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Our
Friend the Vital Force
Excerpt from: "Hatha Yoga" - By Yogi Ramacharaka
Many people make the
mistake of considering Disease as an entity—a real thing—an opponent of
Health.
This is incorrect. Health is the natural state of Man, and Disease is
simply
the absence of Health. If one can comply with the laws of Nature he
cannot be
sick. When some law is violated, abnormal conditions result, and
certain
symptoms manifest them-selves, and to which symptoms we give the name
of some
disease. That which we call Disease is simply the result of Nature's
attempt to
throw off, or dislodge, the abnormal condition, in order to resume
normal
action.
We are so apt to consider,
and speak of, Disease as an entity. We say that "it" attacks us—that
"it" seats itself in an organ—that it runs it's [sic] course—that
"it" is very malignant—that "it" is quite mild—that
"it" persistently resists all treatment—that "it" yields
readily—etc., etc. We speak of it as if it were an entity possessed of
character, disposition and vital qualities. We consider it as something
which
takes possession of us and uses its power for our destruction. We speak
of it
as we would a wolf in a sheepfold—a weasel in the chicken roost-a rat
in the
granery—and go about fighting it as we would one of the animals above
mentioned. We seek to kill it, or at least to scare it away.
Nature is not fickle or
unreliable. Life manifests itself within the body in pursuance to well
established laws, and pursues its way, slowly, rising until it reaches
its
zenith, then gradually going down the decline until the time comes for
the body
to be thrown off like an old, well-used garment, when the soul steps
out on its
mission of further development. Nature never intended that a man should
part
with his body until a ripe old age was attained, and the Yogis know
that if
Nature's laws are observed from childhood, the death of a young or
middle age il
person from disease would be as rare as is death from accident.
There is within every
physical body, a certain vital force which is constantly doing the best
it can
for us, notwithstanding the reckless way in which we violate the
cardinal
principles of right living. Much of that which we call disease is but a
defensive action of this vital force-a remedial effect. It is not a
downward
action but an upward action on the part of the living organism. The
action is
abnormal, because the conditions are abnormal, and the whole
recuperative
effort of the vital force is exerted toward the restoration of normal
conditions.
The first great principle
of the Vital Force is self-preservation.
This principle is ever in evidence, wherever life exists. Under its
action the
male and female are attracted—the embryo and infant are provided with
nourishment—the mother is caused to bear heroically the pains of
maternity-the
parents are impelled to shelter and protect their offspring under the
most
adverse circumstances—Why? Because all this means the instinct of
race-preservation.
But the instinct of
preservation of individual life is equally strong. "All that a man hath
will he give for his life," said the writer, and while it is not
strictly
true of the developed man, it is sufficiently true to use for the
purpose of
illustrating the principle of self-preservation. And this instinct is
not of
the Intellect, but is found down among the foundation stones of being.
It is an
instinct which often overrules
Intellect. It makes a man's legs "run away with him" when he had
firmly resolved to stand in a dangerous position—it causes a
shipwrecked man to
violate some of the principles of civilization, causing him to kill and
eat his
comrade and drink his blood—it has made wild beasts of men in the
terrible
"Black Hole"—and under many and varying conditions it asserts it
supremacy. It is working always for life—more life—for health-more
health. And
it often makes us sick in order to make us healthier-brings on a
disease in
order to get rid of some foul matter which our carelessness and folly
has
allowed to intrude in the system.
This principle of
self-preservation on the part of the Vital Force, also moves us along
in the
direction of health, as surely as does the influence within the
magnetic needle
make it point due north. We may turn aside, not heeding the impulse,
but the
urge is always there. The same instinct is within us, which, in the
seed, causes
it to put forth its little shoot, often moving weights a thousand times
heavier
than itself, in its effort to get to the sunlight. The same impulse
causes the
sapling to shoot upward from the ground. The same principle causes
roots to
spread downward and outward. In each case, although the direction is
different,
each move is in the right
direction. If we are wounded, the Vital Force begins to heal the wound,
doing
the work with wonderful sagacity and precision. If we break a bone, all
that
we, or the surgeon may do, is to place the bones into juxtaposition and
keep
them there, while the great Vital Force knits the fractured parts
together. If
we fall, or our muscles or ligaments are torn, all that we can do is to
observe
certain things in the way of attention, and the Vital Force starts in
to do its
work, and drawing on the system for the necessary materials, repairs
the
damage.
All physicians know, and
their schools teach, that if a man is in good physical condition, his
Vital
Force will cause him to recover from almost any condition excepting
when the
vital organs are destroyed. When the physical system has been allowed
to run
down, recovery is much more difficult, if, indeed, not impossible, as
the
efficiency of the Vital Force is impaired and is compelled to work
under
adverse conditions. But rest assured that it is doing the best it can
for you,
always, under the existing conditions. If Vital Force cannot do for you
all
that it aims to do, it will not give up the attempt as hopeless, but
will
accommodate itself to circumstances and make the best of it. Give it a
free
hand and it will keep you in perfect health—restrict it by irrational
and
unnatural methods of living, and it will still try to pull you through,
and
will serve you until the end, to the best of its ability, in spite of
your
ingratitude and stupidity. It will fight for you to the finish.
The principle of accommodation is manifested
all through
all forms of life. A seed dropped into the crevice of a rock, when it
begins to
grow either becomes squeezed into the shape of the rock, or, if it be
strong
enough, splits the rock in twain and attains its normal shape. So, in
the case
of Man, who manages to live and thrive in all climates, and conditions,
the
Vital Force has accommodated itself to the varying conditions, and,
where it
could not split the rock, it sent out the sprout in a somewhat
distorted shape,
but still alive and hardy.
No organism can become
diseased while the proper conditions for health are observed. Health is
but
life under normal conditions, while disease is life under ah-normal
conditions.
The conditions which caused a man to grow to a healthy, vigorous
manhood are
necessary to keep him in health and vigor. Given the right condition,
the Vital
Force will do its best work, but given imperfect conditions the Vital
Force
will be able to manifest but imperfectly, and more or less of what we
call
disease ensues. We are living in a civilization which has forced a more
or less
unnatural mode of life upon us, and the Vital Force finds it hard to do
as well
for us as it would like. We do not eat naturally (1 rink naturally;
sleep
naturally; breathe naturally; or dress naturally. We "have done those
things which we ought not to have done, and we have left undone those
things
which we ought to have done, and there is no Health within us "—or, we
might add, as little health as we can help.
We have dwelt upon the
matter of the friendliness of the Vital Force, for the reason that it
is a
matter usually overlooked by those who have not made a study of it. It
forms a
part of the Yogi Philosophy of Hatha Yoga, and the Yogis take it
largely into
consideration in their lives. They know that they have a good friend
and a
strong ally in the Vital Force, and they allow it to flow freely
through them, and
try to interfere as little as possible with its operations. They know
that the
Vital Force is ever awake to their well-being and health, and they
repose the
greatest confidence in it.
Much of the success of
Hatha Yoga consists of methods best calculated to allow the Vital Force
to work
freely and without hindrance, and its methods and exercises are largely
devoted
to that end. To clear the track of obstructions, and to give the
chariot of the
Vital Force the right of way on a smooth clear road, is the aim of the
Hatha
Yogi. Follow his precepts and it will be well with your body.
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