1
"How am I to start upon this process of true
self-knowledge?" The answer begins with this: first adopt the right attitude.
Believe in the divinity of your deeper self. Stop looking elsewhere for
light, stop wandering hither and thither for power. Your intelligence has become
falsified through excessive attention to external living, hence you are not even
aware in which direction to look when you seek for the real Truth. You are not
even aware that all you need can be obtained by the power within, by the
omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient Self. You have to change, first of all,
the line of thought and faith which pleads helplessly: "I am a weak man; I am
unlikely to rise any higher than my present level; I live in darkness and move
amid opposing environments that overwhelm me." Rather should you engrave on your
heart the high phrases: "I possess illimitable power within me; I
can create a diviner life and truer vision than I now possess." Do this
and then surrender your ody, your heart and mind to the Infinite Power which
sustains all. Strive to obey Its inward promptings and then declare your
readiness to accept whatsoever lot it assigns you. This is your challenge to the
gods and they will surely answer you. Your soul will be slowly or suddenly
liberated; your body will be granted a freer pathway through conditions. You may
have to be prepared for a few changes before the feet find rest, but always you
shall find that the Power in which you have placed an abiding trust does not go
into default.
2
Because he believes that self-improvement, the
bettering of man's nature, is quite possible, he believes in the quest.
3
He who learns the essence of spiritual questing and
the basic need in practical living, learns that he must come into command of
himself.
4
Who is willing to work upon himself? Who even feels
that he has any duty to do so? Yet this simple acknowledgment could lead to the
discovery of God.
5
The student of true philosophy is more intent on
growth than on study.
6
Each man should be himself, not represent and copy
another man. But he should be his best self, not his worst, his lower, his
lesser. This calls for growth, aspiration, effort, on his part. That is to say,
it calls for a quest.
7
Out of his present self he is to evolve a better one
and to actualize his higher possibilities.
8
The divine spirit is always there in man, has always
been there; but until he cultivates his capacity to become aware of it, it might
as well be non-existent for him.
9
The Overself is always there; it has never left us,
but it has to be ardently, lovingly, and subtly searched for.
10
He must carry the idea of "I" to a deeper level of
identification.
11
Why is it that despite all the visible and
touchable counter-attractions, despite the innumerable failures and long years
of fruitlessness, so many men have sought through so many ages in so many lands
for God, for what is utterly intangible, unnameable, shapeless, unseen, and
unheard? Because the simple but astonishing fact is that the Overself, which is
the presence of God in them, is part of their nature as human beings! Mysticism
is nothing more than the methodical attempt to wake up to this fact. The "soul"
which metaphysics points to in reasoning, mysticism establishes in experience.
We all need to feel the divine presence. Even the man who asserts that he does
not is no exception. For he indirectly finds it just the same in spite of
himself but under limited forms like aesthetic appreciation or Nature's
inspiration. Even if all contemporary mystics were to die out, even if not a
single living man were to be interested in mysticism, even if all mystical
doctrines were to disappear from human memory and written record, the logic of
evolution would bring back both the teaching and the practice. They are two of
those historical necessities which are certain to be regained in the course of
humanity's cultural progress.
12
Because the Overself is already there within him in
all its immutable sublimity, man has not to develop it or perfect it. He has
only to develop and perfect his ego until it becomes like a polished mirror,
held up to and reflecting the sacred attributes of the Overself, and showing
openly forth the divine qualities which had hitherto lain hidden behind itself.
13
The distinction between his lower self and his
higher self will slowly become clear to him through inner experience and
reflection thereon.
14
What, in a general way, is missing in his
development as a human being moving on from animality to a higher Awareness must
be supplied.
15
By such meditation and study the mind returns, like
a circle, upon itself, with the result that when this movement is successfully
completed, it knows itself in its deepest divinest phase.
16
That which appears as the spiritual seeker engaged
on a Quest is itself the spiritual self that is being sought.
17
We have not to become divine for we
are divine. We have, however, to think and do what is divine.
18
This identification with the best Self in us is the
ideal set for all men, to be realized through long experience and much suffering
or through accepting instruction, following revelation, unfolding intuition,
practising meditation, and living wisely. And this best Self is not the most
virtuous part of our character - though it may be one of the sources of that
virtue - but the deepest part of our being, underneath the thoughts which buzz
like bees and the emotions which express our egotism. A sublime stillness reigns
in it. There in that stillness, is our truest identity.
19
Each human being has a specific work to do - to
express the uniqueness that is himself. It can be delegated to no one else. In
doing it, if he uses the opportunity aright, he may be led to the great
Uniqueness which is super-personal, beyond his ego and behind all egos.
20
As he develops more intelligence and subtler
perceptions, he will wake up from being merely a conventional puppet and become
a real person at last.
21
Even while he travels on this quest he should
habitually remind himself of an easily forgotten truth - that what he travels to
is inside himself, is the very essence of himself.
22
Beneath your everyday self lies a giant - an
unsuspected self of infinite possibilities.
23
Within is mastery, within is colossal power - but
you have not yet touched it. However little you have so far accomplished you can
still do big things.
24
Our inmost being is a world of light, of joy, of
power. To find it, and to hold ourselves in it, is to become blessed by these
things. That this is a scientific fact valid everywhere on earth and not a
debatable assumption, can be ascertained and proven if we will achieve the
required personal fitness. Without such fitness, we must be content with belief
in the theoretical statement or with passing glimpses.
25
Because there is something of God in me as the
Overself, godlike qualities and capacities are in me. I am essentially wise,
powerful, loving; but to the extent that I identify myself with the little ego,
I obscure these grand qualities. I have the power to work creatively on my
environment as well as on the body in which I am housed, just as the World-Mind,
the Creative Spirit, works on the universe.
26
A man who wants to pursue this quest will have to
become a different man - different from what he was in the past because the old
innate tendencies have to be replaced by new ones, and different from other men
because he must refuse to be led unresistingly into the thoughtlessness, the
irreverence, and the coarseness which pervade them.
27
It is not only a moral change that is called for
but also a mental one, not only a physical but also a metaphysical one.
28
There is no need to let go of his humanness in
order to find his divine essence, but only of its littleness, its satisfaction
with trivial aims.
29
Such a man cannot rest satisfied with the
littleness that sees nothing beyond its own greed and desire. He will be haunted
by higher ideals than the ordinary; he will want to be finer, cleaner, better,
and nobler human material than the common one.
30
If in the end we have to walk this earth on our own
feet, why not begin to do so now? Why continue to cultivate our weakness when we
could cultivate our strength?
31
Where there is no attempt at self-improvement there
is inevitable deterioration. Nature does not let us stand still.
32
The application of these ideals is hard, but let no
one deceive himself into thinking that their nonapplication is much easier.
Those who live without such life-purposes are subject to troubles that could
have been avoided and to afflictions of their own making.
33
It is easy to drift, as so many others do, through
a life of self-indulgence. It is hard to try continually to practise a life of
self-control. Yet the deferred penalties of the first course are painful, the
consequent rewards of the second course are satisfying.
34
The gaining of such flashes has been accidental. It
should stimulate us to know that if we want to make it deliberate, there is a
detailed technique, ready at hand for the purpose. Sages who know how and why
these flashes come have formulated the technique for the benefit of those who
want to elevate themselves.
35
From the first day that he began to tread this
path, he automatically assumed the responsibility of growth. Henceforth there
had to be continuity of effort, an ever-extending line of self-improvement.
36
"The prize will not be sent to you. You win it,"
says Emerson.
37
No one except the man himself can develop the
needed qualities and practise them.
38
If he wishes to enter the portal of philosophy he
will most likely begin with others, with what philosophers have thought and
taught; but in the end he must make a second beginning - with himself. He will
have to re-examine his own psyche, his own personality, but from a detached
position, standing far to one side. He will have to decide each hour of each day
how to apply the truth, gathered from books and teachers, to the events, duties,
occasions, and thoughts of that day.
39
Effort at self-improvement and self-development,
consciously and deliberately made, is an indispensable requirement. All talk of
dispensing with it because one has surrendered to a master is self-deceiving.
All avoidance of it is self-disappointing in the end.
40
He cannot shift the burden of responsibility from
off his shoulders so easily as that. It remains inalienably his own by virtue of
his membership in the human race.
41
He must begin to cease living at second hand, to
help himself, to try his own powers, or he will never grow.
42
The responsibility for his spiritual development
lies squarely upon his own shoulders. In trying to evade it, either by getting a
master to carry it or by making a Short Path leap into enlightenment, he
indulges in an illusion.
43
The truth cannot be had by muttering a mantram
ad infinitum although that may yield a curious kind of transient relief
from thoughts which chase one another. Nor may it be had by paying one week's
income to a guru.
44
If a man is determined to succeed in this
enterprise and optimistically believes that he will succeed, his efforts will
increase and be strengthened, chances will be taken from which he would
otherwise shrink; and even if he falls short of his hopes, the going is likely
to be farther. What Ramana Maharshi said to me at our first meeting is apposite:
"That is the surest way to handicap oneself," he exclaimed, "this burdening of
one's mind with the fear of failure and the thought of one's failings. The
greatest error of a man is to think that he is weak by nature.... One can and
must conquer."
45
This is the ideal, but to translate it into the
actual, to assert it in the midst and against the opposition of a grossly
materialistic environment, calls for firmness and determination.
46
Let him not be satisfied with the amount of true
knowledge he has got, nor with the quality of personal character which he has
developed. Let him press forward to the more and better.
47
If, instead of merely daydreaming about it, or else
attempting to obtain help from outer sources, the student would listen to and be
guided by the promptings of his inner self, he would vastly hasten his progress
on the Quest.
48
Social betterment is a good thing but it is not a
substitute for self-betterment. Love of one's neighbour is an excellent virtue
but it cannot displace the best of all virtues, love of the divine soul.
49
The man who is discontented with the world as he
finds it and sets out to improve it, must begin with himself. There is authority
for this statement in the life-giving ideas of Jesus as well as in the
light-giving words of Gautama.
50
He has enough to do with the discovery and
correction of his own deficiencies or weaknesses, not to meddle in criticism of
other people's.
51
He can best use his critical faculties by turning
them on himself rather than on others.
52
Progress in self-evolvement on the Quest must be
due to the individual's own efforts. It can be encouraged or fostered only in
proportion to the same individual's wishes and needs. Other people, who are not
interested in an inner search, are, at present, fulfilling their own karmic need
for a particular variety of experience; it is neither advisable nor feasible to
urge them to follow this path.
53
It is a worthwhile cause, this, and does not
require us to interfere with others, to propagandize them or to reform them.
Rather does it ask us to do these things to ourselves.
54
Few know where really to look for the truth. Most
go for it to other men, to books, or to churches. But the few who know the
proper direction turn around and look in that place where the truth is not only
a living dynamic thing but is their own. And that is deep, deep within
themselves.
55
It is logical to assert that if every individual in
a group is made better, the group of which he is a part will be made better. And
what is human society but such a group? The best way to help it is to start with
the individual who is under one's actual control - oneself - and better him. Do
that, and it will then be possible to apply oneself to the task of bettering the
other members of society, not only more easily but with less failure.
56
The Holy Land, flowing with milk and honey, is
within us but the wilderness that we have to cross before reaching it, is within
us too.
57
The great sources of wisdom and truth, of virtue
and serenity, are still within ourselves as they ever have been. Mysticism is
simply the art of turning inwards in order to find them. Will, thought, and
feeling are withdrawn from their habitual extroverted activities and directed
inwards in this subtle search.
58
If you are looking for truth, it is not enough to
look only at your own country's, your own religion's statement of it, nor just
this century's. You need also to look elsewhere, to heed the wiser voices of
other centuries and to feel free to move East and West or into b.c. as well as
a.d. But above all these things you must look into the mystery of your own
consciousness. Uncover its layer after layer until you meet the Overself. All
this is included in the Quest.
59
Nowhere in the New Testament does Jesus ask his
followers to enter into a church but he does ask them, by implication, to enter
within themselves.
60
To the extent that they stop looking outside
themselves for the help and support and guidance they correctly feel they need,
they will start looking inside and doing the needful inner work to come into
conscious awareness of the power waiting there, the divine Overself. They
themselves are inlets to it, never disconnected from it.
61
Why did Jesus warn men not to look for the
Christ-self in the deserts or the mountain caves? It was for the same reasons
that he constantly told them to look for it within themselves, and that he
counselled them to be in the world but not of it.
62
Do not expect to find more truth and meaning in the
world outside than you can find inside yourself.
63
Although the Infinite Spirit exists everywhere and
anywhere, the paradox is that It cannot be found in that way before It has first
been found in one's own heart. Yet it is also true that to find It in its
fullness in the self inside, we have to understand the nature of the world
outside.
64
He must start by believing that concealed somewhere
within his mind there is the intuition of truth.
65
The only man you need for this great work is
yourself. Stop looking outside and look within, for there is not only the
material to work upon but also the god within to guide you.
