1
A wise system of healing would coordinate physical
and psychological, artificial and natural, dietary and spiritual treatments,
using some or all of them as a means to the end - cure. But as the spiritual is
the supreme therapeutic agent - if it can be touched - it will always be the one
last resort for the desperate and chronic sufferers when all other agents have
had to accept defeat.
2
Just as philosophy seeks a full rounded development
of the psyche in its approach to spiritual self-realization, so does it seek a
full adequate treatment in its approach to the problem of curing sickness. It
recognizes that even if a sickness began with evil thoughts or wrong feelings or
disharmonious courses of action, these have already worked their way into and
affected the physical body and brought about harmful changes in it, either
causing its organs to work badly, or introducing poisons into its blood system,
or even creating malignant growths in its tissues. Therefore physical means must
also be used to treat these physical conditions, as well as the spiritual means
to get rid of wrong thoughts and discordant feelings. Both methods should be
applied together to make an adequate treatment. Consequently philosophy does
not, like Christian Science, deny the utility or necessity of ordinary medical
treatment. On the contrary, it welcomes such treatment, provided it is not
narrow-minded, m aterialistic, or selfishly concerned more with fees than with
healing.
3
Why should we not unite working on the body by
physical means with working on it by the healing power of the higher self? Why
not give the latter a chance to repair its own work, since the physical-mental
ego is its own projection?
4
There is no need to make the mistake of those cults
which avoid mention of the body and its sicknesses, which pretend that both are
not there. Let the fact of their existence be there but, at the same time, hold
the thought of the Overself's superior power over them.
5
The art of healing needs all the contributions it
can get, from all the worthy sources it can find. It cannot realize all its
potentialities unless it accepts them all: the homeopath along with the
allopath, the naturopath along with the chiropractor, the psychiatrist along
with the spiritual ministrant. It does not need them all together at one and the
same time, of course, but only as parts of its total resources. A philosophic
attitude refuses to bind itself exclusively to any single form of cure.(P)
6
The services of a physician skilled in the knowledge
of diseases and in the care of their sufferers should never be slighted.
Orthodox allopathic medicine deserves our highest respect because of the
cautiously scientific way it has proceeded on its course. It has achieved
notable cures. But it also has many failures to its debit. This is in part due
to the fundamental error which it accepts in common with other sciences like
psychology - the materialist error of viewing man as being nothing more than his
body. Only by setting this right can it go forward to its fullest possibilities.
Its deficiency in this respect has forced the appearance and nourished the
spread of unorthodox healing methods, of which there are many. Most of these
have something worthwhile to contribute but unfortunately - lacking the caution
of science - make exaggerated claims and uphold fanatical attitudes, with the
result that they too have their failures and incur public disrepute. The extreme
claims m ade by credulous followers and unscientific leaders of mental healing
cults revolt the reason of those outside their fold and lead to distrust of the
justifiable claims that should be made. But they have enough successes to
justify their existence. Only by a mutual approach and interaction will they
modify each other and thus bring a truly complete system of healing. They are
already doing this involuntarily and therefore far too slowly. They have to do
it willingly and quickly if the world of sick and suffering patients is to
benefit by the full extent of present-day human knowledge.(P)
7
The cults which allow healing power only to the
Spirit, which would deny it to all other means or media, even as secondary
causes, are too extreme and fanatical.
8
When either faith healing or naturopathic treatment
is too passive, when it refrains from timely co-operation with nature by the use
of positive means, be they nontoxic medicines or essential operations, it
becomes guilty of sacrificing the patient to its own narrowness.
9
I consider W.J. Macmillan's view on healing
one-sided and incomplete, but thought my foreword to his book [The Reluctant
Healer] was not the place to criticize him.
10
No healer's treatment is always successful nor is
the cure always permanent. Failures are many and relapses are common. Those who
shout and splutter from evangelistic public platforms exhibit the ego's
arrogance, not the Overself's quiet humility.
11
They hold the view which conforms with their
presuppositions, their inborn tendencies and governing prejudices, in short,
with their little ego, not their impersonal higher Self. This is why there are
so many contesting theories, why the body's ill health may cause the mind to be
governed by negative thoughts, why this conflict of authorities shows their
worthlessness.
12
All these cults and groups which acknowledge the
power of mind over body but which leave out the acknowledgment of the body's
power over the mind, are out of balance and so out of truth to that extent. This
statement may be a matter of arguable theory with partisan adherents of either
side, but it is a matter of tested fact with creative leaders who consciously
exercise both powers.
13
The physical cure will surely be accelerated and
the physical therapy will surely be helped if mental and spiritual healing
agents are also joined in. In this way the individual limitations of the method
of treatment being used will be overcome and each healing agent will contribute
to bringing about a complete and successful result.
14
It is foolish to believe that there is any
particular healing method which has only to be applied for it to be universally
and equally successful or that there is any particular human healer who has only
to be visited for one to be cured.
