Exploring Inner Space Via Inner Light  and Sound Meditation
By James Bean
Copyright April 2010, All  Rights Reserved 
https://www.Facebook.com/Sa
"The individual soul has  descended from the higher worlds [realms of the Divine] to this city of  illusion. It has descended from the Soundless State to the essence of  Sound, from that Sound to Light, and finally from the realm of Light to  the realm of Darkness. The current of consciousness which is dispersed  in the nine gates of the body and the nine senses must be collected at  the tenth gate (the sixth chakra, the third eye center between the  eyebrows). Therein lies the path for our return. This is the act of  leaving the gates of the sense organs and becoming established in the  soul.
"We travel back from the realm of Darkness to the realm of  Light, from the Light to divine Sound, and from the realm of Sound to  the Soundless State." (Swami Sant Sevi Ji Maharaj, The Harmony of All  Religions, published by Maharshi Mehi Ashram)
Meditation  Practices
"The four practices are gross to subtle in an  ascending order: manas jap and manas dhyana, Dirsti yoga,  Nadanu-sandhana (Sound Yoga), and the Soundless Yoga. The practice of  manas japa (mantra) and manas dhyana (visualization) is the worship of  the (material) qualified (personal) form of God (God perceived as name  and form in the gross realm); the practice of the meditation on the  infinitesimally small point is the worship of the subtle qualified form  of God (God perceived as the infinitesimal point); Concentration on  divine sounds (other than Sar Sabad, the Divine Sound of the beginning,  Word, Logos) is the worship of the qualified Formless Divine. And,  finally, meditation on the Sar Sabad (the Original Divine Sound) is  worship of the Unqualified-Formless (transcendent Godhead)." (Swami Sant  Sevi Ji Maharaj)
My Commentary
The first paragraph above  describes the origin of the soul. The soul is part of the Supreme  Being, the Supreme Soul, in the true realm, ultimate reality. Then the  soul individualized, and incarnated into various coverings or bodies  (mental, akashic, astral and physical) going to various realms, living  out separate existences being dominated by outwardly focused senses. God  is described as the Nameless State or Soundless One. Then there are  realms of Sound and Light, and the relatively dark matter of the  physical universe or multiverse. This is where most of us are, or at  least where we think we are -- this is where own awareness is directed  most of the time. We are aware of the world as we perceive it via the  five senses.
In the second paragraph of Swami Sant Sevi Ji above  we see a reversal of this process during meditation being advocated, an  inversion or going within. The soul, during meditation, begins the  journey back to its Source. By merging into the divine Light, then the  divine Sound, the soul, transcending the physical world, astral, causal,  mental, and etheric realms, eventually returns home. It returns to  itself again as the pure naked soul, it's true Self.
In the Sant  tradition of India, the Path of the Masters of the East, one is trained  to watch and listen for certain inner Lights and Sounds of the various  planes, Auditory and visionary experiences are at the heart of the  meditation practice (Surat Shabda Yoga). In meditation, it can appear  like one is going through a tunnel, or, scenes change from one thing to  another, various colors, lights within lights, lotuses within lotuses.  There are sounds within sounds also. The bell sound morphs into a  conch-shell, or thunder/drums, sitar, flute-like sound, bagpipes, vina,  and so on. Beyond all the "veils" of the physical body and the subtle  bodies associated with the different planes, is the soul. The awareness  of the soul travels from this outer world of the five senses through  astral, causal, mental, and etheric realms, and back to itself again.  Beyond all these veils of darkness, Light, and Sound, is the Soundless  One, the Supreme Soul.
The third paragraph discusses the  meditation techniques used to "get there from here".
1) Manas  jap: "manas" means mental, and "jap" or, "jappa" refers to the chanting  of mantras, sacred names. Thus, manas jap is the practice of mentally  repeating names of God with the "tongue of thought". This practice is  also called Simran, and the Sufis call it Zikhr. This is a spiritual  exercise one can do within the privacy of one's mind throughout the day  to remember God in all of our activities, and this is also the first  technique in Sant Mat meditation.
