is always obliged to draw back fortunate or pull towards oneselfsuccessful but the struggles, to pull inwards something which is constantly like thatfailures, on the surface. And it is this surface thing which meets all external contactsdifficulties, puts you in touch with similar vibrations coming from othersupheavals. That happens almost outside you. (The Mother , 20 June 1956) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0829/20the-divine-grace-juneand-1956guidance#p49p33</ref>
== Ignorance By Vigilance ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">As One can be quiet, happy, cheerful without being all that in a light or shallow way—and the surface mental entity moving from moment happiness need not bring any vital reaction. All that you need to momentdo is to be observant and vigilant, —watchful so that you may not observing his essential self but only his relation give assent to his experiences wrong movements or the return of the Time-movementold feelings, darkness, confusion etc. Not fear, in that movement keeping the future from himself in what appears to be a blank of Ignorance and non-existence but is an unrealised fullnessvigilance. If you remain vigilant, grasping knowledge and experience then with the increase of being in the presentForce upholding you, putting it away in the past which again appears to be a blank power of Ignorance and nonself-existence partly lightedcontrol will come, partly saved a power to see and stored up by memory, he puts on reject the aspect of a thing fleeting and uncertain seizing without stability upon things fleeting and uncertain. But in reality, we shall find, he is always wrong turn or the same Eternal who is for ever stable and self-possessed in His supramental knowledge and what he seizes on is also for ever stable and eternal; for wrong reaction when it is himself that he is mentally experiencing in the succession of Timecomes. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2131/memory-self-consciousness-and-the-ignorancefear#p15p12</ref>
== Observing Invisible Forces ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">If we But you have only to observe yourselves... you can observe yourself, catch yourself at least a happeninghundred times a day, we judge and explain it from the result and from with a glimpse of its most external constituentsmind which decides everything, knows everything, judges everything, knows very well what is good, what bad, what is true, what false, circumstances or causes; but each happening what is the outcome of a complex nexus of forces which we do not and cannot observeright... And also how one should act, what this person should have done, because all forces are how to us invisibleresolve that problem.... All men know,—but you see... If they are not invisible to were at the spiritual vision head of the Infinite: some of them are actualities working governments, for instance, they would know very well how to produce or occasion a new actuality, some are possibles that are near manage everything! But people don't listen to the pre-existent actuals and in a way included in their aggregate; but there can intervene always new possibilities them... that suddenly become dynamic potentials and add themselves to the nexus, and behind 's all are imperatives or an imperative which these possibilities are labouring to actualise. </span>! <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/06/21/brahman-purusha-ishwara-maya-prakritijuly-shakti1954#p7p40</ref>
= Personality and Self-Observation =<center>~</center>
== Three Guna’s But a time comes when instead of doing things automatically, impelled by a consciousness and Selfforce of which one is quite unaware—a time comes when one can observe what goes on in oneself, study one's movements, find their causes, and at the same time begin to exercise a control first over what goes on within us, then on the influence cast on us from outside which makes us act, in the beginning altogether unconsciously and almost involuntarily, but gradually more and more consciously; and the will can wake up and react. Then at that moment, the moment there is a conscious will capable of reacting, one may say, "I have become conscious." This does not mean that it is a total and perfect consciousness, it means that it is a beginning: for example, when one is able to observe all the reactions in one's being and to have a certain control over them, to let those one approves of have play, and to control, stop, annul those one doesn't approve of. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/08/28-november-Observation ==1956#p19</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>In this progression the first step is a certain detached superiority to the three modes of Nature. The soul is inwardly separated and free from the lower Prakriti, not involved in its coils, indifferent and glad above it. Nature continues to act in the triple round of her ancient habits,—desire, grief and joy attack the heart, the instruments fall into inaction and obscurity and weariness, light and peace come back into the heart and mind and body; but the soul stands unchanged and untouched by these changes. Observing and unmoved by the grief and desire of the lower members, smiling at their joys and their strainings, regarding and unoverpowered by the failing and the darknesses of the thought and the wildness or the weaknesses of the heart and nerves, uncompelled and unattached to the mind's illuminations and its relief and sense of ease or of power in the return of light and gladness, it throws itself into none of these things, but waits unmoved for the intimations of a higher Will and the intuitions of a greater luminous knowledge. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-three-modes-of-nature#p13</refcenter>
= Parts Take one hour of your life, the one which is most convenient for you, and during that time observe yourself closely and Planes of say only the Being =absolutely indispensable words. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/anger#p15</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Have you ever practised distinguishing what comes from your mind, what comes from your vital, what comes from your physical?... For it is mixed up; it is mixed up in the outward appearance. If you do not take care to distinguish, it makes = By Developing a kind of soup, all that together. So it is indistinct and difficult to discover. But if you observe yourself, after some time you see certain things, you feel them to be there, like that, as though they were in your skin; for some other things you feel you would have to go within yourself to find out from where they come; for other things, you have to go still further inside, or otherwise you have to rise up a little: it comes from unconsciousness. And there are others; then you must go very deep, very deep to find out from where they come. This is just a beginning. (The Mother, 10 June 1953) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/05/10-june-1953#p31</ref>Quiet Mind ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">To work for your perfection, 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 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 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 judgment, that when we can hope to form in ourselves a discernment that never errs. For if we truly want to progress and acquire follow the capacity yogic process of knowing quieting the truth of our being, mind itself 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 profounder result of our existence, whatever is opposed to it. In this way, little by little, all the parts, all the elements of our being can be organised into a homogeneous whole around our psychic centre. 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, with a determination to prolong our life as long as necessary for the success of our endeavourself-observation becomes possible. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1221/theindeterminates-cosmic-sciencedeterminations-ofand-the-livingindeterminable#p5p12</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>….You may have a mental power of observation, a vital power of observation, a physical power of observation. When you observe ideas, for instance, the train of ideas, the logic of the ideas, it is not altogether the same power of observation as when you look at a friend doing athletics and see whether he is making his movements correctly or not. That is, the capacity of attention is there in both cases, but it works in a different field. It can't be said that it is one part of the being observing the others; it is the faculty of observation developing in each part of the being—that is, the faculty of concentration and attention. For the capacity of observation must not be confused with the capacity of discernment. Discernment is an intellectual capacity. Something like a judgment already enters into it, what we call "discrimination": you can distinguish between the origin of one thing and of another, and the reciprocal value of these things. But that ought to be founded on a correct observation. The power of observation comes first, discernment follows. (The Mother, 27 January 1954) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/27-january-1954#p34</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">For a larger mental being is A quiet mind does not mean that there within us, a larger inner vital being, even a larger inner subtle-physical being other than our surface body-consciousness, and by entering into this will be no thoughts or becoming itmental movements at all, identifying ourselves with it, we can observe but that these will be on the springs of our thoughts surface and feelingsyou will feel your true being within separate from them, the sources and motives of our actionobserving but not carried away, the operative energies that build up our surface personality. For we discover able to watch and can know the inner being that secretly thinks judge them and perceives in us, the vital being reject all that secretly feels has to be rejected and acts upon life through us, the subtle-physical being that secretly receives to accept and responds keep to the contacts of things through our body and its organs. Our surface thought, feeling, emotion all that is a complexity and confusion of impulsions from within and impacts from outside us; our reason, our organising intelligence can impose on it only an imperfect order: but here within we find the separate sources of our mental, our vital true consciousness and our physical energisms and can see clearly the pure operations, the distinct powers, the composing elements of each and their interplay in a clear light of self-visiontrue experience. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2129/knowledge-by-identity-and-separative-knowledgepeace#p12p10</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>There is a state of being experienced in Yoga in which we become a double consciousness, one on the surface, small, active, ignorant, swayed by thoughts and feelings, grief and joy and all kinds of reactions, the other within calm, vast, equal, observing the surface being with an immovable detachment or indulgence or, it may be, acting upon its agitation to quiet, enlarge, transform it. So too we can rise to a consciousness above and observe the various parts of our being, inner and outer, mental, vital and physical and the subconscient below all, and act upon one or other or the whole from that higher status. It is possible also to go down from that height or from any height into any of these lower states and take its limited light or its obscurity as our place of working while the rest that we are is either temporarily put away or put behind or else kept as a field of reference from which we can get support, sanction or light and influence or as a status into which we can ascend or recede and from it observe the inferior movements. Or we can plunge into trance, get within ourselves and be conscious there while all outward things are excluded; or we can go beyond even this inner awareness and lose ourselves in some deeper other consciousness or some high superconscience. There is also a pervading equal consciousness into which we can enter and see all ourselves with one enveloping glance or omnipresent awareness one and indivisible. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/brahman-purusha-ishwara-maya-prakriti-shakti#p23</refcenter>
