1
In karma we find a key to many puzzles of
contemporary history. It is a doctrine which warns us that we have prepared the
cocoon of our present lot largely by the thoughts and deeds spun out of
ourselves during bygone earth-lives and the present re-embodiment. Now the
doctrine is as applicable to the history of whole peoples as to the history of
single individuals. Its corollary is that our characters and minds are in
travail through the ages; some are old with the rich experience of a hoary past
but most are young, unwise, and ungoverned. Its lesson is that the changing
tides of public fate and private fortune are not meaningless. On the contrary,
they invite our philosophical consideration so that we may understand how
neglected duties or positive wrong-doing are the hidden root of our troubles.
Those who understand the principle of karma aright, who do not misunderstand it
as being an external independent fate but see it as a force originally set in
motion by our actions, understand also the significant part played by suffering
in the lives of men. It is educative rather than retributive. Merited punishment
is really a crude form of education. Thoughtful men learn lessons from their
sorrows and resolve not to commit the same sin or the same error a second time.
2
The unexpected events which happen to us apparently
without cause or connection in our conduct constitute fate. The tendencies by
whose influences and the circumstances by whose compulsion we act the way we do,
constitute necessity. The results of those actions constitute Karma
(recompense).(P)
3
What a higher power has decreed must come to pass.
But what a man has made for himself he can modify or unmake. The first is fate,
the second destiny. The one comes from outside his personal ego, the other from
his own faults. The evolutionary will of his soul is part of the nature of
things but the consequences of his own actions remain, however slightly, within
his own control.(P)
4
Karma's will could not prevail in one special part of
our life and not in any other parts, nor in one special event of our life and
not in the others. It could not be here but not there, in the past but not now.
Nor, going even farther still, could it confine itself only to major items and
not to minor ones. It must be ever present or never present at all. If it puts
more destiny into the happenings we experience than lets the Westerner feel
comfortable, we must remember that other facet of truth, the creative and
godlike intelligence in our deeper humanity and the measure of freedom which
accompanies it.(P)
5
Whereas fate (in the original and Greek sense of the
word) is decreed by whatever Powers there be, karma is the result of our own
doing.(P)
6
The correct meaning of the word "karma" is willed
action through body, speech, and mind. It does not include the results of this
action, especially those which produce or influence rebirth. Such inclusion has
come into popular concepts, but shows a loose use of the term. Karma is cause
set going by the will, not effect at all. The phrase "Law of Recompense" is
therefore not satisfactory and a better one is needed.(P)
7
In the universal drama every man is playing the role
required of him. Neither the drama nor the role depends upon his personal
choice. The very circumstances which instigate his decisions or prompt his
actions are written into the script in advance. Even the attempt to change his
part or the refusal to continue in it is also in it.
8
No one will deny that the past is now absolutely
fixed and completely unalterable.
9
All the karmic tendencies are not present in
consciousness at the same time; some have yet to pass from the potential to the
kinetic condition.
10
If we could really know what was going to happen to
us, it would certainly be important to us. But who really knows? The
future is in God's hands.
11
Every creature comes to earth with a certain
potential of life-force which, ordinarily, must exhaust itself before it leaves.
12
The same destiny which brings two persons together,
also parts them.
13
Since in the end the entire universe is destined to
turn to ashes, what future is there for the human species?
14
The workings of the law of recompense are carried
out by a means as beyond human comprehension as are most of the other workings
of the World-Mind behind it. They are not thought out step by step but appear
suddenly by a single magical stroke just as the result of a problem presented to
an electronic calculator suddenly appears on its dial.
15
The law of recompense may possibly be better named
the law of reflection. This is because every act is reflected back to its doer,
every thought is reflected back to its source, as if by a vast cosmic mirror.
Perhaps the idea of recompense carries too strong a moral implication and hence
too limited a meaning to be the correct equivalent for the word "karma."
16
A doctrine which has the power to deter men from
wickedness or to stimulate them to virtue, not by fear of punishment or hope of
reward but by convincing them that the Good is to be followed for its own sake,
is valuable both to society and the individual.
17
It is not that some mysterious superphysical angel,
deva, or god intervenes personally and manipulates karma as a puppet performer
pulls the wires of his suspended figures, but that karma is part of the
equilibrium of the universe, bringing a come-back, recording a pressure,
allowing each reaction to come about by its own momentum.
18
If life is a drama put on the stage of this planet
for us (and others) to play in, then karma is the audience, the witness of it
all.
19
Quite logically it is taught that some sort of a
balance is struck between the two kinds of a person's karma, so that the bad may
be mitigated or even outdone, but equally the good may be reduced or even
offset.
20
Events happening to us are not necessarily karmic
in the sense that we earned them. They can also have a non-karmic source. No
physical doing on our part brought them on, but they are what we need at that
point for character or capacity, development or correction. Both kinds are
fated. In that sense they are God's will.
21
Human instruments are used to cause
suffering to others and they do cause it out of human viciousness. Both
statements are correct. They are complementary, not contradictory as we may
think. Destiny naturally looks around for a vicious person when she wants to do
harm, or a foolish one who can be led emotionally by the nose for a time, or an
impulsive one who may do in a moment what he regrets for years. She will not
waste time looking for ultra-wise and ultra-good people when she wants to do
harm.
22
The destiny of man is whatever happens to
him, be it self-earned or ordained by a higher power. The fate of a man
is the special kind of destiny which is so ordained and hence beyond his
control.
23
The victory of the spiritual nature in man is
foreordained and unavoidable, but the hour of that victory no man knoweth.
24
If he could see his present path and goal more
clearly, he could foresee his future ones more correctly.
25
Man's destiny always exists potentially and only
waits the propitious moment when it may rightly reveal itself.
26
Destiny follows tendency. What we are makes us go
in a certain direction. Philosophy sees the end from the beginning.
27
This tenet is not offered as consolation to the
afflicted; indeed it would be a poor panacea for them. It is offered because we
see no other that appears to possess its truth, harsh though that be.
28
Ouspensky's theory of eternal recurrence is both
true and false. We repeat ourselves and our circumstances but always on a
different level. It is a spiral not a circle. An event or a period in life
corresponds to a previous one but is not identical with it. The future is
analogous with the past but does not duplicate it. The spiral does not bring you
back identically the same self or the same work: it brings you to what
corresponds to it on a different level.
29
There is an inescapable balance between our
principal thoughts and deeds and our principal life experiences. And this
balance shows itself where it is least expected - in the moral sphere. Our
wrong-doing produces sorrows, not only for others but principally for ourselves.
Our good action produces a rebound of good fortune. We may not escape from the
operation of this subtle law of moral responsibility. Causation is the top of a
wheel whose bottom is consequence. This is just as true collectively as
individually. When, for instance, a nation comes to believe that the conception
of right and wrong is a false one, it marks itself down for destruction. We have
seen this in our time in the case of the German nation. The moral law is not a
figment of man's imagination. It is a divinely established reality.
30
It would be an error to separate karma from the
universal power and to treat it as an independent power. This error accounts for
the difficulty in understanding its role in bringing the cosmos into
manifestations. Treat karma rather as an aspect of God and as inseparable from
God, or as one of the ways in which God's presence manifests itself.
31
Karma, being made by human will, is subject to
human modification. Fate, being decreed by the higher power, is not. The general
fact of death is an example of fate, and in this sense the poet James Shirley's
line: "There is no armour against Fate," is true. But the particular fact of
death, its time and manner, may be alterable.
32
If it be true that the course of life is
predetermined, this does not necessarily mean that it is arbitrarily
predetermined. No - the good and bad qualities of your character, the
development or lack of development of your capacities, and the decisions made in
passing or by reason are the real determinants of your life. There is an
inescapable equation between conduct and consequence, between thought and
environment, between character and destiny. And this is karma, the law of
creative equivalence.
33
It is because this tenet has been so often
ill-understood that it has taken extravagant or erroneous forms and consequently
ridicule has been cast upon it.
34
In philosophical tradition, the sword has been the
symbol of God's Law of Recompense and Justice.
35
The law of consequences is not primarily an ethical
law: more properly it may be said to have an ethical side.
36
Destiny is not working blindly and unintelligently,
arbitrarily and antagonistically against us as most of us are likely to believe
when enduring through a cycle of unfavourable karma. On the contrary, it is
Absolute Wisdom itself in operation.
37
The processes of imagining are endless and
incessant. It is inherent in mind that one idea should give rise to another
because of the dynamic character of mind itself. Karma is the law that links the
two.
38
The experience of hearing inner music is an
interesting and significant happening. It is rare when it happens upon meeting,
being more apt to occur at parting - usually with someone who is very dear, whom
Destiny has decreed cannot stay with us.
39
Things act according to their nature. The World
Idea records these actions in a secret way and reflects back their appropriate
results. And as with things so with persons. Each of us sings a note out into
the universe, and the universe answers us in the same key.
40
Whether he looks under a microscope at the lowest
form of life or whether he looks deep within his own consciousness, this one law
prevails unbrokenly.
41
Where misfortune seems to have visited a man
through no contributory cause of his own, where he does not seem to have
deserved in any way the poor cards which have been dealt out to him by destiny,
he has no other alternative than to ascribe it to the deeds and thoughts of a
former existence on earth, or to the necessary education of his inner nature by
his higher self.
42
Every man is really on trial. Life itself is his
judge with the working of karma, the ignorance or wisdom of his fellows, the
voice of his conscience, and the capacities or incapacities of his personality.
43
As he looks back over all the events of his outer
life, they seem like pages in a book he has been reading, already written out,
with the events yet to happen being the unread pages. Or he is only a character
in the book's story, seemingly acting out of his own choice but really and quite
unconsciously working out the author's choice.
44
Buddha's statement of the karmic law, as made in
the Dhammapada, is brief, lucid, firm, and confident. We are inescapably
confronted with its truth as if it were a granite-hard mountain - a fact, fixed
and undeniable.
45
The Greeks of antiquity believed in three Fates
(The Moirai, or spinners): three old women, sometimes thought of as past,
present, and future, or the holder of the distaff, the one who pulls the thread
of destiny, and the one who cuts it. The early Romans believed in the
birth-fairy who writes down the child's destiny when it is born.
46
Life owes you only what you have given it.
47
Karma is the king who rules this earth.
48
Life has no real purpose for its own essential
self; it has just gone on and on. Man lives and lives, but the iron law of
Compensation guards it, producing effects from Cause, good or bad, and adjusting
the good or bad acts of man to the consequences.
49
The action which completes a thought is thrown back
at him by Nature in the guise of karma. In this view he carries the
responsibility for himself. He cannot turn it over to any human institution such
as a church, or to any other human being such as a guru or saviour.
50
Karma is an impersonal force. It is not to be
swayed by prayers as a Personal God is supposed to be.
51
When rendering an account of good or bad fortune,
people usually forget to include the ethical values which were acquired from
each experience. But when a man has attained some understanding of such matters,
he will involuntarily bring the truth of personal responsibility into this
light, not merely as an intellectual dogma but as a heartfelt conviction.
52
He has to foresee the consequences not only of an
action but also of an attitude or an outlook.
53
He may deceive himself or others, but he cannot
deceive the power of karma. Before it, he must stand responsible for his acts
and receive their due effects. There is no other way he can go.
54
Those who will not learn from correct reflection
about their experiences will have to learn from kicks delivered by the fresh
karma they make.
55
Each birth makes fresh links in that chain of
consequences which is karma.
56
From our study of the law of karma, we may deduce
that a man must grow up, become adult, and learn to be responsible for his
actions, decisions, emotions, and even thoughts. It is he who is accountable for
which ideas, especially which impulses, he accepts and which he lets pass or
pushes away.
57
Whoever ignores these higher laws and especially
flouts the law of karma is opening a volcano under him.
58
Karma puts a certain responsibility upon every man
alike - upon the philosopher no less than the primitive.
59
The man who imagines that he can go through life
and manage his various affairs in independence of any alleged higher laws is
following an illusion. Somewhere or at some time his awakening is inevitable.
60
A life that is not directed towards this higher
goal, a mind that is entirely uninterested in becoming a participant in the
Overself consciousness - these failures will silently censure a man both during
his bodily tenancy and his post-mortem existence.
61
Men act out of self-interest; but through ignorance
of the higher laws, especially that of karma, they may act against that
interest.
62
Many groups in many lands demand justice from their
governments, with varying definitions of the word. Apparently the claims are not
easily satisfied for there are more today than ever before. Some individual
persons go farther and demand justice from God. In a world where mischief and
misfortune are so active they too seem only partly satisfied, if that. Here the
notion of karma may seem fairer than governments are, but it is tied to other
births in which these persons have lost interest!
63
It is largely their own doing which makes men
suffer their own karma. But this is no reason why we should stand aside and
leave them to their destiny.
64
Each of us carries a certain amount of
responsibility for himself: none of us can justly renounce it on the plea that
fate governs, directs, and arranges all things.
65
Let us not imagine that we are merely puppets
bewitched hither and thither into pleasure and pain by an unseen showman.
66
If men ascribe to the overwhelming nature of fate
the miserable weakness of their own inertia, they worsen their bad situation.
67
If men complain that life brings them its worst,
they ought to pause and consider whether they have prepared themselves inwardly
to receive anything better than the worst.
68
Too many people complain that they have been
unfairly singled out by fate from others for unwarranted troubles, that they
have had more misfortunes than they can bear, and that the good life they have
led has availed nothing against such cosmic ill will. The fact is not that they
have been specially harassed but that they have convinced themselves they have
been harassed!
69
I am well aware that there are "occultists" aplenty
who can furnish full and detailed descriptions of the operations of karma, who
know its Alpha and Omega, who can trace its activity among men as easily as a
heraldist will trace your pedigree. They have led many into their camps with
their glib "knowledge," and they shall lead many more. But they are only
tendering the counterfeit coin of mere opinion for the rare currency of factual
knowledge.
70
We are seldom fair to fate. When events do not
happen in the way we would like them to, we refuse to accept the idea that it is
our own fault, so we blame our harsh fate. But when they do happen favourably,
we personally take the credit for bringing them about!
71
It is quite possible to trace the world's troubles
to any cause - from eating certain food to the presence of certain people -
which human fancy picks upon. For there is nothing which is not in some way and
however remotely connected with some other thing. All that is needed is some
imaginative faculty and some logical facility.
72
Too many people are praying to be delivered from
the consequences of their errors or weaknesses, too few are trying to set
themselves free from the faults themselves. If the prayers of the larger group
are answered, the weaknesses still remain and the same consequences are bound to
recur again. If the efforts of the smaller group are successful, they will be
delivered forever.
73
When we think of all the possible permutations and
combinations of destiny and compare them with what actually happens, and note
its relation to our inner being, condition, fault, virtue, or need, a line that
is more than merely coincidental can be traced.
74
A man need not sit all night under a peepul tree to
get the revelation of this truth about the law of recompense. He can get it
sitting in a professional office or walking in the marketplace, if he will watch
what happens with his eyes and put two and two together with his brain.
75
This blaming of others for one's misfortunes or
even for one's misdeeds is, for the quester, a device whereby the ego directs
attention away from its own guilt and thus maintains its hold upon the heart and
the mind. For the ordinary man, it is merely the emotional expression of
spiritual ignorance.
76
Everyone has to feel and think and act and speak.
But everyone does not perceive the consequences, near or remote, swift or slow,
of these operations. Whoever chooses a wrong aim or an unworthy desire must
endure the consequences of his choice. In every evil act, its painful recoil
lies hidden. The process is a cumulative one. Each act begets a further one in
the same downward direction. Each departure from righteousness makes return more
difficult.
77
To bemoan and bewail one's lot helplessly on the
plea of inexorable fate is to pronounce oneself a slave. Whence came this fate?
It was not arbitrarily forced on one. The very person who complains was its
maker. He therefore can become its un-maker!
78
If the cause of his troubles is left unremoved, it
will in time lead to new effects and simply add more misery to his existing
burden. All his so-called escapes from them will be illusory, so long as this
cause is still operative.