66
We must find in our own inner resources the way to
the blessed life.
67
The man of the world drinks and dances; the mystic
thinks and trances.
68
Many men cannot find the higher truth because they
insist on looking for it where it is not. They will not look within, hence they
get someone else's idea of the truth. The other person may be correct but since
this is to be known only by being it, the discovery must be made
inside themselves.
69
He cannot know anyone else so well as himself. Why
then try to know so many people so superficially when he can know only himself
so deeply and truly?
70
The goal can be reached by using the resources in
his own soul.
71
He should create from within himself and by his own
efforts the strength, the wisdom, and the inspiration he needs.
72
The student must remember that success does not
only come to him, it also comes from him. The plan of the road to achievement
and the driving power to propel him along it must be found within himself.
73
Usually, it is by one's own efforts alone - but not
excluding the possibility of Grace, however - that one develops the needed
objectivity with which to correctly study himself and cultivate awareness.
74
The truth will be given us: we shall not be left to
starve for it. But it will be given according to our capacity to receive it.
75
Ideally, we learn the wisdom of life best, easiest,
and most from teachers, from instruction by those who know the Way in its
beginning and end. Actually, we have to learn it by ourselves, by our own
experience, by self-expression, all necessary and valuable, suffering as well as
joy.
76
Only when all of the mind - unconsciously evolved
through the mineral, plant, animal, and lower human kingdoms - enters on the
quest, does it consciously enter upon the development of its own
consciousness.
77
This intellectual preparation and emotional
purification is a task that strains man's faculties to the extreme. Nobody
therefore need expect it to be other than a lifetime's task. Few even succeed in
finishing it in a single lifetime - a whole series is required in most cases.
Nature has taken a very long time to bring man to his present state, so she is
in no hurry to complete his development in any particular reincarnation. Yet
such is the mystery of grace, that this is always a grand possibility, always
the sublime X-factor in every case. But the individual aspirant cannot afford to
gamble with this chance, which, after all, is a rare one. He must rely on his
personal efforts, on his own strivings, more than anything else, to bring him
nearer to the desired goal.
78
The egoism which falsifies our true sense of being
and the materialism which distorts our true sense of reality are maladies which
can hardly be cured by our own efforts. Only by calling, in trust and love, on a
higher power, whether it be embodied in another man or in ourself, can their
mesmeric spell ultimately be broken. Yet it is our own efforts which first must
initiate the cure.
79
Turning inward upon himself might be retiring to a
fool's paradise or into a real one.
80
To make progress inwardly is ultimately all that
matters, everything else passes except the fruit of our spiritual efforts.
81
Mysticism is the theory and practice of a technique
whereby man seeks to establish direct personal contact with spiritual being.
82
The ideal here is not set at becoming a sinless
saint but at becoming an enlightened and balanced human being.
83
The ultimate point to be attained is full
humanity. He alone who has developed on all sides in this way is fully human.
84
The aspirant's decision to aim for the highest Goal
is the governing factor: if he sticks to this decision, he is bound to succeed
sooner or later.
The question now arises: What is this Goal? It is the fulfilment of the Real Purpose of life, as apart from the lower purposes of earning a livelihood, rearing a family, and so forth. The aspirant will become fully Self-conscious - as aware of the divine Overself as he now is of his earthly body. And this achievement will be perpetual, not just a matter of occasional glimpses or fleeting intuitions. Even though the Quest has become more difficult under modern conditions, it has not become impossible. The timeworn means to this end must simply be brought up to date.
What are the means? They are thought, feeling, will, and intuition used in a special way. This constitutes the fourfold path, or Quest.
85
He has chosen a path to which he has been led both
by instinct and by experience. As he tries to follow it, he will meet with all
kinds of difficulties but he should not turn back. Because the interrelation of
outward karma to inner character is so close, he should understand that these
difficulties are linked up with his inner state, and that he begins to solve
them by removing the imperfection of that inner state. He must understand that,
although this goal is not easy to obtain, he must refuse to give up hope. The
path is right by itself, and in allying himself with it, he is allying himself
with what is, after all, the greatest force in the world.
86
How often have I heard, in talk or writing, that
the philosophic requirements are set too high and are beyond average human
compliance. My answer is that time and patience and work keep on pushing back
the measure of what is possible to a man, that grace may fitfully bless him if
he sustains effort and aspiration or recognizes opportunity and inspiration, and
that these requirements are not set for immediate attainment but as an ultimate
goal to be striven for little by little and to give correct direction to his
life. "Hope on and hold on," I told Rom Landau at an outwardly dark and mentally
depressed moment of his life. He did! - and later found himself, his own peace,
and became in turn through his lectures and books a help to many fellow
Christians.
87
The achievements of such personal self-sufficiency,
of such detachment from the world of agitations and desires, is, he will say,
something entirely superhuman. "Why ask frail mortals to look at such
unclimbable peaks, such unattainable summits?" Philosophy answers, "Yes, the
peaks are high, the summits do cause us to strain our necks upwards. But it is
wrong to say that they are unclimbable. There is a way of climbing them, little
by little, under competent guidance, and that way is called the Quest. True, it
involves certain disciplines, but then, what is there in life worth getting
which can be got without paying some price in self-discipline for it? The aim of
these disciplines is to secure a better-controlled mind, a more virtuous life,
and a more reverent fundamental mood."
88
Why is it that on the path we seem to meet students
and aspirants only, not real teachers or genuine adepts? Why is it that so few
ever seem to realize their spiritual selves? The answer is that the way is long
and the game is hard, that the animal self is too strong and the human ego too
foolish, and that the struggle against our innate bestiality and ignorance is
too long-drawn and too beset with failures. This is what observation tells us.
It may be saddening but by being realistic we at least know what to expect, what
is the nature of the path we are undertaking, and what a tremendous patience we
must bring to it.
89
He has come to a clearer knowledge of what the
Quest means and what it will demand of him. The Quest of the divine soul has
become his pole star. It was natural for him to feel repelled at first by the
idea of overcoming the ego but now he sees its desirability. This will not mean
giving it up in practical life however; for while he is in the flesh the ideal
is to find a proper balance between egoism and altruism because he needs both.
But because the individual's egoism is apt to be too big already and his
altruism too small, religious teachers have usually deliberately over-emphasized
subduing the ego. That is the moral side. On the philosophical side it is simply
a matter of finding the Overself and letting it rule the ego thenceforth. Thus
the ego is not killed but put back in its lower place. But first he has to
become conscious of the Overself, he has to feel it as a living presence, and he
has to do this throughout the day and night, awake or asleep. That is the goal.
It is not really as hard as it sounds. For the divine self is always there
within him, it is never absent from him, not even for a second. It is the
unfailing witness of all his efforts and aspirations. When he has tried hard
enough and long enough it will suddenly shed all its Grace upon him.
90
It is not wrong to aspire toward happiness but, on
the contrary, our human duty. Those who, in the name of Spirituality, would turn
life into a gloomy affair are entitled to their opinion but they cannot justly
be called philosophers.
91
Every man will be forced to realize his own
sacredness in the end: then only will his search for happiness find fulfilment.
92
Swami Vivekananda's works can be recommended as
being authentic fruits of realization that come close to the doctrine here
discussed, albeit his path was not the same. The Quest follows a double line of
development: mind-stilling plus mind-stimulating, each in its proper place. And
the ultimate goal is to discover that there is but one reality, of which all are
but a part, that the separateness of the personal ego is but superficial, and
that Truth is evidenced by the consciousness of unity. The first fruit of
such discovery is necessarily the dedication of life to the service of all
creatures, to incessant service for universal welfare. Hence, in this light, the
yogi who has withdrawn into cave or forest is on a lower plane - good for him as
a phase of his personal development but useless to those who must live truth,
the truth of unity.
93
To forget self but to remember Overself - it is as
simple as that, and also as hard as that.
94
Not to find the Energy of the Spirit but the Spirit
itself is the ultimate goal. Not its powers or effects or qualities or
attributes but the actuality of pure being. The aspirant is not to stop short
with any of these but to push on.
95
He has to seek for the mysterious essence of
himself, which is something he touches at rare, blessed, and unforgettable
moments. It allures because it is also the Perfect, ever sought but never found
in the world outside.
96
It is not the knowing of the Overself that
he is to get so much as the knowing that is the Overself.
97
He comes at last to full consciousness of his inner
being, his soul - in the correct sense of a word that is not often understood
and which is used by people without knowing what they really mean.
98
If the distant goal of this quest is the discovery
of true being, this does not exclude and ought not to exclude the fullest growth
of the human being, the widest realization of his best capacities, making patent
what is latent.
99
It is a prime purpose of the Quest to create a true
individuality where, at present, there is only a pseudo one. For those who are
at the mercy of their automatic responses of attraction or repulsion by
environment, whose minds are molded by external influences and educational
suggestions, are not individuals in any real sense.
100
The lotus, that lovely Oriental flower, is much
used as a symbol of the goal we have to gain. It grows in mud but is not even
spotted by it. It rests on water but is never even stained by it. Its colour is
pure white in striking contrast to the dirty surroundings which are its home. So
the disciple's inner life must be undefiled, unstained, and pure even though his
outer life is perforce carried on under the most materialistic surroundings or
among the most sensual people.
101
That which few men value and few men find is
nevertheless the most worthwhile thing for which to search. What is it? It is
what once found cannot be lost, once seen must be loved, and once felt awakens
all that is best in a man.
102
The thirst for perfection is certainly present
within us. This thirst is a pointer to its eventual slaking. But there is no
necessary implication that this will be attained whilst we are in the flesh and
on a level of existence where everything is doomed, as Buddha points out, to
decay and death. It is more likely to be done on a higher level where such
limitations could not exist. The perfection we seek and the immortality we hope
for are more likely to be mental rather than physical achievements. For all
mystics are at least agreed that there is such a level of untainted, purely
spiritual being.
103
The fundamental task of man is first to free
himself of animalist and egotist tyrannies, and second, to evolve into awareness
of his spiritual self.
104
The goal is to free himself from meshes and
fetters, to bring all the forces of his being under mastery.
105
The aim is to emancipate himself from earthly
bondage, to redeem himself from animal enslavement.
106
His quest can come to an end only when the
unveiled Truth is seen, not in momentary glimpses, but for the rest of his
lifetime without a break.
107
We have to bring this awareness of the Overself
as a permanent and perpetual feature into active life.
108
It is perpetual abidance in the divine that is to
be sought.
109
Many are satisfied if they can attain just a
glimpse of the Overself. But a few are not. They seek permanent abidance in the
Overself, and that in the greatest possible degree.
110
But the main object of the quest is, after all,
not these secondary betterments in bodily health, nerve, character, self-control
- welcome as they are - but the discovery of truth and the living within the
presence of the divine.
111
There is no such thing as an ever-receding goal
on the Ultimate Path because there are not ten or twenty ultimate truths. There
is only a single, final truth. This is the objective on this path and once he
knows it he has attained the goal.
112
We must reflect in mind and act the true being of
man.
113
If they think the goal of all this endeavour is
merely to become frozen into a passivity which never expresses itself and a
contentment which never sees the miseries, the disasters, or the tragedies of
life, they are mistaken.
114
He seeks to fulfil a steady purpose which remains
and is not an emotional froth which abates and later vanishes.
115
There are two paths laid out for the attainment,
according to the teaching of Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. The first
path is union with the Higher Self - not, as some believe, with the Logos. But
because the Higher Self is a ray from the Logos, it is as near as a human being
can get to it anyway. The second path has its ultimate goal in the Absolute, or
as I have named it in my last book, the Great Void. But neither path contradicts
the other, for the way to the second path lies through the first one. Therefore,
there is no cleavage in the practices. Both goals are equally desirable because
both bring man into touch with Reality. It would be quite proper for anyone to
stop with the first one if he wishes; but for those who appreciate the
philosophic point of view, the second goal, because it includes the first, is
more desirable.(P)
116
What he chooses at the beginning of his quest
will predetermine what he will become at its end. And the choice is between
self-centered escape and selfless activity. Both paths will give him a great
peace. Both will permit him to remain true to his inner call. But the harder one
will give something to suffering humanity also. A merely personal salvation will
not satisfy the philosophical aspirant.
117
Spiritual experiences that occur during
adolescence are indications that he has possibilities of travelling on the
spiritual quest. But he must decide whether he prefers abnormal occult
experiences or the less dramatic, slower growth in the cultivation of his divine
soul. A beginner cannot mix the two goals safely. And he can expect to have the
help of an advanced mystic only if he seeks the higher goal.
118
He would be a rash man who promised everyone who
embarked upon this quest definite experiences of a mystical, occult,
extraordinary, ecstatic, supernatural, or any such kind. Such results sometimes
come, sometimes not; but the persons who follow the regimes or endure the
disciplines chiefly in expectation of them may well be disappointed, may even
end in distrust in their teachers and teachings. A wiser type of aspirant will
not insist on such experiences but will understand that there are more important
and more lasting things.
