1
The emotions are uppermost in primitive man. With
time and evolution, reason begins to mix with them and eventually to rule the
lower ones. With further time and further evolution, intuition appears as the
fruit of the finer ones. This is the place of emotional life in man.
2
Few persons can separate - in their consciousness -
emotions from thoughts. The capability of doing so is essential both to
self-knowledge and to self-conquest. Therefore it is important to every Quester.
3
We must keep the emotional issues separate from the
intellectual ones. But this is not to say that the intellect is to live an
emotion-proof existence. Such separation always needs to be kept up only so long
as the lack of it is likely to impair the quest of truth. This danger arises
only during the earlier stages of man's seeking. When he has attained a balanced
personality, cultivated a serene disposition, and mastered the egotistic urges
within himself, then emotion and reason join forces with intuition in producing
the quality of intelligence. Henceforth he feels what he thinks and thinks what
he feels, his emotions are rightly directed and his thoughts are truthfully
formed. They work together harmoniously, satisfactorily, and unitedly.
4
He who seeks to arrive at the truth about a matter
must banish his personal inclinations and egoistic desires about it during the
time that he contemplates it. He must make his emotions submit to the facts
which displease them and he must compel his reasonings to accept the conclusions
which surprise them. Otherwise, his emotions may betray him and his reasonings
delude him, so that white will appear black and illusion will appear as reality.
5
There is a special quality which we will do well to
develop during this particular period in which we live, and that is calmness.
For wherever we turn our gaze, we perceive great upheavals of thought and
emotion, great stirring of violent passion and bitter hatred, mass excitement
and mob restlessness. In such a disturbed atmosphere we are liable to be swept
off our feet against our better judgement and may thus injure the true interests
of ourselves or of our country. We should remember that to keep a cool head is
the way to act wisely and successfully, whereas to yield to hot impulsiveness is
to act rashly and often wrongly. We should also remember how the unfortunate
younger folk of Germany were cunningly swept into the Nazi current of blind
impulses and became the bomb-fodder for the insatiable ambitions of a hysterical
maniac like Hitler. Let this be a lesson on the need and value of calm judgement
and levelheadedness.
We may also draw a further lesson from Germany, that is, the importance of practising goodwill to all. The continent of Europe could never have arrived at the present unhappy condition of its people had it realized this virtue. The more we try to be kindly and helpful to others, no matter what class or creed they belong to, the more others are kindly and helpful to us. Therefore, even from the purely selfish point of view it pays good dividends to practise goodwill. Moreover, it will help us as much as anything else to get on in life, for it will bring friends, gratitude, and even opportunities.
6
Once engaged on this Quest it becomes necessary to
attend closely to the emotional and mental movements within himself, rejecting
the lower ones and consenting to the higher. He must study carefully the
differences between them, so that he may be able to recognize them.
7
He must come to the discipline of passion and emotion
not through fearing their bad effects but through willing consent to the truth
that his real being is above them and that it is better to live in reality than
in illusion.
8
We hear much from the new moralists about the need of
encouraging young men and young women to express themselves and of not letting
society impose its will upon them, as we hear much from the psychoanalysts about
the need of liberating them from secret inhibitions and of satisfying their
repressed emotions. Both these movements are excellent. They are antidotes to
the tyrannic soul-crushing, hypocrisy-breeding, and self-deceiving conventions
of the old society. But a good overdone may become an evil, a virtue stretched
too far may become a vice, and a method which ignores all the facets of the
diamond of psychological truth except a single one may become unbalanced. The
new morality may free people to the point where liberty is merely license and
expression a dangerous disregard for the knowledge yielded by experience and
age. The new psychoanalysis may free them to the point where mental liberation
is mere lack of self control and emotional satisfaction is dangerously
anti-social. This is not to say that we would belittle the value of either. Both
standpoints may be philosophically used, which means they may be used in a
balanced manner as a part of a wider one.
9
The whole man is the natural man. Whoever sets up a
cleavage between the intellectual and emotional functions, and would ignore the
latter in order to enthrone the former, is unnatural and cannot attain that
truth which is the voice of nature. This is not to say that emotion or reason
should run riot; it is proper and necessary to give reason the reins, but this
done, any sharper division will lead to unbalance, distortion, and error.
10
Yes, the emotions of a person who is called hard
and dry may need to be released, but this applies only to the positive ones. The
negative ones are not worth releasing and should be got rid of.
11
Anger and hatred are dangerous emotions to carry
about with you. Whether or not they lead to actions harmful to the person they
are directed against, they are certainly harmful to you. Conquer them quickly,
get these psychological poisons out of your system.
12
There is another kind of negative trait which,
although unaggressive, is only less unpleasant by a matter of degrees than the
aggressive ones. It is the black and bitter mood of sullen coldness, of the
self-centered, self-tormenting, self-pitying sense of being wronged by the other
person, the introverted, withdrawn, sulky, resentment at being hurt, a
resentment so deep as to find no fitter expression than gloomy, frozen, and
tense silence. He places all the blame for the situation on the other and
consequently adopts a grieved unconciliatory attitude towards the other. He
wounds by saying nothing, doing nothing, and being boorish. The atmosphere
around him is full of sustained and hostile emotional tension. It is, of course,
an adolescent trait and cannot endure when spiritual maturity is really
attained.