2) Manas dhyana, is the  technique of mentally visualizing a Form of God or the image of one's  Guru. This is a visual form of relaxation, and the repetition of sacred  names is the auditory equivalent. One repeats the name their teacher  gives them while visualizing. Together, these are a powerful  combination, making it possible to get centered and also helps to  prepare one for the next stage. "Coupled with this physical stillness  and ceaseless repetition of God's name [Simran practice], the next step  is to contemplate the Light within." (Yogani Mataji)
Using Your  Spiritual Senses To See and Hear Within
3) Dirsti yoga: the Yoga  of Inner Light: "the practice of the meditation on the infinitesimally  small point [bindu] is the worship of the subtle qualified form of God  (God perceived as the infinitesimal point)." Other terms for this  "infinitesimal point" are: Single Eye, Third Eye Center, Seat of the  Soul, and Tishra Til. As one is in the darkness repeating divine names  and visualizing the form of their Guru or Ideal, Light may manifest  itself: flashes of Light, shimmering Light, lights of various colors,  clouds of Light, sparks or fireflies, stars, suns, moons, etc.... This  is being centered at the Third Eye, which is like a Door or Portal to  the worlds beyond. This is our own "Hubble Space Telescope Within", so  to speak. In meditation, one simply gets relaxed and centered, and  notices a shift from an awareness of the five-sense world to our  "Within" or Inner Space. With a certain amount of concentration, with  the help of the sacred name or names one is repeating, along with  visualizing the form of the teacher, one sees the inner Light or Lights.  Seeing Light beyond the darkness is what it means to "reach the Third  Eye Center". At the time of initiation, one's teacher reveals all the  details of what kinds of visions and Lights one should contemplate.  Certain sights in Inner Space are associated with particular planes and  serve as markers along the way. "At first, Mataji pointed out, there  will be only darkness but eventually Light will appear in the form of  either small flashes or small star-like points. In any case, one should  focus on the radiance, keeping one's Simran intact and allowing the  Light to draw the soul inward." (Yogani Mataji)
4) As one's  concentration develops at the Third Eye Center, one begins to make the  transition from lower to higher, from outer to inner, from visualization  of a form, to real-Light-seen, from the sound of Simran words being  repeated in one's mind, to actually hearing Divine Sound. Even as  contemplating real inner Light is preferable to visualizations, there is  meditation upon inner Sound, which is viewed as a higher or more  advanced stage of practice than the repetition of mantra-names. There is  a higher "Name of God" or "Mantra" one can encounter. The Divine Word  is the True Name or Naam. Nadanu-sandhana: Concentration on divine Sound  -- the Yoga of Inner Sound: These are inner Sounds. At the time of  initiation one is given instruction on meditating upon certain sounds  within. There are many sounds in the cosmos, but certain ones will  attract the soul, pulling it up to higher levels of awareness. "The most  important step, Mataji said, is to listen to the Sound that issues  forth from the Light. It is this Internal Music which will numb the body  and allow the consciousness to leave its ordinary dwelling. By riding  this Current of Light and Sound, like a fish going upstream, the soul  will be able to go back to its original Home." (Yogani Mataji)
5)  Soundless Yoga: Beyond form is Formlessness. Beyond Sound is the  Soundless State, God, the Nameless One, the Soundless One, the Nondual  Ocean of Love. Reaching this State of Oneness or Union with God, the  Beloved, is the goal of the practice known as Surat Shabda Yoga.
Yogani  Mataji once said: "On the journey within, the soul must be guided by a  true master so as not to be detained in any of the lower illusory  regions." Why the need for a living master and Initiation into the  Secrets of Surat Shabda Yoga? Of course, if it wasn't for living  masters, recent masters and past masters, we would not be having this  conversation. There would be no Golden Rule, no Sermon on the Mount, no  Four Noble Truths, no Eightfold Path, no Precepts of Ahimsa, no Rumi  poetry, no satsang discourses or hymns of Saints, no living Path of the  Masters. There would be no understanding or organized path teaching this  as a divine possibility, that human beings can taste something of  heaven even now during this present life, in this present moment of  time, as a result of following specific methods of spiritual practice  communicated from one generation to the next.
There is a  spiritual principal that: "we are influenced by the company we keep".  When we associate with those who experience Divine Light and Sound,  there is a spiritual influence which helps us to open up to Light and  Sound too. In India, this is called Satsang (association with the  eternal Truth or God). We get together to hear the teachings and  meditate as a group. There is a Group Energy that provides a boost or  jump-start that helps open us up to our own experience. "Where two or  three are gathered in My Name, I Am in their midst", as the saying goes.  Even better than meditating with other initiates is to meditate with a  living master or other advanced meditators, and this is what initiation  is, along with complete guidance and instruction on how to meditate, as  well as on how to integrate this sort of meditation practice with one's  daily life in a balanced and healthy sort of way. It is a "far out" form  of meditation, but we need not meditate all day long or be "blown  away", made off-center as a result of the experience. We are simply  adding another level of consciousness to our daily existence. Along with  the waking state, the unconscious state of deep sleep, and the  dream-state, we are adding the meditative state of inner Light and Sound  - Surat Shabda Yoga, to our daily schedule and spend some time in Inner  Space, what some call "the Fourth State of Consciousness." ////////

 