15
A careful study will elicit the fact that although
all these various systems differ in their tenets of belief, they have several
similarities of technique. A scientific examination of these similarities will
yield the basis for determining the universally correct tenet of belief. Such an
examination is necessary because the systems themselves have not sufficient
interest in a scientific approach to make it themselves and are too
self-interested to check their alleged cures with sufficient care. Even were
they truly independent intellectually - which they are not - they are usually
tied up to some form of religious creed. All these systems are dogmatic ones,
being mostly based on some personal revelation. They depend primarily on faith.
The treatments include very much more than faith alone.
16
The nature-curist who denounces all allopathic
drugs as being satanic, the homeopath who can see physical salvation only in his
own minute doses of medicine, and the conventional allopath who rejects the
first as a quack and the second as a fool - each illustrates in his own person
the defect of an ill-balanced mind. Suffering humanity needs all the help it can
get. It cannot afford to reject either nature-cure, homeopathy, or allopathy. It
needs all three and even more.
17
The practice of disidentification from the body
detailed in The Quest of the Overself is not the same kind of mental
treatment as Christian Science. The latter begins and ends with dogmatics,
whereas the other is a rising by strict reasoning from the known facts to the
unknown. Constant and repeated thinking about these arguments must go on until
they are your own, until you have achieved thorough conviction.
18
A defective theory in healing must sooner or later
lead to a contradiction in practice. The rejection of natural yet physical
methods of supplementing and completing the higher ones explains why so many
Christian Scientists have recourse, in hours of desperation, to the medicos they
denounce and the systems they despise.
19
A prudent and balanced approach to the question
requires us to make use of the services of allopathy as well as homeopathy,
psychotherapy as well as physiotherapy, spiritual healing as well as mesmeric
treatment, herbalism and even surgery - if and when needed - if we are to make
the fullest use of developed human knowledge and skill.
20
Susruta, a Hindu physician and writer who lived in
the pre-Christian era, aptly and expertly expressed the philosophic view of
healing when he observed, "He who knows but one branch of his art is like a bird
with one wing."
21
When comparing one Oriental country's healings
with Occidental ones, or pagan centuries' cures with Christian ones, what the
diligent student as well as the experienced traveller may find is that the
techniques, mediums, and procedures are often the same, only the names of the
agents using them are changed.
22
Why should anyone reject the physician and his
medicines for the osteopath and his manipulations, or both for the healer and
his prayer? The power which cures works through all three; if it did not, if it
worked through a single channel alone, the others would never have been needed,
found, and used.
23
Whether it is religion or science, official
allopathic medicine or less established homeopathic medicine, each can make us
its beneficiary and has its contribution to give us. But each also has its
undesirable side, too often a sectarian narrow intolerance of the other. The
world of knowledge, culture, techniques, skills, arts, and worship should be
open to all seekers - whether their quest is for truth, God, information, or
healing - and not dictatorially limited in its offering to the established, the
traditional, the successful, and the conventional.
24
Is there a science of spiritual healing? If there
is, we can discover it only by freeing ourselves from the cultist standpoint;
for, with conflicting doctrines and different methods, Christian Science,
Spiritism, Roman Catholicism, Hypnotism, and Couéism have yet produced similar
results. It follows that these healings do not prove all their claims but may
prove a part.
25
Every healer, orthodox and unorthodox, has his
percentage of failures, although the figure is generally unknown. Spiritual
healing is not a universal cure-all. It is complementary to other systems.
26
From the moment that a healing cult fastens itself
to the Bible exclusively, it narrows its vision and limits its power.
27
When truth gets into the hands of fanatics they do
it harm. One man teaches that all disease is caused by wrong diet only,
but another teaches that it is caused by wrong thinking only. But truth says
that both these causes are operative in man's world, as well as several others.
28
It will have to be recognized that, since we exist
simultaneously on two levels, all our problems of suffering and sickness must be
looked at from two points of view if they are to be adequately seen and grasped.
There is the common and familiar immediate one, which deals with them as they
are in appearance. There is the uncommon and unfamiliar alternate one, which
deals with them as they are in reality. An orthodox physician treating a case of
disease takes the first viewpoint. A Christian Science practitioner treating the
same case takes the second one. Neither takes a wholly adequate and truly
philosophical viewpoint.
29
The services of medicine and surgery, despite the
harm done by their errors and experiments, have been and are too great not to be
appreciated at their true worth.
30
Fanatic followers of naturopathy as well as of
Christian Science reject the services of surgery. Yet do the men among them ever
stop to think that the act of shaving, which they perform daily, is itself the
performance of a minor surgical operation? For the hair is as much a tangible
part of their anatomy as is the bony skeleton. This also applies to finger
nails, toe nails, calluses, and corns.
