1
What we can do is to prepare favourable conditions
for the Light of the Overself's appearance or for the manifestation of its
Grace. This is the role and function of mystical technique and is as far as it
can go. There is no technique which can guarantee to offer more than such
preparation. If it does, it is quackery.
2
The impelling force of an ardent desire for
self-improvement must unite with the attracting spell of the Overself's beauty
to give him the strength for these labours and disciplines. On the one side, he
reflects on the disadvantages of yielding to his faults and weaknesses - on the
other, to the benefits of establishing the virtues and qualities of his higher
nature.
3
A rich, many-sided personality may still be in the
process of accumulating experience and unfolding potentialities. Experience
alone is a hard path; it should be backed by reason, intuition, and correct
counsel. But reason is useful for truth-finding only when it is detached and
impersonal; intuition must be genuine and not camouflaged impulse or
wishful-thinking; and correct counsel may be obtained only from the most
inspired, and not the merely sophisticated, sources.
4
Whoever wishes to develop beyond the spiritual level
of the mass of mankind must begin by changing the normal routine of mankind. He
must reflect, pray, and meditate daily. He must scrutinize all his activities by
the light of philosophy's values and ethics. He may even have to change his
residence, if possible, for serenity of mind and discipline of passion are more
easily achievable in a rural village than in an urban city.
5
He should never forget that in his metaphysical
studies or mystical practices he is working towards an ultimate goal which lies
beyond both metaphysics and mysticism. He is preparing himself to become a
philosopher, fitting himself to be granted the Overself's Grace, unfolding
passive intuition and critical intelligence only that the transcendental insight
may itself be unfolded.
6
He has to learn how to surrender his egotism and
swallow his pride. He has to cleanse his heart of impurity and then open it to
divinity.
7
The philosophic life is a steadily disciplined, not a
severely ascetic one.
8
The aspiration toward the higher self must be
formally repeated in daily prayer, cherished in daily retreats, and kept vivid
in daily study.
9
So long as man is imperfect in character, defective
in intelligence, and mechanical in sense-response to his environment, so long
must he seek to improve the first, perfect the second, and liberate the third.
And there is no better way to achieve these aims than to pursue a philosophic
course of conduct and thought.
10
It is a wise rule of aspiration not to seek for
more power than you are able to use or more knowledge than you are willing to
apply.
11
The inability to believe in or detect the presence
of a divine power in the universe is to be overcome by a threefold process. The
first part some people overcome by "hearing" the truth directly uttered by an
illumined person or by other people by reading their inspired writings. The
second part is to reflect constantly upon the Great Truths. The third part is to
introvert the mind in contemplation.(P)
12
Make it a matter of habit, until it becomes a
matter of inclination, to be kind, gentle, forgiving, and compassionate. What
can you lose? A few things now and then, a little money here and there, an
occasional hour or an argument? But see what you can gain! More release from the
personal ego, more right to the Overself's grace, more loveliness in the world
inside us, and more friends in the world outside us.(P)
13
This Quest cannot be followed to success without
the quality of courage. It is needed at the beginning, in the middle, and near
the end. It is needed to think for oneself, to act in nonconformity to one's
environment, and to obey intuitive leading toward new, unknown, or unfamiliar
directions.
14
He must develop emotional maturity, strong
character, and a courageous attitude toward life. This positive strength is
needed to face and master the many different trying situations of existence. The
will has to be hardened so that it keeps him from being drowned in the wash of
emotional reactions. Only after he has done this can he penetrate through to the
deeper layer of being where his inner Self dwells. If this is not done in the
early stages of growth he will eventually be forced to retrace his steps and
learn, consciously and deliberately, the neglected lessons.
15
Because the quest is in part an attempt to raise
himself to a higher level of being, he must change his attitude for a time
towards those powers of the lower level which would keep him captive there. That
is, he must liberate himself from the thraldom of the senses and the tendencies
of the intellect. The first he may accomplish by ascetic disciplines, the second
by meditative disciplines. The body must be mortified, the emotions purified,
and the mind reoriented. He has, in short, to pursue the good with all the
ardour and faithfulness that the world reserves for its lesser loves.
16
At least two urgent needs must be attended to. The
first is self-awareness and control of our emotional and mental reactions. The
second is the same, but in reference to our physical reactions, that is, the way
we use our body. In short, we must learn how most efficiently to function both
in rest and in activity.
17
By the use of will, of force of a decision made and
kept, a man may strive against his animal self to win peace. By the practice of
mental quiet, of turning inward, of letting his higher nature emerge, he may win
it, too.
18
The mere flexion and extension of the body's
muscles may be valuable to the man who wants to display how large and how thick
he can develop them, but it is not enough for, and may be mere drudgery to, the
man who wants the philosophic attainment. The latter must creatively join
breathing, thinking, imagining, believing, worshipping, and willing to the
physical act and focus them upon it, if he is to gain that attainment.
19
So long as he lacks humour, he may tend to make the
quest a heavy burden of disciplines, exercises, duties, and tests only - that
is, he may confine it to the Long Path only, and miss its joyous releases, its
happy discoveries.
20
There is no point on the Path where a man may cast
goodness aside; neither near its beginning, the middle, or the end may he do so.
21
The quality of calmness is to be highly valued,
constantly pursued and practised, until it becomes well stabilized.
Philosophical knowledge and meditational exercise, plus application to everyday
living, bring this prize.
22
After the necessity for self-improvement has been
brought home to us, whether by peaceful reflection or painful experience, we
begin to cast about for the power to effect it. We see that enthusiasm is not
enough, for this having bubbled up may pass away again into lethargy. We need
the effort to understand, and to organize our thought to this end as well as the
will to apply in action what we learn.
23
He is willing to submit to the restraints imposed
by the ideal because he wants the benefits gained by following the ideal,
including the benefit of feeling that he is doing what is right. He submits
cheerfully without regarding the restraint as being oppressive.
24
Life is grey enough without being made greyer by
sacrificing the little colourful pleasures which art can bring to it or the
little cheering comforts which invention can contribute to it.
