The First Lesson The First Three Principles
It is with no ordinary feelings that we address ourselves to our
students of the Yogi class of 1904. We see, as they perhaps
do not, that to many of them this series of lessons will be
as seed planted in fertile soil, which will in due time put forth
sprouts which will force their way gradually into the sunlight of
consciousness, where they will put forth leaves, blossom, and
fruit. Many of the fragments of truth which will be presented
to you will not be recognized by you at this time, but in years
to come you will recognize the verity of the impressions which
will be conveyed to you in these lessons, and then, and then
only, will you make these truths your own.
We intend to speak to you just as if you were gathered
before us in person, and as if we were standing before you in
the flesh. We feel sure that the bond of sympathy between us
will soon grow so strong and real that as you read our words
you will feel our presence almost as strongly as if we were with
you in person. We will be with you in spirit, and, according to
our philosophy, the student who is in harmonious sympathy
with his teachers really establishes a psychic connection with
them, and is in consequence enabled to grasp the “spirit” of the
teaching and to receive the benefit of the teacher’s thought in a degree impossible to one who merely reads the words in cold
print.
We are sure that the members of the class of 1904 will get
into harmony with each other, and with us, from the very start,
and that we will obtain results that will surprise even ourselves,
and that the term of the class will mark a wonderful spiritual
growth and unfoldment for many of the class. This result
would be impossible were the class composed of the general
public, in which the adverse thought vibrations of many would
counteract, or at least retard, the impelling force generated in
the minds of those who are in sympathy with the work. But we
will not have this obstacle to overcome, as the class has been
recruited only from that class of students who are interested
in the occult. The announcements sent out by us have been
worded in such a way as to attract the attention only of those
for whom they were intended. The mere sensation‑hunters and
the “faddists” have not been attracted by our call, while those
for whom the call was intended have heard and have hastened
to communicate with us. As the poet has sung: “Where I pass,
all my children know me.” The members of the class having
been attracted to us, and we to them, will form a harmonious
body working with us to the common end of self‑improvement,
growth, development, and unfoldment. The spirit of harmony
and unity of purpose will do much for us, and the united
thought of the class, coupled with our own, will be a tower of
strength, and each student will receive the benefit of it, and will
be strengthened and sustained thereby.
We will follow the system of instruction of the East, rather
than that of the Western world. In the East, the teacher does
not stop to “prove” each statement or theory as he makes or
advances it; nor does he make a blackboard demonstration
of spiritual truths; nor does he argue with his class or invite
discussion. On the contrary, his teaching is authoritative, and
he proceeds to deliver his message to his students as it was
delivered to him, without stopping to see whether they all agree with him. He does not care whether his statements are
accepted as truth by all, for he feels sure that those who are
ready for the truth which he teaches will intuitively recognize
it, and as for the others, if they are not prepared to receive the
truth, no amount of argument will help matters. When a soul
is ready for a spiritual truth, and that truth, or a part of it, is
uttered in its presence or presented to its attention by means
of writings, it will intuitively recognize and appropriate it. The
Eastern teacher knows that much of his teaching is but the
planting of seed, and that for every idea which the student
grasps at first there will be a hundred which will come into the
field of conscious recognition only after the lapse of time.
We do not mean that the Eastern teachers insist upon the
student blindly accepting every truth that is presented to him.
On the contrary, they instruct the pupil to accept as truth only
that which he can prove for himself, as no truth is truth to one
until he can prove it by his own experiments. But the student
is taught that before many truths may be so proven he must
develop and unfold. The teacher asks only that the student have
confidence in him as a pointer‑out of the way, and he says, in
effect, to the student: “This is the way; enter upon it, and on the
path you will find the things of which I have taught you; handle
them, weigh them, measure them, taste them, and know for
yourself. When you reach any point of the path you will know
as much of it as did I or any other soul at that particular stage
of the journey; but until you reach a particular point, you must
either accept the statements of those who have gone before
or reject the whole subject of that particular point. Accept
nothing as final until you have proven it; but, if you are wise,
you will profit by the advice and experience of those who have
gone before. Every man must learn by experience, but men may
serve others as pointers of the way. At each stage of the journey
it will be found that those who have progressed a little further
on the way have left signs and marks and guideposts for those
who follow. The wise man will take advantage of these signs. I do not ask for blind faith, but only for confidence until you
are able to demonstrate for yourselves the truths I am passing
on to you, as they were passed on to me, by those who went
before.
