A Devotee : “I find it is extremely difficult for a householder to realize God. How few people can lead the life you prescribe for them! I haven’t found any.”
Sri Ramakrishna : “Why should that be so? I have heard of a deputy magistrate named Pratap Singh. He is a great man. He has many virtues: compassion and devotion to God. He meditates on God. Once he sent for me. Certainly there are people like him.
“The practice of discipline is absolutely necessary. Why shouldn’t a man succeed if he practises sadhana? But he doesn’t have to work hard if he has real faith — faith in his guru’s words. Once Vyasa was about to cross the Jamuna, when the gopis also arrived there, wishing to go to the other side. But no ferry-boat was in sight. They said to Vyasa, ‘Revered sir, what shall we do now?’ ‘Don’t worry’, said Vyasa. ‘I will take you across. But I am very hungry. Have you anything for me to eat?’ The gopis had plenty of milk, cream, and butter with them. Vyasa ate it all.
Then the gopis asked, ‘Well, sir, what about crossing the river?’ Vyasa stood on the bank of the Jamuna and said, ‘O Jamuna, if I have not eaten anything today, then may your waters part so that we may all walk to the other side.’ No sooner did the sage utter these words than the waters of the Jamuna parted. The gopis were speechless with wonder. ‘He ate so much just now,’ they said to themselves, ‘and he says, “If I have not eaten anything . . .” ! ‘ Vyasa had the firm conviction that it was not himself, but the Narayana who dwelt in his heart, that had partaken of the food.
“Sankaracharya was a Brahmajnani, to be sure. But at the beginning he too had the feeling of differentiation. He didn’t have absolute faith that everything in the world is Brahman. One day as he was coming out of the Ganges after his bath, he saw an untouchable, a butcher, carrying a load of meat. Inadvertently the butcher touched his body. Sankara shouted angrily, ‘Hey there! How dare you touch me?’ ‘Revered sir,’ said the butcher, ‘I have not touched you, nor have you touched me. The Pure Self cannot be the body nor the five elements nor the twenty-four cosmic principles.’ Then Sankara came to his senses. Once Jadabharata was carrying King Rahugana’s palanquin and at the same time giving a discourse on Self-Knowledge. The king got down from the palanquin and said to Jadabharata, ‘Who are you, pray?’ The latter answered, ‘I am Not this, not this — I am the Pure Self.’ He had perfect faith that he was the Pure Self.
“‘I am He’, ‘I am the Pure Self’ — that is the conclusion of the jnanis. But the bhaktas say, ‘The whole universe is the glory of God.’ Who would recognize a wealthy man without his power and riches? But it is quite different when God Himself, gratified by the aspirant’s devotion, says to him, ‘You are the same as Myself.’ Suppose a king is seated in his court, and his cook enters the hall, sits on the throne, and says, ‘O King, you and I are the same!’ People will certainly call him a madman. But suppose one day the king, pleased with the cook’s service, says to him: ‘Come, sit beside me. There is nothing wrong in that. There is no difference between you and me.’ Then, if the cook sits on the throne with the king, there is no harm in it. It is not good for ordinary people to say, ‘I am He’. The waves belong to the water. Does the water belong to the waves?
“The upshot of the whole thing is that, no matter what path you follow, yoga is impossible unless the mind becomes quiet. The mind of a yogi is under his control; he is not under the control of his mind. When the mind is quiet the prana stops functioning. Then one gets kumbhaka. One may have the same kumbhaka through bhaktiyoga as well: the prana stops functioning through love of God too. In the kirtan the musician sings, ‘Nitai amar mata hati!’ (“My Nitai dances like a mad elephant!”) Repeating this, he goes into a spiritual mood and cannot sing the whole sentence. He simply sings, ‘Hati! Hati!’ When the mood deepens he sings only, ‘Ha! Ha!’ Thus his prana stops through ecstasy, and kumbhaka follows.
“Suppose a man is sweeping a courtyard with his broom, and another man comes and says to him: ‘Hello! So-and-so is no more. He is dead.’ Now, if the dead person was not related to the sweeper, the latter goes on with his work, remarking casually: ‘Ah! That’s too bad. He is dead. He was a good fellow.’ The sweeping goes on all the same. But if the dead man was his relative, then the broom drops from his hand. ‘Ah!’ he exclaims, and he too drops to the ground. His prana has stopped functioning. He can neither work nor think. Haven’t you noticed, among women, that if one of them looks at something or listens to something in speechless amazement, the other women say to her, ‘What? Are you in ecstasy?’ In this instance, too, the prana has stopped functioning, and so she remains speechless, with mouth agape.
“It will not do merely to repeat, ‘I am He, I am He.’ There are certain signs of a jnani. Narendra has big protruding eyes. (Pointing to a devotee) He also has good eyes and forehead.
“All men are by no means on the same level. It is said that there are four classes of men: the bound, the struggling, the liberated, and the ever-free. It is also not a fact that all men have to practise spiritual discipline. There are the ever-free and those who achieve perfection through spiritual discipline. Some realize God after much spiritual austerity, and some are perfect from their very birth. Prahlada is an example of the ever-free.
“Eternally perfect sages like Prahlada also practise meditation and prayer. But they have realized the fruit, God-vision, even before their spiritual practice. They are like gourds and pumpkins, which grow fruit first and then flowers.