Meditation Yoga1


Meditation Yoga1 Image


YOGALECT.DOC
An Electronic Copy of
"Eight Lectures on Yoga," (Part I of 4)
by Aleister Crowley

*asterisks indicate italics in the original*

YOGA FOR YAHOOS


FIRST LECTURE. FIRST PRINCIPLES.

Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.
It is my will to explain the subject of yoga in clear language,
without resort to jargon or the enunciation of fantastic hypotheses, in order that this great science may be thoroughly understood as of universal importance.
For, like all great things, it is simple; but, like all great
things, it is masked by confused thinking; and, only too often,
brought into contempt by the machinations of knavery.
(1) There is more nonsense talked and written about Yoga than
about anything else in the world. Most of this nonsense, which is
fostered by charlatans, is based upon the idea that there is something mysterious and Oriental about it. There isn't. Do not look to me for obelisks and odalisques, Rahat Loucoumm, bul-buls, or any other tinsel imagery of the Yoga-mongers. I am neat but not gaudy. There is
nothing mysterious or Oriental about anything, as everybody knows who has spent a little time intelligently in the continents of Asia and Africa. I propose to invoke the most remote and elusive of all Gods to throw clear light upon the subject -- the light of common sense.
(2) All phenomena of which we are aware take place in our own
minds, and therefore the only thing we have to look at is the mind;
which is a more constant quantity over all the species of humanity
than is generally supposed. What appear to be radical differences,
irreconcilable by argument, are usually found to be due to the
obstinacy of habit produced by generations of systematic sectarian
training.
(3) We must then begin the study of Yoga by looking at the meaning
of the word. It means Union, from the same Sanskrit root as the Greek word Zeugma, the Latin word Jugum, and the English word yoke.
( / Yeug -- to join.)
When a dancing girl is dedicated to the service of a temple there
is a Yoga of her relations to celebrate. Yoga, in short, may be
translated "tea fight," which doubtless accounts for the fact that all the students of Yoga in England do nothing but gossip over endless
libations of Lyons' 1*s*. 2*d*.
(4) Yoga means Union.
In what sense are we to consider this? How is the word Yoga to
imply a system of religious training or a description of religious
experience?
You may note incidentally that the word Religion is really
identifiable with Yoga. It means a binding together.
(5) Yoga means Union.
What are the elements which are united or to be united when this
word is used in its common sense of a practice widely spread in
Hindustan whose object is the emancipation of the individual who
studies and practises it from the less pleasing features of his life on this planet?
I say Hindustan, but I really mean anywhere on the earth; for
research has shown that similar methods producing similar results are to be found in every country. The details vary, but the general
structure is the same. Because all bodies, and so all minds, have
identical Forms.
(6) Yoga means Union.
In the mind of the pious person, the inferiority complex which
accounts for his piety compels him to interpret this emancipation as union with the gaseous vertebrate whom he has invented and called God.
On the cloudy vapour of his fears his imagination has thrown a vast distorted shadow of himself, and he is duly terrified; and the more he cringes before it, the more the spectre seems to stoop to crush him.
People with these ideas will never get to anywhere but Lunatic Asylums and Churches.
It is because of this overwhelming miasma of fear that the whole
subject of Yoga has become obscure. A perfectly simple problem has
been complicated by the most abject ethical and superstitious
nonsense. Yet all the time the truth is patent in the word itself.
(7) Yoga means Union.
We may now consider what Yoga really is. Let us go for a moment into the nature of consciousness with the tail of an eye on such sciences as mathematics, biology, and chemistry.
In mathematics the expression *a* plus *b* plus *c* is a
triviality. Write *a* plus *b* plus *c* equals 0, and you obtain an equation from which the most glorious truths may be developed.
In biology the cell divides endlessly, but never becomes anything
different; but if we unite cells of opposite qualities, male and
female, we lay the foundations of a structure whose summit is
unattainably fixed in the heavens of imagination.
Similar facts occur in chemistry. The atom by itself has few
constant qualities, none of them particularly significant; but as soon as an element combines with the object of its hunger we get not only the ecstatic production of light, heat, and so forth, but a more
complex structure having few or none of the qualities of its elements, but capable of further combination into complexities of astonishing sublimity. All these combinations, these unions, are Yoga.
(8) Yoga means Union.
How are we to apply this word to the phenomena of mind?
What is the first characteristic of everything in thought? How did