13
What the unawakened man feels as fear, the awakened
one transmutes into needful caution and careful forethought.
14
It is a feat of emotional surgery to relinquish
attachments and to renounce possessivenesses.
15
Emotions unchecked by reason may become our
betrayers. Beware of them when exceptionally strong and unduly excessive.
16
The fears which are natural or necessary should not
be confused with the fears which are neurotic or excessive.
17
If the aspirant is to remake himself effectively,
he must begin by attacking the lower emotions. They must be killed and
eliminated from his life-scene. So long as they dominate it, so long will
experience yield poisonous fruits instead of health-giving ones. Every fresh
situation will only give fresh life to his ego because those emotions will
involve themselves in that situation and cause him to misread it. The first
enemies, the hidden sources of his own difficulties, are within himself.
18
To take the attitude in a depressing situation that
the only action is to sit down and be depressed by it is unphilosophical.
19
He should never give himself up to despair,
although he may give himself up in hard situations to gravest reflection and
deepest resignation.
20
He may become so sensitive as a consequence of
meditation that other people's thoughts, feelings, or passions may reflect
themselves into his own nature temporarily when he is physically near them or
mentally dealing with them. In such cases he will probably mistake the result
for his own, thus expressing what is really alien to his mind or acting outside
of his individual pattern of life. This is particularly true when a strong
emotion like anger is directed against him. He may then feel instinctively angry
with the other person. Unwittingly, he may become disloyal to the Ideal merely
through being ignorant of what is happening psychically, and unguarded against
it.
21
The longer he lives the more he discovers that real
peace depends on the strength with which he rules his own heart, and real
security depends on the truth with which he rules his own mind. When he leaves
his emotions in disorder they bring agony - as the accompaniment or the follower
of the happiness they claimed at first to be able to give. When he lets his
thoughts serve the blindnesses of his ego, they deceive, mislead, or trouble
him.(P)
22
The aspirant must not act, live, or think under the
sway of merely sentimental, emotional, and self-centered feeling alone but
should strive for mature truthful feeling. This is intuition. When dealing with
a complex personal situation, he should detach himself and follow such intuition
instead of emotion. Then it will be solved rightly. He will not be karmically
free of an unpleasant relationship until he has mentally freed himself from all
negative thoughts and negative acts concerning it. Then the outer karmic forces
will free him, or else he may be shown inwardly how to free himself outwardly.
23
Of what use, in such serious matters as survival,
to live in so many illusions? Sentimentalists and emotionalists who desert
reason at the bidding of well-intentioned, high ideals or religion to preach
unrealistic attitudes do not know the difference between religio-mystic ethics
and philosophic ethics. Only the latter is practical in the highest sense as
well as the worldly one. Foolish teachers, professors, and those whose lives are
spent in academic circles are suborned by these emotions more easily than are
other people, just because their distance from the world of practical decisions
and realistic affairs have made them one-sided.
24
All this emotional energy which neurotics waste in
self-pity, hysterics in crises, and unwary ordinary persons in trivialities and
negatives, is to be conserved, controlled, and constructively redirected.
25
If it be observed that young people and women at
times display emotional instability, let it also be stated that to them is given
by Nature tasks which can be fulfilled only in great love, and which call up in
them commensurate emotional capacity. Where much is given, much is required, and
they in particular need to learn control and wise use of the emotional drive so
generously placed in their keeping.
26
An excessive humility or a morbid self-depreciation
may prevent a man from seeking outside help. This too is a manifestation of the
ego, which cunningly uses such emotion to keep him away from a contact which
threatens its rule.
27
This quality of a continuous calmness - so highly
prized by the Brahmins of India - is hard to come by but exceedingly precious
when gained. He who possesses it, who is unfailingly one and the same not only
toward others but also toward himself, becomes a rock of upholding strength in
their crises, an oasis of hidden comfort in his own. This beautiful serenity
makes many other qualities possible in his own development while leaving a
benedictory afterglow of encouragement with all those who are still struggling
with their own refractory emotions and passions.
28
Emotion is an unreliable adviser but refined,
purified, and liberated from egotism, it becomes transformed into intuition.
29
As all worries and fears are aroused in the ego,
they are lulled when, by meditation, the ego-thought is lulled and the meditator
feels peace. But when the ego is rooted out by the entire philosophic effort,
they are then rooted out too.
30
There are two kinds of inner peace. The first is
somewhat like that which the ancient Stoics cultivated: the result of
controlling emotions and disciplining thoughts, the result of will and effort
applied to the mastery of self. It brings with it, at best, a contentment with
what one has, at least, a resignation to one's lot. The second is much deeper,
for it comes out of the Overself. It is the blessed result of Divine Grace
liberating one from the craving for existence.
31
To attain this inner equilibrium, the emotions need
to be brought under control. It is not enough to repress them by will alone:
they need also to be understood psychologically in a far deeper sense than the
academic one. It is not enough to analyse their obvious surface causes and
workings: their relationship to the real self at the centre of being must become
quite clear. The 'I' who experiences them must be sought.
