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"The world is about to bestow its secrets if only we know how to seek them, how to give them the necessary impetus. There is no limit to the power of man's thinking."
SWAMI VIVEKANANDA
Until now, those who wished to learn the method of the Sages had to go to Asia and find a "guru," or Master, from whose lips they could receive the sacred wisdom of the ancients. Many who set out in search of the truth were disappointed, for the "gurus" are not numerous and each can instruct only a small number of pupils; the hard-won secrets of the seers cannot be passed on to just anyone as an ordinary commodity. The pupil must be pure-hearted and agree to undergo a long period of preparation to receive the secrets of Universal Power. With the help of this book, however, you can learn the secrets of the Masters without having to undergo years of study abroad. In a short period of time, simply, you will be able to hold the key to powers so amazing that in centuries past, they were even considered magical. This book offers you the practice of Yoga simplified and modified to conform to Western thought, with applications to the practical matters of daily life.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023
Amazing Secrets of the Masters
of the Far East
Robert Collier
Edition 2023 by ©David De Angelis
All Rights Reserved
CHAPTER 1 - POWER WITHIN YOUR GRASP
CHAPTER 2 - THE WISDOM OF THE MASTERS
CHAPTER 3 - THE POWER OF THOUGHT
CHAPTER 4 - DHARANA—METHOD OF THE MASTERS
CHAPTER 5 - THE FIRST SECRET
CHAPTER 6 - THE SECOND SECRET
CHAPTER 7 - THE THIRD SECRET
CHAPTER 8 - THE FOURTH SECRET
CHAPTER 9 - THE FIFTH SECRET
CHAPTER 10 - THE SIXTH SECRET
CHAPTER 11 - THE SEVENTH SECRET
CHAPTER 12 - THE ASANAS—FOR A SOUND BODY
CHAPTER 13 - BUDDHISM
CHAPTER 14 - KUNDALINI YOGA by Sri Swami Sivananda
CHAPTER 15 - THE YOGI IDEAL MAN OF CULTURE
CHAPTER 16 - YOGI TEMPLES
GLOSSARY OF ORIENTAL TERMS AND NAMES
For century upon century men have spent their strength and their substance in pursuit of a golden dream. Each age has had a different name for that dream: in olden days it was the philosopher's stone, the Fountain of Youth, Eldorado, the Seven Cities of Cibola; in our own time we call it success, or happiness. Today more millions seek it than ever before, yet in the competitive jungle only a handful seem to be able to find it. Whenever we draw close it melts away, to reappear in the distance, a tantalizing, unattainable will-o'-the-wisp.
Must contentment forever elude us while incessantly it beckons us on? Is this a world where the few are favored and the many are doomed to waste their lives in self-doubt and despair?
Truly our days are passed in worry and trembling. In the summer of our lives we toll mightily, for we know the winter will come. Yet, however hard we labor, our supply does not grow. We are as diligent as ants; and as helpless and obscure in the face of adversity.
We are small; still, inside our hearts each of us has a dream of greatness. It whispers to us that we have tremendous potentialities stored up within, and that, if we knew how to bring them forth, we should be able to rise above our circumstances.
Perhaps it is more than a dream. Sometimes It seems so strong and deep that surely a power mightier than ourselves must have put it there to remind us that we need not be the humble creatures we were born—that security and happiness are our birthright. If only we could find a way to realize our dream of fortune and achievement! If only somehow, somewhere, there were some method, that, faithfully persevered in, would help us to find ourselves and make ourselves the men and women we want to be!
AN ANCIENT METHOD OF MASTERY
Is such a method a fantasy, a mythical philosopher's stone? Yes, says the cynic. But, throughout the East, and in enlightened quarters in the West, loud and numerous are the voices that answer with a resounding no! No, a wonderful method definitely exists, and has existed for thousands of years! It was discovered by the Masters of the Far East, the devout holy men dwelling in the remote vastnesses of India and Tibet, in Ceylon and China.
Ages ago the Ancients probed into the heart of Nature and came to understand its innermost mysteries. Not only did the Masters peer through the very fabric of the Universe, animate and inanimate, but they also uncovered the secret principles that rule men's lives. The lore of these Masters enabled them to perform almost incredible feats and attain Heaven on earth. Even today their disciples can gain all the good things a mortal could hope for, drive sickness from their bodies and prolong their youth for great spans of years, win freedom from fear and worry, and lead supremely blissful lives.
