The human situation is a paradox. We are at one and the same time inhabitants
of a world of reality as well as a world of appearance. A true human life must
embrace both aspects, must be spiritual as well as physical, must integrate the
intuitive as well as the intellectual.
SITUATION
Daily life as spiritual opportunity
1
All worldly experiences may become doors to divinity
if interpreted aright.
2
Human experience is our laboratory for higher
experiment. The world is our school for spiritual discovery. The vicissitudes of
personal circumstance are our field for ethical achievement. The great books
written by illumined individuals from antiquity till today are our guides.
3
Those who complain that their opportunities for
meditation, study, travel to India, and so on are nil, and that therefore they
have no possibility of spiritual growth, need not despair. The common life
regarded in an uncommon light, the ordinary activities engaged in from a
different standpoint, become part of a spiritual path through which development
is possible.
4
If life is a process of gaining education through
experience and reflection, it is also a process of correcting errors and
approaching truth, of clearing illusions and perceiving realities.
5
The ego naturally and understandably revolts
bitterly against calamities which are put upon it by chance, by destiny, or by
any other apparent cause outside itself. The quester must not accept this
emotion but ought to separate himself from it. In this way he advances at a
spurt on his quest.
6
Life presents him from time to time with occasions
for improving character and strengthening its weaker places. But whether he
accepts them as such, or lets his ego follow its habitual trends without
opposition, is his choice.
7
The various experiences through which we have
passed, reflectively and analytically instruct us; the immoderate desires we
have checked repeatedly, strengthen us; and the wandering thoughts we have
concentrated determinedly, tranquillize us. Life never runs to waste if it thus
is attuned to the notes of this quest.
8
Life is our real school, for it provides the chance
to acquire virtue and discipline evil, to nurture the mind and clarify its
thoughts.
9
If he can bring himself to look upon events when
they flow upon him as being intended to elicit his qualities and exercise his
powers, and thus give him the chance to cultivate them, he will learn to
acknowledge and accept the responsibility of choosing whether those qualities be
positive or negative, whether those powers be good or bad.
10
No experience is a wasted one when it is treated
philosophically, when not only its final results but every moment of it is used
as material for his strivings toward the ideal and his understanding of the
True.
11
No situation or circumstance is really counter to
self-liberation. Each one may be used for enlightenment.
12
Here, in this physical world, the ego is put to
school. Here it learns lessons, sins and suffers, yields to passion and then
checks it, responds to intuition and is led upward.
13
All activities in the world are an opportunity
both for self-study and for objective awareness of the self in each situation.
An intensified longing for the way itself, rather than a too great concern with
the particular steps along the way, will clarify these efforts.
14
The experiences of daily living in the world
become, for the quester, occasions for working on himself, for co-operating with
the World-Idea as it concerns himself.
15
When every situation which life can offer is
turned to the profit of spiritual growth, no situation can really be a bad one.
16
The kind of environment in which he lives may
hinder or hasten a man's mystical development, but every kind of environment can
contribute towards his understanding of life and therefore towards his general
spiritual development.
17
In the end each experience incites the living
entity to unfold the powers qualities and characteristics already within itself
but still unexpressed.
18
The whole of his everyday experience can be
brought within the area covered by the Quest. Indeed it must be so brought if
the self-division from which ordinary unquesting man suffers is to be avoided.
The ills and calamities of life, as much as its joys and boons, will then
contribute toward his understanding and growth.
19
Regarded in this way, every experience becomes an
instruction, all life a spiritual adventure.
20
He sees in the end that all his life and business,
relationships and contacts in the world really constitute a contest with his own
self; that all have the forming and finding of himself as the ultimate result
and ultimate fulfilment.
21
Life on earth for us is not to be a goal in
itself, but a means to the goal. All its experiences are to be used to shape our
character and increase our knowledge and, above all, to bring us nearer the
discovery of, and identification with, our Overself.
22
Everything, every experience, good or bad,
pleasant or unpleasant, may be turned into a pointer towards our true nature, a
reminder of the high quest which all human beings are here on earth to follow,
whether consciously or not.
23
Each experience of human existence offers at least
one clue, generally more, to the hidden secret of being, the Overself.
24
If we accept the existence of a higher power
behind life and the universe and if, further, we believe that infinite wisdom is
an attribute of this power, then, finally, we must also accept life as we find
it and as we humanly experience it.
25
There is no problem which does not carry within it
a hidden meaning, no person associated with us who does not bear within himself
a hidden message. As soon as we rise above the level of their appearance, and as
long as we stay on that level, the problem shows us the way to solve it and the
person plays his true note in the harmony of our lives.
26
It requires a strong faith to believe that even in
the midst of the direst distress, of the gloomiest hardship, what happens is
sanctioned by, and under the rule of, divinely ordained laws and that it has a
rational and higher meaning which we should seek to extract and heed. Those who
lack this faith bear strain-ridden faces that betray no inner calm. Yet it is
only a single step to turn around and start the journey from inner wretchedness
to inner radiance.
27
The penetrative mind of the deep thinker finds in
time that life in this world is not only life in illusion but also in pain. Yet
for him to stop with this discovery is to stop at an intermediate stage on the
way to truth. He must travel beyond it and learn the hidden cosmic laws and thus
come to understand the magnificent goal toward which all this passage through
worldly existence is leading.
28
All the power behind the cosmos insists on meeting
cause with effect, action with reaction, evil with retribution.
29
What controls the course of our lives? Fate
is something which descends on us from outside ourselves and to which we have
made no visible contribution - as in the death of a beloved one. Destiny
is something which arises out of our own causation.
30
Throw out the idea of coincidence. Remember there
is a World-Idea. There is meaning in life, in its events, happenings, karmas,
meetings, and opportunities.
31
The troubles and inconveniences of life do not
come to us without the knowledge and sanction of the higher power. Therefore
they do not come to us without some reason.
32
The man who is ignorant of the higher laws, such
as the law of recompense, may still display sagacity in certain situations if
his character is good and his intellect sharp. But if they are not, then he will
display only fatuity.
33
The central message of philosophy to the modern
era is that man is not isolated but supported by a friendly power, not left in
the dark but surrounded by helping hands.
34
There is a higher destiny behind all the
experiences which the aspirant undergoes. Although purificatory work may at
times have brought hardships to him and to those whom he loves, still he must
recognize that it may also have afforded protection against dangerous
possibilities from which he and they have been saved.
35
Knowledge is the crying need of the hour,
knowledge of the higher laws governing the life and fortune of human beings.
36
The man who hesitates to accept the idea of
rebirth must confess, in his frankest moments, that he cannot reconcile the
sufferings around him with faith in a benevolent power.
37
The teaching of reincarnation, that every
individual enters repeatedly a new life on earth, carries the sister teaching of
compensation. The two constitute the most plausible teaching about the suffering
of man which he has ever been offered. This teaching sets in place under
universal law what otherwise seems mere chance.
