Sahasrara

Real Yoga

Chapter 8

Is there a beginning and an ending? Do we really go on forever? Or is there just this one life time?

Reincarnation

How did this theory of reincarnation come about? It is after all just a theory. It cannot really be proved. Do you believe in it because it was taught to you by someone or because it makes sense. Does it make sense only because it is repulsive, even subconsciously, to think that everything ends with this one life? Is it man's way of fulfilling a desire for his own eternity?

The theory of reincarnation also gives rise to other issues and questions. Under hypnosis, people have been able to re–trace past lives, or at least, so they believe. How, in fact, is it possible for a person living in our times to unearth objects hidden several centuries ago behind the cornerstone of a fireplace in a certain village in a country that the modern–day discoverer may never even have visited? And then go on to explain in detail what the object is and why it was hidden there in the first place? Pro–reincarnation literature is full of many well–documented cases of this sort.

Scriptural writings throughout the world make reference to reincarnation. Although Christians, as a rule, do not profess belief in it, the Bible does mention one of the 12 disciples answering Jesus' question Who do ye say I am? with the words, You are Elias returned. Belief in reincarnation was quite widespread in Biblical and early Christian times.

Although we may never fully know the truth behind reincarnation, a good way of thinking of it, is as Ramana Maharshi taught, You cannot remember your own birth, and you will not remember your own death — you are always here.

This approach makes much more sense, since we know that while alive in this body and mind, we have an attributable consciousness. Our consciousness is filled with ideas, thoughts, concepts — all attributes that anchor us to this state of Impure Consciousness. Yogis, however, always seek Pure Consciousness, that state without attributes. They want that state while still remaining in full awareness of it. This is possible through the experience of Satchitananda.

Apart from this, the very nature of our present state of consciousness would make it impossible for us to exist as an entity after death, since beyond our present consciousness there is only Pure Consciousness and nothing else at all.

But this is not such a bad thing, is it? After all, in a state of deep sleep, our present consciousness ceases and in fact, everything else also ceases. In order to know or be aware of these states of death and deep sleep, one must attain one of the higher stages of Samadhi. Upon death, after we have shuffled off this mortal coil and done away with the brain–mind–thought connection, we once again enter the state of Pure Consciousness, but we remain without awareness of this state.

Let us assume for a moment that there is no such thing as reincarnation. Such an assumption begs the question about the origin of all these past lives that people are so sure they experience even in our times. Some clues to this may be found in the Hindu scriptures that speak about the Akashic Records, a sort of book that records every thought and every deed of every individual. Now instead of considering the Akashic Records to be an actual book, let us think about it as a part of the universal consciousness that retains in its memory, everything that has ever occurred, down to the minutest details. Would it not then be possible, for just anyone of us, to tune into that consciousness and tap into a part of the record that took place, say, in 18th century when a young girl hid an object under a cornerstone of a fireplace? Could we not tune into that little girl's actual state of consciousness itself, literally becoming that child in a specific memory frame?

One must not forget that scientists are only now beginning to discover the fantastic power of the mind. However, much before the theory of reincarnation, even before the advent of religions or myths, the ancient Yogis were well aware of the oneness of mind, and they knew also, that by tuning in to the right station, or simply aimlessly twirling the dial of their inner mind–receiver, they could pick up the most fabulous information. This could be what happens when a person believes that he or she actually was that girl who, two centuries earlier, hid an object behind that brick in the fireplace.

When the mind unfolds, by accident, in an untrained initiate, he or she steps into a world or worlds never before experienced and the visions, both beatific and demonic, seen in those dimensions, seem very real to him or her. If, unlike our familiar dream visions, these mind experiences were to spill into the waking state of objective reality, the experience would be seen to take place in the person's very room or on a hill or in the sky. It is then that a link is created between the mind vision and our objective reality and the person undergoing the experience actually believes the vision to be as true and real as the surrounding objective reality, even long after it has vanished.

The entire Universal Mind is filled with dimensions that are normally unthinkable to us. Once in a while, these dimensions may become apparent and experienced. The Astral plane, for instance, resides within our minds, yet when we experience it, it seems to be real as our waking world of objective reality. This led to the fire and brimstone vision of the afterlife that has impassioned the sermons of preachers in a vast variety of Christian belief systems. The Astral plane is in fact home to various bat–eared, whip–tailed little monsters and all sorts of sulphurous worlds. Dante's Inferno, for instance, seems directly inspired by visions from the Astral plane.

Yogis, however, know that these worlds are unreal and mere hallucinatory milestones strewn along the path towards Pure Consciousness. There are also other dimensions, like Sri Yukteshwar's Planet of Hiranyaloka, as well as other subtle ethereal planes that are home to the likes of Babaji. In order to see Babaji or the others who inhabit these subtle dimensions, one must be so still that not even a breath of mental disturbance takes place. However, one must never forget, that no matter how real the experience may seem, all these worlds and dimensions are mere products of the mind and nothing else. They are essentially no different from the dream state — a mere mental formation which appears real until one awakens to a another state of consciousness, such as what we like to call the real world.