25
Aesthetical starvation and emotional purity are not
convertible terms.
26
Wisdom is needed to make the most of life. The
discipline of character is needed to prevent avoidable suffering. The control of
thought is needed to attain peace. Reverence for the highest is needed for
spiritual fulfilment.
27
The man who takes his body for himself,
misunderstands himself. Only a course of severe discipline will correct it and
reveal to him by intense experience the power subtler than flesh, subtler even
than intellect, which is at the vital centre deep within consciousness.
28
At first he will find within himself only a tiny
spark of divinity. He will next have to strive to kindle this spark into a
flame.
29
The aspiration has gotten into his bloodstream and
every act, every thought follows inevitably from this one primal fact.
30
"The question of attainment depends only, in the
last resort, on the thirst of the soul," Swami Vivekananda once told an
aspirant.
31
It is true that the aspiration for Overself is also
a desire and must eventually also go. But it is useful and helpful in getting
free from lesser or lower desires.
32
The means needed for the quest have been listed in
Buddha's eightfold path: (1) right belief, (2) right decision, (3) right words,
(4) right dealings, (5) right livelihood, (6) right tendency, (7) right
thinking, (8) right meditative immersion into oneself.
33
The student has to unfold a wider sense. He must
begin to see the whole of which he forms a part, which means he must become more
philosophical. His physical existence depends on the services of others, from
the parents who rear him, the wife who mates him, the customer who buys his
goods or services, the farmer who grows his food, the soldier who guards his
country, to the undertaker who buries his body. No man can forever isolate
himself from the rest of mankind. In some way or other, for one essential need
or another, he will come to depend on it. The shoes he wears or the food he eats
were prepared for him by somebody else. Thus he is mysteriously chained to his
human kith and kin. Thus he is forced to learn the lesson of unity and
compassion.
34
It must become something as central to his life as
eating, as necessary as breathing, and as welcome as great music.
35
According to the Pali Buddhist texts, the three
main requisites to be cultivated for enlightenment are Understanding,
Concentration, and Right Conduct. These correspond to the Mahayana requisites of
Wisdom, Meditation, and Morality.
36
The aspirant has such a task to perform that he
must needs husband his strength for it. He must keep his fingers lithe and
nimble for his starry work, untrammelled by the behests of other taskmasters.
37
Attentive study, faithful practice of the exercises
given in my books, and the re-education of character and conduct along positive
lines will help to prepare him for glimpses of enlightenment.
38
We must direct all our desire along this channel of
a high aspiration, as the artilleryman directs all the force of an explosive
within the steel wall of a gun, concentrating it into conquering potency.
39
He is not only to seek the Real, but he is
also to love the Real; not only to make it the subject of his constant
thoughts but also the object of his devoted worship.
40
It is the shortest step in humility that we can
take to admit that we are all en route, and leave it to others to talk of
final attainments. In an infinite realm of nature, the possibilities are also
infinite.
41
When we feel the littleness of our ego against the
greatness of our Overself, we become humble. Therefore it is that to those who
feel neither the one nor the other, the first prescription is: cultivate
humility.
42
Those who cannot or will not learn to bow their
heads in reverence at certain times like sunsets, in certain places like massive
mountains, or before certain men like sages, will not be able to learn the
highest wisdom.
43
The refinement and evolution of a human being
requires not only a cultivation of his intellectual faculties, not only of his
heart qualities, but also of his aesthetic faculties. All should be trained
together at the same time. A love of the beautiful in nature and art, in sunsets
and pictures, in flowers and music, lifts him nearer the ideal of perfection.
44
There is a difference between aspiration and
ambition as they are to be understood on this quest. The two easily get confused
with one another. Aspiration tries not to surrender to the ego's tyranny whereas
ambition directly strengthens it. I do not refer here to a young man's ambition
to make a career for himself. That is another matter and ought to be encouraged.
45
It is right to go beyond admiration and honourable
to rise up to veneration in a place where Nature gives us great beauty, or at a
truth of being which redeems life from chaos and meaninglessness, or in finding
a book which comes with a welcome opportune message at the right moment, and
finally with a work of true art testifying to the noble, creative, or unworldly
inspiration behind it.
46
It may not be an axiom in many teachings, but it is
in philosophy: to purify emotion, to refine feeling, to control attitude, and to
uplift mood by accepting help from art and nature are spiritual
exercises.
47
This faculty of discrimination, called
buddhi in the Sanskrit Bhagavad Gita and chih in the
Chinese Confucian classics, is to be developed not only by studies and
reflections but also by experiences of life: it is to be applied in
observations, decisions, and actions. It is at first a rational faculty but
later, on a higher level, is transfused with intuition.
48
The universal rule of all true spiritual teachers
which calls for him to purify himself means simply that he shall remove the
hindrances to clear awareness of his Overself. The passions are merely one group
of these hindrances: there are several others and different kinds.
49
The man who is devoid of the eight qualities which
practice of the Long Path eventually develops in him will not be able to succeed
in practising the Short Path. These qualities are calmness, self-control,
oriental withdrawal, fortitude, faith, constant recollection, intense yearning
for the Overself, and keen discrimination between the transient and the eternal.
50
The attempt to use Spirit for personal ends cannot
succeed, but the willingness to be used by it can be realized.
51
The recognition of one's limitations, together with
voluntary annihilation of self-will at the feet of the Overself, are
indispensable prerequisites on the part of the entire ego before the experience
of Reality can transpire.
52
The aspirant who has to undergo deep changes and to
learn how to humble himself must remember that this is for his own ultimate
benefit. All experience of this kind is intended to promote spiritual growth.
53
The attitude of expectancy and hope in the matter
of seeking illumination is a correct one. But the hour when this Grace will be
bestowed is unpredictable; therefore, hope must be balanced with patience, and
expectancy with perseverance. Meanwhile, there is all the work one can handle in
attending to the improvement of character and understanding, the cultivation of
intuition and practice of meditation, the prayers for Grace, and in
self-humbling beneath the Will of the Overself.