32
To sustain this inner calm will not be easy. Many a
time, in test situations, he will fail. But even when the negative, explosive,
or depressive emotion asserts itself strongly, he is not to show it in behaviour
nor express it in speech. For this is a step towards that control of self, that
impersonality, which is what the quest means. If mind influences body, body also
influences mind. From the physical control he may proceed to the mental.
33
When calmness has been well practised for a
sufficient period, it will occasionally of itself lead the practiser into sudden
brief and ecstatic experiences of a mystical character.
34
He should calmly recognize that suffering has its
allotted function to perform in the divine plan, that other people have their
lessons to learn through it when they will learn in no other way, and that the
spectacle of its operation should, in such cases, be met with intelligent
understanding rather than with neurotic sentimentality. He should face the fact
that many people will not learn from reason, intuition, or teaching and that no
one can really liberate them from their sufferings except themselves. Every
other kind of liberation is a false one. Others may effect it today only to see
the same condition return tomorrow. He should not, in certain situations calling
for hard decision, for instance, show unjustifiable weakness under the belief
that he is showing forbearance, nor submit to antisocial egotism under the
thought that he is practising love, nor abandon his highest duties for the sake
of making a false and superficial peace with interfering ignorance, nor passibly
accept a flagrant wrong because God's will must always be borne.
35
The lower emotions and the moods they produce are
his first enemies. Every antagonism and envy, every wrathful temper and animal
lust, every self-injuring desire and socially harmful greed bars his way. And it
will not move out of the way without a long fight.
36
This spiritual quest takes the aspirant through
many moods. He will alternate at times between blank despair and exalted joy.
Though naturally affected by these moods, he ought nevertheless to try to keep a
certain balance even in their very midst, to cultivate a kind of higher
indifference towards them, and patience towards their results. This can be
achieved more easily by obtaining a firm conviction of the transient character
of such moods.
37
Both emotion and reason have their proper place in
practical life, but in the philosophic life where the Quest is for truth alone
and not for satisfaction, there is no place for emotion other than a secondary
one. Its power over man is so great however that it will continually come into
conflict with this ruling, it will struggle desperately to resist reason and to
silence its voice, it will contradict the dictate of calm considered judgement
and seek by sheer force to dominate the mind. Again and again the uprush of
emotion will disturb the would-be philosopher and destroy his equanimity, thus
rendering impossible a correct appreciation of the truth he seeks.
38
The melancholy feeling that he is missing something
joyous in life, that a happiness which so many others have captured is running
away from him with the years, is one of the emotional snares likely to beset the
aspirant's path. If he yields to its self-pitying suggestiveness, it will weaken
his resolve and disturb his peace. From that it is only a step or two to descend
into a painted and delusive animality.
39
Those who waste themselves in emotional excesses
weaken themselves spiritually, for the power of feeling is an essential part of
the higher nature.
40
With the pressures brought down upon them by his
total philosophic effort, the grosser desires will gradually be flattened out
anyway. But it will not be to his detriment if he deliberately and directly
assists them to enter that condition.
41
We must command our thoughts if we are to command
our deeds, but much more, we must command the emotional impulses behind those
thoughts and those deeds.
42
When he is tempted to be angry with some irritating
person, he is faced with two choices: either to identify himself with this lower
emotion or with his higher aspirations. If, following bad habit, he succumbs to
the first, he weakens himself still further. If, following good resolve, he
overcomes the temptation, he strengthens himself for the future.
43
Strong emotional attachments to another person may
only tighten the ego's hold, may narrow, limit, warp, or prevent the seeing of
truth. This happens all-too-often in family relationships and in the affections
of the young. It can even happen in guru-disciple relationships.
44
Until that joyful time comes when negative moods or
thoughts have ceased to cross the threshold of his consciousness, he must
struggle with them by a combination of different methods. First, his will must
follow them at once after their entry and remove them forcibly. Second, his
imagination and reason must attack them in the meditation period set aside each
day for that purpose.
45
Whether or not it is possible to attain a
perfection of calmness that is secure against all assaults, it is surely
possible to attain sufficient calmness to keep off many or most of the emotional
disturbances and mental turmoils which derive from the petty incidents of
everyday life.
46
Some have to learn that rashness is not courage,
and only the painful results of their actions may succeed in teaching them this
lesson.
47
The personal emotions entangle us in the events of
life, whereas the impersonal intuitions enable us to see them from above.
48
Even if the intuitive leading or reasoned
reflection opposes his wishes, the imperativeness of following truth and
preserving integrity will force him to desert his wishes.
49
Emotion is valuable as a driving power, but
doubtful as a means for discovering truth. If unbridled by reason and ungoverned
by will, it may even drive a man to foolishness and disaster.
50
The neurotic introduces emotional factors into
purely business matters, creates hysterical scenes, and cannot take a single
word of constructive criticism or admonitory counsel.
51
Look through the miserable emotions of the ego and
go beyond them to the smiling serenity of the Overself.
52
It is not the emotions which are to be kept out but
the disturbances to which they may give rise.
53
Do not respond to negative or base emotion with the
like. The greater the animosity shown you, for instance, the greater is the
inward calm with which it should be met.
54
There is a vital difference between being merely
callous in the presence of other people's suffering and being philosophically
calm.
55
A settled composed disposition will be one of the
fruits of perseverance in rejecting negative moods and undesirable thoughts as
soon as they arise.