We ask the student to have patience. Many things which will
appear dark to him at first will be made clear as we progress.
The Constitution of Man.
Man is a far more complete being than is generally imagined.
He has not only a body and a soul, but he is a spirit possessing a
soul, which soul has several vehicles for expression, these several
vehicles being of different degrees of density, the body being
the lowest form of expression. These different vehicles manifest
upon different “planes,” such as the “physical plane,” the “astral
plane,” etc., all of which will be explained as we proceed.
The real self is pure spirit—a spark of the divine fire. This spirit
is encased within numerous sheaths, which prevent its full
expression. As man advances in development, his consciousness
passes from the lower planes to the higher, and he becomes
more and more aware of his higher nature. The spirit contains
within it all potentialities, and as man progresses he unfolds
new powers, new qualities, into the light.
The Yogi philosophy teaches that man is composed of seven
principles—is a sevenfold creature. The best way to think of
man is to realize that the spirit is the real self, and that the lower
principles are but confining sheaths. Man may manifest upon
seven planes, that is, the highly developed man, as the majority
of men of this age can manifest only upon the lower planes,
the higher planes not having as yet been reached by them,
although every man, no matter how undeveloped, possesses
the seven principles potentially. The first five planes have been
attained by many, the sixth by a few, the seventh by practically
none of this race at this time.
The seven principles of man, as known to the Yogi philosophy,
are herewith stated, English terms being substituted for Sanscrit
words, so far as may be:
7. Spirit.
6. Spiritual‑Mind.
5. Intellect.
4. Instinctive‑Mind.
3. Prana, or Vital Force.
2. Astral Body.
1. Physical Body.
We will briefly run over the general nature of each of these
seven principles, that the student may understand future
references to them; but we will defer our detailed treatment of
the subject until later on in the lessons.
1. The Physical Body.
Of all the seven principles of man, the physical body is of
course the most apparent. It is the lowest in the scale, and is the
crudest manifestation of the man. But this does not mean that
the physical should be despised or neglected. On the contrary,
it is a most necessary principle for the growth of man in his
present stage of development—the temple of the living Spirit—
and it should be carefully tended and cared for in order to render
it a more perfect instrument. We have but to look around us
and see how the physical bodies of different men show the
different degrees of development under mental control. It is a
duty of each developed man to train his body to the highest
degree of perfection in order that it may be used to advantage.
The body should be kept in good health and condition and
trained to obey the orders of the mind, rather than to rule the
mind, as is so often the case. The care of the body, under the
intelligent control of the mind, is an important branch of Yogi philosophy, and is known as “Hatha Yoga.” We are preparing a
little text‑book upon “Hatha Yoga,” which will soon be ready
for the press, that will give the Yogi teachings upon this most
important branch of self‑development. The Yogi philosophy
teaches that the physical body is built up of cells, each cell
containing within it a miniature “life,” which controls its action.
These “lives” are really bits of intelligent mind of a certain
degree of growth, which enable the cells to perform their work
properly. These bits of intelligence are, of course, subordinate
to the control of the central mind of the man, and will readily
obey orders from headquarters, given either subconsciously
or consciously. These cell intelligences manifest a perfect
adaptation for their particular work. The selective action of
the cells, extracting from the blood the nourishment needed
and rejecting that which is not required, is an instance of this
intelligence. The process of digestion, assimilation, etc., shows
the intelligence of the cells, either separately or collectively
in groups. The healing of wounds, the rush of the cells to the
points where they are most needed, and hundreds of other
examples known to the student of physiology, all mean to the
Yogi student examples of the “life” within each atom. Each atom
is to the Yogi a living thing, leading its own independent life.