54
In this study it is needful to maintain a
discriminative attitude in every matter - then help and instruction can be
obtained from all kinds of unexpected sources. Such an approach, however, should
not be confused with mere credulity since this would delay progress.
55
Until the time his karma brings him the indwelling
Master, the seeker must continue to prepare for what will then happen. He must
seek to uncover and uproot all faults and characteristic weaknesses. He must
resolve to achieve the best life - that is, one that exemplifies truth,
goodness, and beauty. He must understand well the proper values to be attached
to worldly matters and to spiritual ones. He must face the difficulties of
everyday life with courage and with the knowledge gleaned from his study.
56
He must climb out of the dark pit of emotional
resentment and self-pity into which the blows of life throw him. He should
extirpate all the human and pardonable weakness which made him unhappy. He
should be big-hearted and generous towards the failings of others who, he feels,
have wronged him. It is a grand chance to make a quick spurt in his spiritual
progress if he could change from the conventional emotional reaction to the
philosophic and calmer one, if he could rise at one bound above what Rupert
Brooke called "the long littleness of life." He should not continue to bear
resentment against those who have wronged him, nor to brood over what they have
done; let him forget the mean, the sordid, and the wicked things other people do
and remember the great, the noble, and the virtuous things that he seeks to do.
Follow Jesus' example and cheerfully forgive, even unto seventy times seven. By
his act of forgiveness to them, he will be forgiven himself for the wrongs he
also has done. In their pardon lies his own. This is the law. In this way he
demonstrates that he is able to leap swiftly from the present self-centered
standpoint to a higher one, and he deals the personal ego a single paralysing
blow. This is without doubt one of the hardest efforts anybody can be called
upon to make. But the consequences will heal the wounds of memory and mitigate
the pains of adversity.
57
In a certain type of person the most important
factor in the inner life is the cultivation of the harder qualities like will,
decision, execution, endurance, determination, energy, and the like.
58
He must work hard at eliminating the faults in his
character. Even though he may yearn for the Overself, he may actually stand in
the way of his own light. If the ego is strong in him, he must try to learn from
others the humility, devotion, and unselfishness which are so admirable and
necessary. He should not be afraid to go down on his knees in prayer and
confession, for pride, vanity, egotism, and self-assertion must be broken. Even
if he has very good qualities he must forget these and concentrate on the
eradication of his faults, to perfect himself as much as possible. Character is
what counts in every sphere.
59
Ultimately he will have to rise into that pure
atmosphere whence he can survey his personal life as a thing apart. And, still
more difficult as it is, he will have to live in such a way as to use
personality to express the wisdom and goodness felt on that height. The second
part of this program is almost beyond human strength to achieve. Therefore he
has first to establish the connection with the Overself so that its strength and
understanding will then rule him without requiring any effort on his part. The
moment of this event is unpredictable. It depends on the Divine Grace. However,
if he sticks to the Quest, its arrival is sure. After that, Fate re-adjusts his
external circumstances in what may seem to be a miraculous manner and life
becomes more satisfying.
60
At last he finds that he must become as a little
child and re-acquire faith. But this time it will not be blind faith; it will be
intelligent. He must free himself from the pride, arrogance, and conceit of the
intellect and bow in homage before the eternal Mystery; there is much that he
can learn about himself, his mind, the laws of living, and the ways of Nature.
Nothing is to be rejected. He needs to believe as well as to know. In the end,
too, he has to drop all the "isms," however much he may have got from them in
the past, and think, feel, and live as a free being.
61
His personal duty is to grow spiritually all he can
as quickly as possible. He must concentrate on himself, but always keep at the
back of his mind the idea that one day he will be fit to serve others and do
something for them too. Spiritual growth entails meditation practices kept up as
regularly as possible, metaphysical study, cultivation of intuition, and a
kindling of an ever increasing love for the divine soul, the true "I." It is
this soul which is the ray of God reflected in him and it is as near to God as
anyone can ever get. God is too great, too infinite, ever to be completely
comprehended; but the Overself, which is God's representative here, can be
comprehended. Only it keeps itself back until he yearns for it as ardently as
the most love-sick young man ever yearned for his sweetheart. It wants him to
want it for its own sake, and because he has seen through all the material
values and understands how imperfect they are in comparison. So he must
cultivate this heartfelt love towards what is his innermost "me" and must not
hesitate to pray for its Grace or even to weep for it. He must surrender
inwardly and secretly all the ego's desires to it.
62
It is through heartfelt prayer and aspiration to
become one with his own higher self that the student will eventually open the
way for the further guidance he needs.
63
It is absolutely essential for seekers on this
Quest to avoid becoming sidetracked by psychism and occultism and their devotees
- and to place their faith and aspiration in the transcendental purity of the
divine Overself alone.
64
The fact that one may not have had any apparent
mystical experience, even though he has tried practising concentration, need not
dismay him. Concentration alone is not enough. It is no less important to
practise prayer and aspiration, unremitting effort at improving character and
eliminating weaknesses, strengthening the will and purifying the emotions. If he
applies faithful and persistent effort in these directions, he will not only
cultivate a properly balanced and well-developed personality, but he will
eventually call forth the Grace and Guidance of the Overself.
65
Intensified aspiration for the Way, Itself, rather
than too much concern about the steps that lead along It, will act as a
propulsive force.
66
Those who feel they lack the strength to restrain
their emotional ego may vicariously, if momentarily, find it by immersing
themselves in the creations, literary or artistic, of others who do have it.
67
In what way and by what means can a man discover
the truth? By an aspiration active enough and intelligent enough to penetrate
both mysticism and philosophy while saturating itself in reverence.
68
Counsel to a seeker: First hear or study,
reflect and understand what you, the world, and God are. Then enter the
Stillness, love it. The Stillness will take care of you, and of your problems.
69
There are two stages: (a) effort, and (b) cessation
of effort while waiting for Grace. Without guilt and without the use of
willpower, he watches his weaknesses and desires as a mere spectator. This
nondualistic attitude, which refuses to separate body from soul, is
metaphysically correct; but he must place within, and subordinate to, this
larger acceptance the minimum disciplines and controls and exercises. Thus the
latter are modified and their harsh, rigid, or mechanical character is
eliminated. The teaching of acceptance is given by Krishnamurti, but it is not
balanced by the disciplines; it is too extreme, it is not complete. The balanced
philosophic approach eliminates the dualism of body and soul, so criticized by
Krish-na-mur-ti, yet makes a proper limited use of asceticism.
