1
We lament the lack of time. But if we critically
scrutinized our actions, and even made some kind of schedule beforehand, we
would find that some activities are unnecessary and others are useless. These
not only rob us of time but they deprive us of some of the energy needed for
meditation, rendering it harder or even impossible.
2
Do not imagine that because the mystic frequently
seeks seclusion he does this because he is bored with life and hence disdains
the drawing rooms of society; rather is it that he is intensely interested in
life and is therefore short of time, for drawing rooms are usually places where
people go to kill time, because they are bored.
3
The quest calls for strenuous endeavours and the
right use of time. Those who are indifferent to its disciplinary demands should
not complain about the slow-motion character of their progress. Those who give
little should not expect to get much.
4
It will not be enough, if he wants to find time for
graver pursuits, to throw out of his life all harmful pleasures; he will also
have to throw out time-wasteful and useless ones. Such exercise of self-denial
proves a profitable one in the end, whatever it costs in the beginning.
5
If heart does not radiate silently to heart, then
talk is idle dissipation of time and energy, even though it be continued for
hours.
6
People who do not know how to get rid of time except
by getting involved in time-using activities, cannot know the value of
contemplation.
7
He may succeed in his aim only if he succeeds in not
getting entangled by irrelevant activities and intruding persons.
8
Time is like a great treasury. Put nothing of value
into it and you will get nothing out. Put philosophic study and self-training
into it and at the very least you will draw out a measure of peace and
understanding, at the most you may enter into realization of the Truth.
9
He should sometimes ask himself for how many more
years may he hope to be given the chance which every lifetime gives a man to
transcend himself.
10
To give time is to give life. To be master of one's
time, for an hour or a week, free and independent, is to be master of one's life
for an hour or a week.
11
It is a necessary rule of the aspirant's life, laid
down by the yogic manuals of old and proven by experience today, that regularity
should be faithfully observed in meditation practice and at least attempted in
the other important duties of his spiritual career.
12
Those who object to contemplation as a waste of
time and life, need to learn that it is also a form of activity - inner
activity.
13
He will be forced to admit, with sorrowful head,
that he had been too busy with the trivial matters of the moment to break
through the mysterious barriers that bar our human way out of the prison of time
and space.
14
Fritter - and fail.
15
The Quest does not demand the renunciation of
worldly business but only the renunciation of a small daily fragment of the time
hitherto devoted to such business. It asks for half or three-quarters of an hour
daily to be faithfully given to meditation exercises. It asserts that the
fullest realization of the Overself can be attained without becoming a
whole-time yogi.
16
No man can escape responsibility for the way he
uses his day. He can either carefully organize it to serve his highest purposes
or he can carelessly fritter it away in trivial activity or idle sloth.
17
The day must be definitely apportioned and
scheduled beforehand, its routine prearranged and left undisturbed. Chance
visits by friends must be discouraged; he must refuse to fit them in.
18
The excuses given for this failure may be serious
and sincerely meant, but the fact remains that those who make them can still
find time to eat their meals and, perhaps, to make love. The essence of the
matter lies in how important meditation is to him.
19
He is also too much aware of his own precarious
mortality to permit useless involvements and irrelevant commitments to waste his
life.
20
The ordinary person does not have the time to
search intellectually or the desire to search adventurously for truth. This is
partly because his other personal activities absorb his day. But a man who
dedicates his entire time to this quest, who is willing to pay its cost, is more
likely to find the truth. Yet time is only part of the price; he must also be
willing to sacrifice dishonesty in his thinking.
21
He will find, on a strict self-examination, that he
has allowed himself to be drawn into currents of time-wasting worldliness or
attracted into whirlpools of time-eating frivolity.
22
Once he recognizes his responsibility toward the
fulfilment of this higher purpose, for which the Infinite Wisdom has put him
here, he will have to recognize also the obligation of devoting some time every
day for study of, and meditation upon, it. The philosophic standard of
measurement enables him to see plainly that however fully he has fulfilled all
other demands made upon him - to the point that all his time is engaged - if he
has neglected this single one, he is still at fault.
23
To find the time required for meditation may call
for a little planning of our time and a lot of revision of our values. But this
in itself is a worthwhile self-discipline. For we rush hither and thither but
have yet to ask ourselves where we are rushing to. What better use could we make
of the treasure of leisure than soul-finding?
24
Those costly hours when we abandon pleasure or deny
sleep that we may take counsel of our better selves, are not wasted. They too
bring a good reward - however deferred it be - and one that remains forever.
25
Our daily occupations and preoccupations keep our
time, energies, and consciousness identified with the external world and
external activities to such an extent that we have little left for reversing the
situation and discovering - or at least exploring - the deeper layers of self.
Yet, unless something is done about this situation, and at least simple
exercises and pre-studies made as a beginning, we shall remain ignorant
throughout life of what is actually of high importance to us. Twenty minutes a
day at whatever time is convenient should at least be given for this purpose.
26
If the student finds his time fully taken up in
caring for others, this must take first place. He must care for all victims of
man's ignorance as though they were members of his own family; he must be as
clearheaded and practical in dealing with his work as any worldly minded person,
but underneath he will know that earthly life is fleeting, transient, never
permanently satisfying, and therefore only the outer face of his life; deep
within must be a persistent quest of truth and reality which alone confer
everlasting peace.