These atoms combine into groups for some end, and the group
manifests a group‑intelligence, as long as it remains a group;
these groups again combining in turn, and forming bodies of a
more complex nature, which serve as vehicles for higher forms
of consciousness.
When death comes to the physical body the cells separate
and scatter, and that which we call decay sets in. The force
which has held the cells together is withdrawn, and it becomes
free to go its own way and form new combinations. Some go
into the body of the plants in the vicinity, and eventually find
themselves again in the body of an animal; others remain in the
organism of the plant; others remain in the ground for a time,
but the life of the atom means incessant and constant change. As a leading writer has said: “Death is but an aspect of life, and
the destruction of one material form is but a prelude to the
building up of another.”
We will not devote further space to the consideration of the
physical, as that is a subject by itself, and, then, our students
are no doubt anxious to be led into subjects with which they
are not quite so familiar. So we will leave this first principle and
pass on to the second, wishing, however, again to remind the
student that the first step in Yogi development consists of the
mastery of the physical body and its care and attention. We will
have more to say of this subject before we are through with this
course.
2. The Astral Body.
This second principle of man is not nearly so well known as
its physical brother, although it is closely connected with the
latter and is its exact counterpart in appearance. The astral
body has been known to people in all ages, and has given rise to
many superstitions and mysteries, owing to a lack of knowledge
of its nature. It has been called the “ethereal body”; the “fluidic
body”; the “double”; the “wraith”; the “Doppelganger,” etc. It is
composed of matter of a finer quality than that composing our
physical bodies, but matter none the less. In order to give you
a clearer idea of what we mean, we will call your attention to
water, which manifests in several well‑known forms. Water at
a certain temperature is known as ice, a hard, solid substance;
at a little higher temperature it assumes its best‑known form,
which we call “water”; at a still higher temperature it escapes
in the form of a vapor which we call “steam,” although the real
steam is invisible to the human eye, and becomes apparent
only when it mixes with the air and has its temperature lowered
a little, when it becomes vapor visible to the eye, and which
vapor we call “steam.”
The astral body is the best counterpart of the physical body
and may be separated from it under certain circumstances. Ordinarily, conscious separation is a matter of considerable
difficulty, but in persons of a certain degree of psychical
development the astral body may be detached and often goes
on long journeys. To the clairvoyant vision the astral body is
seen looking exactly like its counterpart, the physical body, and
united to it by a slender silken cord.
The astral body exists some time after the death of the
person to whom it belongs, and under certain circumstances
it is visible to living persons, and is called a “ghost.” There are
other means whereby the spirits of those who have passed on
may become manifest, and the astral shell which is sometimes
seen after it has been sloughed off by the soul which has passed
on is in such cases nothing more than a corpse of finer matter
than its physical counterpart. In such cases it is possessed of no
life or intelligence, and is nothing more than a cloud seen in the
sky bearing a resemblance to a human form. It is a shell, nothing
more. The astral body of a dying person is sometimes projected
by an earnest desire, and is at such times seen by friends and
relatives with whom he is in sympathy. There are many cases
of this kind on record, and the student probably is aware of
occurrences of this kind. We will have more to say about the
astral body and astral shells in other lessons in this course. We
will have occasion to go into further detail when we reach the
subject of the astral plane, and, in fact, the astral body will form
a part of several lessons.
The astral body is invisible to the ordinary eye, but is readily
perceived by those having clairvoyant power of a certain degree.
Under certain circumstances the astral body of a living person
may be seen by friends and others, the mental condition of the
persons and the observer having much to do with the matter.
