SIX
ANOTHER
cause of the
inefficiency of the senses as gatherers of knowledge, is insufficient use. We do
not observe sufficiently or with sufficient attention and closeness and a sight,
sound, smell, even touch or taste knocks in vain at the door for admission. This
tamasic inertia of the receiving instruments is no doubt due to the
inattention of the buddhi, and there- fore its consideration may seem to
come properly under the training of the functions of the intellect, but it is
more convenient, though less psychologically correct, to notice it here. The
student ought to be accustomed to catch the sights, sounds, etc., around him,
distinguish them, mark their nature, properties and sources and fix them in the citta
so that they may be always ready to respond when called for by the memory. Page-220
that
concentration on several things at a time is often indispensable. When people
talk of concentration, they imply centring the mind on one thing at a time; but
it is quite possible to develop the power of double concentration, triple
concentration, multiple concentration. When a given incident is happening, it
may be made up of several simultaneous happenings or a set of simultaneous
circumstances, a sight, a sound, a touch or several sights, sounds, touches
occurring at the same moment or in the same short space of time. The tendency of
the mind is to fasten on one and mark others vaguely, many not at all or, if
compelled to attend to all, to be distracted and mark none perfectly. Yet this
can be remedied and the attention equally distributed over a set of
circumstances in such a way as to observe and remember each perfectly. It is
merely a matter of abhyāsa or steady natural practice. Page-221 |