27
His withdrawal from common gossip, tittle-tattle
speech, and negative conversation must be deliberate until by habit it becomes
natural. Such talk is unnecessary, extravagant, and harmful to his inner work.
28
It is not a moral endeavour, although that may
enter into it, but a worthwhile plan to cut out time spent on adulterous theatre
plays, "risquè" stories, and trivial television. The mental attention thus saved
can be transferred and used more constructively on a higher level.
29
Half an hour is not enough for his high purpose.
Only the whole day, all his waking hours will suffice for it.
30
If he values his life he will have to value his
time. This means he will have to select the quality and limit the quantity of
his experiences.
31
The man who seeks more free time for spiritual
pursuits may find it by withdrawing from the fullness of human experience. By
refusing to work at a job or to rear a family, he may achieve his aim.
32
You can throw your time away on the waste-heap, or
you can transform it into a result-producer.
33
If you think you have not the necessary time for
the practice of mental quiet, then make it. Push out of the day's program the
least important items so as to make room for this, the most important of all
activities.
34
Whoever is interested in making the most of his
life and doing the best for his character needs two things among several others:
he needs time and he needs seclusion. The time may vary from a few minutes a day
up to a couple of hours. Seclusion may be in an attic or in a forest. A third
thing needed is silence. With these three conditions he can begin the very
important inner work: first of reflection, second of thought-control. The time
is needed to withdraw from the hustle and bustle of the world, from the
triviality and futility of so much social life. It is a good thing to come out
of that for a while every day, to be sequestered from society and make the
effort to be in himself - that is, in his true self, his spiritual being. These
few minutes of detachment from the world can become in time very valuable to him
if he uses them in the right way.
35
The little seed from which a great tree will one
day grow makes no noise as it busily germinates in the dark earth. In such
silence and with such reticence, the aspirant should begin his quest and wait
patiently for the day when he shall receive a mandate to speak of these things.
To speak prematurely is not only ineffective but likely to arouse unnecessary
and avoidable opposition.
36
The real work on the Quest has to be carried out
within and by the mind, not the body. The aspirant must try to live his outward
life as normally as possible and avoid making a public spectacle of the fact he
is following the
37
The quest is his secret which he can better carry
in the depths of his heart.
38
Holiness or spiritual greatness or a dedicated life
is a secret between a man and his God. He does not need to advertise it by any
outward show, by a particular kind of dress, or by the professional sanctity of
the monk or yogi.
39
The intellectual and intuitional and mystical sides
of his real spiritual life will cause him to withdraw a part of himself from
social communication. He will learn to live alone with it.
40
The student who rushes to narrate to everyone his
inner experiences, his occult visions or messages, his high glimpses, may fall
into the pit of self-advertisement, vanity, conceit. He may then lose through
the ego what he has gained through his efforts.
41
He should not mention his mystical experiences to
unsympathetic persons nor discuss them with incompetent ones. It is better to
keep them to himself and talk about them only to a spiritual director or an
aspirant much more advanced on the road than he is.
42
He should try to follow this quest and to practise
its regimes as unobtrusively and as quietly as he can. By doing so he will
reduce to a minimum the attention attracted from those persons who are likely to
criticize his faith, or worse, to obstruct his path.
43
It is only the novice, enthusiastic but
inexperienced, who loudmouthedly tells all and sundry about each one of his
surface-scratching spiritual experiences. The man who is very far advanced on
the quest acquires great discretion. In fact, the more advanced he is the more
secretive does he become about such matters. He will not speak a word upon them
unless he is bidden by the inner Voice to do so. The Overself does not live in
public but in secret. It is totally outside the world's activity. Therefore the
closer you approach it, the more secretive you are likely to become concerning
the event. And when you do succeed in finally uniting yourself with it, your
lips will be completely shut - not only because of the ego's greater humility
but because the Overself desires it so. There is a further feature of this
question of secrecy which deserves comment. Those who are very far advanced tend
also to withdraw increasingly from the social circles or vocational activity
which formerly engaged them. They vanish into retreat and withdraw into solitude
for longer and longer intervals. Unless they are charged with a public mission,
the world seldom hears of them.
44
This need of privacy to follow one's quest in one's
own way is best satisfied by the wide open spaces of ranch life, next best by
the vast impersonality of large city life. It is hardest to satisfy in a small
town where watching eyes and intruding feet seek to mind everyone else's
business.
45
It must live quite hermetically and secretly in his
own mind and feelings, not because he wants to conceal truth but because it is
still a tender young plant needing shelter and protection.
46
Where emotional guidance would bid him disclose his
inner affiliation with the divine order, intuitional guidance bids him move
unobtrusively and quietly.
47
The gossip who meddles with other people's private
lives, the journalist who uses the excuse of professional practice to invade
other peoples' privacy - these unpleasant repulsive creatures should be avoided
or if necessary rebuked.
48
You must remember that everyone without exception
stands in life just where the evolutionary flow has brought him and that his
outward life is the result of all those previous experiences in many, many
incarnations. His outlook and his beliefs, his attitude towards life are all
part of his evolving growth. Therefore you will not try to convert him. If,
however, doubts begin to arise in his mind and he asks you questions, then it is
right for you to speak to him of a higher viewpoint. But say just what needs to
be said to give him the light you see he needs, and no more. If you go too far
you will confuse him. If you give him just enough to carry his mind a step
onward you will help him. Until then every effort you make is wasted; it is
throwing seed on to stony ground. Therefore, unless you are asked in this way it
is unnecessary and often unwise to advertise that you are following spiritual
practices or believe in spiritual truths. If you live with others and make a
fuss about these things you may arouse their hostility. If you really have
something to give them they will come to you one day and ask for help. You must
learn discretion in dealing with people. You must learn when to be silent and
when to speak, and when you do speak how much to say.