Such opposition to surgery on the part of those who are unorthodox in their views of healing is based partly on blind fanaticism and partly on blind ignorance. The excessive attachment to their own particular system prevents them from seeing its true place and surgery's true relation to it. Natural methods should be tried first, surgical methods only last. If natural methods are tried too late or tried without result, then it is quite proper to resort to surgery if any hope lies there. They should be given their chance in the earlier stages of a disease but if they are not, if the disease has advanced to a serious or chronic degree, surgery may fitly be considered, either alone or in conjunction with them.
Even in divine healing, the spiritual force may still use a surgeon through which to express itself. It does not necessarily have to use only a saint to do so. Spiritual healing completes and does not displace the conventional allopathic or the unorthodox physical healing systems. It does not supplant but supplements them.
31
Opposition to the new and powerful drugs is not
because of their ineffectiveness. That they produce swift and curative results
is admitted. The opposition is instigated by the harmful effects upon other
organs or parts of the body subsequent to the cure, and sometimes accompanying
it.
32
As the science of medicine becomes more reverent,
it will bring the spirit to the healing of the body in addition to its medicine.
33
Life on earth is so short, so beset by dangers of
many kinds, so exposed to our own ignorance and Nature's indifference, that we
cannot afford to turn our eyes away as do the Christian Scientists from the
discoveries and knowledge of men who have devoted their years to patient
sacrifice and research for the alleviation of human sickness.
34
It is usually wise to consult a physician, wiser
still to consult a specialist. Why reject the knowledge they have accumulated,
the experience they have gained? But blindly to follow their advice is quite
another matter. Here a critical judgement is needed, for medicine is immensely
far from being the perfect science that mathematics is.
35
So long as orthodox medicine fails to recognize
the mental or emotional origin of so many cases of sickness, so long will its
cures be temporary and incomplete.
36
To reject the valuable contribution of surgical
art is to neglect human knowledge of anatomy and human capacity to co-operate
with Nature. Thousands of years ago, a gifted Hindu writer and medico even
acclaimed it in these words: "Surgery is the first and highest division of the
healing art, least liable to fallacy." Exaggerated, perhaps, but it is certain
that the ancient Hindus knew and practised a well-developed form of this art -
even including plastic surgery - but it mysteriously disappeared in the course
of time. The successive foreign invasions and their massacres of intellectuals
may have had something to do with it.
37
Gandhi denounced surgical techniques as unnatural
and urged his followers to have nothing to do with them. Yet he lived to modify
his view, for when stricken by appendicitis he accepted the help of those very
techniques. The operation was successful. The medieval Church placed a ban upon
those who performed any operation upon the human body that was accompanied by
the shedding of blood. The modern Church has removed the ban and in its
hospitals permits the extensive practice of surgery. Thus the erroneous theory
of Gandhi and the erroneous superstition of the Church were corrected by time,
which brought the facts of experience into play.
38
I have always associated hospitals with gloom,
with drabness, with ugliness, and with despondency. The association was once
falsified in California and again in Denmark. But not till I was taken through
the hospital founded by Padre Pio at San Giovanni Rotondo did I associate such
intensely positive values as cheerfulness, beauty, hopefulness, and the last
word in modernity with such an institution.
39
On transplants: If they have any positive value at
all, amid all the negative ones, it is a blind and mistaken attempt to renovate
human life - blind, because ignorant of life's higher laws of rebirth and karma,
mistaken because leading always to greater evils than those it seeks to remedy.
40
The surgical operations to transfer certain glands
from animal bodies to human ones may be successful in their vitalizing results
on sexual stimulation, but their karmic results are deplorable. The man who so
abuses Nature as to permit a lower grade creature's glands to be engrafted into
his higher grade body is himself punished by Nature. He risks causing himself to
be reborn with a deformed or even crippled body.
41
Official established and organized medicine is
like official established organized religion. It has much that is true but there
are also many weeds growing in its garden. We should not be afraid to venture
outside its limits.
42
Every teaching which rejects the knowledge and
skills gained by science, in order to put forward its own point of view -
however "spiritual" this may be - condemns itself in theory and cripples itself
in practice. It may do some good and help some people because of the modicum of
truth inherent in it, but it would be able to do more good and help more people
by accepting the results of science and adding them to its own. This is just as
true of scientific medicine itself as it is of a medical-mystical cult.
43
Iconoclastic science came into the world and in a
few short centuries turned most of us into sceptics. It may therefore surprise
the scientists to be told that within two or three decades their own further
experiments and their own new instruments will enable them to penetrate into,
and prove the existence of, a superphysical world. But the best worth of these
eventual discoveries will be in their positive demonstration of the reality of a
moral law pervading man's life - the law that we shall reap after death what we
have sown before it, and the law that our own diseased thoughts have created
many of our own bodily diseases.(P)
44
There are diseases of the mind quite apart from
those of the body, yet too often neither the sufferer nor those in his
surroundings will recognize the morbid symptoms. He considers himself, and they
consider him, normal.