119
In The Secret Path I presented the quest
as shorter and easier than most people found it to be; in The Spiritual
Crisis of Man I presented it as harder and longer, in an effort to redress
the balance.
120
Now, in middle-age, the errors of my published
work have become discernible. Among others, I have made the quest's goal far too
near, its achievement far too easy, and the quest itself far too short. The
conception of that goal which I have formulated is true enough, the reminder of
a divine existence which I have given humanity is something to flatter oneself
about, but the way of realization calls for efforts so superhuman that few
people would ever have turned to it if my literary picture had been more
faithfully drawn.
121
To improve and purify the ordinary self, to reach
and realize the higher self, are clearly the most difficult of tasks. To govern
passions, quieten feelings, control thoughts and develop intuitions, to direct
tendencies, to remove complexes, and to remain steadfast in sticking to the
chosen path - is not all this a Herculean task?
122
The Art of Self-Revelation is no tea-table
philosophy, shaped and polished to beguile the tedium of the idle. Not many have
attempted this path and fewer have completed it. For few find the going easy.
The fleshly world with its snares waits for us all, and the escape is only for
the starred ones.
123
It is to grow slowly into the discovery and
realization of what he really is deep, deep inside. Coming to know it is hard
enough but impregnating the moment-to-moment daily life with this knowledge is
harder still.
124
The aspirant of today may be the adept of
tomorrow, but the course is interminably long, the goal reached only through
innumerable experiences and efforts.
125
After the optimists have had their say and the
Advaitins have preached, the hard fact will be echoed back by experience: the
goal is set so far, his powers so limited, that he has to call on the quality of
patience and make it his own.
126
So far as history tells us, full enlightenment
cannot be got in the span of a single lifetime, except among the notable few.
Yet history has too many undiscovered secrets, and enlightenment is too subtle a
matter to pass correct judgement upon.
127
The attainment of realization of the Overself is
extremely rare, and the aspirant should not expect to do so in one limited
lifetime. However, since its Grace is unpredictable, no one can say that it is
impossible in a particular case.
128
If the recent scientific computation of the
earth's age as four thousand million years be correct, we get some idea how long
it takes to make a man. How much longer then to make a superman?
129
That which is cheaply bought is often lightly
esteemed. We shall rate Truth more highly when we pay a high price for it.
130
Even a lifetime is not too long a period to
devote toward gaining such a great objective. What we give must be commensurate
with what we want to receive. Moreover the effort required, being worthy in
itself and necessary to attain the full development of manhood, is its own
reward whether there is any other or not. Why then should anyone relax his
efforts or fall into despair because he has been able to make only little or
limited progress toward the goal?
131
The illumination is possible for all men because
they are incarnate in human and not animal forms. But all men are not willing to
pay its price in mental control and emotional subjugation.
132
If the reader finds such a task too fatiguing he
should remember that the reward is nothing less than enlightenment.
133
How few are those who have realized their
aspiration to merge into the higher self. How rare an event it is.
134
It is obvious from the rarity of its historic
realization that this ideal was always too ice-mantled a peak of perfection to
be climbable by most men. Nevertheless we gain nothing by ignoring it, and it is
at least well to know towards what goal mankind is so slowly and so
unconsciously moving.
135
This truth may seem unsympathetic to natural
human feelings, far too impersonal. It is not for the multitude who demand from
religion satisfaction of desires, consolation and comfort, answers to prayers.
136
These adepts seems so immeasurably aloof from us,
their attainments so superhuman, that we may well ask of what use to most men is
the offering of such a quest.
137
He feels intuitively that there is, or ought to
be, some elusive element, principle, purpose, or Deity behind all life and all
Nature - but is it possible for a human being to become acquainted with IT?
138
Such a goal may be unappealing to many, held by
their attachments as they are; but it is fascinating and alluring to a few, "old
souls," much experienced after a long series of earthly lives, whose values have
been altered, whose glamours and illusions have been eliminated. They feel like
wanderers returning home.
139
The goal set up by this teaching may seem too
foolish and perhaps even too fatuous for persons who pride themselves on their
reasonability and practicality. This judgement may be the result of a slight
acquaintance with the subject; it could not be the result of a full and
satisfactory knowledge of it.
140
If men tell you that the path is a mere figment
of the imagination, they are welcome to their belief. I, who have seen many men
enter it and a few finish it, declare that the difference between the beginning
and the end of the path is the difference between a slave and a master.
141
If the quest is presented as too difficult for
everyone but the superman, an inferiority complex is created and those who could
get some help from some of its practices are frightened away.
142
Jesus said that the way to eternal life is
straight and narrow. He could have added that it is also long and difficult. Yet
the beginner should not let these things discourage him. There is help within
and without.
143
If the standard is set too high, love for it may
not be strong enough to assist its attainment.
144
If the ideal is too rigorous, its would-be
followers will be too few.
145
The achievement may seem too hard but it is not
impossible. The best guarantee of that is the ever-presence within him of the
divine soul itself.
146
We must take care not to fall into the depressing
belief that this is to be attained by masters only and that we cannot attain it.
147
It is unhelpful to put this goal on some
Everest-like peak far beyond human climbing. If many are called but few are
chosen, it is their own weakness which defers the time of being chosen. In the
end, and with much patience, they too will find the way beyond the struggle into
peace.
148
It is not enough to find an ideal to help one's
course in life: it should also be based on truth, not fancy or falsity.
149
The aspiration must not only be a desirable one,
it must also be attainable.
150
There is always a valid reason for disparity
between the sought-for objective and the actual performance. Those who begin
hopefully and enthusiastically but find themselves disappointed and without
result, ought to look first to their understanding of the Quest and correct it,
to their picture of the Goal and redraw it.
151
If you want to find out why so many fail to reach
the Quest's objective and so few succeed in doing so, first find out what the
Quest really is. Then you will understand that the failures are not failures at
all; that so large a project to change human nature and human consciousness
cannot be finished in a little time.
152
It is only of limited help to the modern man,
living under very different conditions as he is, to offer him the saint as a
type to imitate or to quote the yogi as an example to follow.
153
He will not waste time in seeking the
unattainable or striving for the impossible. For truth, not self-deception, is
his goal; humility, not arrogance, is his guide.
154
That the Overself not only is, but is
attainable, is the premise and promise of true philosophy.
155
If the goal is really unattainable, then the
Quest is futile. If it is no more than approachable then surely the Quest is
well worthwhile. But in fact the goal is both attainable and approachable.
156
Every man may awaken to the presence of
Christ-consciousness within himself and thus step out of the merely animal and
nominally human existence. It will then be a divinely human one.
157
That wonderful time when he can look straight
into himself, through ego to Overself, awaits his endeavours.
158
The goal is far-off, it is true; but nevertheless
it is reachable by those who will make the requisite effort to overcome self.
159
Despite all setbacks, the outcome of this
endeavour can be only the fulfilment of hope. For that is God's will.
160
Even if the goal seems too far off, the
attainment too high up for their limited capacities, even if it seems that one
would have to be far better than ordinary to have any chance at all, that does
not mean they should not embark on this quest. For even if they are able to
travel only a modest part of the way the efforts involved are still well
worthwhile.
161
What if the goal seems too distant or the climb
too steep? Do as much or as little as you can to advance. If you lack the
strength to go all the way, then go some of the way. Your spiritual longings and
labours will influence the nature of your next body and the conditions of
your next incarnation. Nothing will be lost. Higher capacities and more
favourable circumstances will then be yours if you have deserved them. Every
virtue deliberately cultivated leads to a pleasanter rebirth. Every weakness
remedied leads to the cancellation of an unpleasant one.
162
If the fullest degree of perfection seems so far
off as to depress him, the first degree is often so near that it should cheer
him.
163
Few imagine their capacity extends to such a
lofty attainment and so few seek it. Most of those who engage on this quest have
a modest desire - to get somewhere along the way where they have more control
over their mind and life than their unsatisfactory present condition affords.
164
If he knew at the beginning that it was so far
and so long, and so troubled a journey, would he have embarked on the quest at
all? That depends on the nature of the man himself, on the nature of his
impelling motive, and on the strength behind it.
165
What man will set out on a task which he can
never hope to accomplish? It is too much to expect the average seeker to become
a mahatma. We portray the nature of this quest not because we hold such a vain
expectation but because we believe in the value of right direction and in the
creative power of the Ideal. The general direction of his thoughts and deeds -
rather than those thoughts and deeds themselves - as well as the ideal he most
habitually contemplates, is what is most important and most significant in his
life.
166
His first need is to choose a general goal, not
necessarily an exact point but enough to orient himself, to give him a
direction.
167
An ideal helps to hold a man back from his
weaknesses, a standard gives him indirectly a kind of support as well as,
directly, guidance.
168
Let us not pretend to the Perfect or the hope of
its attainment. But we can have the Ideal and follow it.
169
It is a truth which he must bring to life by his
own personal experience.
170
If there were no possibility of finding one's way
from this body-prisoned, time-encased condition, then no one would ever have
become self-realized, and all preaching of religion and teaching of philosophy
would have been futile. But we know from history and biography that such
achievement has been experienced in all parts of the world and in all centuries,
so that no one should give up hope.
171
Are the quest's goals worth what he has to pay
for them? Is it even worth embarking on if he remembers how few seem to reach
those goals? Time alone can show him that no price is too high and that right
direction is itself sufficient reward.
172
The ultimate goal is for us to live from the
Overself not from the ego.
173
Thinking which is fact-grounded,
experience-based, and correct; living which is wise, balanced, and good;
meditation which goes deeper and deeper - these are some of our basic needs.
174
Peace of mind can be enjoyed in this world: there
is no need to wait for passage to the next one.
175
Different terms can be used to label this unique
attainment. It is insight, awakening, enlightenment. It is Being, Truth,
Consciousness. It is Discrimination between the Seer and the Seen. It is
awareness of That Which Is. It is the Practice of the Presence of God. It is the
Discovery of Timelessness. All these words tell us something but they all fall
short and do not tell us enough. In fact they are only hints for farther they
cannot go: it is not on their level at all since it is the Touch of the
Untouchable. But never mind; just play with such ideas if you care too. Ruminate
and move among them. Put your heart as well as head into the game. Who knows one
day what may happen? Perhaps if you become still enough you too may know
- as the Bible suggests.
176
The impossibility of realizing the Bodhisattva
ideal alone shows it was not meant to be taken literally. For not only would the
Bodhisattva have to wait until the two billion inhabitants presently occupying
this planet had been saved, but what of the others who would have been added to
this number by that time? The Bodhisattva ideal is supposedly set up in contrast
with that of the Pratyeka Buddha, who is alleged to seek his own welfare alone.
177
That life will reach some higher end and thus
justify all the fret and toil is more than a comforting belief: it is also an
offering of the highest Reason, the revelation of highest experience.
178
A surgeon we know once wrote to us that the goal
seemed so distant, the way so long, the labour so arduous, that he felt inclined
to abandon the quest altogether as something beyond ordinary human reach. Our
reply to him was that because a position could not be captured in its entirety
that was no reason for hesitating to make a start to capture some of it.
179
In every individual there is an original,
mysterious, and incalculable element, because his past history and his prenatal
ancestry in other lives on earth have inevitably been different at certain
points from those of other individuals. His world-outlook may seem the same as
theirs, but there will always be subtle variations. There is no single path
which can be presented to suit the multitudinous members of the human species.
There is no one unalterable approach to this experience for all men. Each has to
find his own way, to travel forward by the guidance of his own present
understanding and past experience - and each in the end really does so despite
all appearances to the contrary. For each man passes through a different set of
life-experiences. His past history and present circumstances have constituted an
individual being who is unique, who possesses something entirely his own. It is
partly through the lessons, reflections, intuitions, traits, characteristics,
and capacities engendered by such experiences that he is able to find his way to
truth. Therefore he is forced not only to work out his own salvation but also to
work it out in his own unique way. Every description of a mystical path must
consequently be understood in a general sense. If its expounder delimits it to
constitute a precise path for all alike, he exaggerates. Although there is so
much in life which the aspirant shares with other beings, there is always a
residue which imparts a stamp of individuality that is different from and
unshareable with the individualities of all others. Consequently, the inner path
which he must follow cannot be precisely the same as theirs. In the end, after
profiting by all the help which he may gain from advanced guides and
fellow-pilgrims, after all his attempts to imitate or follow them, he is forced
to find or make a way for himself, a way which will be peculiarly his own. In
the end he must wor k out his own unique means to salvation and depend on
himself for further enlightenment and strength. Taught by his own intelligence
and instructed by his own intuition, he must find his own unique path toward
enlightenment.
Each case is different, because each person has a different heredity, temperament, character, environment, and living habits. Therefore these general principles must be adapted to, and fitted in with, that person's particular condition.
180
Just as there is not a single radius only from
the centre of a circle to its circumference but countless ones, so there is not
a single path only from man to God but as many paths as there are men. Each has
to find the way most appropriate to him, to the meaning and experience of truth.
