tm 4,000 TM & the effect of “ahimsa” in the Yoga Sutra
In the Yoga Sutra, the first of the eight limbs of yoga is
called yama. Yama has five aspects, beginning with ahiṁsā, which means
‘non-injury’ or ‘non-violence.’ Mahatma Gandhi made ahiṁsā famous when he
mobilized all of India to free itself from British domination without firing a
shot. Martin Luther King, Jr., the head of the civil rights movement in the
U.S., was one of many who were influenced by Gandhi and his use of ahiṁsā to
achieve social change without violence.
The Yoga Sutra describes what happens when a person is
established in non-injury: “Where non-injury is established, in the vicinity of
that, hostile tendencies are eliminated.” (2.35)
In Sanskrit: ahiṁsā –pratishthāyāṁ tat-sannidhau vaira-tyāgaḥ. The word-by-word
translation is: “Where non-injury (ahiṁsā) is established (pratishthāyāṁ), in
the vicinity (sannidhau) of that (tat), hostile tendencies (vaira) are
eliminated (tyāgaḥ).
st-francis-assisiAccording to the Yoga Sutra, where is
non-injury established? In the state of yoga, which is defined in the second
sūtra of the Yoga Sutra as the complete settling of the activity of the mind.
The settled mind, the mind established in yoga, is free of injury, and the Yoga
Sutra says that for this person the environment becomes free of hostility. St.
Francis of Assisi, for instance, was famous for calming people and even animals
around him by the sheer power of his love. An individual who has a mind full of
peace radiates an influence of peace, and then creates a reality that is
peaceful.
This is where non-violence becomes effective. It is a state of mind that, in
Maharishi’s words, “disallows the birth of an enemy.” When enmity has been
eliminated inside, there is no enemy outside. According to Maharishi, “An enemy
is the lively embodiment of our own weakness.”
meissner-effectThe principle of non-injury is also described in quantum physics
as the Meissner Effect, which shows that a coherent system generates a field
around it that is coherent. Non-coherent fields will not penetrate a coherent
system
.
While it’s possible to understand how this principle applies to
individuals, what would happen if a large group were established in the state
of yoga?
In the summer of 1993, 4,000 individuals gathered in Washington, D.C., to see
if practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique in groups for two months
would affect the crime rate. Dr. John Hagelin, a quantum physicist, predicted
that the crime rate would drop by at least 20%. The chief of police went on the
evening news and said that it would take a snow blizzard in the middle of
summer to accomplish that.
washington-dc-meditation-peace-groupYet, after two months,
public records showed that the crime rate dropped 23%. Since most people’s
paradigm about the nature of reality is based upon classical mechanics, this
experimental result seems unlikely. However, from a quantum perspective, the
Washington, D.C., study follows the same principles as the Meissner Effect and
was described long ago in the Yoga Sutra—“in the vicinity of yoga, hostile
tendencies are eliminated.”
Taking it a step
further, what if throughout our society there were many large groups of
individuals who could do their Transcendental Meditation practice together each
day to heighten the experience of Yoga? Imagine the possibilities. A group of
school children meditate and stress levels and violence go down in the
neighborhood. A group of elderly people meditate together and their city begins
to be more progressive and prosperous. It’s a possibility that could yield
profound results both for the individual and for society at virtually no cost,
and with great “side-benefits” for each of the individuals involved. It’s worth
exploring, isn’t it?https://www.google.com/url…
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