38
The nearer he comes to this insight the larger is
his acceptance of life. Each event is seen to be either inevitable, just, or
right. No news is ever so bad that there is no good behind it. Less and less is
he inclined to attempt to reform others or to meddle in their affairs. More and
more he sees that there is wisdom and purpose at work in all happenings, and
that the law of recompense never ceases to operate.
39
In the end, after so many births, all these
experiences must lead to the mystical rebirth.
40
If you live in harmony with Life it will unfold in
perfect sequence the exact experience which you need.
41
There is no situation in the life of a quester, no
incident and no contact, which is not a parable to be penetratively read and its
inner meaning adequately elucidated.
42
If he works faithfully on the quest, every
experience which is essential to his inner growth will gravitate to him, every
thing or person needful to his development will be drawn to him, subject to some
synchronization with his personal karma. He, on his side, ought to welcome those
situations which can be used to strengthen his inner life.
43
Nothing in his experience is to be condemned but
everything is to be understood. It is there because its lesson is needed.
Similarly, no one in his experience is to be despised but everyone is also to be
understood. Each is there to test or tempt, to teach or uplift.
44
The friends of a man who was thrown out of work
into unemployment asked, "Why should this evil happen to him? He is so upright
in character and so scrupulous not to harm others. Yet he has been without work
for the past three months and there is none in sight!" This is one way, the
commonest way, of looking at the matter. But the habitual attitude towards
events is often an inferior one. It is the ego's attitude. It is possible to
regard unemployment from another and superior standpoint, a more impersonal and
less egoistic one. For this question, like many others, is part of the larger
and ultimate question, "Why am I here on earth?" Only when the answer to this
second one is correctly found will the answer to the first one be correctly
found. The unemployed man will see his situation not as an evil to be shunned
but as an experience to be studied. If he does this calmly and properly, he may
find that certain deficiencies in himself have to be supplied, or faults
remedied, or capacities developed. With the acceptance of such a discovery, the
lack of work will go and a cycle of more fruitful activity than ever before will
come. For the Infinite Intelligence which placed him here also provided the
necessary conditions for his existence. Where these conditions are not
immediately favourable or discoverable, that circumstance does not nullify this
statement, for then it is intended to educe his latent resources, to force him
to make the efforts needed to develop his character and intelligence, to
stimulate the growth of his energies, capacities, and qualities.
45
The fact that an event has happened or that an
experience has arrived must have some significance in a man's life. It could not
be there unless he had earned it or unless he needed it. If he is not willing to
meet it from this approach and deal with its effect impersonally, he will miss
most of its lesson.
46
The experiences which come to him and the
circumstances in which he finds himself are not meaningless. They usually have a
personal karmic lesson for him and should be studied much more than books. He
must try to understand impersonally the inner significance behind these events.
Their meaning can be ascertained by trying to see them impartially, by
evaluating the forces which are involved in them, by profound reflection, and by
prayer. Each man gets his special set of experiences, which no one else gets.
Each life is individual and gets from the law of recompense those which it
really needs, not those which someone else needs. The way in which he reacts to
the varied pleasant and unpleasant situations which develop in everyday life
will be a better index to the understanding he has gained than any mystical
visions painted by the imagination.(P)
47
Every important event occurring to him who follows
this path has an inner as well as an outer significance, for it traces back to a
karmic origin which is specially selected to promote his self-knowledge and
self-purification.
48
If he will look upon each situation when it comes
as a new lesson to learn, or an old one to learn better, he will gain precisely
what he needs just at the time he needs it. Books can only seldom speak with
exactness to his personal condition, for they are written to suit too many
individuals and they are too general to be quite pertinent to his own personal
requirements.
49
If his growth requires a drastic change in his
surroundings or his circumstances, be sure it will happen.
50
The whole world carries a message - nay,
innumerable messages - to the man with ears to hear.
51
Every event, happening, and action-consequence
carries its message to those concerned. Too often that message is the need of
abandoning negativity or animality, of becoming positive or disciplined.
52
Some events happen to a man or some people come
into his life to stand as symbols representing a truth of human existence
generally, or a fact of inner life, or a principle of ethical, moral, or karmic
law. The situation offers a lesson, or a warning, or an instruction or
challenge.
53
Experience is apparently of value only insofar as
it leads to thoughts about the experience, but actually it has another and
hidden value - in the subconscious mind.
54
The education of self which is provided by
experience is an almost subconscious process.
55
The lessons remain long after the problems
themselves have died.
56
There is no school of philosophy where instruction
is so regularly given as the school of life itself.
57
There is no substitute for personal experience, no
more effectual way to learn the lessons of human existence than to see with
one's own eyes and feel with one's own body. This said, philosophy neither
justifies nor approves this way, but only explains why it is the commonest one.
58
Every generation must learn these lessons afresh,
must find by its own experience that evil traits will invite the purgation of
suffering. Technical advance can be kept for and maintained by the next
generation, but spiritual advance is a highly personal and individual matter. It
drops out again when the man himself drops out of circulation. This is why real
historians who happen also to be deep thinkers tell us that mankind's moral
nature changes only slightly during the centuries. The group has to learn its
moral lessons all over again but some units in that group need not.
59
In life we learn that truth, principle, knowledge,
or information best which we teach ourselves.
60
Reflection and imagination, analysis and
anticipation, rightly used and harmoniously combined, can supersede experience.
Indeed, they are forms of experience. But, being under our individual control
and direction, they can be used as instruments to save us long-drawn and
emotionally painful results.
61
Why should we individually undergo every possible
experience? Can we not, by creative imagination, intuitive feeling, and correct
thinking, save ourselves the need of passing through some experiences? This is
so, but it is so only for those who have developed such faculties to a
sufficient degree.(P)
62
Ironically enough, pain and suffering are not
always necessary. But only the few understand this. They may learn quietly from
philosophy within a few years what humanity at large must learn brutally through
suffering, and relearn again in every epoch.
63
Experience is an expensive way of gaining wisdom.
64
All people are inescapably guided by experience.
But the prudent man looks to other people's - especially the best - as well as
his own, whereas the fool is limited entirely to his own.
65
He who will not heed the counsels of reason or
accept the promptings of intuitive feeling will receive the less pleasant
instruction of experience.
66
If a man feels that despite the dictates of reason
he should embark on a particular unethical adventure simply to gain some sort of
experience, and if he believes that this experience is a necessary part of the
whole of his development, then let him go ahead, taste the bittersweet fruits of
his actions, and learn at first hand why it should have been left alone.
67
What is demonstrated by observing contemporary
life is that so few men are willing to take their lessons from the past
experience of other men throughout history, that so many obdurately prefer to
learn under pressure the hard way. The same foolish errors, the old
pain-bringing sins are repeated monotonously and regularly. The cost of ignoring
such experience is heavy. People are not teachable and their defects not
corrigible by the gentle way. They will not absorb guidance from the interior
sources of reflection or intuition or the exterior sources of preachment or
observation.
68
It is true that wisdom comes with experience but
that experience need not be gained at the cost of one's own suffering. It can
just as well be gained by the observation of it in others.