181
There are as many ways to union with the Overself
as there are human beings. The orthodox, the conventional, and the traditional
ways can claim exclusiveness or monopoly only by imperilling truth.
182
It is an unnecessary self-limitation to believe
that there is only a single path to enlightenment, only a single teaching worth
following. Persons who believe or feel themselves to be unable to understand
subtle metaphysics can turn to a simple devotional path.
183
There is no one particular type of aspirant to
mystical or philosophical enlightenment. Taken as a whole, aspirants are a mixed
and varied lot in their starting points, personalities, motives, and
allegiances. They vary in individuality very widely, have different needs,
circumstances, opportunities, outlooks, and possibilities.
184
We are all built by Nature in different ways: no
two palms, no two thumbprints, no two persons are exactly alike.
185
The seekers are to be found at different levels
and are attracted by different approaches according to their different
intellectual development, emotional temperaments, moral capacities, and
intuitional sensitivity.
186
The uniqueness of each person is emphasized by
the differences which separate him from his fellows.
187
In one's search for Truth he may have progressed
through orthodox Christianity, Christian Science, and Spiritualism - but,
eventually, the Quest will lead him away from limited, organized public
approaches, and bring him to the unrestricted freedom of the Presence of the
Overself. Other movements, such as those mentioned, may be useful to beginners;
but when some progress has been made, the path necessarily opens onto the Quest
where it becomes unlimited, individual, and private.
188
All of us have to travel in the same broad
direction if we would rise from the lower to the higher grades of being. But the
way in which we shall travel the Way is essentially a personal one. All of us
must obey its general rules, but no two seekers can apply them precisely alike.
189
Again and again one observes that the technique,
exercise, method, or rule which brings good results for one person fails to do
so for another. It is absurd to make a single uniform prescription and expect
all persons to get a single uniform result from it. What has been done here is
to give some of the best ones and let each reader find out what suits him most,
not what suits his friend or another reader most.
190
Each man is unique so each quest must be unique
too. Everyone must find, in the end, his own path through his own life. All
attempts to copy someone else, however reputed, will fail to lead him to
self-realization although they may advance him to a certain point.
191
Each seeker must find out his own path, his own
technique for himself. Who else has the right or the capacity to do it for him?
192
We prefer to follow the creative rather than the
compulsive way, to help men find their own way rather than force them to travel
our way. And this can only be done by starting with the roots, with the ideas
they hold, and the attitudes which dominate them.
193
There are too many differences in individual
aspirants to allow a broad general technique to suit them all. A guide who can
give a personal prescription is helpful, but even in his absence the aspirant
can intelligently put together the fragments which will best help him.
194
Let him walk forward slowly or quickly, as suits
him best, and also in his own way, again as suits his individuality which he has
fashioned through the reincarnations to its present image and from which he has
to begin and proceed farther.
195
There are not only widely different stages of
evolutionary growth for every human being but also widely different types of
human beings within each stage. Hence a single technique cannot possibly cover
the spiritual needs of all humanity. The seeker should find the one that suits
his natural aptitude as he should find the teacher who is most in inward
affinity with him.
196
Let him take up whatever path is most convenient
to his personal circumstances and individual character and not force himself
into one utterly unsuited to both, merely because it has proven right for other
people.
197
There is no single universal rule for all men:
their outer circumstances and inner conditions, their historical background and
geographical locality, their karmic destiny and evolutionary need, their
differences in competence, render it unwise, unfair, and impracticable to write
a single prescription for them.
198
The philosophic approach does not limit the
seeker rigidly to a single specific technique. While it asks him to follow the
basic path and fulfil the fundamental requirements which all beginners must
follow, it also points out that this is only a general preparation. A point will
be reached when he is ready for more advanced work, and when the personal
characteristics and circumstances which are particularly his own must be brought
in for adjustment if he is to receive the greatest benefit. No two seekers and
the surrounding conditions are ever exactly alike and, at a certain stage, what
is helpful to one will be time-wasting to another.
199
It is a common error, among the pious and even
among the mystics, to believe that one path alone - theirs - is the best. This
may be quite correct in the case of each person, but it may not necessarily be
correct for others, and even then it is only correct for a period or at most a
number of lifetimes. How often have men outgrown their former selves and taken
to new paths? And how different are the intellectual moral and temperamental
equipments of different persons? It is in practice, as in theory, not possible
to tie everyone down to a single specific path and certainly not advisable.
200
Men are differently constituted. There are a
dozen main types and innumerable subdivisions within each type. It is not
possible for a single spiritual approach to suit them all.
201
No one reaches the world of truth through any
other path than his own, the one which his individual nature fits him for.
Someone else's help can at best improve his condition and prepare his mind but
cannot take him into truth. Those cases which seem to contradict this statement
are cases either of self-deception or of illusion. Too often time spent on these
chalked-out paths is time wasted.
202
Each man's path is his own unique one, with its
own experiences. Some are shared in common with all other seekers but others are
not; they remain peculiar to himself. Therefore a part - whether large or small
- of what he has to do cannot be prescribed by another person, be he guru or
not. In the groups, organizations, schools, there is too much rigidity in the
instruction, the rules, and the expectancy aroused of what should happen at each
stage. This is too tight a program. It brings confusion and frustration and does
not correspond to the actual situation which an independent observer finds among
these circles.
203
The human being will bring about its own
redemption, if only we would allow it to do so. But instead we hypnotize the
mind with ideas that may suit other persons but are unsuited to us, we practise
techniques that warp our proper development, we follow leaders who know only the
way they have themselves walked and who insist on crowding all seekers on it
regardless of suitability, and we join groups which obstruct our special line of
natural growth.
204
It would be an error to try to make his own any
spiritual path which, or teacher who, was not so in fact. Such an attempt might
maintain itself for a time but could not escape being brought to an end when the
false position to which it would lead became intolerable.
205
The individual uniqueness of each aspirant cries
out to have its special needs attended to, but suggestion from outside or
mesmerism from authority causes him to approach the Quest with fixed opinions as
to what should be done. Others are being allowed to mold him instead of letting
the inner voice do so, using their contributions solely to carry out or to
supplement its guidance.
206
Every man's individual life-path is unique. It
may not be to his best interests to conform to a technique imposed upon him by
another man or to confine his efforts to a pattern which has suited others. What
may be right for another man who is at a different stage of development may be
wrong for the aspirant.
207
To deny his individuality is to destroy his
creative mind.
208
The Bhagavad Gita not only emphasizes the
need of solitude for practising yoga but also warns us that the duty, the path,
the way of life of other men may be full of danger to us. Thus it also preaches
the need of individualism.
209
There is no single path to enlightenment. Yoga
has no monopoly. Life itself is the great enlightener. I met a man once who,
after the shock of hearing his wife tell him that she had ceased to love him,
that she had for some time had a secret lover, and that she requested a divorce
so as to be able to marry him, felt a collapse of all his hitherto confidently
held values and beliefs. For some days he was so affected that he could not eat.
But his mind by then had become so extraordinarily lucid concerning these
matters and himself, that he experienced moments of truth. Through them he came
into a great peace and understanding, an inner change. What was the morning sun
which awakened him? He did no yogic exercises, entered no churches, was too
intent on his worldly business to read spiritual books. This brings me back to
the theme: do not submit to the pressure of those who say there is only a single
way to salvation (the way they follow or teach) do not let the mind be
trammelled or narrowed. The truth is that the ways are many, are spread out in
all directions, are individual.
210
From the clues, hints, and indications which
search and experience give us, we learn in the end what is the true way to the
God within us.
211
The quest is too individual a matter to fit
everyone in the same way, like a ready-made suit of clothes. Each man has his
own life-problems to consider and surmount. In trying to do so wisely nobly and
honestly he does precisely what the quest calls for from him at the time.
212
Each quest thus has its own character and its own
personality. This it shapes by the act of dedicating itself to the incorruptible
integrity of the higher life.
213
Arnold Toynbee found his spiritual path in his
study and work in history. It revealed to him, he says, the presence of God as
others have found it through prayer and religion. The inner characteristics of
men are various and so are the forms which the quest takes for them.
214
The course of each quester is not necessarily
invariable nor are his experiences always inevitable.
215
The journey from anticipation to realization is a
long one. On this Quest the curiosity to know what lies ahead can never be
satisfied with perfect correctness because it must necessarily differ with
different individuals.
216
Changes of circumstances which bring uncertainty
of the future will not frighten him. They will interest him. He will seek to
discover if they point the way to an incoming of new forces of experience
necessary for his further development.
217
All human beings differ in some respects and in
mind as well as in body. Each is unique. Each needs to find his own individual
path. For in each aspirant there exists a certain direction, tendency, capacity,
attribute, or gift along which line the possibility of his spiritual development
can open up more quickly, freely, and easily than along any other. It is on this
line that he should concentrate more effort and so take advantage of what Nature
has given him. But to detect and recognize what is his best potentiality
requires exploration and search, not only by his ordinary faculties but also and
especially by his more sensitive and intuitive ones. It will not be found all at
once but only after much groping around and feeling his way. Time is needed
because this hidden possibility does not exist at the surface level. The earth
which surrounds this gem obscures its whereabouts. If he is in a hurry and
insists on a premature discovery instead of keeping up the search, he will
identify the wrong stone. Once having found it let him stay with it as often and
as long as he can.
218
There is a way suited to the particular
individuality of each separate person, which will bring out all his spiritual
possibilities as no other way could.
219
The purpose of all paths being to bring the
traveller to the same single destination - union with God - any path which
either fulfils this purpose or partially helps to do so, is acceptable.
220
He may work toward enlightenment and inner
freedom, to the aspiration which draws him most.
221
Whatever helps consciousness come nearer to high
moods is a useful spiritual path to someone.
222
He should take any approach which appeals to him,
if it is morally worthy, and try to use what he can of it.
223
Several different methods of spiritual
development have been offered to humanity. Some have more merit than others and
some are more effective than others. But so much depends on the particular needs
and status of each person, that the value of a method cannot be generalized with
fairness.
224
It is misleading to pick out any one way to the
Overself and label it the best, or worse still, the only way. It is unfair to
compare the merits of different ways. For the truth is that firstly each has a
contribution to make, and finally each individual aspirant has his own special
way.
225
The claims that these simpler paths like devotion
or repeating a declaration can lead to the goal, are neither true nor untrue.
For they lead to the philosophic path which, in its own turn, leads directly to
the goal.
226
Is there a single teacher, prophet, messenger, or
saint who has been universally acclaimed and universally followed? For that to
be, all mankind would need the same outer background and inner status.
227
Great or small there are certain differences
between all persons. They cannot all pursue the same ways, therefore we should
let others take a different view in religion from ourselves. They vary so widely
that it is an adventure for society if there exists as great a diversity of
approaches as possible - they are thus better able to suit particular needs. Why
should anyone be afraid of diversity in religious views, of variety in religious
practices? Let heresies multiply! Let the sects flourish! For out of all this
free competition, the seeker has a better chance to find truth.
228
The modern seeker is fortunate in this: that he
has a wealth of teachings to choose from - or by which to be bewildered.
229
We must not only acknowledge the differences
between men but respect them. Consequently we must accept the fact of variations
in responsive capacity and not demand that all should think alike, believe
alike, behave alike.
230
What is too much for one individual is too little
for another. No universally applicable prescription can be given to suit
everyone alike.
231
All these paths should converge towards one
another, as all must merge in the central point in the end.
232
However different personal reactions will
necessarily be with every individual seeker, there will still remain certain
experiences, requirements, and conditions - and these are the most important
ones - along his path which must be the same for every other seeker too.
233
Each man's approach must inevitably be
individualistic yet each will also share in common all the essentials which
constitute the Quest.
234
Whether a man is a Zionist or a Zennist, whether
he seeks the Christian Salvation or the Japanese Satori, the fundamental
approach is more or less the same.
235
There is no cut and dried system or method which
can be guaranteed to work successfully in every case. But there are suggestions,
hints, ideas, which have been culled from the personal experiences of a widely
varied, world-spread number of masters and aspirants.
236
Since each man's path is peculiarly an individual
one, no book can guide all his steps. A book may help him through some
situations, inform him about the general course of inner development, and warn
him against the probable mistakes and chief pitfalls.
237
Each man has to strive for this higher
consciousness in his own way. Each path to it is unique. But at the same time he
may profitably avail himself of the general instruction contained in writings
like the present one.
238
One responds to the inner call according to one's
capacity and history, one's circumstances and perspective.
239
It is fair for him to ask himself, "What do I
bring to the quest: what equipment, qualities, and virtues to entitle me to ask
for the results I seek?"
240
When the sublime light of the Ideal shines down
upon him and he has the courage to look at his own image by it, he will
doubtless make some humiliating discoveries about himself. He will find that he
is worse than he believed and not so wise as he thought himself to be. But such
discoveries are all to the good. For only then can he know what he is called
upon to do and set to work following their pointers in self-improvement.(P)
241
However deep his commitment to the quest may be,
he will have to reckon with his own frailties and his environmental pressures.