49
One reason why this silence about inner experiences
is enjoined upon novices is that speech about them tends to spiritual conceit;
another is that it identifies the novice with his ego from which it is the very
purpose of those experiences to separate him. In learning to keep them secret,
he is learning to keep himself out of the subtlest forms of egoism.
50
The seeker is warned not to talk about his inner
experiences. They have to be well-guarded by silence if they are to be kept or
repeated.
51
It is not a reprehensible selfishness to become,
for the purposes of his inner work, more seclusive, more withdrawn, more
conscious of the value of privacy. The more he obeys this higher will the more
will others benefit.
52
If others laugh at him because he does not go with
the herd, he must include it in the quest's cost. But it would be well to screen
those things which need not be displayed, or refrain from drawing attention to
them if this is possible. The world being what it is, negativities muddying so
many characters, the less he lets them put their thoughts upon him the better.
53
The high value of secrecy in preparation and
surprise in attack is well known to those who plan military operations
skilfully. But those who want to succeed with their efforts for a higher kind of
life can also profitably use these two approaches.
54
Most novices make the mistake of talking too freely
to friends and relatives about the Quest. This is a serious error, and can lead
to needless suffering on both sides. The aspirant must learn that it is a test
of faith to trust in the workings of the Overself to spread these ideas in Its
own time and way.
55
All must cherish secrets and the farther anyone
advances on the path of knowledge the more he must cherish in this manner, not
because of their value alone but because society is not usually ready to receive
them. The sage, who is full of the loftiest secrets, does not suffer in the
slightest from their possession. Restrained emotions are good as signs of
attempted self-discipline but bad when they are set up as a goal of living.
Asceticism can only bloom successfully when it arises out of genuine, reasoned
understanding. Until such understanding comes one often has to restrain himself
forcibly. But nothing ought to be overdone. The overdoing of asceticism produces
cranks - unbalanced, illogical, and self-deceiving persons. Confession and
sharing help to relieve the soul only insofar as they are connected with the
right persons. To confess to the wrong persons or to share with them only makes
matters worse.
56
The younger people of today who are knowingly
embarking on the Quest should make some effort, within reasonable limits, to
appear outwardly as being not too different from those who are not embarking on
it - thus avoiding the stigma of being regarded as eccentric or, even worse,
insane.
57
Such secrecy as he is expected to maintain about
his quest is also due to the utter seriousness with which he must take it. It is
something too sacred and too intimate to be talked about or argued about.
58
The impulse to speak may be obeyed or resisted;
only each individual case can determine which course is correct.
59
To gain more friends at the risk of losing more
privacy is a move which requires the fullest consideration.
60
Unlike most beginners, the proficient will never
speak of his inmost spiritual experiences to other aspirants except in special
cases. He will, however, drop such reticence with a teacher.
61
The rule of secrecy does not mean that he is never
to talk about the Truth to others. It means only that he shall not talk
prematurely about it. He must wait until he can talk with correct knowledge and
at times when it is prudent to do so, and to persons who are ready for what he
has to say. He must wait until he is himself strongly established in Truth, and
will not be affected by the doubts and denials of others. He should learn and
remember that speech opens his private purposes to their negative thoughts or
antagonistic emotions and may thus weaken him. It needs firmness and discipline
but by keeping his spiritual work and goals locked up inside himself and
revealing them only when the right occasion arises he will show true
practicality and foster real strength. Spiritual service
62
He must defend his right to an inner life against
all disruptions, however well-meaning the disrupter may be. What he owes to
others, to society, friends, or family in the way of devotion, attention, or
intercourse can and should be given. But there is a point where his self-giving
may have to stop, where his responsibility to the higher purpose of living must
cancel all other responsibilities.
63
When a man begins to think of what service he can
render as well as the common thought of what he can get, he begins to walk
success-wards.
64
All the great prophets have made special mention of
the fact that the task of spiritually enlightening others is the most important
and most beneficial activity in which any man can engage. He who wishes to
stimulate others to start on the spiritual Quest, to help those who have already
started to find the right direction in which to travel, and to make available to
the public generally the leading truths of spiritual knowledge, feels that this
is the most worthwhile activity. The effective and enduring preparation for this
is first to spiritualize oneself and therefore it is up to him to carry on even
more ardently with his efforts than he has done hitherto.
65
Philosophy bids him follow its quest and practise
its ethics in his own person before he bids others do so. Only after he
has succeeded in doing this, can he have the right to address himself to them.
Only after he has discovered its results and tested its values for himself, can
he guide them without the risks of deception on the one hand or hypocrisy on the
other.
66
He may seek, when better equipped to do so, to
render service to many people. But until that time comes, it is better to go on
working upon himself, improving his moral character, increasing his knowledge of
the philosophic teachings, humbling himself in daily prayer and worship, and
cultivating that thread of intuition which links him to the Soul.
