1
The proper cultivation and refinement of feeling is
necessary for the philosophic path, but this must not be confused with mere
emotionalism. The former lifts him to higher and higher levels while the latter
keeps him pinned down to egoism. The former gives him the right kind of inner
experience, but the latter often deceives him.
2
It is right to rule the passions and lower emotions
by reasoned thinking, but reason itself must be companioned by the higher and
nobler emotions or it will be unbalanced.
3
As man's impulses to action come mainly from his
feelings, hence it is necessary to re-educate his feelings if we would get him
to act aright.
4
There are three kinds of feeling. The lowest is
passional. The highest is intuitional. Between them lies the emotional.
5
It is not emotion in itself that philosophy asks us
to triumph over but the lower emotions. On the contrary, it asks us to cherish
and cultivate the higher ones. It is not feeling in itself that is to be ruled
sternly by reason but the blind animal instincts and ignorant human
self-seeking. When feeling is purified and disciplined, exalted and ennobled,
depersonalized and instructed, it becomes the genuine expression of
philosophical living.
6
The heart must also acknowledge the truth of these
sacred tenets, for then only can the will apply it in common everyday living.
7
Those are much mistaken who think the philosophic
life is one of dark negation and dull privation, of sour life-denial and
emotional refrigeration. Rather is it the happy cultivation of Life's finest
feelings.
8
The hardest thing in the emotional life of the
aspirant is to tear himself away from his own past. Yet in his capacity to do
this lies his capacity to gain newer and fresher ideals, motives, habits, and
powers. Through this effort he may find new patterns for living and re-educate
himself psychologically.
9
But it is not all his ideas which govern man's life.
Only those are decisive which are breathed and animated by his feelings, only
they prompt him to action. Hence a merely intellectualist acceptance of these
teachings, although good, does not suffice alone.
10
The aspirant needs to rise above his emotional
self, without rising above the capacity to feel, and to govern it by reason,
will, and intuition.
11
Sentimentality is a disease. The sooner the
aspirant is cured of it, the quicker will be progress.
12
The idea that perfectly harmonious human relations
can be established between human beings still dominated by egoism is a
delusional one. Even where it seems to have been established, the true situation
has been covered by romantic myth.(P.
13
It is possible to attain a stoic impassivity where
the man dies to disturbing or disquieting emotions and lives only in his finer
ones, where the approbation of others will no longer excite him or the criticism
by others hurt him, where the cravings and fears, the passions and griefs or
ordinary and everyday human reactions are lacking. But in their place he will be
sensible to the noblest, the most refined feelings.
14
By "heart" I mean the central abode of human
feeling, the symbolic reminder that the "head" or cold dry intellect is not
enough to touch the reality of Spirit.
15
There is one relationship which takes precedence
over all others. It is the relationship with the Overself.
16
A wrong relationship with the Overself must
inevitably lead to a wrong relationship with men.
17
We are not called upon to renounce our human
affections, our earthly ties, as the ascetics demand, but we are called upon to
liberate our love from its egoism.
18
He is indeed free who is no longer liable to be
tossed about by emotional storms, whose mind has become so steadied in the
impersonal Truth that his personal feelings shape themselves in accord with it.
19
If and when we can reconcile our feelings with the
hard, sharp truths of philosophy, we shall then find the secret of peace.
20
The disciple must have no room for false
sentimentality if he seeks truth. Consequently, he will not apply the phrase "a
broken heart" to himself at any time, for he knows that what it really means is
a broken ego, a severed attachment to some external thing which has to be given
up if the way is to be cleared for the coming of Grace. It is only when he is
unwilling or unable to do this for himself that destiny steps in, taking him at
his word in his search for truth and reality, and breaks the attachments for
him. If he accepts the emotional suffering which follows and does not reject it,
he is able to pass into a region of greater freedom, and of progress to a higher
level. His heart is not broken arbitrarily or capriciously, but only there where
it most needs to be broken - where passion, desire, and attachment bind him the
most strongly to illusion and to error.
21
Only after long experience and severe reflection
will a man awaken to the truth that the beauty which attracts him and the
ecstasy which he seeks can be found free of defects and transiency only in the
Soul within.
22
Philosophy will create within him a disgust for
evil, a disdain for what is ignoble, a taste for what is refined and beautiful,
a yearning for what is true and real.
23
It is not that in the process of dying to self he
is to become a man without feelings, but that he is to die to the lower phases
of feeling. Indeed, such a victory can only be achieved by drawing the needed
forces from the higher phases of feeling.
24
In the world of values, the truth is the synthesis
of opposites, as for instance the synthesis of optimism and pessimism.
25
The quest remains unfinished and unsuccessful so
long as it lacks this element of rich feeling, so long as it has not become a
warm devotion.
26
The Quest is not all a matter of psychological
readjustment, of severe self-improvement. Man is not just a character to be
remolded. Deep reverential feelings have also to be cultivated.
27
His life will be extraordinarily enriched, and not
bleakly impoverished, by discovering the higher relationship that is possible
between men and women than that which begins and ends with the flesh.
28
Intense concentrated feeling may fill a man with
self-destructive or murderous antagonism but lead another into self realization
- depending upon the thoughts and acts which flow from him at its bidding.
29
First comes the capacity to recognize these higher
feelings; then to understand them for what they are; next to appreciate their
intrinsic worth; and finally, to give oneself up to them entirely.
30
The real philosopher feels what he knows: it
is not a dry intellectual experience alone but a living one.
31
Why become resentful and bitter at the loss? Why
not be grateful at having had the good fortune at all, and for possessing memory
of it that cannot be lost? Why not regard it as enough to have experienced such
happiness, even for a little time, when in the chances of life it could have
passed you by altogether? Why not receive the gifts of destiny humbly without
trying to own them with a tight vampire-like grip.
32
The higher human feelings such as kindness and
sympathy, patience and tolerance have to be nurtured.
33
This species called Man has shown its finer
possibilities in the kindness of Christ, the compassion of Buddha, the love of
Saint Francis, and the skill of Michelangelo.
34
He will not lose the capacity to feel; in this he
will still be like other men: but it will be free from false sentimentality and
debased animality.
35
He who enters upon this quest will have to revise
his scale of values. Experiences which he formerly thought bad, because they
were unpleasant, may now be thought good, because they are educative or because
they reveal hitherto obscured weaknesses.
36
Aesthetic appreciation, the feeling of delight in
art, is not enough by itself to bring humanity into the perception of reality,
that is, into truth. Artistic feeling, even poetic emotion, is not less exempt
from the need of being equilibrated by reason than the other functions of man's
nature.
37
No one can be devoid of feeling, and the
philosopher will not be exempt from this rule. But whereas the ordinary man's
feelings are transient emotions, passions, stresses, or moods, the philosopher's
feelings nourish a sustained, elevated state.
38
The mistake of taking personal feelings as fit
judges of truth or reality is a grave barrier which often lies across the portal
of philosophy. People put a grossly exaggerated value on them and are thus led
astray from the true knowledge of a fact or a situation.
39
Without changing a person's feelings, no change for
the better in his own life, in himself, and in his relationship with other
persons can be stable.
40
When his feelings are really a conscious or
subconscious cover for other feelings, nothing will help, save the uncovering of
what the ego has hidden.
41
Generous feeling must be directed by sound
judgement, fervent devotion must be led by wise discrimination.
42
The longing for inward security and invulnerable
peace is one which a man can certainly satisfy. But he cannot satisfy it on his
own terms. Life has always and inseparably dictated the price which must be paid
for it.
43
It is easy to talk vaguely of lofty ideals, hard to
put them where they belong - in our personal relationships.
44
The line of conduct which impulse suggests is often
different from that which deliberate reflection or deeper intuition suggests.
Only when a man so develops himself that the two lines harmoniously coincide
will he know the peace of never being torn in two - either mentally or
emotionally. Then only, when desire and duty agree perfectly with one another,
will he be happy. For, when reason approves what feeling chooses, and the inner
balance is perfect, the resulting decision is more likely to be a right one than
not.
45
Cheerfulness is an excellent mental attribute and
worth cultivating; but where it results from mental blindness it is not worth
having, for then it may become a real danger.
46
Feelings, emotions, and passions should not be
allowed to submerge reason, unless the feeling is genuinely intuitive, the
emotion truly impersonal, and the passion a passion for the highest Truth.
47
Feeling can be trained to become finer, more
delicate, responsive to higher urges and ideals.
48
The baser feelings go away of their own accord as
the higher ones are let in and encouraged.
49
The man who is seeking regeneration of his
character will not often have repose of his feelings, for he is called by
himself to struggle with himself.
50
It is in the very nature of emotion to vary like
the wind. Consequently, he who would attain inner peace cannot base his
attainment upon emotion alone. He has to find something much more stable than
that, much more constant than that. This is not to say that the life of the
spirit is without feeling, but it is a calm, unbroken feeling.
51
He may legitimately take pride in the fact that he
is called to the philosophic life, that he has accepted the philosophic ideal.
For it is not the kind of pride which can vaunt itself over other men; its aims
are to be fulfilled rather by humbling the ego and reducing its sway.
52
The Roman Stoics, who sought to control their
emotions and master their passions, placed character above knowledge. We pursue
a similar albeit less rigorous discipline in controlling feelings by reason
because we place knowledge above character. The latter is made a preliminary to
attainment of the former.
53
Goethe says: "I prefer the harmful truth to the
helpful falsehood. Truth will heal the wound which she may have given." And
again he says: "A harmful truth is helpful, because it can be harmful only for
the moment, and will lead us to other truths which must become ever more and
more helpful. On the other hand, a helpful lie is more harmful, because it can
help only for the moment and then lead to other lies which must become more and
more harmful..
54
When he can bring himself to see clearly that no
woman has anything to offer him which the Overself cannot offer more
satisfyingly - be it ecstasy or beauty, intimacy or love, comfort or
companionship - the glamour of sex will pall.
55
No possessive relationship between two human beings
can last forever. To ask for such a thing is to ask for the impersonal universe
to change its laws of growth for the sake of pleasing its ungrown progeny. God
is entirely self-sufficient and if God's children are to grow increasingly into
his likeness, they can do so only by becoming less dependent on others, more
sufficient unto themselves.