70
The Quest uses the whole of one's being, and when
enlightenment comes, all parts are illumined by it. To prepare for this, one
should continue the self-humbling prayers for Grace, the exercise of sudden
remembrance of the Overself, the surrender of the lower nature to the Higher,
and the never-ceasing yearning for Reality.
71
It is not only character, capacities, faculties,
and intelligence that are to be developed by mankind in the course of centuries
as concerns his inner nature but also refinement. This is an attribute which he
expresses chiefly through aesthetic feeling and artistic sensitivity yet also
through speech, manner, dress, and behaviour. It betokens his quality and lifts
him from a lower caste (by inward measure) to a higher one.
72
He must try to remain noble even in an ignoble
environment, philosophical in an ignorant one.
73
Not infrequently a student asks, "Has anyone ever
been in my position? How can I arrive at awareness of the Truth?" The Teacher
could reply that he himself has been in many such positions. What he did was to
ardently and prayerfully seek Truth through the fivefold path of religious
veneration, mystical meditation, rational reflection, and moral and physical
re-education. There is, however, a certain destiny always at work in these
matters.
74
It is necessary to explore, find, and face his
problems before he can resolve them. This will require a ruthless impersonality
and a maturity of experience which not many possess. Therefore, it is here that
the wholesome books and the advice of friends may be sought.
75
Our human nature is so pitifully limited and
imperfect that only its most rigorous discipline will bring the infinite and
perfect enlightenment into consciousness without spoiling it in some way.
76
He needs a humbleness like that of the grass which
is trodden by all feet, a patience like that of the tree which is exposed to all
weathers.
77
The ego must aspire before the soul can reveal.
78
It is a work upon himself, his character and
outlook, his knowledge and capacity. But especially is it a work upon his
faculty of attention, his control of thought, his delicate awareness.
79
Enframed and conditioned as they are by the
suggestions and influences from various outside sources, the first duty is to
find liberation from them.
80
It is easy to express the wish to become an
instrument in the hands of the Divine but hard to become one in actuality.
Countless pious persons say countless times, "Thy will be done," but they seldom
do it. They are not to blame, however. For they are ignorant of the fact that
before their words can get any real meaning, they themselves must pass
through a discipline, a preparation, a self-development, and a balancing-up.
81
Self-study and self-observation, a constant effort
toward developing awareness, and a truly objective analysis of past and present
experiences in the light of one's highest aspirations, will eventually lead one
to the discovery of the Undivided Self; whilst meditation, accompanied by an
intensified attitude of faith and devotion, will lead to deeper understanding
of, and communion with, this Goal of Goals.
82
These ideas will have to become not merely his
beliefs but his very life, will have to govern not merely his head but his
deepest heart. He must live in them as naturally and continuously as he breathes
in the air.
83
We are living in wonderfully momentous times and it
is the task of those on the Path to become bearers of the light in a dark age.
But first, before that can be, each one must purify, ennoble, and instruct
himself. He must fit himself for the divine grace because nothing can be done by
his own personal power.
84
Though you may be the greatest of sinners, do not
be afraid to take up yoga. It is not for the good alone, it is for all alike.
Take up this practice, give a little time to it regularly, and you will begin to
see your sins gradually disappear. It will happen naturally, automatically. Did
not Socrates somewhere say that "knowledge is virtue"? And we can guess that his
favourite precept was "Man Know Thyself."
85
The sincere attempt to live out our highest
intimations even among the most mundane of environments is essential if we are
not to lose ourselves in a sea of vague sophistication. No metaphysical study,
no pondering upon the fascinating laws of mind, no ambiguous wandering with a
candle in the dark recesses of psychical life can ever atone for the lack of
Right Action. We may harbour the loveliest dreams but we must turn them into
realities by effort.
86
Some means of testing his faith and character, his
ideas and motives, his values and goals must be found. Life itself provides that
means.
87
The idea that being practical means being dead to
all sacred feelings and holy intuitions is another error to be exposed.
Everywhere men of affairs and achievement, both celebrated and obscure, have
kept their inward being sensitive and alive amidst their earthly labours and
worldly successes.
88
If daily work is accompanied by daily remembrance,
and if detachment from the ego is practised along with both, this goal can be
attained by a worldling as much as by a world-renouncer.
89
These teachings have first to become known, then
understood, next accepted, and lastly made a part of day-to-day living.
90
Another excellent practice is to begin each day
with some particular quality of the ideal in view. It is to be incorporated in
the prayers and meditations and casual reflections of that day. A special effort
is to be made to bring all deeds to conform to it.
91
Day by day and hour by hour it must be practised,
must be brought into personal living. For it is not to be treated as something
abnormal and unnatural or set esoterically apart.
92
He should ask of each day what it has yielded in
this lifelong struggle for the realization of higher values.
93
Time may bring him more perception, experience may
bring him more knowledge, but he will gain inner strength only as he uses his
opportunities aright.
94
He need not torment himself trying to understand
everything in the teaching, if he finds many parts too difficult. It is enough
to start with what he can understand and apply that to daily living. This will
lead later to increased intuitive capacity to receive such ideas as he had to
pass by for the time being.
95
Those who do not feel ready, or inclined, to fulfil
the disciplinary requirements and follow the meditational practices of the
Quest, can still benefit in a practical way by using its ethical principles in
daily life.
96
In the spiritualization of active life, through the
deeds that come from him and the events that come to him, he has one effectual
method of self-development. For a valuable part of the quest's technique is to
treat each major experience as a means of lifting himself to a higher level. All
depends not on the particular nature of the experience, but upon his reaction to
it. It may be pleasurable or painful, a temptation or a tribulation, a caress by
fortune or a blow of fate; whatever its nature he can use it to grow. As
he moves from experience to experience, he may move from strength to strength.