45
The moderns refuse to split up Mind into
Consciousness and its Contents and they will not believe that Consciousness
per se has its pure, unalloyed existence. Hence the utter confusion of
modern psychology. Yet it is the light of this Consciousness which enables their
own busy intellects to function and their bodies to believe themselves to be
conscious entities. Everything in Nature works by Its reflected light.
46
The inner nature that is rent by unresolved
conflicts and unhappy divisions needs healing just as much as the outer body
that is afflicted by pain-bringing disease.
47
Psychoanalysis and psychiatry have to deepen
themselves if they are to fulfil their own best possibilities. The emotional
vacillations and mental perturbations of the lower self must be studied and
understood, but this will never be adequately achieved if the existence of the
higher Self is denied or ignored.
48
The psychoanalysts, who are so busy pointing out
the complexes of other people, have themselves one supreme complex that
dominates and obsesses. It is psychoanalysis itself!
49
The mistake of the analysts is to treat lightly
what ought to be taken seriously, to regard as a parental fixation or sex
repression what is really the deep spiritual malady of our times - emptiness of
soul.(P)
50
It is needful to look into the self in depth, to a
level where psychoanalysts are seldom able to reach. For the real aim is to
penetrate through thoughts to Thought itself, through the personal being to the
impersonal one. Further, according to ancient tradition, not only must
meditation penetrate deeply, it must also be continuous.
51
The work of a true psychoanalysis and a wise
psychiatry is only preparatory to the work of mysticism. Yet in some cases it is
necessary and valuable to a true philosophical mysticism. In clearing the mind
from preoccupation with maladjusted personal problems, it makes more possible
the opening of the gate of impersonal spiritual consciousness.
52
These complexes and neuroses begin to lose their
power from the first moment that we begin clearly to recognize and frankly to
acknowledge their existence. This indeed is the primary requisite of successful
treatment, whether it be self-applied or whether it be the work of someone else.
53
Without psychological delving into, and treatment
of, the emotional conflicts and moral problems, the conscious complexes and the
subconscious tensions which absorb so many of the individual's forces and
obstruct so much of his spiritual aspirations, any technique remains incomplete.
Such a therapeutic activity is not separate from the religio-mystical one, but
indeed forms a necessary part of it and confirms its purpose.
54
Half our maladies arise from a sickness which
philosophic discipline alone can heal, from a divided, unbalanced, distorted,
warped, or unintegrated psyche.
55
There are deformed minds as well as bodies,
diseased emotions as well as physiques. Everyone wants to heal the one but few
want to heal the other.
56
The psychology which believes its study of man to
be complete with its study of his reflexes, complexes, emotions, and behaviour
is superficial. It has still to get at and explain his consciousness of
those things.
57
There are two essential divisions in the
psychological constitution of man. The first is the realm of thoughts, the
second is that which is aware of the thoughts, the thinker. Modern psychology
has done nothing more than grope in the first realm; it has been quite unable to
find the final verified truth about the second one, about the mind that is
behind all thoughts.
58
The psychoanalyst, the psychological counsellor,
and the psychotherapist can all study and practise philosophy with benefit to
their professional work. Having done so, they can then play a useful role in
treating those who would like to undertake involvement but are emotionally or
psychologically too egocentric, too easily upset and unbalanced, or suffering
too much from psychoses or neuroses, to be able to rise to its impersonal
demands. There is of course a semi-lunatic fringe always around religion,
spiritualism, and occultism, with a smaller one around mysticism, for there is
some sort of ego satisfaction to be found there. The philosopher is not
concerned with this atmosphere.
59
Too many unbalanced persons prematurely occupy
themselves with occultism, hypnotism, spiritualism, and even mysticism. It is
better not to encourage them, for that will only make their present condition
worse. Their first need is to get straightened out and for this they need
outside help. The proper help is not easy to find. If it is professional and
paid for such as that given by psychologists, psychoanalysts, or psychiatrists,
it may have only a very limited value. The kind of help that would be really
efficient would be a combination of these professional skills with philosophic,
intuitive, and psychic skill.
60
More patients suffering from mental disorders drag
out miserable lives in hospitals than those suffering from other forms of
sickness, although sickness may kill more people more quickly. This is only a
part of the price modern man is paying for his "civilized" way of life.
61
Freud's outlook was too materialistic, his
interpretation of psychological processes too mechanistic, his personal
experience too one-sided to permit him to adequately solve the human problem.
Nevertheless he presented a good start in opening up a neglected mental
hinterland to science. Adler advanced beyond Freud. Jung advanced beyond Adler.
Psychoanalysis has indeed made a useful contribution, amidst all its errors and
exaggerations. It has brought into light what was formerly and unhealthily
hidden in darkness. It has said what needed saying but what nobody had the
courage to say. It has helped people understand their character better. But this
said, its work is useful only on its own level, which is much inferior to the
philosophical one.