Of course, the trained and developed occultist is able to project
his astral body consciously, and may make it appear at will; but
such powers are rare and are acquired only after a certain stage
of development is reached. The adept sees the astral body rising from the physical body
as the hour of death approaches. It is seen hovering over the
physical body, to which it is bound by a slender thread. When
the thread snaps the person is dead, and the soul passes on
carrying with it the astral body, which in turn is discarded as the
physical body has been before. It must be remembered that the
astral body is merely a finer grade of matter, and that it is merely
a vehicle for the soul, just as is the physical, and that both are
discarded at the proper time. The astral body, like the physical,
disintegrates after the death of the person, and persons of a
psychic nature sometimes see the dissolving fragments around
cemeteries, in the shape of violet light.
We are merely calling attention to the different vehicles of the
soul of man, his seven principles, and we must hasten on to the
next principle. We would like to speak to you of the interesting
phenomenon of the ego leaving the physical body in the astral
body while one is “asleep.” We would like to tell you just what
occurs during sleep, and how one may give orders to his astral
self to gain certain information or to work out certain problems
while he is wrapped in sleep, but that belongs to another phase
of our subject, and we must pass on after merely whetting your
appetite. We wish you to get these seven principles well fixed
in your mind, so that you may be able to understand the terms
when we use them later on.
3. Prana, or Vital Force.
We have said something of Prana in our little book, “Science
of Breath,” which many of you have read. As we said in that
book, Prana is universal energy, but in our consideration of
it we will confine ourselves to that manifestation of Prana
which we call vital force. This vital force is found in all forms
of life—from the amœba to man—from the most elementary
form of plant life to the highest form of animal life. Prana is
all‑pervading. It is found in all things having life, and as the
occult philosophy teaches that life is in all things—in every atom—the apparent lifelessness of some things being only a
lesser degree of manifestation, we may understand that Prana
is everywhere, in everything. Prana is not the Ego, but is merely
a form of energy used by the Ego in its material manifestation.
When the Ego departs from the physical body, in what we
call “death,” the Prana, being no longer under the control of
the Ego, responds only to the orders of the individual atoms or
their groups, which have formed the physical body, and as the
physical body disintegrates and is resolved back to its original
elements, each atom takes with it sufficient Prana to enable it
to form new combinations, the unused Prana returning to the
great universal storehouse from whence it came. Prana is in all
forms of matter, and yet it is not matter—it is the energy or
force which animates matter. We have gone into the matter of
Prana in our little book previously referred to, and we do not
wish to take up the students’ time in repeating what we said
there.
But before taking up the next principle, we wish to direct
the student’s attention to the fact that Prana is the force
underlying magnetic healing, much of mental healing, absent
treatment, etc. That which has been spoken of by many as
human magnetism is really Prana.
In “Science of Breath,” we have given you directions for
increasing the Prana in your system; distributing it over the body,
strengthening each part and organ and stimulating every cell. It
may be directed toward relieving pain in one’s self and others
by sending to the affected part a supply of Prana extracted
from the air. It may be projected to a distance so far as to affect
other persons. The thought of the projector sends forth and
colors the Prana gathered for the purpose, and finds lodgment
in the psychic organism of the patient. Like the Marconi waves
it is invisible to the eye of man (with the exception of certain
persons who have attained a high degree of clairvoyant power);
it passes through intervening obstacles and seeks the person
attuned to receive it. This transferring of Prana under the direction of the will is
the underlying principle of thought transference, telepathy, etc.
One may surround himself with an aura of Prana, colored with
strong positive thought, which will enable him to resist the
adverse thought waves of others, and which will enable him to
live serene in an atmosphere of antagonistic and inharmonious
thought.
We advise students to re‑read that portion of “Science of
Breath” which deals with the use of Prana. We propose going
into great detail regarding this phase of the subject, during the
course of these lessons, but “Science of Breath” gives a good
fundamental idea of the nature of Prana and the methods of
its use, and students will do well to refresh their minds on this
subject.
We do not wish to weary you by this description of each of
the seven principles, and we are aware that you are impatient
to enter into the more interesting phases of the subject. But
it is absolutely necessary that you obtain a clear idea of these
seven principles, in order that you may understand that which
follows, and to obviate the necessity of your being “sent back”
to relearn the lesson which you have “skipped.” We had this idea
in mind when we started this class in November, 1903, instead
of waiting until January, 1904, and we give you the November
and December lessons as “good measure,” so as to be able to
reach the more interesting part of the subject by the January
lesson.