69
Most people learn and can only learn by the method
of trial and error - that is, by the method of experience.
70
Men are not left to depend for guidance only on
what they learn by experience. What they believe by faith also guides them.
71
The art of living includes the arts of survival
and social adaptation. In life, with its pleasures and miseries, its problems
and mysteries, these arts must be learned from theory and practice, from
surrender and compromise, from teachers and elders.
72
The truth starkly lights up certain situations,
but it is equally valid to say that certain situations light up the truth.
73
They would not need to get any experience of the
world without, if they would get sufficient experience of the world within.
74
All the experiences through which he passes, and
many of those through which he observes others pass, should find their way after
reflection and distillation into his wisdom.
75
The lessons of past experience are not enough in
themselves to provide all the guidance needed for present living. We need also
the ideals held up by intuition, the principles and ideas presented from within
by the higher part of our nature, and from without by the spiritual teachers and
religious prophets of mankind.
76
It is one thing to grope through life blindly and
another to fulfil the law of our being consciously.
77
Where experience is extremely narrow, its
deficiency may be supplied by reading, reflection, or intuition.
78
Only after he has fully tasted and long enjoyed
the fruits of striving ambition and straining desire will he be in a position to
assess their worth correctly. Only then will he be perceptive enough to consider
the vacuity of his ephemeral life.
79
It is possible for man to learn whether a proposed
course is wise or foolish, prudent or reckless, without having to wait for the
testimony of events. In that case he must look for the counsel of spiritual
teachers.
80
What he can teach himself from the pages of a book
is one thing, and a very necessary thing, but what he can only teach himself
from life's experiences is another.
81
He may learn this truth by reading someone else's
ideas or reflecting on his own, by the arguments of logical thinking or the
announcements of intuitive feeling.
82
Life and grief will teach a man through harsh
tragedy what reason and intuition would teach him through tender pleading.
83
If they will not come to the truth by directly
accepting it from the truth-seers, then they must come to it by a more
roundabout and painful way.
84
Life is the real tutor; experience is the
principal education. The voice of truth is within.
85
It is one thing to learn from experience, another
to remember and not to forget these lessons.
86
A man's acts constitute the daily declaration of
his faith. If he possesses spirituality let him demonstrate it by actual
achievement. Action is to be considered the first criterion of philosophic
achievement.
87
His fidelity to the Quest will be tested, both by
specially critical periods and by everyday happenings. On the one side,
temptations will call him; on the other, difficulties will deter him. Will he
bend the knee before the world's idols? Will he stand strong amid the world's
turmoil? Only when the hour of testing comes can he know.
88
The tests through which life itself outwardly puts
him may seem appropriate or not but they contribute to the discoveries within
himself, to the knowledge of his character, its strengths and limits, its
belated ambitions and ludicrous self-deceptions.
89
I have tried to teach from the very beginning of
my writing career - well before I went off to the Orient - and have repeated
tirelessly, the close connection between spiritual truth and practical
life, as opposed to spiritual imagination. I have insisted that the ordinary
activities of everyday existence must bear the impress of this truth, that the
inward light must shine in outward conduct. In other words, I tried to say that
this is not a matter only for dreamers, useless to men and women who carry on
the world's work, but a matter for all, whether they want to live in the busy
world or in the cloistered monastery. Philosophy is for use. It is not a
thing which is queer, outlandish, and entirely superfluous, as some think.
90
The beginner should look more to his outer
situation and environment, for he is more affected by it; the proficient should
look more to his inner reactions to situation or environment, for they then
become his test. The role they play in his development depends on the stage he
is at.
91
If, instead of bitterly resenting it, we receive
the test in the right attitude or pass through the trial with the proper
thoughts about it, we shall find when it is over that the experience has been of
great value to us. We shall find that it has lifted us to a new and higher level
of character, a new and truer conception of life. Our lower nature is weakened,
our better nature strengthened. Our eyes are clearer. Our feet advance another
step forward on the Quest.
92
Knowing that his reaction to whatever happens is
even more important than the happening itself, he watches for hidden tests of
his character and capacity. Whether he is coping with the problems of his work
or moving in the circle of his family, he uses each episode or situation to
prove himself worthy or to discover a weakness. In the latter event he will not
become discouraged but will probe, analyse, plan, and resolve until he turns it
into a new strength.
93
It is the unexpected situation, when there is no
time to calculate a response or prepare a reply, that reveals what measure of
strength we can rise to. It is in the sudden crisis - which is only a situation
pushed to a complete extreme - when there is no chance to escape altogether or
to evade partially, that what wisdom we have, or lack, shows itself.
94
Life with its variety of experiences is always
testing him anyway, but it is when he is under stress that he is tested most.
95
Theoretical knowledge of the truth is not
valueless. Its very presence, even if we fail to apply it, tends to irritate and
impel us towards such application.
96
The test of bringing thoughts and theories,
intuitions and revelations, to action is a means not only of expressing them but
also of evaluating them. It is only by doing this, by bringing them face to face
with the facts of life that he can learn what they are really worth or how they
should really have been executed. Even though the opportunity to act wisely has
been lost, the knowledge has been gained. Even though he may never be
able to make use of it again in this lifetime, it remains in his mind and will
enrich his later incarnations. Experience of the world, however studded with
faults and mistakes it may be, must always complement understanding of life if
he is to accomplish his fullest development. The abstract is man's left arm, the
concrete is his right one. As he applies his ideas directly to the outward life,
they become fruitful. Thus he is able to see for himself whether the fruit is
good or bad, and to judge the tree accordingly.
97
These eternal truths must be brought down into his
simple daily experience. Every act is to be done in their light, every thought
held in their atmosphere.
98
If the practice of meditation is to be limited to
recluses and the study of metaphysical truth confined to monasteries, then both
mysticism and metaphysics will be in danger of becoming merely theoretical
subjects. For active life in the world, with its problems to be grappled with
and its realities to be faced and its temptations to be overcome, provides both
a necessary testing-ground and a valuable expressional medium for mystical
experience and metaphysical reflection.
99
The carpenter can bring his idea for a piece of
furniture to the test by the simple act of making it. The quester can bring his
understanding of the teachings to the test by trying them out in actual everyday
living. Not before then can he conclusively determine how correctly he has
absorbed them, or how utterly foolish and dangerously misleading they themselves
may be. Here is the place of the physical plane and the purpose of physical
action. Not before then can he have the certainty that they belong to reality,
and not merely to his own or someone else's imagination.
100
When we understand it aright, each test is then
seen not to be an ordeal to be shrinkingly dreaded, but a gate to be eagerly
welcomed; and this is because it offers us the chance of a higher development,
of an entry into a higher state of being and capacity.
101
Action is the best way to complete a thought.
102
An impracticable teaching is a defective
teaching. What is unworkable in practice is untrue in theory.
103
The minor details which, in their numerous
throng, make up most of our daily life offer a chance to express philosophy's
wisdom and apply philosophic discipline just as much as the great ones.