67
The seeker who follows this path is and will be of
some service as a channel for the inspiration and enlightenment of others less
advanced than he - within, of course, his own capacity and subject to his own
limitations. Because of this, he should make every effort to acquire accurate
knowledge of what the Quest is, what Philosophy contributes to it, and what - in
everyday language - these mean and offer to the individual's everyday life.
68
The acts of service are yours, the consequences of
service are God's. Do not be anxious where anxiety is not your business.
69
He must not only apply the teaching but he must
apply it intelligently. His acts must either be inspired ones or, when they
cannot attain that level, considered ones. Only in this way will he avoid the
reproach so often levelled at mystics, that they are impractical, fanatical, and
inefficient.
70
Service, in its purity, must be the first as well
as the last thought behind his work. He is not unconcerned about rewards but he
knows that they are always the natural accompaniment of, or sequel to such
service.
71
You talk of service. But you cannot really become a
server of God before you have ceased to be a server of self.
72
The serious aspirant soon discovers that he has so
much work to do on improving himself that he has little time left to improve
others.
73
A novice in meditation ought not expect that he can
give himself with impunity to the fully active life as an advanced practitioner
can. Practical service of humanity ought therefore be limited within much
narrower degrees by the former than need be done by the latter. The sphere of
service should be widened only as the server develops his mystical faculties and
should not outrun them. The sensible rule is that with the beginner emphasis
must be laid upon self-development first and service last, but with the senior
this order must be reversed. This is not to say with the reclusive minded that
the beginner should be concerned wholly with himself and attempt no service at
all.
74
Before we can help others or influence the world,
we need to possess three things: knowledge, experience, and power.
75
It is an error to place too much stress on
unselfish activity as an element in the aspirant's qualifications. We did not
incarnate primarily to serve each other. We incarnated to realize the Overself,
to change the quality of individual consciousness. Altruism is therefore always
subordinate to this higher activity. The sage's compassion is not primarily for
other people's troubles, although he certainly feels that too, but he knows that
these will continue without end in some form or other - such being the
unalterable nature of mundane existence. His compassion is for the ignorance out
of which many avoidable troubles spring or which when they are unavoidable
prevents people from attaining inner peace. Hence he economizes time and energy
by refraining from devoting them merely and solely to humanitarian work and uses
them instead for the root-work of alleviating spiritual ignorance.
76
Serve in sublime self-abnegation.
77
There is a common delusion that giving up
selfishness in the sense of becoming utterly altruistic is the highest call of
the quest. It is believed that the sage is simply a man who no longer lives for
himself but lives wholly for others. Getting rid of one's own ego, however, does
not mean taking on someone else's. It means taking on or, rather, being
taken up by, the deeper self.
78
The divine power to help, heal, guide, or instruct
others begins to show itself when we begin to turn our face towards it humbly,
prayerfully, and thus make the necessary connection through meditation and
study, through altruistic action and religious veneration.
79
They have no adequate idea of what they mean
when they use this term "service." And in its absence they are liable to do as
much harm as good. For they do not know in what consists the real good of other
persons.
80
This does not mean that one is to renounce all
ideas of rendering service. It merely means that one is to withdraw from
premature acts of service, to withdraw for a time sufficient to prepare oneself
to render real service, better service. One is to become possessed of patience
and to wait during this period of preparation.
81
To refrain from premature service whilst developing
oneself for better service, is not selfishness but simply unselfishness made
sensible. He who has demonstrated his capacity to solve his own problems may
rightly set forth to solve other people's.
82
Although the Buddha agreed with the mystical view
that to seek one's own spiritual welfare and not that of another was a higher
aim in life than to seek another's spiritual welfare whilst ignoring one's own,
he said it was the highest of all to seek both one's own and another's at
the same time.
83
But before he embarks on such service, such entry
into the hearts and lives of others, he should be sure that neither personal
egotism nor the desire for personal reward has mixed itself up with his
altruistic impulse. If this surety is not present, he had better wait until it
does arrive.
84
If you feel you want to spread this teaching, then
do so; but do it in the right way. You don't have to organize a society or
indulge in loud propaganda. Truth is not something which can be imposed on other
people. They must grow through experience and reflection into the right attitude
of receptivity and then they will look for whatever they need. It is only at
such a critical moment that you have any right to offer what you yourself have
found, just as it is only at such a moment that your offering will be successful
and not a wasted one.
85
Another reason for not making meditation the sole
path is that in these times of world crisis we deliberately have to emphasize
self-forgetfulness, to stop looking so much at our own selves and start looking
a little more at mankind, to forget some of our own need of development and
remember others' need of development. The spiritual enlightenment, however
humbly we are able to do it, of the society in which we find ourselves is at
least as vital in this crisis as our own enlightenment through meditation. If we
will faithfully recognize and obey this, then God will bless us and grant grace
even though we haven't done as much meditation as in normal times we ought to
have done.
86
We cannot save others until we can save ourselves.
And yet the altruistic desire to share this self-salvation with others should be
present from the beginning. Otherwise, it will not manifest itself when success
comes.
87
If he begins to think what impression he is making
on others, how spiritual his speech or appearance, his silence or personality
must appear to them, then he is worshipping his own ego. To the extent that he
does this, his value or service to them is diminished.