62
Insofar as he can bring anyone to see himself as
he is, the psychiatrist may prepare him - at a price - for this quest or, if he
is particularly materialistic, may hinder his patient from it.
63
Those who take only a casual interest in their
mental health will not take a serious interest in philosophy.
64
There has never been in incarnation so high a
proportion of neurotics, psychotics, and mildly unbalanced, destructive,
violent, or largely mad persons.
65
Everybody can recognize a bodily deformity -
whether it be his own or another's - in an instant, whereas hardly anybody
recognizes a mental deformity until weeks, months, or even years have passed:
sometimes it is never recognized at all.
66
Ignorance of the laws of psychic well-being is not
less dangerous because it is so common.
67
There is a legitimate place for experiment in the
applied sciences: it contributed so much to their development. But in the matter
of psychology, consciousness, psychical investigation, and the religious inner
life, the need for guarding sanity and safeguarding morality is surely there.
68
To tell yourself that you are getting better and
better every day, when the cause of your sickness is making it worse and
worse, is to lead the mind into illusion, error, and self-deceit. Suggestion has
its proper place and usefulness, but it is only a part and not the whole of
psychotherapy.
69
Pseudo-practical psychology is a system for
turning thoughts into things, mental images into physical realities, and airy
nothings into solid somethings - by believing in them.
70
The psychoanalytic method has only a limited
usefulness, as its theory has only a quarter truth. If adopted and followed
unrestrainedly it may do as much harm as good, or sometimes even more. It may
make the patient so self-absorbed that he is deprived of the broad interest in
life necessary to a healthy mind. It may cause him to go on seeking for
childhood experiences that never existed, for the alleged roots of his trouble -
a process over which people have sometimes wasted years. He may read extreme
sexual meanings into his night dreams and his day thoughts, and thus come to
absurd attitudes towards life. And finally, the patient may become so dependent
on the analyst that he is a helpless creature unable to cope with the world by
his own willed and personal response.
71
The psychoanalyst may do useful work in bringing
to the surface an earlier happening which gave a suggestion whose work upon the
mind and feelings led ultimately to illness.
72
The psychoanalysts work busily on the ego all the
time, thus keeping the poor patient still imprisoned in it. But a reference to
the Overself might help him really to get rid of some complexes.(P)
73
To how many persons has the average Freudian
psychoanalyst brought true inner peace? If statistics were available they would
be disillusioning. Why is this? It is not for lack of shrewdness, training,
research, and practice on the part of the analysts. The basic answer is that
both he and his patients are moving in a vicious circle; all their attention is
being kept within the ego, that combination of animal and lesser human traits
which has yet to discover its greater self. They seek escape, healing, and
freedom where there is none. In that greater self alone the good, the true, the
beautiful, and the healthy resides.
74
Psychoanalytic practices may be quite right in
their place and for their purpose, but the technique used has no place in
philosophy. We do not consider it necessary to delve into an aspirant's
childhood in order to explain his present mental condition. For as we believe
that his past stretches away into numerous earlier reincarnations, it is
obviously insufficient and inadequate merely to take the past of the present
reincarnation alone for analysis. Nor do we consider it of any use to try to
explain his repressions and frustrations by attempting to interpret his dreams.
For we consider most dreams to be merely a worthless melange of thoughts,
events, and experiences of the previous twenty-four hours. The really
significant dreams are very few.
75
Freud confessed that he had never had any mystical
experiences or mystical feelings. He therefore went on to dismiss all such
things in purely materialistic terms, making the silly assumption that because
he had never had them, therefore it was not possible for anyone else to have
them.
76
Freud thought that by searching in the darkest
corners of our souls, by putting the most sexual interpretation upon the most
innocent thoughts and dreams, we would develop our personalities and free our
souls! This distorted and pseudo-deep psychology is typical of present-day
theorists who offer their last surmise as a first discovery. No man who has
practised the profound meditation which philosophic self-knowledge enjoins, will
hear without a smile the Freudian psychoanalysts' doctrine that human nature is
but a bundle of obscenity. Even Jung knew better.
77
Psychiatry takes itself too seriously and so
overestimates the worth of its findings. If it could pick up a sense of humour,
its results would be more accurate.
78
It is unreasonable to conclude that because so
large a part of human activity must be attributed to the impulses of sex, the
whole of human activity is attributable to that same source. Those analysts who
do so have something to learn about the unconscious quest of every creature for
its own spiritual self-realization.
79
The psychiatrists, being always properly qualified
doctors of medicine, are expected to be more reliable in diagnoses, prognoses,
and treatments than other healers. But experience shows exceptions. Others have
succeeded in curing when the official psychotherapists failed. Why? It is
because the unofficial ones have quite often dropped the materialistic belief
that the causes of mental disease must be sought in the physical brain
alone. The psychiatrists do not reckon with a mind having a consciousness apart
from the body.