242
The great man knows he has limitations, he knows
his defects and faults - but he is not afraid of them. "Paint me as I am, warts
and all," said Oliver Cromwell to the artist who had, thinking to please him,
omitted a mole on his face.
243
All do not start with equal capacities for the
quest. Each is qualified to go only a certain distance upon it. Those who
exaggerate their capacities harm themselves by their presumption. Those who
underrate them practise a false modesty. It is an error either to deceive
oneself about one's aspirations or to deter oneself unduly.
244
Hope is good for man: it confers endurance, spurs
positive attitudes, and urges endeavour upon him. But if its base is ungrounded
fancy and extravagant wishes, he is hurt rather than benefited by it.
245
Begin by admitting that you know really little or
nothing about your deeper mind. That is better than learned tall talk.
246
It is much easier to set himself a discipline
than to keep it.
247
We cannot all be Buddhas. We may not all have the
strength to live like Christ. Only one in a million may be even a Himalayan yogi
living alone and above us in his cave high up on the rugged mountain. But
something worthwhile is within reach of all of us. Let us therefore aim at the
immediately practicable, which in its turn will lead to something more. It is
foolish to waste time and strength unavailingly grasping for what is out of
reach.
248
There is a point at which man's mind must fall
back baffled by the great mystery which surrounds him. Reflect and reason,
search and probe as much as he can, he can go no farther. But this does not mean
that his life is meaningless or that the universe is meaningless. Only a being
superior to man might possibly penetrate this mystery. Therefore let him work
within his own inescapable limits. It is futile to nurture wild ambitions which
he is not qualified to realize. In short, let him know himself. He may then have
a key to better knowledge of other things, especially of the meaning of his own
life.
249
It is only the few, after all, who have the
inborn inclination to sacrifice everything if needs be in the hope of attaining
truth. What of the lesser souls who have no such passport, whose temperament,
environment, family, or position forbids them from aspiring heroically to the
highest goal? Can we hold no hope for them? Is it to be a case of all or
nothing?
The answer is that nobody is asked to undertake more than lies within his strength or circumstances. There is room here for those with humble aims who do not feel equal to more than the slightest philosophic effort. Let them study these doctrines just a little where possible, but where even this is not possible let them accept these teachings on simple faith alone. Let them absorb a few leading tenets which make special appeal to them or which are more easily understandable by them than others. Let them practise a few minutes' meditation only once or twice weekly, if they do not find the time or tendency to practise more. Let them keep in only occasional touch by letter or otherwise with someone who represents in himself a definite personal attainment which, although beyond their own reach, is not beyond their own veneration. Thus they take the first step to establish right tendencies. If however they are unable to do any of these things, let them not despair. There still remains the path of occasional service. Let them give from time to time, as suits their capacity or convenience, a little help in kind or toil or coin to those who are themselves struggling against great odds to enlighten a world sorrow-struck through ignorance. For thus they will earn a gift of glad remembrance and internal notice whose unique value will be out of all proportion to what is offered. The karmic benefit of such offering will return to them, and even if it be long deferred they will have the intangible satisfaction which comes from all service placed on the Overself's altar.
250
If he is unable to gather enough strength to seek
the Truth, then let him seek it for the sake of the services it can render to
him.
251
Although hardly any seeker can perfect himself in
the quest's varied requirements, all seekers can develop something of each
needed quality.
252
The change in thinking and living habits must
theoretically be a total one if the regeneration sought is to be that also. But
the compulsions of earning a livelihood, fitting into the local community, and
adjusting to family opposition make this impossible in all but exceptional
cases. Men who have to take these actualities into their consideration in
practice attempt to compromise with hard necessity and present environment. This
does not mean that they discard the truth - they must indeed keep it loyally as
the Ideal - but that they relate it to the prevailing conditions and somehow
arrive at some kind of a reconciliation between the two. Nor does it mean that
the teaching is impractical, for the few exceptions already mentioned are able
to put it into practice a hundred percent simply because they are willing and
able to pay the heavy price of isolation for doing so. It means that although
the teaching is adequate to all circumstances, its devotees are unwilling to
court the extra suffering and struggle involved in fighting the insanity and
tension of those existing circumstances. The latter tend to promote materialism
and are best suited to a materialistic way of thinking and living. Those who,
while reading its true character aright, submit to it and refuse to withdraw
from it, are entitled to do so - if at the same time they have the clear
understanding that the higher illuminations, as well as the permanent one, will
have to remain inaccessible to them. Is there not enough to do in climbing to
the lesser ones, and are they not sufficiently glorious and rewarding?
253
There are many who are not seeking for the
quickest attainment of the highest goal. They feel, quite pardonably, that the
demands of training for it are too great for their modest equipment. But they
are seeking for occasional inspiration and they would be content with just a few
glimpses during their lifetime. Although these people are not fully committed to
the Quest, they are in general sympathetic with it.
254
If he feels that rising to a higher level of
consciousness would be too much for him, then he could simply try to become a
better man.
255
It is some kind of a victory over self for a man
to be willing to live without distress if he has to live within his limitations.
256
Those who feel that there are too many evils in
the contemporary ways of living and of earning a livelihood, who sincerely
deplore these evils, nevertheless often feel also that there is little or
nothing they can do about it until society as a whole develops new and better
ways. But this is only a first look at their situation; it reveals the
appearance of it but not the reality. Do they really need to wait until the
unlikely event of a wholesale and voluntary amendment takes place all around
them? For the challenge today, as will be made clear in this book's later
course, is not a social but an individual one. More men are free to take
the first steps towards their own liberation from these evils than they usually
realize. When their caution becomes excessive, it also becomes a vice. It may
prevent them from making mistakes, but it also prevents them from doing anything
at all - leading, in fact, to a kind of inertia. Even if they cannot do more,
they can make a start to apply new ideals and then see what happens.
257
Is the Quest nothing but an endless adventure and
never to become a final achievement? Are its goals too high for frail humans,
its exercises too difficult for feeble ones? The historic fact that men have
lived who have turned its adventure into its achievement puts an end to such
pessimism. If, knowing and accepting our limitations, we object that this cannot
possibly be done in a single lifetime, the answer is, "Then do what you can in
the present lifetime, and there will be that much less to be done in the next
lifetime."
258
When a man has the right stuff in him, all he
needs is just opportunity, and nothing else. If he possesses a sufficient degree
of talent plus the determination to succeed, there is no stage so humble that it
cannot be made a jumping-off ground to better things.
259
The disciple's quest must begin with his own
simple specific needs, not with complicated generalities.
260
He must begin with what he is and where he is:
that's the starting point. After looking at the goal, and the direction leading
to it, he looks for the next step.
261
Do not let the past hold you down. Do not let
dust-laden memories keep you down. Make today a fresh day, a new beginning.
262
He can begin this inner work with whatever
capacities he has now, from wherever he is now on life's road. There is no time
that is not the right time, no place that is not the right place, no
circumstances which cannot be put to use in some way. For there are lessons to
be learnt everywhere, meanings to be gleaned in all experiences; spiritual tests
and opportunities of the most varied kinds can be found in the most unlikely
situations, the most unspiritual environments.
263
Time is needed to bring maturity to his
development; the years must pass before his understanding is complete enough to
stand on its own supports.
264
We must recognize what is not always recognized,
that the growth of mind and character takes time, just as the growth of trunk
and limb takes time. A man does not begin to mature and become what he is likely
to be until he is past thirty.
265
The young man who has the wisdom to devote some
of his abundant energies to this quest will one day be the envy of the old man
who would devote only his slackened forces and shortened days to it.
266
It is entirely for the seeker to set his own rate
of progress. Even the man who is interested only in theoretical discussion
thereby, and to that extent, promotes his own good. If through inclination or
circumstances he prefers to let his aspirations remain only at the level of
reading and discussion, that at least is better than being entirely uninterested
in them. It will be for him to decide whether to endeavour to obtain the fullest
realization of his aspirations in practical life. There is room for both classes
on this Quest.
267
He should not be discouraged because others have
gone ahead on the path more quickly than he, any more than he should be
gratified because some have gone ahead more slowly than he, for the fact is that
the goal he seeks is already within his grasp. He is the Overself that he seeks
to unite with, and the time it seems to take to realize this is itself an
illusion of the mind. Let him, therefore, go forward at his own rate and within
the limits of his own strength, leaving the result in the hands of God.
268
If they impose on themselves an impossible ideal,
an unattainable standard, they must expect the sense of frustration that will
overtake them later.
269
It is better that an aspirant should know his
limitations now than that, failing to do so, he should know tragic
disappointments and unutterable despair later. It is better in such a
case that he should realize that he is engaged on a long search whose end he
cannot reach in this incarnation.
270
How can the naïve inexperienced beginner fail to
commit errors and neglect precautions; how can he not be deceived by his own
imaginations or puzzled by the contradictions and paradoxes which beset this
path?
271
The newly awakened aspirant should search for
clues without losing his balance or overreaching new enthusiasm.
272
Of what use is it to reproach himself again and
again for being what he is? How could he have been otherwise, given his
heredity, environment, and history?
273
The quest says he is not so helpless as he thinks
he is. Why give himself up so unresistingly to the tendencies he finds in his
heart, to the thoughts he finds in his mind, to the inward dominion of his
possessions and passions? Why be so soft-willed as to refrain from making any
effort at all on the plea that he must accept himself as he finds
himself?
274
What he cannot do in the beginning, he may be
able to do in the middle of his journey. He should not let misgivings about his
capacity to travel far stop him from travelling at all.
275
Those who already possess a flair for mysticism
will naturally advance more easily and more quickly than those who do not. But
that is no reason for the unmystical to adopt a defeatist attitude and negate
the quest altogether.
276
His weaknesses may come in the way of his
seeking, yet he still remains an authentic seeker.
277
The quest would have to be entered with a
realization of all its complexity and with a comprehension that his good
intentions could be frustrated by adverse circumstances if he lets his thoughts
about them become negative.
278
A man needs to know his limitations and to accept
them. But he need not accept them as absolutes. There is always the mysterious
X-factor, the second wind, the untapped unpredictable resources.
279
He should fit his aspiration to his estimated
capacity but, in order not to miss unknown possibilities which might yet emerge
to the surface, he should do so loosely and not rigidly.
280
It is true that enlightenment is to be found
wherever it is earnestly sought, and not in any special place such as India.
However, one's own desires and needs will provide him with a source of
direction; and it may be that these will indicate that one's individual progress
may be hastened or better served by a journey to some particular location.
281
No matter what the personal circumstances of a
man may be, no matter whether he be rich or poor, well or ill, old or young,
educated or illiterate, there is no point in his life where some part at least
of the quest may not be introduced.
282
Would they have done better to have stayed at
home, rather than to have gone off looking for gurus in the East? The answer
must vary from seeker to seeker.
283
From a long-range point of view, is anyone really
"lost"? It is sometimes consoling to remember that we have Eternity before us,
and we can only do what we are capable of at a given time.
284
Why do seeking souls run off to India, and now to
Japan, as they ran off to Europe in Emerson's time? If they had a less confused
conception of the Overself, a clearer idea of what they sought, none of them
would feel that he had to go to this or that country, place, person. But
the tendencies inherited from former births and pushing him one way or pulling
him toward somewhere else, set up this urge to move away and meet new
experience, new people, perhaps new masters. In particular, they draw him back
to the scene of previous lives which powerfully affected his spiritual seeking.
This is attractive to him, perhaps even emotionally romantic, but it gives him
nothing really that he has not in fact had before.
285
For many years I was enthralled with the
spiritual glamour of India. The need to go there became a strong one, and in the
end I surrendered to it. I learnt what the grasshopping tourist never learns;
saw what the professional observer rarely sees; for both tourist and journalist
usually lack the aspiration, the patience, and the preparations required to
search for and discover what is really the best in any Oriental country.
I found much in that country that was of great interest and greater value, but I did not find the fulfilment of my Quest. That did not come to me until I was back again in the other hemisphere. Indeed, the Cosmic Vision, which revealed the Presence of Infinite Intelligence throughout life, throughout the universe and throughout history, which explained so many of the Higher Laws to me, came incongruously enough while I was sitting in a hotel room in Chicago. With this humbling insight, the need to go to India disappeared. And I then saw that it was really an ancient complex - a kind of auto-suggestion - inherited from my own far, reincarnatory past. Indeed, I found out that if I had remained loyal to the inward direction I had originally travelled, I need never have gone to India at all, nor to those other Asiatic countries where I sought for Truth. What I needed could be very well found within myself. But, I had accepted the suggestions out of my past as well as out of the lips and writings of other persons. And so I deviated from the inward way. The shortcut, which the journeys to Asia offered, turned out to be a long way, for I wandered over other men's roads, and, in the end, had to return, as we all have, to my own road. Indeed, there was nowhere else to go, and my Quest ended there.