56
Self-control is your greatest friend through all
the incidents and accidents of life.
57
Shanti means not only peace but also
tranquillity, calmness, equanimity.
58
Whoever prolongs resentments belonging to past
years and chapters long left behind, himself adds to the injury he suffered.
Such brooding brings on negative moods.
59
Personal feelings must be studied and analysed, not
to become more neurotically self-wrapped but to correct, discipline, and lift
them to a higher level.
60
The more emotional a person is the more easily is
she (or he) hurt. The way to lessen such hurts is to bring up reason to the same
strength and to deepen calm.
61
The more he practises keeping calm in the
confrontations of worldly stress, the less difficult will it be to practise
meditation. The practice not only makes it easier for intelligence to operate
but also for thoughts to come under control.
62
A panicky feeling disorganizes the whole of a man,
throws him into confusion. This is avoided if one cultivates inner calm
constantly.
63
He cannot afford to imitate those who show a calm
exterior while raging furiously within themselves. Not necessarily - nor only -
for the sake of appearances or personal advantage does he remain calm, but also
because the ideal of self-control is very close to his heart.
64
But although philosophy refuses to accept a wild
emotionalism or an unbalanced one or an egotistic one, it would be a grave
mistake to think that it refuses to accept emotion altogether in its own sphere.
On the contrary, it asserts that without the intensest possible feeling, a
genuine devotion to the Overself cannot be given. And without such devotion, the
Overself in turn is unlikely to give its Grace. What philosophy does ask,
however, is that emotion should be balanced, purified, and deepened.
65
Pessimism will corrode our better nature, optimism
may disillusion itself in the end. The middle way is the better way - and also
the truer way - for it gives both sides of the case.
66
It is not only in practical life that emotional
control will be needed but also in mystical life. The very intensity of his
emotions - however noble and aspiring they be - will confuse the reception of
the truth during meditation and mingle it with the meditator's own
preconceptions.
67
We believe first and think out our belief
afterward. This is because emotion rather than reason is our driving force.
Reason actuates us from a deeper level and is therefore slower to arouse and
harder to keep going than feeling.
68
The Stoics in old Europe tried to put the emotions
under the absolute control of reason. The Buddhist yogis in old India tried to
do exactly the same. But whereas the Stoics did this in order to meet the
everyday alternations of fate, health, and fortune with great courage, the yogis
did it in order to escape from those alternations. The Stoics were practical men
who accepted the world but sought to conquer it through the power gained by
conquering themselves. The yogis rejected the world and, like the desert monks
of early Christianity, wanted to be done with its struggles and afflictions.
69
If he sulkily takes constructive, well-intentioned
criticism as if it were a personal insult, if his emotional self falls
discouraged into a slough of despond at the smallest discovery of his own faults
and weaknesses, then he is likely not ready for this quest. Some
self-preparation is first needed.
70
Merely to recollect that he is on the quest should
soften his angers, if not quickly subdue them.
71
They should deliberately face whatever it is they
fear. When they become frightened, they should not seek escape, but, in times of
meditation and prayer, should turn full attention on its cause. Then, they
should call upon latent resources and if the call is made in the right way, the
response will appear in their conscious will. Thus equipped, they will be
capable of compelling fears to subside and, in time, of overcoming them.
72
This inner quiescence, this emotional calm, this
being at peace with oneself, this refusal to be upset or feel hurt, is one of
those conditions which make possible the discovery of the true being.
73
The truth crushes all the falseness and all the
deceptiveness in sentimentality and emotionality, but leaves intact what is
sound in them. The ego eagerly wants to nourish itself with these pitiful
illusions, therefore.
74
It is even helpful in certain cases to put the
physical body under the strain of hard manual labour, or hard physical exercise
for some weeks. This counterbalances the mental tension.
75
To eradicate anger he should cultivate its opposite
- forgiveness.
76
According to ethics of the hidden teaching, hatred
and anger are twin branches on the same tree.
77
How far is the moral distance from Buddha's purity
to the modern pseudo-Zen plausibly concealed laxness! How immense the distance
from self-mastered Founder to self-indulgent follower! The often used word
"freedom" is conveniently misunderstood, its true meaning twisted to suit their
sensual appetites.
78
Conduct is a deliberate, consciously purposeful,
and willed activity whereas behaviour is general, casual, and not specifically
directed.
79
Security of earthly possessions is hard to find and
harder to keep in the quick-changing world of today. So anxieties and worries
get multiplied. Because of this, inner security, the close friend of inner
peace, becomes proportionately more valuable. If it is to be attained, the first
practical requirement is to train oneself in the art of keeping emotionally and
mentally calm.
80
This deliberate practice of calmness is a
preparation for the deeper state of Mental Quiet, which comes by itself when
meditation is sufficiently advanced. It is effort consciously and quickly made
to keep a hold on passions and emotions so that the work of getting nearer the
realization of ideals is not hindered.
81
Whether, or how much, philosophy removes fear must
depend on either his capacity to withdraw part of awareness from the body or on
a higher level to remain unmoved in the non-dual identity. Most people are
captive, in different degrees, to some kind of fear. It may be caused by their
surroundings, by their religious upbringing, by those in authority over them, by
their bodily condition, by suggestion received from others or self-made.