79
There is a spiritual penalty to pay for every
intellectual misbehaviour and every moral misconduct, whether there be a worldly
penalty or not. For the one, there is the failure to know truth; for the other,
there is the failure to find happiness.
80
Man is responsible for his own acts. The belief
that any Saviour can suffer for his sins or any priest remit them, is incorrect.
81
He may resent and resist the law, but it requires
him ultimately to go forward alone.
82
To ascribe the results of man's negligence to the
operation of God's will is blasphemy. To blame the consequences of human
stupidity, inertia, and indiscipline upon divine decrees is nonsense.
83
Those who say they deem it unjust to be forced to
accept the painful consequences of deeds somebody else has done, who consider
the lack of remembrance between the two earthly incarnations sufficient excuse
for their lack of belief in the doctrine of re-embodiment, utter reasonable
objections.
84
If men knew that the law of compensation was no
less operative than the law of their country, they would unquestionably become
more careful.
85
People should be warned that cause and effect rule
in the moral realm no less than in the scientific realm. They should be trained
from childhood to take this principle into their calculation. They should be
made to feel responsible for setting causes into action that invite suffering or
attract trouble or lead to frustration.
86
When men come to understand that the law of
compensation is not less real than the law of gravitation, they will profit
immensely.
87
It is not only a misfortune for which he is to be
pitied, when a man endures trouble of his own making, but also a fault for which
he is to be blamed.
88
Where a man will not put himself under his own
discipline, life eventually compels him to accept its sterner one. Where he will
not look his defects in the face, sufferings that result from them will
eventually remind him of their existence.
89
Sins of omission are just as important karmically
as sins of commission. What we ought to have done but did not do counts also as
a karma-maker.
90
The same man who is responsible for our mistakes is
likewise responsible for our misfortunes.
91
If the teaching of Karma (the law of recompense)
imbues men with the belief that it is not all the same whether they behave well
or ill, if it arouses their sense of moral responsibility, then none can deny
its practical value.
92
He who discovers these moral truths and reveals
them to his benighted fellows is not only their educator but also their
benefactor. For he saves those who heed him from much avoidable suffering.
93
There is a justice in human affairs which only
impersonal eyes can see, only impartial minds can trace.
94
Once a man really takes the law of consequences to
heart, he will not willingly or knowingly injure another man. And this is so
primarily because he will not want to injure himself.
95
Modern man needs this awakening to the fact that he
is responsible for his fate and must not seek to saddle it on a whimsical God or
blind chance. And so far as he has brought evil upon himself he should acquiesce
in the justice of it, confess his sins, retract his deeds, and reorient his
conduct.
96
When we thoroughly imbibe this great truth, when we
humbly acknowledge that all human life is under the sway of the law of
consequences, we begin to make a necessity of virtue.
97
When considered from the long-range karmic point of
view, each of us creates his own world and atmosphere. Therefore, we have no one
but ourselves to thank or blame for our comfort or wretchedness. It should be
remembered, too, that present correct or incorrect use of free will is right now
deciding the conditions and circumstances of lives to come.
98
It is absurd to treat the idea of karma as if it
were some outlandish Oriental fancy. It is simply the law which makes each man
responsible for his own actions and which puts him into the position of having
to accept the results which flow from them. We may call it the law of
self-responsibility. The fact that it is allied with the theory of reincarnation
does not invalidate it, for we may see it at work in our own present incarnation
quite often.
99
The attempt to evade karma may itself be part of
the karma.
100
Foolish actions damage a man's life and may
damage other men's lives, too. Wicked actions claim him as their first victim
for he will suffer morally at some time in life or death, and physically if the
karma justifies it.
101
Since it is demonstrably true that it is the
degree to which events affect your thoughts or move your feelings that they have
power over you, it must also be true that to gain control over thought and
feeling is to become pleasurably independent of fortune. If you let your life be
managed entirely by the hazards and chances of outside happenings instead of by
your own intelligence, you imperil it.
Our outward miseries are symbols and symptoms of our inner failures. For every self-created suffering and every self-accepted evil is an avoidable one. It may not depend entirely upon yourself how far events can hurt you but it does depend largely upon yourself. If you had the strength to crush your egoism by a single blow, and the insight to penetrate the screen of a long series of causes and effects, you would discover that half your external troubles derive from faults and weaknesses of internal character. Every time you manifest the lower attributes of your internal character you invite their reflection in external events. Your anger, envy, and resentment will, if strong enough and sustained enough, be followed eventually by troubles, enmities, frictions, losses, and disappointments.
Yes, if you wish to understand the first secret of fate, you should understand that its decrees are not issued by a power outside you, but by your own deepest self.
102
Will the West ever admit the notion of karma to
its mind? I feel assured that it will do so. This is because it will have to
admit the idea of rebirth which, once accepted, introduces karma as its twin.
103
Do they notice the sequence of cause and effect
in the lives of others, as well as in their own?
104
His own actions will in turn lead to someone
else's further actions.
105
It is because of this pressure of their
limitations that men are driven sooner or later to seek the inner life.
106
Men will moan about their unhappy past, and ache
because they cannot undo it; but they forget to undo the unhappy future which
they are now busy making.
107
The weapons which wound us today were forged by
our own selves yesterday.
109
So long as men love only the ephemeral and lose
themselves in it, so long will they continue to suffer from that portion of
their troubles which is avoidable. This was a chief element in the Buddha's
message twenty-five hundred years ago and it is still as true today.
110
We reject the fatalism which would preordain
every happening in such a total way that there is nothing left to personal
initiative, nothing more that the individual man can do about it. We accept the
existence of a line of connection between actions and their ultimate effects in
one's life, even if those effects are deferred to later reincarnations.
111
Nobody succeeds in extinguishing karma merely
because he intellectually denies its existence, as the votaries of some cults
do. If, however, they first faced up to their karma, dealt with it and used it
for self-cultivation and self-development, and then only recognized its
illusoriness from the ultimate standpoint, their attitude would be a correct
one. Indeed, their attempt to deny karma prematurely shows a disposition to
rebel against the divine wisdom, a short-sighted and selfish seeking of
momentary convenience at the cost of permanent neglect of the duty to grow
spiritually.(P)
112
If we look at men in the mass, we must
believe in the doctrine of fatalism. It applies to them. They are compelled by
their environments, they struggle like animals to survive precisely because they
are not too far removed from the animal kingdom which was the field of their
previous reincarnational activity. They react like automatons under a dead
weight of karma, move like puppets out of the blind universal instincts of
nature. But this is not the end of the story. It is indeed only its beginning.
For here and there a man emerges from the herd who is becoming an
individual, creatively making himself into a fully human being. For him each day
is a fresh experience, each experience is unique, each tomorrow no longer the
completely inevitable and quite foreseeable inheritance of all its yesterdays.
From being enslaved by animality and fatality, he is becoming free in full
humanity and creativity.(P)
113
The old Japanese method of cultivating rice
yields larger crops on poorer soil than the old Indian method. It was introduced
and publicized by the Indian Republic's Ministry of Agriculture with such
favourable results that it has become unnecessary to import the annual balance
required to meet the population's growing needs. It is estimated that cheaper
and more plentiful rice will within a few years reduce or remove the traditional
hunger of this vast country. The people have hitherto religiously interpreted
their starved existence as the will of God. The episode may teach them the
philosophic truth that they are here to become co-workers with God by developing
their intelligence, knowledge, and abilities. By improving themselves, they are
able to improve the environment. The supine fatalism saddled on them by a
mistaught religion and a miscomprehended mysticism may yield at last to the
correct kind of fatalism taught by their own highest philosophy.
114
Such an enlightened and qualified fatalism need
not lead to a paralysis of the will and passivity of the brain. It emphatically
does not lament that man can do nothing to change his lot for the better nor,
worse, leave him without even the desire to change it. No - the submission to
fate which a doctrine teaches is not less enlightened and qualified than itself.
Its effect upon those who not only believe in it but also understand it, is
towards the striking of a balance between humble resignation and determined
resistance, towards the correct appraisal of all situations so that the truly
inevitable and the personally alterable are seen for what they are. It yields to
God's will but does not therefore deny the existence of man's.
115
Can the puniness of man pit itself against the
immensity of the universe? This is the attitude behind Fatalism.
116
The believer in such rigid fatalism finds himself
trapped; there is nothing he can do about a situation except let it take its own
course. Whichever way he turns he feels that he is caught. No choice that he
makes is really his; it is always an imposed one. He cannot act of his own free
will.
117
The belief that he can do nothing to control his
future is paralysing to a man. Why try to become a better person if the matter
is already totally arranged, if the same result will come about whether he acts
well or evilly?
118
Philosophy refuses to acquiesce in a wrong or
foolish deed merely because it has happened. Therefore it cannot acquiesce in it
even if and when the happening is asserted to be God's will.
119
Philosophy teaches the truth of destiny but not
the half-error of fatalism.
120
This utter dependence on destiny, this refusal to
lift arm or limb to change one's circumstances, this complete acquiescence in
every miserable event that time and others may bring us - this is not fatalism,
but foolishness.
121
The fatalist who believes his future is
irrevocably fixed, loses ambition, initiative, and other valuable spurs to human
effort.
122
The malignant spirit of fatalism cannot be
exorcised by a word or by a sentence, but when religion consistently entreats
men to come up higher, to live out the fullness of their being, it is certain to
have a wholesome influence upon those who hear.
123
The materialist doctrine of "determinism" is a
mixture of truth and falsity. It rightly points to the way our outer lives are
determined by our outer circumstances and events. It wrongly deprives us of the
freedom to react as we choose to those circumstances and events. It is quite
untrue where moral choice is concerned.
124
That the course of our actions and decisions has
been unalterably fixed for us by an external power is manifestly an
exaggeration. If it were really so, it would be useless for prophets to preach
their religion and for philosophers to teach their system.
125
When the belief in fatalism is pushed to the
Oriental extreme, the believer assumes no more responsibility for his life, his
misdeeds, his health, his errors, and his fortunes. All these have been decided
long beforehand by a power completely outside his control; it is not for him to
question the decisions or complain against the actions of this power.
126
No man need resign himself to utter helplessness
in the face of fate. Let him try to change what seems inevitable, and his very
trying may be also fated!
127
In other words, what is destined to happen,
paradoxically comes to pass through the exercise of our free will.
128
The choice between right and wrong can only exist
where there is freedom of will to make it. Man is neither responsible nor free,
declares materialistic determinism. If he is or becomes a criminal, environment
is to blame, heredity is to blame, society is to blame - but not he. Spiritual
determinism, karma (recompense), does not give him so wide a license to commit
crime. It asserts that he was and is in part the author of his own character,
consequently of his own destiny.
129
How can a man hold at one and the same time a
belief in the existence of destiny and a sense of personal responsibility?
Philosophy reconciles the two, solves the dilemma, and makes this position quite
reasonable.
130
Three ways of looking at the world, out of many:
(1) young optimism, such as that of Christian Science, New Thought, etc., which
solves problems by ignoring them or by dismissing them as imaginary; (2)
individual optimism which believes that man can conquer all difficulties by
supreme self-exertion of will; and (3) the fatalistic acceptance of all
difficulties as unavoidable and unmodifiable.
131
A freedom which permits everything to man is
quite deceptive. A fatalism which denies everything to him is quite depressive.
132
He can accept neither the arrogant Occidental
attitude which believes itself to be the master of life nor the hopeless
Oriental attitude which believes itself to be the victim of life. The one
overvalues man's creativeness, the other undervalues it. The one believes it can
banish all human ills, the other regards them as irremediable.
133
That the future already exists in time does not
necessarily mean that we must become fatalists, that it cannot be changed, and
that escape from its confinement is impossible.
134
That the retribution of guilt is as much a
haphazard thing as the reward of goodness - this is a logical conclusion from
the doctrine of materialism, as dangerous to the individual who believes it as
to the society in which he lives.
135
The rigid fatalism which ignores the fact that
what we do now is contributing towards the making of the future and which
resigns itself to endure the effects of what it has made in the past - that
rigid kind of fatalism which is mesmerized by those effects and makes no effort
at all - has no place whatever in philosophy or in the philosophical
understanding of the law of karma.
136
The idea that everything is already preordained
and that nothing we can do will alter the destiny is accepted with a melancholy
finality by millions of Orientals, but resisted by millions of Occidentals.
137
There is a large and decided factor between the
original meaning of karma and that which has come to be assigned to it through
the efflux of time. Once I rented a house in India and had to take the gardener
into my employ with it. After a few days he asked my secretary to approach me to
give him an increase in wages. As his former pay was by Western standards
pitiably small, I instantly agreed to grant an increase. But as a student of
human nature I took the opportunity to send for him and pretend that it could
not be granted. He blandly raised his eyes to the sky and muttered: "It is your
karma to sit comfortably inside the house but mine to toil fatiguingly outside
it in the grounds. If the Lord had willed that you should give me an increase in
wages you would surely have done so. As it is, my karma is bad and yours is
good. There is nothing to be done but to accept it." He went back to his work,
scraping the ground with a shaped piece of wood as his ancestors had scraped it
two thousand years earlier. I saw that piece of wood as a symbol of inertia and
unprogressiveness which the misunderstanding of karma had stamped upon his
character. For whereas karma has come to mean that a man's life is predestined
and patterned for him all the way from conception before birth to cremation
after death, its original meaning was simply that a man could not escape from
the consequences of his habitual thoughts and acts. It meant that success or
failure in life lay largely in his own hands, that satisfaction or sorrow
followed inevitably upon the heels of virtue or wrong-doing.
138
There is certainly a distinction to be drawn
between determinism and fate. Those who have never been determinists, in the
materialistic sense of the word, showed intuitive powers even in the earlier
stages of the Quest of Truth.
139
If by determinism it is meant that something
outside of oneself is the cause that determines one's actions, this can be only
partly true. For the thought and energy behind them must come out of oneself.
140
That which compels us to act in a certain way is
in part the pressure of environment and in part the suggestion of our own past.
Sometimes one is stronger, sometimes the other is stronger. But the root of the
whole problem lies in our mind. Its proper cultivation frees us largely from
both compulsions.
141
If you want to change your karma, begin by
changing your attitude: first, toward outer events, people, things; second
toward yourself.
142
The centuries-old debate between those who
believe that all happenings are predetermined and those who believe they are the
mere play of chance, can be resolved only by understanding that both
predetermination and chance take their rise out of the divine Void.
143
When he fails to admit this first blunder, the
way is opened for more blunders linked with it and possibly, emerging as a
larger consequence of it.
144
His efforts to modify the effects of evil karma
(recompense) must, where he can possibly trace any of them to causes set going
in the present life, include remorse for wrongs done to others, as well as for
harm done to himself. If the feeling of remorse does not come naturally at
first, it may do so after several endeavours to reconsider his wrong actions
from an impersonal standpoint. Constant reflection upon the major sins and
errors of his past in the right way, setting the picture of his actual behaviour
against the picture of how he ought to have behaved, may in time generate a deep
sense of sorrow and regret, whose intensity will help to purge his character and
improve his conduct. If, by such frequent and impartial retrospection, the
lessons of past misbehaviour have been thoroughly learnt, there is the further
likelihood that the Overself's grace may wipe out the record of evil karma
waiting to be suffered, or at least modify it.
145
What he has brought upon himself may come to an
end of itself if he finds out what positive quality he needs to develop in his
attitude toward it to replace the negative one.
146
We learn in time to accept everything that
happens to us as the will of the Supreme Father, and hence never grumble or
complain about misfortunes. The karma made in past births is like a shot from a
gun; we cannot recall it and must endure the consequences. But once we have
surrendered ourself to the Spiritual Preceptor, he guides our hands and prevents
us from shooting out further bad karma.
147
Although karma is clinched by what a man does in
fact, it is built up also by what he long thinks and strongly feels.