The other ways were not without their usefulness and helpfulness, of course, but they lost that value the moment they were turned into substitutes for the interior way, which is unique and without a second because each one of us is unique. Each gets his own special experience of life, makes his own special set of contacts with other persons, and meets his own particular destiny. In his reactions to and dealings with all this, he is really reacting to and dealing with himself. He is showing quarrelsomeness, or trying to conquer it; he is losing himself in the day's activity, or saving himself from it in a half-hour retreat. He is letting negative thoughts or feelings stay in his heart, or trying to drive them out of it. He is practising a larger relationship and a kindlier attitude toward those he encounters in his day-to-day business, or he is failing to recognize why they - and not others who are quite different - have been put into his path by the Infinite Intelligence. His environment is really a testing-place and a disciplinary school.
And so I come back to the statement that going to India, or going to any other place, in quest of spiritual enlightenment is not so important as going inside one's self, and discovering Who one is. Moreover, if some have gone to India to look for an incarnate Master, others have gone to Palestine to look for a disincarnate one. There they lingered at the holy places, the sacred monuments, the historic ground where Jesus walked and talked. But, the attempts of both kinds of seekers bear real fruit only as and when they lead to the Seeking Within, for the indwelling Master, in the one case, or the indwelling Christ in the other. Yet, this final search the seeker could have begun anyway without leaving home. Indeed, Ramana Maharshi himself once said aloud: "Had I known how easy it was, I would never have gone away from home."
286
The question of how far he would be prepared to
travel in this quest has no geographical reference. It is a metaphorical one and
refers only to the time he can give each day to the exercises, studies, and
devotions, as well as to the moral ideals he can bring himself to pursue. He is
not asked for more than he feels he can humanly give under his present
circumstances and responsibilities. As for going to India or elsewhere, that is
unnecessary and even inadvisable. One of the greatest Western mystics I ever
knew spent every day in the city of London, where he had a business to manage.
He did his job and made a success of it, stuck to his ideals and became
spiritually "aware." He was indeed an adept at meditation but he had never set
foot in the Orient. The seeker has indeed not very far to travel. Four hundred
years ago Sebastian Franck, a German who had attained the full spiritual
realization, wrote: "We do not need to cross the sea to find Him - the Word is
nigh thee, is in thy heart."
287
The belief that we have to travel to far places
for the light of Truth is not really true but our own feebleness may have to
make it true. As soon as we settle down in hope and confidence to discover the
deeper forces within ourselves they begin to become active.
288
We delude ourselves with the dream that we are
travelling to Italy or to Austria; it is not we who are travelling, but the ship
and the train. We only travel when our souls move out of their narrow
encasements and seek a larger life. And that can happen anywhere: it might be at
our own familiar fireside at the bidding of an illumined book; it might come, of
course, with our first view of the Himalaya Mountains. But merely to move our
bodies from one place to a distant one, without a corresponding movement of the
soul, is not travel; it is dissipation.
289
How many, of late years, have travelled on "the
ashram circuit"! How much have I, and some friends, contributed toward this
result! Yet in the end, to what does it all add up? Let an earlier president of
the respected Ramakrishna Mission, head of the Ramakrishna Order of Monks, and
abbot of Belur Monastery answer, in the warning which he gave an American lady
who was enthusiastically going from one Hindu ashram to another, spending a few
days at each during a six-week visit to India. Said Swami Saradananda with a
large smile: "Remember, what is within you is everywhere. What is not, is
nowhere." Do not these words admonish his visitor that there is nothing free in
the universe, that she cannot get something for nothing, that no "guru" can give
her what she herself must work for and provide, and that no seeker will be able
to bring into close inner relationship with himself any spiritual master who is
too far from, or too high above, his own range of development? When an Indian of
such authority and experience makes this statement to such seekers, his words
ought to be well weighed against those which have been written, pronounced, or
circulated by those who do not know better.
290
Where should a man go in order to start on this
Quest? Should he travel to the Orient? Can it be followed only in the Near East,
the Middle East, or the Far East? The answer is that such a journey is quite
unnecessary. Let him start in the land where he is living, where destiny has put
him. But if he need not move from one country to another for the purposes of the
Quest he may find it helpful to move for the purposes of a single department of
the Quest - that is, meditation - from the noise and bustle of city life to the
quiet and calmness of country life.
291
To those who want to travel to India or elsewhere
in search of salvation, or of a master who shall lead them to it, the question
must be asked, "Can you not see that if you take yourself there you will still
have to cope with your ego there as here? Look deeper into your own heart, for
that is where what you seek really is."
292
If a man has to go to India to find peace of
mind, then he may lose it again when he leaves India. The same is just as true
if he has to stay around a guru for the same purpose.
293
There is nothing wrong with the urge to visit
India, for then he may learn more about this world of ours and the people in it,
and especially about Indian spiritual traditions. The wrong sets in when he
believes that just by displacing himself in space in this way he is likely to
have enlightenment handed over to him by some other man, called a guru, on a
platter. This cannot be, whatever wishful thinking on the one side and fanatical
narrowness on the other may say. At the moment the fad is more Indonesia than
India but the point of the matter is still the same. For enlightenment involves
liberation from his ego, its captivity and deceitfulness.
294
The hidden teaching is unknown to almost all the
yogis and swamis in India. It exists, however, and can be got without going to
these people.
295
One man may go to the Orient and gain nothing. It
is not emotional exuberance which produces a high spiritual result, nor visits
to many ashrams, but the depth and concentration with which the truth is seen.
296
Many an old fable is a perfect allegory of this
quest. The temptations and perils, the toils and adventures of its hero are
faithful references to what the aspirant has always encountered in the past and
will encounter in our own day.
297
The stages of the Quest pass by degrees from the
disciplining of the ego to the opening of consciousness to the Overself.
298
On this journey there are stages of ascent,
stations of understanding, lights of peace, and shadows of despair.
299
The Quest must traverse the three levels of body,
mind, and spirit.
300
There is an Indian formula covering three
progressive stages of the quest: Hearing, Reflection, Enlightenment. It means:
Receiving instruction (from guru or text), Thinking constantly over the
teachings until they are thoroughly assimilated, Experiencing glimpses of a
mystical nature. With the end of this third phase, the aspirant has not only to
repeat and prolong the glimpses until his whole life is permeated by the wisdom
and peace which is their fruit, but also to receive and apply the highest and
final philosophic doctrine. With this, his enlightenment becomes "natural,"
effortless, unbroken. It is unified with his activity, established whether he is
busy in the world or seated in meditation.
301
According to the Hindu teaching, man passes
through three stages of development from the Inert through the Passional to the
Harmonious.
302
In the course of his life the student will pass
from one phase of development to another, thus gradually enriching and expanding
his whole character.
303
To start on the quest is the first step. To
continue on it is the second, and possibly harder. Thoroughly to finish the
quest is the hardest step of all.
304
It is true that he is only at the beginning of
his quest, that its fulfilment may be far far away, but everything must have a
beginning.
305
It is a progressive training which continues
throughout one's lifetime.
306
There are times to intensify the quest, to hasten
its tempo and stiffen its disciplines.
307
With growth of outlook, development of mind,
correct instruction from text or teacher, correct interpretation of his own and
others' experiences, he moves out of narrow sectarianism into a new universal
level.
308
The attitude of faith in another person is
undoubtedly helpful to beginners, provided the faith is justified. But it is a
stage necessarily inferior to the attitude of faith in one's own soul. To turn
inwards rather than outwards, to overcome the tendency towards externality, is
to ascend to a higher stage.
309
Negative transference, positive transference,
balanced orientation, all are stages of external adjustment and
deserve no higher evaluation than that. On the internal level alone is the
surest equilibrium attainable.
310
This creative changing of circumstances is a
twofold process, practised both in the outer world where those circumstances
belong and in the inner world of the spirit, where they are absent.
311
If he continues the inner work he will pass
through various stages of development. It would be a mistake to believe that he
has reached a final attitude or a fixed set of values.
312
Between the beginner and the adept is this
difference: that the state of being which the one looks up to with awe-struck
wonder seems entirely natural to the other.
313
The last lap necessarily brings him into the
Silence of THAT which transcends intellect, but it is a silence that is rich
with freedom and serenity. Here alone he may hear the wordless voice of God and,
once heard, he can well afford to disregard all other voices.
314
Although the movement towards enlightenment goes
forward by stages, the actual moment of enlightenment comes abruptly with a
sudden transcendence of the darkness in which men ordinarily live.
315
The time will come, if he perseveres, when his
mind will naturally orient itself toward the spiritual pole of being. And this
will happen by itself, without any urging on his part. No outer activity will be
able to stop the process, for to make it possible his mind will apparently
double its activity. In the foreground, it will attend to the outer world, but
in the background it will attend to the Overself.
316
He may stop in one or other of these cults for a
time but, if he is seeking truth, he will not remain there. In the end, and
after sufficient sampling and discarding over a number of years, his search will
lead him to philosophy.
317
The ascending degrees of initiation into higher
understanding of truth and large capacity to receive contemplative awareness
open themselves to him one by one as he passes each successive test leading to
it. These tests consist, in the lower grades, of willingness to submit physical
habits, passions, and desires to discipline and, in higher grades, willingness
to submit thoughts and feelings to it. In all, they lead to a progressive
detachment from the animal and the ego.
318
When the disciple reaches the end of the phase
through which he is travelling, his attention is diverted towards a new one.
Uncertainty and chaos descend upon him with reference to it. He cannot clearly
see his further way into it or easily get right direction through it.
319
There are tests, dangers, and pitfalls at various
stages of this Quest.
320
This momentary glimpse of the Overself provides
the real beginning of his quest. The uninterrupted realization of it provides
the final ending.
321
When he begins to sense the inner peace and
exaltation which is a perfume, as it were, upon the threshold of the Overself,
he may understand how real this inner life is and paradoxically how
unintelligible, indescribable, and immaterial from the ordinary standpoint. It
is something, and yet not something which can be put into shape or form
graspable by the five senses. Anyway it is there and it is the Immortal Soul.
322
It is inevitable that a seeking mind - as
differentiated from a stodgy one - should pass through various progressive
phases of thinking.
323
The personal man needs to grow and develop
adequately as man. Only after this does he reach the stage when it is
safe, and not premature, to undo the ego, and destroy its rule. For after this
point the latter becomes a tyranny when the task now is to make it a
subserviency.
324
From error at one end to truth at the other, the
journey is long and tedious.
325
Let him take from different teachings what suits
his mind and purpose: the study of comparative religion and mysticism may assist
him here. But this is for a beginning; later he will need to specialize each
period to its needed idea.
326
It is good as a beginning to believe in God. It
is admirable as the next step to try to come closer to God by worship - but it
is not enough. It is a fulfilment of a still higher duty to try to know that in
us which is the link with God, which in contrast to man is of a godlike nature.
327
The order of progress is from belief to
knowledge, and thence to love of that which is known.
328
If a man comes to this quest by thought or by
suffering or by fate, he will end by love if he remains with it, love of that
which shines forth during his first glimpse, love of the Overself. It is like
the child losing, then finding, its parent.
329
First, he has a vague feeling of being attracted
towards the Overself. Then he bestows more attention upon it, thinks of it
frequently; at length attention grows into concentration and this, in turn,
culminates in absorption. In the end, he can say, with al Hallaj: "I live not in
myself, only in Thee. Last night I loved. This morning I am Love."
330
The stages in philosophic training usually begin
with gaining a theoretical knowledge of the teachings. When this is well
established, it grows in time into an aspiration for self-improvement and into
an effort to mold character and conduct in conformity with the philosophic
ideal. Such a maturation period is often a long and difficult one. In the third
stage the "glimpse" of enlightenment begins to be experienced. The first glimpse
has a far-reaching effect and is likely to be associated with the first contact
with an inspired spiritual guide, or with the writings of such a man. In the
case of some persons there is a different series of steps. The glimpse comes
first, the theoretical study next, striving to express through living comes
last.
331
The seeker will pass through three periods
successively before he can enter the sublime land of realization. First he must
experiment with and exhaust the external possibilities of religion; then he must
practise the internal rite of meditation; lastly he must, with sharpened
intelligence, pursue the subtlest of all philosophies.
332
That a higher existence is possible for mankind
may be a strong intuitive feeling or a strong religious belief. It can develop
through experience of a mystical glimpse into personal realization or more
lastingly, more truthfully, through experience of philosophic insight.
333
The aspiration or yearning comes first on the
Quest, the repentance and cleansing come next; study, prayer, and meditation
will then naturally follow these preparations. He must first make himself ready
for the illumination, then only will he get it. As a consequence of all these
efforts and aspirations, he will begin to grow out of himself. Wisdom comes with
the end of a long probation.
334
The third part of the quest is a moral and social
praxis.