82
It is prudent to keep away from temptation - at
least until enough positive strength has been developed to risk the test. But if
development is not sought and obtained, then untempted and unproven virtue may
be merely negative.
83
Many aspirants pass through fluctuating moods,
because they have yet to face the battle of Reason against Emotion, and to make
their emotions the servants of their thought-out principles of living.
84
If he has strong emotions naturally, his problem is
to check, guide, and rule them where they are of the lower human kind. But of
course, the highest and noblest emotions need not be checked, and he may safely
give himself up to them. He must get a better balance of temperament by
disciplining his feelings, cultivating the moments of calmness which come to
him, and by developing the reasoning faculty. He should also practise the
exercise of constantly thinking over his past. But his thoughts should be
tranquil, impersonal, self-critical, and he should be eager to learn the lessons
to be gained from this practice. Especially should he look for the mistakes
made, the faults displayed, and - by studying the results to which they led -
try to get rid of these weaknesses of character.
85
There is nothing wrong with the human desire for
affection, companionship, and marriage. But he who has embarked on the spiritual
path should remember that more is expected from him than from ordinary people.
He is expected to have a definite measure of control over his emotions and
impulses and must not be carried off his feet into extremes where he loses
balance. It is not possible to make good progress on the spiritual path unless
some triumph over the impulsive nature is secured.
86
Evenness of temper is a valuable possession where
it comes from self-mastery and not from a low vitality physically.
87
When you feel these fits of depression and
despondency coming on, you must learn to stand aside from them and refuse to
identify yourself with the emotions which express them. They are simply other
forms of ego manifestation. With time and practice, you will be able to
do this. The Short Path affirmations and meditations are essential at such a
time, for they help you to acquire the detachment necessary to recognize the
moods for what they are.
One student asked: "But how can one identify oneself with something one doesn't know?" Another one replied: "That is where faith in something beyond the intellect comes in!" P.B. said: "Yes, if that faith is intense enough it will be sufficient to lead to the desired result. If not, if one cannot have faith in the Overself, then a Teacher is necessary. It is through faith in the Teacher that the student is helped to knowledge of the Overself which he finds so difficult to reach by himself."
In this matter of sadness and depression, one should also be careful not to take on the moods of others. Sometimes, people who are sensitive do this. If extra-sensitive, they can even take on for a short time the symptoms of their ailments.
88
When critical moments arrive in a man's life his
best recourse is first to calm not to panic, second to remember and turn towards
the Overself. In that way he does not depend on his own small resources alone,
but opens himself to the larger ones hidden in his subconscious.
89
So long as anyone lives in a state of uncontrolled
emotion, and especially of ungoverned desire, so long does he remain unready for
entry into the higher consciousness. For he is unable to bring his mind into
that unruffled balanced state which is necessary to reflect like a mirror the
truth and peace of that consciousness.
90
When anyone is carried away by an emotion, in most
cases it happens before he knows it. This is why some sort of training in
self-awareness, self-observation, and self-control becomes a requisite. All of
these can be practised during the day at odd times more easily and effectively
if the day itself is reviewed at night.
91
The emotional agitations will certainly come to an
end when he finds his real inner peace, for he cannot have the two together. To
have the peace he has to give up the agitations.
92
There will be no relief from this continual
oscillation between opposite moods until he reaches the sixth degree.
93
His capacity to recover quickly from, and react
positively to, the unexpected shocks of life will be one of the benefits of this
cultivation of calmness.
94
When uncontrolled, emotion may be very destructive
to oneself and to others, but controlled it becomes constructive and beneficial
to all.
95
If they uselessly seek to achieve moral perfection,
they may hopefully seek to achieve inner peace.
96
The man who holds to this discipline of the
emotions will not be easily embarrassed when friends desert him or enemies
attack him. Where the hands of another man may tremble, his heart bleed, and his
eyes fill with tears, the philosopher will know peace.
97
The impressions which other persons make on him are
to be separated from the emotional and personal feelings they arouse in him. How
else is he to know the truth about them?
98
The practice of calmness frees a man from the
fretful, nervous tension so many carry around with them; he brings a pleasant
air of repose with him.
99
This coolness where other men might see them with
passion or emotion, this detachment from events and persons, things and places,
is exacerbating to those who misunderstand it.
100
Why was it required of candidates for entry into
the Pythagorean School of Wisdom that they be of a "contented disposition"? Why
does the ancient Hindu Scripture Svetasvatara Upanishad forbid the
teaching of the deepest knowledge to one "who is not tranquil in the mind"?
101
The practice of calmness means that no emotions
are squandered, no negative thoughts entertained.
102
Walter Hilton, the medieval English religious
mystic, remarked on the fact that the advanced Christian is no longer bubbling
with religious devotion or weeping with religious fear, since emotional feelings
are subject to changes, hence unstable, for he "is now wholly at peace, and
there is little outward indication of fervour."
103
The pathological resentment in their hearts
contributes toward the ideological resistance in their heads to truth.
104
He who values inner peace will resist being swept
away by strong negative emotions, will try to keep in command when the pressure
of fear, anxiety, wrath, or hate threatens this peace.
105
As we win control of our feelings they become
less a source of negative thoughts and more of upholding ones.