We will leave the subject of Prana and will pass on to the
next principle; but we trust that you will not leave this part of
the lesson until you have acquired a clear idea of Prana and
its qualities and uses. Study your “Science of Breath” until you
understand something of Prana.
The Mental Principles.
The Western reader who has studied the writings of some
of the recent Western psychologists will recognize in the Instinctive Mind certain attributes of the so‑called “subjective”
or “subconscious” minds spoken of so frequently by the said
writers. These writers discovered in man these characteristics,
as well as certain higher phases of the mind (coming from the
Spiritual Mind), and without stopping to investigate further,
they advanced a “new” theory that man is possessed of two
minds, i. e., the “objective” and “subjective,” or as some have
termed them, the “conscious” and “subconscious.” This was
all very well so far as it went, but these investigators set the
“conscious” mind aside and bundled all the rest into their
“subconscious” or “subjective” mind, ignoring the fact that
they were mixing the highest and lowest qualities of mind and
putting them in the same class, and leaving the middle quality
by itself. The “subjective mind” and the “subconscious” theories
are very confusing, as the student finds grouped together the
most sublime flashes of genius and the silliest nothings of the
man of low development, the mind of the latter being almost
altogether “subjective.”
To those who have read up on these theories, we would say
that such reading will materially help them to understand the
three mental principles of man, if they will remember that the
“conscious” or “objective” mind corresponds very nearly with
the “Intellect” principle in the Yogi philosophy; and that the
lowest portions of the “subjective” or “subconscious” mind are
what the Yogis term the “Instinctive Mind” principle; while the
higher and sublime qualities, which the Western writers have
noticed and have grouped with the lower qualities in forming
their “subjective mind” and “subconscious mind” theories, is
the “Spiritual Mind” principle of the Yogis, with the difference
that the “Spiritual Mind” has additional properties and qualities
of which these Western theorists have never dreamed. As we
touch upon each of these three mental principles, you will see
the points of resemblance and the points of difference between
the Yogi teachings and the Western theories. We wish it distinctly understood, however, that we do not
desire to detract from the praise justly earned by these Western
investigators; in fact, the Yogis owe them a debt of gratitude
for preparing the Western mind for the fuller teachings. The
student who has read the works of the writers referred to will
find it very much easier to grasp the idea of the three mental
principles in man than if he had never heard of any division
in the functioning of the mind of man. Our principal reason
for calling attention to the mistake of the Western dual‑mind
theories was that to the mind of the Yogi it is painful to see
that which he knows to be the highest manifestation of mind,
that which is the seat of inspiration and flashes of genius, that
which touches the pure Spirit (the Spiritual Mind), which is
just beginning to awaken in men of development and growth—
confused and confounded with and placed in the same class
with the lowest mental principle (the Instinctive Mind) which,
while most necessary and useful to man, under the direction of
his higher principle is still something which is common to the
most undeveloped man, even to the lower form of the animal
kingdom—yea, even to the plant life. We trust that the student
will free his mind of preconceived ideas on this important
subject, and will listen to what we say before forming his final
opinion. In our next lesson, we will go into detail regarding each
of the three Mental Principles.
A mantram is a word, phrase, or verse used by the Eastern
people in order to concentrate upon an idea and to let it
sink deep into the mind. It is similar to the “statements,” or
“affirmations,” used by the Mental Scientists and others of the
Western world.
The mantram for the month is a verse from a Western poet,
Mr. Orr:
“Lord of a thousand worlds am I, And I reign since time began;
And night and day, in cyclic sway,
Shall pass while their deeds I scan.
Yet time shall cease, ere I find release,
For I am the Soul of Man.”
Commit this verse to memory, and repeat it often, letting the
mind dwell upon the idea of immortality expressed so strongly,
remembering always that you are the “I” referred to.