56
A false, showy, and pretentious cheerfulness which
ignores facts, represses truths, and hides evils is not really cheerful at all.
57
It is well to remember not to let oneself become
the victim of negative feelings or harsh thoughts. They do not mend matters but
only make you suffer more, and also suffer needlessly.
58
It is one of the side effects of philosophy that it
purifies human affection, takes the littleness out of it, and lifts it to a
higher and wider plane. This may bring some pain or it may bring a shared
pleasure, depending on those involved in the experience.
59
It is excellent but not enough to be well-meaning,
to have a pure intent, to be guided by feeling alone, if ignorance, credulity,
naïveté, or imbalance are the accompaniment. For there are traps and quicksands,
illusions and deceits in life as on the quest.
60
No human being has the right to claim another as
his own. Each stands ultimately alone and essentially isolate. Each is born out
of and must find his way back to spiritual solitude. For each must learn to be
divinely self-reliant and self-sufficient. This is so because the soul is of the
nature of God. How much misery has come into contemporary life through
non-recognition of this fact! How much bitterness has come to the unwilling
possessed ones or to the defeated would-be possessors.
61
The way to get rid of an obstinate negative feeling
is to supersede it by a new positive one of greater intensity. Right thoughts
about the wrong feeling will help to correct it, right imaginations about the
new one will help to bring it in, but feeling itself must be invoked and
fostered if success is to be attained.
62
In most human relations, egoism in one person is
replied by egoism in the other.
63
He has feelings but they are so poised that they
never disturb, so balanced with reason that they never agitate, and so
harmonized with intuition that they never excite him.
64
If anyone is to carry out Christ's bidding of
reconciliation with enemies and forgiveness of those who have harmed him, he can
do so only by giving up the ego.
65
In the New Testament Apocrypha we find a curious
sentence: "For the Lord himself, having been asked by someone when his kingdom
should come, said, 'When the two shall be one, and the outside as the inside and
the male with the female.' .
66
The loss of property and the break-up of
possessions may be a terrible happening, but it may also have the effect of
driving the sufferer into himself. He may disintegrate with his things, or he
may steel his mind and school his emotions to endure the event while he tries to
start life anew. So in the end he will become stronger than he was when the
world's pleasures and riches were available to him.
67
We may wallow in the lowest kind of emotions and
passions, or we may raise the whole feeling-nature to a level where love and
beauty, refinement and sensitivity reign serenely.
68
When the good in him overbalances the bad, his
selfishness will be purged by pity.
69
He can transcend sex by turning inward and finding
the inner bliss. He should cultivate therefore joy, love, and happiness as
attributes of the inner self.
70
The man who reposes his emotional strength or
mental peace on any single person is taking a chance whose outcome may
disappoint him.
71
The feelings of the transformed man no longer come
out of the ego but out of the Overself's life deep within the ego.
72
A fuzzy sentimentality which passes for mystical
feeling is only its counterfeit.
73
If a man has trained himself to reject self-pity as
an emotional egoism that is harmful, he is not likely to encourage its display
in other men merely because they conventionally expect him to be sympathetic.
Yet it must always be remembered that when pity, which begins in the emotions,
is filtered through the reason, it is not destroyed but balanced.
74
A man may have to free himself from being unduly
dependent on or overly attached to another person if he is to attain the freedom
and assume the responsibility of true adulthood.
75
Values are imposed upon things by human feelings,
human desires, and human purposes. The common criterion of value is whether a
thing or an occurrence brings an agreeable feeling or satisfies a personal want.
But as wants and feelings are subject to change, so likewise first valuations
are subject to revision with time. Indeed, it may happen, as indeed in the case
of marriage it often does happen, that what was formerly valued as good is later
branded as bad.
76
That he should seek the delight of shared
understanding and confirmed attitude with friend, family, or co-disciple is to
be expected.
77
Muhammed knew the power of tears. He bade his
followers to weep whenever they recited the Koran.
78
In these changing times, we all have to reorient
our external lives occasionally, so it is useless to try sentimentally to fix
forever relationships that once were.
79
It is essential that the student keep his romantic
inclinations under constant surveillance of reason, caution, and reflection upon
consequences. He is well advised to avoid emotional entanglements; for in this
region there is often, for those who have a special spiritual destiny, a thorn
concealed beneath every rose.
80
When two people, emotionally involved with each
other, have a misunderstanding or difference of opinion regarding the Quest
itself, it is best that they deliberately discontinue their relationship for a
while. In this way they avoid a revival of the discussion which can only lead to
exacerbation and further confusion. Time will solve the problem. Probably there
are faults on both sides, since we are all human, but we have to carry on with
the Quest despite these faults.
81
Being on the Quest need not prevent the continuance
and even the development of a friendship with one of the opposite sex, provided
that it be kept on a high plane above the physical. Karmic ties may be involved
and these have to be carefully negotiated. The relationships can be beautiful,
platonic, and mutually helpful but a strong discipline of the ego is called for.
82
Great men can liberate great feelings in others or
lift them toward acceptance of true ideas.
83
Few people know what love really means because with
nearly all it is filtered through the screens of bodily and selfish
considerations. In its pure native state it is the first attribute of the divine
soul and consequently it is one of the most important qualities which the seeker
has to cultivate.
84
The love for which man is searching exists; it is
as perfect, as beautiful, as perpetual, and as healing as he can imagine it to
be. But it does not exist where he wants to find it. Only the inner kingdom
holds and gives it at the end of his search. No other human being can do so
unless he or she has previously entered the kingdom, and then only through all
the limitations and colourings of the earthly consciousness.
85
Although we have stated in The Wisdom of the
Overself that a love restricted to the limited circle of wife, family, or
friends is unphilosophic and should be extended in universal compassion to all
mankind, this should not be mistaken to mean that such a restricted love ought
to be abandoned. On the contrary, it should have its fullest place within the
larger one. We have also written in the same book that "love" is one of the most
misused words in English. We may now add that it is also one of the most debased
words. Why? Because, very often, it is based on sheer self-interest and not on
the beloved's interest and gives only so long as it gets; because, not seldom,
the greater the ardour with which it begins, the greater the antipathy with
which it ends; and because it frequently mistakes the goading of animal glands
for the awakening of human affection. True love does not change or falter
because the beloved has changed and faltered or because the physical
circumstances wherein it was born have become different. It cannot be blown
hither and thither by the accidents of destiny. It is not merely an emotional
attraction, although it will include this. "Love is not love which alters when
it alteration finds, ...O no! it is an ever-fixed mark..." wrote Shakespeare.
86
It expresses itself outwardly in an exceptionally
kindly behaviour. He will not hurt others unnecessarily. He feels that one of
the best pieces of advice he can give others is: "Be kind." In this way you
abrase your own egoism and show forth something - just an echo - of this love
which emanates from the indwelling spiritual self. The cost in thus weakly and
briefly identifying yourself with others is little: the gain in moral growth is
large. When your duties, activities, or responsibilities in life call for
critical judgement of any person, that is allowable. But when you fall into it
for the sake of idle gossip or, what is worse, when you are nastily censorious,
slanderously back-biting, for the sake of malice, that is unkind and
unpardonable. Above his own deliberate willing or wishing, quite spontaneously
and impulsively, a feeling of pure love begins to well up within him. It is
unconnected with physical or egoistic causes, for all those who touch his orbit
benefit by it. It does not stop flowing if they are foolish or ugly, sinful or
deformed, unclean or disagreeable.
87
No one has ever unraveled the mystery of love as it
exists between a man and a woman. Since it is usually beyond our power to accept
or reject, we should regard it as a Divine Message and seek out its meaning to
our spiritual life.
88
At its peak moments, which can arise only in its
first or last stages and which belong only to its affectional rather than
passional side, human love catches and reflects feebly the nature of divine
love.
89
The romantic aureole which young persons put around
love, the demands made on it for that which it cannot give, point to the need of
maturer instruction. Yet there is a relationship where two can grow in virtues
side by side, learning wisdom from one another, harmonizing more and more with
each other. But this calls for self-control, eliminating negatives, cultivating
positives.
90
No one has the right to bind, hinder, or restrict
the free spiritual movement of another person - no matter how close his blood,
contractual, or emotional relationship may be - who enters into the pursuit of
higher well-being. If it is done in the name of love, then that word has its
meaning sorely misrepresented, for it is really being done in selfishness.
91
This quality of "love" is not to be measured by the
exhibitions of effusiveness on the part of its possessor; it is to be measured
by the presence or absence in him of egolessness.
92
Whoever talks of his love for mankind will reveal
it better by positive deeds than by sentimental displays. The fact is, however,
that such love is hard to feel when brought down to individuals. Only the sage
really possesses it.
93
By loving the Overself within you in worship you
are loving it in all other men, because it is present in them, too. Hence, you
don't have to go out of your way to love any individual specially, separately,
although you will naturally feel affection for some.
94
The capacity to give and receive love is not to be
destroyed, nor can it be. Nature has planted its roots too deeply for that
destruction to be attempted with success or desired with wisdom. But the man or
woman who aspires to the highest cannot let it stay ungrown and benefit from its
finest fruits. He should nurture it, purify it, exalt it, and spiritualize it.
He should direct it toward his best self, his Overself, aspiring and yearning.
And when it comes back to him in the blessed form of Grace, he should be ready
and fit to receive it.
95
Love mixed with the sense of bodily touch, or with
the emotion of personal companionship, is what most people take to be love
itself. They have not experienced it as it is, unmixed with anything else. Yet
if its adulterated forms give them so much satisfying feeling, how much more
could they get from seeking it at its source, pure and intense.
96
Passion, with its savage insistencies and
appeasements, its animalist intrusion, has no place in this serene, tender
affection which unites their minds - the hushed peace, the mesmeric strangeness,
and the golden felicity of this mood.
97
It is by trial and error, reflection and
experience, that the paradoxical art of loving without becoming possessive, of
being affectionate without becoming attached, of accepting outward attachments
with inward detachment, is learnt, and this applies to family.