88
His first duty is to himself; only when this has
been properly attended to is he free to consider his second duty, which is
towards mankind. Nevertheless, he is not to fall into the error which would
defer all consideration of such altruism until he has completely realized his
Overself. If he does so, it may be too late to create a new attitude. It ought
always to be at the back of his mind; it should be the ultimate ideal behind all
his immediate endeavours.
89
That is pure service where the server feels no
importance in himself, where he effaces the gratifying egoism that good deeds
may bring to the doer. But where the opposite prevails, then the very act of
service itself strengthens self-importance.
90
It is a human failing to wish to appear the
possessor of important knowledge, and the desire to rise in the estimation of
the curious may easily lead to loss of discretion.
91
There are those who sacrifice themselves to others
under the belief that this is a virtue. But if the sacrifice is not linked with
wisdom and righteousness, if it is foolish and cowardly, then it becomes the
opposite of a virtue and brings harm to one's self and the others.
92
Only wisdom, not emotion alone, can show him how to
help without becoming personally entangled. Otherwise he becomes caught in a web
of lives, and no longer free to live his own.
93
By identifying emotionally with another's
suffering, when this is based on futile, vain, or unwise demands, one does not
really help him by supporting, or seeking to satisfy, those demands. One merely
prolongs the fog of error around him. It is better to engage in the unpleasant
duty of pointing out their unwisdom, of throwing cold water upon them. But this
should be accompanied by positive suggestion, by pointing out the benefits of a
self-disciplined attitude, by explaining how this is the correct way to heal the
suffering emotions and bring peace to the agitated mind, because it is the
harmony with the higher law.
94
The need of self-help precedes the duty of service.
He must lift himself out of the errors and weaknesses of the flesh before he can
safely or effectively lift others. He will be able to serve others spiritually
precisely in proportion to the extent he has first served himself spiritually.
There are profounder forms than the merely intellectual or merely muscular, too
subtle for the materialists to comprehend, whose power is based on mentalist
truth. Service does not primarily consist of repeating parrot-like what he has
read. It consists of so deepening his consciousness and so developing his
character that he can speak with authority, make every word count because of the
spiritual experience behind it. If a man can deepen his consciousness, he will
discover the instrumental means whereby he can help others to deepen their own.
Power will flow from his mystic "heart" to any person he concentrates upon and
will get to work within that other's inner being. It will take time for the
results to show, however.
95
He who has helped himself to inner strength and
knowledge, outer health and spiritual energy, becomes a positive force in the
world, able to assist others instead of asking assistance from them.
Self-salvation must come first.
96
Because your world is contained in your
consciousness, as mentalism teaches, you can best help that world by improving
and correcting your consciousness. In attending to your own inner development,
you are putting yourself in the most effectual position to promote the
development of other persons. Philosophy is fully aware of, and concerned with,
the misery and the suffering which are rampant everywhere. It does not approve
of selfishness, or indifference to the welfare of others. Yet, at the same time,
it does not permit itself to be swept away by blind emotionalism and unreasoned
impulsiveness into doing what is least effective for humanity. It calls wisdom
in to guide its desire to serve, with the result that the service it does render
is the most effective possible.
97
So long as there still adheres to his conscious
mind even a fragment of the conviction that he is destined to serve humanity
spiritually, much less save it messianically, so long should he take it as a
sign that the ego is still dominant. With true humility, there comes abnegation
of the will - even the will to serve or save.
98
The disciple who exposes himself too prematurely to
the world as a would-be teacher, exposes himself also to new perils and
dangerous temptations. It will not be easy for him to reorient himself toward
the concept of pure service done disinterestedly, but without it he will fall
into traps that will injure him.
99
Those who have been given a mission to perform,
however small or large it may be, too often fall into the arrogant error of
extending it beyond the proper limits. They let the ego intrude, overplay their
hand, and thus spoil what might otherwise have been a good result.
100
What is the best charity, the truest
philanthropy? It is so to enlighten a man that thereafter he will find within
himself all the resources he needs to manage his life so as to bring him the
greatest happiness.
101
Love is to be given as a first duty to our own
higher self, and only then to other men. We are here on earth to find the soul,
not to better the social relationship nor to construct utopia. These are highly
desirable things, let us seek them by all means, but let us not make the mistake
in thought of calling them first things. The two ideas are not mutually
exclusive. They ought to be, and can be, held side by side, but one as primary
and the other as secondary.
102
The feeling of compassion and the doing of
service help to cleanse the human mentality of its innate egoism and to release
the human heart from its inborn selfishness. Thus they are useful to the
aspirant who is treading the path of purification.
103
Those who criticize this refusal to engage in
service prematurely, this seeming mystical isolationism - and most Occidentals
do criticize it - should ask themselves the question: How can people who are
unable to live in harmony with themselves, live in harmony with others? Is it
not wiser, more practical, to establish harmony within oneself first and then
help others to do so?
104
To recognize that the conventional world is ruled
by monstrous stupidity and malignity, to realize that it is useless, vain, and
to no purpose to fight these powerful rulers - since failure alone can be the
result - is practical wisdom. Let it be called selfishness and escapism, but to
refuse the sacrifice of energy and the spending of time in so-called service of
humanity is simply an acknowledgment partly that no good can come from meddling
in other people's affairs that would not have come anyway, and partly that the
character of humanity cannot be changed within one man's lifetime but only by
the slow long processes of evolution. It is delusory to believe that anything
effectual can be done to perceptibly weaken the real rulers of the world, the
stupidity and malignity against which prophets have spoken and sages have warned
mankind since thousands of years ago. The fruit of their denunciations hangs on
history's tree before us - more stupidity and more malignity today than ever
before! Time has not evolved virtue; it has only accumulated folly.