it come to be a thought at all? Only by making a distinction between it and the rest of the world.
The first proposition, the type of all propositions, is: S is P.
There must be two things -- different things -- whose relation forms knowledge.
Yoga is first of all the union of the subject and object of
consciousness: of the seer with the thing seen.
(9) Now, there is nothing strange or wonderful about all this.
The study of the principles of Yoga is very useful to the average man, if only to make him think about the nature of the world as he supposes that he knows it.
Let us consider a piece of cheese. We say that this has certain
qualities, shape, structure, colour, solidity, weight, taste, smell, consistency and the rest; but investigation shows that this is all
illusory. Where are these qualities? Not in the cheese, for
different observers give quite different accounts of it. Not in
ourselves, for we do not perceive them in the absence of the cheese.
All "material things," all impressions, are phantoms.
In reality the cheese is nothing but a series of electric charges.
Even the most fundamental quality of all, mass, has been found not to exist. The same is true of the matter in our brains which is partly responsible for these perceptions. What then are these qualities of which we are all so sure? They would not exist without our brains;
they would not exist without the cheese. They are the results of the union, that is the Yoga, of the seer and the seen, of subject and
object in consciousness as the philosophical phrase goes. They have no material existence; they are only names given to the ecstatic
results of this particular form of Yoga.
(10) I think that nothing can be more helpful to the student of
Yoga than to get the above proposition firmly established in his
subconscious mind. About nine-tenths of the trouble in understanding the subject is all this ballyhoo about Yoga being mysterious and
Oriental. The principles of Yoga, and the spiritual results of Yoga, are demonstrated in every conscious and unconscious happening. This is that which is written in *The Book of the Law* -- Love is the law, love under will -- for Love is the instinct to unite, and the act of uniting. But this cannot be done indiscriminately, it must be done
"under will," that is, in accordance with the nature of the particular units concerned. Hydrogen has no love for Hydrogen; it is not the
nature, or the "true will" of Hydrogen to seek to unite with a
molecule of its own kind. Add Hydrogen to Hydrogen: nothing happens to its quality: it is only its quantity that changes. It rather seeks to enlarge its experience of its possibilities by union with atoms of opposite character, such as Oxygen; with this it combines (with an
explosion of light, heat, and sound
) to form water. The result is
entirely different from either of the component elements, and has
another kind of "true will," such as to unite (with similar
disengagement of light and heat
) with Potassium, while the resulting
"caustic Potash" has in its turn a totally new series of qualities, with still another "true will" of its own; that is, to unite
explosively with acids. And so on.
(11) It may seem to some of you that these explanations have
rather knocked the bottom out of Yoga; that I have reduced it to the category of common things. That was my object. There is no sense in being frightened of Yoga, awed by Yoga, muddled and mystified by Yoga, or enthusiastic over Yoga. If we are to make any progress in its
study, we need clear heads and the impersonal scientific attitude. It is especially important not to bedevil ourselves with Oriental jargon.
We may have to use a few Sanskrit words; but that is only because they have no English equivalents; and any attempt to translate them burdens us with the connotations of the existing English words which we
employ. However, these words are very few; and if the definitions
which I propose to give you are carefully studied, they should present no difficulty.
(12) Having now understood that Yoga is the essence of all
phenomena whatsoever, we may ask what is the special meaning of the word in respect of our investigation, since the process and the
results are familiar to every one of us; so familiar indeed that there is actually nothing else at all of which we have any knowledge. It
*is* knowledge.
What is it we are going to study, and why should we study it?
(13) The answer is very simple.
All this Yoga that we know and practice, this Yoga that produces
these ecstatic results that we call phenomena, includes among its
spiritual emanations a good deal of unpleasantness. The more we study this universe produced by our Yoga, the more we collect and synthesize our experience, the nearer we get to a perception of what the Buddha declared to be characteristic of all component things: Sorrow, Change.
and Absence of any permanent principle. We constantly approach his
enunciation of the first two "Noble Truths," as he called them.
"Everything is Sorrow"; and "The cause of Sorrow is Desire." By the word `Desire' he meant exactly what is meant by `Love' in *The Book of the Law* which I quoted a few moments ago. `Desire' is the need of