148
If a man will not repent his ill-deeds, will not
make restitution where he has wronged others, and will not try to change his
thoughts and doings for the better, then his bad karma (recompense) must run its
inevitable course.
149
It would be an error to confuse this serene
peacefulness, this calm acceptance of life with mere stagnation or unfeeling
sluggishness. The latter makes no effort to improve circumstances or to progress
personally whereas the former is ready to do so at any time. The latter is
stupefied by its situation, whereas the former patiently endures the necessities
of its situation only so far and so long as it is unable to change them.
150
He will naturally try to smooth his destiny but
he will not do so at the expense of his character. If there be no other way to
keep his ideals, then he will be prepared to endure and suffer.
151
Only when a man can judge his own fortunes with
impersonality and without complaint, can he develop the capacity to understand
the mystery of his destiny and why it has taken one particular course rather
than another.
152
Although philosophy considers all attitudes to be
relative, it makes use of particular attitudes as and when necessary. Because it
recognizes the factor of destiny and tries to detect the trend of events and to
adjust itself to that trend, at certain periods it is optimistic, at other
periods pessimistic. It knows there are times when the greatest efforts will
still go badly. This is why the philosopher disciplines himself to endure with
equanimity misfortunes which are such that none can avoid them, but on the other
hand he seeks to overcome with resolution those which need to be fought against.
153
When a man finds that a condition is beyond his
power to change, he may better endure it by holding the faith that all things
and all conditions are ultimately ordered by the Universal Mind, and that they
will work out for the best in the end.
154
When he becomes a philosopher, he will become
strong enough to bear his fate with submission, if he finds that he cannot or
should not modify it. Then neither grief nor distress, neither other people's
evil-doing nor their evil-speaking will force him into emotional self-betrayal
of the inner peace which has been won with so much effort.
155
We must learn to let go, to renounce voluntarily
that which destiny is determined to take away from us. Such an acceptance is the
only way to find peace and the only effective path to lasting happiness. We must
cease to regard our individual possessions and relationships as set for all
time.
156
The man who can live without troubles has yet to
be found, but the man who can live without worry about them may be found
wherever philosophy is found.
157
There is no capacity of mind which will always
and easily give the foresight of consequences; but there is a capacity which
will give an insight into truths which, when applied to practical affairs,
guarantees the best possible consequences.
158
Before a man can submit to his destiny he needs
to know what it is. Because something has happened to him in the past and is
again happening in the present, must it necessarily happen in the future?
159
He will then see that the ego is not his true
self, that the evil and error which it spawns are the avoidable causes of
avoidable distresses.
160
The same illness whose enforced inactivity brings
boredom or despair to one man, may bring literary discoveries or spiritual
awakenings to another man. It may quickly dull the first one's mind but directly
stimulate the second one's to reflect about life, suffering, and death.
161
It takes time, and plenty of it, before the new
ideas and ideals become established in the mind, the feelings, and the actions.
162
It is a valuable exercise for him to find out
just where his own responsibility for his troubles begins, to separate what is
really an outward projection of his inward defects from what is being saddled
upon him by an untraceable destiny or a formidable environment.
163
When we discover how small is the measure of
freedom we possess, the first reaction is one of stunned hopelessness; the
second, which may come months later, is of weary surrender to it all.
164
Let him place his trust in the universal laws and
turn his face towards the sun.
165
In the making of our future, a mixed result comes
from the mixed and contradictory character of the thoughts feelings and desires
we habitually hold. Therefore our very fears may contribute their quota in
bringing about what we do not desire. Here lies one advantage of positive
affirmations and clear-cut decisions in our attitude toward the future.
166
The unpaid mistakes and debts from former lives
are now here to haunt us. If we want release from them, we must either get
release from our egos or else set up counteracting thoughts and deeds of an
opposite character and in overwhelming amount.
167
The measure of this counter-influence will be the
measure of the sincerity of his repentance, of the refusal to take any alibis
from himself, of the effort to change his mode of thought, and of the practical
steps he voluntarily takes to undo the past wrongs done to others.
168
A wiser attitude carries its outward problems
into the inward realm of character, to intelligence and capacity, and deals with
them there.
169
By watching our thought life, keeping out
negatives, and cultivating positive ideas, full of trust in the higher laws, we
actually start processes that eventually bring improvement to the outer life.
170
He is wise who sifts, screens, and absorbs the
bygone years, taking only their lessons, counsels, warnings, and encouragements.
In this way, he frees himself from much of it.
171
He must use his combined reason and intuition,
that is, intelligence, to discern the handiwork of karma in the pattern of some
of the external events of his own life.
172
Repentance for wrong-doing may not commute its
karma but will at least provide the indispensable preliminary condition for such
a commuting.
173
Life is largely what we make it by our way of
thinking about it. How important then to remove error from the mind and to put
truth in its place! How different would our fortunes be if we recognized this
need and always acted upon it!
174
It is a Jain belief that bad karma can be
cancelled by practising austerity, penance, and self-mortification. The harsher
the asceticism the quicker will be this process of destroying the results of an
evil past. There is a certain logic in this belief, for by suffering this
self-imposed pain one is also suffering the bad karma, albeit in a concentrated
form, and not evading it.
175
He may have to learn how to accommodate what he
cannot control or avoid. This is resignation, the very name - Islam - of the
religion given to the world by Muhammed. But if he has to accept certain things,
this is not to say that their accommodation implies his approval of them. It
means rather that he ceases to grumble or worry about them.
176
He is content to leave them, these evil-doers, to
the judgement of time, knowing that the power of karma is inseparable from it.
177
Your karma is being speeded up; everything is
being accelerated to a certain extent. This is necessary for a period to bring
quicker progress through forcing different parts of mind and character into
activity. Think how much has been accomplished since you took up these studies.
Look back to your state of mind before that.
178
Only when he sees that he himself is the prime
cause of his own troubles, and that other people have been not more than the
secondary cause, does he see aright.
179
Where it is possible to undo the past, he will
try to do so, but where it is not he will remember the lessons but forget the
episodes.
180
To state the doctrine is one thing; to apply it
to practical problems is another.
181
Even deliberate inaction does not escape the
making of a karmic consequence. It contains a hidden decision not to act
and is therefore a form of action!
182
The law of recompense is not nullified nor proved
untrue by the objector's proffered evidence of hard ruthless individuals who
rose to influence and affluence over the crushed lives of other persons. The
happiness or well-being of such individuals cannot be properly judged by their
bank account alone or their social position alone. Look also into the condition
of their physical health, of their mental health, of their conscience in the
dream state, of their domestic and family relations. Look, too, into their next
reincarnation. Then, and only then, can the law's presence or absence be rightly
judged.(P)
183
We humans have to bear the decrees of Allah as
best we may.
184
Forces out of his own reincarnatory past come up
and push him towards certain decisions, actions, and attitudes.
185
Men being what they are, the results of their
actions must be what they will be, too.
186
One of the greatest misunderstandings of karma by
its believers, and perhaps one of the chief hindrances to its acceptance by
others, is the idea that it produces its effects only after very long periods of
time. What you do today will come back to you in a future incarnation several
centuries later; what you experience today is the result of what you did
hundreds or even thousands of years ago; what you reap here in this twentieth
century is the fruit of what you sowed there in Rome in the second century -
such are the common notions about reincarnation and karma. But we have only to
open our eyes and look around us to see that everywhere men are getting now the
results of what they have done in this same incarnation.
187
Karma waits for a proper time before calling in
its accounts; its settlements being periodic and grouped together explains why
good and bad fortune so often run in apparent cycles.
188
Our intellect acknowledges the justness of this
law, but our heart craves for the mitigation of its harshness. We pray for the
forgiveness of our sins, the remission of their penalties.
189
The Day of Judgement is not only on the other
side of the grave. It may be here, on this side, and now, in this month.
190
A man may break these higher laws through his own
personal weakness or moral failure, or through deliberate rebellion and refusal.
191
Quite unwittingly, the criminal, the evil-doer,
or the sadist is trying to punish himself. Soon or late he will succeed in doing
so, and in proportion to the extent that he hurts others.
192
When the cause is put too far from the effect, as
in some beliefs about karma, the moral effectiveness is weakened.
193
Karma is really neutral although to the human
observer its operations seem to be rewarding or punitive.
194
All through history we see men inflicting
suffering upon other men. This shows their ignorance of the higher laws, for by
their own sin they punish themselves.
195
Not to harm others is as much in one's own
interest as theirs. For if one does harm them he sets up causes which lead in
the end by a mysterious cosmic working to a consequential suffering. Cosmic
justice is then self-provoked.
196
The working of karma may often seem a grim
affair, dragging in the past when he would prefer to forget it - whether it
include unpleasant things done or pleasant things not done - permitting no
appeal and offering no pardon.
197
The good merits of conduct in former lives bring
pleasant benefits in the present one.
198
Retribution comes, even if it comes so late as to
be deferred to another lifetime on this earth. Some ancients thought it came
down too heavily, especially when the sin was only one of pride or folly, and
complained to the gods.
199
Trotsky made a point of being merciless to the
enemy during Russia's Civil War: it is not surprising that his own murder was a
merciless affair.
200
If in the end - and sometimes well before - karma
catches up with a man, it is not all painful; the term need not fill him with
foreboding. For the good he has thought and done brings a good come-back too.
201
There are times when the karma of an action comes
back to a man with the speed and precision of a boomerang.
202
The working of karma traces complicated effects
back to complicated causes.
203
The web of karma tightens around a man as the
lives increase with the centuries or thins away as the ego gets more and more
detached.
204
The brutal egotist who ruthlessly knocks others
aside on his way upward will himself receive harsh treatment when the time is
decreed.
205
Most men do not learn the practical wisdom of
life the easier way. They do not heed the true seers, the far-seeing sages, the
inspired prophets. There is a harder way, which they choose because it appeals
to both their animal instincts and their selfish purposes. This is why they must
be tutored by necessity - that is to say, by harsh circumstances of their own
making, by karma.
206
Man rules this planet but the gods rule man. Take
them into account in your mortal reckonings.
207
It will be asked: Why should the innocent suffer
because of the activities of wicked men? Their innocence belongs to the present;
we do not know of their past evil deeds and misdeeds!
208
The errors and disorders in his consciousness
reflect themselves eventually in his general fortunes and outward conditions.
209
History shows that there are implacable forces
around man which can elevate him in a day or cast him down in a night.
210
Events and environments are attracted to man
partly according to what he is and does (individual karma), partly according to
what he needs and seeks (evolution), and partly according to what the society,
race, or nation of which he is a member is, does, needs, and seeks (collective
karma).
211
The law of compensation does not measure
its rewards and penalties according to the little scale of little human minds.
212
It is sheer nonsense habitually to interpret
karma (recompense) as something which is operative only in remote
reincarnations. Actually it is mostly operative within the same lifetime of a
man or nation.
213
The working of karma from former lives is mostly
in evidence at birth and during infancy, childhood, and adolescence. The working
of karma made in the present life is mostly in evidence after the maturity of
manhood has been reached.
214
We invite the future through our aspirations. We
get the consequences of our thinking, feeling, and doing. Nature has no
favouritism but gives us our deserts.
215
A man's sins are the outcome of the limitations
of his experience, faculties, and knowledge.
216
Retribution must one day overtake the wrong-doer.
His sins and mistakes will pile up until one day the karmic hour strikes and
they come down on him with a crash. All failure to wake up to responsibilities
constitutes an ethical error for which a man must bear the consequence
eventually. Thus the failure to do a right deed in a certain situation may be a
karmic sin, although very much less so than doing a wrong deed.
217
Every infraction of the great law of compensation
on its moral side is cumulative, piles one eventual affliction upon another into
a heap, which is one reason why we often hear the complaint that afflictions are
not in just ratio with sins.
218
The working of recompense (a piece of karma) also
affects those who are closely associated with the person whose own acts or
thoughts originated it.
219
The course of karma is not rigidly predetermined.
It may have alternative patterns. If an evil deed does not find retribution in
some other way, then it will always find retribution in the form of disease.
This must not be foolishly misinterpreted to mean that all disease is the result
of evil karma. If we live in an unhealthy manner, the disease which is thereby
generated is the karma of our present ignorance or bodily imprudence, not
necessarily the expiation of moral faults committed in other lives.
220
When at length he will be called to account by
karma, he will be judged not by the certificates of character which others
bestow upon him, whether good or bad, but by the motives felt in his heart, the
attitudes held in his mind, and the deeds done by his hands.
221
These doctrines assert that those unlucky
wretches are merely paying for their misdeeds in former bodies. Why, if that is
correct, should they suffer for errors which they cannot possibly remember and
which might have been committed by others, for all they know? I can understand
and appreciate the philosophical arguments for the doctrine of rebirth, but I
cannot understand the justice of punishing men for misdeeds of which they are
completely unaware. Such is a reasonable criticism.
222
For some errors we have to pay with the
misfortune of a few years. But for others we have to pay with the misfortune of
a lifetime. An injury done to a Sage who incarnates compassion may easily, if
not repented and amended, fall into the second class.
223
Any man who artfully hurts another in the end
hurts himself. For he denies the principle of love in his relationships, a
principle that is part of the higher laws set for his development, and must pay
the penalty of his denial.
224
The karma of a man cannot be measured by the
world's yardsticks. Wisdom is worth a fortune at any time and goodness is a
solid protection. Those who live for the immediate moment, the immediate
enjoyment, may not perceive this; but those who wait for the ultimate result,
the ultimate event, know its truth. Indeed, how could it be otherwise in a
Universe where infinite intelligence and infinite benevolence have made the laws
which make the destiny of mankind?
225
It is a mistake to regard the karma of a deed as
something that appears later in time, or comes back to its doer soon or long
afterwards. It is not a sequence to follow after what was done before. On the
contrary, the karma is simultaneous with the deed itself.
226
A grievous marriage situation may itself change
completely for the better or else a second marriage may prove a happier one, if
there is sufficient improvement in thinking to affect the karma involved.
227
If men behave like wild beasts of prey, violent
and greedy; if they show an utter lack of conscience, we may write them down as
doomed to suffer themselves one day the painful consequences of their misdeeds.
228
A callous egotism is a bad-paying investment. For
it means that in time of need, there will be none to help; in the hour of
distress, none to console. What we give out we get back.
229
The war showed in the plainest possible way that
the cost of wrong-doing is painful retribution. For we lived to see Hitler
destroyed by his own hand, his Nazi hierarchy with its loathsome deviltry
destroyed by all humanity's hands, and his deluded followers eating the sour
fruits of their own planting.
230
The karma of a thought-habit or a deed becomes
effective only when it reaches maturity. The time this takes is variable.
231
Karma expresses itself through events which may
seem to be accidents. But they are so only on the surface.
232
The moral fallacy which leads a man to think that
he can build his own happiness out of the misery of other men, can be shattered
only by a knowledge of the truth of karma.
233
If you throw a pebble into the sea, its ripples
go on and on, until they are exhausted. In the same way, there comes a time when
the accumulated effects of doing or thinking lets loose a ripple of karmic
come-back.
234
The consequences of several years of wrong doing
and wrong thinking may crowd into a few months.
235
In the final test, they may show by their own
words and actions during the next decade whether they honestly wish to enter the
path of reconciliation. Their last yet first hope is to purify themselves by
discipline and to make restitution - either physical or verbal - to those whom
they have wronged.
236
His situation in the world is highly paradoxical,
at once comic and tragic: comic because he knows that he is not so sure of
himself as he appears to others, tragic because he does not know if adversity's
sudden blows will miss him and strike others.
237
The prophet becomes the butt of the vulgar and
violent mob, but in heaven the mob itself is gibbeted and hung. So justice
works.
238
Each period of a life has its own evaluation, and
opinions differ about them. Some say the early years are best, others the middle
years, and so on. But the truth is that it depends on a person's karma more than
on his age as to which shall prove best for him and from which he shall extract
the most satisfaction.
239
Failure to act at the right time in the right way
may bring its own karmic consequences.