98
Miguel Unamuno's declaration that "love is the
child of illusion" is one of those statements which are themselves the product
of illusion. For the pure state of love is the Cosmic Energy which holds
together and continuously activates the entire universe. It is those shadows of
shadows of love which appear in the beasts as lust, in the humans as affection,
which represent states that are transient and in that sense unreal. This
transiency is obvious enough in the beast's case but less so in the human's.
99
We may divide these different kinds of love
conveniently into animal-physical love, emotional-mental love, and
impersonal-spiritual love.
100
When Saint John of the Cross was prior of the
Monastery of Segovia, he was unjustly dismissed from his high position by his
own superiors in the Order and banished to an unhealthy hermitage in semi-wild
country. But he bore no ill-will against his persecutors, and even wrote in a
letter: "Where there is no love, put love and you will get back love." This is
so, but he did not state that the returning love might take a long time to
appear, so long that a whole lifetime in some cases, or several incarnations in
other cases might be needed. The lesson is that it must be accompanied by
patience. If we look for quick results, we may look in vain. Indeed, we ought
not to look for any positive results at all. In all such relationships with
hostile persons, we ought to do what is right, forgiving, extending goodwill, if
we wish, but leaving the outcome to take whatever course it did. "Act, but do
not be attached to the consequences of your action," was the counsel which
Krishna gave the young prince Arjuna. Be patient if you want to practise
goodwill.
101
We have been told by well-meaning ministers of
religion and counsellors in psychology to practise Jesus's words, "Love thy
neighbour." Now there are two different ways in which we can do so, because
there are two different interpretations of these words - the religious and the
philosophic. According to the first, we have at least to be amiable toward our
next-door neighbour, or at most to throw our arms around him and express our
warm feeling for him in a gushy, sentimental, hyper-emotional manner. According
to the second and philosophic interpretation, we have to understand that every
person who crosses our path is our neighbour, everyone with whom we are thrown
into momentary or continuous contact is our neighbour, whether at home or at
work. It is in these immediate contacts that irritations are bred, differences
are noted, and dislikes appear. It is much easier to love humanity as a whole or
in the abstract than it is to love humanity in the individual and in the
concrete. In spite of the instinctive urge to manifest irritability, dislike,
anger, resentment, or even hatred against those with whom you are thrown in
contact, you can steel your will and resist the negative feeling. If you can
take all these negative feelings and sublimate them into understanding,
tolerance, and goodwill based on the teachings of philosophy, you are actually
loving your neighbour in the sense that Jesus meant it. You will then see that
such philosophic love is far removed from and far superior to the
hyper-emotionalism which blows hot and cold.
102
How can I love my enemy, it is asked, or anyone
who is outwardly or inwardly repugnant to me? The answer is that we are not
called on to love what is evil in our enemy nor what is ugly in anyone. We are
called on, however, to remember that alongside of the evil there is the divine
soul in him, alongside of the ugliness there is the divine beauty in him. His
non-awareness of it does not alter the fact of its existence. And because he is
a bearer of something grander than himself, unconscious of it though he be, we
are to meet his hostility with our goodwill, his baseness with our nobility, and
thus help him by our thought or our example to move onward - even if no more
than one millimeter - towards the discovery and realization of his own divine
soul. When we are enjoined to love others we are really enjoined to sympathize
with them as fellow living creatures and to have compassion for their sufferings
or ignorance. If the thought of our enemy arouses hatred, dislike, or fear, he
will continue to haunt. The only way to be free of him is to arouse our
compassion for him, to extend goodwill towards him. In the moment that we feel
like this we exorcise his wrath and are liberated.
103
"Love thy neighbour as thyself," the dictum
preached by Jesus and practised by the sages, seems to offer a remote and
unapproachable ideal. But it will not seem so if we come to understand what
Jesus meant and how the sage is able to realize it. Every man does indeed love
himself, but he does not love the whole of himself. There are defects and
weaknesses in himself which he hates. He cannot therefore be expected to love
them in his neighbour. But he can be expected, if he perceives that these faults
eventually bring painful karmic results, to feel compassion for those who suffer
from them. In the case of the sage, not only is such a consideration operative
but also the perception of his neighbour's existence within the one universal
Mind in which he feels himself to be rooted. It is easy and natural for him,
therefore, to practise loving kindness towards his neighbour. Here, at this
final stage of knowledge which is sagehood, the "I" in a man becomes inseparable
from the "you." Both existsimultaneously within him, whereas in the
ordinary man they stand fundamentally opposed to each other. No longer is the
personality the sole content of the mind: it is now but a partial content. In
his inmost attitude he is conscious of unity with others and consequently
emanates a perfect sympathy towards them. This is not the sentimental attitude
which often goes with the superficial emotion called love. It is profoundly
deeper. It can never change, whereas emotional love may turn to dislike or even
hate. This inner sense of unity can in no wise alter. It is always there. Nor
can it even be impeded by physical or selfish considerations. There is nothing
in another man's face or body, fortune or misfortune, mind or heart, which can
obstruct the ceaseless flow of the blesser. "We two are rooted in the same
Overself" is the remembrance which he cherishes in himself. He has understood
the inner-penetration of the many in the One and of the One with the many. What
he feels for himself is not different from what he feels for others; but
what he does for himself will be necessarily different, because wisdom
demands recognition of the superior and hence more responsible role which has
been allotted to him in his game of life.
104
Plotinus' belief that in all his lesser loves,
man is seeking the divine, that it is the object he really permanently wants
much more than these temporary ones, is the truth to which he must come one day.
And he will come by a double movement: the first, away from them by successive
disenchantments, the second by progressive glimpses of the divine beauty.
105
A life without love is a life emotionally starved
and therefore stunted in growth. But do not limit the meaning of the word
love either to a selfish or an animalistic definition.
106
How many unreflective and selfish persons have
uttered the words "I love you" to someone else - wife, friend or teacher - when
what they actually if unconsciously meant was, "I love myself and use you to
serve my interests or to satisfy my feelings..
107
A merely physical or purely emotional love will
fade and die when events test if it really seeks the happiness of the beloved
rather than the pleasure of the lover.
108
The idea that ordinary people can love one
another, including those they have never met as well as those they meet day
after day, is a pleasant piece of sentimentalism. It sounds well when solemnly
uttered by ministers of religion before their respectful congregations or when
published as advice by professional psychologists. But where are the individuals
who succeed in following it? If we look at history or at the cities and villages
we already know, we find that the only form where something like it is
discovered is that of organized philanthropy. This is excellent, this is
commendable, but still it is not strictly love. Most ordinary people cannot get
closer than this to the full sympathetic identification with another person
which love really is. Only saints can achieve complete empathy; only they are
capable of washing the leper's sores. For all others the idea is vague and
unreal, although convenient to use in talk at Christmas time.
Karamazov, a character in one of Dostoevski's Russian novels, drily said, "One can love one's neighbour in an abstract way occasionally perhaps, even from afar, but in close contact, almost never.... It is precisely the neighbour, the one who is physically close to us, whom one cannot possibly love. At best one can love those who are far away..
Now this may be a little exaggerated but it does speak openly of the difficulty many people experience in their attitude towards those with whom they are in daily contact. It is still more difficult if they are forced to live with unscrupulous or unliked people. Then it will be all they can do to numb their revulsions.
But ordinary people have to come to terms with their associates or have at least to take care not to show their dislike. They must particularly learn to endure others who are different from themselves in habits, leaving aside the case of those who are thoroughly repulsive to them. Unless they do achieve this capacity, there is no hope for the human race, which must otherwise go on fighting and warring until, with the frightful weapons now coming into its hands, it destroys itself.
Such tolerance is still only the first station on the route to that active goodwill which the more idealistic persons who take the Quest seriously must try to achieve eventually. Many of them find it hard to reach even this first halt. They are sensitive, they are often heterodox, and they cannot warm up to those whose ideas, habits, mannerisms, or orthodoxies irritate them. The Quester who does not eat meat, for instance, may not enjoy sitting down at table with those who delight in it. If he has the fortunate circumstances to do as he likes, he need not do so. But most are not so free. He may put up with the meat-laden table and its diners with bad grace or good grace, but put up with them he must. Or take another case, that of having perforce to associate with someone who indulges in frequent sniffles when such a personal habit is felt to be most repulsive. Again if he is a Quester and if he is free to do as he likes and to avoid the other person, he is entitled to do so. But suppose he is not free? Instead of straining himself in the futile task of trying to love unlovable people, it is better to learn how to give them enough goodwill to tolerate them. This is within his capacity. If he has to live with them, or associate with them, he must try to put up with them, which means trying to put himself in their place. And that is a most desirable spiritual exercise, an advanced stepping-stone toward love itself. The practice of goodwill helps the practiser by creating good karma and shaping a good character. The thought of it, habitual and sustained, helps those who touch, or move within, his orbit. The profound meditation upon it repays him with blissful feelings and mystical harmony. If a man can be nothing else, let him be kind to others. Each time he does this he goes out of his own little ego. He comes a little closer to expressing the spiritual self dwelling hidden in his heart.
109
Gandhi (and spiritual pacifists like him)
believed that love shown to a man like Hitler would call forth its like from
him. This is a typical belief among mystics down through the centuries. When
tested by experience, we find that it is successful in some cases but a failure
in many more. And where it fails it harms the criminal because he believes the
more strongly that his crimes can go unpunished, and it harms society because it
is a misapplication of a good ideal. Everything, even love, must be applied at
the right time and at the right place, for when misapplied even a virtue becomes
a vice. We must not forget that wise old Latin proverb which warns us that when
the best is corrupted it becomes the worst of all.
110
The love for all humanity which many a
religionist professes to feel would not need much testing to find out the
shallowness of its reality. The saint possessed by his higher self may, perhaps
out of excessive kindness, be able to give it to the undesirable and the
disgusting types. But the more impersonal philosopher has a wide goodwill, which
is not the same as love.