If he uses each situation aright - studying it analytically and impersonally,
supplicating the higher self for help if the experience is in the form of
temptation, or for wisdom if it is in the form of tribulation - his progress is
assured. Thus action itself can be converted into a technique of
self-purification instead of becoming, as so many monastics think it inevitably
must become, a channel of self-pollution.
97
There is great profit in the coinage of spiritual
self-growth waiting to be picked up at every turn. The method is a simple one.
Consider every person who makes an impact on your life as a messenger from the
Overself, every happening which leaves its mark as a divinely-sent teacher.
98
We must endeavour to find this divinity within, not
merely at set times of meditation, but also amid the press of the marketplaces.
99
Learn how to live the teaching out in the midst of
the world, yes! with all the temptations and trials; to shun cloistered virtues
which, because they are untested, may not be virtues at all; to stay amongst
suffering ignorant men who need enlightenment and not to leave them to rot in
their darkness; to face the difficulties of worldly life as brave students of
philosophy and not as cowardly weaklings; to be too big-hearted and tolerant,
too broad-minded and intelligent to separate yourselves; in short, to follow
Jesus' advice and be in the world yet not of it.
100
We must bring our philosophy to the test not only
in the exalted stratosphere of inspired moods but also in the prosaic flatness
of daily life.
101
Since most of us have to live in the world as
laymen, or even prefer to do so, we must learn how to make use of the world so
that it will promote our spiritual aspirations and not obstruct them.
102
What the poet or artist conceives is within
himself, but what he creates is outside himself. Similarly, what the Quester
conceives is within himself, but what he creates is the actual life that he
creates in the world outside himself.
103
The beginner needs knowledge, needs to attend
lectures, study books, discuss ideas, and even debate the criticism of them. But
the man who has done all that needs to move on, to get into the testing ground
where teachings and values must prove themselves - that is, into life itself.
104
To accept a high ideal during emotional
enthusiasm is one thing; to live up to its guidance during the everyday routine
life is another.
105
It is not easy, this living of two different
lives at one and the same time, yet it is not impossible. The common everyday
existence is not so unrelated that it cannot coexist with the uncommon mystical
existence.
106
If his common activities are carried on against a
background of philosophical endeavour, they will themselves tend to become in
time a part of this endeavour.
107
It is necessary to strive increasingly for
practicality and some measure of self-reliance in worldly life. This is not
something separate or apart from the search for the higher self. On the
contrary, whatever Truth is found and whatever changes are brought about in
one's being should be reflected in one's participation in every activity and
relationship, whether it be in the work done as the individual's share of
world-labour or in his necessary ability to get along with others - not only
with those of similar interests and understanding, but with all humanity.
108
Progress can be made not only in Egypt or India
but anywhere. No matter who or where he is, each individual's own character,
together with its participation in daily life, is the material presented to him
for self-study and self-observation. An analysis of these experiences, both past
and present, when carried on in the light of his highest aspirations and in his
search for awareness of and attentiveness to God, will open the way to guidance
from the Higher Self.
109
"The time of happiness does not differ with me
from the time of prayer, and in the noise and clutter of my kitchen I possess
God in as great tranquillity as if I were on my knees," said Brother Lawrence as
he went about his work in the monastery kitchen. This is the reward - or rather
part of the reward - which philosophy holds before us. It is worth striving for.
And the Gita tells us that no efforts are in vain; all bring their fruit
sometime, somewhere - if not in this birth then in another, if not in this world
then in the next. For the man or woman busy with his bit in the world's work,
the Quest must be carried on in the midst of activity. He must not let the
difficulties which arise inevitably out of such work cause him to abate his
trust in the divine laws. These should be his safeguard, his dependence, his
armour, and his weapons.
110
It is sometimes asked whether it is better to
retain a detached attitude in one's relations with others during the day, or to
cultivate and concentrate on a feeling of unity with them and with the All.
Since both are necessary, one should follow his inner promptings as to which
phase needs to be developed at any particular time. By keeping his approach
flexible, and by carefully heeding these inner promptings, his judgement of and
dealings with all daily situations will be greatly improved. Such promptings -
when free of and not influenced by selfish desires - will shift of their own
accord when the need for balance arises.
111
He may call himself a follower of philosophy only
when it has become a part of his daily life.
112
His mind having captured these ideas and his
heart being captured by them, the next step is to apply them in daily living.
113
Do your duty to the best of your ability, but
preserve mental equilibrium at the results, whether the latter be success or
failure. This is karma yoga.
114
Until we learn to regard our environment and our
contacts as means of rising spiritually, we remain on the materialistic level
and do not get as much out of life as we could.
115
The student's "firsthand experience" is his daily
life. This opportunity should be used, and through it will come a deepened and
more complete understanding of what has been gained from intellectual knowledge.
116
Once his understanding is sufficiently mature and
once he is achieving the correct results in meditation, the aspirant's progress
will be assured and rapid. Before this stage is reached, however, his immediate
need is to bring into his everyday life whatever fruits he has so far gathered
from his studies. Spiritual growth, like physical growth, is a series of
separate growing moments. Just as the child cannot become an adult overnight,
illumination, too, is a long, slow process. The aspirant must actually and
literally begin to live what he has already learnt; otherwise, he is
unwittingly holding himself back, and limiting Reality to the realm of mere
theory.
117
But if he overdoes the recognition of life's
transiency he may upset the delicate balance needed in his self-training for
attainment of the goal. For, thus overdone, it will turn into manic
depressiveness and pathological melancholia, into groundless fears and hopeless
worries. The remark of Emerson that the strength of the spirit is expressed in
its joy is useful here.
118
Few beginners feel the need to keep their
balance. Consequently most beginners have a chaotic inner life. It is well
looked after in one or two aspects but neglected in others.
119
When a scientist like Darwin confesses that he
was utterly impervious to poetry and another like Freud that he lacked any
feeling for music, we must conclude that they are one-sided in their
development, that is, unbalanced.
120
If the struggle for holiness becomes desperate,
if the probing into his spiritual state becomes constant, then the effort is
excessive and unbalanced.