every unit to extend its experience by combining with its opposite.
(14) It is easy enough to construct the whole series of arguments
which lead up to the first "Noble Truth."
Every operation of Love is the satisfaction of a bitter hunger, but the appetite only grows fiercer by satisfaction; so that we can say with the Preacher: "He that increaseth knowledge increaseth Sorrow."
The root of all this sorrow is in the sense of insufficiency; the need to unite, to lose oneself in the beloved object, is the manifest proof of this fact, and it is clear also that the satisfaction produces only a temporary relief, because the process expands indefinitely. The
thirst increases with drinking. The only complete satisfaction
conceivable would be the Yoga of the Atom with the entire universe.
This fact is easily perceived, and has been constantly expressed in the mystical philosophies of the West; the only goal is "Union with God." Of course, we only use the word `God' because we have been
brought up in superstition, and the higher philosophers both in the East and in the West have preferred to speak of union with the All or with the Absolute. More superstitions!
(15) Very well, then, there is no difficulty at all; since every
thought in our being, every cell in our bodies, every electron and
proton of our atoms, is nothing but Yoga and the result of Yoga. All we have to do to obtain emancipation, satisfaction, everything we want is to perform this universal and inevitable operation upon the
Absolute itself. Some of the more sophisticated members of my
audience may possibly be thinking that there is a catch in it
somewhere. They are perfectly right.
(16) The snag is simply this. Every element of which we are
composed is indeed constantly occupied in the satisfaction of its
particular needs by its own particular Yoga; but for that very reason it is completely obsessed by its own function, which it must naturally consider as the Be-All and End-All of its existence. For instance, if you take a glass tube open at both ends and put it over a bee on the windowpane it will continue beating against the windows to the point of exhaustion and death, instead of escaping through the tube. We
must not confuse the necessary automatic functioning of any of our
elements with the true Will which is the proper orbit of any star. A human being only acts as a unit at all because of countless
generations of training. Evolutionary processes have set up a higher order of Yogic action by which we have managed to subordinate what we consider the general welfare. We are communities; and our well-being depends upon the wisdom of our Councils, and the discipline with which their decisions are enforced. The more complicated we are, the higher we are in the scale of evolution, the more complex and difficult is the task of legislation and of maintaining order.
(17) In highly civilised communities like our own (*loud
laughter*
), the individual is constantly being attacked by conflicting interests and necessities; his individuality is constantly being
assailed by the impact of other people; and in a very large number of cases he is unable to stand up to the strain. "Schizophrenia," which is a lovely word, and may or may not be found in your dictionary, is an exceedingly common complaint. It means the splitting up of the
mind. In extreme cases we get to the phenomena of multiple
personality, Jekyll and Hyde, only more so. At the best, when a man says "I" he refers only to a transitory phenomenon. His "I" changes as he utters the word. But -- philosophy apart -- it is rarer and
rarer to find a man with a mind of his own and a will of his own, even in this modified sense.
(18) I want you therefore to see the nature of the obstacles to
union with the Absolute. For one thing, the Yoga which we constantly practice has not invariable results; there is a question of attention, of investigation, of reflexion. I propose to deal in a future
instruction with the modifications of our perception thus caused, for they are of great importance to our science of Yoga. For example, the classical case of the two men lost in a thick wood at night. One says to the other: "That dog barking is not a grasshopper; it is the
creaking of a cart.
" Or again, "He thought he saw a banker's clerk
descending from a 'bus. He looked again, and saw it was a
hippopotamus."
Everyone who has done any scientific investigation knows painfully
how every observation must be corrected again and again. The need of Yoga is so bitter that it blinds us. We are constantly tempted to see and hear what we want to see and hear.
(19) It is therefore incumbent upon us, if we wish to make the
universal and final Yoga with the Absolute, to master every element of our being, to protect it against all civil and external war, to
intensify every faculty to the utmost, to train ourselves in knowledge and power to the utmost; so that at the proper moment we may be in
perfect condition to fling ourselves up into the furnace of ecstasy which flames from the abyss of annihilation.
Love is the law, love under will.

