The aspirant is also advised to practise moderation in his daily habits—in eating, sleeping, recreation, etc. Extremes are to be avoided because they hinder the practice of meditation. By living a life of such moderation, and gathering up all his forces and directing them towards meditation upon the Atman, the aspirant gradually transcends the senses and intellect and merges himself in the blissful Atman. Once attained, he finds that the bliss of the Atman is incomparable, that there is no gain greater than the Self. And having thus reached perfect union with the Self, the Yogi no more descends into ignorance or delusion and does not relish any more the pleasures of the senses. | The aspirant is also advised to practise moderation in his daily habits—in eating, sleeping, recreation, etc. Extremes are to be avoided because they hinder the practice of meditation. By living a life of such moderation, and gathering up all his forces and directing them towards meditation upon the Atman, the aspirant gradually transcends the senses and intellect and merges himself in the blissful Atman. Once attained, he finds that the bliss of the Atman is incomparable, that there is no gain greater than the Self. And having thus reached perfect union with the Self, the Yogi no more descends into ignorance or delusion and does not relish any more the pleasures of the senses. |