240
Although the higher laws bring man the kind of
experience - pleasurable or painful - which is so just, so right, and so fitting
to his true deserts and need, he is mostly unable to see this, being blinded by
his ego or his ignorance.
241
Here are facts which are vital to our conduct of
life, primal to our search for happiness, yet which he leaves ignored or, worse,
deliberately sneers at. Karma is one of them.
242
It is a fact in many people's lives that some of
the troubles which befall them have no origin in the karma of former lives but
belong solely to causes started in the present life.
243
The spiritually ignorant are to a large extent
makers of their own misery.
244
Whoever fails to take advantage, by his
co-operation and effort, of the right time for beginning an enterprise or the
right opportunity that fortune thrusts in his path, will never again be able to
do so to the same extent, if at all - for neither he nor circumstance can remain
the same.
245
For the lucky few, life is pleasure spotted by
suffering. For the unlucky many, it is suffering relieved by pleasure. For the
rare sage, it is ever-flowing serenity.
246
Every prophet knew and taught that virtue rewards
itself as sin punishes itself.
247
If his evolutionary need should require it, he
will be harassed by troubles to make him less attached to the world, or by
sickness to make him less attached to the body. It is then not so much a matter
of receiving self-earned destiny as of satisfying that need. Both coincide
usually but not always and not necessarily. Nor does this happen with the
ordinary man so much as it does with the questing man, for the latter has asked
or prayed for speedier development.
248
The wisdom which he has the chance to gain from
his sufferings should lead not only to some self-renunciation, but also to some
self-resignation to destiny's will when it reveals itself as inexorable. Once he
brings himself to this submission, time will then more quickly heal up its own
wounds and inner peace will more easily be obtained. So destiny shows itself
also as a teacher.
249
There are times when, for a man's inner
evolution, his ego has to be crushed, and he may then find himself bent under
harsh events or melancholy reflections.
250
Fate is fashioned in such a way that it gives
people at times what they want, so that they shall eventually, through this
experience, learn to evaluate it more justly. They have then the opportunity to
see the adverse side of the experience, which desire too often prevents them
from seeing. Fate is also fashioned to go into reverse and block the fulfilment
of the wishes of other people. Through this inhibition they may have the chance
to learn that we are not here for a narrow, egoistic satisfaction alone, but
also, and primarily, to fulfil the larger purposes of life as formed in the
World-Idea.
251
The Law is relentless but it is flexible: it
adjusts punishment to a man's evolutionary grade. The sinner who knows more and
who sins with more awareness of what he is doing, has to suffer more.
252
The subconscious connection between wrongs done
and sufferings incurred leads him to feel more uncertain and more uncomfortable
the more he engages in such acts.
253
To look upon the encounters with suffering,
misfortune, mistakes, and disappointment as the principal offering of each
reincarnation is one view, and especially the Indian view. To see in them the
requitals and rewards of the Goddess of Justice is another.
254
When man knows the results of his actions, he has
the chance to know the value of those ideas which led to these actions. In other
words, experience will bring responsibility, if he allows it to, and that will
bring development.
255
Everyone has periods of pleasurable delusion when
he affixes a rosy label on life but the awakening to what lies on its other side
must follow sooner or later. Only after both experiences is he able to form a
fair judgement upon it. The philosopher however does not want to wait for this
tutoring by experience alone. By a deliberate detachment from every feeling
likely to falsify the picture of life, he puts himself in a position to see it
as it truly is.
256
The spiritual inertia which keeps most men
uninterested in the quest is something which they will not seek to overcome by
their own initiative. Life therefore must do this for them. Its chief method is
to afflict them with pain, loss, disappointment, sickness, and death. But such
afflictions are under karma and not arbitrary, are intermittent and not
continuous, are inlaid with joys and not overwhelming. Therefore their result is
slow to appear.
257
If this is the way his life has to be, if this is
how the cards of his destiny have fallen, and if the inner voice bids him accept
it after the outer voice has led him into unavailing attempts to alter it, then
there must be some definite reason for the situation. Let him search for this
reason.
258
As a man flings his cigarette suddenly upon the
floor and stamps his heel savagely upon it until the red spark is extinguished,
so too life flings some of us to the ground and stamps upon our ardours and
passions until they are dead.
259
Life will bring him, if he is teachable, through
the tutelage of bitter griefs and ardent raptures to learn the value of
serenity. But if he is not, then the great oscillations of experience will
tantalize him until the end.
260
Life is not trying to make people either happy or
unhappy. It is trying to make them understand. Their happiness or unhappiness
come as by-products of their success or failure in understanding.
261
The modern struggle for existence is nothing new.
It is the same sky and the same world of pre-historic times. The scenes have
been changed only in details; the actors, men and women, remain the same but
they are now more experienced. Incessant struggle has ever been the lot of the
human race.
262
No human existence is without its troubles at
some period or without its frictions at another. The first arises out of the
element of destiny which surrounds human freedom, the second out of the element
of egoism which surrounds human relations.
263
Sorrow, loss, and pain may be unwelcome as evils
but they are at the same time opportunities to practise the philosophic attitude
and to train the will.
264
There is peace behind the tumult, goodness
behind the evil, happiness behind the agony.
265
The painful elements in your destiny are the
measure of your own defects. The evils in your conduct and character are
mirrored forth by the troubles which happen to you.
266
Despite its insistence that suffering is always
close to life, it tries to charge its message with the flavour of hopefulness,
and to inspire men to make efforts and be daring in their inner lives. When
suffering stimulates a man to re-adjust his life on sounder philosophical lines,
it can hardly be called an evil.
267
I believe in love, not hate, as a motivating
force for reform. At the same time, I see karma at work, punishing the selfish
and the heartless, and I know that it will inexorably do its work whatever
anyone says. God never makes a mistake and this universe is run on perfect laws.
Unfortunately, suffering is one of its chief instruments of evolution and
especially so where people will not learn from intuition, reason, and spiritual
prophets.
268
How priceless would be the knowledge of the
outcome of our actions at the time we did them! How invaluable the capacity to
foretell beforehand the consequences of our deeds! We would then certainly avoid
the tragedy of error and the misery of failure - so runs our thinking. But life
is wiser and lets us profit by the commission of error and the experience of
failure to find out what needs correction or cultivation in our own
personalities.
269
Everyone has his burden of bad karma. What kind
and how heavy it is are important, but more important is how the man carries it.
270
While fulfilling its own purpose, karma cannot
help fulfilling another and higher one; it brings us what is essential to our
development.
271
When his life does not develop along the line he
has planned, his mind will become confused and self-doubt will creep in. It is
then that the ambitious man is taken in hand by his higher self, to learn
through frustration and disappointment released by the new cycle of bad karma
those lessons he could not receive through success and triumph.
272
He makes many wrong decisions in the course of a
lifetime, suffers their consequences, and learns the lessons of these results.
If he is willing to learn them, they will be more quickly, fully, and
consciously learnt; if not, they will be only partially, slowly, and
subconsciously learnt.
273
All relative truths are fluctuating truths. They
may become only partially true or even wholly falsified from a higher
standpoint. The case of evil is a noteworthy instance of this change. A karma
(recompense) which is outwardly evil may be inwardly spiritually beneficial.
274
The deer which lies mortally wounded by a
hunter's shot is not capable of asking Life why it should suffer so, but the man
who lies mortally wounded by a murderer's shot is capable of doing so.
275
When he accepts affliction as having some message
in it which he must learn, he will be able to bear it with dignity rather than
with embitterment.
276
When justice is done to a man for the injuries he
has done to others, when his wrong actions end in suffering for himself, he may
begin to learn this truth - that only the Good is really able to triumph.
277
It is true that sometimes the past, or at least
some portion of it, will not bear looking at. It hurts to know that its
unworthiness was created by his own actions, its foolishness by his own choices.
Yet it may help somewhat to reconcile him to mistakes which are now unmendable,
to recognize that they arose out of his inheritance from former lives, out of
the nature this caused him to be born with, and out of the circumstances this
allotted as his destiny - that, in short, he could hardly have acted or chosen
differently. It would be futile to be angry with himself or resentful against
fate.
278
Generation follows generation. Of what avail all
this striving and struggling which always ends in death and dust? It is salutary
at times to sink in this mournful thought, provided we do not sink to the point
of despair.
279
People bound by their littleness, uninterested in
Truth and unable to see it, dominated by puerile aims and petty desires - their
way is long and slow, it is the way of instruction by karma.
280
The iron of man's character turns to tempered
steel in the white-hot furnace of trouble.
281
We do not easily grow from the worse to the
better or from the better to the best. We struggle out of our imperfections at
the price of toil sacrifice and trouble. The evil of these things is not only
apparent nor, in essence, in any ultimate conflict with divine love. Whatever
helps us in the end towards the realization of our diviner nature, even if it be
painful, is good and whatever hinders, even if it be pleasant, is bad. If a
personal sorrow tends towards this result it is really good and if a personal
happiness retards it, then it is really bad. It is because we do not believe
this that we complain at the presence of suffering and sorrow in the divine plan
and at the absence of mercy in the divine will. We do not know where our true
good lies, and blindly following ego, desire, emotion, or passion, displace it
by a fancied delusive good. Consequently, we lose faith in God's wisdom at the
very time when it is being manifested and we become most bitter about God's
indifference just when God's consideration is being most shown to us. Until we
summon enough courage to desert our habitual egoistic and unreflective attitude,
with the wrong ideas of good and evil, happiness and misery which flow out of
it, we shall continue to prolong and multiply our troubles unnecessarily.
282
When he knows that no good phase can last, that
fortune will never let him rest durably in its undisturbed sunshine, he is ready
for the next step. And that is to seek for inner peace.
283
It is as foolish to attribute all events to fate
as it is to claim that all decisions and choices are free ones.
284
It is possible to take any and every situation
and assert that it is in entire conformity with God's will. It is possible to
find reasons to support the assertion. And the argument would be right, for if
the universe with all its complications, ramifications, and connections, with
all its network of relations and events, is not a manifestation of God's will in
the end, then what is it? But two opposing events, or two hundred varying and
contradictory ones happening at the same time as each other, can be brought into
the same argument, thus making nonsense of it.
285
"Mektoubi!" exclaims the North African Arab. "It
is written (fated)," implying that there is nothing to be done as action is
useless. "Mektoubi."
286
There are events which a greater power than man's
has preordained. Some he can modify, change, or prevent altogether but others he
cannot. All of them exist already in future time. He will meet them in present
time. He never leaves present time. Therefore it is not he that is moving to
meet the future but the future is moving to meet him.
287
He clanks the earth in iron chain, each link
stamped with the word "destiny." But because he neither sees nor hears his
chains, he imagines that he walks where he wishes and as far as he wishes.
288
A man's whole destiny may hang upon one event,
one decision, one circumstance. That single cause may be significant for all the
years to follow.
289
There are times when events have to happen
as they do, because such is the decree of the higher power which governs life.
290
Sometimes, here and there a man foresees his
fate, but to most it is a blank page.
291
What is the message of Greek tragic drama, what
do these doomed figures who make us shiver as they commit or endure horrors have
to tell us? Is it not that do what you will circumstances will catastrophically
overwhelm you, that the gods will drive you to an allotted disastrous end
however much you may plan the contrary? From this depressing view, we may gladly
turn to Shakespeare's, arrived at in the last maturest years of his life,
expressed in the final four plays, ending in the philosophic view of The
Tempest, that out of all life's troubles good somehow will emerge.
292
The same opportunity does not recur because it
cannot.
293
No man is, or can become, fully free.
294
Some events in the future are inevitable, either
because they follow from the actions of men who fail to amend character or
improve capacity or deepen knowledge, or because they follow from the basic
pattern of the World-Idea and the laws it sets to govern physical life.
295
He cannot withdraw from this destiny, try as he
may.
296
When he reaches the end of a cycle, there will
necessarily come with it some inner adjustment and outer change. This may also
produce a little mental confusion.
297
Cycles of destiny make their periodical returns,
for individuals and for nations. The prudent man foresees the coming one in
advance and lets neither adversity nor prosperity overwhelm him but bears the
one well and the other calmly.
298
All too often does an important enterprise, a
long journey, or a serious undertaking carry in its start the insignia of its
end.
299
However carefully we choose our course and plan
our actions, we discover in the sequence that what is to be, will be. We have no
power over happenings.
300
Life itself will work out his future course
without consulting him.
301
"The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but
in ourselves that we are underlings." Shakespeare's bold words sound reassuring,
but he omitted to add that Brutus and Cassius were both struck down by violence.
Does this not show that the last move was with fate after all?
302
But the ordinary man, who has not yet come to
scorn time or seek a higher consciousness, will not like this terrible truth.
303
If all men knew all that would happen to them,
how many would be willing to go on living into the worst period? Even if
deprived of hope most perhaps would not abandon the body.
304
The feeling of being trapped by fate, held down
by forces beyond his control, is partly true.
305
He becomes penetrated with the thought of his
personal helplessness as against this inexorable and impersonal power
controlling his life. He feels that there is nothing he can do when confronted
by the unfavourable situations it creates for him, no way in which he can help
himself. He sees himself in a little boat tossed by the waves of this immense
power, a boat whose drift toward catastrophe he may observe but not prevent.
306
Atlantis shaped itself out of the condensing fire
mists. Land hardened. Animals appeared. Men and women appeared. Civilizations
appeared. The continent was developed. Then the wheel turned. The continent sank
and all went with it. In 1919, Germany lay at the feet of her victors. She was
disarmed and dismembered. She was weak, depressed, and fearful. Nobody was
afraid of her. The wheel turned. Germany armed to the teeth. Her frontiers grew.
She was strong, optimistic, and aggressive. Everybody was afraid of her. Today
she is again disarmed, weak, and fearful. Arabia was unknown, insignificant,
unimportant, obscure, her people barbarous, semi-savage. The wheel turned. A
prophet arose, instructed and inspired his people. They spread out and took an
empire that spread from the Atlantic to China. The wheel turned. The Arab power
dwindled again. Arabia itself became a mere province, or colony, of the Turks.
Empires are formed but to dissolve again; continents rise but to sink. Peoples
collect but to be redistributed once more. Cycles operate, the wheel turns,
evolution becomes involution. Only the intellectually blind, the spiritually
paralysed can fail to perceive this. And the seeker of truth needs to be brave
to be a hero, if he would tear down the veil and behold the Goddess Isis as she
really is. Our own decade has witnessed strange things but things which prove
this truth up to the hilt.
307
Even if his intuitive feeling warns him of an
impending event in such a manner that he knows it to be unalterably preordained
and inevitable, his inability to prevent it from happening need not prevent him
from making all possible preparations to protect himself and thus to suffer less
from it than he might otherwise have done. Such a warning can only be useful and
saves a man from falling into the panic in which fear of the unexpected may
throw others.
308
When a favourable cycle of destiny is operative,
a little right action produces a lot of fortunate results. But when an
unfavourable cycle is dominant, a lot of right action produces little result.
The man and his capacities have not changed but his destiny has. At such a time,
the new sequence of events in his life is dictated not by his individual will
but by a higher will.
309
You can win if at the beginning of any enterprise
you determine to do so, unless the fates are equally determined that you shall
not. This is the "X" factor, the unknown hand which can gather up all your
winnings in one grasp and toss them all aside. You may call it Luck if you wish.
The wise man will in all reckonings allow for this mysterious factor and accept
its existence as a fact.
310
If we accept the fact that man is as predestined
to suffer as to enjoy life, that both experiences have been allotted to him,
sometimes in juxtaposition but more often in rhythm, we can better prepare
ourselves for life. If we refuse to accept it, we may have to pay the price
which Oscar Wilde had to pay. The same Wilde, who until he was forty years old
said that he did not know what it felt like to be unhappy, who repeatedly said,
"We should seek the joys of life and leave the sores alone," lived to utter this
confession and commentary upon his earlier attitude: "I seem dead to all
emotions except those of anguish and despair."