== Witness There are four movements which are usually consecutive, but which in the end may be simultaneous: to observe one's thoughts is the first, to watch over one's thoughts is the second, to control one's thoughts is the third and Parts of Being ==to master one's thoughts is the fourth. To observe, to watch over, to control, to master. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/conjugate-verses#p7</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>It is difficult to say generally what is conscious; but naturally, if something observes, it is always the "witness" element in this part—in each part of the being there is something which is a "witness", which looks on. There is even a physical witness which can get very much in the way; for instance, if it watches you playing, this can paralyse you considerably. There is also a vital witness which looks at you, sees your desires and enjoys highly all that happens; it acts also as a brake. There is the mental witness which judges ideas, which says, "This idea contradicts this other", and which arranges everything. Then there is the great psychic Witness, who is the inner divinity. (The Mother, 22 March 1951) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/22-march-1951#p6</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Sometimes there What happens usually is no relation among these different witnesses—there ought to bethat something touches the vital, but often without one's knowing it is not always there, and brings up the old ordinary or external consciousness in such a way that the inner mind gets covered up and all the old thoughts and feelings return for a time. But if there It is in the being a will to become perfect, physical mind that becomes active and gives its assent. If the relation is established quite quickly; one can refer to another whole mind remains quiet and finallydetached observing the vital movement, if there is a sufficient sinceritybut not giving its assent, sufficient concentration, you come then to the supreme inner Witness who can judge all thingsreject it becomes more easy. But generally it may be said that it is always a part This established quietude and detachment of the mind, more or less enlightened, marks always a great step forward made in a little closer contact with the inner being, which observes and judgessadhana. (The Mother, 22 March 1951) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0431/22the-vital-and-marchother-1951levels-of-being#p7p45</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>A man with a very developed introspective mind often identifies himself with the witness part of his mind and observes his own thoughts and studies their nature. That is a beginning which makes it easy for the full detachment to come. For others it is less easy, but it can be done by all. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/inner-detachment-and-the-witness-attitude#p</refcenter>
But if you remain very quiet, only if you observe—as though you were silently looking at something, you understand—then you will begin seeing more precisely, and little by little distinguishing between different categories of things. You will be able to know what one thing is and what another etc., whether it comes from you or from outside, whether it is on a material plane or on another plane. All this is learnt through a very quiet observation, quiet but very sharp, you understand; because there are very tiny shades, very tiny, between different things, and when you get used to distinguishing these nuances, you can discern exactly what it is.<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/20-october-1954#p46</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>You have to become conscious—that is to say, there must be something in you which is not carried away by thoughts and feelings, but looks at them and observes how they work and how they affect you. The part that observes and knows is called the Witness sākṣī in man. It is always possible to develop this in oneself. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/inner-detachment-and-the-witness-attitude#p25</refcenter>
== Psychic Being ==It is really an inner silence that is needed—a something silent within that looks at outer talk and action but feels it as something superficial, not as itself and is quite indifferent and untouched by it. It can bring forces to support speech and action or it can stop them by withdrawal or it can let them go on and observe without being involved or moved. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/speech-and-yoga#p76</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>...behind there is the psychic which supports the development, the growth of the being and gives this continuity of consciousness, makes one feel that he is the same being even while being absolutely different, absolutely different. If later one observes himself sufficiently, he can see that the things he understood and could do at that time are things which seem to him absolutely inconceivable now, and that he could never do a similar thing because he is no longer that person at all. And yet, because within there was the psychic consciousness which is immortal, one has the feeling that it is always the same being which was there and continues to be there and will continue to be there with more or less progressive and more or less conscious changes. (The Mother, 29 June 1955) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/07/29-june-1955#p28</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The ordinary mind knows itself only as an ego with all the movements of the nature in a jumble You must be able to silence your head absolutely andbe completely detached, identifying itself with these movements, thinks "I am doing this, feeling thatnot to have (for example, thinking, in joy or in sorrow etc." The first beginning of real self-knowledge is when you feel yourself separate from are looking for the nature solution of a problem), not to have already in your head the solution that seems to you and its movements and then you see that right or the best or most profitable. That must not be there are many parts of your being. You must become absolutely like a blank paper, many personalities each acting with nothing on its own behalf and it. And you proceed in its own that way. The two different beings you feel are—one, with a very sincere aspiration to know the psychic being which draws you towards the Mothertruth, the other the external being mostly vital which draws without assuming beforehand that it will be like this or like that; because otherwise you outward and downwards towards the play of the lower naturewill see only your own formation. There The very first condition is also in you behind that the mind head must keep completely silent during the being who observes, the witness Purusha, who can stand detached from the play of the nature, time one is observing it and able to choose.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2805/the30-psychicseptember-being1953#p84p13</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>The actions are of importance only as expressing what is in the nature. You have to be conscious of whatever in your actions is not in harmony with the Yoga and to get rid of it. But for that what is needed is your own consciousness, the psychic, observing from within and throwing off what is seen to be undesirable. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/29/work-and-yoga#p45</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The mental being within watchesTo silence the mind it is not enough to throw back each thought as it comes, observes and passes judgment on all that happens in youcan only be a subordinate movement. The psychic does not watch One must get back from all thought and observe in this way like be separate from it, a witnesssilent consciousness observing the thoughts if they come, but it feels and knows spontaneously in a much more direct and luminous way by not oneself thinking or identified with the very purity of its own nature and the divine instinct within it, and so, whenever it comes thoughts. Thoughts must be felt as outside things altogether. It is then easier to reject thoughts or let them pass without their disturbing the front it reveals at once what are the right and what quietude of the wrong movements in your naturemind. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2831/theinteractions-with-jivatmanothers-inand-the-integralpractice-of-yoga#p40p99</ref>
== Mind and Self-Observation By Developing the Witness Attitude ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">GraduallyHave you never felt this? As though you were a little behind or above things, and were looking at them taking place but were not doing anything yourself? Witness means an observer, someone who looks on and does not act himself. So, as when the action mind is prolonged very quiet, one can withdraw a little in this way from circumstances and the outer being begins to assimilate this actionlook at things as though he were a witness, there awakens a capacity of observationspectator, first and not participating in the mental consciousnessaction himself. This gives you a great detachment, a great quietude, and also a kind very precise sense of objectivisation occurs: something in the mind looks onvalue of things, observes and translates in its own waybecause it cuts the attachment to action. This is what When you call understandingknow how to do this with yourself, when you can withdraw and this is what gives watch yourself acting, you the impression (smiling) that learn many things about yourself. When you are having an experience. But that is already considerably diminished all mixed up and take part in comparison with the experience itselfaction, it is a transcription adapted to your mentalyou do not observe yourself acting, vital you don't know what you are like. But when you draw back and physical dimensionlook at yourself, that is, something that is shrunken, hardened—and it gives you at the same time the impression that it is growing clearer; that is to say, it has become as limited as your understandingcan perceive many imperfections which you wouldn't have seen otherwise. (The Mother, 31 October 1956) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0806/3113-october-19561954#p19p2</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>...We have in all functionings of the mentality four elements, the object of mental consciousness, the act of mental consciousness, the occasion and the subject. In the self-experience of the self-observing inner being, the object is always some state or movement or wave of the conscious being, anger, grief or other emotion, hunger or other vital craving, impulse or inner life reaction or some form of sensation, perception or thought activity. The act is some kind of mental observation and conceptual valuation of this movement or wave or else a mental sensation of it in which observation and valuation may be involved and even lost,—so that in this act the mental person may either separate the act and the object by a distinguishing perception or confuse them together indistinguishably. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/memory-ego-and-self-experience#p5</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">So the A man of real merit or the more civilised man has with a whole mental construction to which he must conform in order to be in harmony very developed introspective mind often identifies himself with the ideal of the environment in which he lives. But someone who does not conform at least to the smallest witness part of this construction would be considered a savage his mind and observes his own thoughts and would be thrown out of the society immediately. In fact, people who are criminals or half-mad are those who obey studies their impulses without any mental controlnature. There isn't That is a single person among you who gives way without control beginning which makes it easy for the full detachment to all the impulses that get hold of himcome. You have only to observe yourselves livingFor others it is less easy, you spend your time saying, "No, this I but it can't do", or "This I can", or in restraining one movement or encouraging another. This is mental controlbe done by all. (The Mother , 15 September 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0630/15inner-detachment-and-the-septemberwitness-1954attitude#p9p</ref>
