Robert:
That beautiful line you quoted below with "a bird of fire" is part of
a larger poem from Sri Chinmoy featured on the Mahavishnu Orchestra
album, "Birds of Fire".
That poem inspired me greatly when I first started meditating in '73
and to this day remains a favorite spiritual prose in my collection.
Back then John McLoughlin was a big devotee of Sri Chinmoy so he must
have dedicated the album name accordingly.  An all time jazz fusion
classic as well.


-- In [email protected], Robert Gimbel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

            
Samadhi: The Height of Divine Consciousness'Above the toil of life my
soul is a bird of fire winging the Infinite'.   Samadhi is a spiritual
state of consciousness. There are various kinds of samadhi. Among the
minor samadhis, savikalpa samadhi happens to be the highest. Beyond
savikalpa comes nirvikalpa samadhi, but there is a great gulf between
these two: they are two radically different samadhis. Again, there is
something even beyond nirvikalpa samadhi called sahaja samadhi.
>   In savikalpa samadhi, for a short period of time you lose all
human consciousness. In this state the conception of time and space is
altogether different. For an hour or two hours you are completely in
another world. You see there that almost everything is done. Here in
this world there are many desires still unfulfilled in yourself and in
others. Millions of desires are not fulfilled, and millions of things
remain to be done. But when you are in savikalpa samadhi, you see that
practically everything is done; you have nothing to do. You are only
an instrument. If you are used, well and good; otherwise, things are
all done. But from savikalpa samadhi everybody has to return to
ordinary consciousness.
>   Even in savikalpa samadhi there are grades. Just as there are
brilliant students and poor students in the same class in school, so
also in savikalpa samadhi some aspirants reach the highest grade,
while less aspiring seekers reach a lower rung of the ladder, where
everything is not so clear and vivid as on the highest level.
>   In savikalpa samadhi there are thoughts and ideas coming from
various places, but they do not affect you. While you are meditating,
you remain undisturbed, and your inner being functions in a dynamic
and confident manner. But when you are a little higher, when you have
become one with the soul in nirvikalpa samadhi, there will be no ideas
or thoughts at all. I am trying to explain it in words, but the
consciousness of nirvikalpa samadhi can never be adequately explained
or expressed. I am trying my best to tell you about this from a very
high consciousness, but still my mind is expressing it. But in
nirvikalpa samadhi there is no mind; there is only infinite peace and
bliss. There nature's dance stops, and the knower and the known become
one. There you enjoy a supremely divine, all-pervading, self-amorous
ecstasy. You become the object of enjoyment, you become the enjoyer
and you become the enjoyment itself.
>   When you enter into nirvikalpa samadhi, the first thing you feel
is that your heart is larger than the universe itself. Ordinarily you
see the world around you, and the universe seems infinitely larger
than you are. But this is because the world and the universe are
perceived by the limited mind. When you are in nirvikalpa samadhi, you
see the universe as a tiny dot inside your vast heart.
>   In nirvikalpa samadhi there is infinite bliss. Bliss is a vague
word to most people. They hear that there is something called bliss,
and some people say that they have experienced it, but most
individuals have no firsthand knowledge of it. When you enter into
nirvikalpa samadhi, however, you not only feel bliss, but actually
grow into that bliss.
>   The third thing you feel in nirvikalpa samadhi is power. All the
power of all the occultists put together is nothing compared with the
power you have in nirvikalpa samadhi. But the power that you can take
from samadhi to utilise on earth is infinitesimal compared with the
entirety.
>   Nirvikalpa samadhi is the highest samadhi that most realised
spiritual Masters attain. It lasts for a few hours or a few days, and
then one has to come down. When one comes down, what happens? Very
often one forgets his own name and age; one cannot speak or think
properly. But through continued practice, gradually one becomes able
to come down from nirvikalpa samadhi and immediately function in a
normal way. Generally, when one enters into nirvikalpa samadhi, one
does not want to come back into the world again. If one stays there
for eighteen or twenty-one days, there is every possibility that the
soul will leave the body for good. There were spiritual Masters in the
hoary past who attained nirvikalpa samadhi and did not come down. They
attained their highest samadhi, but found it impossible to enter into
the world atmosphere again and work like human beings. One cannot
operate in the world while in that state of consciousness; it is
simply impossible. But there is a
>  divine dispensation. If the Supreme wants a particular soul to work
here on earth, even after twenty-one or twenty-two days, the Supreme
can take that individual into was another channel of dynamic, divine
consciousness and have him return to the earth-plane to act. Sahaja
samadhi is by far the highest type of samadhi. In this samadhi one is
in the highest consciousness but, at the same time, one is able to
work in the gross physical world. One maintains the experience of
nirvikalpa samadhi while simultaneously entering into earthly
activities. One has become the soul and, at the same time, is
utilising the body as a perfect instrument. In sahaja samadhi one does
the usual things that an ordinary human being does. But in the inmost
recesses of the heart one is surcharged with divine illumination. When
one has this sahaja samadhi, one becomes the Lord and Master of
Reality. One can go at his sweet will to the Highest and then come
down to the earth-consciousness to manifest.
>   Even after achieving the highest type of realisation, on very rare
occasions is anyone blessed with sahaja samadhi. Very few spiritual
Masters have achieved this state. For sahaja samadhi, the Supreme's
infinite Grace is required. Sahaja samadhi comes only when one has
established inseparable oneness with the Supreme, or when one wants to
show, on rare occasions, that he is the Supreme. He who has achieved
sahaja samadhi and remains in this samadhi, consciously and perfectly
manifests God at every second, and is thus the greatest pride of the
Transcendental Supreme.
> 
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