121
Unfortunately, his virtues will throw dark
shadows if they are not balanced by reason and restraint. Enthusiasm will be
trailed by rashness and faith by superstition.
122
If we misapply the right or overdo the good, we
may create new foolishness and fresh wrongs. If, for example, we remain
patiently inactive when it is time to effect a positive change, then we fall
into the sin of indolence.
123
Unbalance can take the form of an indomitable
determination to attain the goal coupled with an equally indomitable
determination to follow foolish procedures.
124
Whoever, in his ill-instructed ignorance, says
that the physical, the intellectual, and the aesthetic are irrelevant to the
quest of spiritual fulfilment or, in his fanatical bias, says they are even
obstructive to it, merely shows up the incompleteness of his experience and the
imbalance of his being.
125
One side of his character will respond less
quickly than another. His development will be uneven and unequal.
126
When the will is feebler than the imagination,
the life loses its balance.
127
Self-discipline must be balanced or it will
become needless torment, fanatic self-injury.
128
To promote his idealistic tendencies and to
neglect his realistic ones, to achieve a high level of intellectuality and to
remain at a low level of morality, to be over-critical of others and
under-critical of oneself - these are types of unbalance which he should adjust
as soon as possible.
129
He may have difficulty in the world in generating
the necessary ambition for pushing ahead with the business side of life.
However, the strain and pain of his efforts will pass away eventually whereas
the fruits in developed faculties and increased balance will remain as permanent
possessions. He must stick to the task of rebuilding his personality on a more
solid basis. He must take as his symbol the great pyramid with its huge square
base but narrow pointed apex signifying that the broader and bigger the
personality the more inspired the service that can be accomplished through it.
For there is an invisible inverted pyramid resting on the visible one like the
adjoining sketch. This other unseen pyramid stretches away and can stretch away
into infinity without limit whereas the lower visible pyramid can proceed no
further than the earth's surface.
130
The very nature of man as a psycho-physical
organism with spiritual possibilities and animal actualities, compels him to
attend at some time or other to all his sides. No amount of denying or ignoring
any one of them will succeed in the end, any more than exaggerating or
over-emphasizing some other side will escape Nature's eventual attempt to
correct the unbalance and regain equilibrium.
131
The ideal is the fullness and harmony of balanced
qualities, wasting none, denying none: the active will companioned by the
mystical intuition, the pleasure-loving senses steadied by the truth-loving
reason.
132
Do not lose your sense of proportion and assume
that your actions are going to make any difference to the Witness, the Overself
which always remains unaffected.
133
Somewhere between undisciplined sensuality and
uncontrolled asceticism there is the way of sanity.
134
Philosophy teaches that both aversion from, and
attraction to, the world are to be avoided if the fine balance of mind needed to
perceive truth is to be attained.
135
If on the one hand he ought not try to turn
philosophy into sectarian dominated theology but keep it rigorously upon the
wide bases of experience-supported Reason, critical judgement, and balanced
synthesis, on the other hand he ought not desert the precinct of holiness: daily
he should seek a reverent atmosphere and become suffused with divine feeling.
136
Only to be a scientist or an artist is not
enough, just as only to be a very ordinary person is not enough: a fuller human
being is life's silent, ever-pressing demand.
137
The ability to make this research successfully
without ascending to the clouds and getting lost in them, is as necessary as the
sensitivity which keeps itself alive, alert, and unsubmerged within the
world-experience.
138
Balance cannot be separated from proportion.
139
We have to find our way between the optimist to
whom life is a joyous dance and the pessimist to whom it is a sad dirge.
140
Risk and caution should pair each other, if he is
not to be one-sided.
141
Goodness must be tempered by intelligence, for
instance. How many misguided persons assiduously cultivate an inferiority
complex under the misapprehension that they are cultivating a selfless
character!
142
The Quest must become obsessive without becoming
unbalancing.
143
Whatever faculty, quality, function, or aspect he
is deficient in, he should seek to cultivate it. Whatever is present to excess,
he should seek to curb or modify it. Harmony, Balance, and Completeness
characterize the idea.
144
He must meet the demands of his whole psyche if
he is to have the proper equipment with which to find the whole truth.
145
We must punctuate our philosophy with the periods
and commas of action, or it will become somewhat stale.
146
There are different principles of man's being.
Each has to be developed and equilibrated. Only after this is done can the
energies of the Overself flow into them and thus transform them into expressions
of itself.
147
The safeguard of balance prevents any single
aspect of his development and any single function of his psyche from being cast
for the role of supreme domination.
148
The virtue of balance is neither easily nor
quickly bought, but its cost is repaid by the values it yields - greater
security, more endurance, less error, and better progress.
149
"Sensible" and "balanced" are convertible terms.
150
He will have to bring into a fine balance the
refusal to be satisfied with the man he is or the way he lives and the
acceptance of life generally.
151
Without this proper balance, he may easily
mistake being sentimental for being compassionate.
152
This need of balance may show itself in a hundred
different ways. Where kindness compulsively overrules judgement, for instance,
there may be a price to pay. And where kindness keeps beggars in self-chosen or
socially enforced idleness, it may harm them, whereas where it finds and fits
them for useful work, it must surely help them.
153
He has to train himself to catch what the soul
intuits as clearly as he can already catch what the intellect thinks and the
body reports.
154
Be and behave grown-up, not childishly.
Understand something of yourself, your character, your strengths and weaknesses.
Find and keep a balance, a common-sense, and a sanity. Value good health, good
diet, good manners. Develop yourself, your talents, your knowledge, your calm.
155
If he himself is a quietist, temperamentally
suited only to the studious and meditative pursuits, then he needs activists
around to balance and compensate him.
156
Whenever he observes too much one-sidedness in
his being or living, he must attend to its balance and make needed adjustments.
157
A sound protective balance must be held between
the pressure of these different tendencies. It must be slowly learnt by
experience as well as considered reflectively in the mind.