MYSTIC CIRCLES OF THE ORIENT
Until the present time, those who wished to learn the method of the Masters had to travel to Asia and find a guru, or teacher from whose lips they might receive the sacred wisdom of the ancients. Most of these seekers of the truth have met with disappointment, for the gurus are not many in number and each may instruct only a few pupils; the hard-won secrets of the seers may not be passed on to anyone like common merchandise. The man or woman who is accepted for initiation into the mystic circles of the Orient must first acquire a sound knowledge of Sanskrit, the ancient Asiatic language in which the lore of the yogis is taught; the pupil must be pure in heart, and must be willing to undergo a long period of preparation for receiving the secrets of Universal Power.
With the help of this book, however, you can learn the secrets of the Masters without years of study in a foreign land. In only a short while you can hold in your hands the key to powers so amazing that in ages past they were regarded as nothing short of magical. For this book offers you the practices of yoga simplified and brought into conformity with Western ways of thinking, with applications to practical, everyday matters. It follows the principle of the Svetasvatara Upanishad: "Devotion is to be paid to numerous schools and teachers, and the nectar is to be drawn from each of them, as the bee takes nectar from many flowers." It is based upon the teachings of Raja, Karma, and Hatha Yoga as they appear in the Sacred Books of the East, and embodies the profoundest lessons of Gautama Buddha, Patanjali, Swami Vivekananda, Ramakrishna, Mahatma Gandhi, and other Great Masters of the Orient who have lighted torches of wisdom to guide man's faltering footsteps to knowledge and happiness.
RESULTS COME QUICKLY
By applying the wisdom of the Far East, as expounded in this book, you have within your grasp the means to make all of your dreams come true. You can learn to invoke the Law of Supply so that your pockets will never be empty. You can learn to tap immeasurable resources of genius that lie hidden in your subconscious mind— resources that will enable you to forge ahead in your job and increase your earnings tenfold, or found a new business that will bring you success beyond your fondest hopes. You can gain wealth and health and social success; all you want and more.
And don't think there is anything magical involved in acquiring these powers for yourself. It is simply a matter of learning the hidden principles that the Masters have discovered through thousands of years of research and meditation, and applying them for yourself. Results will come quickly as you grow in your powers. You will have immediate, incontrovertible evidence that you can make yourself the happy, effective person you want to be.
The powers of the Master Yogins can easily be yours, if you proceed along the safe and tested ways explained in this book. Here you will find no abracadabra or hocuspocus, for it is the author's intention to help the reader; not to mystify him. You will not be taught how to charm snakes or do the Indian rope trick, for these are for the most part frauds; practiced by simple tricksters in the hope of earning a few annas. But you will learn the laws of psychic energy and mental control that have made the seers of the Far East masters of men since time immemorial.
YOGIC POWERS BRING FAME AND HEALTH
I know of many renowned persons who have learned some of the lore of the Masters and are practicing it right in our own country, and winning fabulous success. One is Yehudi Menuhin, a great concert violinist whose name is world-famous; his concerts are sold out weeks in advance when he appears at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Several of America's favorite screen stars would not think of going on a Hollywood set without practicing meditation as it will be explained in later chapters; for this preparation permits them to enter into their roles as though they were actually the persons whose parts they are playing. The famed screen actress Gloria Swanson, a woman who has reached the middle years, still has the charm, beauty, and suppleness of body of a young girl; thanks to her participation in yogic practices.
Living in the United States today are several famous British novelists—Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, and Gerald Heard—men whose books have sold millions of copies and whose scenarios bring fabulous prices from the motion picture studios. Some of the novels they have written have been translated into a dozen foreign languages, and are recognized as world classics in the authors' own lifetimes. These men are profound students of Vedanta, one of the great branches of the wisdom of the Masters of the Far East; the inner enlightenment they derive from their studies has enabled them to release their powers fully and completely, and gain not merely self-fulfillment, but universal acclaim.