311
Professor Don Mackenzie Brown, of the University
of California at Santa Barbara, told me the story of a professional Hindu seer
who visited that city. Under the strictest scientific test conditions, the man
correctly predicted a number of headlines which would appear in the local
newspaper within the next week. Did this mean that the events to which they
referred were already present? If so, did that lead to the corollary that they
were fully preordained and ruled by Fate? Or was there some entirely different
explanation?
312
Many events in a person's or a nation's life are
foreseeable, but only if existing trends of thought and existing courses of
action are continued.
313
There is always some part of a man's person or
fortune which remains wholly beyond his control. Do what he will he cannot alter
it. It is then more prudent to acknowledge the inevitability of this condition
than to waste strength in useless struggle. Sometimes he may then even turn it
to his advantage. But how is he to know that this inevitability, this decree of
fate, exists? By the fact that no matter how much he exerts himself to alter it,
he fails.
314
We meet our destined experiences, for we have
been given sealed orders at the beginning of our incarnation.
315
He knows that fate moves in rhythms of gain and
loss, in cycles of accumulation and deprivation. The force which brings us
loving friends and hating enemies is one and the same.
316
The wheel of life is a fixed one. Its turning
spokes bring now elation, then depression, now prosperity, then adversity. There
are periods of years when good health and good fortune crowd together, but then
there are succedent periods when death and disasters try to break one's heart.
317
If, for instance, he is not destined to enjoy
marital happiness, it would be futile for him to go on seeking it. If he does,
he will one day get tired of beating the wings of desire against the bars of
fate. But it is not always possible to know through past experience or present
reasoning what his destined lot really is. For the past may be quite
misrepresentative of the future, and thought can only throw light on some of its
mysteries, not on all. Consequently he is forced to seek aid from revelation.
This may come to him unreliably through the channel of one of the predictive
arts or, most reliably, through a deeply felt intuition granted by his own
higher self.
318
Those ignorant of the dark power of Destiny
struggle with their lot and try to alter Fate's decrees. As well might they try
to stop the roar and rush of a Niagara, alone and unaided. Even the mighty
Napoleon, who nearly conquered all Europe, could not conquer Fate. He had to bow
before its terrible sentence, as his own pathetic words at Saint Helena
testified later. It is better to bow to the inevitable, and endure bravely what
we cannot alter, than to cast our strength away in vain struggles.
319
We imagine we are the masters of destiny, when
the truth is that we are as the barges that float down the Thames with each
tide. I am never tired of telling myself, when things appear to go wrong, that
the Gods rule this universe, and not man, that the last word lies with them, and
if they see fit to dash all our plans to the dust, perhaps it is as well.
320
There is one striking passage wherein Emerson's
pen neatly turns out the truth about the problem. I give it in its entirety
because it is worth passing down intact. "I lean always to that ancient
superstition (if it is such, though drawn from a wise survey of human affairs)
which taught men to be beware of unmixed prosperity...Can this hold? Will God
make me a brilliant exception to the common order of his dealings, which
equalizes destinies? There's an apprehension of reverse always arising from
success."
321
Destiny gives him hills of difficulty to climb
because of its own impersonal balancing activity. But if he is thus able to, he
demonstrates the superiority of the Man over the inferiority of the Position.
Destiny befriends him.
322
He could not have met any person whose contact
left deeply felt or important after-effects at any particular time in his inner
life without the almighty power and infinite wisdom behind life having brought
the meeting about for his own eventual development.
323
So many seemingly unrelated occurrences and
inconsequential events shape into a pattern when looked at later, when they have
long fallen into the past.
324
The wheel of life keeps turning and turning
through diverse kinds of experiences and we are haplessly bound to it. But when
at last we gain comprehension of what is happening and power over it, we are set
free.
325
The broken fragments of destiny's mosaic are put
into their correct places by his growing insight and thus an intelligible
pattern eventually appears.
326
Internally and externally, we find through
experience that a certain arc of fate has been drawn for us and must consummate
itself. Futile is the endeavour to try to cross that arc; wise is the
submissiveness that stays within its limits. We must leave to it the major
direction which our mental and physical life must take. The thoughts that shall
most move us and the events that shall chiefly happen to us are already marked
on the lines of the arc. There is nothing arbitrary, however, about this, for
the thoughts and the events are related and both together are still further
related to an interior birth in the long series that makes up human life on this
planet.
327
There are tides of fortune and circumstances
whose ebb and flow wash the lives of men. There are cycles of changes which must
be heeded and with which our plans and activities must be harmonized, if we are
to live without friction and avoid wasting strength in futile struggles. We must
learn when to move forward and thus rise to the crest of the tide, and when to
retreat and retire.
328
Time and thought have fixed in my mind the
unpleasant but unescapable notion that the major events of a man's life are as
preordained for him as are the destinations of a million different letters all
posted on the same day.
329
It was not blind fatalism but clear perception
which made Mary, Queen of Scots, say that her end was in her beginning.
330
Can the oracular writing of destiny be
deciphered? Can its mysterious pattern be foreseen?
331
Destiny may bring them together for the purpose
of the spiritual birth of the younger one of them, may confront them so that the
elder may pass his living vision and enlarged understanding to the other.
332
He misses the road-signs of life, the events
which could tell him where he is going, the episodes which indicate success or
disaster as a destination if he does not heed their meaning.
333
That the human will is but a thin straw floating
on an irresistible tide, is a hard conclusion for the human mind to accept. Yet
it is not less reasonable than it is distasteful.
334
For long I fought desperately against the notion
of fate, since I had written screeds on the freedom of will. But an initiation
into the mysteries of casting and reading a horoscope began to batter down my
defenses, while an initiation into profounder reflection caused me to suffer the
final defeat.
335
Human will may plan its utmost for security, but
human destiny will have something to say about the matter. There is no
individual life that is so secure as to be without risk.
336
Every man's personal freedom stretches to a
certain distance and then finds itself ringed around by fate. Outside this limit
he is as helpless as a babe, he can do nothing there.
337
Envy not those with good fortune. The gods have
allotted them a portion of good karma, but when this is exhausted they will be
stripped of many things, except those inner spiritual possessions.
338
If fate's decrees are preordained but a man's
prayer seems to bring result, then his prayer too was part of his fate and also
preordained.
339
But after we have listed all these various
sources and influences which make us what we are, it would be an exaggeration to
assert that they do so inexorably, immovably, and inevitably. We are not
condemned to be the plaything of all these forces. There is a mysterious
X-factor in every human being which he can call upon if he will. The fact that
so few do so merely means that through ignorance they condemn themselves to
remain as they are.
340
What different course our life might have taken
if we had not casually met a certain person - a meeting which led to momentous
consequences - affords material for tantalizing speculations. Fate sometimes
hangs upon a thread, we are told; but it always hangs upon such a tangled knot
of dependent circumstances that the game of speculating how different it would
have been had a single one of them been changed, is futile though fascinating.
341
We are at one and the same time both the
consequence of our environment and the creator of it. The philosophic mentality
sees no contradiction here, knows that there is a reciprocal action between the
two.
342
Those who look for some swift miraculous
renaissance of peace and goodwill in the Occident look in vain, for such
miracles do not happen. The world is making its own destiny, and nobody can
neutralize it. Nobody can abrogate the past. A grim Justice rules all worlds,
from the strange and weird places where ghosts foregather to the more
matter-of-fact haunts of earthly cities. Only the psychically blind and the
spiritually sightless ever hope to evade this Justice or to escape the final
accounting which tracks down individuals and nations alike with mathematical
accuracy.
343
That our mortal destiny is made up of welcome and
unwelcome circumstances or happenings is a certainty. There is no human being
whose pattern fails to be so chequered - only the black and white squares are
unequal in number, and the proportion differs from one person to another. It
hurts to confess this duality of pain with joy, this temporality which threatens
every happiness; but this truth is unassailable, as Buddha knew and taught.
344
You cannot defraud self-made Destiny. It enters
unannounced upon your best-laid plans.
345
Life whirls us around as the clay is whirled upon
the potter's wheel.
346
If good cycles seem to pass all-too-quickly, the
bad ones seem to linger.
347
His spiritual destiny remains hidden far out of
sight in the future.
348
Our lives are like a jigsaw puzzle; we collect
our little queerly shaped pieces and then one day the pattern is seen.
349
Where nothing is certain, nothing is really
predictable.
350
That an irresistible power dictates the major
events of our lives, who can doubt that has lifted a little of the veil?
351
"We trail our destiny with us wherever we go.
Even the gods cannot alter the past," says a Greek aphorism.
352
The disintegration and disappearance of things is
an inescapable part of their history if they are to come into existence at all.
Nature could not be formed by God on any other basis than this. But it is
followed by their reappearance.
353
In the story of life there is misfortune and
suffering, frustration and calamity; but it is not completed by them alone. It
usually includes other chapters which bring out some of its positive,
attractive, and happier sides and even its potential glory.
354
Only the sage perceives with deadly clarity how
like the dust blown hither and thither is the weary labour of their days; how
frail are the timbers of the ships which men send out, laden with their
self-spun hopes and fears; how dream-like are their entire lives.
355
Whatever happens to a man or a nation is
self-made or God-decreed. And this is still so even when some other human agent
or other nation is the outward doer.
356
Whether he enters birth in penurious squalor or
in palatial grandeur, he will come to his own SPIRITUAL level again in the end.
Environment is admittedly powerful to help or hinder, but the Spirit's
antecedents are still more powerful and finally INDEPENDENT OF IT.(P)
357
One man's power may prevail against his
circumstances, whereas another man must accept them simply because he lacks both
the power and the knowledge to contend with them.
358
The ugly woman has the right to ask why others
are born beautiful and she not. The deformed man has an equal right to ask why
other men are born well-formed, healthy, virile and not he.
359
We are often not doing the ideal actions, but
those which the circumstances necessitate, which are forced on us for the time
being.
360
We are forced to discover in the end how little
is the freedom which illusion deceives us into believing is our own. We are
drawn to move in environments and mix with people scarcely of our own choice.
361
There was a period when the Roman Imperial grip
on Europe and the Near East was so firmly established, and for so long, that few
could foresee how it could ever be relaxed, let alone removed.
362
He despises the snobbishness which despises
others less fortunate, yet he acknowledges that caste is a fact in Nature. Is
this a contradiction?
363
Caste differences may be accepted but caste
rigidity need not. There ought to be free passage upward for those who seek to
qualify by self-improvement, who have widened their horizons and started to
respond to the meaning of quality.
364
When the low castes rule society, do not expect a
high result because inferior sources must yield inferior results. But if the low
castes rule society, it is because the high castes were indifferent to their
welfare or even exploited them.
365
Newspaper quote: "While a man may inherit wealth
and position he does not necessarily inherit brains and wisdom." P.B.'s comment:
But he does inherit upbringing, atmosphere, and standards.
366
Many individuals may be caught in the wave of a
common destiny, may have to share a group karma.
367
Each of us lives at a certain time in history and
occupies a certain place (or certain places) during that period. Why now and
here? Look to the law of consequences for an answer, the law which connects one
earthly lifetime with earlier ones.
368
The ability or cupidity, the opportunity or
inheritance, which brings a man into the possession of riches, is itself the
product of his karma.
369
If a man can come up out of the squalor,
discomfort, and ignorance of the slums into cleanliness, culture, and refined
living, we may read into it either the favourable working of karma and rebirth
or the power of the person to conquer his environment. But others who fail to do
so may read into it the belief that luck is against them or else their lack of
capacity to overcome environment. Thus we see that some glean a message of hope
from reading the biography of such a man while others glean only frustration, if
not despair. In both views there may be an element of truth but how much will
differ from one person to another.
370
He has unconsciously taken a decision. It lies
there, implicit, within his obedience to, and faith in, the credo or the party
he follows. He is still responsible, still making personal karma.
371
Who is to say whether contributory circumstances
which totally change our plans are merely pure coincidence or really the
writings of the hand of destiny?
372
Duty and destiny must be reckoned together in
one's life account. It is often a matter of not only what one should do but also
of what circumstances allow one to do.
373
Suppose you had to carry the hunchback's cross?
Would you not be bitter? Would you consider God's dealing with you a just one?
374
Nobody has been betrayed, either by God or by
life. We have contributed to, and in some measure earned, the tragic happenings
of our time.
375
When we say that a situation is caused by
circumstances, we mean that it had to happen. That is fate. But does this
imply that nobody is responsible for it, no individual is to blame for it if it
is tragic or distressing?
376
It is quite untrue to say that we are created by
our environment. It is true to say that we are conditioned, assisted, or
retarded by our environment, but it is only a half-truth. We bear within
ourselves a consciousness which, at several points and in different attributes,
is independent of and sometimes quite opposed to all environmental suggestions.
For, from the first day on earth, we possess in latency certain likes and
dislikes, aptitudes along one line of thought and action rather than along
others, whose sum, as they disclose themselves and then develop themselves,
constitutes our personality. Of course, such a process necessarily takes time.
Biological heredity contributes something quite definite toward this result but
former incarnations contribute much more.
377
The face, brain, and form of the body will partly
be molded by his destiny, partly by his character-tendencies and mental
qualities.
378
The bad environment does not create the
bad character. It brings it out and encourages its development. The weaknesses
were already there latently.
379
The man who is born with a silver spoon may have
great talents but never use them. They may die with him, because he never felt
the spur of necessity. Insufficient or moderate means may give a man incentive.
The worse the poverty the greater the incentive. This sounds a hard gospel but
for some men it is a true one.
380
You want your exterior life unfoldment to meet
your own conceptions. But if your have not found your interior harmony with God,
in spite of all your efforts it will never do so.
381
Circumstances or other persons may be
contributory but cannot be wholly responsible for a man's failures and
misfortunes. If he will look within himself he will always find the
ultimate causes there.
382
The average man is not so heroic or so angelic as
all that and soon finds out that his soul cannot rise above his circumstances
and that his nerves are unquestioningly affected by his environment.
383
To regard man as the product of his thinking
only, to ignore the existence and influence of his surroundings, would be to
place him in an utter vacuum.
384
Man's body and mind inherit his past, and the
body can move freely only within the limits imposed by this past karma, just as
a goldfish can move freely only within the limits of its globe of water.
385
He may be predestined to live in certain
surroundings but the way in which he allows them to affect him is not
predestined.
386
Karma is as active in the destiny of great
powerful nations as in the destiny of poor insignificant men.
387
In a rough kind of way, and after sufficient
periods of time have matured, a man's outward conditions will keep in some sort
of step with his inward development.
388
The people one meets, the events one confronts,
and the places one visits may be highly important but they are, in the end, less
important than one's thought about them.
389
A lesson which the multitude has to learn is that
acquiescence in brutality and aggressiveness does not pay in the end any more
than the perpetration of such crimes themselves. Nevertheless, although a people
which acquiesces in the deeds of its rulers has to share the karma of those
deeds, it need not necessarily share all the karma.
390
Providence has made great men of unattractive or
undersized physical appearance, or made them crippled, hunchbacked, lame, and so
on, apparently in order to give the mob a striking lesson that men are not to be
judged by outer appearance alone but much more by inner worth.
391
Because the Mind at the back of the Universe's
life is infinitely wise, there is always a reason for what happens to us. It is
better therefore not to rail at adverse events but to try to find out why they
are there. It may be consoling to blame others for them, but it will not be
helpful. If we look within ourselves for the causes, we take the first step
toward bringing adversity to an end; if we look outside, we may unnecessarily
prolong it.
392
We come normally into higher-class surroundings
if our tendencies pull us to them, or if our actions (karma) justify them. But
in an age of transition such as ours, where social ranks are thrown into
confusion, where democratic levelling of all alike creates ethical and social
chaos, where religion is losing its meaning and materialism prevails, no one is
to be judged by the old rule of appropriate birth, of being in the station to
which God has called him. In any case, neither lower nor higher class escapes
the alternations of suffering and joy, misery and happiness in some way. That is
the human lot.