== Vital and Self-Observation ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">What happens usually You have to become conscious—that is that to say, there must be something touches the vital, often without one's knowing it, and brings up the old ordinary or external consciousness in such a way that the inner mind gets covered up and all the old you which is not carried away by thoughts and feelings return for a time, but looks at them and observes how they work and how they affect you. It is the physical mind The part that becomes active observes and gives its assent. If knows is called the whole mind remains quiet and detached observing the vital movement, but not giving its assent, then to reject it becomes more easyWitness sākṣī in man. This established quietude and detachment of the mind marks It is always a great </span><span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">step forward made possible to develop this in the sadhanaoneself. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3130/theinner-vitaldetachment-and-other-levelsthe-ofwitness-beingattitude#p45p25</ref>
== By Sincerity and Impartiality ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">After each crisis there is something gained, For that you must be absolutely sincere and impartial. You must observe yourself as if there has been you were observing and criticising a victory and rejectionthird person. The gain You must not start with an idea that this is your life's mission, this is your particular capacity, this you are to externalise the vital disturbancedo or that you are to do, in this lies your talent or genius, so that even if it returns it etc. That will be felt so much an outside force that carry you away from the right track. It is not the observing consciousness (liking or disliking of your external being, your mental, higher or vital) cannot be disturbedor physical choice that determines the true line of your growth. If Nor should you keep take up the opposite attitude and say, "I am good for nothing in this matter, I am useless in thatone; it is not for me." Neither vanity and arrogance nor self-depreciation and false modesty should move you. As I said, it will you must be absolutely impartial and unconcerned. You should be an immense advancelike a mirror that reflects the truth and does not judge. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/3115/wrong12-movementsnovember-of-the-vital1952#p68p6</ref>
== Physical and Self-Observation ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">One can prepare the body through a series of observationsIf you observe yourself, studies, understandings,by showing it examples, making it understand things you will see that as soon as one makes you do something which disturbs you a child understand themlittle, either by observing its own movements―but generally, in this, one the mind immediately gives you a favourable reason to justify yourself—this mind is comparatively blind!―or by observing those capable of othersgilding everything. And in a more general way, this preparation will be based on recognised studies, on clear facts. Like this, for instance: that a certain number of persons, placed in exactly similar circumstances, experience, each one of them, very different effectsIn these conditions it is difficult to know oneself. One may go even further: in a given set of definite circumstances, there is a certain number must be absolutely sincere to be able to do it and to see clearly into all the little falsehoods of particular, definite individuals, in apparently quite identical conditions, and for some the effects are catastrophic, while others escape without any harmmental being. (The Mother, 4 July 1956) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0804/415-julyjanuary-19561951#p15p3</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">If it is an inert tamasic passivity subject to any influence and unable to react, then it is subjection to Nature. If it is a sattwic passivity =By Becoming Aware of the Witness observing and understanding the movements of Nature, then it is an intermediate condition, often necessary for knowledge. If it is a luminous passivity open to the Divine, shut to all other influences, then it is not subjection to Nature but surrender to the Divine. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/difficulties-of-the-physical-nature#p24</ref>Desire ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">For the giddinessthat you must observe yourself very, very attentively, and if there is anything in you which produces something like a small intense vibration, it then you may be sure that in concentration there lies a desire. For example, you say, "This food is necessary for me"—you believe, you go partly out of your body; thenimagine, you think that you need such and such a thing and you find the necessary means to obtain the thing. To know if it is a need or a desire, you must look at yourself very closely and ask yourself, "What will happen if I cannot get up and move before the whole consciousness has come backthing?" Then if the immediate answer is, "Oh, it will be very bad", there you may be sure that it is just such a giddiness as matter of desire. It is the same for everything. For every problem you describe. You can observe in future draw back, look at yourself and ask, "Let us see whether it , am I going to have the thing?" If at that moment something in you jumps up with joy, you may be certain there is not this that happensa desire. One has to be careful On the other hand, if something tells you, "Oh, I am not going to move after deep concentration or tranceget it", and you feel very depressed, till there then again it is the full consciousness in the bodya desire. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/3104/difficulties-of-the25-physicaljanuary-nature1951#p59p3</ref>
= Consciousness and Self-Observation =<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Your consciousness becomes a screen or mirror; but this is when If you are in a state of contemplationobserve yourself attentively, a mere observer; when you are activewill see that before acting you need an inner impetus, it something which pushes you. In the ordinary man this impetus is like a searchlightgenerally desire. You have only This desire ought to turn it onbe replaced by a clear, if you want to see luminously and examine penetratingly anything in any placeprecise, constant vision of the Truth. (The Mother, 30 June 1929) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0304/3021-junedecember-19291950#p7</ref>
==By Education of the Senses==
<span style="background-colorBut it is through sensations that you learn:transparent;color:#000000;">Howeverby seeing, observing, hearing. Classes develop your sensations, studies develop your sensations, if one observes the mind receives things a little deeply, through sensations. By the education of the senses the growth of one perceives that there 's general education is progressaided; if you learn to see well, exactly, that precisely; if you learn to hear well; if you learn through touch to know the nature of things become better and better; if you learn through the see of smell to distinguish between different odours—all these are a powerful means of education. In fact, though apparently they do not improve. And should be used for a consciousness seated a little higherthis, as instruments of observation, it control and knowledge. If one is quite evident that all evil—at least what we call evil—all falsehoodsufficiently developed, all that is contrary to one can know the nature of things through sight; through the see of smell one may also know the Truthvalue, all suffering, all opposition is the result different nature of things; by touch one can recognise things. It is a disequilibrium. I believe question of education; that is, one who is habituated to seeing things from this higher plane sees immediately that must work for it is like that. (The Mother , 8 January 1951) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0406/831-januarymarch-19511954#p13</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>There are two centres or parts of the consciousness—one is a witness, sākṣī, and observes, the other consciousness is active and it is this active consciousness that you felt going down deep into the vital being. If your mind had not become active, you would have known where it went and what it went there to experience or do. When there is an experience, you should not begin to think about it, for that is of no use at all and it only stops the experience—you should remain silent, observe and let it go on to its end. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/suggestions-for-dealing-with-experiences#p8</refcenter>
The child must be taught to observe, to note his reactions and impulses and their causes, to become a discerning witness of his desires, his movements of violence and passion, his instincts of possession and appropriation and domination and the background of vanity which supports them, together with their counterparts of weakness, discouragement, depression and despair. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/12/vital-education#p14</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>At a certain stage of the sadhana, in the beginning (or near it) of the more intense experiences, it sometimes happens that there is the intense realisation of some aspect of the Divine, a sort of communion with it, and that is seen everywhere and all as that. It is a transitory phase and afterwards one gets the larger experience of the Divine in all its aspects and beyond all aspects. Throughout the experience there should be one part of the being that observes and understands—for sometimes ignorant sadhaks are carried away by their experience and stop short there or fall into extravagance. It must be taken as an experience through which you are passing. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/suggestions-for-dealing-with-experiences#p10</refcenter>
