Yoga and Meditation
Almost everyone has experienced the fact that when one starts
concentrating his mind on any immediate object or an idea, the
mind starts wandering. It is very difficult to keep the mind
busy with a single thought. The ancient sages too encountered
the same problems. Arjuna, in Gita had mentioned that
controlling the mind is the impossible thing on the earth.
Hence, he was advised by Krishna that though mind control is
difficult, it can be made silent and steady by regular practice
of vairagya and abhyasa. However, he has warned that yoga is
very difficult for people whose minds are not steady and
controlled. Pantanjali, in Yoga Sutra has emphasized these two
qualities to achieve mind control. Hence these are the very
qualities that make the essence of yoga.
Mind is like a disturbed pond with many impurities. First you
need to stop the inflow of fresh impurities and then remove the
existing impurities to clean the mind. Abhyasa is the one of the
practices for purifying the mind. Dhyana is one of the sub
practices of abhyasa. This is a stage that the person reaches
after practicing concentration for some time. At the start of
dhyana, the mind is steadier and only a single thought about the
object arises in the mind. Now it is safe to say that the state
of dhyana is reached. Here the mind becomes very stable like the
flame of a lamp in the calm atmosphere and its contact with the
object of experience becomes intense and complete.
There are two varieties of dhyana called sagunadhyana or
nirgunadhyana. In the first dhyana, the stillness of mind is
associated with an object of experience which can be experienced
through the sense organs. The second one is completely mental.
It implies complete absorption of mind into itself. Here mind is
not associated with any external object. It becomes completely
still in this state. This mind is supposed to remain still,
silent and sensitive such that it can understand any past,
present and future event that might have happened anywhere in
the universe.