knows something, hears some voices. And at the same time
the body
holds it. And it
does not know where and how it can escape it or escape from itself.
A man on the threshold of the new world has exactly the same experience. He has
heard the music of heaven, and the dull songs of the earth
no longer touch or move
him; or, if they do touch and move him, it is because they speak to him of heavenly
sounds, of the unattainable, of the unknown. He has experienced a feeling of an
extraordinary
EXPANSION
of consciousness, when for a moment
everything
was clear to
him, and he cannot reconcile himself to the slow
earthly
working of the brain.
Moments of 'sensation of infinity' are connected with quite special emotions.
In 'theosophical' literature and in books on occultism it is often said that,
passing
into the 'astral' world man begins to see
new colours,
colours which are not in the solar
spectrum.* This symbolism of the new colours of the 'astral sphere' conveys precisely
the thought about the
new emotions
which a man begins to experience together with
the sensations of an expanded consciousness - 'the ocean being absorbed by a drop'.
This is the 'incredible bliss' of which mystics speak, the
heavenly light
which the saints
'see', the 'new sensations' which poets experience. Even conversational
psychology
connects 'ecstasy' with completely unusual
new
sensations, inaccessible and unknown
to man in ordinary life.
This sensation of
light
and infinite joy is experienced in moments of expansion of
consciousness (the unfolding of the
mystic lotus
of the Indian Yogi), at the moment of
the sensation of infinity which produces, at the same time, the sensation
of darkness
and boundless terror.
What does it mean?
How to reconcile the sensation of light with the sensation of darkness, the sensation
of joy with the sensation of terror? Can it be simultaneous? Does it happen
simultaneously?
It does happen and it has got to be so. Mystical literature gives us examples of this.
The simultaneous sensation of light and darkness, joy and terror seems to symbolize
the strange duality and contradiction of human life. It can happen to a man who is very
sharply divided, with one side of his nature gone far into the 'spirit'
and the other side
deeply sunk in 'matter', i.e. in illusion, in unreality; with too profound a faith in the
reality of the unreal.
* Although it must be remembered that we see
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