111
When one's love for another is of the highest
type and leads to an expansion of understanding, compassion, and tolerance of
others, he has glimpsed the greater purpose of personal love: how the surrender
of his "heart" may lead to its opening to, and becoming united with, Universal
Love.
112
Being aware of the weaknesses or faults of
another does not necessarily mean we love him less. It is an essential part of
the message of love that we learn how to forgive surface characteristics by
contemplating the essence of the beloved, to see what "is," while also seeing
deeper to what truly IS - the Divine evidenced in a particular form.
113
Only when love ceases to be personal and becomes
impersonal, when it passes out of the local into the universal, does it fulfil
itself and attain its own unmixed and unadulterated integrity.
114
Real love is not something to be withdrawn
abruptly when the person who is its object annoys or offends you.
115
If the human race has not yet learnt to love its
neighbour, it is not likely to take the farther step of loving its enemy.
116
It is not only unnatural to put one's neighbour
before oneself, but also unwise. Both Buddha and Ramana Maharshi pointedly said
that the duty to oneself is primary. Only - one had to find out what was behind
the self before that duty could be properly accomplished.
117
Those who cannot make the leap and rise above
human love to their higher self - with its impersonality and immateriality - may
continue to draw a happiness from it. But the limitations will be there,
inexorable, unconquerable, of time and body, relativity and change.
118
Fear weakens a man, hate destroys him in the end,
but love brings him his best.
119
More than four hundred years before Jesus' time,
Mo Tzu was teaching the Chinese that "if everyone in the world would practise
universal love, then the whole world would enjoy peace and order." But he also
took care to teach them to rise above the emotions, and to understand by this
kind of love a state of mind, not a state of emotion.
120
Those who glorify romantic love avert their eyes
from the truth that there is a negative side to it. However ignored, it will one
day come into focus.
121
There is a common notion that love, to be worth
its name, must be highly emotional and dramatically intense. That, of course, is
one kind but it is not the best kind which is calm, unchanging, and unexcited.
122
The sentimental gush which is talked so often and
so freely in religio-mystic circles about loving one's fellow humans is usually
quite shallow and will not stand deep analysis. Nor is it the most important of
all the virtues as such circles seem to believe.
123
When a woman comes to a man for spiritual help or
even spiritual companionship, he should not ask her for more than the chance to
serve. This remains true even if she is not conscious of having been sent to him
for this purpose, or even if she mistakes the spiritual attraction for a merely
human one. It would be a spiritual failure on his part to ask for more than the
opportunity to serve her. The service he gives must be given with a pure motive.
Therefore, her appearance in his life is a test for him.
Should he fall in love with her the test still holds good, but its character may change. He is to keep the relationship at a high level. He is not to attempt to possess her but to be content with knowing and loving her. He must accept the situation with calm resignation and complete nonattachment.
124
Does the unified man have to like everyone he
meets? Some students believe that because Jesus commanded us to "love thy
neighbour as thyself" and because the Bhagavad Gita bids us hold no
aversions and no attractions, this question ought to be answered with a
resounding Yes! But in actual life we find that some unified men succeed in
doing this whereas others frankly do not feel that way nor make any such effort.
125
To make the love of everybody else a compulsory
ethic ought not to be demanded even from a quester, much less from the masses!
To make the cultivation of goodwill desirable as a general attitude would be
more reasonable. Even so it should grow naturally out of the cultivation, not be
forced.
126
When a man discovers that the same Overself
dwells in his enemy as in his own heart, how can he ever again bring himself to
hate or injur. another.
127
It is easy to believe mere softness to be
compassion. It is easy to deceive oneself in this way. But a vigorous analysis
of one's thoughts and observation of their results in action will expose the
very real difference between them.
128
What did Jesus mean when he enjoined his
disciples to love their neighbours as themselves? Did he mean the sentimental,
emotional, and hail-fellow-well-met attitude which the churches teach? How could
he when in order to become what he was, he had once to hate and turn aside from
that part of himself, the lower part - that is, the ego and the animal nature -
which is mostly what neighbours show forth? If his disciples were taught to
hate, and not to love, their egos, how then could they love the ego-dominated
humanity amidst which they found themselves? The injunction "Love thy neighbour"
has often led to confusion in the minds of those who hear or read it, a
confusion which forces many to refuse to accept it. And they are the ones who do
not understand its meaning, but misinterpret it to mean "Like thy neighbour!"
The correct meaning of this age-old ethical injunction is "Practise compassion
in your physical behaviour and exercise goodwill in your mental attitude towards
your neighbour." Everyone can do this even when he cannot bring himself to like
his neighbour. Therefore, this injunction is not a wholly impracticable one as
some believe, but quite the contrary.
Whoever imagines that it means the development of a highly sentimental, highly emotional condition is mistaken; for emotions of that kind can just as easily swing into their opposites of hate as remain what they are. This is not love, but the masquerade of it. Sentimentality is the mere pretense of compassion. It breaks down when it is put under strains, whereas genuine compassion will always continue and never be cancelled by them. True love towards one's neighbour must come from a level higher than the emotional and such a level is the intuitive one. What Jesus meant was, "Come into such an intuitive realization of the one Infinite Power from which you and your neighbour draw your lives that you realize the harmony of interests, the interdependence of existence which result from this fact." What Jesus meant, and what alone he could have meant, was indicated by the last few words of his injunction, "as thyself." The self which they recognized to be the true one was the spiritual self, which they were to seek and love with all their might - and it was this, not the frail ego, which they were also to love in others. The quality of compassion may easily be misunderstood as being mere sentimentality or mere emotionality. It is not these things at all. They can be foolish and weak when they hide the truth about themselves from people, whereas a truly spiritual compassion is not afraid to speak the truth, not afraid to criticize as rigorously as necessary, to have the courage to point out faults even at the cost of offending those who prefer to live in self-deception. Compassion will show the shortcoming within themselves which is in turn reflected outside themselves as maleficent destiny.
When the adept views those who are suffering from the effects of their own ungoverned emotion or their own uncontrolled passion and desire, he does not sink with the victims into those emotions, passions, and desires, even though he feels self-identity with them. He cannot permit such feelings to enter his consciousness. If he does not shrink from his own suffering, it is hardly likely that the adept will shrink from the sufferings of others. Consequently it is hardly likely that the emotional sympathy which arises in the ordinary man's heart at the sight of suffering will arise in precisely the same way in the adept's heart. He does not really regard himself as apart from them. In some curious way, both they and he are part of one and the same life. If he does not pity himself for his own sufferings in the usual egoistic and emotional way, how can he bring himself to pity the sufferings of others in the same kind of way? This does not mean that he will become coldly indifferent towards them. On the contrary, the feeling of identification with their inmost being would alone prevent that utterly; but it means that the pity which arises within him takes a different form, a form which is far nobler and truer because emotional agitation and egotistic reaction are absent from it. He feels with and for the sufferings of others, but he never allows himself to be lost in them; and just as he is never lost in fear or anxiety about his own sufferings, so he cannot become lost in those emotions or the sufferings of others. The calmness with which he approaches his own sufferings cannot be given up because he is approaching other people's sufferings. He has bought that calmness at a heavy price - it is too precious to be thrown away for anything. And because the pity which he feels in his heart is not mixed up with emotional excitement or personal fear, his mind is not obscured by these excrescences, and is able to see what needs to be done to relieve the suffering ones far better than an obscured mind could see. He does not make a show of his pity, but his help is far more effectual than the help of those who do.
The altruistic ideal is set up for aspirants as a practical means of using the will to curb egoism and crush its pettiness. But these things are to be done to train the aspirant in surrendering his personal self to his higher self, not in making him subservient to other human wills. The primacy of purpose is to be given to spiritual self-realization, not to social service. This above all others is the goal to be kept close to his heart, not meddling in the affairs of others. Only after he has attended adequately - and to some extent successfully - to the problem of himself can he have the right to look out for or intrude into other people's problems. This does not mean, however, that he is to become narrowly self-centered or entirely selfish. On the contrary, the wish to confer happiness and the willingness to seek the welfare of mankind should be made the subject of solemn dedication at every crucial stage, every inspired hour, of his quest. But prudence and wisdom bid him wait for a more active altruistic effort until he has lifted himself to a higher level, found his own inner strength, knowledge, and peace, and has learnt to stand unshaken by the storms, passions, desires, and greeds of ordinary life.
Hence it is better for the beginner to keep to himself any pretensions to altruism, remaining silent and inactive about them. The dedication may be made, but it should be made in the secrecy of the inmost heart. Better than talk about it or premature activity for it, is the turning of attention to the work of purifying himself, his feelings, motives, mind, and deeds.
Just as the word compassion is so often mistaken for a foolish and weak sentimentality, so the words egolessness, unselfishness, and unself-centeredness are equally mistaken for what they are not. They are so often thought to mean nonseparateness from other individuals or the surrender of personal rights to other individuals or the setting aside of duty to ourself for the sake of serving other individuals. This is often wrong. The philosophical meaning of egoism is that attitude of separateness not from another individual on the same imperfect level as ourself but from the one universal life-power which is behind all individuals on a deeper level than them all. We are separated from that infinite mind when we allow the personal ego to rule us, when we allow the personal self to prevent the one universal self from entering our field of awareness. The sin lies in separating ourselves in consciousness from this deeper power and deeper being which is at the very root of all selves.(P.
129
Jesus' preachment of love of one's neighbour as
oneself is impossible to follow in all fullness until one has attained the
height whereon his own true self dwells. Obedience to it would mean identifying
oneself with the neighbour's physical pain and emotional suffering so that they
were felt not less keenly than one's own. One could not bear that when brought
into contact with all kinds of human sorrow that shadow life. It could be borne
only when one had crushed its power to affect one's own feelings and disturb
one's own equilibrium. Therefore, such love would bring unbearable suffering. By
actively identifying oneself with those who are sorrowing, by pushing one's
sympathy with them to its extreme point, one gets disturbed and weakened. This
does not improve one's capacity to help the sufferer, but only lessens it. To
love others is praiseworthy, but it must be coupled with balance and with reason
or it will lose itself ineffectually in the air. Not to let his interest in
other matters or his sympathy with other persons carry him away from his
equilibrium, his inner peace, but to stop either when it threatens to agitate
his mind or disturb his feelings, is wisdom.(P.