104
It is largely through such spiritual trial and
error that so many find their way through imitations, frauds, sterilities, and
black perils to the authentic philosophy and the real quest.
105
Every new experience or new set of circumstances
becomes his teacher. Every personal reaction to it becomes an indication of his
spiritual status.
106
Sooner or later situations will form themselves
which will remind him that only by enforcing the teachings in his own conduct
can he get their benefits, only by applying them in deeds and linking them to
daily living can he verify their truth.
107
Hardships offer tests but so do easier
circumstances, although this is less plainly seen because the tests are so
different.
108
The test comes when they find themselves in
situations to which they are unequal.
109
The spiritual gains made in spite of the world's
opposition and in its very midst will be solid durable and substantial. But the
gains made in an ashram may be imaginary superficial and transient.
110
Awareness grows in silence, the test of it in
activity.
111
What is its value for life? This is the test.
112
The result of his actions will tell him
something about the ideas which led to them, about the truth or falsity, the
rightness or wrongness, of those ideas. It will tell him whether his faith is
well-placed or ill-placed.
113
The last test must still be how far he brings
the truth into his life.
114
The troubles of a follower do not prove that the
teachings have failed. They prove only that he did not actually follow them in
reality, whatever else he may have done in appearance, that they were not active
in his mind and heart and will, however much they may have seemed so in the
sight of others.
115
When the truth alters his whole conception of
life, penetrates his heart and stirs his will, it has become his own.
116
What he accepts as idea and principle must be
applied to experience and sustained in action. Then, and then only, will it
manifest itself in fortune and destiny.
117
Life does not tell us why we are here: we have
to enquire of it, seek to understand it, and wait while seeking for the answers.
118
Every event in his life should be made to reveal
its karmic meaning for him. He may not at first perceive this; time, patience,
and tranquil invitation to his deeper being - best done after meditation, before
sleep, or before rising - can help.
119
In some way this life is a charade, a play which
is being acted out but whose meanings have to be inferred from given clues.
120
It is not the mere succession of events that
make up the essence of a man's life: it is what he extracts from those events.
121
Every new circumstance or happening in his life
has some message for him from the Infinite Mind or some lesson to convey to him
or some test to strengthen him. It is for him to seek out this inner
significance and to re-adjust his thinking and actions in accordance with it.(P)
122
"What is the Overself telling me through this
experience? What does it want me to learn, know, do, or avoid?"
123
Many people read the lessons of their experience
but alas! what they read is different from what is really indicated. Too often
it is an egoistic distortion or even a gross falsification of the real lesson.
124
It is only if experience is correctly
interpreted that it brings discretion, and only if thought is correctly reasoned
that it brings discernment.
125
He should learn to profit spiritually and
practically by all his experiences, the pleasurable as well as the painful, the
gay as well as the grave. But he can do this only if he reads from them not what
he wishes to read, not what will soothe or flatter his ego, but what is really
their message and teaching. The unguided seeker finds it harder to succeed in
this endeavour than his luckier fellow, but it is worth trying.
126
The undisciplined mind is easily misled.
127
It was because the Greeks knew that meditative
reflection upon the meaning of tragic experience is less effective in the midst
of it, while emotion is highly involved, that they avoided actual representation
of the tragedy itself. The audience then received it only as an idea, not as a
spectacle.
128
Reason alone may give him the truth about a
situation, but personal feeling may give him a half-lie about it. Yet he will
prefer that to the truth simply because the ego is being supported.
129
An experience involving suffering may not bear
its lesson on its face - unless it has repeated itself so many times that the
lesson is plain and clear. Although having a teachable and receptive mind will
elucidate it more quickly, more often it is dark and obscure. There is needed
something or someone to draw the line of connection between cause and effect.
That something can be only the intuition, but how seldom is that achieved? That
someone must be a teacher or a book.
130
He sees in the situation only what his bias
permits him to. That is, he consciously or unwittingly excludes from sight those
factors which he does not wish brought to his attention.
131
Those who have committed themselves to a
particular belief, opinion, or theory may get back its mere reflection when they
try to understand their experiences.
132
The profounder a truth the more it will be
misunderstood and misapplied.
133
It is in the nature of human self-centeredness
to appraise things, persons, and events only by the measure of satisfaction or
suffering they yield. But such egotism hides their true nature and real value,
and obstructs their power to bring about progress.
134
An experience may be wrongly interpreted so that
little or nothing is learned from it, or, which is worse, the mind's error or
heart's evil may be increased.
135
The worst misfortune is not to experience it but
to misunderstand it, and consequently misinterpret it. When it makes us worse in
character than before, less in faith than before, when it fills us with
resentment bitterness anger or hatred, it is we who are injured and not
merely our fortunes.
136
It is better, more prudent, more satisfying in
the end to see things just as they are and not foolishly to imagine them in
exaggerated, idealized, or wished-for forms.
137
We look only at the mere appearance of a
situation or experience and expect to judge it rightly by that. The divine
message it contains is nearly always a hidden one.
138
The ordinary person judges from the surface of
things and at times is deceived in consequence. The seeker of truth must
penetrate to the depth of things.
139
He should cultivate the habit of looking beneath
the surface of many incidents in his daily life, both the important and the
trivial, to determine the character of the forces they represent. Some show
forth the good or evil within himself, or within others; all have some useful
lesson to teach. Some, standing for the power of evil, ignorance, or illusion,
necessitate constant watchfulness against temptations outside; others symbolize
weaknesses inside that must be ceaselessly fought.
140
If he succeeds in keeping out of the emotional
surface of his being the temptation to take his situation rebelliously, and
penetrates instead deep down inside where he can take it resignedly, he will
gain strength and feel peace.
141
The art of extracting a spiritual message even
from the most ordinary circumstances is worth practising. But it can be done
only if one lives in a certain independence of them, if while experiencing them
one stands apart from them.
142
The aspirant lives a kind of double life. He
sees all his experiences as personal events just like other men do. But he also
sees them again as material for study: what is and what ought to be his reaction
to them?
143
This is the double role he has to play: a
looker-on at what is happening around him and an active participator in these
events.
144
Where destiny compels us to follow an undesired
path, to consort with undesired company, to work at undesired tasks, a special
attitude must be created and kept until that particular cycle is ended. The
experience must be studied philosophically - that is, impersonally - in the
larger perspective of life's general meaning and our own character's personal
needs.
145
If he is to learn the full lesson of his
situation, he must not only examine and analyse it, but he must do so as if it
were somebody else's.
146
It is not only a way of looking at life but also
a way of participating in it.
147
Every circumstance or situation may be looked at
from a higher plane than the merely animal or narrowly selfish one so that a
higher benefit may be got from it. But this attitude calls for a willingness and
detachment and courage which most people lack.
148
The misery on which the Indian mind likes to
dwell, and which leads to the idea of escape from rebirth as the highest good
fortune, does not obsess the philosophic mind. The latter does not deny life's
brevity and tragedy, sorrow and pain, but at the same time it notes life's
beauty and glory, joy and reward. In this it is very Greek. If the mysticism of
India could be married to the sanity of Greece, a broader and better philosophy
would be the offspring.