158
Balance is needed in all ways on this quest. The
student must not overvalue his emotional experiences, nor overconcentrate upon
his metaphysical studies. He must strive for poise in all things and at all
times. To lose it is to lose that integrality of character which is the mark of
the true philosopher. The mournful consequences which follow are apparent in the
fantastic cults which pass for mysticism, as well as in the fantastic movements
which distort modern art; they can be seen also in the dry barren field of
academic metaphysics as well as in the ugly earth-tied materialism of
utilitarian science.
159
The ideal of Balance keeps us from falling into
dangerous extremes. The self-controls which follow detachment are meritorious
but its lengthening into callousness is not.
160
The Sanskrit word for inner Balance is
samadham, that poise which is maintained in all kinds of circumstances.
By constantly thinking about the falsity of the ego and its phantom-like nature,
it can be sublimated and its power divinely directed.
161
If intensity is achieved but other qualities
neglected, then this very virtue may turn into fanaticism and balance lost. The
Quest is a way of balanced thought and living, not a mania to unhinge the mind
and disorder the emotions.
162
We exist on more levels than one, from the
grossly physical to the finely ethereal. We have to take care of our body, of
our vital force, our emotions and thoughts because we have to live with them and
use them.
163
In the well-formed and well-informed aspirant the
activities of both paths will be subtly blended. This is part of what is meant
when it is said that he is properly balanced. And out of this union will come
the "second birth," the new man who reflects at last the glorious consciousness
of the Overself.
164
Even when one's deep sincerity and earnest
aspiration are beyond question, and even though one may have already travelled
fast and far in certain directions, this may not be enough to attain
enlightenment. All sides of the psyche - including some previously neglected -
must be evenly balanced and developed in order to lead one to a full and lasting
illumination of the whole.
165
Energy and drive in action, calm and patience in
meditation - this is the combination he ought to achieve.
166
To get this strength and gain this wisdom, he
must paradoxically follow two opposed courses. First, he must retire wholly from
all activities every day and contemplate them analytically as well as
impersonally. Second, he must plunge into and use those activities as
springboards whence to rise to higher levels. Hence, it is said that neither
meditation nor action is enough. Both are necessary to him and to one another.
The first inspires and aspires, the second expresses and tests.
167
Man wants certain things from life, but life
itself wants certain things from him. It wants proper treatment of his body, it
wants knowledge and understanding in his mind.
168
It is essential to keep a certain minimum balance
in life and nature when thrusting forward to develop or improve on both;
otherwise the over-doing will bring new evils and upset both.
169
Because we refute authoritarianism this does not
mean we are to jump with the unbalanced into intuition and deny all value to the
past, to books, and to the teachings of other men. Life would be empty indeed if
each of us had to start his quest afresh without the help of great authors like
Sankara. Because we deny that material inventions can alone give man happiness,
we are not therefore to follow the fanatic and flee into asceticism.
170
Salvation does not depend on any one factor but
on a balanced total of several factors. The devotional temperament is not
enough. The disciplined will is not enough. The moral virtues are not enough.
The trained intellect is not enough.
171
Aspiration and wisdom-knowledge are "the two
wings which help the soul in the course of its spiritual flight" or as Professor
Hiriyanna used to say to me "knowledge without devotion is as futile as devotion
without knowledge."
172
The thoughts in the brain and the feelings in the
heart need to be together; each side of his nature contributes to make a man
what he is. Both are necessary to a full development. Why ignore or, worse,
reject one or the other?
173
An equilibrium of mind and heart must be
established, the deliverances of both must be respected and reconciled.
174
A well-balanced personality requires that he
should be not less a sharp thorough observer, with feet kept well on the ground,
than a rapt absorbed meditator.
175
No man is freed from the necessity of developing
his thinking capacities merely because he is developing his mystical ones. The
reverse is just as true. Nature is not satisfied if he is a good mystic but a
bad thinker.
176
His intellect needs to understand what are the
real facts of his situation, while his moral nature needs to be willing to
fulfil the sacrificial and disciplinary demands made.
177
The goodness which must come into his willing is
not separate nor separable from the truth which must come into his thinking.
178
One part of his being may yield obediently to the
philosophic discipline but other parts may not. His thoughts may surrender but
his feeling or his will may not. So struggle there must be until the ego's
surrender is total and complete.
179
Although the emotions will provide driving force
to secure action in giving up bad habits, for instance, the co-operation of the
reason and the will is needed to secure lasting results.
180
Intuition leads the way in the philosophic quest
and reason follows it; faith, feeling, and will are then obedient to, and
balanced by, reason.
181
The wise student understands that the pattern of
human existence is too complex to be drawn by any single straight-line movement.
Therefore he will strike a balance between his feelings and his reasonings,
between his mental life and his active life. He knows it is always foolish and
sometimes dangerous to overdo the one and underdo the other. For the
contradictions and disharmonies which are thus set up, the disproportion between
aims and means, will hinder progress and harm experience.
182
If he seeks truth with his whole being, then it
must enter into his whole being. Hence, if through inborn disposition he felt
his way with the emotions toward it in the past, rather than knew it with the
understanding, he will one day become aware of the need of adding an
intellectual basis to his life. That which leads him into this awareness is his
own higher self.
183
We have referred often to the need of balance but
not so often to its importance. Yet this can be plainly seen from the picture of
a brokenor clipped-winged bird trying to fly on its sound wing alone. It
flutters round and round in the air, always returning to the starting point, to
its own confusion. This is a picture of a creature without physical balance; a
person without psychic balance, which follows completeness of development,
whirls about just as vainly in his intellectual, emotional, and active life.
184
The more intellectual a man is, the more does he
need to bring a devotional element into the studies and practices.
185
It helps to attain a measure of emotional
balance, calmness and detachment if, in the midst of bright fortune, you
remember the time of dark despair.
186
All influences, contacts, persons, or places
which destroy our balance are to be shunned as undesirable, if not evil.
187
The ability to reason accurately must be balanced
by the ability to live according to one's findings.