130
Love of the divine is our primary duty. Love of
our neighbour is only a secondary one.(P.
131
Compassion is the highest moral value, the
noblest human feeling, the purest creature-love. It is the final social
expression of man's divine soul. For he is able to feel with and for another man
only because both are in reality related in harmony by the presence of that soul
in each one.(P.
132
There must be an end, a limit to his sacrifices
on behalf of others. They must not play upon his kindness to the extent of
ruining his own life. He may help them, certainly, but there are various other
ways to do so than by surrendering what is essential to his own life to satisfy
their emotional demands or material desires.
133
In the ninth chapter of The Wisdom of the
Overself I wrote.
For this notion of love is a sadly limited one. To bestow it only on a wife or a child, a sweetheart or a sister, is to bestow it in anticipation of its being returned. Man finds in time that such giving which hopes for a getting is not enough. Love cannot stop there. It seeks to grow beyond the restricted circle of a few friends and relations. Life itself leads him on to transcend it. And this he does firstly, by transcending the lure of the pitiful transient flesh and secondly, by transforming love into something nobler and rarer - compassion. In the divine self-giving of this wonderful quality and in its expansion until all mankind is touched, love finally fulfils itself.This last sentence may lead to misunderstanding. The paragraph in which it appears is, I now see, incomplete. For compassion is an emotion felt by one ego when considering the suffering condition of another ego. But spiritual development eventually lifts itself above all emotions, by which I do not of course mean above all feeling. The wish to help another person should not spring out of compassion alone, nor out of the aspiration to do what is right alone, nor out of the satisfaction derived from practising virtue for its own sake alone. It should certainly come out of all these, but it should also come even more out of the breaking down of the ego itself. With that gone, there will be a feeling of oneness with all living creatures. This practice of self-identification with them is the highest form of love.
134
False compassion, like false sentimentality, does
harm under the delusion that it is doing good. The abolition of flogging in
England and the eruption of youthful merciless brutal criminal violence are not
unconnected. The legal punishment of birching was not cruel: but the use of it
on the wrong persons - starving men, for instance - was cruel. For hooligans and
bullies it is a fit deterrent.
135
Some students have expressed disagreement with my
use of the term "compassion" when describing the enlightened man's loftiest
social quality. They believe the common term "love" would be more correct. Now
one of the fundamental terms of the New Testament is, in the original Greek,
"agape" - which is always translated as "love." But this is unsatisfactory
because man's love may be selfishly motivated whereas "agape" has the definite
implication of unselfish, or better, selfless love. And the only English word
which I can find to express this idea is the one which I have used, that is,
"compassion." If we cast out its selfish, sentimental, or sensual associations,
the word "love" would be enough to express this attitude, but because these
associations thickly encrust its meaning, the word "compassion" is better used.
The kind of compassion here meant is not condescending toward others. Rather
does it stretch out its hands through innate fellow-feeling for them. It puts
itself in the shoes of others and intellectually experiences life from their
standpoint.
136
"Hatred ceaseth not by hatred," declared the
Buddha, "It ceaseth only by compassionate love." This counsel is much the same
as Jesus' injunction to love our enemies. Many people, who wish to do what is
ethically right and feel that their best course is to follow the ethics
prescribed by such great souls as Jesus or Buddha, get confused here and wallow
in sentimentality under the mistaken impression that they are following these
counsels.
But the sentimentalists misunderstand Jesus if they believe that he taught us to practise outwardly and practically unconditional and universal forgiveness. On the contrary, he made repentance the prerequisite of such visible forgiveness. Those who refuse to repent and persist in wrongdoing must be inwardly and silently forgiven, but otherwise left to suffer the karma of their actions. What is really meant is that we should be big-hearted enough not to exclude our enemies from our goodwill to all mankind and that we should be big-minded enough to comprehend that they are only acting according to their own experience and knowledge of life. This is to "forgive them for they know not what they do." When we hold them in thought and when we image them with feeling we must do so without anger, without hatred, without bitterness.
All doctrines which are based on hatred emanate from the blackest of evil forces. Hatred is always their indicator just as compassion is always an indicator of the good forces. By practising great-hearted compassion, we help to counteract whatever ill-feelings have been generated. Therefore let us not at any time or under any provocation lose ourselves in emotions of resentment, bitterness, and hatred. We must not hate the most misguided of our enemies. We may oppose their false ideas resolutely, we may hate their sins, but not the sinners. We must pity even the most violent of them and not spoil our own characters by accepting their example. We must not sink to the low level of seeking revenge. The desire for revenge is a primitive one. It is apposite to the tiger and reptile kingdom, but in the human kingdom it should be replaced by the desire for justice.
137
A gushy sentimentality which refrains from saying
what needs to be said or doing what needs to be done because it will hurt
people's feelings, is mere weakness and cowardice, not true compassion. It will
not help them by giving them the truth when this is called for.
138
He must give out that love of which Jesus spoke.
But it is not to be an unbalanced sentimentality; rather it is a serene
self-identification with others without being thrown off one's own centre. That
is why reason is a helpful check here. Above all, he must love the Real, the
Overself.
139
The ideal relation to our neighbour, and indeed
the ultimate one, is a loving one, as Jesus said. If it is to be perfect, it
means a self-identification with him. But who can create this attitude of his
own free will, by his own mere wish? It cannot be done. Only growth and time, or
grace, can bring it about.
140
We can harm others and ourselves by practising a
sloppy sentimentality in the name of love, a misguided humanitarianism in the
name of service.
141
To practise love towards our fellow men is to
hold goodwill toward them, to accept them as they are and even to identify
ourselves intellectually, if temporarily, with them in the attempt to understand
their viewpoint.
142
"Love thy neighbour," preached Jesus. Perhaps!
but that does not mean I must also love his ill-mannered vulgarity, his
insensitive crude commonness, his unfair class, race, and national hates, his
malice towards all and charity toward none.
143
A silent compassion which does things is
preferable to a voluble sentimentality which does nothing.
144
He whose goodwill and pity extend to all men will
understand all men.
145
T.M.P. Mahadevan says that the higher meaning of
"Love thy neighbour" as revealed in meditation is to (1) confer a blessing, and
(2) identify with his higher self.
146
Total goodwill is, after all, only an ideal
because it must be practised towards our enemies and those we dislike not less
than toward our friends and those we like. We can only try to come close
to it in difficult cases. The attempt may elicit grace, which will carry us
further in the same direction.
147
The philosopher achieves what is rare - a cool
mental detachment from things or persons, united with a tender feeling for them.
148
No man can become philosophical and yet derive
complete satisfaction from or attach complete importance to whatever is
favourable in his external life. He sees too clearly how transient, how
imperfect, and how compensated by disadvantages it all is. Indeed he outgrows
the excessive common interest in and the excessive common preoccupation with the
ebb and flow of external life. He finds more and more trivial what he once found
- and the generality of men still find - worthy of serious attention.
149
Is it possible to be inwardly aloof from the
pleasurable things of the world and yet be outwardly able to enjoy them? Is it
possible to love another in a human way but yet retain the inner detachment
requisite for resting in philosophic peace? Can we make the best of these two
worlds? The answer is that just as we can learn by practice to remain inwardly
peaceful in the midst of outward turmoil, so we can learn to remain peaceful in
the midst of outward pleasure. But this practice is hard to learn and most
beginners fail at it. For a man to train himself in emotional control over the
mad loves and insane passions, the recurrent longings and tormenting desires, is
like training himself to die. Let no one underestimate this tremendous task.
150
The philosophic attitude is a curious and
paradoxical one precisely because it is a complete one. It approaches the human
situation with a mentality as practical and as cold-blooded as an engineer's,
but steers its movement by a sensitivity to ideals as delicate as an artist's.
It always considers the immediate, attainable objectives, but is not the less
interested in distant, unrealizable ones.(P.
151
Disinterested action does not mean renouncing all
work that brings financial reward. How then could one earn a livelihood? It does
not mean ascetic renunciation and monastic flight from personal
responsibilities. The philosophic attitude is that a man shall perform his full
duty to the world, but this will be done in such a way that it brings injury to
none. Truth, honesty, and honour will not be sacrificed for money. Time, energy,
capacity, and money will be used wisely in the best interests of mankind, and
above all the philosopher will pray constantly that the Overself will accept him
as a dedicated instrument of service. And it surely will.(P.
152
He will rise above personal emotion into perfect
serenity rather than fall below it into dull apathy.(P.
153
To be pure in heart means not only to be
separated from animal tendencies, not only from egoistic impulses, but also to
be detached from everything and everyone. Thus we see that the word "pure" is
not as simple in connotation as it is short in length, and purity is harder to
achieve than the newly converted religious enthusiast believes.
154
The act of renunciation is always first, and only
sometimes last, an inward one. It is done by thoroughly understanding that the
object renounced is, after all, only like a picture in a dream and that, again
like a dream, it is ephemeral. Its illusoriness and transitoriness must be not
only mentally perceived but also emotionally taken to heart. If we give up our
wrong belief about it, we may not have to give up the object itself. Now this
admonition cannot be made to stop with visible things only. To be honestly
applied, it must be applied to visible persons also. No matter how fondly we
love somebody, we must not flinch from seeing the metaphysical truth about him
nor from accepting the consequences of such perception.
155
How can we renounce the attachments to everything
and everyone and yet enjoy life, fulfil obligations, or remain in the world? How
do this without flight to a monastery? How remain an affectionate husband, a
devoted father? In the case of things, the answer has been given earlier. In the
case of persons, the answer ought now to be given. We renounce the "materiality"
of the loved one and with it the clinging to her material image, her physical
possession, her personal ego. We hold on to the concept of her "spirituality,"
her essence, her real being. We then know that this true self of hers cannot be
separated from our own; the illusory relationship is replaced by a real one, the
perishable pseudo-love by an undying essential one.