= Thoughts The indispensable starting-point is a detailed and discerning observation of the character to be transformed. In most cases, that itself is a difficult and often a very baffling task. But there is one fact which the old traditions knew and which can serve as the clue in the labyrinth of inner discovery. It is that everyone possesses in a large measure, and the exceptional individual in an increasing degree of precision, two opposite tendencies of character, in almost equal proportions, which are like the light and the shadow of the same thing. Thus someone who has the capacity of being exceptionally generous will suddenly find an obstinate avarice rising up in his nature, the courageous man will be a coward in some part of his being and the good man will suddenly have wicked impulses. In this way life seems to endow everyone not only with the possibility of expressing an ideal, but also with contrary elements representing in a concrete manner the battle he has to wage and the victory he has to win for the realisation to become possible. Consequently, all life is an education pursued more or less consciously, more or less willingly. In certain cases this education will encourage the movements that express the light, in others, on the contrary, those that express the shadow. If the circumstances and the environment are favourable, the light will grow at the expense of the shadow; otherwise the opposite will happen. And in this way the individual's character will crystallise according to the whims of Nature and the determinisms of material and Selfvital life, unless a higher element comes in in time, a conscious will which, refusing to allow Nature to follow her whimsical ways, will replace them by a logical and clear-sighted discipline. This conscious will is what we mean by a rational method of education. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/12/vital-Observation =education#p6</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">= How to Observe Thoughts are not the essence of mind-being, they are only an activity of mental nature; if that activity ceases, what appears then as a thought-free existence that manifests in its place is not a blank or void but something very real, substantial, concrete we may say—a mental being that extends itself widely and can be its own field of existence silent or active as well as the Witness, Knower, Master of that field and its action. Some feel it first as a void, but that is because their observation is untrained and insufficient and loss of activity gives them the sense of blank; an emptiness there is, but it is an emptiness of the ordinary activities, not a blank of existence.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/three-experiences-of-the-inner-being#p3</ref>==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It is only gradually, very slowly, through the movements of life and a more or less careful The error comes from thinking that your thoughts are your own and thorough education that you begin to have sensations which are personal to you, feelings their maker and ideas which are personal to if youdon't create thoughts (i. An individualised mind is something extremely rare, which comes only after a long education; otherwise it is a kind of thought-current passing through your brain and then through another's and then through a multitude of other brains, and all this is in perpetual movement and has no individualitye. One thinks what others are thinking, others think what still others are thinking), and everybody thinks like that in a great mixture, because these are currents, vibrations of thought passing from one there will be none. A little observation ought to another. If you look at yourself attentively, you will very quickly become aware show that very few thoughts in you are personal. Where do you draw them from?—From what you have heard, from what you have read, what you have been taughtnot manufacturing your own thoughts, and how many of these but rather thoughts occur in you have are the result of your own experience, your own reflection, your purely personal observation?—Not many. (The Mother, 20 February 1957) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0931/20thought-februaryand-1957knowledge#p6p3</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>To observe your thoughts, you must first of all separate yourself from them. In the ordinary state, the ordinary man does not distinguish himself from his thoughts. He does not even know that he thinks. He thinks by habit. And if he is asked all of a sudden, "What are you thinking of?", he knows nothing about it. That is to say, ninety-five times out of a hundred he will answer, "I do not know." There is a complete identification between the movement of thought and the consciousness of the being. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/conjugate-verses#p12</refcenter>
<span style="backgroundThoughts are not the essence of mind-color:transparentbeing, they are only an activity of mental nature;color:#000000;">...when undesirable thoughts come, if you look at themthat activity ceases, observe them, if you take pleasure what appears then as a thought-free existence that manifests in following them in their movements, they will never stop coming. It its place is the same thing when you have undesirable feelings not a blank or sensation: if you pay attention to themvoid but something very real, substantial, concentrate on them concrete we may say—a mental being that extends itself widely and can be its own field of existence silent or even look at them with active as well as the Witness, Knower, Master of that field and its action. Some feel it first as a certain indulgencevoid, they will never stop. But if you absolutely refuse to receive but that is because their observation is untrained and insufficient and express loss of activity gives themthe sense of blank; an emptiness there is, after some time they stopbut it is an emptiness of the ordinary activities, not a blank of existence. You must be patient and very persistent. (The Mother , 22 September 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0630/22three-experiences-of-the-septemberinner-1954being#p19p3</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>Most people—and not only those who are uneducated but even the well-read—can have the most contradictory, the most opposite ideas in their heads without even being aware of the contradictions….And if you observe yourself, you will see that you have many ideas which ought to be linked by a sequence of intermediate ideas which are the result of a considerable widening of the thought if they are not to coexist in an absurd way. (The Mother, 20 February 1957) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/09/20-february-1957#p8</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The error comes from thinking that your thoughts are your own It is only gradually, very slowly, through the movements of life and a more or less careful and thorough education that you begin to have sensations which are their maker personal to you, feelings and if ideas which are personal to you don. An individualised mind is something extremely rare, which comes only after a long education; otherwise it is a kind of thought-current passing through your brain and then through another't create thoughts (is and then through a multitude of other brains, and all this is in perpetual movement and has no individuality.eOne thinks what others are thinking, others think what still others are thinking, and everybody thinks like that in a great mixture, because these are currents, vibrations of thought passing from one to another. think)If you look at yourself attentively, there you will be nonevery quickly become aware that very few thoughts in you are personal. A little observation ought to show that Where do you draw them from?—From what you have heard, from what you have read, what you have been taught, and how many of these thoughts you have are not manufacturing the result of your own thoughtsexperience, your own reflection, but rather thoughts occur in youyour purely personal observation?—Not many.</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/3109/thought20-andfebruary-knowledge1957#p3p6</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>When one practises Yoga and observes the thoughts, one sees that they come from outside, from universal Nature, from the mental, vital or subtle physical worlds etc. The proper thing is then to stand back from these thoughts, voices or suggestions, to reject them or else control them, to make the mind free and quiet and open only to the divine light, force, knowledge and the presence of the Divine….Aspire, get into contact with the Light and the true Force, reassert your will to reject these suggestions and voices. Do not take interest in these voices, keep the mind quiet. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/thought-and-knowledge#p5</refcenter>
= Sense When one practises Yoga and Self Observation =observes the thoughts, one sees that they come from outside, from universal Nature, from the mental, vital or subtle physical worlds etc. The proper thing is then to stand back from these thoughts, voices or suggestions, to reject them or else control them, to make the mind free and quiet and open only to the divine light, force, knowledge and the presence of the Divine. ...Aspire, get into contact with the Light and the true Force, reassert your will to reject these suggestions and voices. Do not take interest in these voices, keep the mind quiet. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/thought-and-knowledge#p5</ref>
<span style="backgroundDifficulties in Self-color:transparent;color:#000000;Observation= ==Danger of the Ego== But to begin with, how many times, if one thinks, if one quite simply observes oneself, does one catch oneself saying, ">This sensational thought-mind which It is based upon senseI!" And, then, memoryone congratulates oneself sometimes, associationone says, first ideas and resultant generalisations or secondary ideas"After all I can do something, is common to I am capable!" I am going further: how many people would be capable of doing anything at all developed animal life and mentality….The intelligence and will if simply deprived of the animal are involved in pleasure of being able to tell themselves, "I have done this, I have realised that, I have made a progress, how well I played this game"? How many people would be able to sincerely do something if this pleasure were taken away? I have known individuals whose mind was much more developed than the sense-mind and therefore altogether governed by it and carried on its stream rest of sensationsthe being, sense-perceptions, impulsesthey had understood very well (almost too well); it is instinctive. Man is able they sat down to use a reason meditate and willall their energy was gone, all vitality evaporated into a self-observingkind of peace, thinking and all-observingnot unpleasant, an intelligently willing mind which but very still. There is no more need to do anything, no longer involved in any need to move, one dreams. ...Under a tree, arms crossed, one leaves the sense-mindDivine to do everything for oneself, including feeding you if you need it. This is perhaps very well, but acts from above and behind this shows that the instrument is not ready; it is not really at the service of the Divine, it in its own rightis at the service of the ego, with a certain separateness and freedomwhen the ego is taken away, it does nothing any longer. He Therefore, so long as one lives in the ego this illusion is necessary to make you act; it is necessary to keep up action until one is reflectivecompletely transformed or, has a certain relative freedom of intelligent will. He has liberated in himself and has formed into a separate power any case, till the buddhitrue consciousness is established.</span>(The Mother, 5 April 1951) <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2404/purification5-intelligenceapril-and-will1951#p4p14</ref> <center>~</center>