80
It is interesting to note that the author of works
on Psychosynthesis, Dr. Assagioli, has dropped use of the word "spiritual" and
replaced it by "transpersonal."
81
"All of my work has been directed towards myself,"
said Jung; "all of the books are but by-products of an intimate process of
individuation."
82
Those psychoanalysts like Freud who find no
Overself but only complexes in the human being are outgrown by those like Jung
who do find this holy core.
83
Those who get into the hands of many
psychoanalysts are likely to stay in their hands forever or until the requisite
fees can no longer be afforded.
84
Psychoanalysis has harmed patients by its
stirring-up of muddy waters that would have been better cleared of their dirt;
by its pose as a strict science when it is only a fanciful pseudoscience; and by
its narrow biased and misleading explanation of religion, which substitutes
worship of the body's sex instinct for worship of the universe's higher power.
Even the introversion which it so greatly excoriates as bad, is so only when it
is unwilling and unable to fasten its interest on anything outside the small
circle of its petty ego. Otherwise, it unfolds the capacity to intuit directly,
to think metaphysically, and to meditate spiritually.
85
Hubbard's book on Dianetics had a wide circulation
in this country. Despite repulsive literary style and egoistic literary
arrogance, it contains information about practices which are of real worth. When
I discussed it with the late Dr. Karen Horney, the leader of a more advanced,
less materialistic school of psychoanalysis in New York, she thought that the
danger of the patient evading the necessary work upon himself and his character
by using this method as a seeming shortcut to the goal was very real. She
thought that consequently this method was to be avoided. There is danger, but I
do not agree that it should be completely avoided. Much of the danger could be
eliminated by combining a part of the Dianetics technique with the analytic one,
while avoiding the services of professionals of both schools.
86
Too much harping upon the unhappy childhood or
adolescence of a person, or upon his unfortunate adult experiences, all in the
name of psychoanalysis, is a mistake. The negative things in a man's past should
be impersonally examined, the lessons in them carefully extracted, and then he
should be done with it. It is better for the analyst to lift him up than to keep
on pressing him down in this way. Similarly, the idea of writing down one's past
- whether in a diary or a book - to act as a safety valve and get rid of it, is
erroneous. It merely makes the past more powerful when it ought to be forgotten.
A more positive attitude to the present and the future ought to be built up, and
this is not to be done by dwelling on the miserable periods of the past.
87
The psychoanalysts have made it fashionable to
search for a guilt complex, or to invent one if it is non-existent, and then to
get rid of it as something utterly detestable, harmful, and evil. Yet insofar as
it humbles its possessor, it may render a necessary and even beneficial service.
Its opposite number, the smug self-righteous assurance that he is quite a fine
fellow, may lead a man just as much into detestable and harmful ways.
88
Highly neurotic persons are particularly eager to
find a guru (or an analyst), as he or she affords an opportunity to enter into
an intimate mental-emotional relationship centered round the neurotic's ego,
thus feeding it still more. But the food here is "spiritual." Quite clearly
philosophy, throwing the burden of self-salvation on their own shoulders, would
be distasteful.
89
Those who can no longer cope with the life of
today or with themselves and their experience of today are segregated and put
into homes or institutions for the mentally disturbed. May it not be that there
is something wrong with society itself that it has brought them to this state?
90
The neurotic person moves in a small world which
is solely concerned with his own feelings and his own desires. All his thoughts
are centered in his little self. How can he be released from such a prison? One
way is to become interested in the lives of other people, helping them so far as
he can. Another way is to become interested in understanding the World-Idea,
participating consciously in its workings. His temperament will make it
difficult for him to follow either of these ways. If, however, he is earnestly
seeking release, the attempt to follow either of these ways will attract help
from outside himself.
91
When men and women become so completely occupied
with their own affairs that thought or feeling for others is entirely absent and
the point of extreme obsession with self is reached, they are liable to go mad.
It is certain that many of this type find their way into lunatic asylums or
mental hospitals.
92
Schopenhauer was not altogether theorizing when he
expressed the view that the unconscious mind retreats in the end from every
effort at self-expression, because the sufferings and pains of consciousness
cause it to return to its own primal and peaceful state.
93
In any madhouse one may see patients sitting for
hours and staring into space, a vacuous expression on their faces. Outwardly
they not only have these resemblances to the yogis but they too live in a kind
of sequestered retreat, they too have in their peculiar way renounced the world
and its affairs.
94
Most negative traits belong to the feelings of
adolescence, most positive ones to those of real maturity. It is when the
negative ones appear in adults that they become neurotic and must be treated as
psychic sickness.
95
Through ignorance of the World-Idea or through
disobedience to their revelators and teachers, neurotics get worse and become
psychotics. They are to be found in both camps - the religious or cultist
believers and the sceptical materialists.
96
Too many of these neurotics are too full of
unstable egoism to have their emotional complexes soluble by any other
psychological treatment than a robust and direct attack upon these complexes. A
mushy sentimentality will merely prolong the life of such a complex.