156
He may try to keep up the illusion that he is a
well-fitting part of these surroundings called civilization, a member of the
society into which he was born, but in the deepest layer of his heart the
reality will deny it. He no longer belongs to a race caught up in appearances,
ensnared and hypnotized by them to the point of self-destruction.
157
It may take some time to get familiar with this
impersonality of attitude, this detachment of heart, before he can realize how
fine it is, how precious its worth and rewarding in result. The first impression
may be cold and frightening. The last will be calm and soothing.
158
If indifference and detachment mean that the man
has ceased to care, then he has ceased to understand philosophy.
159
Deep within his heart he will strive to
depersonalize his relations with his wife, his children, his family, and even
his friends. But in the domain of action we should find him the best of
husbands, the most loving of fathers, and most faithful of friends.
160
The demand which the quest makes upon his
feelings is often a harsh and exacting one. He has to see each troubling
situation which concerns him without allowing personal emotions to interfere
with the truth of vision. He has to displace hot resentment, for instance, by
calm detachment. It is a battle of self against self and consequently invisible
to and unnoticed by other men. No one will help him here.
161
To be detached simply means not letting yourself
get into the power of anything or anyone who can hurt, damage, or destroy you
inwardly.
162
The Gita recommends those who live in the
world but are not of it to work with complete detachment from the fruits and
results of their activity. But how could any aspiring student achieve this? Only
the master, the man who has uncovered his identity as Overself could succeed in
labouring without caring what rewards he got or what effects he brought into
being.
163
It is not a petrifying ascetic coldness but a
benevolent inherent calm.
164
The practice of detachment helps in the practice
of meditation, while the reverse is also true.
165
It is pure but calm feeling unmixed with the
desires, passions, perturbations, and inflammations of the ordinary unawakened
and unevolved man.
166
Does this detachment mean that nothing is to make
any difference in him? No, it means rather that he may let the different effects
produce themselves but only under the check and control of a deeper abiding
serenity.
167
He who can detach himself from emotion even while
he continues to feel it, becomes its true master.(P.
168
It would be a mistake to confuse detachment with
callousness or to think that the conquest of emotion means the lack of all
feeling. He who is possessed by the one and has achieved the other, may still
have his sympathies unimpaired, and even brought to a greater
self-identification with other men than before. But they will not be
uncontrolled. Wisdom and knowledge, ideality, and practicality will balance
them.
169
The degree of attachment is measurable by the
degree of emotional involvement. Therefore to become detached is to become
emotionally detached.
170
The disillusionments which come from personal
contact with the defects or deficiencies of human nature will not make him
cynical, will not even make him sad.
171
A cold, heavy and death-like apathy is not the
indifference, or the detachment, taught here.
172
In the world of artists - using the word broadly
to include all who practise any of the arts - one too often notices an easy,
careless way of living, a lack of any worthwhile purpose, and consequently a
lack of any worthwhile self-discipline. This merely egoistic casualness drifting
through the years, is a counterfeit of the true detachment taught by philosophy.
173
It is not so easy to assume an air of detachment
in the deeper levels of one's being as it is on the surface.
174
To be unattached gives one a lighter touch in
dealing with the affairs and events of life, takes out some of the unnecessary
solemnity and nerve-racking hurry.
175
The emotional results of undergoing a misfortune
or an affliction can be made a part of oneself or can be separated out by
refusing identification with them. One may seek the real I which never
changes and so become detached from them. It is this self whose presence in one
makes it possible to be conscious of those results.
176
The wise man had better cast the plaudits of the
multitude out of his ears; it is all noise, for the mob does not understand him.
He has pleased them for today; but tomorrow, when he displeases them, they will
be as ready to destroy him. He should be prepared to receive abuse with the same
equanimity with which he is ready to receive praise.
177
It is comparatively easy to be detached from past
circumstances, for the feelings they aroused are now quiet or dead; but can he
be so detached about present ones? Yet no less an achievement than this is
required of him.
178
When detachment is used as an excuse for escape,
it is being misused.
179
It is not that he is above having admirations and
aversions, preferences and distastes, but that he tries to stand aside mentally
even while they register on his feelings.
180
Detachment does not mean that he regards his
outer performance in the world and his inner thoughts about the world with the
utmost solemnity. No! the day will not pass without a little lightheartedness
about it all. Why? Because he knows very well that it is just like a dream into
which he is peeping - a passing show, as Shakespeare also knew.
181
We may express our disenchantment with life in
exactly opposite ways - either with a grim scowl or with a quiet smile. It is
not only a matter of temperament but also of our world-view. The two combine to
make the result which we express. In the last and supreme disenchantment - which
is death itself - a third factor enters to effect this result.
182
Out of the understanding which ripens and deepens
with the philosophical work, he becomes grateful for one result. This is the
transmutation of those resentments and bitternesses which follow some
experiences to needed instruction and growing detachment.
183
His aim being the contrary of most people's aims,
he tries to depersonalize his attitudes and reactions. What relief he feels with
even partial freedom from the burden of self-consciousness! How heavy a load is
borne by those who see or react with ego-centered nervousness.
184
The eventual aim of human evolutionary experience
is to make us learn to love the Overself more than anything else. Therefore, any
personal attachments which we continue to hold within the heart must be purified
in quality, while at the same time kept subordinate to our larger attachment to
the Quest.
185
He must fully understand his situation, both with
regard to business responsibilities and the duties towards his family - perhaps
a wife and mother. It is part of this belief that such responsibilities have to
be honourably and effectively discharged and truth should be able to help him to
do so rather than relieve him from them.
186
The detachment which is taught by philosophy is
not to be confused with the detachment which is preached by religio-mysticism.
The first is a personal lifestyle for coping with the world; the second is an
indifference to the world.
187
It comes to this: that we have to view our own
life's events in a bifocal manner, both impersonally and personally.
188
The right way to regard possessions and property
is to replace the sense of ownership by the sense of trusteeship.
189
When earthly things or human entities hold our
heart to the exclusion of all else, they obscure the Overself's light and shut
out its peace.
190
Such nonchalant detachment is not easy to attain.
It is easy to renounce the things which we value lightly but very hard to become
inwardly aloof to those which we hold precious.
191
Human preferences do exist; it is possible to
pretend that they may not be there when they actually are - but this has to be
paid for by self-deception.
192
It is natural and pardonable for a married man
with responsibilities to worry if he has lost his employment or to be anxious if
serious illness descends on his family; but if he is also philosophically
inclined, he will check his worry and anxiety by calm reasoned analysis followed
by prayer, meditation, and finally a handing of the problems over to the higher
power.
193
It is not that he is to be without pity for the
misfortunes and miseries of others - such a thing would be impossible - but that
he insists on taking a larger and longer view of them.
194
It is better that we pass by unnoticed rather
than be praised or blamed. For then there will be no strain on our peace of
mind. If praised, we may swell with pride. If blamed, indignation may disturb
our feelings.
195
He may not give more than a part of himself to
these lesser loves. His deepest feeling must remain remote from them.
196
Conquest of the emotional nature and knowledge of
the true character of death will be evidenced when, at the actual passing of a
near one, he seems insensible to grief.
197
To be detached from anything means that he can
take it or leave it alone.
198
Ambition wears thin with time or even wears out
altogether. The hour may come when it means nothing and when a man feels nothing
of it. Only the young are so eager to risk the perils of upward flight to fame.
The reflective man is indifferent to worldly ambitions as the aged man is tired
of them. Philosophy leads its votaries to a somewhat similar detachment, but, by
supplying new incentives, does not lead to negative results.
199
The process of inner disentangling in the quest
of total freedom may have to be wide-sweeping. Not only desires but also duties
may have to go, not only long-hoarded possessions but also relatives and
friends.
200
There are those who regard such detachment as too
cool, perhaps even too inhuman. They are displeased with this rule. They will
let nothing disturb their tenderest affections, yet the ego lurks here too.
201
His family life - if there is one - provides the
first scene for his application of philosophy. There his opportunity is plainly
visible, the area for the self-judgements of his philosophic conscience plainly
marked out.
202
When the family circle prepares the younger
members for mature life, it does its duty. But when it sets itself up as the
supreme value of human existence and its loyalties or attachments as the supreme
forms of human ethics, it overdoes duty and breeds evils. It stifles individual
growth and crushes independent thought. It is nothing more than enlarged
self-centeredness. It turns a means into an end. Thus the influence of a useful
institution, if over-emphasized, becomes unhealthy and vicious. Parents who
refuse to release their children, even when the latter are fully adult, who
constantly fuss around them with over-solicitousness and hover around with
over-protectiveness, belong to the patriarchal age. They stifle the children's
development, breed the daughter-in-law's or the son-in-law's resentment, and
fill their own minds with unnecessary anxieties.
203
The desire for motherhood is Nature's urge in the
individual; it is entirely on a par with the illusions of sex. See it for what
it is worth, no more or less, and leave the rest to fate; you may then enjoy it
if it comes or remain undisturbed if it does not.
204
The parent, the husband, or the wife who demands
continuous attention and undivided devotion, who assumes as a natural right the
duty of making decisions for one, turns a home into a gaol.
205
The only relatives he recognizes are not blood
ones but love ones, inner not outer, lasting spiritual affinities not temporary
physical accidents, mental and not geographical ones.
206
Family life gives great joys on the one hand and
grave anxieties on the other. It was always like that and we cannot alter but
must accept it. With all its ups and downs the householder life is the best
after all. Most of the qualities needed for spiritual development can be got
from it.
207
Parents should respect the child's individuality
and not let it get too dependent and too attached, thus robbing it of the
capacity to grow mature and self-reliant.
208
The over-protectiveness of fear-ridden mothers
toward their children and the over-possessiveness of dominating mothers show a
lack of faith in the one case, and a lack of understanding in the other.
209
It is a part of family relationship for the
children to identify themselves, by extension, with their parents. Thus,
it is what the French call "egoisme a deux..
210
Relationship is a matter of soul, not a measure
of blood.