RESCUED FROM FAILURE
I could cite many instances of businessmen who have been helped to success through a knowledge of the wisdom of the Orient, but I shall content myself to mention just one who is known to me personally. This man is a publisher with offices located in New York City. The incredibly successful concern he heads grosses millions of dollars annually, and his biography appears in the current issue of Who's Who; yet only ten years ago this man's business did not exist and he was an obscure individual in the employ of another. When this publisher went into business, he was dismayed by the obstacles that blocked his path. His capital was small and his competitors were big. He was worried about losing the little he possessed, and when a decision had to be made, either momentous or trivial, he did not know which way to turn. He was so disturbed that he frequently suffered from digestive upsets and could not sleep at night.
One year he made a business trip to California, and it changed his life. There he was introduced to a swami—not a smooth-tongued fraud but one of the genuine Masters of Oriental Wisdom in the tradition of Sri Aurobindo, Vivekananda, and Ramakrishna, who are revered by millions in India today. This swami did not advertise his wisdom or exact a high price for it; he offered simply to teach a few disciplines of the East because, like all true yogis, he was pledged to the service of his fellow man.
The publisher placed himself in the swami's hands for a few weeks. He learned a number of simple meditative postures and exercises such as will be explained later in this book; the principles of dharana, or the Indian technique of concentration, were taught him, and he was given an insight into certain methods of controlling his emotions and releasing latent thought power. When he returned to New York City, he continued to practice these disciplines and soon mastered them. All his worries fell away from him. What had seemed hard had now become easy. His nights and days were suddenly untroubled, and he was able to attack his work with new gusto. He never lacked for ideas or the wisdom to make decisions.
Recently I had lunch with this publisher. In the past he had always complained of the state of his health or of business conditions. But now, on the contrary, he exuded confidence and good cheer. He told me that the banks were only too eager to invest money in his enterprise; successful authors were coming to him from all over the country and begging him to take their books, for they knew he could make more money for them than their present publishers.
A man in his early sixties, he had the vigor and the clear visage of a youth in his twenties. He declared that he could never repay his debt to the swami, but that each year he sent a tithe of his earnings to the holy man in India, where he had his ashram,
or spiritual retreat; the holy man distributed this money to the poor.
A SCIENCE ANYONE CAN MASTER
Some people are fortunate enough to discover a few of the secrets of the Masters by themselves, through intuition. The results are often stupendous. Every now and then you will hear of somebody who goes into Wall Street with a few hundred dollars and in a matter of months is a wealthy man. Or there is the case of the young man who is still at college, yet is able to make a scientific discovery or an invention that his professors never even conceived was possible, and reaps a harvest of gold while contributing benefits for all mankind. A middle-aged lady who never put pen to paper earnestly before, suddenly writes a play that stays on Broadway for years, achieving a success that wrings feelings of envy from authors who have written thirty plays, all of which never earned as much in royalties as her single drama.
You can equal or surpass the accomplishments of these happy people without relying upon a chance discovery or an accidental stroke of luck. Long ago the Masters of the Far East reduced luck to a science—a science that anyone can master if he applies himself to it diligently and persistently, and in the right spirit. "Infinite energy," said the Swami Vivekananda, "is at the disposal of everyone, if he only knows how to, get it. The yogi has discovered the science of getting it."
No—you need not dread the future, or run before misfortune like an ant scurrying for cover. Peace of mind, financial security, and contentment can be yours almost for the asking, once you know the rules of the Masters and observe them faithfully.
Follow the guidance of the Masters of the Orient, and you can be the architect of your own circumstances. Cement and bricks are nothing but bricks and cement until the architect makes them something more than that. Yesterday, knowing little, with the building materials that were given to you, you could make only a hovel. Tomorrow, knowing much, you will be able to build a stately palace that towers to the skies!
India has ever been a land of magic and mystery to the West. In older days its fabled treasures of precious metals, ivory, and spices lured Columbus, Vasco da Gama, and other bold mariners across forbidding spans of uncharted ocean. Those who reached their destination found a strange and wondrous land, enormously wealthy not only in material things but in priceless treasures of the spirit.
Many conquerors have stamped across the soil of the subcontinent of India. Two thousand years ago, it was Alexander the Great, who, in 327 B.C., thrust into western India and set up Greek fortresses there. Later Tamerlane and the Moguls came; then the French, the Dutch, and the British, who warred with one another for the rich spoils of India. For a long time the conquerors held sway. But, as all history relates, not one of them lasted. In the end the ancient faith corroded the chains of the enslavers; their armed might and materialistic beliefs dissolved like a mist in the morning sun.