149
In youth we suffer from an unreflecting optimism
or an unknowledgeable pessimism but the years correct that. After we have gone
through enough experience, we know better how to be cheerful without permitting
our optimism to obstruct our reasoning faculties and without permitting our
pessimism to dominate during reaction to difficulties. We know we cannot afford
the shallow optimism which thrusts the thorn aside and sees only the rose. We
prefer to view the red beauty in all her brutality while enjoying the fragrance.
150
Neither suffering alone nor joy alone can
educate his heart and develop his mind in the right way. Both are needed.
151
It is the ironic paradox of human existence that
both suffering and joy can enable a man to pass to a higher plane. How is this
possible? Suffering drives him to seek its own end, that is, to seek peace. Thus
he is led inevitably and eventually to the quest of Overself. Joy draws him
towards its source, which rises ever higher as it becomes more refined. Thus he
is brought in time to recognize that the true permanent happiness is in the
Overself. The urge to shun misery and experience joy shows itself on every plane
and in every kind of condition because it is finally and fully satisfied only in
the Overself.
152
Life is not all sunshine and no shadow, all fair
sailing and no storm, all growing green-leaved trees and no decaying bare hulks.
Both halves of each pair are found either side by side or alternate, and none is
so far off that the other never appears during a lifetime. The complete optimist
is as unjustified as the complete pessimist. This said, it is nevertheless true
that personal realization of the higher truth does give a contented mind a
perennial hopefulness and an inward security. All these combine and fuse into a
quiet sort of happiness.
153
Human life brings inseparable anxieties along
with its joys, dilemmas along with its successes.
154
Experience in the world at first satisfies his
desires but later purifies him of them.
155
Hiding within our pleasures and lurking behind
our possessions are their malignant enemies - change and death. Sickness trails
behind the healthiest life and may one day catch up with it. Our joys are
insecure, our loves and friendships ever open to separation and bereavement. We
may try to ignore these facts by forgetting them but life itself will force us
to remember them again. It is better to accept them frankly, even though we
individually hope for the best.
156
The pessimism which Buddha taught in India as
religion, the tragedy which Sophocles expressed in Greece as drama, should warn
us that the human will cannot hope to achieve all its ends in a universe where
fate has the greatest share of power and where that fate deliberately opposes
itself to the realization of human happiness - I speak here not only of earthly
happiness but also of spiritual happiness. The tragic element in our days is
ineradicable. The hostile working of the cosmic laws is inevitable. Yes, life
means struggle. Its satisfactions are often short-lived. The man who
congratulates himself upon the joy he finds in it had better beware, for
frustration and privation are even now travelling around the corner toward him.
And the man who finds life wonderful had better keep his thought to himself, or
he will tempt the gods to shatter his illusion with a more devastating blow than
he might otherwise have received. What are the artificial pleasures of the
modern age really but anaesthetics to hide either its boredom or its suffering,
its emptiness or its discontent?
157
What is every man doing but trying to find his
way toward the Happiness that intuition tells him is his birthright? His
direction may be wrong, his mode of travel painful, but still - when his error
is corrected and the means to his end altered - he will seek to be happy in the
only way this is really and durably possible, for no other way will be left.
158
The adherents of sentimental sloppy-cults which
refuse to see the dark sides of life but persist in seeing only the brighter
ones, which find only Love in man and God, are practising an optimism which can
never support them in their hours of severest trial.
159
He who hopes to find continuous satisfaction in
any worldly thing, in any external creature, is either incapable of thinking
deeply or inexperienced in the vicissitudes of living.
160
We ask for contradictory and impossible things -
for instance, unchanging happiness in a changing world.
161
Pessimism turns life into a protracted funeral
where we mourn our evils before their time. Such a doctrine can only be to the
taste of morose minds.
162
Here, in this world, the human entity could not
have come into existence unless it came in the form and way it did. This meant
that the dualities of opposites must ever surround him, that the correlative of
his happiness must be his misery.
163
A happiness which is gained at the expense of
others will prove costly in the end.
164
The seeker should remember that it is possible
to learn just as much from joyous, satisfying experiences as from those of
suffering and frustration.
165
No experience is so pleasant that it has not a
negative factor, nor so unpleasant that it has not a compensating one.
166
The egos attach themselves to one another,
driven by the blind universal urges translated as personal "loves," passions, or
needs. Glamour, maya, creates these attachments; but experience leads to
awakening and, possibly, detachment, until maya operates again. So the
drama goes on, repeating the old scenes, until awakening is finally carried to a
deeper level and the truth seen at last.
167
In the world we find no perfect situation, look
where we can. In the individual person we find no perfect character, behaviour,
speech. There is no environment, no human arrangement, which is without any
fault.
168
The same Greek culture whose architects gave us
the chaste beauty of their structures, and whose philosophers gave us the
Olympian serenity of their teachings, gave us also the horrors of tragic plays.
It could not have attained the balance which it did if it had not so frankly
looked life fully in the face.
169
The brevity of human life and the transience of
human experience prevent the full realization of human happiness.
170
Life is a mosaic of brightly coloured pleasures
and darkly coloured pains.
171
All life is tragic, as Buddha pointed out, and
ends in frustration. It is only the degrees of frustration that differ with each
individual's experience.
172
Extreme joy stupefies a man spiritually, as
extreme misery paralyses him. Too much of either condition bars his way to the
Overself since it prevents him from becoming interested in the quest.
173
The suffering which is attached to life may vary
in extent and kind but it is missed by no one.
174
Life brings its joys and despairs and much of it
is an oscillation between them, plus the long flat intervals separating the two.
175
Along with the mystery and misery of life, we
must include its obviousness and gaiety to get a balanced picture.
176
Life, with its unfulfilled expectations, its
unpleasant surprises, its slow disillusionments, is something we learn to bear
because there are pleasanter experiences too or because the craving for
existence is still not crushed.
177
The pains of childbirth come to the mother in
spasms which strain heart, womb, and lung but which, coming between intervals of
rest, are rendered more bearable. So the sufferings and troubles of a whole
lifetime most often come in cycles and alternations which give rest from them or
afford actual pleasure, and are rendered more bearable also.
178
What Buddha meant was that if life does not
break your heart, it will at least give you plenty of frustrations.
179
The quest is a joyful labour: its glimpses
afford a bewitching happiness. But it is not a blind labour. There are moments
and moods when it acknowledges the suffering inevitably interwoven with human
life, the sadness of some of the fundamental inescapable human experiences.
180
They want to keep their personal identity but
they do not want to pay all the price for it. They want to keep the
satisfactions but not the sorrows of earthly life: but the two go together.
181
The same God who gives you the inner peace of
profound meditation gives you also the storm of outer tribulation. Why?
182
We suffer primarily because we have isolated our
conscious being from the universal Being. Only when we renounce this isolation
shall we be able to remove our suffering.