211
Once across the threshold of puberty the girl or
boy begins the unfolding of the emotional nature. Each will then develop her or
his own individual feelings and passions as a process of growth towards
womanhood or manhood. How can this be done unless the young begin at the same
time to develop away from utter dependence upon the mother? They must begin in
however small a degree to claim their freedom and move away emotionally from
their physical source. All this is to be accomplished by stages and not all at
once until maturity is reached. Then, just as the fledgling bird has to emerge
from the nest and learn to fly even at the risk of falling, so the young must
learn to stand on their own feet in order to reach maturity.
212
It is questionable whether family love is a break
out of the ego's shell or merely an extension of self. More often perhaps it is
a mixture of both.
213
The family link becomes unhealthy when it becomes
exaggerated. No personal relation is enduring. All end with the efflux of time.
Even the most enduring of all - the disciple-master one - must end too with the
disciple's own graduation.
214
It was Jesus' closest relative, his own mother,
who sought to sidetrack him from his mission, compelling him to exclaim, "Woman!
What have I to do with thee?" It was Ramana Maharshi's own mother who sought to
drag him back from his meditation-cave to a worldly life, compelling him to tell
her, in effect, not to alter a course already preordained for him. The duties
towards one's family are limited ones, whereas the duty towards one's soul is an
unlimited one.
215
A family problem may have to be considered again
and in a fresh light, judged and considered not merely by his personal feelings
but from the point of view of duty, as perhaps to his children. It is necessary
to make sacrifices at times if one wishes to follow the spiritual Quest, even if
those sacrifices involve crushing the ego.
216
When children are grown up and past thirty, their
lives are largely their own affair: they are then entitled to a measure of
freedom from possessive parents.
217
Once he has found out his true relationship to
the higher power, the problem of settling his relationship to other human beings
becomes easy.
218
"Friends are friends if nothing can separate
them," observed the Buddha. He spoke not of the superficial relation which
subsists between persons belonging to the same class, rank, profession, or
locality. True friendship is not formed as are most of these by self-interest,
vanity, custom, or habit. It is a profound tie formed not seldom between those
who have lived together and died together under remote skies and remoter
centuries no less than in familiar lands and more recent times. We are bound to
each other by links that have lost themselves in the archaic past, links of
affectionate studentship and hallowed trust, and - not seldom - the mutual
suffering of sharp persecution, when the prison cell and the torturer's stake
were the punishment for expressing or believing truth.
219
We often imagine we have made a new friend when
we have merely made a new acquaintance. He only to whom we can speak our private
thoughts is our friend, and none else. He who flies to our aid when all others
flee away is our friend, and none else. Above all, he whose sympathy is so
perfect that he understands and forgives our failings is indeed worthy to be our
honoured friend.
220
Where minds are great and hearts are large, two
persons can remain cordial friends even though their outlooks differ.
221
There is a silence between two persons which is
full of nervous tension, but there is another which is full of healing peace.
This is rare, uncommon, but it is found through real harmony, full trust,
surrendered ego.
222
It is not necessary to give up personal
friendships in order to follow the Quest. They are quite permissible in their
place and have their instructive value.
223
Those who pursue such an ideal as ours have
always to live inwardly, and sometimes outwardly, apart from the mob - that is,
to live in a loneliness which makes true friendship double its worth.
224
Sometimes a quick friendship means that he is
reviving an old spiritual relationship out of the hidden past, out of the
numerous incarnations which have been lost in time. Therefore understanding and
recognition come quickly, explanations and introductions are not waited for and
are not necessary in the real soul-realm.
225
There is the common friendship in which the
emotional attitude may one day pass from affection to animosity, and there is
this rare friendship which, because it is based on something deeper, diviner,
and more enduring than mere emotion, witnesses only the ripening of affection
into real love.
226
We each possess our own heavenly latitude and
must seek out our true compatriots on that line.
227
"As iron sharpeneth iron, so a man sharpeneth the
understanding of his friend," says Solomon.
228
The course of life's friendships is sometimes
like a turning wheel. We think we grasp the hand of a friend but one day the
wheel turns and he is gone. In the end we cannot escape from our solitariness.
229
Only those who hold the same spiritual conception
of life can be true affinities in friendship.
230
There are times in personal relationships when
eagerness for friendship, on one side, would mean cruelty on the other side, if
an individual wished to break away from any continued acquaintance completely.
In such an instance one should try to continue seeing the other but make the
association on a different level if possible. The other person may have awakened
to the Quest of truth, and any unfortunate experience between them would be no
reason for deserting her but only for learning how to handle persons of the
opposite sex who are led across his orbit for spiritual help.
231
Each of us being individually complete in his
inmost godlike self, no other person is needed for self-fulfilment, no mate or
affinity is required to bring him to the realization of life's goal. But each of
us being incomplete in his outer self, the longing for such a mate or affinity
is human, natural, and pardonable. There is nothing wrong nor contrary to the
Quest in seeking to satisfy this longing, although unless this is done with
wisdom and after prudent consideration, rather than with ignorance and in
impulse, the result may bring more unhappiness rather than more happiness. Nor
must such a longing ever be allowed to obscure the great truth of individual
completeness on the spiritual level.
232
Those ascetics who vehemently denounce marriage
because, they say, it caters to the passions are themselves showing the baneful
effects of passion repressed but not sublimated.
233
Personally I do not accept the Christian and
Hindu conceptions that marriages are made in heaven and that we are allied as
husband-wife for all eternity; but I do accept the strict duty of acting with
the utmost consideration for the other party, of being ready to renounce one's
own happiness entirely rather than destroy the happiness of the other person.
234
The aspirant who seeks to live spiritually in the
world should marry for something more than physical enjoyment and comfort, more
even than intellectual and social companionship. He must find a woman whose
inner being is polarized to the same ideals as his own, who will walk by his
side through every vicissitude as a fellow-pilgrim and a wholehearted seeker.
235
One general guiding principle as to whether or
not a young aspirant on the quest should enter into marriage is that it is
necessary that there should be spiritual harmony. Both must pursue the same
ideal, for if disharmony enters this would lead to disaster. Both must stand
within measurable distance of each other on the spiritual path. In addition to
that, it is advisable that there should be physical, magnetic, and temperamental
suitability to each other. In any case this decision is a matter which should
not be rushed and it will be well to take enough time for consideration. It
would be well also to ponder the opinions of wise friends who have met the other
person. A decision about marriage should not be made on the basis of emotion
alone, but the checks of critical reason and outside judgement should also be
introduced.
Committing oneself to a life-partnership in marriage is not only of vital importance to worldly life but also to spiritual life. It may either help inner progress or else lead to spiritual disaster. It is necessary, therefore, that a man, for example, should explain his views to the lady that he is interested in, and if she is unable to accept them sincerely within a reasonable period then he may face the fact that he would be headed for a stoppage on his spiritual journey if he married her. To make a mistake in marriage will bring both pain and trouble to his wife as well as to himself. He should resolve to choose correctly or else to wait patiently until the right girl appears.
236
The marriage partner should fulfil both the human
characteristics needed for satisfaction and the spiritual qualities needed for
affinity. Where fate denies this, wisdom counsels abstention from marriage
altogether. Otherwise, unnecessary unhappiness is invited.
237
Philosophy says that the marriage state is
necessary for most people, the less advanced. It also says that even for the
others, the more advanced, the smaller love of two persons mating can coincide
with, and remain within, the larger love of the individual for the Higher Self.
Of course, this is only possible if the relationship is a successful and
harmonious blending of the two personalities.
238
For some people marriage does take away from the
higher life, but not for others. It all depends upon the two individuals
concerned in it as to which of these results will come about.
239
Marriage hinders some aspirants because of the
distractions and burdens it imposes, but it helps others because of the release
from sex-tormenting thoughts which it may give. When sensibly fitted into the
framework of a spiritual understanding of life, marriage need not be a bar and
success may be achieved.
240
It is true that men who are lonely or young or
romantic are likely to marry a young woman with whom propinquity has brought
them in touch. In such cases he puts an illusion around the woman to the
pressure of desire. When the illusion goes and the facts show themselves he is
left alone with the hard lesson of discrimination. The situation can repeat
itself with the victim being the woman.
241
Many marriages are based on calculation, not on
love. They are business transactions bearing social or financial rewards, not
emotional ones. Yet if animated by goodwill they may be successful.
242
One man who seemed to make no spiritual progress
generally, and little progress in meditation particularly, found the situation
completely altered when he adjusted himself to a new attitude towards his wife.
She was a shrew and a scold, hostile to his higher aspirations and quite earthy.
He was several times on the brink of leaving her but the thought of
responsibility toward their growing children restrained him. He did leave her
mentally and bitterly resented her presence in his life. When he was taught how
to bring a new viewpoint to bear upon his marriage, he began to regard it as a
perfect opportunity for the better development of his character and his wife as
an unwitting instrument for the better control of his mind. He learned to accept
her in his life without complaint. He came to regard the marriage as a piece of
Self-Created destiny to be worked out, in its own unpredictable time, by his
fostering the needful qualities. He set to work upon himself and gradually
unfolded patience, calmness, strength of will, and unselfishness. Within a few
years he not only became expert at meditation but also gained higher awareness.
Nor was this all. In his work as an executive in a large commercial office
involved in accounts, calculations, and business decisions, formerly he would
easily become excited, irritated, or angry with subordinates over their
mistakes, their inefficiency or stupidity. Now he taught himself how to hold on
to the inner peace found in periods of meditation until the time arrived when he
could pass through the whole day's activity without losing or disturbing it.
243
If a woman has done all that was humanly possible
to hold her husband and has failed, she must realize that acceptance of the
inevitable - even the temporarily inevitable - is the only way to bear this
painful result. The husband's weaknesses may have found their expression in
outer action. But through the painful results of that expression he may
eventually discover a truer set of values. If she has tried to appeal to his
better nature and failed, she must now let him do what he wishes and try the
path of personal experience in the satisfaction of his desires, which is the
common path for most people.
244
It is not necessary that he remain married in
order to pay a karmic debt, nor on the other hand is he free to follow personal
desires in the matter. It is a mistake to think that such a debt must continue
to be paid until the end of one's life. Yet, it must be paid off if one's inner
life and path are not to be obstructed. Only the voice of his own deeper
conscience may decide this point.