393
A choice which is thrust upon a man by
circumstances is no choice at all.
394
Our economic condition and our personal history,
our physiological situation and our astrological horoscope all contribute to
making us what we are. There is a spurious peace which is really nothing more
than stagnation and which will be pushed aside or even destroyed with the first
waves of change - whether the change be economic, physiological, or
psychological.
395
Karma is not merely applicable to the individual
alone but also to groups, such as communities, towns, countries, and even
continents. One cannot get away in some particular or other from the rest of
humanity. All are interconnected. One may delude himself, as nearly all people
do, into thinking that he can live his own life and let others go hang, but
sooner or later experience reveals his error. All are ultimately one big
family. This is what reflection on experience teaches. When one reflects on
Truth, he shall eventually learn that, as the Overself, all are one entity -
like the arms and legs of a single body. The upshot of this is that he has to
consider the welfare of others equally with his own, not merely because karma is
at work to teach the individual, but also because it is at work to teach
humanity en masse the final and highest lesson of its unity. When this
idea is applied to the recent war, one sees that the latter was partly (only
partly) the result of the indifference of richer peoples to poorer ones, of
well-governed nations to badly governed ones, of the isolationist feeling that
one's country is all right and if others are not, then that is unfortunate but
their own affair. In short, there is no true prosperity and happiness for any
country whilst one of its neighbours is poor and miserable; each one is his
brother's keeper.
396
Great catastrophes, such as earthquakes and
floods sweep hundreds to their doom, but individuals here and there escape, for
their destiny is different. Such escapes often occur miraculously; they are
called away suddenly to another place or protected by seemingly accidental
occurrence. Thus individual destiny, where it conflicts with collective or
national destiny, may save one's life where others are struck down.
397
If Alexander is to be praised for spreading Greek
civilization as far east as India by the simple process of invading other
countries, then the generals Flaminius, Sulla, and Mummius are to be praised for
spreading Roman civilization by the simple process of invading Greece. There is
a karmic connection between the two.
398
What tradition, family, society, and surroundings
have bequeathed to him, consisting of beliefs, ideas, customs, culture, and
manners, may need revision, examination, sifting, and sometimes even scrapping.
399
There are so many still latent possibilities for
good and evil in most men that only the turns of circumstance's wheel can
develop them.
400
Man changes the world, and the world changes him.
401
Philosophy does not reject the belief in the
power of environments over man. They are important. But, it adds, even more
important is the power of man himself.
402
The study of recompense (karma) reveals that
mankind have to pay not only for what they have wrongly done but also for what
they have failed to do. Such neglect is largely due to this, that man's
intensely personal outlook makes him estimate the character of events primarily
by the way in which they affect his own existence and only secondarily by the
way in which they affect the larger human family to which he belongs. We are all
workers in a common task. This is the inevitable conclusion which shares itself
as soon as the truth of humanity as an organic unity is understood.
403
If you study history and think it over for
yourself, instead of accepting the book-built theories of blind historians, you
will find that the rise of great upheavals among men - whether spiritual or
social, military or intellectual - always synchronized with the birth and
activity of great personalities.
404
History vividly shows us that at certain
psychological periods unusual men arise to inspire or to instruct the age. They
are men of destiny.
405
Every successful man feels this sense of power
supporting him, although the time comes when it also deserts him. Why? Because
the map of his destiny has already indicated this change. Napoleon on St. Helena
felt this loss, this difference from his former state. Disraeli, in his late
sixties, said, "There were days when, on waking, I felt I could move dynasties
and governments; but that has passed away."
406
One of the most impressive biographical facts
about most of these men is the mixture of fate and free will in their lives.
407
It is a fundamental lesson of my world-wide
observation that Heraclitus was completely right when he wrote: "Man's character
is his fate."
408
Character is the root of destiny. An evil
character must lead to an evil destiny.
409
A creative and original mind can undertake work
for his own profit or benefit. If he undertakes it in addition for the benefit
of others, he gains karmic merit. One refers, of course, to worthwhile work.
410
Wherever man goes he still takes his own mind,
his own heart, his own character with him. They are the real authors of his
troubles. Nothing outside will change these troubles so long as he does not
begin to change his psychic life, that is, himself.
411
Fate gives them unbounded faith in their own
future; it forms their character and shapes their capacity to enable them to
carry out an historic task in human evolution.
412
Although it is true that the strong or the
prudent man rules his stars and conquers his circumstances, it is equally true
and often overlooked that the strength and the prudence to do so come from
within, are born in the man much more than acquired by him.
413
Most of the great figures of history - be they
great in war or thought, art or industry - have felt that some higher power than
their own was largely responsible for the upward arc of their career. Napoleon
felt it and said: "I feel myself driven toward an end that I do not know. As
soon as I shall have reached it, as soon as I shall have become unnecessary, an
atom will suffice to shatter me."
414
Responsibilities tend to gravitate to the
shoulders of those who can bear them best.
415
His character was already in existence at birth,
but it is now somewhat modified by environment and experience, by karmic
happenings.
416
Destiny uses certain men to work out its large
public aims yet lets them work at their little personal ones all at the same
time.
417
Men like Lenin and Lincoln - strange as the
conjunction may seem - are the instruments of destiny.
418
It is nonsensical to say that a single man
makes a historical epoch. He is the embodied reaction called to play his
part by the destiny of his times and by the thoughts of those among whom he is
thrown.
419
Destiny uses such a man to fulfil her ends, to
bring about the changes for better or worse. Hence destiny makes or breaks him.
420
History teaches us that the hour produces the
man, yet if we are too addicted to the things of earth, if we have forgotten the
diviner principles of righteousness, truth, and justice, then the man arises to
our doom. The awful chaos of the French Revolution spawned forth after awhile
its predestined figure of Napoleon. He brought the beginning of the end of the
old feudal age in every European country wherein he fought but he brought it
through a holocaust of misery, war, suffering, and bloodshed.
421
To accomplish a notable historic event, two
elements are required - the man and the destiny.
422
Karma may use a person as the unwilling agent for
its decrees.
423
Destiny usually fits its man. What he is tends to
shape what he experiences.
424
The modification of a man's destiny calls for the
modification of his moral character and personality trends as essential
prerequisites.
425
Hitler was a vain and violent man who had
absolutely no conscience, no sense of good or evil other than the barbarous rule
that his own success was the sole good, his own failure the sole evil. In the
vast contours of this century's history, this would-be world dictator will be
seen for what he was and it will then find no other words with which to conclude
its judgement than that Hitler was a criminal lunatic, a pathological and
paranoic creature whose own insanity showed up the general craziness of his
people and of his own groups who followed him in other lands. This is a true
judgement of Hitler the man, but there was also Hitler, the instrument of
destiny.
We can read the cryptic signs of these historic events aright when we read in him the half-conscious karmic agent who broke the decaying foundations of an ageing structure, who hastened the final dissolution of a shallow period which was governed by refined hypocrisies and self-deceptions and materialistic jealousies. Hitler had his part to play in the universal drama, albeit a very wicked one. But this does not for one moment mean, however, that we are to welcome Hitler's birth or to regard him as other than he was - the wickedest of all human beings, the most sinful of all sinners, the most vindictive of his contemporaries, the most barbarous of human creatures, the most devilish of all the enemies of truth and culture. Let there be no misunderstanding about this man who made murder a method of propaganda and oppression a method of government. If history has a place for Hitler, it can be only in her annals of brutality without parallel, falsehood on a gargantuan scale, and aggressiveness raised to the degree of utter bestiality. He has amply illustrated Emerson's saying that all history resolves itself easily into the biography of a few stout and earnest persons, even though his stoutness was devoted to an evil cause and his earnestness to an aggressive aim. This said, we must finish by curling our lips in disgust.
426
Although it is quite true that much of the
vaunted free will of man is quite illusory, it is equally true that most of the
events in his life, which consequently seem so predetermined, grow inescapably
out of the kind of moral character and mental capacity which he possesses. They
are neither merely accidental nor wholly arbitrary. Choice and reaction,
attitude and decision depend ultimately on his psychological make-up and
influence the course of events in a certain way. "Character is fate" - this is
the simplest statement of the greatest truth. Where is freedom for man when
heredity and the history and state of his family and race prearrange so many
physical factors for him?
427
Philosophy teaches us a wiser course than mere
fatalism, a truer one than mere faith in free will. It teaches us that even when
the stars in the firmament appear to work against us, the stars of worthy ideals
will always work for us. It liberates us from anxieties about our horoscope
because it gives us certitudes that the right causes we set going must have
right effects. It gives our life's ship sails and rudder, port and map; we need
not drift.
428
The present comes to us out of the past and the
future is being made in the present. All three are linked together and a
horoscope is simply their map. This is one of the oldest ideas to be found in
human culture, this idea that man's life is subject to a higher power, that he
is personally responsible to a higher law for his actions and that he cannot
escape its retribution for wrong-doing or its reward for righteousness. The
Stoics of ancient Rome had this idea and called it Fate. The Platonists of
ancient Greece had it and called it Destiny. And the Indians, mostly Buddhists
and Hindus, had it and have it and call it Karma.
429
The planets do not control your individual
destiny, but their movements determine the times when the latent karma which you
have earned shall become active and operative. Hence the sky is like a gigantic
clock whose hands point to the fateful hours of human life but it is not a
storehouse of forces influencing or dominating that life.
430
I am not sure but that our modern reformers have
swept away some sound doctrines in their efforts to purge astrology of its
"superstitions." They lose sight of the fact that astrology could never have
been formulated by the thinking brain of man but was essentially a revelation.
This wonderful knowledge could only have been discovered by great seers, whose
lucid clairvoyance compelled the star-gemmed skies to deliver up their secrets.
It is a great pity that the Oriental system is so little known in the West, for
without its aid we shall never come nearer to an impeccable science.
431
The horoscope is a map not only of the present
reincarnation, but also of the relation existing between the ego and the soul.
It indicates what particular lessons have to be learned.
432
The question of astrology comes up afresh too
often these days to let us forget it. If it were wholly true, this predictive
reference to the planets, it could easily be tested and established in the
company of all the respected sciences. If it were wholly false, it could just as
easily be tested and discarded once and for all. But because the correct
appraisal lies at some undetermined point between these two extremes, the
question can only receive a tantalizing and confused answer. Those who reject
astrology totally prove thereby that either they have never or insufficiently
investigated it. Those who accept it totally are in grave danger of denying to
man his gift of limited free will in mind and action as well as of losing their
way in a silly fatalism. Since it is man himself who has made the larger part of
the destiny which he must undergo, it is he who can unmake it. Thus there is no
room for extreme fatalism. Nevertheless, because his individual will is governed
by a higher will, some part of his destiny remains so strong that it is beyond
his capacity to change it. The Overself must surely be granted the simple power
to know, before each reincarnation on earth, the potentialities for virtue and
sin, for spiritual rise and fall, that lie innate within its progeny, the ego.
But this no more commits man to a hopeless fatalism than does the knowledge that
he will eat a couple of meals tomorrow. Let him ask his own reason and past
experience whether these shining points of light in the sky are more baleful
influences on his life than his own weaknesses, shortcomings, egoism, and lack
of self-control. What can they do to him worse than what he can do to himself?
433
Lodovico, the Italian medieval prince, fell into
one trouble after another despite his faithful following of advice given by a
personal astrologer. For there are several different ways of interpreting a
starry relationship - be it square or trine, conjunction or opposition.
Astrology can point more easily and more certainly to its nature, as whether it
be good or bad. But it cannot point to the precise meaning of a configuration in
such detail that all astrologers would agree among themselves. Hence astrology
is not a science so much as an art. The perfect astrologer would have to be
omniscient and dwell far above the common human scene.
434
Astrology was given by the primeval sages as a
revelation to early mankind. No human being on earth could have created out of
his own head this mysterious science of astrology. It was given to help human
beings who still were far from spiritual attainment, as a concession to their
human nature. But when man has come by spiritual advancement, under the grace of
God, directly, or through a teacher, it is not possible to construct a horoscope
that will perfectly fit him because his testimony will always be liable to
modification and alteration.(P)
435
The ancient Roman belief that books are born
under some kind of horoscopical destiny, just like human beings, seems, in my
experience, to have a basis of truth.
436
Overstress of such beliefs as astrology may cause
him to understress or even forget entirely his creative possibilities. They are
both extreme swings of the pendulum. Astrology rests on the ground of karma in
tendencies and deeds. Freedom of decision rests on the evolutionary need to let
man express the creativeness he gets from the Overself. He must put both factors
together to find truth.
437
While lesser lights of the modern literary world
are content to dismiss the subject of astrology with a contemptuous sneer,
England's greatest dramatist treated it with the respect grown of proper
understanding. This is proved by abundant quotations from Shakespeare's plays
that could be made. But advanced astrologers ought to realize the incomplete and
fragmentary nature of their present knowledge.
438
We may defy the karmic law for many years in
matters of the body's health and not have to pay for it until middle or old age.
We may defy it in matters of conduct towards others and not have to pay until a
later birth. But the law is always enforced in the end, always registered in the
horoscopal chart imprinted on the very form of the body and nature of the
personality.
439
Whatever happens to a man is in some way the
consequence of what he did in the past, including the far-gone past of former
births. But it may also be in part the imposition of the World-Idea's pattern
upon his own karmic pattern. If it comes, such imposition is irresistible for
then the planetary rhythms are involved.
440
Were those Romans wrong or superstitious who
returned home if the day's start was unfortunate or marred? Was there nothing
but chance in such accidents? Or were they, as astrologers believe, ill-omens to
be heeded?
441
An Indian astrologer: "The planets do not compel
anyone to be a villain and proclaim from the house tops 'Evil be thou my Good.'
Unique in the history of [the] world's astrological adventure, the Indian
systems have carefully explained that the planets just indicate a rough outline
of future events. Individuals and nations must realize not merely their
potentialities for good and evil, but their limitations as well, as indicated by
planetary configurational patterns, if life is to be lived in peace and
harmony."
442
Man's inner life is fulfilled by rhythms which
are under laws as much as tides and dawns are under laws.
443
Whoever will take the trouble to investigate the
subject can discover that the events of life concur with the changes indicated
in the skies.
444
All we may rightly say is that there is a fated
element in every human life. But how large that element is in each particular
life is generally unknown; what shape it will take is often unpredictable. We
certainly ought not to say that such an element is the sole one. Therefore the
wise man will take no horoscope, however expertly cast, as absolutely inevitable
and no clairvoyant, however reputed, as absolutely infallible.
445
When astrology uses the stars and planets to
explain the events which happen to us as pointers to the good and evil, the
wisdom and ignorance within ourselves, as the prime causes of these
events, it serves a purpose. If, however, it uses them as the real
causes, then it renders us a disservice.
446
Have astrologers ever answered the criticism of
Saint Augustine, that twins born under identical aspects do not have identical
fortunes in life?
447
Do the sparkling planets which circle around our
sun put the thoughts in our heads, the tendencies in our hearts, the words in
our mouths, and the events in our lives? Do they throw roses in one man's path
and rocks in another man's?
448
The first science ever created by the brain of
man was astronomy.
449
The warning prophecies of these clairvoyants are
useful in that they are to some degree what the oracle of Delphi was to
Socrates. Those old Greeks had a wisdom all their own. They were not far wrong
when they saw in unusual good fortune the forewarning of dread calamity; to them
the gods did not desire mortals to remain happy too long.
450
It was a common act for the instructed persons
among the earlier races of man, whether Egyptian or Greek, Roman or Indian,
Chinese or Sumerian, to undertake no important enterprise and no long voyage
without first consulting the will of the gods. And this they learnt within the
secret walls of the temple, or from the lips of some revered holy man, or by
studying the omens given by certain objects or circumstances. Men as gifted and
as astute as Macedonian Alexander did not disdain to make the unpleasant journey
to a corner of the Egyptian desert solely to consult the oracle at the temple of
Ammon. It was here that Alexander, after dismounting from his horse at the door
of this mystic shrine, was told that victory would follow his flag and that the
world would be put into the hollow of his hand. Let us not think so slightingly
of the people who lived before us, but remember that they too had culture,
civilization, and religion.