The strength of the Orient is the strength of the spirit. We Westerners place our reliance in cannon and aircraft and atomic bombs; the Oriental leans confidently upon the resources of his soul. His victories are greater than ours, even though his means appear invisible. The people of India, by a massive effort of the spirit, were able to compel the British to leave their shores. Their leader was no general, but a holy man, a mahatma, and the doctrine he preached was one of the purest spirituality. Mahatma Gandhi was able to free 400,000,000 Indians from almost two centuries of British rule.
The psychic force of the Hindus is difficult for us to understand, for we Westerners, though we pay lip-service to spirituality, believe primarily in things that we can see and feel. Ours is the cult of the concrete; we worship machines and money and science. In our society the high priests are the technical specialists, the experts who are the masters of our machines, our finances, and our science.
EXPERTS IN THE SPIRITUAL
The Hindus are specialists, too. They are experts in the spiritual as we are in the material. For four thousand years they have been studying the spirit and the unseen forces that make and mold the universe. They have discovered hidden laws and powers whose existence our most advanced scientists have only begun to suspect. They have achieved a degree of control over their bodies and spirits that has been possible only to a handful of men in the West.
Reports of the incredible powers of the yogis, or sages of India, appear often in the daily press of the United States and Europe. We have all heard of holy men who are able to lie upon beds of nails for days and then arise with their flesh uncut. We read of Indian holy men who allow themselves to be completely buried, without air, food, or drink for days; when they are exhumed, they soon come back to life, apparently unharmed by their superhuman experience.
YOGIS ARE LONG-LIVED
If you go to India, you may see for yourself the accomplishments of its seers. On some of the holy days, fairs are held in many sections of India. At these celebrations, anyone is welcome to converse with the sages who are present, surrounded by hordes of adulants who have come from near and far to pay their respects to these saintly figures.
These seers, whose lives are devoted to the cultivation of the spirit, are often women as well as men. Some of them, you will learn, are, despite their youthful appearance and well-developed bodies, persons of great age. It is not unusual to see a sage who hardly looks more than forty years of age, yet is reported to be well past the century mark. These gifted people look forward with confidence to many more years of life. They believe that with purity of spirit they gain great power over their physical bodies.
In India, you will hear reports of persons who have lived as much as two hundred years or possibly longer, vying with the patriarchs of the Old Testament in longevity. These persons have withdrawn from ordinary life, and spend their days in meditation. Many are said to dwell in caves in the Himalayas. They are considered the most knowledgeable of gurus, or teachers, and it is related that they possess the power to foretell and to control the future, and also to transfer their thoughts.
YOGA IS SOUL CONTROL
Some readers will naturally greet such stories with skepticism, nor can I blame them. We are prone to disbelieve things that are in contradiction to the evidence of our own senses. Still, one should not rule out the possibility of truth here. People pooh-poohed Edison's statement that he would one day be able to light up a whole city simply by throwing a switch. Today the truth of his assertion is so manifest that nobody bothers to think twice about the wonder of electricity. Our recently discovered ability to send words and pictures in full color through the air would probably have struck our forebears as witchcraft of a high order. The yogis, by the way, do not lay claim to supernatural powers; on the contrary, they merely state that they have mastered the scientific control of the psyche or soul—in their own language, katvalya.
YOGA SUTRAS OF PATANJALI
One of the most significant books of the Orient is called the Yoga Sutras or Yoga Aphorisms of Patanjali. Patanjali, a deeply revered teacher of the Far East, lived before the birth of Christ. Although his very identity is obscured by the mists of time, his brief book shows perennial vigor. It has been studied by millions in India, and has shown them the way to greater power. We shall have occasion to refer to it again and again in the course of this work, for it is both profound and to the point.
BRAHMA, SOUL OF THE UNIVERSE
The word yoga means "yoke"—the yoking of the individual to the great forces of Nature and the Universe. Patanjali, Shankara, and other Masters of the Far East teach that all the Universe is one. In the words of the Upanishads, the sacred Vedic books of ancient India, "There is one Ruler, the Spirit that is in all things, who transforms his one form into many." This Ruler we of the West call God, the Hindus Brahma. In the Hindu view, He is not only the Master of the Universe—He is the Universe itself, and all things in it. The Judaeo-Christian Scriptures, which describe God as the Creator of all things, are in fundamental agreement with this concept.