335
The higher stage is pure philosophy, for it
re-educates his outlook and hence his consciousness. It demands close,
concentrated study, however, and therefore few care for it. It is based on
reasoning, not on mystic intuitions, and will be the logical development of
modern science if it keeps on probing as men like Eddington, Planck, and others
like them have done. Unfortunately the West has not carried reasoning to the
bitter end, as the ancient Rishees did, for it has omitted consideration of the
dream and deep sleep states from its data, as well as other important matters.
Reason is not to be confused with logic, either; the latter is limited and
cannot yield truth.
336
But the mystical experience is not sufficiently
common to be made the foundation for popular instruction in the modes of
obtaining it. Humanity in its present stage is not even mystical by nature, let
alone philosophical, but it could become so by education and training. For
mysticism always follows religion as a further stage in the individual's
journey. The mystical consciousness is an inevitable stage of human evolution.
Every man will attain it with the efflux of time. But he will not do so by a
smooth mechanical clocklike progress. His ascent will be uneven erratic and
zigzag. Yet he will necessarily attain it. The few who want to anticipate the
human evolutionary process must take to mysticism or philosophy.
337
First stage: This is attained by those who
study metaphysics alone or practise mysticism alone. It is the withdrawal from
the senses and their objects. It is negative. It leads to a perception that the
external world is unsatisfactory. It is the great turning away from things of
sense. It is an ascetic stage; it is accompanied by thoughts; it is a
recognition that matter is not ultimately real. It is marked by moral change. It
is the discovery through a glimpse of his spiritual nature which is an ecstatic
sense of union with a superior immaterial being. He feels on occasions that he
is divine.
Second stage: It affirms the unique positive ultimate reality. It yields the vision of mystic light of the Logos; it is attained by mysticism alone. It is entry into the Void; it is the discovery of Spirit; it is trance. It is thought-free, delights in solitude. This realization of God in the heart marks the Witness-stage of ultramystic experience. The man feels utterly detached from his own or the world's activities, so much so that he is ascetically tempted to withdraw into a retreat from life. If, however, fate forces him to continue in the world he will feel all the time curiously like a spectator at a cinema show; but this cannot constitute an ultimate human goal.
Third stage: It is in the world, but not of it. It is the return to the external sense-world and the discovery that it too is God-born. It never loses sight of its unity with life, but insists on its connection with action. Instead of becoming a refuge for dreamers, talkers, and escapists, it becomes an inspiring dynamic. It is the realization of All in himself and himself in All. With this attainment he throws himself incessantly into the service of mankind.
338
Whilst there are parts of our nature which remain
still undeveloped, we are not complete men.
339
It is the wholeness of his bodily, mental, and
spiritual being that man must develop.
340
Results will best prove the soundness of the
integrated path, the effectiveness of the integrated personality. Man is a
many-sided being. His development must accordingly be correlated with this fact.
341
The whole psyche of man must get into this task
of self-spiritualization. Feeling alone cannot do it, will alone cannot do it,
thinking alone cannot do it, and intuiting alone cannot do it. Every element
must contribute to it and be shaped by it.
342
Can these competing tendencies, the extroverting
and the introverting, be brought together in a single life? Philosophy not only
answers that they can, but also that they must be integrated if the mystical
life is to reach its fullest bloom. It wisely mingles the two ideals without
despoiling either. Here, it not only co-operates with human nature but also
imitates the rhythmic pattern of Nature. It is in harmony with Tao, "the way the
universe goes."
343
It is not enough to develop any one of these
parts of our being alone. It is a much more stupendous task to develop all three
at the same time. Yet this is what philosophy asks for.
344
Work completely done, the body effectively used,
the mind capably directed - such a roundly developed personality is the ideal.
345
If the whole truth is to be discovered, the whole
being must be brought to its quest. If this is done, philosophy will be lived as
well as known, felt as well as understood, experienced as well as intuited.
346
Man as a whole must enter on the Quest and then
the complete organism will benefit when truth is found. If isolated functions
alone enter on it then they alone will benefit by the truth.
347
So long as he is an incomplete person, so long
will he never be able to find more than an incomplete truth.
348
It is not just one part of man which is to follow
the quest but all parts of him. The whole truth can come only to the whole man.
349
Other experiences and other goals demand the
strength and activity of only a part of his being from him but this search for a
higher life demands his all.
350
He follows the quest somewhat hesitantly,
discontinuously and cautiously, wary lest it demands more from him than he is
prepared to give. There is no objection: he may set his own pace but in the end,
of course, he must come into this quest with all of himself.
351
Why should he not be a human being as well as a
yogi? Why should he not bring all of his nature to this co-operative venture
that is Life?
352
The quest may become his central interest but
this is no excuse for him to become unbalanced or disequilibriated.
353
If he comes to the quest with his whole being,
turning every side of it to the quest's light and discipline, he may confidently
expect the full insight, the full transformation and not a partial, incomplete
result.
354
The first reward is truth realized in every part
of his being, the lower self becoming the instrument of the Soul. The second
reward is peace, intensely satisfying and joyous. A keen and constant longing
after the Soul's consciousness, a willingness to surrender all to it
inwardly, are however necessary prerequisites.
355
The acceptance of these ideas can only benefit,
and not harm, humanity.
356
If he will consciously put himself into line with
this higher purpose of human living, he will not only become a better and wiser
man but also a happier one.
357
The pursuit of Mammon is an uncertain adventure,
but the pursuit of Truth is full of certainty. It rewards its own, even in
apparent defeat.
358
Out of the Quest will come a yearning for what is
the best in life and the highest in Truth.
359
With every year of growing experience and
continued application, he will find more and more the truth of these teachings.
He will in consequence be unable not to love them more and more.
360
Out of the medley of mystical researches and
peculiar experiments, religious studies and metaphysical contemplations which
have taken up so large a part of the Quest, there will emerge a few irrefragable
certitudes.
361
When this truth is at last seen, that heaven is
not a place in space but a condition of being, and that therefore it can to a
certain extent be realized even before death, a feeling of joy and a sense of
adventure are felt. The joy arises because we are no longer restricted by time,
and the adventuresomeness arises because a vista of the quest's possibilities
opens up.
362
A serenity which never leaves him and an
integrity which always stamps him, are only two of the fruits of matured
philosophic discipline.
363
If there were nothing more - no exciting or
dramatic inner experience - possible than this ameliorating peace, this
extra-deep feeling of stillness, it would be enough to make the time and care
given to it worthwhile. But there is more for those who want also to know
something of its source, its workings and connections. Beyond that little
measure of knowledge, be content, for the Great Mystery swallows all who find
it. Yet there is nothing to fear.
364
He whose resort is solely the personal ego is
constantly subject to its limitations and narrowness and, consequently, is
afflicted with strains and anxieties. He who lets it go and opens himself up,
whose resort is to his Higher Self, finds it infinite and boundless and,
consequently, is filled with inward peace.
365
The quest often begins with a great sadness but
always ends with a great happiness. Its course may flow through both dark and
bright moods at times, but its terminus will be unbelievably serene.
366
The Quest gives him the chance to achieve inner
peace and find inner happiness; it does not give peace and happiness. If this
does not seem to justify its labours and disciplines, remember that ordinary man
lacks even this chance.
367
Therefore it is that, grey with wandering from
his ancient goal, the aspirant turns tired feet across the threshold of immortal
thought and dwells for a soft white hour upon the couch of unutterable peace.
The words he has heard with his mortal ears have proved only of momentary worth
to him, but the words he hears when he turns away from the world and listens
with the inner ear will walk by his side until the end of Time.
368
When he has brought the host of conflicting
emotions to rest, when he has trained the thoughts to obedience, when he has
fought and beaten the ego itself, he comes to a state of peace.
369
To enter into the presence of a high inspiration,
feel its ennoblement, and understand its message, brings a deeply satisfying
joy.
370
The man who fails to find joy in his Quest has
not understood the Quest.
371
There is no need for aspirants to engage in the
cult of morbid suffering. There is no reason why they should not be happy. If
the Quest is to bring them nearer to their essential self, it will also bring
them nearer to its happiness.
372
When a man feels the presence of a diviner self
within his breast, when he believes that its power protects and provides for
him, when he views past errors and future troubles alike with perfect
equanimity, he has a better capacity to enjoy life and a truer expression of
happiness than those who delight only in ephemeral pleasures and sense
satisfactions. For it will endure into times of adversity and last through hours
of calamity, where the other will crumble and vanish.
373
Wisdom may or may not come with the years of old
age: it is more likely to come with the labours in self-rule and the deepenings
of study, concentration, and reflection, with the humbling religious veneration
of the higher Power. It is, they say, its own reward but it is a bringer of
gifts, of which inner peace is the most prominent and a kindly smile the most
permanent.
374
He who has won wisdom as the reward of his quest
wins virtue as its natural accompaniment too.
375
The student who has diligently applied himself to
the primary tasks of self-improvement, and who has accompanied his efforts with
honest and rigid self-analysis, will discover that many questions which formerly
baffled him have been solved by the workings of his own intuition.
376
Nobody can earnestly work through a course in the
higher philosophy without finding himself a better and wiser man at the end than
he was at the beginning. And this result will come to him almost unconsciously,
little by little, through the creative power of right thinking.
377
His judgements turn out to be misjudgements, and
his caution to be indecision. Often this may be so, alas! But this is the kind
of wisdom which comes with failure or defeat; it embodies the hindsight which,
too late to be of possible use except in the future, is the consequence after
the event. How precious then would be the acquirement of two values to which the
Quest may lead a man - calmness and intuition.
378
Here on the quest, it is not only possible for
him to meet the profoundest thoughts of the human mind but also its highest
experiences.
379
He who finds the Overself, loses the burdens, the
miseries, and the fears of the ego.
380
How does the quest remove his fears? By providing
him sooner or later with firm assurance that the Overself's gracious power is
not only illuminative but also protective.
381
Slowly, as he strives onward with this inner
work, his faults and frailties will fall away and this ever-shining better self
hidden behind them will begin to be revealed.
382
Even if his quest ends in total failure (which it
cannot do) the ideals and ideas it involves will have left some impress on his
character, for they are faint reverberations of whispers from his higher being.
383
The aspirant is not unreasonable in asking that
some reward, if not an adequate reward, should become visible in time for all
his struggles. If he is told to acquire the virtue of patience, he is not told
to acquire the quality of hopelessness. There are signs and tokens, experiences
and glimpses to hearten him on the way.
384
His meditations tend to make him sensitive and
his studies sympathetic; the two qualities combine well so that others notice
how kindly he is in personal relations.
385
It is essential to make clear that none should
take to this Quest in order to follow or depend on some particular man, or to
gain certain mystic experiences, for if he is disappointed in the man or
frustrated in reaching the experiences, he will be inclined to abandon the
Quest. No! - he should take to it for its own sake, because it is immeasurably
worthwhile and because its rewards in improved character and developed
understanding are sufficient in themselves to pay for his effort. If the Quest
helps him to become aware of, and to eradicate, bad faults in himself, in his
outlook on life and in his approach to others, it has justified itself. Even if
the mystical consciousness fails to show itself, or to show itself often enough
to please him, he has still had his money's worth.
386
The time will come when values will change, when
ambitions, powers, possessions, and acquisitions will all be put back into their
proper places, when their tyranny over the will and the feelings will be put to
an end.
387
He who seeks his inner being, and finds it, finds
also his inner good.
388
Those who will take the trouble to comprehend
what all this means, and who will do what they can to practise the requisite
exercises, will find with increasing joy that new life opening up to them.
389
When this inner work is sufficiently advanced,
certain traits of character will either advance in strength or appear for the
first time. Among them are patience, goodwill, stability, self-control,
peacefulness, and equableness.
390
Those who are willing to practise the philosophic
discipline may realize their spiritual nature for themselves and not have to
depend upon hearsay for the knowledge of its existence.
391
It can be shown that the disciplines of
philosophy offer much in return, that to the person who seriously feels his life
needs not mere amendment but raising to a finer level there are encouraging
experiences and beautiful intuitions awaiting him.
392
It is a new and different, a superior and fuller,
a self-fulfilling kind of experience.
393
A life so full of exalted purpose, so inspired by
a tremendous ideal, cannot be a dull or unhappy one.
394
The toil of the quest is hard and long. If it
deters anyone from starting on it, let him remember that the rewards along the
way, even apart from the grand one at the end, are sufficiently worthwhile to
repay him for all he is likely to do.
395
The reward of all the years of long arduous
striving will be their happy justification; the rich blessing of an infinite
strength within him will pay off the failures and weaknesses of a past self
which had to be fought and conquered.
396
During times of war and suffering, the spiritual
Quest demonstrates its value by the inner support which it gives and the
unquenchable faith it bestows. The forces of evil will be checked; the good will
triumph in the end, as always. God's love for all remains what it ever shall be
- the best thing in life.
397
No man may free himself from every form of
outward suffering but all men may free themselves from inward suffering.
398
How weak, how helpless is the man who is himself
alone. How strong, how supported is the man who is both himself and more than
himself. In the one, there is only the petty little ego as the motor force; in
the other there is also the infinite universal being.