451
Why is it that a man's own dreams have sometimes
made a correct forecast of coming events?
452
Do the planets work sometimes for and sometimes
against him or are they quite neutral?
453
Astrologers might be called "Interpreters of
Over-Ruling Justice." It is not generally known that in India (although not in
the West) astrology admits that in the horoscopes of advanced persons there
appears what is called the Gurukula. When this is present, the astrologer
takes it for a sign that at any moment Grace may change the character of the
picture thereby presented. It is true that this doesn't appear in the horoscopes
of ordinary persons. This point should be investigated by individuals who are
particularly interested in the subject since it could have an important bearing
on one's thinking.
454
In the horoscopes of ordinary people, in which a
concatenation of several planets called the Gurukula does not appear, the expert
can with reasonable accuracy plot the course of their future life because their
characters are not likely to change very much. But, in the horoscopes of those
few people in which the Gurukula does appear, it is not possible to
prognosticate the future. Usually such persons have a great mission to perform,
whether public or hidden. The individual karma from past lifetimes, even of the
present one, may be changed during the fulfilment of such a mission. Ramana
Maharshi had the Gurukula in his chart, as did Gandhi, and all Masters have it.
Philosophy agrees that karma can be changed, modified or counteracted for the
most part, but there are certain limits beyond which one cannot go.
455
Although astrology cannot be regarded as an exact
science, in the sense that astronomy is, it does offer some useful, informative
clues and probabilities. A man's capacities and talents, the forces in his
character, even some major happenings may be indicated by a horoscope. But
interpreting this chart offers scope for human error.
456
This is not to go back to medieval superstition,
but to go forward to modern, carefully investigated discovery.
457
Scholars and priests of the earliest known
antiquity have drawn on the traditions of astrology to link our human fortunes
with the starry firmament.
458
It is ridiculous for any sceptic to assert that
it is impossible to foretell the future when science itself is doing it
successfully every day of every year. Astronomical science foretells the time of
eclipses of the sun and moon long in advance to the very minute of their
happening. Chemical science foretells what will happen to litmus paper when it
is applied to alkaline or to acid.
459
The horoscope indicates the future only for
ordinary people and can never become a fixed certainty for the spiritually
awakened. For wherever an individual has come under Divine Grace, he directly or
indirectly through a teacher can be rendered independent of his past karma at
any moment that the Divine wills it to be so. The will is free because Man is
Divine and the Divine Self is free.
460
In its practice, astrology is resorted to by its
believers too frequently and for too trivial matters. In its Western
popularization through newspapers, periodicals, and pamphlets, it is presented
so deceptively as to be half-falsified. In its theory only the most honest and
most expert of its practitioners will admit the truth that it is not a precise
science and that its interpretation trembles under the human frailty of its
interpreters.
461
One important use of an astrological horoscope is
principally to detect the presence of new opportunity, and to warn against the
presence of dangerous tests, snares, and pitfalls. It is often hard to make a
decision, when an important crossroad presents itself, if one of the roads leads
to disaster and the other to good fortune. At such a time a correct horoscope
will be helpful in arriving at a right decision.(P)
462
Whoever succeeds in discovering his deeper
identity by penetrating through the personal ego's surface and sub-surface life
will thenceforth cease the efforts to discover his worldly destiny. The oracles
which others seek so eagerly, the turns of the wheel of fortune which they hope
to learn in advance, are left alone that he may enjoy serenity.
463
The receipt of a proposition or the beginning of
a new undertaking or the making of a momentous decision, the founding of an
enterprise or the occurrence of a grave crisis may offer signs which show the
future destiny of the affair or advice as to the course to be taken. Such signs
could be given by a particular phenomenon in Nature or the character of a
particular event. These signals omens auguries and auspices need interpretation
or divination; they may be favourable or unfavourable. It is as if Nature
herself or Karma itself cast a kind of horary horoscope to direct those who are
uncertain about the future or undecided about the present.
464
Those who use the I-Ching or astrological
ephemerides and horoscopes as predictive instruments which are infallible tend
to over-use them in the end and thus become complete fatalists devoid of
self-reliance. Moreover, even apart from the question of infallibility, human
interpretation enters into them, which is certainly not infallible.
465
All our Western education, training, mentality,
and instinct has refused to accept this distasteful fatalism of the Orient, and
so has rejected it utterly in the past. But since the war a wide belief in
astrology has been spreading through Euramerica. Is not its inevitable
consequence summed up in the Muhammedan's exclamation: "Inshallah" ?
466
It is a mixture of wish and desire, fear and
anxiety, which brings them repeatedly to the door of the fortune-teller, the
predictive astrologer, and the like.
467
In most of the future-reading methods which have
come down by tradition, such as Tarot, palmistry, and so on, the left side
represents the past and the right side represents the future. The left eye, for
example, represents receptivity and the right eye represents positivity. The
same symbolism is carried through into ceremonial forms.
468
Does anyone really possess the power of
predicting events weeks or even months before they happen? Accuracy about the
past or present could alone give one some confidence in predictions about the
future.
469
Some who cannot succeed in any other profession
or who are unfit for honourable work, take to fortune-telling and quickly learn
the art of deceiving those who consult them. Sometimes their predictions happen
to come true but in ninety percent of cases they do not.
470
Critics insist that character-readers and fortune
tellers appeal only to the grossest superstitions. One can understand the
attitude of those who are so antagonized by exaggerated claims as to dismiss the
whole subject of destiny and its foretelling with irritated impatience. The old
Brahmin astrologers of India rigidly refrained from allowing their astrological
knowledge to percolate down to the masses, for fear that it would be
misunderstood or misused. This is precisely what has happened today. The
popularization of knowledge in these democratic days is not altogether a good
thing.
471
There are some enthusiastic exponents who, not
content with claiming that every event in a man's life can be predetermined with
the utmost precision, even turn these arts into a creed. I am a believer in the
stellar science, with certain reserves - for I perceive its incomplete and
fragmentary nature - but I have never found that astrology could provide the
spiritual solace for which one looks to religion or philosophy.
472
The situation in the world with its anxiety,
stress, and strain has produced a remarkable phenomena of recrudescence of
fortune-telling and notably of astrology. A whole army has encamped in the midst
of the metropolis which professes to provide its patrons with glimpses of the
events of their future life. I do not regard astrology as nonsense. I believe
there is some basis for the doctrines, but I regard the whole trade of
fortune-telling as having been riddled through and through with quackery. Those
who place their faith in the predictions of these gentry will, in the vast
majority of cases, be sadly disillusioned. The prosperity, fortunate marriage,
and fame which form so common a feature in their venial prophesies prove to be
hollow bubbles that are pricked by the spears of time. The mentality which
accepts every prediction as authentic is as primitive and as moronic as the
mentality which utters it, as in the days of the decline of ancient Rome.
Superstition battens on unsettled minds and fearful hearts, on all those who
feel the need of some assertions about their personal future during the
disturbed epoch. The wise man will refuse to follow the mass of slander, but
will derive his assertions from the study of philosophy and practice of
meditation.
473
However much we pry into the future we do not
come a bit nearer real peace, whereas faithfully seeking and abiding in Overself
gradually brings undying light and life.
474
Predictions were not only unfulfilled but
actually their very reverse happened; this was because they were based on the
false theory of materialism on the one hand and the cynical estimate of human
nature resulting from it on the other.
475
All talismanic precautions, gem influences, and
so on, either amplify or modify the other influences (karmic, environmental, and
personal) which may be at work; they do not stand by themselves. More may be
done in this way by changing the kind of prevailing thoughts, and especially by
keeping out negative harmful and destructive thoughts, together with prayer for
guidance.
476
Given a certain set of characteristics in a man,
it is often possible for the psychologist to foretell in advance how he is
likely to act in a given situation.
477
Some possess an instinctive belief in astrology.
They look constantly to the planets for advice about the right timing of their
moves.
478
He may intuitively know - not reason out - that
certain events will happen even before they do arrive.
479
There is a danger that negative predictions may
also act as suggestions and, by influencing mental or emotional causes, bring
about physical effects which fulfil the predictions.
480
Although the ancients were much addicted to
divination, Socrates counseled the use of one's own reason and judgement in
solving problems, and only when these failed should one resort to divination.
481
There are no lucky house-numbers and no unlucky
ones. If a man has had a series of misfortunes in a certain house, it is not the
fault of its number but the fault of his karma. His evil karma fell due during
that period and would have ripened into sorrowful experiences even if he had
occupied a totally different house with a totally different number. Now karma
arises ultimately out of character for the better and thus ultimately changes
his karma to some extent. Then let him move back into the same house which once
brought him sorrow. He will find that this time it will not do so. Its so-called
unlucky number will no longer harm him.
482
I am a believer in portents. This is one weak
little superstition I allow myself, that the beginning of an event carries quite
an auspicious significance for me.
483
That at times it is possible to foretell the
future, to know beforehand what is going to happen, is a matter of personal
experience with the sensitive man.
484
The "lucky gem" which can thwart the power of
karma and bring a man to the high position which he does not deserve has not
been found; the "unlucky stone" which can deprive a man of the fruits of his
endeavour has not been formed.
485
A warning must be given about astrological
predictions. The readings must be taken with the greatest reserve. Every
astrologer makes mistakes - and, frequently, tremendous mistakes - because the
full knowledge of this science is lost in the modern age and there is only a
partial knowledge nowadays.
486
"He resisted the temptation to introduce himself
[to the woman who later became his wife]; he felt it was not the right moment
either for him or for me - But now, six months later, he knew that the right
time had come." It proved so! Thus the importance of timing in relation to
events is once again illustrated by this short story, and constantly illustrated
daily by the work of astrologers.
487
We may freely leave the future to our stars, if
we know that we can be true to ourselves.
488
It is more important to face the future equipped
with right principles and strong character than with predictions concerning its
details. If we establish good attitudes toward it, we cannot get bad results.
489
Uncritical and imaginative believers will mold,
press, and distort the history of their life and the pattern of their character
to fit the fortune-teller's reading or an astrologer's horoscope. In this task
they mostly succeed, for there are usually some points in any reading or
horoscope which are correct for any person.
490
The astrologically inclined may think they can
sidestep the blows ordained by the stars.
491
If we consider the wide range of possibilities
which the future holds for us, we will make predictions hesitantly.
492
When I was in the teen-age group, I studied
astrology and looked anxiously or expectantly at my horoscope several times each
month. Now I have not seen it for years, and care little what is in it. Why?
493
The accurate prediction of future events is not
something that can be as rigidly scientific as mathematics, for instance. There
are incalculable and elusive factors always at work. Nevertheless, the broad
trend and general ways of events can be forecast with some soundness.
494
Shall we delay our journeys in deference to the
planets?
495
If I have lost interest in having my fortune
told, it is because I have found my real fortune in myself.
496
In dealing with the adverse statements of
fortune-telling, Alan Leo, who was years ago the greatest of British
astrologers, pointed out that these predictions were the consequence of what
would happen if no precautions were taken against them. This attitude of a
modern, Western, European astrologer is interesting when compared with the
predictions made by an Indian or other Oriental astrologer, for their view is
far more fatalistic.
497
Where a horoscope shows that any physical
relationship with women - much more any promiscuous one - is adversely aspected
by the planets, to ignore this warning would simply bring trouble after trouble
in a man's life. However hard, an unmarried chaste state must be accepted.
498
What man really dominates his destiny? The great
person may succeed in modifying it, but the psychological and physical factors
with which the ordinary person starts the course of life are already in his
genes and predicate both character and fortune. He is at the mercy of events
until he learns this secret of modifying and influencing them.(P)
499
We all have to bear the consequences of our past
deeds. This cannot be helped. But of course there are good deeds and bad deeds.
We can, to a certain extent, offset those consequences by bringing in
counter-forces through new deeds; but how far this will be true will necessarily
vary from person to person. The one who has knowledge and power, who is able to
practise deep meditation and to control his character, will necessarily affect
those consequences much more strongly than the one who lacks these.
500
Karma gives a man what he has largely made
himself; it does not give him what he prefers: but it is quite possible at times
that the two coincide. If he is partially the author of his own troubles, he is
also drawing to himself by mental power his good fortune.
501
Some measure of fate, prudence, destiny, must
exist in the world of human affairs if they are to be part of a divine order,
and not of a mere fortuitous chaos.
502
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof say
the apathetic, the sluggish, the inert, and they refuse to look forward. They
experience the evil alright. If time is simultaneous and the future already
exists, what is the use of making any effort? This despairing but plausible
objection overlooks the parallel fact that the future is not fixed for all
eternity; it is always fluctuating because it is always liable to modification
by the intrusion of new factors, such as an intense effort to alter it or an
intense interference by another person. The future exists, but the future
changes at the same time.(P)
503
Both the benign and the malefic are already
concealed in destiny's decrees for the child at its birth. To the extent that
outer fortunes are directly traceable to inner tendencies, to that extent they
are controllable and alterable. How large or how small a part of its life is
quite beyond its free choice and direction is itself a matter of fate.(P)
504
He may feel powerless in the presence of fate,
too diminutive against the vast cosmic power that shapes men's lives, and
overwhelmed by it into apathy or impotence.
505
Resignation to circumstance, adaptation to
environment, coming to terms with the inevitable, and acceptance of the
unavoidable, however reluctant - these have their place as much as the use of
free aggressive will.
506
If it were true that every act of man and every
event which happened to him was predestined in every point, the destruction of
his moral responsibility which would necessarily follow would be as disastrous
to society as to himself.
507
If certain evils are written in our destiny and
may not be avoided by effort, it is still sometimes possible to minimize them by
prudence.
508
Just as threads are crossed and laced to make
textiles on a loom, so destiny and free will are interwoven to make a man's
life.
509
If he had not done this, life would still have
arranged for it to happen; but in that case it would then not be quite the same
nor happen just at the same time.
510
Fate must have its way and impose its will, for
that is its work and power. But man may interfere with what it does by
introducing his own doings, or equally help it in its course.
511
In the somewhat mysterious way whereby fated
decree meshes its gear in with willed free choice, the final result appears.
512
To say that everything depends on fate is an
exaggeration; to say that it depends on one's effort is misleading.
513
With most persons whom one encounters, destiny
has withheld something they ardently desired and persistently looked for.
514
We are not so tightly bound by fate as we think.
515
What man has more than partial freedom? All men
have to receive the come-back of past activities, although the wise and
disciplined ones may counter it to some extent by new actions.
516
The karma is a part of himself and he cannot get
away from it. But just as he may bring some changes about in himself, so there
may be a corresponding echo in the karma.
517
Philosophy never encourages a passive attitude
towards the law of recompense, but it does not fall into the error of these
misleading schools of thought which hold out false hopes.
518
No one transgresses against these higher laws
without self-injury, quite apart from the punishment which the transgression
itself invokes.
519
Karma brings us the results of our own doing, but
these are fitted in the World-Idea, which is the supreme law and shapes the
course of things.
520
There are occasions when it is either prudent or
wise to practise Stoic submission. But there are other occasions when it is
needful to do battle with the event or the environment.
521
The old arguments about fate and free will are in
the end quite useless. It is possible to show that man has the full freedom to
improve himself and his surroundings, but it is also possible to show that he is
helpless. This is so because both sides of the matter are present and
must be included in any account of the human situation. The World-Idea renders
certain events and circumstances inevitable.
522
To strive hard for a worthwhile aim but to resign
oneself to its abandonment if destiny is adverse to its realization, is not the
same as to do nothing for it at all but to leave that aim entirely to fate. To
eliminate within oneself the avoidable causes of misfortune and trouble but to
endure understandingly those which are the unavoidable lot of man is not the
same as to let those causes remain untouched whilst blindly accepting their
effects as fate.
523
Only so far as personal planning obtains
destiny's sanction will it be able to achieve its goals.