188
He may have studied under mystical teachers,
lived in monastic ashrams, and wandered in mountain caves in former
reincarnations gaining much bliss by the practice of meditation. That is why he
may feel such a strong hankering for these things during the present
incarnation, but the rhythm of progress has put him into a Western body and
given him family life in order to develop another necessary phase of character
and thus make him better balanced. Mysticism is only one side of life and a most
estimable one, but life itself is many-sided. The true Quest must lead to a
development of all these sides. Nothing narrower than this ideal will suffice.
Any attempt to escape in the wrong way from the path which karma has outlined
for him can only end in disappointment and disillusionment. However there is a
way of escape from hard, external conditions and that is by fully learning their
lessons, by mastering the problems of practical, everyday living, by developing
intelligence and reasoning power, and by remembering to keep the mental picture
of a fuller life of disinterested service ever before him.
189
A certain hardness of character in some students
is not altogether a defect as there is no particular virtue in being soft. The
world being what it is today a little toughness acts as a protective shield. The
defect lies only in pushing this to extremes and in not balancing it
appropriately with its opposite. For such persons, there is the need of evolving
a gentler side of the character and the result will eventually be all to the
good in a finer, better balanced personality.
190
Hard thinking is just as necessary on this path
as gentle submission to delicate moods of mental stillness. Both are required.
191
A well-developed critical intellect in
combination with over-concentration produces an exceptionally strong ego. Such a
person should cultivate a little more humility so as to improve the natural
balance of his personality. He must humble the ego. He should do this himself,
secretly, and through calm, reflective meditation; then life will not do it to
him openly and through bitter external circumstances.
192
It is one function of experience through action
to correct our mistakes in thinking, as it is a different function of thinking
to correct our mistakes in action.
193
Right feeling should accompany right thinking,
right willing should complement right intuition.
194
So long as man lives in a fleshly body he is the
compound of animal, human, and angelic beings. Nature does not permit him to
destroy any one of these three parts of his personality. What she does require
of him is to make the animal subject to the human and the human again subject to
the angelic.
195
Evolution is working along three lines in the
human being: the intellectual, the mystical, and the moral-physical. All must be
attended to. Hence it is not enough to develop any single part of one's being
alone. The threefold path is what philosophy asks for although religion,
science, or mysticism is usually satisfied with a single path. Meditation is the
most important of all as without it one cannot transcend the intellect, but it
is not enough by itself. He has to practise meditation, cultivate knowledge, and
shape conduct aright - all these being directed towards the quest of the
Overself. The combination of all three will yield results far in advance of
those which a separate development could yield.
196
Many a yogi will criticize this three-fold path
to realization. He will say meditation alone will be enough. He will deprecate
the necessity of knowing metaphysics and ridicule the call to inspired action.
But to show that I am introducing no new-fangled notion of my own here, it may
be pointed out that in Buddhism there is a recognized triple discipline of
attainment, consisting of (1) dhyana (meditation practice), (2)
prajna (higher understanding), (3) sila (self-denying conduct).(P)
197
The quest is integral - a combined approach
through formal meditation and study, analytic observation, reflection, moral
endeavour, religious devotion, and constant self-recollection.
198
The objection is made that to engage in the total
approach - hatha, bhakti, raja, and gnana yogas - is
too large a program for any man outside an ashram, too impossible in the case of
the average man in the world. Who, after the work of his business or livelihood,
has the requisite energy for its study or practice? Who, with a family - wife
and children - has the requisite time? My answer is: True! But you can do a
little of each yoga. Make the best of the situation and thus tempt the Grace of
the Overself to ease the situation."
199
He must not only do so far as he can all that the
Long Path demands from him but he must also step outside it altogether and do
those totally different things that the Short Path demands.
200
Three subjects of study: the natures of man, the
universe, God. Three duties are owed: to yourself, to other living creatures -
human and animal - to God.
201
The aspirant need not confine himself to any
single approach, leaving out all the others. His greatest success lies in using
and balancing the different techniques.
202
But finding the higher presence within the heart
is only the first step. The next is to surrender oneself to it, to be passive in
its hands, to let it direct the course of thought, feeling, and conduct. This is
a task which is not less hard, and will take not less time, than the first one.
It is indeed an art to be learnt by unremitting practice.
203
It is better nowadays to pursue the different
paths side by side, whilst placing special emphasis on one of them.
204
The philosophic life accepts, combines, and
follows all these four dictates: The Christian self-giving, the Roman-Stoic
self-control, the Grecian self-balancing, and the Hindu self-knowledge.
205
The balance does not have to be exact.
206
He ought not to restrict himself to a single
approach. His nature as a human being has different areas, each of which needs
to be worked on. The body needs cleansing, the feelings need uplifting, the
thoughts need calming. Especially in the contemporary individual the critical
analytic intellect needs turning away from its destructive tendency and
directing constructively, first, to discriminate truth from error, reality from
appearance and, second, to discern the ego and its working, as well as its
education by experience.
207
Each has its place and one need not be decried in
favour of the others: homage and devotion to a guru, study and practice of the
teaching. For from the first one gains inspiration and from the second,
understanding and capability.
208
All this work upon the different sides of oneself
does not have to be done by turns, for each does not exclude the others. One
will benefit more by doing it at one time, even though it will be probably
necessary to stress the work on a hitherto neglected side.
209
The Quest has two aspects. One is the constant
accumulation of right thoughts, feelings, and acts, along with the constant
elimination of wrong ones. The other aspect called the Short Path is the
constant remembrance and contemplation of the Overself.
210
He should not discard meditation before he has
completely mastered it. Yet, the balanced threefold path should be followed and
not merely meditation alone. Otherwise mental and emotional defects will be
magnified. Moreover the times in which we live today make practical service
necessary.
211
The two processes, of on the one hand developing
and on the other balancing his faculties, have to be carried on and perfected
together so far as possible. The qualification is added because it is rarely
possible to do so completely. Human nature being what it is, development
inevitably tends to move in one-sided phases.
212
Here again the delicate balance of things which
the total Quest demands must be brought into play. It is not only the
long-drawn-out labour of the Long Path which must engage him, but also the
continuous and fresh attempt to follow it in what he thinks, feels, and does
here in this very place , and now at this very moment.