The Masters of the East teach that the Universe is an infinite reservoir of power and energy. Its force and persistence blaze forth in the eternally burning sun and stars, in the millions of giant galaxies and nebulae that illuminate the endless stretches of space. Not only does this vast Power show itself to us in heavenly bodies of enormous magnitude; if we look at the smallest thing that is, the atom, we observe in the ceaseless motion of its protons and electrons the same boundless, inexhaustible energy, the soul of Brahma. We discover it wherever we turn: in the blade of grass and in the flower that grows from a tiny, life-laden seed, flourishes for a season, then dies, and is born again. We see this regenerative force in the life of man, who, though he is born to die, can create other creatures in his image. It is with Brahma, the Soul of the Universe, that the yogis seek union.
THE POWER OF SUPPLY IS IN MAN
The Universe is Brahma, but man, being part of the Universe is Brahma, too, once he can realize the potentially divine within him.
The yogis say—to quote one of the greatest of them, the Swami Vivekananda—that "desires and wants are in man, that the power of supply is also in man." The Yoga Sutras and the other Sacred Books of the East lay down a system for achieving union with the Infinite and drawing upon this infinite treasure-house of supply. They teach that the subtle or refined has great power over the gross, or, as we would say it, that mind has power over matter. This we observe every moment of our lives. It is the mind that regulates and commands the body. It is our organized thought processes, converted into dynamos, steam shovels, locomotives, airplanes, tractors and other mechanical contrivances, that have subdued Nature and made her obedient to our beck and call.
But the Masters of the Far East go even further. They declare that by refining our minds, we can become capable of direct contact with prana, or Infinite Energy, which science tells us is the true essence of matter. Drawing upon the Energy of the Universe, not only does our mind become capable of infinitely greater performance— unleashing energies we never dreamed we possessed—but we can bend matter to our will.
POWERS EASILY ACHIEVED
We have already seen that yoga, as practiced by the Masters, is no easy discipline. It has many branches, and one has to devote a lifetime to its study if he would perfect himself in it. (For that matter, perfection cannot be absolutely attained, although the greatest of the Masters have come close to it.)
The arduousness of yoga need not discourage us, however. We shall content ourselves in this book to gain only some of the minor powers. They are easily achieved and are enough to bring the fulfillment of most earthly wishes. True, what we shall attempt would be little to one of the Master Yogins of the Far East—but it will be much for us if it brings us happiness and the realization of long-cherished dreams.
For the Masters, the ability to wrest of life the physical things they want of it is only the first step. As they proceed in their studies, over the years, they go much further than we who live amid the hustle and bustle of a materialistic culture can ever hope to. They learn, through purification of the body and control of the mind, to transcend human consciousness and to achieve union with Brahma. They acquire powers that they term siddhis, and that we in the West have traditionally considered occult. Most Americans have heard of these powers and are curious about them, so we shall glance at them before launching directly into our study of the method of the Masters.
As a fine magnifying glass concentrates the rays of the sun and produces a fire, so the refined mind of the yogi concentrates the Infinite Energy of the Universe and causes it to do his bidding. Through meditation and soul control, he becomes a channel of
Universal Power, which he is able to regulate and make flow where he will. In the language of India, this ability is known as samyama. The true Masters learn, by degrees, to make samyama upon all of Nature or any part of it.
The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali tell us that by making samyama upon the hollow of his throat, a yoga can cause hunger to disappear. When a yogi makes samyama upon udana, the Hindu name for a vital nerve-current in the lungs, he can make his body lighter and perform many remarkable feats. This, the Masters tell us, was the power exercised by Jesus when He walked upon the waters. It is the way they explain the well-known ability of the holy men of the Far East to rest upon a bed of nails for long periods of time or walk along a pathway strewn with hot coals. Many of the Masters have been able to foretell the hour of their death; according to Patanjali's Sutras, through control of the nerve-current udana a yogi can die at will.
FORCE OF THE SPIRIT
A great variety of other samyamas lie at the disposal of the adept, according to Patanjali. A certain form of the body is known as akasa; this is its immaterial form, or, as we would put it, the astral body. By making samyama upon the akasa, the yogi is able to separate this spiritual body from the body of flesh, bone, and blood; he now has the power to travel where he will, in the spirit.