...if you do your tapasya, all the time observing yourself doing it and telling yourself, "Am I making any progress, is this going to be better, am I going to succeed?", then it is your ego, you know, which becomes more and more enormous and occupies the whole place, and there is no room for anything else. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/26-april-1951#p35</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">….But it is through sensations that you learn: by seeing, observing, hearing. Classes develop your sensations, studies develop your sensations, the mind receives things through sensations. By the education of the senses the growth of one's general education is aided; if you learn to see well, exactly, precisely; if you learn to hear well; if you learn through touch to know the nature of things; if you learn through the see of smell to distinguish between different odours—all these are a powerful means of education. In fact, they should be used for this, as instruments of observation, control and knowledge. If one is sufficiently developed, one can know the nature of things through sight; through the see of smell one may also know the value, the different nature of things; by touch one can recognise things. It is a question of education; that is, one must work for it. (The Mother , 31 March 1954) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/06/31-march-1954#p13</ref>= Escape attitude ==
= Education Constantly man rushes into external action in order not to have time to observe himself and Selfhow he lives. For him this is expressed by the desire to escape from boredom. Indeed, for some people it is much more tiresome to remain quiet—seated, or to be still. So for them it represents an escape from boredom: to make a lot of noise, to commit many stupidities, and become terribly restless; it is their way of escaping boredom. And when they sit quietly and look at themselves, they are bored. Perhaps because they are boring. That's very likely. The more boring one is, the more one is bored. Very interesting people usually are not bored. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/07/26-january-Observation =1955#p14</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The indispensable starting-point is a detailed and discerning observation of the character to be transformed. In most cases, that itself is a difficult and often a very baffling task. But there is one fact which the old traditions knew and which can serve as the clue in the labyrinth of inner discovery. It is that everyone possesses in a large measure, and the exceptional individual in an increasing degree of precision, two opposite tendencies of character, in almost equal proportions, which are like the light and the shadow of the same thing. Thus someone who has the capacity of being exceptionally generous will suddenly find an obstinate avarice rising up in his nature, the courageous man will be a coward in some part of his being and the good man will suddenly have wicked impulses. In this way life seems to endow everyone not only with the possibility of expressing an ideal, but also with contrary elements representing in a concrete manner the battle he has to wage and the victory he has to win for the realisation to become possible. Consequently, all life is an education pursued more or less consciously, more or less willingly. In certain cases this education will encourage the movements that express the light, in others, =Focusing on the contrary, those that express the shadow. If the circumstances and the environment are favourable, the light will grow at the expense of the shadow; otherwise the opposite will happen. And in this way the individual's character will crystallise according to the whims of Nature and the determinisms of material and vital life, unless a higher element comes in in time, a conscious will which, refusing to allow Nature to follow her whimsical ways, will replace them by a logical and clear-sighted discipline. This conscious will is what we mean by a rational method of education. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/12/vital-education#p6</ref>Negative==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">To be always observing faults and wrong movements brings depression and discourages the faith..The child must be taught Turn your eyes more to observe, to note his reactions and impulses the coming Light and their causes, less to become a discerning witness of his desiresany immediate darkness. Faith, his movements of violence and passioncheerfulness, his instincts of possession and appropriation and domination and confidence in the ultimate victory are the background of vanity which supports themthings that help, together with their counterparts of weakness, discouragement, depression —they make the progress easier and despairswifter. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/1231/vitalsteps-towards-overcoming-educationdifficulties#p14p28</ref>
= Results of Self-Observation =<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">If What you observe yourself attentivelyhave to aspire for most is the improved quality of the recipient consciousness in you—discrimination in the mind, the unattached impersonal Witness look on all that goes on in you will see that before acting and around you need an inner impetus, something which pushes youpurity in the vital, calm equanimity, enduring patience, absence of pride and the sense of greatness—and more especially, the development of the psychic being in you—surrender, self-giving, psychic humility, devotion.. In the ordinary man this impetus is generally desire. This desire ought to be replaced by a clearsufficient foundation and a consciousness always self-observant, precise, constant vision vigilant and growing in these things is indispensable—for perfect purification is the basis of the Truthperfect siddhi. (The Mother, 21 December 1950) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0430/21the-danger-of-the-ego-and-the-need-decemberof-1950purification#p7p14</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>If you observe yourself, you will see that as soon as you do something which disturbs you a little, the mind immediately gives you a favourable reason to justify yourself—this mind is capable of gilding everything. In these conditions it is difficult to know oneself. One must be absolutely sincere to be able to do it and to see clearly into all the little falsehoods of the mental being. (The Mother, 15 January 1951) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/15-january-1951#p3</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">… if each element which comes with its ignorance, its unconsciousness, its egoism, To become conscious of what is put before the will to change and one remains awake, compares, observes, studies and slowly acts, that becomes infinitely interesting, one makes marvellous and quite unexpected discoveries. One finds be changed in oneself lots of small hidden folds, little things one had not seen at the beginning; nature is the first step towards changing it. But one undertakes a sort of inner chase, goes hunting into small dark corners and tells oneself: must observe these things without being despondent or thinking "it is hopeless" or "What, I was like cannot change". You do right to be confident that! This was there the change will come. For nothing is impossible in me, I am harbouring this little thing"—sometimes so sordid, so mean, so nasty. And once it has been discovered, how wonderful! One puts the light upon it nature if the psychic being is awake and leading you with the Mother's consciousness and force behind it disappears and working in you no longer have those reactions which made you so sad before, when you used to say, "Oh! I shall never get there. (The Mother, 19 April 1951) </span>This is now happening. Be sure that all will be done. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0431/19speech-apriland-1951yoga#p14p53</ref>
= Difficulties during Self-Observation =<center>~</center>
== Danger of Despair and despondency are always wrong. If you make a mistake, quietly observe it and correct the Ego ==tendency next time. Even if the mistake recurs often, you have only to persevere quietly—remembering that nature cannot be changed in a day. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/depression-and-despondency#p67</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>But to begin with, how many times, if one thinks, if one quite simply observes oneself, does one catch oneself saying, "It is I!" And, then, one congratulates oneself sometimes, one says, "After all I can do something, I am capable!" I am going further: how many people would be capable of doing anything at all if simply deprived of the pleasure of being able to tell themselves, "I have done this, I have realised that, I have made a progress, how well I played this game"? How many people would be able to sincerely do something if this pleasure were taken away? I have known individuals whose mind was much more developed than the rest of the being, they had understood very well (almost too well); they sat down to meditate and all their energy was gone, all vitality evaporated into a kind of peace, not unpleasant, but very still. There is no more need to do anything, no longer any need to move, one dreams.... Under a tree, arms crossed, one leaves the Divine to do everything for oneself, including feeding you if you need it. This is perhaps very well, but this shows that the instrument is not ready; it is not really at the service of the Divine, it is at the service of the ego, and when the ego is taken away, it does nothing any longer. Therefore, so long as one lives in the ego this illusion is necessary to make you act; it is necessary to keep up action until one is completely transformed or, in any case, till the true consciousness is established. (The Mother ,5 April 1951) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/5-april-1951#p14</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">...It is a subtle law of the action of consciousness that if you do your tapasyastress difficulties—you have to observe them, all the time observing yourself doing it and telling yourselfof course, "Am I making any progressbut not stress them, is this going they will quite sufficiently do that for themselves—the difficulties tend to be betterstick or even increase; on the contrary, am I going if you put your whole stress on faith and aspiration and concentrate steadily on what you aspire to succeed?", then it that will sooner or later tend towards realisation. It is your egothis change of stress, you know, which becomes more and more enormous a change in the poise and occupies attitude of the whole placemind, and there is no room for anything elsethat will be the more helpful process. (The Mother, 26 April 1951) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwmcwsa/0431/26dealing-aprilwith-depression-and-1951despondency#p35p22</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Do not be over-eager for experience,—for experiences you can always get, having once broken the barrier between the physical mind and the subtle planes. What you have to aspire for most is the improved quality of the recipient consciousness in you—discrimination in the mind, the unattached impersonal Witness look on all that goes on in you and around you, purity in the vital, calm equanimity, enduring patience, absence of pride and the sense of greatness—and more especially, the development of the psychic being in you—surrender, self-giving, psychic humility, devotion... a sufficient foundation and a consciousness always self-observant, vigilant and growing in these things is indispensable—for perfect purification is the basis of the perfect siddhi. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/the-danger-of-the-ego-and-the-need-of-purification#p14</ref>=Surface Level Observation==
== <span style=As a general rule, with a few very rare exceptions, men are content to observe more or less accurately everything that happens around them, and sometimes within themselves, and to classify all these observations according to one superficial system of logic or another. And they call this organisation, these systems, "background-color:transparent;color:#000000;knowledge">Escape attitude</span> ==. It has never occurred to them, they have not even begun to perceive that all the things they see, touch, feel, experience, are false appearances and not reality itself.