524
Socrates: "Uncouth, uncivilized, unkind - destiny
decreed all those things for me, but I, through perseverance, managed to change
a little."
525
Trying in the wrong way hinders us and trying in
the right way helps us. Rebellion against fate does not help; acceptance and
correction of fate does.
526
It is not easy to know when to follow destiny's
lead or when to fight it.
527
When we find inward peace, we cease to struggle
with the fates.
528
The ordination of the universal life includes the
ordination of man's life.
529
We have only to look back and sum up the events
of a whole lifetime to read in them the one sure meaning of it all. The future
is pre-existent in us from the very beginning. Although it is not so hard-set
that a change in ourselves will not modify it by reflected reaction.
530
He may do all he can to circumvent his destiny
but although he can succeed in some particulars he cannot in others. For
instance, a person cannot change the colour of his skin. But the kind of
experiences which fall to his lot in consequence of that colour are to some
extent subject to his influence and character, while his own emotional reaction
to them is to the fullest extent certainly subject to them.
531
Karma does not wholly cancel freedom but limits
it. If the present results of old causes set walls around him, through a better
character and an improved intelligence new causes may be initiated and other
results be attained.
532
There is no complete freedom but, on the other
hand, there is no complete necessity. There is a confined free will, a freedom
within bounds. Philosophy makes, as the basis of this freedom in man, both the
intelligence it finds in him and the Divine Spirit from which that intelligence
is derived.
533
Those who object to the doctrine of
self-determined fate, who put forward an absolute freedom of will, have to show
how free will can change the results of a murder. Can it restore life to the
corpse or save the criminal from death? Can it remove the unhappiness of the
murdered man's wife? Can it even eliminate the sense of guilt from the
conscience of his murderer? No - these results inevitably flow from the act.
534
When we uphold the existence of free will, we
uphold implicitly the existence of fate. For enquiry into the way the thought of
freedom arises in the mind reveals that it always comes coupled with the thought
of fate. If one is denied, then the other is thereby denied also.
535
What is the use of fooling oneself with stirring
phrases about our freedom to mold life or with resounding sentences about our
capacity to create fortune? The fact remains that karma holds us in its grip,
that the past hems us in all around, and that the older we grow the smaller
becomes the area of what little freedom is left. Let us certainly do all we can
to shape the future and amend the past, but let us also be resigned to
reflective endurance of so much that will come to us or remain with us, do what
we may.
536
Whoever imagines that all his actions are
entirely the result of his own personal choice, whoever suffers from the
illusion of possessing complete free will, is blinded and infatuated with his
ego. He does not see that at certain times it was impossible for him to act in
any other way because there was no alternative. And such impossibility arose
because there is a law which arranges circumstances or introduces a momentum
according to an intelligible pattern. Karma, evolution, and the individual's
trend of thought are the principal features of this pattern.
537
The human will's freedom has its limits. It must
in the end conform to the evolutionary purposes of the World-Idea. If, by a
certain time, it fails to do so voluntarily, then these purposes invoke the
forces of suffering and force the human entity to conform.
538
What will happen to each one of us in the future
is not wholly inevitable and fixed, even though it is the logical sequence of
our known and unknown past. It is still unset and uncrystallized - therefore
changeable to a degree. That degree can be measured partly by the extent of our
foreknowledge of what is likely to happen and the steps taken to circumvent it.
The ability to evade these events is not a complete one, however, for it is
always subject to being overruled by the will of the Overself.
539
Why not preordain events by using a hard will?
540
When the belief in destiny is allowed to paralyse
all energy and overwhelm all courage, it should be re-examined. When the belief
in free will is allowed to lead men into egoistic arrogance and materialistic
ignorance, it also should be re-examined.
541
Had his choice between roads been made
differently, his life would certainly have been very different, too. But was his
power of choice really as free as it seemed to be?
542
Is it possible to distinguish between a
calamitous destiny which we all-too-obviously fashioned for ourselves and a
calamitous fate for which we seem utterly unresponsible?
543
Until a certain time the course of a man's
destiny is within his area of influence, and even of control; but beyond that
time it is not.
544
That which delays the expression of a man's
dynamic thought in modifications of his environment or alterations of his
character is the weight of his own past karma. But it only delays; if he keeps
up the pressure of concentration and purpose, his efforts must eventually show
their fruit.
545
The law of consequences is immutable and not
whimsical but its effects may at times be modified or even neutralized by
introducing new causes in the form of opposing thoughts and deeds. This of
course involves in turn a sharp change in the direction of life-course. Such a
change we call repentance.
546
If fate is absolute, then is prayer useless?
Ought men, like the medieval Sufi, Abdullah ibn Mubarak, never ask God for
anything?
547
Many men unwittingly break the higher laws of
life. Others, either knowing of them or believing in them, fail to understand
them well enough to apply them personally.
548
While men are not yet ready for the conscious and
deliberate development of their spiritual life, they must submit to its
unconscious and compulsive development by the forces of Nature.
549
Is it believable that situations which are
themselves the product of man's will and thought should not be alterable by that
same will and thought? No! - let him accept his responsibility at this stage of
their history as he admitted it at the beginning stage.
550
Which of us has the power to change the
consequences of his former actions? We may make amends, we may be penitent and
perform penances. We may counter them by the opposite kinds of good deeds. But
it is the business of karma to make us feel responsible for what we do and that
responsibility cannot be evaded. In a certain sense, however, there is a measure
of freedom, a power of creativity, both of which belong to the godlike Higher
Self which each of us has.
551
What has happened has happened and there is
nothing we can do about it. We cannot rewrite the past, we cannot repair our
wrong actions, we cannot put right the wrongs we have done, the hurts we have
given, or the miseries we have caused both to others and to ourselves. But if
the past records cannot be changed, our present attitudes towards them can be
changed. We can learn lessons from the past, we can apply wisdom to it, we can
try to improve ourselves and our acts, we can create new and better karma. Best
of all, having done all these things, we can let go of the past entirely and
learn to live in the eternal now by escaping into true Being, the I am
consciousness, not the I was.
552
He submits himself to karma as mutely and as
will-less-ly as a sheep to the slaughterer's knife.
553
Are some faults of conduct, weaknesses of
character, quite incorrigible? Give the man enough time, that is to say, enough
lifetimes, and he will be unable to resist change and reform, that is to say,
unable to resist the World-Idea. God is will in religious parlance.
554
Does he really choose to do these acts or are
they already preordained by fate? Is his activity genuinely free and what he
wanted to do or is his liberty a mere illusion and his desire mere reflection?
555
A man may conquer a continent but himself be
conquered by a power before which he is as helpless as a babe - the power of
divine retribution. The harvest of his aggressive war will then be gathered in.
556
If the currents of life are running adversely, if
you suffer an irreparable calamity, why not submit and save your energies and
your tears, says the fatalist.
557
In the end, and whether by his own surrender or
by outside compulsion, his own personal purposes have to be subordinated to the
World-Idea's lines of force.
558
Must fate (karma) always take its course? Are we
helpless automatons? It seems a chilling thought.
559
If, after exhausting all our efforts, nothing
comes of them, then we shall have to accept that as Destiny.
560
Greek tragic drama shows how event after event
may turn against a man at the bidding of a higher power - destiny. It shows how
little human will can do to avert catastrophe or avoid disaster when the
universal will is set in an opposite direction.
561
The law of recompense is not only one to compel
man to right thought, feeling, and conduct. On a higher plane, there is the
Overself. Were there no rewards for goodness and no punishment for wickedness,
either here on earth or somewhere in a death-world, it would still be a part of
man's highest happiness to express the compassion that is, through the Overself,
his purest attribute.
562
This deadly doctrine of karma seems to leave us
no loophole. It catches us like animals in the iron trap of fate.
563
A higher power than human will rules human lives.
Yet it does not rule them arbitrarily. Even though man does not control its
decisions, he does contribute toward them.
564
There is a certain amount of destiny in each life
as the result of past karma, but there is also an amount of free will if it is
exercised. Every happening in our lives is not karmic, for it may be created by
our present actions.
565
We need not dally idly in the stream of
happenings because we believe in destiny. The Overself is deeper than destiny.
The Overself is omnipotent; the related links of the chain of Fate fall to the
ground at its bidding; it is worse to disbelieve in the Overself and its
supremacy than to believe in destiny and its power - not that the Overself can
outwit destiny, it merely dissolves it.
566
In the final chapter of A Search in Secret
India, I provided some hints of the cyclic nature of life, writing of how
"every life has its aphelion and perihelion" (paraphrase). Now the time has come
to particularize this statement and cast some light on the great mystery of fate
and fortune. The knowledge of this truth renders a man better able to meet all
situations in life, both pleasant and unpleasant, in the right way. "With an
understanding of the auspicious and inauspicious issues of events, the
accomplishment of great Life-tasks becomes possible," taught a Chinese sage.
According to the Chinese wisdom, Tao, in its secondary meaning, is the divinely
fixed order of things; under this there are four cycles of history. The first
two are "yang" and the last two are "yin." This law of periodicity refers to
individual lives no less than to cosmic existence. Every human life is therefore
subject to periodical changes of destiny whose inner significance needs to be
comprehended before one can rightly act. Hence the method of grappling with
destiny must necessarily vary in accord with the particular rhythm which has
come into the calendar of one's life. Every situation in human existence must
find its appropriate treatment, and the right treatment can only be consciously
adopted by the sage who has established inner harmony with the law of
periodicity.
The sage seeks to do the right thing at the right moment, for automatic adjustment to these varying fortunes. This is called, in the Chinese Mystery School teaching, "mounting the dragon at the proper time and driving through the sky." Hence I have written in The Quest of the Overself that the wise man knows when to resist fate and when to yield to it. Knowing the truth above of the ebb and flow of destiny, he acts always in conformity with this inner understanding. Sometimes he will be fiercely active, other times completely quiescent, sometimes fighting tragedy to the utmost, but at other times resigned and surrendered. Everything has its special time and he does not follow any course of action at the wrong time. He is a free agent, yes, but he must express that freedom rightly, because he must work, as all must work, within the framework of cosmic law. To initiate the correct change in his activities at the incorrect time and amid wrong environing circumstances would be rash and lead to failure; to start a new and necessary enterprise at the wrong moment and amid the wrong situation of life, would also lead to failure. The same changes, however, if begun at another time and amid other conditions, will lead to success. The sage consults his innermost prompting, which, being in harmony with truth, guides him to correct action in particular situations accordingly. We can neither dictate to him as to what he should do, nor prescribe principles for his guidance, nor even predict how he is going to respond to any set of circumstances.
The proper course of action which anyone should adopt depends ultimately upon his time and place both materially and spiritually. In short, human wisdom must always be related to the cosmic currents of destiny and the divine goal. Man must be adaptable to circumstances, flexible to destiny, if his life is to be both wise and content. Unfortunately, the ordinary man does not perceive this, and creates much of his own unhappiness, works much of his own ruin. It is only the sage who, having surrendered the personal Ego, can create his own harmony with Nature and fate and thus remain spiritually undisturbed and at peace. As Kung-Fu-Tze (Confucius, in Western parlance) pithily says: "The superior man can find himself in no situation in which he is not himself." The wise man defers action and waits if necessary for the opportune and auspicious moment; he will not indulge in senseless struggles or untimely efforts. He knows how and when to wait and by his waiting render success certain. No matter how talented he be, if his circumstances are unfavourable and the time inopportune to express them, he will resign himself for the while and devote his time to self-preparation and self-cultivation and thus be ready for the opportunity which he knows the turn of time's wheel must bring him. He puts himself into alignment with the hidden principle which runs through man and matter, striking effectively when the iron is hot, refraining cautiously when it is cold. He knows the proper limits of his activity even in success and does not go beyond them. He knows when to advance and when to retreat, when to be incessantly active and when to lie as still as a sleeping mouse. Thus he escapes from committing serious errors.(P)
567
Your karma led you into this horror but your
cleared sight can now lead you out of it. This will act as a healing. The
conjunction of your character, temperament, and qualities with the time,
surroundings, and history being what they were, the result was what it was. Now
the more you can displace the so-called freedom of the ego, submit to the call
of Overself, the more you will share the greater possibility which it hides.
568
The yearning to free himself from the limitations
of personal destiny and the compulsions of outward circumstance can be gratified
only by losing the sense of time.
569
Karma comes into play only if the karmic
impression is strong enough to survive. In the case of the sage, because he
treats life like a dream, because he sees through it as appearance, all his
experiences are on the surface only. His deep inner mind remains untouched by
them. Therefore he makes no karma from them, therefore he is able when passing
out of the body at death to be finished with the round of birth and death
forever.
570
The view that karma operates like an automatic
machine is not a wholly true one; this is because it is not a wholly complete
one. The missing element is grace.
571
The privileges of enlightenment can only be
justified on the basis of karma - "My own, my own, shall come to me," as the
poet intuited.
572
He will be content to leave the mutations of his
future in the disposal of the higher power. He knows that it is rendered secure
by his obedience to, and conformity with, the higher laws.
573
Man may attempt to defy his destiny, but unless
he has emancipated his spirit, it will get him.
574
It is sometimes asked, why should the Overself,
through its grace, interfere with the workings of its own law of consequences?
Why should it be able to set the karma of a man at naught? If the recurrence of
karma is an eternal law, how can any power ever break it or interfere with its
working? The answer is that the Overself does not violate the law of
consequences at any time. If, through a man's own efforts he modifies its
effects upon him in a particular instance, or if the same is brought about by
the manifestation of Grace, everything is still done within that law - for it
must not be forgotten that the allotment selected for a particular incarnation
does not exhaust the whole store of karma existing in a man's record. There is
always very much more than a single earth-life's allotment. What happens is that
a piece of good karma is brought into manifestation alongside of the bad karma,
and of such a nature and at such a time as completely to neutralize it, if its
eradication is to be the result, or partially to neutralize it, if its
modification is to be the ended result. Thus the same law still continues to
operate, but there is a change in the result of its operation.
575
There is no other judge of your deeds than the
law of recompense, whose agent is your own Overself.
576
Even if human karma were rigidly implacable and
against it human will sadly impotent, divine Grace is still available and divine
Mercy is yet accessible.
577
Do your best to mend matters, the best you can,
then leave the results to destiny and the Overself. You can't do more anyway.
You can modify your destiny, but certain events are unchangeable because the
world is not yours but God's. You may not know at first what events these are,
therefore you must act intelligently and intuitively: later you can find out and
accept. Whatever happens, the Overself is still there and will bring you through
and out of your troubles. Whatever happens to your material affairs happens to
your body, not the real YOU. The hardest part is when you have others dependent
on you. Even then you must learn how to commend them to the kindly care of the
Overself, and not try to carry all the burden on your own shoulders. If it can
take care of you, it can take care of them, too.
578
The working of a man's karma would never come to
an end if his egoism never came to an end. It would be a vicious circle from
which there would be no escape. But when the sense of personal selfhood, which
is its cause and core, is abandoned, the unfulfilled karma is abandoned too.
579
The law of recompense has no jurisdiction over
the eternal and undivided Overself, the real being, only over the body and mind,
the transitory ego.
580
On this question of fate and free will, Ramana
Maharshi was the supreme fatalist. He once said, "Make no effort to be active or
to renounce activity for your effort is your present. What is predestined to
arrive will arrive. Leave things to the Supreme Power, you cannot choose to
renounce or to keep."
581
If a man comes into alignment with the
Overself-consciousness, he is compelled to give up his earlier position of free
will and free choice - for he no longer exists to please the ego alone. The
regulating factor is now the Overself itself.
582
How wonderful it would be if a man could fall
asleep one night and wake up in the morning finding himself fully enlightened,
that is, someone else!
583
What we have yet to learn is that destiny makes
its chesslike moves according to our thinking and doing. Whoever will offer
himself unto the Overself, and will be blessed by its benediction so that he
becomes as one inspired, may then perceive this strange figure at his side
working for the good of man.