II      The Psychological Meaning of Soma

 BOOK 9 of the Rig Veda contains 114 hymns to Soma. Soma is presented
variously as a god, an ambrosia of immortality drunk by gods, and a ritual
elixir with spiritual powers consumed by human beings. Our main interest
here is what Soma means in terms of archetypal psychology, and especially
what it symbolizes at the level of spiritual consciousness, meditation,
contemplation and the like.

In the Vedas, Soma — the drink and the god — is associated with a
vivifying, quickening and strengthening of consciousness.  Because
consciousness itself may be directed in many ways (e.g., sensation,
thought, contemplation) so too the gifts of Soma are manifold.  Here the
reader is encouraged simply to read a few of the Hymns of Book 9.  Good
examples include Hymns 1, 4, 28, 36, 81, 86 and 100.

The Soma principle evidently adds to human Consciousness an affective
dimension of intoxication, delight, joy and pleasure. As a god, Soma is
associated with the Moon (which beautifies objects by reflecting the Sun’s
light). Soma also has parallels with the Greek god, Dionysius.

Two important myths are associated with Soma.  In one, the powerful deity
Indra (a sky god and counterpart of Zeus) drinks hefty amounts of Soma in
order to gain sufficient strength and resources to defeat the primal
serpent, Vrtra. Vrtra is the source of the evils that afflict humanity (or,
symbolically, that which oppose the integrity of the human psyche).

In another myth, the Asuras (good divinities) defeat the Devas (demonic
powers) in a war to see who will have access to Soma, the elixir of
immortality. This myth resembles the war between the Olympians and the
Titans in Greek mythology: psychologically, the Asuras symbolize the more
virtuous elements of the psyche, and the Devas our powerful natural
appetites in their unregulated condition.

Because the descriptions for the preparation of Soma are so detailed in Rig
Veda 9, it’s generally been assumed that the drink was actually consumed in
ancient religious practices.  This view is supported by the fact that the
Persian equivalent, called haoma, described in the Avesta, is still drunk
by certain Zoroastrians.  There has been much speculation as to what this
ancient drink might have contained. One widely spread (but scarcely
credible) theory is that ancient Soma was based on hallucinogenic mushrooms
(either psilocybin, or Amanita muscaria).  A more popular view today is
that the ancient Aryans brought to India a drink based on some combination
of cannabis, ephedra and opium.  This view is supported by (1) ancient and
continued use of cannabis as an entheogen by some Hindu sects, (2) use of
ephedra in the above-mentioned contemporary Zoroastrian drink, and (3) most
intriguing, recent discoveries of 4000 year-old temple complexes in
Turkmenistan that contain many vats, sieves and so on evidently used for
food or drink preparation that contain residues of these three substances.

*Even if there was historically a drink, Soma, made of psychedelic
substances, our greater concern is not what went into it, but what positive
alterations of consciousness are described.*

Asrani, U. A. The Psychology of Mysticism. In: John White (ed.), The
Highest State of Consciousness 2nd ed., White Crow, 2012. (Article
originally appeared in Main Currents in Modern Thought, 25, 68–73, 1969.)

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX      K Rajaram  IRS 10425

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