183
Pain and suffering belong to the worlds of
limited being, not to the world of infinite being. If man has to endure them, it
is because they serve to remind him of this, to warn him against self-deception
and to arouse him to take the homeward path.
184
Men shut the door on their best self, and their
best friend the Overself, and then wonder why they suffer.
185
We read past history and remember present
history with the result that we stand appalled. Why all this tragedy and terror,
blood and pain? It is not in God's will that the cause of this vast and endless
suffering lies, but in man's flight from God's will.
186
It is this unconsciousness of his spiritual
selfhood which is his worst calamity.
187
So long as men do not believe in the truth of
Jesus' message, "Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven and all these things
shall be added unto you," so long will they grope blindly and suffer
needlessly.
188
The more anyone resists the fulfilment of the
higher purpose of his life on earth, the more suffering he creates for himself.
It is the ego and the animal in him which instigate this resistance.
189
He pays heavily for this forgetfulness of his
divine centre - pays in errors and sins, and in the miseries and sufferings
which are their results. If the teaching had no other value than this one, to
point out to him the need and worth of such remembrance, and the blessings which
are its results, propagation of it as well as education in it would be fully
justified.
190
The misdirection of energies, the waste of
efforts, and the penalty of useless sufferings constitute the sad result of our
ignorance concerning life's higher laws.
191
It is as if the higher law provides penalties
for ignorance of it; as if the higher power, having given man intelligence and
intuition, bids him find out the spiritual facts of his situation or take the
consequences.
192
We have heard to the point of tiresomeness the
one-sided statements which assert either, "We must blame ourselves for our
troubles" or, "We must blame circumstances for our troubles." To get truth,
bring the two statements together.
193
The root of most of his troubles lies in man's
own psyche, the beginning of most of his distresses in his own thinking.
194
Our frail spirits fret at every handicap Fate
puts upon us, forgetting entirely the far greater handicap of a mind bound with
hard thongs to illusions.
195
The unenlightened mind sees in the shadows of
existence only misfortune where the enlightened mind sees Karmic instruction and
opportunity for self-improvement along with misfortune. When it is schooled both
by experience and revelation to recognize and admit that its own mistaken
behaviour has led to most of its misfortunes, to see the causal connection
between personal wrong-doing and the penal troubles or sufferings which follow
in its wake, it will act righteously through fear. But later, when it is
schooled by subtler experience and loftier revelation to see the divine quest
which life ordains it to follow, it will act righteously not from fear but
through faith. When it comes to see or believe that most of its griefs are
self-inflicted, it sees well.
196
To react to the pressure of suffering with blind
resentment is the way of the ignorant. To study the nature of this suffering and
learn its message, self-educating his character accordingly, is the way of the
aspirant. He will understand that at some time, in some way, he broke the
universal laws and inevitably brought this thing upon himself.
197
All experience shows what distress and misery
often follow undisciplined passion and unruled feeling.
198
Suffering is the price of wrong-doing. Sin
creates its own punishment. Prayer that has no higher purpose than to escape
from the consequences of its own mistakes and its own ignorance is like an
object standing in the sunlight which asks that its shadow be removed from it -
it asks for the impossible. The proper way to separate sin from the price of sin
is first, to stop sinning; second, to make all possible amendment and
reparation; and third, freely to recognize, humbly to confess, and penitently to
eliminate the faults of character which created the sin.)
199
While he loves his chains, he must be prepared
to accept without murmur the suffering they bring. Only when he loves freedom
from them more will he have a right to resent the agonies they cause.
200
We build up mental pictures of what we want.
When eventually they are fulfilled, we find the actualities to be accompanied by
things we do not want, or to be so different that the happiness both they and
the pictures promised is illusion. How much distress we could save ourselves if
we could understand and accept the teaching that so many of our griefs are made
so by our thinking, by our clinging to mental pictures and emotive thoughts when
time bids us let go!
201
If he finds that his path is beset by
opposition, his footsteps dogged by evil, he will learn to put himself on his
guard against the shortcomings and imperfections which might bring victory to
the enemy and failure to himself. He will accept the law that there can be no
strength without struggle, but the struggle to which he is called is not with
other men - it is with himself.
202
When a man has to receive and live for years
with the results of his errors or sins, he is likely to remember them.
203
Only when he arrives at a clear understanding of
himself, and especially a correct discernment of his follies and weaknesses, is
he likely to arrive at the truth about the situations in which he finds himself
and the cause of the troubles that affect him.
204
Events which are painful as well as unsettling
may give him hours of anxiety. It is not enough to reach out only for spiritual
comfort and peace in these situations; he must also constantly and rigidly
analyse the causes of them in himself, the mistakes and weaknesses which
led him into them, the lessons he needs to learn from them. He should carry out
such self-examination quite calmly and impartially, taking care not to exonerate
himself. He has to find out how far he himself has contributed to these
situations even if the larger share comes from those offending him. It could be
that he needs to understand that there is so much evil in this world and in
people that he should keep his eyes open accordingly. He cannot take all people
on their face value nor believe their words have much value if contradicted by
their actions. He may have to develop critical judgement. Life brings contacts
with people who show different and opposite facets of their character. Each type
has its positive as well as negative qualities. The aspirant who is growing in
sensitivity should keep away from those who show more of the negative than the
other, who are unscrupulous, or who are emotionally unstable or physically
dissipated. He should form no friendship or association with persons who are not
clean, wholesome, honest, and stable. It is better to be alone than to get
involved with undesirable characters. Having understood the needful lessons, he
must resolve to govern his future conduct accordingly. Then and then only should
he seek help and comfort through prayer and meditation. There will then be no
need to despair, for these situations will work out in the end. If he adheres to
right thinking he must accept them as working for his ultimate good.
205
Your suffering may be shortened or even ended if
you will express the fullest self-inculpation and throw no blame for it on
others. For their misbehaviour does not absolve you from the responsibility for
your own.
206
He must thrust aside the unsatisfactory common
habits - often unconscious but sometimes wilful ones - of overlooking mistakes,
exaggerating difficulties, evading problems, excusing selfishnesses, explaining
away failures, rationalizing evil conduct by shifting responsibility for his own
shortcomings through blaming other people.
207
If a man will not take the trouble to discipline
himself, then life, soon or late, will do it for him.
208
Life gives us enough problems from time to time
without our own addition to them of still more which are self-created entirely.
209
If pain did not creep on the heels of passion,
men would rarely desire to tame it, much less do so.
210
So long as we set up the goal of outward gain
against the ideal of spiritual growth, so falsely and so unnecessarily opposed
to each other, so long shall we continue to suffer.
211
A human existence cannot be separated from a
painful and suffering one, however small its measure, so long as it is tied to
the flesh or emotions.
212
Every tenant of the flesh pays a rent for the
pleasure it affords him. He pays in limitations or infirmities, disobediences or
pains.
213
After all their conniving and calculating, those
who eat the coveted fruits of selfish ambition will have to eat along with it
the fruit of their egotism, illusion, and passion.
