http://intyoga.online.fr/intzone.htm
Sri AurobindoThe Intermediate Zone (1933)All these experiences are of
the same nature and what applies to one            applies to another.
Apart from some experiences of a personal character,            the rest
are either idea-truths, such as pour down into the consciousness
from above when one gets into touch with certain planes of being, or
strong formations from the larger mental and vital worlds which, when
one is directly open to these worlds, rush in and want to use the sadhak
for their fulfilment. These things, when they pour down or come in,
present themselves with a great force, a vivid sense of inspiration
or illumination, much sensation of light and joy, an impression of
widening            and power.The sadhak feels himself freed from the
normal limits, projected            into a wonderful new world of
experience, filled and enlarged and exalted;            what comes
associates itself, besides, with his aspirations, ambitions,           
notions of spiritual fulfilment and yogic siddhi; it is represented
even as itself that realisation and fulfilment. Very easily he is
carried            away by the splendour and the rush, and thinks that
he has realised            more than he has truly done, something final
or at least something sovereignly            true. At this stage the
necessary knowledge and experience are usually            lacking which
would tell him that this is only a very uncertain and            mixed
beginning; he may not realise at once that he is still in the           
cosmic Ignorance, not in the cosmic Truth, much less in the
Transcendental            Truth, and that whatever formative or dynamic
idea-truths may have come            down into him are partial only and
yet further diminished by their presentation            to him by a
still mixed consciousness. He may fail to realise also that           
if he rushes to apply what he is realising or receiving as if it were
something definitive, he may either fall into confusion and error or
else get shut up in some partial formation in which there may be an
element of spiritual Truth but it is likely to be outweighted by more
dubious mental and vital accretions that deform it altogether. It is
only when he is able to draw back (whether at once or after a time)
from his experiences, stand above them with the dispassionate witness
consciousness, observe their real nature, limitations, composition,
mixture that he can proceed on his way towards a real freedom and a
higher, larger and truer siddhi. At each step this has to be done. For
whatever comes in this way to the sadhak of this yoga, whether it be
from overmind or Intuition or Illumined Mind or some exalted Life Plane
or from all these together, it is not definitive and final; it is not
the supreme Truth in which he can rest, but only a stage. And yet these
stages have to be passed through, for the supramental or the Supreme
Truth cannot be reached in one bound or even in many bounds; one has
to pursue a calm patient steady progress through many intervening stages
without getting bound or attached to their lesser Truth or Light or
Power or Ananda. This is in fact an intermediary state, a zone of
transition            between the ordinary consciousness in mind and the
true yoga knowledge.            One may cross without hurt through it,
perceiving at once or at an early            stage its real nature and
refusing to be detained by its half-lights            and tempting but
imperfect and often mixed and misleading experiences;            one may
go astray in it, follow false voices and mendacious guidance,           
and that ends in a spiritual disaster; or one may take up one's abode
in this intermediate zone, care to go no farther and build there some
half-truth which one takes for the whole truth or become the instrument
of the powers of these transitional planes, - that is what happens to
many sadhaks and yogis. Overwhelmed by the first rush and sense of power
of a supernormal condition, they get dazzled with a little light which
seems to them a tremendous illumination or a touch of force which they
mistake for the full Divine Force or at least a very great yoga Shakti;
or they accept some intermediate Power (not always a Power of the
Divine)            as the Supreme and an intermediate consciousness as
the supreme realisation.            Very readily they come to think that
they are in the full cosmic consciousness            when it is only
some front or small part of it or some larger Mind,           
Life-Power or subtle physical ranges with which they have entered into
dynamic connection. Or they feel themselves to be in an entirely
illumined            consciousness, while in reality they are receiving
imperfectly things            from above through a partial illumination
of some mental or vital plane;            for what comes is diminished
and often deformed in the course of transmission            through
these planes; the receiving mind and vital of the sadhak also           
often understands or transcribes ill what has been received or throws
up to mix with it its own ideas, feelings, desires, which it yet takes
to be not its own but part of the Truth it is receiving because they
are mixed with it, imitate its form, are lit up by its illumination
and get from this association and borrowed light an exaggerated value.
There are worse dangers in this intermediate zone of experience. For
the planes to which the sadhak has now opened his consciousness, - not
as before getting glimpses of them and some influences, but directly,
receiving their full impact, - send a host of ideas, impulses,
suggestions,            formations of all kinds, often the most opposite
to each other, inconsistent            or incompatible, but presented in
such a way as to slur over their insufficiencies            and
differences, with great force, plausibility and wealth of argument
or a convincing sense of certitude. Overpowered by this sense of
certitude,            vividness, appearance of profusion and richness,
the mind of the sadhak            enters into a great confusion which it
takes for some larger organisation            and order; or else it
whirls about in incessant shiftings and changes            which it
takes for a rapid progress but which lead nowhere. Or there           
is the opposite danger that he may become the instrument of some
apparently            brilliant but ignorant formation; for these
intermediate planes are            full of little Gods or strong Daityas
or smaller beings who want to            create, to materialise
something or to enforce a mental and vital formation            in the
earth life and are eager to use or influence or even possess           
the thought and will of the sadhak and make him their instrument for
the purpose. This is quite apart from the well-known danger of actually
hostile beings whose sole purpose is to create confusion, falsehood,
corruption of the sadhana and disastrous unspiritual error. Anyone
allowing            himself to be taken hold of by one of these beings,
who often take a            divine Name, will lose his way in the yoga.
On the other hand, it is            quite possible that the sadhak may
be met at his entrance into this            zone by a Power of the
Divine which helps and leads him till he is ready            for greater
things; but still that itself is no surety against the errors           
and stumblings of this zone; for nothing is easier than for the powers
of these zones or hostile powers to imitate the guiding Voice or Image
and deceive and mislead the sadhak or for himself to attribute the
creations            and formations of his own mind, vital or ego to the
Divine.