97
Neurotics are moody, sometimes very attractive
with their gay and brilliant charm, but sometimes repulsive with their black
despairs and criticizing tantrums.
98
When anyone attaches immensely more importance to
something than it really has, there is the first sign of neuroticism.
99
Some people become neurotic through too much
strained activity, but others become neurotic through too little!
100
The neurotic, whose habitual reaction is
entirely impulsive and quite unreasoned, may yet be intellectual or cultured or
artistic. But in this matter of reaction he is too dangerously close to the
animal level of evolution, with its instinctive passional response to stimulus.
101
It is a tragic fact that there are many
psychoneurotic individuals and others suffering from mental disorders, who are
under malign psychic influence. Whatever treatment is given such individuals,
including those who are now receiving institutional care, might be more
successful by having the patients take up residence at an altitude of not less
than five thousand feet.
102
The electric shock and deep-freeze therapies
used by several psychiatric institutions may achieve temporary success, but the
price will be exacted later.
103
Where a thought of fear constantly recurs and
plunges him into anxiety or even despair against all the evidence of fact and
reason, he is no longer normal but is the sufferer of a phobia.
104
Sufferers from the manic phase of mental
disorder are unstable in temperament and soon change their aims, policies, or
goals, for none of these is clear enough.
105
In our studies, the term "the unconscious" is
not used in the narrow meaning of certain arbitrarily selected innate trends, a
meaning given it by the psychoanalysts, but in a broadly scientific sense, as
containing in potential latency all the possibilities gained in the conscious
life and all the deposits of former earth lives, and not only the personal
possibilities, but also the super-personal or cosmic ones.
106
It may be that the patients who are advised by
their analysts to take up painting pictures as a form of therapy benefit by the
concentration involved in the work, as well as by the relaxation of transferring
their thoughts for a while from their own self-affairs.
107
There are different ways of escape for those who
have problems. Some of them, such as drink and sex, are frankly acknowledged to
be so; others are less easily recognized as such and these include art and
religion.
108
Professor Stefan de Schill, psychoanalyst: (1) A
compulsion neurosis, of which there are several kinds, is caused by a
person (technically called "a compulsive") feeling guilty over unclean thoughts.
His dry washing of hands is an outer symbol of his attempt or wish to get rid of
them. Or his feet swinging, fingers tapping the table, and ear-pulling are
nervous habits which betray tension. (2) Any good standard work on psychiatry
deals with these habit patterns, these neuroses, which annoy or irritate others.
109
In the catatonic state, the whole force of the
person is turned inward and concentrated upon an idea or a picture or a
happening which may be of a purely mental kind. They may or may not be aware of
what is happening around them but they are unable to leave the condition at
will; it must pass away of its own accord.
110
What has the person who is obsessed, insane,
paranoic, or hysterical really done? He has fixed his attention on a particular
thought, idea, belief, or mental picture and he will not let it go. If the
thought contradicts reality, we call him insane.
111
In changing thought for the better, one of the
first activities is to cleanse it of undesirable attributes, to wash them away
by positive energetic willed control, immediately reacting to their appearance
with a very definite mental exclamation of "No!" A mind filled with negative
qualities cannot possibly be a healthy mind and is certainly unsuitable for high
spiritual flights.
112
Neurotics talk about their quest but too often
fail to apply its disciplinary principles, live in a perpetual muddle because
they consider reasoning and planning to be anti-spiritual, and remain indecisive
and unsettled because they are swaying from one emotion to another. They are
easily excited, elated, or depressed. The fact is too often ignored that they
have to go through a first stage in which they simply prepare themselves as
grown-up human beings before trying higher flights. This is as much in their own
interests as in society's, for they will then be better able to deal with others
and help themselves. Surely it is more prudent to take up an ideal which is not
too far off, which may be an intermediate one that seems reachable and
realizable. But they must recognize this situation for what it is, practise a
humble patience, and not try to put the burden of duty elsewhere. They are
really looking for someone to nurse them out of their neurotic condition which,
of course, means a passag e from emotional adolescence to adult responsibility.
113
Too often the emotionally sick are excessively
possessive and will not let go of someone.
114
The neurotic turns minor situations into great
crises.
115
Freud thought that giving emotional support to
distressed persons would probably come through forms of hypnosis or
self-hypnosis. Today more and more use is made of methods of relaxation,
imaging, suggestion, meditation, positive thinking, and kindred ways of
countering stress or improving healing.
116
The practice of hypnotism to help others
psychologically or to heal them physically cannot be recommended
indiscriminately. Just as there are dangers in the surrender of one's body and
will to an invisible spirit-entity in mediumistic passivity, so there are
dangers in their surrender to a visible human entity in mesmerized passivity. It
should not be practised - if it is practised at all - more than is sufficient to
give a needed initial impulse to start the patient's constructive energies. If
he is subjected too long and too often to this controlling influence of another
person while in this passive inert condition, his willpower can only get weaker
and weaker until he is ruined. For if the mind has opened itself up to accept
control and receive suggestions from one outside source, it will do so from
other outside sources too. In the end its individuality will be destroyed and
its capacity for self-protection lost.
