integral yoga sadhana for a balanced personality

217
Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality Swami Satyananda Saraswati Speech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA, Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977 According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities: dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantly dynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is an integration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personality we have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into our lives. Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personality must also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development of our personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing one aspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothing else, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physical body, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In the Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, an integration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga is recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should remember

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Page 1: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mind

Page 2: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Some years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnation

Page 3: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

in8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only a

Page 4: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

small portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as a

Page 5: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

bright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice of

Page 6: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, the

Page 7: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5

Page 8: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantastic

Page 9: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

experiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. It

Page 10: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

is no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, an

Page 11: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

integration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of the

Page 12: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

earth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attained

Page 13: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

through raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the time

Page 14: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

when the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture on

Page 15: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

the Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress with

Page 16: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

which his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, then

Page 17: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

continue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enter

Page 18: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

your mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.

Page 19: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantly

Page 20: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

dynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof the

Page 21: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

brain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed of

Page 22: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

three gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karana

Page 23: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

sharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, he

Page 24: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

suddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is a

Page 25: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

reenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come up

Page 26: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

otherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured and

Page 27: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

his hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerful

Page 28: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Page 29: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind is

Page 30: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

very difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from all

Page 31: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

these vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others who

Page 32: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

are not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit of

Page 33: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

depression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.

Page 34: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclined

Page 35: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

towards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. There

Page 36: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

was no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with five

Page 37: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

subdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands of

Page 38: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

people, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In the

Page 39: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of the

Page 40: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

earth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attained

Page 41: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

through raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the time

Page 42: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

when the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture on

Page 43: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

the Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress with

Page 44: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

which his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, then

Page 45: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

continue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enter

Page 46: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

your mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.

Page 47: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personality

Page 48: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

we have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These waves

Page 49: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

awaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5

Page 50: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not be

Page 51: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

misunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened the

Page 52: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

small tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They were

Page 53: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

very happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when we

Page 54: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

are practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, the

Page 55: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

eyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person has

Page 56: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

extraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Page 57: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mind

Page 58: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Some years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnation

Page 59: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

in8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only a

Page 60: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

small portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as a

Page 61: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

bright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice of

Page 62: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, the

Page 63: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5

Page 64: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantastic

Page 65: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

experiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. It

Page 66: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

is no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesided

Page 67: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

development.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many things

Page 68: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

which ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.

Page 69: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can be

Page 70: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

exploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, still

Page 71: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

you are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.

Page 72: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation has

Page 73: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

an important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the right

Page 74: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

one for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. It

Page 75: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

is important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing one

Page 76: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

aspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we must

Page 77: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

also remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would a

Page 78: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

diamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like a

Page 79: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

hidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded and

Page 80: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

this deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered her

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body with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.

Page 82: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by the

Page 83: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

dentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life very

Page 84: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

comfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977

Page 85: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What change

Page 86: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

takes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that our

Page 87: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

jiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious and

Page 88: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

unconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eating

Page 89: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

human filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.

Page 90: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mouna

Page 91: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

When practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, a

Page 92: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

terrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strong

Page 93: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

purgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine many

Page 94: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

spices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It is

Page 95: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

easy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or political

Page 96: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

problems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Those

Page 97: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

who are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. In

Page 98: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

our ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away with

Page 99: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

karma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantra

Page 100: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

like Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One French

Page 101: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

gentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that all

Page 102: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of its

Page 103: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

effectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In the

Page 104: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of the

Page 105: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

earth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attained

Page 106: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

through raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the time

Page 107: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

when the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture on

Page 108: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

the Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress with

Page 109: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

which his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, then

Page 110: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

continue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enter

Page 111: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

your mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.

Page 112: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.

Page 113: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan we

Page 114: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

get peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context because

Page 115: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

they indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success and

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tragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the last

Page 117: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

time he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on a

Page 118: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

picnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and we

Page 119: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

push it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop and

Page 120: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

while eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind is

Page 121: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

necessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda Saraswati

Page 122: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Speech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan on

Page 123: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

the brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through a

Page 124: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

fantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According to

Page 125: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

modern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.

Page 126: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one by

Page 127: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

one. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantra

Page 128: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

should always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre and

Page 129: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

concentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that it

Page 130: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

immediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in their

Page 131: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

cosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It is

Page 132: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

easy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or political

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problems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Those

Page 134: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

who are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. In

Page 135: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

our ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away with

Page 136: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

karma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantra

Page 137: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

like Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One French

Page 138: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

gentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that all

Page 139: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

mantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of its

Page 140: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

effectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In the

Page 141: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Bhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan weget peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of the

Page 142: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

earth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context becausethey indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attained

Page 143: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

through raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success andtragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the time

Page 144: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

when the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the lasttime he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture on

Page 145: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

the Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on apicnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress with

Page 146: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

which his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and wepush it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, then

Page 147: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

continue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop andwhile eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enter

Page 148: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

your mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind isnecessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.