106
We use the term "emotionalist" in the same
derogatory sense that we use "intellectualist."
107
Only an unflinching devotion to truth and an
unyielding exercise of reason can see through these insincerities of
sentimentality.
108
Intelligent generosity is philosophical.
Sentimental generosity is not.
109
So long as he mistakes his own longings for
actualities, so long will disappointment wait for him in the end.
110
If we let it stay in the mind long enough and
feed it often enough, a worry can easily become an obsession.
111
Baruch Spinoza wrote in his Ethics: "Human
power in controlling the emotions consists solely in the Understanding, it
follows that no one rejoices in blessedness because he has controlled his lusts,
but contrariwise his power of controlling his lusts arises from this blessedness
itself."
112
The passage from jealousy to hatred is not a long
one.
113
The negative, discordant, and disruptive emotions
require treatment by psychological means just as much as the physical body may
require treatment by medical, surgical, herbal, naturopathic, magnetic, or
manipulative means.
114
The first step is to deny every form of outward
expression to those emotions which are definitely harmful to his spiritual
progress: to resentments, wraths, envies, and hates.
115
How can he discover the truth that some of his
strongest desires arise out of imagined needs if he lets them envelop him in a
haze of excitement or of emotion?
116
If the value of a calm stability in our emotional
life could be sufficiently known and appreciated, we would have less
unhappiness, less tragedy, and less inefficiency.
117
In moments of unusual calm, he may recognize the
truth of these statements, but never in moments of personal agitation, whether
it be painful or pleasurable agitation.
118
He must learn to master his baser emotions and to
free himself from emotional frailties which, while not objectionable in common
everyday life, may weaken his capacity to comprehend the truth.
119
The free indulgence of undesirable personal
emotions leads to neuroticism. Those who most need the excellent discipline of
checking such emotions by the power of will and eventually extinguishing them by
the activity of reason, are unfortunately those who are least ready to submit to
it.
120
He may put each irritating situation of his life
in a truer perspective if he asks himself whether when dying he would like to
remember that he had reacted to it in a negative way when he could have reacted
positively.
121
Since a kind of order reigned in Nature, argued
Confucius, it should be made by men to reign among themselves. They ought to
live in an orderly manner and thus they could live in civilized harmony. This
requires them to control emotions and not allow themselves to be swept hither
and thither.
122
The individual who is touchy and irritable should
beware lest his traits flare up into open anger, still more lest anger grow by
degrees into intense hate and aggressive spite.
123
These neurotics seeking comfort, who invade
mysticism to its detriment, display their self-willed, petty egotisms by
resenting the discipline of their emotions, and thus contribute to their own
further suffering.
124
The man who is constantly petulant and
consistently pessimistic obstructs the inflow of higher forces.
125
Sentimentality may enfeeble a person and mislead
his impulses.
126
To keep emotion under control is one thing; to
keep it altogether out is another. It is well to be cautious about how we feel,
but not to be so over-cautious that the day comes when we can no longer feel at
all.
127
The emotional moods between which so many
undisciplined men and women oscillate, with black despair at one end of the
scale and golden joy at the other, belong to the ego.
128
It is not enough to create these new ways of
thinking. They must be supported by emotional steadiness if they are to be
maintained and not lost again. Emotional enthusiasm is not enough.
129
Diderot took this view, too, and asserted in
The Paradox of the Actor that a good actor is inwardly calm and
self-possessed even in the most passionate moments of his roles.
130
He finds that this serenity can be kept only if
he drops many previously held superstitions, such as that it is necessary to be
liked by everyone he meets everywhere.
131
If he starts with wildly unbalanced
over-appreciation, glorifying and magnifying only its good points, he will
probably end embittered in inevitable disillusion. But if this is pointed out to
him, he is affronted.
132
Two men may be blood-brothers and yet greedily
fight each other where property inheritance is at stake; two other men may be
close friends and yet treacherously betray each other where a woman's love is at
stake. Where personal desires or ambitions are at stake in the conventional
world, such insincerities are always possible.
133
When the response to these teachings is merely
emotionalist then it is also mostly untrustworthy.
134
He who follows such a regime finds he is more and
more the master of himself, better and better able to subdue passions.
135
Don Quixote found his frightening giants were
only windmills after all. So exaggerated are many of our fears.
136
To look only for pleasant effects upon the ego's
feelings, whether it be our own or other people's, is a mistake.
137
Emotion is expert at inventing reasons for its
aversions and dislikes.
138
One of the very important tasks of the Quest is
to bring the emotional nature and the passional nature under control. If this is
not done, it is certain that the man will be so affected by the various persons,
so changed by the various environments he meets with as the days move forward,
that he will not be able to achieve that serene poise which is the Quest's goal,
nor depend on what he will be like tomorrow. That is, he will not be able to
depend upon himself.
139
There are feelings which should be distrusted.
There are reasonings which should be discarded. Only when the philosophic
discipline has purified the heart and tranquillized the head can we safely rely
on ourselves for judgement.
140
Most people are, in fact, very far from the stage
where they can sagely trust their emotions or indiscriminately yield to their
instincts.
141
Is it not better to take counsel of reason than
to yield to the ardour of impulse, the throb of emotion, or the stir of passion?
For if these are leading in a right direction, they lose nothing but, on the
contrary, get confirmed by being reasoned out.