The great Siddhi Powers that some people may unconsciously attain, trap them into believing that what they see is true. Even highly developed Yogis who attain these siddhi powers and can actually put them to work in the waking world, must give them up, for in the ultimate analysis, they are nothing but traps. They are the last traps set by the greatest illusionist of them all, Maya. All this relinquishing, renouncing or giving up must be accomplished before one can enter the Fourth State of Consciousness, Turiya.

So where does all this leave reincarnation? I think where it belongs. To those who wish to believe in it, and to those who have had experiences which make it appear all too real to them. One can only throw off the gross state of body and impure consciousness; when the time is ripe, one might take on another form. Whether one remembers the previous form, even when one has a tough time remembering one's own birth in the present life, is of little importance. And in the case where one does remember one form or another, one can never really be sure if it is a mere memory retrieved by tapping into the Akashic Record, or instigated by the strong desire to cling to the reassuring belief that one has existed at sometime in the past and will therefore continue to exist at sometime in the future.

The Yogi is far more concerned with the here and now. To while away our time looking into the past or dreaming about the future, is to waste this present moment — and this is the only moment we have. We should learn to make good use of it. To the Yogi, the here and now is best used by ever seeking unity with the Atman, since the rest of life will then take care of itself.

Most people can work only so hard and then must rest or some how find diversion. The Yogi is no different. In the beginning the time required for work is just a few short minutes a day, but as awareness of the SELF unfolds increasingly, the Yogi lavishes increasing amounts of time on it, until he reaches the Fourth State of Consciousness. This state of consciousness, where one is ever united with the Paramatman in a fusion known as the Fourth State of Consciousness or Turiya. In that fourth state it is experienced in full blown Pure Consciousness as Satchitananda.

The Yogi is far more concerned with the here and now.
The Yogi is far more concerned with the here and now.

Chapters


Chapter 1: ConsciousnessGod Pure Consciousness Choiceless Awareness Krishnamurti Srimat Bhagavata Brahmaloka paramanu mansions objective reality Dharana Concentration Abhyasa Dhyana Contemplation Satori zen Sabikalpi Samadhi Nirvikalpa satchitananda being ever existent being ever conscious being ever blissful Patanjali Sahaj dharma discipline
Chapter 2: Magic, Hallucinations, Visions and the Real ThingPatanjali Siddhi Jesus LSD Aliens fakirs chitta vritti nirhoda annihilates all mental fluctuation Fourth State Pure Consciousness Truriya SatChitAnanda Transcendental Astral maya divine power levitation
Chapter 3: KarmaLaw of Synchronicity Atman Higher Self
Chapter 4: The Silence of MounaYantra mantra Ramana Maharshi Patanjali Chitta Vritti Nirhoda Paramatman total and complete annihilation of all mental fluctuations
Chapter 5: Sex and the YogiSheaths Koshas Physical Mental Astral Causal Ideational Atman Pure Consciousness Judeo Christian Gordian Knot Shakespeare Kundalini Shakti Kriya Tantra Tantric Moksha Liberation celibacy Yoni Lingam Zen Buddhists Ida Pingala Sushumna Jordan Ganges land of milk and honey pituitary pineal glands YHVH
Chapter 6: The SoulAkashic records Karma Moksha Liberation Sacrament of Penitence Confession Ramana Maharshi Jesus
Chapter 7: The Holy TrinityTrimurthy Brahma Vishnu Shiva Christ Jesus New Testament Sattvic Jains Ahimsa nonviolence
Chapter 8: ReincarnationBible Jesus Christ Ramana Maharshi Pure Consciousness Satchitananda Samadhi Akashic Records Astral Sri Yukteshwar's Planet of Hirinyaloka Babaji Siddhi Powers Akashic Record Turiya
Chapter 9: The 9 Planes of RealityTuriya consciousness Astral Maya avidya Atman Yantra schizophrenic Akashic Record Samadhi Satchitananda
Chapter 10: The Parting of the Red SeaSwami Gitananda Nadis Pingala Ida Sushumna Canal Kriya Coccyx Kundalini Shakti Star of Bethlehem Ajana Third Eye Pancreatic Nerve The River Jordan The Manger Navel Center Christ Consciousness Patanjali Abhyassa of the Chitti Vritti Total annihilation of all mental fluctuation 144000 Revelations Alpha Gamma Gamma Betta Yantra Yoga 999 666 Sri Yukteswar Dwapara Yuga Kali Yuga chakras satchitananda
Chapter 11: The Philosophy of KlesasBuddhism Shakti Prakritti Purusha Maya Illusion Consciousness Karma Kosa pratyahara choiceless awareness satchitananda chitti vritti annihilation of mental fluctuations Pure Consciousness discipline
Chapter 12: Conclusionsatchitananda Moksha Turiya pure consciousness Pratyahara Hridian center Sahaja chitta vritti
God Speaks: Introduction
God Speaks: A Play In One Act
God Speaks: More Heavenly Theater
God Speaks: God Is Amused
God Speaks: God Speaks About Health and Some Asian Remedies

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Articles by Swami Harinanda and Yogi Karmananda are © 2026 and are licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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