For this intermediate zone is a region of half-truths - and that by
itself would not matter, for there is no complete truth below the
supermind;            but the half-truth here is often so partial or
else ambiguous in its            application that it leaves a wide field
for confusion, delusion and            error. The sadhak thinks that he
is no longer in the old small consciousness            at all, because
he feels in contact with something larger or more powerful,           
and yet the old consciousness is still there, not really abolished.
He feels the control or influence of some Power, Being or Force greater
than himself, aspires to be its instrument and thinks he has got rid
of ego; but this delusion of egolessness often covers an exaggerated
ego. Ideas seize upon him and drive his mind which are only partially
true and by over-confident misapplication are turned into falsehoods;
this vitiates the movements of the consciousness and opens the door
to delusion. Suggestions are made, sometimes of a romantic character,
which flatter the importance of the sadhak or are agreeable to his
wishes            and he accepts them without examination or
discriminating control. Even            what is true, is so exalted or
extended beyond its true pitch and limit            and measure that it
becomes the parent of error. This is a zone which            many
sadhaks have to cross, in which many wander for a long time and
out of which a great many never emerge. Especially if their sadhana
is mainly in the mental and vital, they have to meet here many
difficulties            and much danger; only those who follow
scrupulously a strict guidance            or have the psychic being
prominent in their nature pass easily as if            on a sure and
clearly marked road across this intermediate region. A           
central sincerity, a fundamental humility also save from much danger
and trouble. One can then pass quickly beyond into a clearer Light where
if there is still much mixture, incertitude and struggle, yet the
orientation            is towards the cosmic Truth and not to a
half-illumined prolongation            of Maya and ignorance.

I have described in general terms with its main features and
possibilities            this state of consciousness just across the
border of the normal consciousness,            because it is here that
these experiences seem to move. But different            sadhaks comport
themselves differently in it and respond sometimes to            one
class of possibilities, sometimes to another. In this case it seems
to have been entered through an attempt to call down or force a way
into the cosmic consciousness - it does not matter which way it is put
or whether one is quite aware of what one is doing or aware of it in
these terms, it comes to that in substance. It is not the overmind which
was entered, for to go straight into the overmind is impossible. The
overmind is indeed above and behind the whole action of the cosmic
consciousness,            but one can at first have only an indirect
connection with it; things            come down from it through
intermediate ranges into a larger mind-plane,            life-plane,
subtle physical plane and come very much changed and diminished
in the transmission, without anything like the full power and truth
they have in the overmind itself on its native levels. Most of the
movements            come not from the overmind, but down from higher
mind ranges. The ideas            with which these experiences are
penetrated and on which they seem to            rest their claim to
truth are not of the overmind, but of the higher            Mind or
sometimes of the illumined Mind; but they are mixed with suggestions
from the lower mind and vital regions and badly diminished in their
application or misapplied in many places. All this would not matter;
it is usual and normal, and one has to pass through it and come into
a clearer atmosphere where things are better organised and placed on
a surer basis. But the movement was made in a spirit of excessive hurry
and eagerness, of exaggerated self-esteem and self-confidence, of a
premature certitude, relying on no other guidance than that of one's
own mind or of the ``Divine'' as conceived or experienced in a stage
of very limited knowledge. But the sadhak's conception and experience
of the Divine, even if it is fundamentally genuine, is never in such
a stage complete and pure; it is mixed with all sorts of mental and
vital ascriptions and all sorts of things are associated with this
Divine            guidance and believed to be part of it which come from
quite other sources.            Even supposing there is any direct
guidance, - most often in these conditions            the Divine acts
mostly from behind the veil, - it is only occasional            and the
rest is done through a play of forces; error and stumbling and
mixture of Ignorance take place freely and these things are allowed
because the sadhak has to be tested by the world-forces, to learn by
experience, to grow through imperfection towards perfection - if he
is capable of it, if he is willing to learn, to open his eyes to his
own mistakes and errors, to learn and profit by them so as to grow
towards            a purer Truth, Light and Knowledge.