In recent years a number of Europeans have come to India and scaled Everest, Annapurna, Godwin Austen, and other great mountains that tower over 25,000 feet to the sky in the north of that ancient land. Possibly you have read of the intrepid men who toiled up the craggy sides of those stony giants. Marvel as we will at the heroism and fortitude of the mountain climbers—their achievements are regarded as epochal in the West—the holy men of northern India and Tibet find them not only unimpressive, but hardly worthy of comment. They declare that they have been to the summits of these mountains on countless occasions, and offer detailed descriptions of the peaks and their surrounding area as evidence. They say that the efforts expended by the Westerners were praiseworthy, yet completely unnecessary—an astral body is considerably lighter than a physical one, and travels so much faster!
THE QUALITY OF QUIETNESS
The Masters of the Far East also possess the ability to make themselves invisible. When the Tashi Lama, one of the great religious leaders of Tibet, passed some time in India, he gave a remarkable demonstration of his supernormal abilities.
Oddly enough, he had been asked by some visitors whether he possessed any supernatural powers, and his only reply had been a smile. Not long afterward, the gentlemen of his household and his personal bodyguard, who had been standing all about him, suddenly became aware that he had disappeared. Terror gripped their hearts, for they were entrusted with his safety; if any harm came to him, they would have to answer with their lives.
Now began a mad search. Every inch of the garden, the house, and the surrounding grounds was ransacked, yet no trace of the missing lama could be found. Many minutes passed as the soldiers milled about, looking for their lost leader, when suddenly one of the officers perceived that the Tashi Lama was sitting in the midst of the wild melee, a smile of playful amusement on his benign features.
Had the lama actually vanished? Not really; but he had, by the exercise of yogic powers, obliterated his form so that his followers could not see him. Patanjali has said that "by making samyama on the shape or outline of the body, its form becomes impossible to perceive, and the eye is deprived of its capacity for seeing." We of the West might ascribe it to the superb quietness that the yogi is capable of; he can all at once sink into such immobility that his presence is lost, blending indistinguishably with his surroundings. In this state of quietness, he refreshes his mind and body.
THOUGHT TRANSFERENCE AND YOGA
By making samyama on the "light of the heart," says Patanjali—that is, by the use of psychic powers which have been the property of gifted or saintly persons in all ages—the yogi gains a knowledge of the remote or faraway. He is able to observe events that are occurring in other cities or even in countries on the other side of the world.
Yogis can also telegraph mental messages to people in distant places. This, of course, is the power we know as telepathy. In the West telepathy is now receiving serious scientific study and the experiments of Professor J. B. Rhine of Duke University have satisfied many that telepathy is a distinct possibility; in the Orient it is taken for granted, and proofs of its reality have been offered for thousands of years.
Telepathy or thought transference is also an instance of samyama—in this case, samyama upon the mind of another. Most well-read persons are familiar with the writings of Maxim Gorky, one of Russia's outstanding novelists of the early twentieth century; his books The Lower Depths and Mother have been made into masterful motion pictures. Gorky was fond of relating an experience he once had with a Hindu, in Caucasia. The Indian showed the novelist an album with metallic pages that were quite blank. As Gorky examined the pages, shapes and colors began to appear on them. As he looked, they took definite forms, and he realized he was beholding the great cities of India, just as though their pictures were actually printed on the pages.
Gorky, you may recall, was a died-in-the wool materialist, and he examined the book to see if it had been treated with chemicals that would make the pictures appear when the book was opened. He was convinced that he had encountered an authentic case of thought transference.
MIRACLE OF TELEKINESIS
The Yoga Sutras state that telekinesis also becomes possible as one's mastery grows. Telekinesis (derived from two Greek words signifying "far motion") is the moving or control of objects at a distance, without recourse to physical means. The Army is now able, by radio, to guide unmanned robot aircraft and aerial torpedoes to a selected goal. The yogi, according to Patanjali, can achieve the same result by concentration.
That the brain does produce electrical energy is a well-known fact. Every day, in their examining rooms, brain specialists measure the electrical charges within the craniums of their patients to determine whether any pathological condition is present. Can we say it is inconceivable that certain gifted persons, through secret techniques, should be able to amplify the discharge of electricity in their brains and bring it to bear upon objects outside their bodies? The great electrical wizard Charles Steinmetz has said: "The most important advance in the next fifty years will be in the realm of the spiritual—dealing with the spirit—thought."
THE SADDHU AND THE TRAIN