142
If one has to meet other persons who tend to put
one into a condition of unease, then the most practical wisdom is to have as
little personal contact with them as possible.
143
Emotions must be held within bounds. Intuition
and intelligence must set those bounds. Otherwise imbalance, fanaticism,
narrow-mindedness will thrive like weeds in the human heart.
144
Young James Dean, brilliant cinema-acting genius,
was not protected by the golden Saint Christopher medal, given him by Pier
Angeli, which was found close to his battered and broken body at the scene of
the auto accident which ended his short life. This tragic result was directly
caused by his own reckless temperament; it was the bitter fruit of a defect in
his own character. No religious medal could avert the result itself; only a
modification of temperament, a correction of weaknesses, could have done so. To
believe otherwise is to believe in superstition.
145
Incompatibility is inevitable, but not
unconquerable.
146
Our private emotions need not less control than
our public behaviour.
147
The aim of the self-denial and self-discipline is
to bring the aspirant through the period of emotional adolescence into the
healthy state of emotional maturity.
148
No aspirant is asked to remain emotionally
neutral regarding his personal hopes and fears. He is asked to strive for
impartiality in his decisions, to recognize that it is wrong action which
secures his own enjoyment at the cost of other people's suffering or his own
gain at the cost of their rights.
149
He is to try at all times to see directly into
his own personal situation without being misled by emotions, blinded by
passions, or confused by suggestions; that is, he is to see it just as it really
is. This practice is intended to help disentangle him from his ego.
150
The same human characteristic of emotion which
enslaves and even harms him when it is attached to earthly things alone, exalts
and liberates him when it is disciplined and purified by philosophy.(P)
151
Just as inordinate fear evoked by sudden
catastrophe could drive someone quite insane, so calm resignation evoked by
sudden bereavement could bring a glimpse of full spiritual sanity.
152
He who keeps a silent tongue in his head when the
air is filled with anger is on the way to holding down his own wrath. But he who
keeps a silent mind will conquer it more quickly and easily.
153
There is the caution which comes from timidity
and the caution which comes from experience. They are not the same.
154
He must keep a part of himself in such reserve
that no event and no person can ever touch it.
155
In the case of an ordinary man, the emotional
reaction to a situation is all he is conscious of during the situation itself.
The intellectual or intuitional judgement of it comes some time afterwards, if
it comes at all. But in the disciple's case, his self-training should be
directed toward a side-by-side working of the two at one and the same time.
156
The silent, taciturn, reserved man makes fewer
friends but guards his present and future better. To be cautious in speech and
writing today - whether private or public - is to save trouble tomorrow. A
single indiscretion may mar a lifetime's honourable reputation.
157
The same act which is wrong when done in anger
and on impulse may become right when done in calmness, after due reflection.
Such an act might be, for instance, the protection of other persons against an
unjust invasion of their rights or a violent aggression against their bodies.
158
At a certain stage of one's evolutionary
development, personal emotions form the greatest obstacle of all. It is
extremely difficult and painful to stand aside from one's emotional nature at a
time when it wants most to be insistent - but that is the very time the quickest
progress can be made, if he does.
159
One should try, so far as possible, to avoid
anxiety about his problems, whether they are of a worldly or spiritual nature.
It is necessary to develop a calm, hopeful attitude toward the future.
160
Anything that may be written or thought at a time
when one is plunged in pain or grief must be evaluated again after enough time
has elapsed to allow the upheaval of emotions to subside, lessening the hurt.
Only then can a calm, philosophical appraisal of the entire situation be
satisfactorily achieved.
161
Inner strength of a remarkable nature can be
shown in the manner in which one responds to disappointment. One could so easily
become wildly hysterical at the breakdown of his hopes. We are forced into
admiration for the way in which another may take the breakdown of his dreams.
162
Nothing should ever be done in a great hurry or
in a sudden outburst of enthusiasm. He should sleep on his decisions and discuss
them with older people who have themselves demonstrated by their own success
that their judgements are worthwhile.
163
In one's relationship with others, the emotions
involved in carrying out a duty tend to confuse the duty itself with unnecessary
matters.
164
The emotional hurts which meant so much and felt
so deep when he was spiritually juvenile, will come to signify less and less as
he becomes spiritually adult. For he sees increasingly that they made him
unhappy only because he himself allowed them to do so, only because, from two
possible attitudes, he himself chose the little ego's with its negative and
petty emotionalism as against the higher mind's positive and universal
rationality.
165
There will be times when he, who built on
philosophic coolness through the years, who thought himself proof against tears,
will yield to them all too readily and all too helplessly.
166
He should keep a cool, philosophical perspective
even when everyone else seethes with violent emotion and bitter prejudice. He
should preserve his independence even when everyone else submerges his own in a
fashionable party or a popular group.
167
Whilst utterly and apologetically patient with
other people's pitiful or romantic illusions, he should firmly and austerely
have none of his own. His needs are too high, too distant from those of fools
and weak beings, to be satisfied with anything less hard than reality itself.
168
Small minds are the victims of every trying
situation because they are the victims of every immediate reaction to it. The
student of philosophy, with his metaphysical powers and personal
self-discipline, is not. He looks many years ahead of it and much more deeply
into it. He does not blindly accept the first feelings about it that arise
within himself or are suggested to him by others.