The result of this state of mind is that one begins to affirm everything
that comes in this mixed and dubious region as if it were all the Truth
and the sheer Divine Will; the ideas or the suggestions that constantly
repeat themselves are expressed with a self-assertive absoluteness as
if they were Truth entire and undeniable. There is an impression that
one has become impersonal and free from ego, while the whole tone of
the mind, its utterance and spirit are full of vehement
self-assertiveness            justified by the affirmation that one is
thinking and acting as an instrument            and under the
inspiration of the Divine. Ideas are put forward very           
aggressively that can be valid to the mind, but are not spiritually
valid; yet they are stated as if they were spiritual absolutes. For
instance, equality, which in that sense - for yogic Samata is a quite
different thing - is a mere mental principle, the claim to a sacred
independence, the refusal to accept anyone as Guru or the opposition
made between the Divine and the human Divine etc., etc. All these ideas
are positions that can be taken by the mind and the vital and turned
into principles which they try to enforce on the religious or even the
spiritual life, but they are not and cannot be spiritual in their
nature.            There also begin to come in suggestions from the
vital planes, a pullulation            of imaginations romantic,
fanciful or ingenious, hidden interpretations,           
pseudo-intuitions, would-be initiations into things beyond, which excite
or bemuse the mind and are often so turned as to flatter and magnify
ego and self-importance, but are not founded on any well-ascertained
spiritual or occult realities of a true order. This region is full of
elements of this kind and, if allowed, they begin to crowd on the
sadhak;            but if he seriously means to reach the Highest, he
must simply observe            them and pass on. It is not that there is
never any truth in such things,            but for one that is true
there are nine imitative falsehoods presented            and only a
trained occultist with the infallible tact born of long experience
can guide himself without stumbling or being caught through the maze.
It is possible for the whole attitude and action and utterance to be
so surcharged with the errors of this intermediate zone that to go
farther            on this route would be to travel far away from the
Divine and from the            yoga.

Here the choice is still open whether to follow the very mixed guidance
one gets in the midst of these experiences or to accept the true
guidance.            Each man who enters the realms of yogic experience
is free to follow            his own way; but this yoga is not a path
for anyone to follow, but only            for those who accept to seek
the aim, pursue the way pointed out upon            which a sure
guidance is indispensable. It is idle for anyone to expect           
that he can follow this road far, - much less go to the end by his own
inner strength and knowledge without the true aid or influence. Even
the ordinary long-practised yogas are hard to follow without the aid
of the Guru; in this which as it advances goes through untrodden
countries            and unknown entangled regions, it is quite
impossible. As for the work            to be done it also is not a work
for any sadhak of any path; it is not,            either, the work of
the ``Impersonal'' Divine who, for that matter,            is not an
active Power but supports impartially all work in the universe.
It is a training ground for those who have to pass through the difficult
and complex way of this yoga and none other. All work here must be done
in a spirit of acceptance, discipline and surrender, not with personal
demands and conditions, but with a vigilant conscious submission to
control and guidance. Work done in any other spirit results in an
unspiritual            disorder, confusion and disturbance of the
atmosphere. In it too difficulties,            errors, stumblings are
frequent, because in this yoga people have to            be led
patiently and with some field for their own effort, by experience,
out of the ignorance natural to Mind and Life to a wider spirit and
a luminous knowledge. But the danger of an unguided wandering in the
regions across the border is that the very basis of the yoga may be
contradicted and the conditions under which alone the work can be done
may be lost altogether. The transition through this intermediate zone
- not obligatory, for many pass by a narrower but surer way - is a
crucial            passage; what comes out of it is likely to be a very
wide or rich creation;            but when one founders there, recovery
is difficult, painful, assured            only after a long struggle and
endeavour.

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