What is Consciousness? A
Mystic’s Perspective
Oct 6, 2015 isha Sadhguru
Jaggi Vasudev
Sadhguru answers a question
on what raising human consciousness means, and speaks about the
fundamental intelligence that makes life happen.
Q: Namaskaram, Sadhguru.
What is the relationship between the work we are doing in Isha,
including our sadhana, and raising human consciousness?
Sadhguru: “Consciousness”
is a highly abused word, used in many different ways. First of all,
let me define what we refer to as consciousness. You are a
combination of many things. As a piece of life, as a body, you are
a certain amount of earth, water, air, fire, and akash or ether.
And there is a fundamental intelligence that puts all these things
together in a particular way to make life out of it. The same
ingredients that are lying there as mud sit here as life – what an
incredible transformation! There is a profound and unimaginable
level of intelligence that can make simple things like air into
life. If the air stops, life goes.
Whether it is a tree, a
bird, an insect, a worm, an elephant, or a human being – just about
anything is made up of the same simple material. We call this
intelligence that makes life happen “consciousness.” The only
reason why you experience life and aliveness is because you are
conscious. If you are unconscious, you do not know whether you are
alive or dead. If you are in deep sleep, you are alive but you do
not know it.
You actually can neither
raise consciousness, nor can you bring it down. We only use the
expression of “raising consciousness” against the following
background: if you are strongly identified with your physical body,
the boundaries of what is you and what is not you are distinctly
clear. In this state, you experience yourself as a separate
existence. This means you are in survival mode, which is what every
other creature is in too. When you identify yourself as the body,
the boundaries of who you are, are 100% fixed.
Even in the physical realm,
the more subtle something is, the more the boundaries disappear. We
are breathing the same air, which also includes some moisture. As
we breathe, we constantly exchange air and water. We have no
problems with this exchange between us because we are not
identified with the air and the water. But we are identified with
our body and consider it as ourselves, so we do not want anyone to
transgress the boundaries of our body.
What we refer to as
consciousness is a much subtler dimension of who you are, and it is
commonly shared by everyone. It is the same intelligence that is
turning food into flesh in me, in you, in everyone. If we move
people from being identified with the boundaries of their physical
body to a deeper dimension within themselves, their sense of “me”
and “you” decreases – “you” and “I” seem to be the same. This means
consciousness has risen on a social level.
Essentially, we do not
raise consciousness. We raise your experience so that you become
more conscious. All of us are conscious to some extent. The
question is to what degree you are conscious. You do not have to
raise your consciousness – you have to raise yourself to find
access to it and experience it. Consciousness is there all the
time. If it was not, you would not be able to convert your breath
and your food into life. You are alive – that means you are
conscious. But so far, you only have minimal access. As your access
improves, your sense of boundary expands. If you become identified
with consciousness, you will experience everyone as yourself. This
is what yoga means.
The word “yoga” means
union. Human beings are trying to experience this sense of union in
so many ways. If it finds a very basic expression, we call it
sexuality. If it finds an emotional expression, we call it love. If
it finds a mental expression, it gets labeled as greed, ambition,
conquest, or simply shopping. If it finds a conscious expression,
we call it yoga. But the fundamental process and longing are the
same. That is, you want to include something that is not you as a
part of yourself. You want to obliterate the distance or the
boundaries between you and the other.
Whether it is sexuality or
a love affair, ambition or conquest – all you are trying to do is
make what is not you a part of yourself. And so with yoga. Yoga
means becoming one with everything, or in other words, obliterating
the boundaries of who you are. Instead of talking about it, instead
of intellectualizing it, we are looking at how to raise your
experience from the physical aspect of who you are to a dimension
beyond the physical.
This is what Shambhavi does
– taking you to a twilight zone. You are still rooted in the body
but you are beginning to touch a dimension beyond, so that your
experience of life is not limited to your body – you experience it
as a larger phenomenon. This is raising consciousness. It means you
experience all the people around you as a part of
yourself.
The material that makes the
five fingers on your hand was in the earth some time ago – now it
is your five fingers. What was on your plate yesterday as food was
not “you.” But you ate it, and today you experience it as a part of
yourself. You are capable of experiencing anything as a part of
yourself if only you include it into your boundaries. You cannot
eat the entire universe. You have to expand your boundaries in
different ways.
Expanding the sensory
boundaries in such a way that if you sit here, the entire universe
is a part of yourself – this is yoga; this is raising
consciousness. We are not doing it philosophically or ideologically
but experientially, using a technological process that everyone can
make use of. Why a technology is – the nature of a technology is
such that it will work for whoever is willing to learn to use it.
You do not have to believe it; you do not have to worship it; you
do not have to carry it on your head. You just have to learn to use
it.