169
The need is to live according to principles, not
according to impulses.
170
Men who seek a higher kind of life must practise
self-restraint whatever faith they hold or whatever religious society they
belong.
171
Those who demand the freedom to live as they
wish, who seek to be undisciplined and unregulated by any authority, ask too
much.
172
No one can avoid sometimes reacting badly to
outer experiences or circumstances, but the aspirant should not react without
trying to practise self-control.
173
With regard to the emotions, the path is a
crucifixion of the personal ego. The aspirant's heart must be searched and
searched until it is free from all reservations and utterly surrendered to the
higher self. It is impossible to pass through such a process without undergoing
the terrible ordeal of crushing some feelings and surrendering others. The adept
is indeed the man who has triumphed over his emotions, but it would be an
indefensible and inexcusable error to think he lives in a complete emotional
vacuum, that he is a man without feeling or sensibilities of any kind. Bulwer
Lytton has pictured for us in his brilliant novel Zanoni a character of
this type, the Rosicrucian adept Mejnour. This picture is close to reality in
certain respects but it is far from reality in other respects. Let us not make
the mistake of believing that the adept does not know the meaning of the words
affection, sympathy, compassion, joy, enthusiasm, and even ecstasy. He does, but
he knows them all within the higher self, which rules them. The only emotions he
does not know are those lower ones, such as anger, resentment, hatred,
prejudice, bitterness, lust, pride, and intolerance. Yes! - the philosophical
life does not lack emotional content but it is not the kind of narrow, selfish,
vacillating emotion so many human beings are accustomed to.
174
If a man is to attain a durable peace, he must
commit emotional suicide. But does this mean he is to become utterly devoid of
all feeling? Not at all. It is only the lower emotions that have to be
liquidated. Yet it is these which play so large a role in human life today,
whether in their grossest form of hatred or their most refined form of romantic
nonsense miscalled love.
175
The frenzies of passion let loose, the manias of
the lower emotions run wild are never again to be known to him. This high
standard is the goal. It may seem unattainable to a human entity, yet history
and biography prove that it is not.
176
It might be thought that the philosophic
discipline seeks to eliminate emotion. The truth is that it seeks to maturate
emotion. The disciple's feelings - no less than his thoughts - must grow up and
assume their philosophic responsibilities.
177
It will be easy for critics to misunderstand the
statement that he is to become intellectually feverless and emotionally
passionless. We do not mean that he is to be deprived of all feeling, bereft of
all enthusiasm, incapable of all affection. We mean that he is to seek an inward
serenity which no feeling, no enthusiasm, and no affection can distract.
178
The adept who attains perfect inner serenity can
do so only by paying the price of forgoing the emotional agitations,
attractions, and repulsions which constitute much of the inner life of most
people. Having attained it himself, he can lead others to it only by pointing
towards it as a reachable goal for them, too. He may not yield to personal
favouritism or egotistic caprice based on likes and dislikes in selecting those
whom he is to help. Indeed, because of this it is said that he is more
interested in mankind collectively rather than as individuals. Now if he had to
commit emotional suicide to reach his present height, it is unreasonable to
expect that he should flatter or encourage those who, although seeking the same
height, seek also to preserve or nourish their egoistic emotions. The latter are
nearly always closely linked to egoistic desires. An inward detachment from all
eagerness for earthly life is the grim price that must be paid before entry into
the kingdom of heaven can be got. Such detachment requires soft sentimentality
to yield to hard recognition of the impersonal realities of the human situation.
And this recognition must assuredly lead the seeker far away from conventional
points of view concerning his personal duties, his family relations, and his
social behavior.
179
It is not that he will not feel desires and
aversions, attractions and repulsions, but that he will not be moved by them.
They will be under control, not only of the ego but of a power higher than the
ego. Thus the tensions which agitate the uncontrolled man and stresses which
animate him, will not be present.
180
It is an error to regard him as inhuman, as
lacking in feeling. What he rejects is negative feeling: what he seeks to
overcome is animal wrath, lust, hatred; what he affirms is positive feeling of
the best kind - delicate, sensitive, aesthetic, compassionate, and refined. Thus
his stoic imperturbability is not rigor mortis.
181
To talk of his condition as simply being one of
controlled emotion is not quite correct; much rather is it one of balanced
emotion - which is markedly different.
182
The idea of a philosopher being an utterly aloof
person, coldly indifferent and quite unapproachable, a man who restricts his
human feelings to the degree that hardly any are left, is applicable only to
those who follow narrow, rigid, and incomplete systems.
183
The notion that a philosopher is melancholy is
arguable: there is no reason why he should not show joy and appreciate humour.
But since he is a balanced person, he will put the governor of deep seriousness
to control these qualities.
184
If a human price has to be paid for such
emotionless behaviour let us remember that it must also be paid for too
emotional behaviour.
185
A portentous gravity is not at all a hallmark of
the sage.
186
Is mental tranquillity indistinguishable from
emotional death? Is it not better to guide feelings, educate desires, and uplift
emotions into the proper channels than to kill them? Such questions show a
confused comprehension of the philosophic discipline. The latter's aim is not to
produce an insensible human stone but a true human being.