105
To rush out into the service of enlightenment too
prematurely at the bidding of the emotion of pity unrestrained by the balance of
reason, may do nothing worse than waste time, but it may also do something more
serious. It may create confusion in others, pamper vanity in oneself.
106
He should certainly think of his own welfare, it
would be foolish not to do that. The mistake or sin is to think only of
himself or to make the welfare of others entirely subservient.
107
People will begin to come of their own accord for
help and guidance when this higher power is using him.
108
He who waits until he penetrates to his innermost
being before he begins to play with the notion of service attains depth in the
character of that service, whereas he who hurries hastily into the arena may
attain width in his service, but he will lack depth. Moreover, the first will
work on a world canvas, because space cannot bar the efforts of the spirit,
whereas the second, using the method and manner of the body and the intellect
alone, may not reach farther than his own town or land.
109
The only kind of service he may render is unpaid
service. This condition he cheerfully accepts. For whatever he does to help
others, he does out of love of the deed itself.
110
Service must be thoroughly practical as well as
conceived in a spirit of noble and generous endeavour.
111
But although premature service of this kind is to
be discouraged, the attempt of an advanced disciple to help a beginner is not
necessarily a blunder. That depends on confining the help given to proper limits
and on abstaining from treading where there is no sure-footedness. He may
rightly share his knowledge, experience, and findings.
112
If his efforts to serve mankind socially are made
to the utter neglect of the need to serve his own self spiritually, then they
are as unbalanced and unwise as the efforts to pursue personal salvation in
utter indifference to the fate of others. The proper solution has been given by
Light on the Path, which counsels the aspirant to kill out desire and
ambition but to work as those work who are impelled by these two great forces.
But if he does do this, the impelling forces within him can then only be duty
and altruism.
113
Offers of service which have unseen strings
attached to them, should not be made.
114
The snubs and rebuffs he will meet will cure him
of the delusion that society is filled with people who would eagerly take to the
quest if only they were told about its existence. Thus he will be brought face
to face with the problem of the general uncomprehension of mysticism, the common
unsympathy to philosophy. He will discover that his own feelings, his own
intuitions, cannot be communicated to others through the medium of words where
neither experience nor reflection have prepared a way for them. So he cannot
share them with the crowd but must perforce keep them to himself.
115
To improve his corner of the world is good but to
improve himself is still better. Unless he receives a mandate from the higher
self to set out on such reforming activities, it may be mere egoism that drives
him to meddle with them.
116
The field of service will widen in range as the
fields of capacity and aspiration themselves widen.
117
The attempt to improve other people's lives can
easily mask a presumptuous interference with them. This is especially true when
the hidden realities and long-term causes of a situation are not known, or are
misread, or when the higher laws which govern mankind are ignored. In all these
cases, the old evils may merely be replaced by new ones, so that the improvement
is entirely fictitious. In the early Christian times, Saint Cyril saw and said
what, much more than a thousand years later, Ananda Metteya the Buddhist and
Ramana Maharshi the Hindu told me - that one best saves society by first saving
oneself. This is why the philosopher does not try to impose on others the Idea
or the Way which he has espoused. For the itch to improve them or alter them is,
he now knows, a form of interference. He minds his own business. But if the
higher power wants to use him to affect others, he will not resist it!
118
If anyone becomes idealistic and wants to help
others he is told to "start a movement" and to persuade as many people as he can
to dedicate themselves to it. This is excellent advice in the world of politics,
economics, social reform, and material philanthropy. It is of some use even in
the world of organized religion. But it cannot be applied in the world of
spiritual truth without self-deception. For there a movement must not be started
by a man but only by the higher power. It will then select the man it can use,
and will guide and inspire him.
119
To dedicate life to spiritually uplifting and
guiding others, to the extent one is capable of, is to make certain of receiving
the same help from those beyond oneself.
120
If you take another man's duty off his shoulders
and put it on your own, or lift his responsibility and leave him without it,
because you have a laudable desire to serve mankind, you may in the end render
him a disservice as well as put an unnecessary obstacle on your quest.
121
Do not attempt to make people act on a level
beyond their comfortable traditional one if they neither want nor understand the
higher one. They will resist or resent your attempt, which necessarily must
fail.
122
The best form of social service is the one which
leads others to the higher understanding of truth. For from that single cause
will issue forth various effects in higher moral character, better human
relations, and finer spiritual intuitions. Interfering with the freedom of
others and meddling in their affairs, while the true laws of man's being and
destiny are still hardly understood, leads always in history to unfortunate
results.
123
Moreover, whatsoever we give or do to others is
ultimately reflected back to us in some form by the power of karma, and if he
frequently nurses the ideal of serving mankind he will attract to himself the
spiritual help of those who themselves have this same aim.
124
Although it is true that the help we give others
always returns to us in some way, somewhere, somewhen, nevertheless he is not
motivated in this matter by the desire of reward or return. He will engage in
the service of humanity because compassion will arise in his heart, because of
the good it will do.