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Constantly man rushes into external action in order not to have time to observe himself and how he lives. For him this [Based on Aphorism 7—What men call knowledge is expressed by the desire to escape from boredomreasoned acceptance of false appearances. Indeed, for some people it is much more tiresome to remain quiet—seated, or to be stillWisdom looks behind the veil and sees. So for them it represents an escape from boredom: to make a lot of noise, to commit many stupiditiesReason divides, fixes details and become terribly restlesscontrasts them; it is their way of escaping boredom. And when they sit quietly and look at themselvesWisdom unifies, they are boredmarries contrasts in a single harmony]. Perhaps because they are boring. That's very likely. The more boring one is, the more one is bored. Very interesting people usually are not bored. (The Mother, 26 January 1955) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/0710/26-januaryaphorism-19557#p14p3</ref>
== Focusing on the Negative ==<center>~</center>
<span style="backgroundIt is evident that our state on the surface is indeed a state of knowledge, so far as it goes, but a limited knowledge enveloped and invaded by ignorance and, to a very large extent, by reason of its limitation, itself a kind of ignorance, at best a mixed knowledge-color:transparent;color:#000000;">To ignorance. It could not be always observing faults otherwise since our awareness of the world is born of a separative and wrong movements brings depression and discourages the faith. Turn your eyes surface observation with only an indirect means of cognition at its disposal; our knowledge of ourselves, though more direct, is stultified by its restriction to the coming Light and less to any immediate darkness. Faithsurface of our being, by an ignorance of our true self, cheerfulnessthe true sources of our nature, confidence in the ultimate victory true motive-forces of our action. It is quite evident that we know ourselves with only a superficial knowledge,—the sources of our consciousness and thought are a mystery; the things that helptrue nature of our mind, emotions, sensations is a mystery; our cause of being and our end of being,—they make the progress easier significance of our life and swifterits activities are a mystery: this could not be if we had a real self-knowledge and a real world-knowledge. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3121/stepsknowledge-by-towardsidentity-and-overcomingseparative-difficultiesknowledge#p28p7</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>It is a subtle law of the action of consciousness that if you stress difficulties—you have to observe them, of course, but not stress them, they will quite sufficiently do that for themselves—the difficulties tend to stick or even increase; on the contrary, if you put your whole stress on faith and aspiration and concentrate steadily on what you aspire to, that will sooner or later tend towards realisation. It is this change of stress, a change in the poise and attitude of the mind, that will be the more helpful process. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/dealing-with-depression-and-despondency#p22</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparentOne throws oneself out all the time;color:#000000;">It is difficult to observe all the difference between the action of the hostile Force and the pressure of the lower Nature because time one lives, as it were, outside oneself, in such a superficial sensation that it is the latter that the Force takes hold of for its purposealmost as though one were outside oneself. But there is in the Force As soon as one wants even to observe oneself a suggestive characterlittle, control oneself a conscious arrangement of the attack so as little, simply know what is happening, one is always obliged to upset draw back or destroy pull towards oneself, to pull inwards something which is constantly like that, on the sadhana surface. And it is this surface thing which there is not meets all external contacts, puts you in the ordinary movement of the lower Nature—for that only comes to satisfy itself and then ceasestouch with similar vibrations coming from others. That happens almost outside you. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/3108/the-hostile-forces-and-the-difficulties20-ofjune-yoga1956#p35p49</ref>
== Overcoming  difficulty Observing Invisible Forces==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">If you had that observation (we observe a happening, we judge and explain it from the inner spiritualresult and from a glimpse of its most external constituents, circumstances or causes; but each happening is the outcome of a complex nexus of forces which we do not the outer intellectual and ethical viewpoint)cannot observe, because all forces are to us invisible, then it would be comparatively easy for you —but they are not invisible to get out the spiritual vision of the Infinite: some of your difficulties; for instance you would find at once where this irrational impulse them are actualities working to flee away came from and it would not have any hold upon you. Of courseproduce or occasion a new actuality, all some are possibles that can only be done are near to the best effect when you stand back from the play of your nature pre-existent actuals and in a way included in their aggregate; but there can intervene always new possibilities that suddenly become dynamic potentials and add themselves to the Witness-Control nexus, and behind all are imperatives or the Spectator-Actor Manageran imperative which these possibilities are labouring to actualise. But that is what happens when you take this kind of self-seeing posture.</span><span style="background-color:transparent;color:#0066cc;"><u><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/3121/mentalbrahman-difficulties-andpurusha-theishwara-needmaya-ofprakriti-quietudeshakti#p23p7</ref></u></span>
= Other fields of SelfObservation -Observation Exploring Realms of Consciousness=
Man is a type among many types so constructed, one pattern among the multitude of patterns in the manifestation in Matter. He is the most complex that has been created, the richest in content of consciousness and the curious ingeniousness of his building; he is the head of the earthly creation, but he does not exceed it…. If there is a perfection to which he has to arrive, it must be a perfection in his own kind, within his own law of being,—the full play of it, but by observation of its mode and measure, not by transcendence. To exceed himself, to grow into the superman, to put on the nature and capacities of a god would be a contradiction of his self-law, impracticable and impossible. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/man-and-the-evolution#p8</ref>
<center>~</center>
== Meditation ==...behind there is the psychic which supports the development, the growth of the being and gives this continuity of consciousness, makes one feel that he is the same being even while being absolutely different, absolutely different. If later one observes himself sufficiently, he can see that the things he understood and could do at that time are things which seem to him absolutely inconceivable now, and that he could never do a similar thing because he is no longer that person at all. And yet, because within there was the psychic consciousness which is immortal, one has the feeling that it is always the same being which was there and continues to be there and will continue to be there with more or less progressive and more or less conscious changes. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/07/29-june-1955#p28</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>... when one comes out of meditation, some time later—usually not immediately—from within the being something new emerges in the consciousness: a new understanding, a new appreciation of things, a new attitude in life—in short, a new way of being. This may be fugitive, but at that moment, if one observes it, one finds that something has taken one step forward on the path of understanding or transformation. It may be an illumination, an understanding truer or closer to the truth, or a power of transformation which helps you to achieve a psychological progress or a widening of the consciousness or a greater control over your movements, over the activities of the being. (The Mother , 5 June 1957) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/09/5-june-1957#p20</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">The mind There is always a state of being experienced in Yoga in activitywhich we become a double consciousness, one on the surface, small, active, ignorant, swayed by thoughts and feelings, grief and joy and all kinds of reactions, the other within calm, vast, equal, observing the surface being with an immovable detachment or indulgence or, but we do not observe fully what it is doingmay be, but allow ourselves acting upon its agitation to be carried away in the stream of continual thinkingquiet, enlarge, transform it. When So too we try can rise to concentrate, this stream a consciousness above and observe the various parts of self-moved mechanical thinking becomes prominent to our observationbeing, inner and outer, mental, vital and physical and the subconscient below all, and act upon one or other or the whole from that higher status. It is possible also to go down from that height or from any height into any of these lower states and take its limited light or its obscurity as our place of working while the first normal obstacle (rest that we are is either temporarily put away or put behind or else kept as a field of reference from which we can get support, sanction or light and influence or as a status into which we can ascend or recede and from it observe the inferior movements. Or we can plunge into trance, get within ourselves and be conscious there while all outward things are excluded; or we can go beyond even this inner awareness and lose ourselves in some deeper other consciousness or some high superconscience. There is sleep during meditation) to the effort towards Yogaalso a pervading equal consciousness into which we can enter and see all ourselves with one enveloping glance or omnipresent awareness one and indivisible. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2921/concentrationbrahman-purusha-ishwara-andmaya-prakriti-meditationshakti#p30p23</ref>