245
An individual may keep the ideal of a true mate
but understand that one can't be absolutely certain to meet him or her on this
earth. The spiritual path is a call to renunciation of personal attachments,
inwardly at least, and to a renunciation of the animal nature also. Both have to
be overcome if inner peace is to be obtained. But once overcome, the world can
be enjoyed without danger because his happiness no longer depends on it. If he
lets the natural desire for a mate be included in but transcended by the higher
desire for spiritual realization, he stands a chance to get both. But if he
feels that the first is wholly indispensable, he may miss the chance to get
either. The truth is that the Soul will not give itself to you unless you love
It more than anything or anyone else. He may have great capacity for love in his
nature, which properly directed by wisdom, may lead him to great spiritual
heights and human satisfactions. But directed by impulse, unchecked by reason,
it can bring him into situations productive of much misery to himself and
others. He must therefore make it a part of his spiritual discipline to secure
this balance. Until he has secured it, he should not commit himself to any
decision without consulting with a spiritually mature person. Much harm has been
done by the pseudo-romantic nonsense and false suggestions put out by cinema,
magazines, and novels.
246
Marriage is a risky affair when one of the two
belongs in every way - spiritual, intellectual, and social - to a class higher
than the other. If they cannot meet on these levels, where can they? The bad in
both is brought out and made worse; the good is diminished. This was one of the
original reasons why the caste system got established in some form or other
among the Orientals as if it were an essential part of religion.
247
Marriage multiplies burdens, entanglements,
anxieties, difficulties, and worldly preoccupations. The single man has a better
chance to wed his life to a single undistracted aim. Nevertheless, philosophy
does not condemn marriage but leaves it to individual choice. Indeed, when two
persons are temperamentally harmonious and spiritually suitable, it definitely
approves of marriage.
248
If he could find a companion who had the
character and capacity to help, and not to hinder, his own inner pilgrimage,
then it might be useful for him to marry; but if she were to fall short of this
ideal then greater inner misery would descend upon him. There is a certain fate
about such matters and if she has to come, she will come into his life of her
own accord. In any case it will be advisable to wait to make sure that the inner
harmony does really exist.
249
Some questions asked about marriage problems
ought not to be answered by anyone other than the individual's own higher self.
Let him hear the voice of the Overself, which concerns itself neither with
conventional contemporary attitudes, out-dated Oriental teachings, nor merely
personal reactions. Let him listen mentally in profoundest meditation to hear
this voice.
250
It would be a profound error to believe that
because the philosophic life is so deeply concerned with self-improvement and
the philosophic mind so attached to serious studies, therefore the philosophic
student must be a gloomy, dreary, and miserable individual. But the contrary is
the fact. His faith uplifts and upholds him, his knowledge brings joy and peace
to him.
Nor should the renunciatory preachments of Buddha, the bitter complaints of Job, the harsh pessimism of Schopenhauer, and the appraisal of the World's life as vain foolishness in Ecclesiastes make us forget the cheerful optimism of Emerson and the bright rapture of many a mystic.
251
The quest for an ideal place or person can never
be satisfied; consequently, it can never really end. What we may hope to find
are better places, better persons. The dream of the Best will always remain only
a dream.
252
Where is the earthly thing, attraction, creature,
which can compete successfully with THAT in the deepest heart of men? Without
knowing what he is really doing, he is seeking THAT amid all other activities,
loving THAT behind all other loves.
253
It is possible, given certain conditions, to
attain happiness thinking only of oneself and without care for the welfare of
other men, but it is not possible to keep it. For if destiny or nature do not
interrupt or destroy it, some among those others will become envious and may
turn into a potential danger to one's happiness.
254
We shall secure personal happiness only to the
extent that we unfold ourselves to the light of the impersonal Overself.
255
The happiness which everyone wants can be found
only in the eternal, not in the temporal. But everyone continues to try this or
that, with the same endlessly repeated result. Nobody listens to the prophets
who tell this, or listens with more than his ears, until time teaches him its
truth. Then only do his heart and will begin to apply it.
256
The danger of seeking for personal happiness over
and above self-improvement is one of nurturing egoism and thus hindering that
improvement. And how could anyone find happiness so long as the causes of his
suffering lie so largely in his own frailties.
257
With a single exception, no living man is ever
really content either with his lot or, what in the end is the same thing, with
himself. That exception is the illuminate. The reason is that all living men are
unconsciously striving to become, in the timed state, what they already are in
the eternal one. That is, they are unwittingly in search of themselves. This is
the hidden cause of all their discontent, all their restless desires,
endeavours, and ambitions.
258
Happiness cannot be found by those who seek it as
a goal in itself. It can be found only by those who know it is a result and not
a goal.
259
It is true that the student of philosophy,
understanding the impermanent and imperfect nature of this world, has in one
sense renounced the quest of personal happiness, but he has renounced it only as
an end in itself. He comprehends, on the one hand, that it is futile to demand
perfection and permanence when the ever-changing world cannot by its very nature
give them. To seek to establish personal happiness under such conditions is to
travel farther away from it. He comprehends, on the other hand, that so long as
he feels for and with other living creatures he cannot be fully happy whilst so
many among them are immersed in suffering. But all this is not to say that he
need forgo the quest of the higher trans-worldly happiness which is entirely
independent of persons, places, and things and which is to be found within the
Overself alone. Moreover, he realizes that it is his duty to attain it precisely
because he must attain the power to lift those suffering creatures above their
misery and gloom, to infuse in them the life-giving qualities of hope, courage,
and serenity which will help them triumph over difficulties. Thus there is no
adequate reason why he should be less happy than other men. The depth of his
thinking and discipline of his senses do not prevent his sharing in the
beauty-bringing arts, the laughter-raising fun, and the lighter diversions of
human living. Indeed, by his efforts to reshape his thought and conduct, he is
eliminating a number of causes which would otherwise bring him future worry and
misery, just as he is fortifying himself to bear present trouble with calmness
and wisdom. Moreover, he is on the path to realizing for himself - if he has not
already partially realized it - that inexpressible inner beauty and satisfying
bliss which accompany the consciousness of the Overself. Even from afar its
reflected light shines down upon his path, to cheer the mind and warm the heart.
No - he cannot be a miserable man. He is in the process of finding an exalted
and enduring happiness which is not bought at the expense of others, but rather
shared with others.
260
Some worthwhile lessons may be got by analysis
and reflection from experiences of human love, if it is approached with reason,
impersonality, and the determination to learn wisdom. We may see the risks in
permitting happiness to depend upon another person, whoever that other person
may be. The first love must be given to the divine soul within one's own heart,
because it alone will never desert, betray, or disappoint. Then and then only
may an individual turn to human love for comfort.
261
Is not excessive melancholy just as undesirable,
and as much of a stumbling block in the path of spiritual progress as, for
instance, excessive drinking - or any other fault? What is being gained by these
self-demeaning tactics? Is anyone benefiting from them? The time has come to ask
himself these questions. Certainly he is not alone in having made mistakes -
everybody makes them! Consider what would happen, however, if everybody
continued to punish themselves over and over again, needlessly remaining on the
level of their own errors? What then is to be done? His gloomy situation can
improve only when he is willing to change his attitude towards it. He must make
a deliberate attempt to cultivate happiness! Just as he raises the
windowshade in the morning to allow sunshine to pour into the room, so must he
open himself to the higher power and let hope pour into his heart! As long as he
continues to cling to despondency and to misunderstand, he is shutting out the
Overself and preventing its message from reaching him. Every day is a new
day, with new possibilities of a fresh, determined, and more courageous approach
to all daily difficulties. Let him forget the past, and start planning
for a happier tomorrow! No one else can do this for him, but he can draw faith
from the knowledge that his efforts will count towards his joyful resurrection.
262
It is an heroic and stoic goal to set before a
man, that he shall not be dependent upon others for his happiness and that he
shall be emotionally self-sufficient. But it is a goal reachable by and, in the
present kind of faulty human society, useful to, only the few.
263
If a man reaches finality of decision and
recognizes that enlightened self-discipline is to be achieved and not resisted,
he takes the first step to true happiness.
264
So long as we believe that some other person is
essential to our happiness, so long shall we fail to attain that happiness.
265
Happiness is not the monopoly of the successful.
One of the happiest men I ever knew was an aged tramp who wandered from
poorhouse to poorhouse across the country. His eyes were blazing with a strange
light.
266
Happiness? Is it so important and so necessary?
Are not strength, understanding, and peace of mind more indispensable to a human
life.
267
When inner conflict goes out, inner harmony comes
in. There can be no happiness without such harmony.
268
Only they who have brought all the different
sides of their being into equilibrium, as well as they who have lived fully
between the opposite poles of human experience, can appreciate the quest for
serenity over the quest for happiness. Goethe in Europe was one man who
appreciated this superiority as Buddha in Asia was another.
269
It is as erroneous to expect perfect happiness
through another person as it is to expect perfect salvation. Each must find the
one or the other for himself in himself. No one else can bear such a great and
grave responsibility, or ought to bear it. No human relationship can adequately
or properly be substituted for what everyone must in the end do for himself.
270
He who asks for happiness asks for something he
cannot and shall not get while his body breathes. The wise man does not ask more
from life than it can yield. If it cannot give happiness, it can give peace.
271
"Are you happy?" is a question people often ask
him. But he has not sought happiness. He has sought to find out why he is here
and to fulfil that purpose.
272
The aim of getting as much personal happiness as
he can out of every situation is no longer the dominant one. Other and loftier
aims now coexist with it in some cases or even displace it in others.
273
During no one's lifetime are all desires fully
realized. To look for a happiness that is complete is to look in vain. It is
more philosophic to look for peace of mind.
274
Happiness may leave a man in a single moment or
come to him in the same way. But this can only happen if he identifies it solely
with the ego and nothing more.
275
If a man has inner peace he does not have
emotional disturbances or mental agitations. Who then, really enjoys living -
the disciplined philosopher who has the peace, or the undisciplined sufferer
from the agitations.