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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/The Expanding Body.htm
The Expanding Body-Consciousness
THE
field of our physical activity is very limited. If you look at it closely you
will find it indeed extremely narrow and our capacities confined within a small
circle. Weare bound by the outline of our material body. I cannot, for
instance, be sitting in my room and at the same time doing gymnastics in the
playground. If you wish to do one thing you cannot do another; if you are at
one place you cannot be at another simultaneously. How convenient it would be
if while I was writing at the table, I could get there immediately a book from
a far-off shelf for consultation without moving or taking anybody's help! And
yet is the thing so very i
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Earth a Symbol.htm
Earth a Symbol
THE earth
is the centre of the material universe. It has been created for concentrating
the force that is to transform Matter. It is the symbol of the divine
potentiality in Matter. As we have said, the earth was created through a direct
intervention of the Divine Consciousness: it is on the earth alone that there
is and can be the direct contact with the Divine. The earth absorbs and
develops and radiates the divine light; its radiation spreads through space and
extends wherever there is Matter. The material universe shares, to some extent,
the gift that the earth brings – the light and harmony of the Divine
Consciousness. But it is upon the Earth alone that t
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Meditation and Meditation.htm
Meditation and
Meditation
SOME people, when they sit
for meditation, imagine they have gone into a remarkable condition and are
proud of it. But most often what they do in meditation is simply to let loose
their thoughts: it is a sort of kaleidoscope that moves in their head. There
are some, however, who can remain without any thought for a while; but if they
are called out all on a sudden at the time for some reason or other, they wake
up furious, protesting that a nice meditation is spoilt and fret and fume
against the whole world. There are all the same a few who know how to meditate,
they do come to a sort of union with the Divine. Certainly, this is very g
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Personal Effort and Will.htm
Personal Effort and Will
IN personal
effort there is a feeling of effort, of tension: the effort is felt as personal
i.e. you rely upon yourself and you have the impression that if you do not do
at each step what is to be done all will be lost. Will is different. It is the
capacity to concentrate upon what one does so that it may be done well and to
continue to do so till the thing is done.
Supposing
under given circumstances a work has come upon you. Take an artist, for
example, a painter. He has an inspiration and has decided to do a painting. He
knows very well that if he has not the inspiration he will not be able to do
anything good, the painting would be not
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/The Body Natural.htm
The Body
Natural
WITH regard to the food that man takes, there
are two factors that determine or prescribe it. First of all, the real need of
the body, that is to say, what the body actually requires for its maintenance,
the elements to meet the chemical changes occurring there, something quite
material and very definite, viz, the kind of food and the quantity. But usually
this real need of the body is obscured and sumberged under the demands of
another kind of agency, almost altogether foreign to it, (I) vital desire and (2)
mental notions. Indeed, the menu of our table, at least 90% of it, is arranged
so as to satisfy the demands of the second category, the considerati
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Human Progress.htm
Human Progress
CREATION has evolved.
That is to say, there has been a growth and unfoldment and progress. From
nebulae to humanity the march cannot but be called an advance, a progress, in
more senses than one. But the question is about man. Has man advanced,
progressed since his advent upon earth? If so, in what manner, to what extent?
Man has been upon earth for the last two million years, they say. From what has
happened before him in the course of Nature's evolution, it is legitimate to
infer that man too, in his turn, has moved forward in the line towards growth
and development. In fact, if we admit that man started life as a savage or
jungle-man or ape-man, and look at
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/The Soul and its Journey.htm
The Soul and its
Journey
1
WHEN a man dies, his soul or psychic being, after a time goes to the
psychic world and takes rest there till the hour comes to take birth again in
another body upon earth. There are then these two periods in the life after
death. First, the passage and next the rest. The passage means the gradual
shedding of all the other sheaths or envelopes that surround the psychic being
and form its earthly frame. With the physical body has to go also the subtle
body, then the vital and finally the mental too. The reason why one does not
remember the past lives is this that one leaves behind the instrument of memory
– the brain mind – with one's dea
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Mental Silence.htm
Mental Silence
NORMALLY
the mind is in turmoil; it is eagerly active. First of all it is preoccupied
with its problems and wants their solution. It knows only to think, to see pros
and cons, weigh, reason, deduce; it arrives at some kind of conclusion which
brings success or failure almost at random. Apart from this conscious or
voluntary activity there is in the mind a whole region of involuntary activity;
that is to say, it is assailed on all sides by a hundred thoughts, ideas and
notions that come from outside and fill your brain cavity and over which you
have no control. Each one tries to push forward, secure a place for itself,
claim satisfaction and fulfilment. They ar
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/Varieties of Religious Experience.htm
Varieties of
Religious Experience
THERE have been religions, approaches to the
Divine, which did not believe in the divinity of man, the Chaldean line, the
Semitic, for example. According to these, the Creator and the created are
separate in nature and being; to call anything created as God himself is blasphemy. The ancient Egyptian, the Hebrew
or the Muslim place God high in Paradise,
and, in their view, man can be only his servant or slave, his worker or
warrior. Man is too small and too earthly to be ever identified with God: he
can only be a worshipper. Man can love God, at the most, as his Beloved. But
this devotion is for something afar, like the desire
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Nolini Kanta Gupta/English/Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta/Volume-3/True Humility.htm
True Humility
IT is not by repeating mea culpa ad
infinitum that one can show one's true humility. In owning too much and
too often one's sins, one may be just on the wrong side of virtue. There lurks
a strain of vanity in self-maceration: the sinner in an overdose of self-pity
almost feels himself saintly. Certainly, one must stand before oneself face to
face, not hide or minimise or explain away one's errors and lapses, all one's
omissions and commissions. But one need not brood over them, merely repenting
and repining. One sees steadily, without flinching, what one actually is and
then resolutely and sincerely takes to the ways and means of changing it,
becoming what one h