117
Although hypnotism is useful for some nervous
illnesses, its "cures" are not reliable. When carefully and conscientiously used
by the right person, it may be helpful; but it is also exceedingly dangerous in
the hands of the wrong one.
118
The Theosophical denunciation of hypnotism as a
black art is too sweeping. Hypnotism can be good or evil. That depends partly
upon the intentions with which it is practised, the depth of knowledge of the
operator, and partly upon the methods used. In the field of healing it may offer
useful although often merely temporary relief. The same is true of the field of
psychological and moral re-education. If the hypnotist is more than that, if he
is also an advanced mystic, it is possible for the alleviations which he brings
about to be of a durable nature. Thus the vice of alcoholism can be and has been
at times cured instantaneously. The changes are brought about by the impact of
the hypnotist's aura upon the patient. When this occurs and when the hypnotist
places his will and mind upon the suggestion which he gives, there is a
discharge of force dynamically into the patient's aura. It is this force that
brings about the change, provided the patient has been able to fall into a
passive, sleepy con dition. In the case of an advanced mystic, the various
physical techniques which bring about this condition are not required. It is
then enough if the patient has sufficient faith and is sufficiently relaxed. The
mystic can then accomplish the discharge of force merely by gazing intently into
the patient's eyes.(P)
119
The mild use of tobacco and the mild indulgence
in alcohol are better in the end than the sudden breaking away from them under
the spell of a hypnotic "cure." For in the one case the addict still has some
room left for the development of self-control, whereas in the other, not only
has he none but he is liable either to relapse again or else to divert his
addiction into some other channel which may be not less harmful and may even be
more.(P)
120
Hypnotism can bring him to a kind of peace but
it will not be the real one - only a copy, as drugs also bring.
121
No one can learn the art of thorough
self-control by putting his will under someone else's control and his mind in a
state of helplessness. Hypnotism, mesmerism, and suggestion may be useful as
momentary helps or temporary palliatives but they do not solve the problem of
attaining self-liberation. They may even be permanently useful when applied by a
man to himself but he who most needs their help least possesses the willpower
needful to apply them.
122
Hypnosis should not be resorted to lightly, nor
used ordinarily, but should be left to treat chronic cases.
123
More than half the cases reported cured by
hypnotic treatment were found by one investigator to have had their symptoms
temporarily lulled only, the diseased condition or bad habit returning in a
worse form than before within a few weeks, a few months, or at least within
one-and-a-half years. Thus the patient merely deceived himself about being cured
and unwittingly allowed the disease to continue its ravages unchecked by other
treatment; hence its later aggravation.
124
It is true that with hypnosis, symptoms of
deeper psychological maladjustments may be banished, but the psychological
difficulty will remain and may break out in a more serious form elsewhere. This
is the greatest limitation on the therapeutic use of hypnosis. It is effectively
applied in psychology, not as a cure, but as a bridge to the subconscious mind
to locate causes of maladjustments and phobias for other types of therapy.
125
If the hypnotist's patient is given the
suggestion to rely on himself rather than on the hypnotist, this should overcome
the objection to hypnotism as having a weakening effect on the will.
126
The most exaggerated claims have been made on
behalf of medical hypnotism. Dr. Alexander Cannon for years diagnosed ailments
by using someone as a professional hypnotic subject, but the truth is that the
subject will only give a diagnosis either of what the patient believes is wrong
with himself, or of what someone else present believes. The subject picks up the
thought in the other person's mind rather than penetrating into the true nature
of the disease itself. Cannon also professed to read the past incarnations of
people by the same means, and I once had amusing proof of the truth of this
criticism. A lady whom I had met and who was exceedingly ambitious and
conceited, who could only conceive of herself playing the most historic roles
whether in the past, present, or future, once went to him for a reading. The
hypnotized medium said that she had been Cleopatra. Later the lady told me this
with great excitement as convincing proof of the fact that she had been
Cleopatra. Hypnotism ha s enough of a case to offer for scientific study without
running into farcical extremes or fantastic assertions.
127
Hypnotism is morally wrong because it is the
imposition of one person's will on another person. It is also practically
ineffective because its results are mostly transient and the patient relapses
later into his original or even a worse state. This is because it is an attempt
to cheat karma and to sidestep evolution, but the Overself of the patient will
not allow that to happen. Hence hypnotism's failure, for it is an artificial
attempt to do the patient's own walking for him. Every man must in the end do it
for himself. The hypnotist who cures me of the drink habit leaves me just as
weak-willed afterwards as I was before, nay, even more so. But if I develop my
own willpower and thus cure myself of the habit I get both a permanent cure and
a stronger character.