125
The desire to help the unfortunate and to uplift
the depraved is a noble one, but it may also be a misguided, premature, or even
dangerous one. Misguided, because some men must pay for their criminality before
they will be willing to renounce it. Premature, because the philanthropist may
have nothing worthwhile of a worldly or spiritual kind to give others.
Dangerous, because the mental atmosphere which surrounds low circles of society
is haunted by vicious and perverse unseen entities which seek to influence
sensitive or mediumistic minds.
126
That alone is pure authentic service which asks
for no return.
127
He is warned not to get involved in the personal
problems of others, not to assume responsibility for their own duty of forming
decisions, and not to believe that he is helping them when they try to evade the
necessity of using their own powers and judgement. At his present stage it is
safe only to communicate what he knows of the general laws of the spiritual
life. Beyond this he should not usually attempt to go, but should let each
person apply them for himself to his individual problems. The effort thus called
forth will be more valuable to that person's own evolution than blindly obeying
someone else.
128
In what way can the student fit himself for
greater service to humanity? Usually his first need is to acquire or improve
balance between the various functions. It may be that he is overweighted on the
side of feelings and psychic sensitivity, and underweighted on the side of
caution, practicality, worldly wisdom, and personal hardness. He ought in that
case to develop the qualities which he lacks. This he can do during meditation
by logically pondering upon them and by making them specific themes for his
creative imagination. He can also deliberately seek opportunities to express
them in practical day-to-day living. The task is a hard one and certainly not a
pleasant one, but it is necessary if he wants to render real service of a
tangible nature and not merely indulge in vivid fantasy about it.
129
If one's greatest desire is to serve God, he must
first understand that he will serve Him best by making himself a constantly
fitting testament of his faith.
130
Students frequently carry over some remnant of
the religionist's urge to convert others to their own belief. Self-disciplines
must be applied to curb this tendency. Actually it is a product of wishful
thinking combined with ignorance. Why ignorance? Because efforts of this sort
are more likely to repel than to attract others, to set up what the doctrine of
relativity calls an "observational interference." One's contribution should
simply be to be available for some discussions of metaphysics and mysticism in
general, and to answer questions - provided one is qualified to do so. If the
person is really ready for this Teaching, he or she will become aware of it
through higher forces than the student's. These work through the subconscious or
over-conscious mind. Usually the individual builds up artificial resistances,
and time is needed to overcome them. Then, some results will begin to appear in
the conscious mind. This is the way the Overself "works." It is also the way the
true Master teaches.
131
After the student has sufficiently prepared
himself - that is, after he has undergone the philosophic discipline for
purifying character, subjugated his lower nature, developed his intellect, and
cultivated his intuition - he will then be able to use his gifts in the practice
of a higher order of meditation, which will bring him the bliss of communion
with the Overself. Others, who may have benefited hitherto by association with
him, will find that the earlier benefits were superficial compared with those
following his transformation. Thus, one's first duty is always towards oneself -
although the idea of service may and should be held in the background for later
use.
132
There is more than one way of doing some good to
suffering humanity. He should find the way which suits his own temperament,
qualifications, and karmic possibilities. For instance, he must not regard a
trade or a business as an activity that is neither useful nor necessary.
Business is so broad that it is possible to find branches of it that are
superior enough to fulfil the double function of making a livelihood and helping
others.
133
It is incumbent upon each of those on the Quest
to play his or her part in the world in a courageous manner in accord with the
teachings of this noble philosophy.
134
As to the time taken for attainment, one has
certainly to go through many incarnations before becoming a fit channel for the
Overself. But this does not mean that he is not used by the higher power until
then. The student who has not yet been purified of egoism can only be used
brokenly, in patches, and at intervals, whereas one who has made and implemented
the requisite inner delegation of self to Overself is used continuously.
135
By humble prayer and aspiration one may attract
that kind of Grace from the Overself which manifests as a power to heal those in
unhappy states of mind, bad nervous conditions, and emotional unbalance. But
first, he must work on himself and develop the requisite poise, strength, and
wisdom from within. The intensity of devotion to the Divine, the desire to be
used as a channel for it to others, and the faith which carries on with the
Quest through both dark and bright circumstances, moods, or times - these things
are equally necessary to such self-cultivation.
136
In trying to help others in these unsettled times
- perhaps one's own children - one should try to think of them in their larger
relation to God, rather than in their relation to familiar surroundings, filial
attachments, or the unexpected, disturbing situations which have come up, over
which one has limited or no control. Prayer and positive thinking will be as
much of a help at these times as anything else one can say or do.
137
Until the aspirant has been notified that he has
attained sufficient inner knowledge, purity, and strength, he should not attempt
to engage in any outward service, such as entering into meditation with others,
holding classes, and so forth, and he should restrict to a minimum the number of
people with whom he discusses such matters.
138
Whenever the aspirant volunteers spiritual help
to another, or seeks it for himself, he ought not to take money in return on the
one hand, nor give it in payment on the other. Such needs will be attended to by
the Infinite Intelligence at the proper time.
139
The weak spot in his attitude is its failure to
achieve full purity, its pretension to a virtue which remains partially lacking.
For his altruistic service wants to take something back in return for what it
gives. Such service has hooks in it.
140
If he seeks the realization of his mystical aims
only and for his own gain and no one else's, then it is quite proper and
necessary for him to concentrate all his attention upon them and upon himself.
To indulge in any form of altruistic service - even if it be spiritual service -
is to go astray from this path and be led afar from his goal. But if he seeks
humanity's benefit as well as his own, it is not proper and necessary to do so.