399
Any man may detect the presence of divinity
within himself, if he will patiently work through the course prescribed by
authoritative books or a competent guide. It is not the prerogative of spiritual
genius alone to detect it.
400
Is all this too good to be true, too beautiful to
be factual? Is it only a theory without grounds, a personal belief without
evidence? No! - it is quite demonstrable to anyone who will undertake the work
upon himself.
401
If the quest does nothing more than save him in
his darkest hours from total submergence in the all-prevalent worldliness, it
will have done enough.
402
The quest can give stability to the feelings,
support to the mind, defense against the pettiness and the evil in the world.
403
The transformations effected by this inner work
seem, when stabilized, to be a natural maturity.
404
It is only in the rational balanced growth of the
mind and the sympathetic heart, the disciplined body and the tranquillized
nerves, the philosophic reflectiveness, mystic peace, and ultramystic insight,
that a man arrives at last at maturity and normality and thus becomes really
sane.
405
The rewards of this quest are not primarily
material ones, although these may come. The only reward that can be guaranteed
to the successful aspirant is that he will emerge out of the unregenerate state
and come closer to the Overself's consciousness, that is to say, to the kingdom
of heaven. Whoever looks for more may be disappointed. But to the man who
through reflection or suffering, intuition or instruction, has got his values
right, this will be enough.
406
From the first momentary glimpse of the soul till
the final rest in it, he is being led to accept the truth that the love which he
wants and hopes to find outside himself must be found within himself. The true
beloved is not a person but a presence. When genuine love in its most intense
form utterly overwhelms him, he will find that its physical form is a mere
caricature of it and that its human form is a pale reflection from it. Instead
of having to beg some woman or some man for crumbs of affection from their
table, he will find a veritable fountain of everflowing love deep within his
heart, and therefore ever available to him in the fullest measure. This is the
one beloved who can never desert him, the unique soul-mate who will forever
remain with him, the only twin soul he can seek with the absolute certainty that
it is truly his own.
407
At the least there will be more outer harmony and
less outer friction in day-to-day living, more inner peace and less inner
anxiety.
408
It leads to amity in human relationships and
dissolves enmity.
409
The more a man becomes acquainted with the true
sources of his inner life - both in its good and bad sides - the better it will
be for his outer life.
410
He will expand the meaning of his own habitual
life-experience as he expands the awareness of the divine in himself.
411
Practical wisdom in overcoming the most difficult
situations and perfect skill in managing the most delicate ones, are qualities
which should emerge from the balanced training given by this quest.
412
It becomes the background, unknown to other
persons, of all his activities. This is a considerable achievement, a
consequence of applying to them what he perceived in meditation, learnt
in study, and understood in reflection.
413
It is a teaching whose conceptions give the mind
a reasonable understanding of life and whose practice gives the heart repose.
414
It is a gross mistake to believe that this is a
path to worldly misery and material destitution. Says an ancient Sanskrit text,
Ratna Karanda Sravakachara: "Whoever turns himself into a jewel-case of
philosophic wisdom, perfect devotion, and faultless conduct, to him comes
success in all his enterprises, like a woman eager to return to her husband."
Note particularly that the promise is made to those who have travelled the
threefold path and have also travelled it to its end.
415
He who is sufficiently ready to recognize the
Higher Purpose of Life, and who has the courage to change and improve his way of
thinking, thereby replacing negative thoughts by positive ones, will certainly
be rewarded by improved circumstances and greater happiness than he may already
enjoy.
416
No one who feels that his inner weakness or outer
circumstances prevent him from applying this teaching should therefore refrain
from studying it. That would not only be a mistake but also a loss on his part.
For as the Bhagavad Gita truly says, "A little of this knowledge saves
from much danger." Even a few years' study of philosophy will bring definite
benefit into the life of a student. It will help him in all sorts of ways,
unconsciously, here on earth and it will help him very definitely after death
during his life in the next world of being.(P)
417
Although its promises and experiences may not
appear glamorous in a worldly sense, the Quest reveals itself to be the best of
all possible ways of living.
418
If it exacts the highest possible price in human
satisfactions it gives in return the highest possible spiritual satisfactions.
419
The aspirant may have already discovered for
himself some of the inner benefits of the Quest. Once the Overself has been
experienced as a felt, living presence in the heart, it loosens the grip of
egoistic desires - together with their emotional changes of mood - on one's
consciousness and lifts it to a higher level, where he will soon become aware of
a wonderful inner satisfaction which remains calm and unruffled despite outward
circumstances to the contrary.
Ultimately, the aspirant has to rise into that pure atmosphere whence he can survey his personal life as a thing apart. Still more difficult is it for one to live on that level while expressing the wisdom and goodness known to him. It is, however, almost beyond human strength to achieve the second part of such a program. Therefore, he has first to establish the connection with the Overself so that its strength and understanding will then rule him effortlessly. The moment this connection is established, the aspirant will become aware of results from the descent of Divine Grace upon his personality. Such a moment is unpredictable, but, for the individual who sticks to the Quest, its arrival is sure.
420
Out of these intense struggles with his thoughts
and emotions, these repeated meditations and altruistic actions, these constant
self-analyses and ardent yearnings, he will eventually get something which words
can hardly describe. It will be a new sense of sacredness, an enlightened
awareness of a deeper self, a blessed loving serenity.
421
In meditation practice, metaphysical study, and
right conduct we have the triune path which brings satisfaction, peace, wisdom,
and true prosperity. Jesus taught us all this long ago but unfortunately his
message has been largely misunderstood, distorted, and even falsified. However
he also taught that we are all the children of God. It is a Father's business to
look after his children. Despite the tragedy and horror of our times, those who
have eyes to see can still see the divine arms enfolding us. Despite the
presence of monstrosities in the world, there is also the presence of the
Overself - beautiful, radiant, benign, and indestructible.
422
Intelligence exercised constantly in musing upon
the nature of life, the movements of the universe, the psychology of man, and
the mystery of God - if exercised in calmness, intuitive balance, and depth -
leads to the opening up of the soul.
423
If he lets this purpose penetrate his entire
life, he will soon joyously feel that he is part of the eternal structure of the
universe, that he fits into the Idea of it at some point, and that with such a
high relationship all things must work together for his ultimate good.
424
Those who are frightened away from the Quest by
these notes of its dangers are better separated from it.
425
The aspirant who lacks balance is liable to take
a misstep at more than one point of his path.
426
If an unbalanced dreamer is not brought to
actuality and reality by experience, he had better leave the quest alone. This
is not to say that he cannot get mystical experiences in plenty, but that they
will have little true worth for insight.
427
The uncertainties of the Quest may lead,
especially in the neurotic temperament, to a variety of unhappy moods and
unhealthy emotions as the years pass by. The student may at such times turn
against himself in morbid masochism, or against the teaching he has been
following, or against the personal instructor if he has one.
428
The novice too often lives under the delusion
that he is following the Quest when he has yet to find the entrance to it.
429
The importance of right direction is such that if
the angle of deflection covers a long period, the area of error stretches a wide
distance.
430
A self-protective need of the quester is to find
and keep both an apparent and a real sanity. The first is needed in defense
against the world, the second against himself.
431
When yoga is improperly or over-practised, one of
the harmful results will be a gradual slackening of interest in the common
activities of mankind. The unfortunate practitioner develops a blurred and vague
character. He becomes increasingly unfit to fulfil social obligations or
business duties, and tends to become bored with responsibilities. He treats the
fate of others with indifference. He does what is inescapable, but he does it in
a casual, detached, and uninterested manner. In short, he becomes unfit for
everyday practical life.
432
Keep away from psychic practices and occult
explorations. They are filled with dangers and pitfalls. First devote your
energies to the foundational work of learning philosophy, improving character,
disciplining emotion, and cultivating calmness. Only after this work has been
well advanced will it ever be safe for you to take up occultism, for only then
will you be properly equipped to do so.
433
Once again must a warning be given against the
dangers of falling into mere psychism and seeking for phenomena, visions,
miracles, and other things which are still in the realm of a kind of subtle
materialism and are always connected with the personal ego. The true spiritual
experience is higher than that, purer than that, and will leave him absolutely
calm, whereas the psychical phenomena leave him excited. Every kind of such
phenomena involves thought or emotion, whereas the deepest spiritual experience
goes beneath thought and emotion and especially beneath the personal ego. Only
then does one come in contact with the Infinite life-power which is behind
everything and which is the true goal of this Quest.
434
Those who imagine the Quest to be a spiritual
joyride know only a limited phase of it. For along with the joys there are
glooms, difficulties, struggles, conflicts, and vacillations.
435
That a proportion of those who are attracted to
these subjects are psychopaths, is unfortunately true. They would be far better
employed in getting proper treatment for their disordered minds, imaginations,
and feelings. Mystical studies may easily exaggerate their condition and
increase their imbalance. It is the serious duty of every responsible expounder
to warn them off this field and to bid them engage in the quest of psychic and
bodily health before attempting that of spiritual light!
436
When a man pays no heed to the warnings of
prophets and the counsel of sages, and is still too ungrown to pick his steps
correctly, he inevitably loses his way.
437
The awakening of inner forces ought not be
attempted without an accompanying attempt to fortify character and guard against
weakness.
438
In the case of mentally disturbed or emotionally
unbalanced persons, trust in their own ego may easily be misread as trust in the
Overself - with correspondingly lamentable results.
439
The danger is that he may get lost in the mazes
of his own mind. Those who suffer from such psychic maladjustments cannot find
truth but only its distortions. They have fallen into a mental quagmire.
440
Let him not deceive himself. Few have ever really
entered that exquisite awareness and remained there. Others seem to have done so
but the fact is that they merely touched its outermost fringe for a few moments
and then passed into an egoistic conceited state which has trapped them.
441
Certain psychic experiences may arise, the
pattern of which is familiar, having been observed in both the writer's own
experience and numerous other cases. Between the ordinary state of undeveloped
humanity and the truly spiritual state attained by highly advanced individuals,
there is a psychic region conducive to mediumship and other pitfalls and dangers
which has to be crossed. One is indeed fortunate to come through this safely.
442
From several different sources a variety of
suggestive influences play upon the student's mind and habits, influences which
may be all very well for others but which may be harmful to his own
individuality at his particular stage of spiritual progress. This is true not
only of the trivial affairs of everyday living but also of the loftier affairs
of aspirational living. White truths and black falsehoods, cleverly combined
half-truths and half-falsehoods are continually being presented to his
consciousness. Not only his physical life, but also his mental life must become
a process of careful acceptance and vigilant rejection. At a certain stage of
this quest the seeker must be particularly careful to be on his guard against
the skilfully suggested "truths" of others who mistake their own candle-glimmer
for the sun's glory and the prejudices born of their own narrow experience for
the wisdom born of insight. This caution is especially necessary in the sphere
of mystical experience.
443
The wary seeker should be on his guard against
those who offer pseudo-knowledge as well as those extremists who would lead him
off balance.
444
Those who take to this quest for the sake of
satisfying personal ambition, will do better in the end to leave it alone.
445
Travelling on this quest can be only another way
of inflating their egos, increasing their pride, and renewing their
sectarianism.
446
It is not easy, this quest. Some stumble along it
and somehow manage to advance a little way, but others give up.
447
A longtime personal disciple of Professor Jung
told P.B., "My friend and teacher Jung was not opposed to yoga: it was only that
most of the people who came to see him were patients who suffered from
psychosis. He thought this should be cured first, or yoga would be perilous."
448
Teachers have sometimes tried to discourage
people from entering on the Quest, for, by their own experience, they know what
a long and painful road it is.
449
Beginners come to this quest with little
knowledge and much indoctrination, so that sectarian attitudes soon appear
again, although clothed in a different jargon.
450
Too many beginners form too many misconceptions
about this subject, too often got from miscellaneous cursory reading of mixed
quality.
451
There is not only danger in dabbling in
meditation but also in experimenting in it too long without adequate safeguards
or qualified supervision.
452
Extravagant assertions and erroneous ideas
constitute another peril which besets the developing beginner.
453
Good intent or sincere motive cannot by itself be
enough to protect the fool against his own gullibility, the uncritical against
his own stupidity, and the uninformed against his own ignorance. All this is as
true of the quest itself as of that part of its practice called meditation.
454
Seductive activities, phenomena, ideas, or
"guides" may try to lure him from this straight course into time-wasting
sideshows or dangerous directions. Reform, psychism, politics, perverted
teachings or counterfeit ones may call but must not be heeded. He has a long way
to go yet and must take care to keep on the right road.
455
There is an evil quest too, whose disciples seek
to serve their lower nature rather than to conquer it, and whose masters show
themselves by action or teaching to be monsters.
456
Warnings must be given against possible pitfalls
on the quester's way. Yes, meditation may lead to hallucinations, spiritual
self-development may lead to spiritual vanity, and self-purification may lead to
ascetic crankiness.