Page 149: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.

Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced PersonalitySwami Satyananda SaraswatiSpeech at the Gita Ashram, Monrovia, Liberia, May 1977, first printed in YOGA,Vol. 15, No. 8, August 1977According to vedic dharma each person is a composite of four main qualities:dynamism, emotions, mysticism and rationalism. Some people are predominantlydynamic, others are more emotional, mystical or rational. Every personality is anintegration of these four essential temperaments. For the evolution of our personalitywe have to integrate the four corresponding categories of yoga sadhana into ourlives.

Page 150: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

Sadhana is spiritual discipline or practice. Just as you train an animal, the personalitymust also be trained in order to be useful in this life. For the balanced development ofour personality, we must practise an integral yoga sadhana. By emphasizing oneaspect of sadhana, our development will be lopsided. If we eat protein and nothingelse, what will happen? Just as we carefully provide a balanced diet for the physicalbody, so we must supply a balance of nutrition to the spiritual body also. In theBhagavad Gita, Yoga Vashishtha, Srimad Bhagavata, and other scriptures, anintegration of the four systems of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yogais recommended. Those who overemphasize any one aspect of yoga should rememberthat this results in onesideddevelopment.Through the practice of karma yoga, bhakti yoga, raja yoga and jnana yoga, we cantrain the whole personality. This is what I want to tell everyone, everywhere. It iseasy to attain temporary tranquillity through certain practices, but to train the mind isvery difficult. To transform the entire consciousness into a creative instrument is noteasy.Transforming the mindSome years ago some research was conducted to find out the influence of kirtan onthe brain. When we do kirtan for half an hour, we feel relaxed. Why? What changetakes place in the structure of the personality and in the hormonal makeupof thebrain? Research has found that during repetitive singing of kirtan, the brain registersthe sound waves, which influences other wave patterns of the brain. These wavesawaken alpha rhythms which immediately induce tranquillity. Thus by singing kirtan we

Page 151: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

get peace of mind. This is well and good, but maintaining that state of mind during ourdaily life is not so easy. The peace we gain by practising this technique does notremain with us through the complicated and confusing patterns of our daily life.Therefore, side by side with yoga sadhana which gives us peace of mind, we mustalso remember the necessity of transforming the very structure of our mind. But how?When we drive our car into the petrol station to fill up the tank we find that petrol isof different categories. But when this petrol was extracted from the depths of theearth, what was it like then? Crude oil is so dirty but after being refined it becomes aremarkable agent of energy. It can even provide the power to fly an aeroplane.Similarly, the mind, or chitta, which we have inherited from our previous incarnationsstill remains in its crude or raw state. In the mental body we have so many thingswhich ought to be removed. When we become terribly angry or very tense, when weworry too much and pass sleepless nights due to family, business, social or politicalproblems, then we feel the necessity of purifying the mind. We must free it from allthese vrittis, those habits which we have formed in our personality from the presentand previous incarnations.We believe that the jiva or individual has undergone a process of selfincarnationin8,400,000 yonis or wombs. According to science, evolution has passed through afantastic panorama of existence, but despite these millions of incarnations that ourjiva has undergone, we still carry a very crude mind with us. This mind is composed ofthree gunas: sattwa, rajas, and tamas, which are the essential manifestations of12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 2/5prakriti or nature. The three gunas are also used in a social or moral context because

Page 152: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

they indicate the personality of a person. Nature manifests as energy; in nature thereare static (tamasic), kinetic (rajasic) and balanced (sattwic) energies.If we want to make the mind infinite, we must cut and polish it just as we would adiamond. They say that tamas makes a person lethargic, rajas makes you violent andsattwa makes you balanced. Therefore, tamas and rajas have to be overcome bysattwa, and this is accomplished through the process of dhyana yoga. Dhyana hasbeen translated as meditation, but actually it means awareness. This can be attainedthrough raja yoga, bhakti yoga, jnana yoga, laya yoga, mantra yoga, and many otheryogic processes.The mind is not thought or emotion. Thought and emotion are patterns of mind.Happiness is a state of mind and so is depression. Mind is consciousness, awareness.Mind is a storehouse of energy, shakti. The pure mind is pure shakti. The mind can bepurified and corrected by following the methods most suited to our personality. Thosewho are very strong can take up the path of kundalini and kriya yoga. For others whoare not so strong and who haven’t yet developed much understanding of yoga, thereare other ways like mantra yoga or japa yoga.The mind is much more than thought or feeling. The mind is like an iceberg; only asmall portion is visible, the remainder lies submerged under the ocean. According tomodern psychology, the mind exists in three spheres: conscious, subconscious andunconscious. In Vedanta we call them: sthoola sharira, sukshma sharira and karanasharira.Exploding the unconscious mindThe unconscious mind is very powerful. The word ‘unconscious’ should not bemisunderstood. The unconscious mind is like a storehouse. All disease, success and

