It is the vital push that compels the physical to work. If a person is restless, we say that his body is making the movement. But actually the movement is coming from his vital. If the vital does not act within the body, you will see that the body is all inertia. The body has very, very, very limited light. In the dynamic vital there is much more light. In the aspiring mind there is still more light. In the psychic heart there is abundant light. People consciously care for manifestation because through their ambition, all individuals want to do something. There are very few people on earth who do not want to do something. Yes, they may sit quietly because they are lazy by nature. But if somebody else does something remarkable, immediately desire comes into them and they say, “Oh, if only I could do that!”
When we are in the spiritual life, we do not think like that. If we see that somebody has done something extraordinary, we do not envy him. Either we identify with him and feel that it is we who have done it, or we feel, “It is good for him, but for me something else is necessary; something else will give me more joy. He is the best runner and I am the best singer,” or “I am an aspirant. Let me try to be the best aspirant and let him remain the best singer or best runner.” In this way we are freeing ourselves. We are not competing with anyone. But in the ordinary life, when an absolutely lazy man goes to a football match and sees how dynamic the players are, he thinks, “How I wish to be that kind of player!” But he will not make any effort to become a good player. He really feels that rest is the most important thing, his most favourite thing; but his human ambition makes him want to manifest himself in football.
That is how it is for ordinary human beings. The vital immediately wants to do something, although it knows that the body does not care for the action. Consciously, the individual does not know that his body does not care to do something and his soul does not care to do it; but the moment he sees that somebody has achieved something, he says, “I also have to become that.” All day and night, he has been sleeping, resting; he has been in another world. But when he sees somebody’s achievement, immediately he becomes greedy and feels that he also has to do the same thing.
But spiritual people don’t do this. Either they feel that they have their own goal, or they become one with the doers. When I see that somebody is running the fastest, I really feel that I am the fastest runner. Ask me to run with the fastest runner and I will be nowhere. But when the person runs, I get joy because I can identify with him and feel that it is I who have run the fastest. Or as a seeker, I say that his goal is to become the fastest runner and my goal is to realise God. In that way, the seeker in me is safe. But ordinary men won’t act like that. They will operate in their vital. They will do nothing and, at the same time, the moment they see somebody else achieve something, immediately they will try to grab that achievement. Without working they want to get the same name and fame, the same admiration, as somebody who has earned it. That is what the manifestation is like for ordinary, unaspiring people. But for the sincerely aspiring people, it is different.From:Sri Chinmoy,AUM — Vol.1, No.12, 27 December 1974, Vishma Press, 1974
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