== Dreams ==<center>~</center> In this progression the first step is a certain detached superiority to the three modes of Nature. The soul is inwardly separated and free from the lower Prakriti, not involved in its coils, indifferent and glad above it. Nature continues to act in the triple round of her ancient habits,—desire, grief and joy attack the heart, the instruments fall into inaction and obscurity and weariness, light and peace come back into the heart and mind and body; but the soul stands unchanged and untouched by these changes. Observing and unmoved by the grief and desire of the lower members, smiling at their joys and their strainings, regarding and unoverpowered by the failing and the darknesses of the thought and the wildness or the weaknesses of the heart and nerves, uncompelled and unattached to the mind's illuminations and its relief and sense of ease or of power in the return of light and gladness, it throws itself into none of these things, but waits unmoved for the intimations of a higher Will and the intuitions of a greater luminous knowledge. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-three-modes-of-nature#p13</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>Now the procedure to deal with dreams and the dreamland. First become conscious—conscious of your dreams. Observe the relation between them and the happenings of your waking hours. If you remember your night, you will be able to trace back very often the condition of your day to the condition of your night. In sleep some action or other is always going on in your mental or vital or other plane; things happen there and they govern your waking consciousness. (The Mother, 21 April 1929)~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/21-april-1929#p6</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparentThe Shakti, the power of the Infinite and the Eternal descends within us, works, breaks up our present psychological formations, shatters every wall, widens, liberates... she frees the consciousness from confinement in the body;color:#000000;">it can go out in trance or sleep or even waking and enter into worlds or other regions of this world and act there or carry back its experience. It is spreads out, feeling the body only as a tremendous field small part of observation—there is no end itself, and begins to contain what before contained it; it achieves the discoveries you can make in your dreamscosmic consciousness and extends itself to be commensurate with the universe. But there is one important point: you must It begins to know inwardly and directly and not go to sleep when you are very tiredmerely by external observation and contact the forces at play in the world, feels their movement, for if you dodistinguishes their functioning and can operate immediately upon them as the scientist operates upon physical forces, you fall into a sort of unconsciousness accept their action and results in which dreams do whatever they like with youour mind, life, body or reject them or modify, change, reshape, create immense new powers and you have no reactionmovements in place of the old small functionings of the nature. Just as I said that you should not eat without having taken rest, I would advise everyone We begin to rest before going perceive the working of the forces of universal Mind and to sleep. And for that, you must know how to restour thoughts are created by that working.... (The Mother , 1 February 1951) </span>" <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/1508/17-februarynovember-19511956#p14p1</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>As the inner consciousness grows by sadhana, these dream experiences increase in number, clearness, coherence, accuracy and after some growth of experience and consciousness, we can, if we observe, come to understand them and their significance to our inner life. Even we can by training become so conscious as to follow our own passage, usually veiled to our awareness and memory, through many realms and the process of the return to the waking state. At a certain pitch of this inner wakefulness this kind of sleep, a sleep of experiences, can replace the ordinary subconscient slumber. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/30/three-experiences-of-the-inner-being#p6</refcenter>
= Things It is thus by an integralisation of our divided being that the Divine Shakti in the Yoga will proceed to Remember =its object; for liberation, perfection, mastery are dependent on this integralisation, since the little wave on the surface cannot control its own movement, much less have any true control over the vast life around it...It begins to know inwardly and directly and not merely by external observation and contact the forces at play in the world, feels their movement, distinguishes their functioning and can operate immediately upon them as the scientist operates upon physical forces, accept their action and results in our mind, life, body or reject them or modify, change, reshape, create immense new powers and movements in place of the old small functionings of the nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-ascent-of-the-sacrifice-ii#p29</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">If one begins =How to find out, to understand what a feeling is and what a thought is, and how it works, then one can already go quite far on the path with that. One must at the same time observe how his feelings and thoughts have an action on the body, what the reciprocity is. And then, there is another exercise which consists be in looking into oneself for what is persistent, what is lasting, something which makes one say "I", and which is not the body. For obviously, when one was very small, and then when each year one grows up, if one takes fairly long distances, for example a distance of about ten years, they are very different "I"s from what one was when as small as this (gesture), and then what one is now; it is difficult to say that it is the same person, you see. If one takes only this, still there is something which has the feeling of always being the same person. So one must reflect, seek, try to understand what it is. This indeed can lead you far on the path. Then if one also studies the relation between these different things—between thoughts, feelings, their action on the body, the reciprocal action of the body on these things—and also what it is that says "I" permanently, what it is that can trace a curve in the movement of the being, if one seeks carefully enough, it leads you quite far. Naturally if one seeks far enough and with enough persistence, one reaches the psychic. (The Mother, 9 March 1955) </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/07/9-march-1955#p23</ref>Witness State?==
= Yogic Experience =It is difficult to say generally what is conscious; but naturally, if something observes, it is always the "witness" element in this part—in each part of the being there is something which is a "witness", which looks on. There is even a physical witness which can get very much in the way; for instance, if it watches you playing, this can paralyse you considerably. There is also a vital witness which looks at you, sees your desires and enjoys highly all that happens; it acts also as a brake. There is the mental witness which judges ideas, which says, "This idea contradicts this other", and which arranges everything. Then there is the great psychic Witness, who is the inner divinity. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/04/22-march-1951#p6</ref>
== Divine as Observer ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparentSometimes there is no relation among these different witnesses—there ought to be, but it is not always there. But if there is in the being a will to become perfect, the relation is established quite quickly;color:#000000;">A hidden Power one can refer to another and finally, if there is a sufficient sincerity, sufficient concentration, you come to the true Lord and overruling Observer supreme inner Witness who can judge all things. But generally it may be said that it is always a part of our acts and only he knows through all the ignorance and perversion and deformation brought mind, more or less enlightened, in by a little closer contact with the ego their entire sense inner being, which observes and ultimate purposejudges. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsacwm/2304/self-surrender-in22-works-the-way-of-themarch-gita1951#p6p7</ref>
== Purusha and Self-Observation ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It is ordinarily considered The witness Purusha in the mind observes that the Yogin should draw away inadequacy of his effort, all the inadequacy in fact of man's life and nature arises from action as much as possible and especially that too much action is a hindrance because it draws off the energies outward. To a certain extent this is true; separation and we must note farther that when the mental Purusha takes up the attitude consequent struggle, want of mere witness and observerknowledge, a tendency to silencewant of harmony, solitude, physical calm and bodily inaction grows upon the beingwant of oneness. So long as this It is not associated with inertiaessential for him to grow out of separative individuality, incapacity or unwillingness to act, in a worduniversalise himself, to make himself one with the universe. This unification can be done only through the soul by making our soul of mind one with the growth universal Mind, our soul of life one with the tamasic qualityuniversal Life-soul, all this is to our soul of body one with the gooduniversal soul of physical Nature. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2324/the-releaseperfection-fromof-subjectionthe-tomental-the-bodybeing#p7p15</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>It is possible for the Purusha to use it on the mental plane itself for a constant self-observation, self-development, self-modification, to sanction, reject, alter, bring out new formulations of the nature and establish a calm and disinterested action, a high and pure sattwic balance and rhythm of its energy, a personality perfected in the sattwic principle. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-divine-shakti#p9</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">..with regard to It is ordinarily considered that the movements Yogin should draw away from action as much as possible and experiences of especially that too much action is a hindrance because it draws off the body the mind will come to know energies outward. To a certain extent this is true; and we must note farther that when the mental Purusha seated within it as, first, takes up the attitude of mere witness or and observer of the movements and, secondlya tendency to silence, solitude, physical calm and bodily inaction grows upon the knower being. So long as this is not associated with inertia, incapacity or perceiver of the experiences. It will cease unwillingness to consider in thought or feel act, in sensation these movements and experiences as its own but rather consider and feel them as not its owna word, as operations with the growth of Nature governed by the qualities of Nature and their interaction upon each othertamasic quality, all this is to the good. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-release-from-subjection-to-the-body#p4p7</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>The Purusha and Prakriti are on the mental level as in the rest of our being closely joined and much involved in each other and we are not able to distinguish clearly soul and nature. But in the purer substance of mind we can more easily discern the dual strain. The mental Purusha is naturally able in its own native principle of mind to detach itself, as we have seen, from the workings of its Prakriti and there is then a division of our being between a consciousness that observes and can reserve its willpower and an energy full of the substance of consciousness that takes the forms of knowledge, will and feeling. This detachment gives at its highest a certain freedom from the compulsion of the soulby its mental nature. ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-divine-shakti#p8</refcenter>