Page 153: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

tragedy in life originate in the unconscious mind. The experiences that you have hadin life, important as well as unimportant, are all registered there. It is something like ahidden camera in the street. Everything that passes within its range is immediatelyphotographed. In the same way, whatever experience you have is immediatelytransferred back to the unconscious through the indriyas or senses and the mind.There they are stored in bija or seed form. This process starts rights from the timewhen the child is in the womb of the mother. From the fourth month of pregnancy,children have certain experiences which are embedded deep in the unconscious mind.Through the practices of kundalini, kriya and laya yoga, the unconscious mind can beexploded. What happens when we explode the unconscious mind? Here is an exampleof how an ordinary, insignificant experience can cause great damage to one’s mind. Inour ashram there was an intelligent engineer who could not manage to complete hiseducation or hold his job. Every morning from six till nine, he would go into a fit ofdepression. He became so restless that sometimes he felt he was going to die. Inthese fits of depression, he could not sit quietly, walk or talk. He left his career as abright mechanical engineer in the UK and wandered around Africa. Finally, he came toIndia and found his way to our ashram.One morning he was on the roof terrace and on the street below he saw a pig eatinghuman filth. This is quite a common scene for those of us who have lived in Indianvillages, but for this young man it was something new. The moment he saw it, hesuddenly remembered an incident from his childhood. When he was eight years old, heused to go fishing. One morning when he was preparing his tackle, he opened thesmall tin in which he kept little maggots for bait. He had forgotten to empty it the last

Page 154: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

time he had gone fishing, and when he lifted the lid hundreds of flies swarmed in hisface. The moment he saw the pig eating human filth, his unconscious exploded andthis deep childhood memory came out. Since then the young man has never hadanother fit, and is perfectly all right.KarmaEvery action, every thought, every place is an experience. A satsang or a lecture onthe Bhagavad Gita is an experience. Even an ordinary experience can become very12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 3/5consequential in later life. There are so many types of karma. Charity is one karmaand plundering someone’s property is another. Even if you don’t do these things, stillyou are making karma. In the Gita, it is said that there is not one moment in life inwhich a person is free of karma. Only in samadhi can you completely do away withkarma, otherwise not. Modern psychology and yoga agree that even during deep sleepwhen you are not aware of time and space, name and form, your mind is still working.Remember that the unconscious mind is the storehouse of all past experiences orkarmas, not only in this life, but in our previous lives as well.The unconscious body is called hiranyagarbha, the golden egg. By the practice ofmantra sadhana we can penetrate it deeply and eliminate all kinds of karmas, one byone. That is why they say that by the practice of mantra one becomes free from theentanglements of karma.Every action is born of a deep karma. Every thought, movement, success, failure is areenactmentof one of our previous experiences. Here is another example, a clinicalcase concerning a husband and wife who loved each other very much. They werevery happy together at home, but whenever they went out to dinner, for a walk, on a

Page 155: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

picnic, etc. they always fought. Why? When the husband was a child of four, hewalked into the bathroom when his mother was taking a bath. She quickly covered herbody with a dirty housedress, pushed him out and locked the door. Now, wheneverthe husband is at home, his wife is engaged in housework. She wears an oldhousedress and he loves her. He is still working out the problem of the old dress withwhich his mother covered herself in the bathroom. Whenever his wife is not wearingher old housedress, he doesn’t like her! Such simple childhood experiences can causeso many problems. Many good people suffer unnecessarily because they are unawareof their karmas and how they fructify.Mantra yogaThere are two ways of practising mantra yoga: one is the repetition of a bija mantralike Aum, Hrim, Shrim, Klim; the other is using the name of one’s guru or favouritedeity. Nowadays we have lost touch with the original mantra yoga system. If we feeldevotion for Shiva, then we practise ‘Om Namah Shivaya’. If we feel more inclinedtowards Rama, we repeat ‘Sri Ram Jai Ram’. When we feel attracted towards Krishna,we say ‘Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya’. But according to mantra shastra, themantra must be very carefully selected to suit each individual personality. The bijamantras are very powerful. They can allay the strong influence of karmas. Mantrashould always be practised with a mala. Even in meditation when mantra issynchronized with the breath, a mala is still used.Japa and antar mounaWhen practising mantra, a lot of things come up in the mind which would not come upotherwise. When past incidents arise, what do we do? The usual response is tosuppress these thoughts because we are more interested in our mantra. So when weare practising japa and a thought come, we push it out; another one comes and we

