English >> Compilations from the Works of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother >> Other Compilations |
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Towards Perfect Health Selections from the writings of the Mother and Sri Aurobindo
About Towards Perfect HealthThis compilation focuses on the health of the body and its necessary role in the total transformation of the being as part of the manifestation of a divine life on earth. The material has been organised into sections that explain the importance of a healthy and conscious body reflecting an inner harmony and consecration, the origin and causes of illness, how the right attitude towards sleep, food, physical culture, and medicine, for example, can make the body healthier, and the secret of perfect health in the practice of Sri Aurobindo's integral yoga. REVIEWHealth is a subject of perennial interest, given the precarious balance of human existence. Much has been written and debated on the subject and each is useful in its own place. But nowhere does one find the depth and wideness of vision as in the writings of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. This vision includes all details, putting each in its just measure, right proportion, and true relation to the total scheme of things. Each one has his own idea and finds out suitable sentences from Sri Aurobindo's writings to support his views. Those who oppose such views can also find suitable sentences from his writings. That is the way mutual opposition works. Nothing can be truly done until Sri Aurobindo's total view of things is taken. 10 October 1954 Words of the Mother. CWM 13: 22 It is not always safe to apply practically to oneself what has been written for another. Each sadhak is a case by himself and one cannot always or often take a mental rule and apply it rigidly to all who are practising the yoga. What I wrote to X was meant for X and fits his case, but supposing a sadhak with a different (coarse) vital nature unlike X were in question, I might say to him something that might seem the very opposite, "Sit tight on your lower vital propensities, throw out your greed for food—it is standing as a serious obstacle in your way; it would be better for you to be ascetic in your habits than vulgarly animal in this part as you are now." To one who is not taking enough food or sleep and rest in the eagerness of his spirit, I might say, "Eat more, sleep more, rest more, do not overstrain yourself or bring an ascetic spirit into your tapasya." To another with the opposite excess I might speak a contrary language. Each sadhak has a nature or turn of nature of his own and the movement of the yoga of two sadhaks, even where there are some resemblances between them, is seldom exactly the same. Letters on Yoga SABCL 22-24: 859-60 Dr Alok Pandey |