214
While man identifies his highest good with
momentary pleasure, he will continue to receive the educative experience of
suffering.
215
If moral instruction and spiritual direction
fail to lead a person on the right self-controlled course, then troubles,
sufferings, shocks, and scares may have to do so. Sooner or later he will have
to surrender himself to strict principles - the sooner the pleasanter in the
end.
216
Years of error and suffering could have been
years of success and peace if the man had known the principle of right thinking
and right living. Wasted and spoiled years become so because of this first and
fundamental ignorance leading to mistakes in judgement and sins in conduct. This
is the reason why a man suffers and why he causes others to suffer.
217
Unless we learn something about how to live, or,
rather, how not to live, we have suffered in vain. And this applies both to
physical and to mental life. I like the words used by R.W. Emerson in
conversation with a friend: "Why be sick, if to no purpose?"
218
In terms of lessons learned, no experience is
wasted. All experiences contribute in the end. But because of the ego's
reluctance to accept, many lessons are submerged until their cumulative effect
pushes them into awareness.
219
Why should we be ashamed to learn new truths
from life's experiences and, dramatically or slowly, to reverse our views in
consequence? The answer is that the ego does not wish to humiliate itself, nor
to inculpate itself.
220
The fortunes and vicissitudes of life have an
educational value but if the conscious mind refuses to receive it, then the
subconscious mind will have to do so.
221
He may undergo a vivid experience and yet seem
to learn nothing from it. This may repeat itself several times. But on one of
these repetitions the process of learning will start to actualize itself on the
conscious level.
222
It is utter foolishness to bear in complete
blindness, and with unlearning stolid apathy, the unpleasant results of wrong
thinking or evil doing.
223
We suffer emotionally when our view of a
situation is shown by experience to be self-deceptive. But if this view is
itself involved in, and part of, our general view of life, then this
disillusionment gives the chance to introduce a truer and higher one. Thus the
suffering becomes its purchase price. But if we prefer to hug the emotion and
refuse the lesson, we invite its recurrence at some future time.
224
Without the willingness to learn, all experience
becomes doubly painful, although never futile. Without the willingness to apply
what is learned, all experience becomes a source of inner conflict and
self-division.
225
If a lesson has been learned so thoroughly that
both character and outlook have altered in consequence, there is no necessity
for the higher power which manages life to recur to it again.
226
Some sufferings entirely fail to improve
character, so the sufferer continues to repeat and repeat the cycle of
self-originating cause and painful effect.
227
We learn our lessons from suffering, it is true,
but so inadequately that we forget them all too quickly. Out of this failure to
comprehend life comes the continuance or recurrence of most human trouble.
228
When this curious feeling of having tried the
same experiment or tasted the same experience dozens of times before in dozens
of lives comes abruptly to the top of his consciousness, it is a warning not to
waste his precious years in behaving like an ass - that is, not to let himself
be tutored in the same lessons by the same disappointments again and again
without end.
229
Even when extreme or prolonged suffering has
forced a willingness to accept the peace of non-existence, a man cannot wrench
himself away from his "I."
230
The result of wrong-doing will reach a man in
the end and teach him the value of its opposite. If he stubbornly needs many
lessons and many classes in life's school before he is willing to accept this
value, the fact is regrettable and his suffering is inevitable.
231
A lesson which must be learned in the end had
better be learned in the beginning. The price of lateness is multiplication of
suffering.
232
Most people do not seem to learn at all the
wisdom that life is trying to instill into them. Of the few who do learn, most
learn either too little or too slowly or too late for it to be of any use.
233
They suffer but they do not learn. Yet this is
true only of society as a whole, not of certain individuals in it.
234
Every experience carries its own lesson with it.
But if a man is unteachable, through stubbornness or stupidity, through egoism
or animality, he will not be willing or able to receive that lesson.
235
It is not enough to say that you have suffered.
Have you profited from your sufferings? If not, all your weeping was useless.
236
Good fortune may put a stop to the suffering
caused by ill fortune, but where the ill fortune has been the end-result of
tendencies in our own character or defects in our own mentality or deficiencies
in our own personality, these things will remain like seeds within us and will
one day sprout again; then the ill fortune will reappear and the suffering with
it.
237
The man who does not want to look at Truth
because it is unpleasant hides from it or throws out the thought of its presence
or excuses himself with sophistries and hypocrisies.
238
Stupid sincerity can go from one mistake to
another, yet be none the less sincere.
239
If it were true that men gained nothing from
self-earned suffering and learned nothing from it, that they went on making the
same errors and committing the same sins again and again, then they would not be
men but the lowest of the lower animals. The capacity to think distinguishes men
from these creatures. It may be very feebly and most imperfectly used, but this
capacity is still being used in some way. Such mental activity may lead to wrong
results or to little results, but it cannot lead to no result at all. The
conclusion is that if men do not learn from experience today - that is, in one
lifetime - they will inevitably do so tomorrow - that is, in another and a later
lifetime.
240
Some say suffering is ennobling, others say it
is degrading. But if we look around us we shall see that both assertions are
right in some cases, wrong in other cases. It does not have, and cannot have,
the same effect in all cases.
241
Life for some is a slide to Hell, for others a
bridge to Heaven.
242
The very struggles and sufferings which bring
both practical and metaphysical wisdom to the mature and reflective person may
bring evil emotions to the undeveloped and unthinking person. It is possible to
read wholly opposing lessons from one and the same experience. Thus when
afflicted by a common distress men rise to higher virtue or fall into deeper
wrong-doing.
243
The same kind of shock experienced by two
different kinds of men may have entirely opposite effects. The extremely
materialistic may find the ground slipping under their feet and may feel, for
the first time, the urge to seek spiritual help. The extremely unworldly may
fall for the first time into a dark night which casts doubt upon the truth of
their treasured beliefs and which drives them toward a worldlier outlook as
being closer to the real facts. Great traumatic suffering, whether bodily or
mental, points two ways.
244
Such is the intractability of human egoism that
if suffering ceases too quickly he learns little or nothing from it. The old
habits of thought and patterns of conduct will remain only slightly erased or
else not erased at all. If suffering continues too long, it may arouse negative
emotions of bitterness, resentment, anger, despair, apathy, or self-pity. Again
little or nothing is learned.
245
If men suffer too much or too long, this drives
them into being even more preoccupied with their ego than before. If they have
to struggle continually for their livelihood, the same effect happens. Egoism is
increased.
246
When suffering is too prolonged, too acute, or
too large, it may induce a hatred of life and a longing for death.
247
Who shall blame them if the struggles, the
frustrations, the difficulties, and the adversities of life become intolerable
and leave them beaten, unable and unwilling to make any further effort?
248
Great hurts lead the perceptive to great
surrenders but lead the unseeing to greater bitter blindnesses.
249
The tears of suffering may blind us to the truth
behind suffering.
250
The passage from anguish of life to anger at
life is often a short one.