Page 156: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

push it out. But this is incorrect. We do not want to avoid karma, but to eliminate it.Therefore, it is necessary to observe each thought and let it pass of its own accord.Thus japa yoga must be followed or accompanied by antar mouna, the process ofwitnessing our thoughts. When we are practising mantra and a thought comes intoour mind, we must stop for a moment and see the thought, whatever it is, thencontinue the mantra until another thought comes. During the practice of japa andantar mouna, over a period of months the significant and insignificant memories of thepast flash into our mind. These memories should be seen very clearly if we want topurify our mind. Every experience we have during mantra practice or meditation hasan important bearing on our life.I know of many people who have changed completely through the practice of japaand antar mouna and they were amazed to see how it happened. One Frenchgentleman had a hernia and hydrocele. He left his job and went to his sister in thecountry. He told her that he was completely broken and could no longer work. Therewas no point in prolonging his life, he said, as he felt only pain everywhere. His sister,12/10/2015 Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personalityhttp://www.yogamag.net/archives/2007/fjune07/integ.shtml 4/5a staunch devotee of yoga, told him to put some cream on his eyebrow centre andconcentrate on that point. One day while the French gentleman was practising this, aterrific sound exploded somewhere in his brain. Surprisingly his hernia was cured andhis hydrocele problem was completely resolved – for him it was a miracle. When I methim, I asked what had happened when he was concentrating on bhrumadhya, theeyebrow centre. He said that when he was a schoolboy he went to the fish shop and

Page 157: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

while eating, a fish bone got stuck in his teeth which later had to be removed by thedentist. When he was practising concentration on his bhrumadhya, he saw fish comingout of his mouth. After that, he too became a great devotee of yoga.Therefore, when practising mantra, do not discard or repress the experiences whicharise. You may think that while practising mantra, worldly thoughts should not enteryour mind, and if they do, then it is your duty to remove them in respect for themantra, but this is incorrect. According to yoga and psychology, we must observe,analyze and respect whatever thoughts or experiences come into our mind whilepractising japa.You will find that if the mantra is correct, it will work immediately. If it is not the rightone for you, it will still work, but slowly. To be powerful the mantra has to correlatewith all of our qualities and tendencies. The tantra and mantra shastras say that allmantras, with the exception of Aum, are classified into twelve main groups with fivesubdivisions. Only Aum can be repeated by anyone at any time, without restriction.The mantras which are used to explode the unconscious mind are very important.People with devotion for the Devi, particularly Durga or Kali, have fantasticexperiences while practising her mantra. Many of my disciples had terrifying dreams allnight after receiving her mantra. This is because the mantra is so powerful that itimmediately starts exploding the karmas from the unconscious mind. Just as a strongpurgative makes you go to the toilet every five minutes, so repetition of a powerfulmantra purges karma very quickly.Science of yogaThe science of yoga aims at perfecting human life. Every ordinary person hasextraordinary potential, but to develop this a strong and welltrainedmind is

Page 158: Integral Yoga Sadhana for a Balanced Personality

necessary. Through the practices of yoga we can gain complete mastery over thebody and mind. The West gave technology to the world and made life verycomfortable, easy and quick. India can give yoga and spirituality and the whole worldis crying for it. People in the West are fed up and frightened of technology. Theywant a science to allay their fears and give them peace.Only the system of yoga which is still alive today in India can adequately fulfil thisneed. Therefore, all Indians wherever they are, must represent this science correctly.Yoga is knowledge, not miracles, witchcraft or superstition. Yoga is a science whichcan be studied, practised, experienced, understood and explained by any educatedand wellreadperson. Yoga can improve relations and create international goodwill. Itis important to be able to give something to others which they can cherish deep intheir hearts.I give free discussions on yoga everywhere I go because I am fully convinced of itseffectiveness. My experience and experiments in life with thousands and thousands ofpeople, East and West are my proof. Now it is the duty of those who know that yogaproduces an integrated personality to acquaint themselves with all aspects of yoga. Itis no use saying that bhakti yoga alone is enough. If it were, why are religious peoplelying ill in hospitals and taking so many pills? Why are they unable to sleep in theircosy beds? Religion is bhakti yoga. We need an integrated approach to life. Justadding salt to the vegetables does not make a tasty dish. We must combine manyspices. Life is too complex for one aspect of yoga to suffice. With a comprehensiveapproach, life becomes rich.