For he will then have to divert some compassionate thought and meditation and
feeling to humanity. The kind of mystical attainment which fructifies at the end
of the quest depends on the kind of effort he previously put forth in it. If his
aim has been self-centered all along, his power to assist others will be limited
in various ways; but if it has been altruistic from the start, then he will be
able to assist them adequately, easily, widely, and differently.
141
If he finds that the Overself is using him at any
particular time as the personal instrument for its guidance, blessing, or
healing, he must take care to be detached and keep ego out of the relationship.
142
The student must work for the welfare of the
world, yes, but he must do it in his own way, not the world's way. He must not
only do the right thing at the right time, neither too early nor too late, but
also in the right way. He will not desert the world, but rather transfuse his
little corner of it with truer ideals.
143
The right move made at the wrong time may no
longer be a right one. If made too late, it may lose much of its effectiveness;
if made too early, it may meet with failure.)
144
A wise man will seek to study himself, a fool
will be busy meddling with others.
145
All are not called to act as, nor are personally
equipped to be, teachers and apostles, preachers and helpers, healers and
expounders.
146
It is no use talking vaguely of service to
humanity when he lacks the capacity to render any specific service at all. In
such a case it is better first of all to set to work to develop within himself
the necessary capacities.
147
Wisdom always relates service to need whereas
ignorance relates it to desire.
148
The philosophic suggestion to be active in the
service of mankind does not mean, as some think, that we have to be active in
politics nor, as others think, to give away propagandist pamphlets.
149
Let it not be forgotten that goodwill towards
mankind does not exclude goodwill towards oneself. The way of martyrdom, of
dying uselessly for others, is the way of emotional mysticism. The way of
service, of living usefully for others, is the way of rational philosophy.
150
If, at the insistence of other persons or of an
over-tender conscience, a man takes too much on himself, he becomes less able to
help those for whom he does so.
151
Why this eagerness to run about and set society
right? If there is a God, then He has not run away from His creation and left it
to fend for itself.
152
The Bhagavad Gita's warning about the duty
of another being full of danger runs parallel with the Tao-teh-King's
advocacy of the practice of non-interference. Both Indian and Chinese wisdom
thus tell us to mind our own business! Lao Tzu's words are: "The sage avoids the
very popular error of endeavouring to assist the processes of nature, which is
what he never ventures on doing." The wisdom of minding our own business is not
only validated by such teaching: it is also confirmed by experience.
153
Those men who have known this inner life, that
other Self, and who have the talent to communicate in speech, writing, or
action, have a duty laid on them to tell others of it. But if they lack this
talent, they do no wrong to remain in silence about it. For, as Ramana Maharshi
once said to me, "Silence also is a form of speech."
154
He who attains even a little power to help others
cannot measure where that help will stop. If it gives a lift to one man whom he
knows, that man may in his turn give a lift to another person, and so on
indefinitely in ever-widening ripples.
155
Reflection reveals and history shows that it is
impossible to save the whole world. So he prudently keeps his energies for the
task that holds much more favourable possibility - saving himself. It is only
the individual person here and there, not the entire mass, who is ever led out
of ignorance and slavery to wisdom and freedom.
156
It is bitter indeed to be strong and wise in
oneself yet, by identification with another person, to share his weakness and
his blindness. For the suffering that inevitably follows them must be shared too
under a feeling of helplessness, of inability to change the other and save him
from his self-earned destiny.
157
Those who are searching for truth are only a
small number but still they are a growing number. Each of us may repay his own
obligation by saying the right word at the right time, by lending or
giving the right book to the truth-hungry person.
158
The minor conventions must be practised if we
would serve mankind and achieve our major aims thereby. We can make the world in
our own image only by mingling harmoniously with it.
159
Who can save the sick world from itself? Possibly
an Avatar but there isn't one in sight at present, so what can we do? Each can
save himself, can look to himself. He can tell or show others what he is doing
for himself but cannot save them.
160
Even though one is headed in the right direction
and is most earnest, his progress, sometimes, is slow. This may be Nature's way
of encouraging restraint in his attempts to help or enlighten others.
Discrimination is absolutely essential in such matters and they must not be
undertaken before one is ready.
161
There is a proper time for everything. When he
has reached the age when he has to consider his own spiritual interests he
should lessen his activities and save his energies for a higher service, first
to himself and then to others.
162
Rather than placing over-emphasis on vocal
propaganda, students should, instead, silently exemplify in their own persons
and conduct the fruits of such acceptance of this doctrine.
163
Sometimes it becomes necessary for the student to
drop all thought of service for a while, in order to demonstrate in his own life
what he can do for himself - both inwardly and outwardly. Before this time, any
talk of service to others, especially to the Teacher, is premature. The
philosophic ideal of ultimate service is agreed upon; however, there is no need
to concern oneself about this until one has achieved enough knowledge and
experience to make such service worthwhile.
164
The noble and beautiful teachings of old Greece,
from the Socratic to the Stoic, harmonize perfectly with the age-old teachings
of the higher philosophy. Although they taught a lofty self-reliance they did
not teach a narrow self-centeredness. This is symbolized vividly in Plato's
story of the cave, where the man who attained Light immediately forsook his
deserved rest to descend to the help and guidance of the prisoners still living
in the cave's darkness.