== Shakti It is possible for the Purusha to use it on the mental plane itself for a constant self-observation, self-development, self-modification, to sanction, reject, alter, bring out new formulations of the nature and Selfestablish a calm and disinterested action, a high and pure sattwic balance and rhythm of its energy, a personality perfected in the sattwic principle. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-divine-Observation ==shakti#p9</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>"The Shakti, the power of the Infinite and the Eternal descends within us, works, breaks up our present psychological formations, shatters every wall, widens, liberates... she frees the consciousness from confinement in the body; it can go out in trance or sleep or even waking and enter into worlds or other regions of this world and act there or carry back its experience. It spreads out, feeling the body only as a small part of itself, and begins to contain what before contained it; it achieves the cosmic consciousness and extends itself to be commensurate with the universe. It begins to know inwardly and directly and not merely by external observation and contact the forces at play in the world, feels their movement, distinguishes their functioning and can operate immediately upon them as the scientist operates upon physical forces, accept their action and results in our mind, life, body or reject them or modify, change, reshape, create immense new powers and movements in place of the old small functionings of the nature. We begin to perceive the working of the forces of universal Mind and to know how our thoughts are created by that working...." (The Mother , 7 November 1956) ~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/08/7-november-1956#p1</refcenter>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">It is thus by an integralisation ...with regard to the movements and experiences of our divided being that the Divine Shakti in body the Yoga mind will proceed come to its object; for liberation, perfectionknow the Purusha seated within it as, mastery are dependent on this integralisationfirst, since the little wave on witness or observer of the surface cannot control its own movementmovements and, secondly, much less have any true control over the vast life around it..knower or perceiver of the experiences.It begins will cease to know inwardly and directly and not merely by external observation and contact the forces at play consider in thought or feel in the world, feels their movement, distinguishes their functioning sensation these movements and can operate immediately upon them experiences as the scientist operates upon physical forces, accept their action its own but rather consider and results in our mind, life, body or reject feel them or modifyas not its own, change, reshape, create immense new powers and movements in place as operations of Nature governed by the old small functionings qualities of the natureNature and their interaction upon each other. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-ascentrelease-offrom-subjection-to-the-sacrifice-iibody#p29p4</ref>
== Evolution and Self-Observation ==<center>~</center>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Man is a type among many types so constructed, one pattern among The Purusha and Prakriti are on the multitude of patterns mental level as in the manifestation rest of our being closely joined and much involved in Mattereach other and we are not able to distinguish clearly soul and nature. He is But in the most complex that has been created, purer substance of mind we can more easily discern the richest dual strain. The mental Purusha is naturally able in content its own native principle of consciousness and mind to detach itself, as we have seen, from the curious ingeniousness workings of his building; he is the head of the earthly creation, but he does not exceed it…. If its Prakriti and there is then a perfection to which he has to arrive, it must be a perfection in his own kind, within his own law division of our being,—the between a consciousness that observes and can reserve its willpower and an energy full play of itthe substance of consciousness that takes the forms of knowledge, but by observation of its mode will and measure, not by transcendencefeeling. To exceed himself, to grow into This detachment gives at its highest a certain freedom from the superman, to put on compulsion of the soulby its mental nature and capacities of a god would be a contradiction of his self-law, impracticable and impossible </span>. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/2224/manthe-and-thedivine-evolutionshakti#p8</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>In the animal mind is not quite distinct from its own life-matrix and life-matter; its movements are so involved in the life movements that it cannot detach itself from them, cannot stand separate and observe them; but in man mind has become separate, he can become aware of his mental operations as distinct from his life operations, his thought and will can disengage them selves from his sensations and impulses, desires and emotional reactions, can become detached from them, observe and control them, sanction or cancel their functioning: he does not as yet know the secrets of his being well enough to be aware of himself decisively and with certitude as a mental being in a life and body, but he has that impression and can take inwardly that position.~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/22/the-evolution-of-the-spiritual-man#p6</refcenter>
== Chitta The actions are of importance only as expressing what is in the nature. You have to be conscious of whatever in your actions is not in harmony with the Yoga and to get rid of it. But for that what is needed is your own consciousness, the psychic, observing from within and throwing off what is seen to be undesirable. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/29/work-and Self-Observation ==yoga#p45</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;"center>Chitta, the basic consciousness, is largely subconscient; it has, open and hidden, two kinds of action, one passive or receptive, the other active or reactive and formative. As a passive power it receives all impacts, even those of which the mind is unaware or to which it is inattentive, and it stores them in an immense reserve of passive subconscient memory on which the mind as an active memory can draw.But ordinarily the mind draws only what it had observed and understood at the time,—more easily what it had observed well and understood carefully, less easily what it had observed carelessly or ill understood; at the same time there is a power in consciousness to send up to the active mind for use what that mind had not at all observed or attended to or even consciously experienced. This power only acts observably in abnormal conditions, when some part of the subconscious chitta comes as it were to the surface or when the subliminal being in us appears on the threshold and for a time plays some part in the outer chamber of mentality where the direct intercourse and commerce with the external world takes place and our inner dealings with ourselves develop on the surface.~</span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/24/the-instruments-of-the-spirit#p6</refcenter>
= Practice The mental being within watches, observes and passes judgment on all that happens in you. The psychic does not watch and observe in this way like a witness, but it feels and knows spontaneously in a much more direct and luminous way by the very purity of Selfits own nature and the divine instinct within it, and so, whenever it comes to the front it reveals at once what are the right and what the wrong movements in your nature. <ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/28/the-Observation =jivatman-in-the-integral-yoga#p40</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Take one hour of your life, the one which is most convenient for you, and during that time observe yourself closely and say only the absolutely indispensable words.</span>
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/anger#p15 http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/anger#p15</ref>
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">There are four movements which are usually consecutive, but which in the end may be simultaneous: to observe one's thoughts is the first, to watch over one's thoughts is the second, to control one's thoughts is the third and to master oneContent curated by Aditi Kaul'''s thoughts is the fourth. To observe, to watch over, to control, to master. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwm/03/conjugate-verses#p7</ref>
== Going Within ==
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">When we are in contact with the Divine or in contact with an inner knowledge and vision, we begin to see all the circumstances of our life in a new light and can observe how they all tended without our knowing it towards the growth of our being and consciousness, towards the work we had to do, towards some development that had to be made,—not only what seemed good, fortunate or successful but the struggles, failures, difficulties, upheavals. </span>
<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/29/the-divine-grace-and-guidance#p33</ref>
{|class="wikitable" style= Positive Attitude =="background-color: #efefff; width: 100%;"|Read Summary of '''[[Self Observation Summary|Self Observation]]'''
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">To become conscious of what is to be changed Dear reader, if you notice any error in the nature is paragraph numbers in the first step towards changing it. But one must observe these things without being despondent or thinking "it is hopeless" or "I cannot change"hyperlinks, please let us know by dropping an email at integral. You do right to be confident that the change will comeedu. For nothing is impossible in the nature if the psychic being is awake and leading you with the Mother's consciousness and force behind it and working in you. This is now happening. Be sure that all will be done@gmail. </span>com<ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/speech-and-yoga#p53</ref>|}
<span style="background-color:transparent;color:#000000;">Despair and despondency are always wrong. If you make a mistake, quietly observe it and correct the tendency next time. Even if the mistake recurs often, you have only to persevere quietly—remembering that nature cannot be changed in a day. </span><ref>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/depression-and-despondency#p67</ref>References =