Recommended books (downloadable pdfs):

Christopher Siren - Sumerian Mythology Faq
Aleister Crowley - Eight Lectures On Yoga


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Aleister Crowley Thelemquotes 6 Will Is Not Want


Aleister Crowley Thelemquotes 6 Will Is Not Want Image
"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law."

For Thelema Quotes installment number 6, we deal with the "omnipresent blackguard" of people taking "Do what thou wilt" to mean "Do whatever you want." All quotations are from Aleister Crowley or "The Book of the Law."

QUOTATION #1

"The word of the Law is THELEMA Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law So with thy all; thou hast no right but to do thy will. Do that, and no other shall say nay. For pure will, unassuaged of purpose, delivered from the lust of result, is every way perfect."

-"The Book of the Law" I:39-40, 42-44

QUOTATION #2

"St. Augustine's 'Ama, et fac quod vis' [roughly 'Love, and do what thou wilt'] puts the cart before the horse, begs the question, and is moreover liable to the most serious misunderstandings. As if the fact of 'loving' were sufficient excuse for all and sundry acts, or lines of conduct.

Safer, 'Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law' with 'love' relegated to its scientifically correct position as the means of carrying out all plans soever: Hungry man 'loves' food and drink, i.e. unites chemically therewith, assimilates it to his own nature, and so becomes man refreshed i.e. capable of continuing to pursue his true will. Hence, 'Love is the law, love under will.' It will not help him to 'love' anything but food and drink on such occasions; and it must be the food suited to his nature and his powers of digestion. Hay will not restore or nourish him; and food too gross, or too plentiful, drink too cold or too intoxicating, may disturb the perfection of the process.

Of course you [Karl Germer] know all this well enough; but I thought that you might find it useful to quote St. August to the common blatant guffaw of the omnipresent blackguard 'Do wot yer loike, eh? What ho!'"

- Letter from Aleister Crowley to Karl Germer, March 1942

QUOTATION #3

"If every man and every woman did his and her will-the true will-there would be no clashing. 'Every man and every woman is a star,' and each star moves in an appointed path without interference. There is plenty of room for all; it is only disorder that creates confusion. From these considerations it should be clear that 'Do what thou wilt' does not mean 'Do what you like.' It is the apotheosis of Freedom; but it is also the strictest possible bond.

Do what thou wilt-then do nothing else. Let nothing deflect thee from that austere and holy task. Liberty is absolute to do thy will; but seek to do any other thing whatever, and instantly obstacles must arise. Every act that is not in definite course of that one orbit is erratic, an hindrance. Will must not be two, but one."

- Liber II: The Message of the Master Therion

QUOTATION #4

"At the exact moment when the futility of the formalized faiths of the world has been recognized, despite the stoutest denials; when the first principles of religion and ethics have been subconsciously rejected, so that a kind of spiritual neurasthenia broke loose in the hysteria of the world-war, there appeared a mysterious figure who is generally known as the Master Therion. Instructed by chiefs who have hitherto preferred to remain in the background, he brings to free and enlightened men a law by virtue of which mankind may arrive at a new and higher stage of advancement on every plane, from the biological to the spiritual. It is a law of liberty and of love, but also of discipline and of force. This law is already in operation under the name of the Law of Thelema.

The formula of this law is: Do what thou wilt. Its moral aspect is simple enough in theory. Do what thou wilt does not mean Do as you please, although it implies this degree of emancipation, that it is no longer possible to say `a priori that a given action is "wrong." Each man has the right-and an absolute right-to accomplish his True Will.

The more one examines the deepest implications of the Law of Thelema, the more one understands that it constitutes a sublime synthesis, and the only one possible, of the teachings of every science, from embryology to history."

-The Method of Thelema


QUOTATION #5

"It will be seen that the formula - 'Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law' has nothing to do with 'Do as you please.' It is much more difficult to comply with the Law of Thelema than to follow out slavishly a set of dead regulations."

-"Eight Lectures on Yoga", "Yama"
FEEL FREE TO LEAVE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THESE QUOTATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR FUTURE TOPICS IN THE COMMENTS.

For more information on these topics check out these links:

* "The Book of the Law"

* Liber II: The Message of the Master Therion

* The Method of Thelema


* "Eight Lectures on Yoga", "Yama"

"Love is the law, love under will."



Recommended books (downloadable pdfs):

Kenneth Grant - Aleister Crowley And The Hidden God
John Moore - Aleister Crowley A Modern Master Extract
Anonymous - Aleister Crowley And The Enchantment Of The Wicked Man


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To Make Bad Luck Go Away


To Make Bad Luck Go Away Cover
At night time, light a small fire in a cauldron or whatever you have available to contain the fire. Write on a piece of paper that is 3" x 3" the words BAD LUCK. Then write down any bad things you do not like in your life right now. Then draw a big X across the paper with a black marker. While doing this you should be thinking of how all these things are going to disappear from your life, never to return. Place the paper in the fire and repeat the following words 3 times...

"Fire, fire burning bright
Turn my darkness into light!
Take away my bad luck ill,
Bring me nothing but good will.
Bad luck came and stayed too long,
Be gone forever, be gone, be gone!
With this fire burning bright,
Bring me good luck, bring me light!
SO MOTE IT BE!"

After repeating these words 3 times, sit for a few minutes and concentrate on the bad luck being gone and the good luck coming your way. When you are done, extinguish the fire.

Also try this free pdf e-books:

Ea Wallis Budge - The Book Of Am Tuat
Meshafi Resh - The Black Book

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