251
Outward circumstances injure character for the
weak man but improve it for the strong one. In the first case, the man lets
himself be moved still farther away from his spiritual centre, but in the second
one he moves closer to it.
252
Those who have had ample experience of the world
may draw from it either despair and cynicism or advance in, and confirmation of,
the Spirit's truth. For their capacity to learn correctly will depend on the
extent to which they keep the ego out of the way.
253
What happens to him may tighten his bondage or,
paradoxically, stimulate him to escape from it. The particular result depends on
how satiated he is with this kind of experience.
254
What seems a wholly evil event to one man may
seem a mixed good and evil event to another. The first man may see only that it
brings affliction and distress. The second may see that it not only does this
but also corrects error and checks weakness.
255
When a man is stretched on the rack of
suffering, he may not be able to see or willing to accept in his anguish its
spiritual lesson.
256
Experiences take on their different private
meanings in different men's minds. A public calamity may confirm the religious
man in his belief that God's hand is behind history. But the same calamity may
confirm the atheistic man in his precisely opposite belief.
257
Humiliation, which dwindles one man's stature,
adds to another's spiritual opportunity.
258
Setbacks, and even more drastic shocks, may
force a man to see what he could not or would not see before, and thus bring him
into better balance. But, to the contrary, they may confuse and bewilder another
man.
259
Intense suffering may dull the capacity for
higher thought, as intense pleasure may lull it.
260
Experience, which gives the true quester fresh
opportunities to eradicate errors, merely gives the foolish man fresh
opportunities to repeat them.
261
Philosophy does not ascetically applaud
suffering and pain. It deplores them. In themselves, they are regarded as evils.
It accepts them as good only when they succeed in bringing about a change of
thought - a conversion of heart or an ennoblement of conduct.
262
Those who, like Gandhi, can find beauty in human
suffering are welcome to do so; most of us cannot, but we may appreciate the
values and benefits it yields without enjoying such "beauty."
263
Since our faulty ways of thinking and living can
be pointed out to us by suffering and since we are thus given the chance to put
an end to them, does not suffering prove itself to be a useful part of the
world-scene? Is it not, at least sometimes, a friend disguised as an enemy?
264
No experience which turns a man more than before
to recognition of the truth and the sense of its worth is really an adverse one.
Even though it is a source of pain, it is still a step forward in his growth.
265
To the man on this Quest, the man willing to
step aside from his ego, earthly misfortunes may sometimes be seen as disguising
spiritual blessings if they force him to fall back on the eternal truths and his
own deeper resources.
266
It is sometimes spiritually beneficial for a man
to lose part of his wealth, an official his position, a nation its empire. For
then they may lose the arrogance which too often accompanies these things.
267
Instead of complaining of difficulties, we
should welcome them for the opportunities they give us.
268
The error of thanking God for good fortune is
that this forces us to blame God for ill fortune.
269
When painful experiences are undergone by mind
on the lower levels of evolution, very little is learned from those experiences
- and that little slowly. When the same experiences are undergone by mind on the
higher level, much is learned from them - and learned quickly. This is because
in the one case there is no desire to learn the causes of that suffering, and no
capacity to learn them even when the causes are evident; whereas in the other
case, there is a keen desire to master the lessons and a prepared attitude
wherewith to receive them. When, therefore, the really earnest disciple who has
asked for a quickened advance on the Quest finds that all kinds of experiences
begin to follow each other for a period, he should recognize that this is part
of the answer to his call. He will be made to feel loss as well as gain, bliss
as well as pain, success as well as failure, temptation as well as tribulation
at different times and in different degrees. He needs both kinds of experience
if his development is to be a balanced one. But because he is still human, he
will learn more from his sufferings than from his pleasures. And because their
memory will last longer, he will not pass through this period of quickened
experiences and extreme vicissitudes without much complaint. Each of those
experiences represents a chance for him, not only to conserve what he has
already gained, but to pass to a farther point where he can gain something
new.(P)
270
The wine of wisdom is distilled in the grape
presses of bitter agony. The best tempered steel comes out of the fiercest
fires. If you have suffered more, you have learned more and may perceive more
than others.
271
If Nature's way of evolution is cruel, it is
also necessary. For the human entity would soon be led astray from its true path
if there were no suffering to warn it of wrong direction, no pain to signal a
disharmonious condition.
272
The sufferings which destiny brings us are not
to be looked upon as punishment so much as instruction. They are intended to
teach us right thinking and to turn us to right doing.
273
Lessons so painfully learned indicate that we
are being nourished by truth.
274
All circumstances are used by the divine forces
of evolution to develop the human soul and, distasteful though it is to us,
suffering is one of the chief forces of such evolution. Humanity, having so
deeply and so widely lost sight of the higher purpose of its life on earth, has
had to undergo calamity and distress in consequence. To recall blind men and
women to this purpose is a noble task and a compassionate duty for those who
tread the path of philosophy.
275
Whatever difficulties we encounter in the course
of a lifetime, we should remember that some reason has put them there: they are
not meaningless. But whether put there by our own fault or by other people's
fault, or by an implacable destiny, it is usually possible to extract profit
from them, at the least, or to get through them successfully, at the most.
Through the capacity they draw out, the power they develop, or the discipline
and correction they impose, they can be made to yield personal advantage.
276
The impulses of Nature push men helplessly
onward until necessity, suffering, reason, or aspiration forces them to make a
stand and practise control.
277
The depth to be penetrated from the surface to
the deepest layers of the human psyche is too great to be reached quickly
without acute sacrifice and intense anguish.
278
The sugar cane yields its sweet juice only after
it has been crushed relentlessly in a mill. The human entity yields its noblest
traits and truest wisdom only after it has been crushed repeatedly in the mill
of anguish.
279
He has the duty to learn why he suffers.
280
Environments which present no problems,
relationships which bring no anxieties - these are pleasant circumstances and
help foster pleasant qualities in us. But other qualities also need drawing out
and developing and can be fostered only by tougher, even opposing,
circumstances.
281
The extreme contemporary human suffering has
also been an educational discipline in this wisdom. What men cannot yet receive
with their conscious intelligence they are already receiving with their
subconscious intelligence.
282
Suffering has a purgative place, in the scheme
of things. If in the earlier stages of man's growth it tempts him to seek relief
in evil courses, in the later stages it presses him to seek out its real cause
and final cure. Next it has an educative place for it leads him to analyse
experience and learn to understand its lessons. Last it has a redemptive place,
for it drives him to confess his weakness and seek mercy, grace, and help.
283
Every outward experience has its inward
benefits, if only we will look for them with ego-free eyes. And this is true
even when the experience involves suffering. Behind suffering we may learn to
find some lesson to profit by, some purificatory discipline to be undergone,
some ignored fact to be faced, or some wisdom to be gleaned.
284
If what he is undergoing is hard to endure, it
is also an opportunity that will not recur again in the same form and under the
same circumstances, an opportunity to master a special lesson or to arouse a
latent energy or to work on a particular character-trait.
285
We ought not ask limited man to look at his
painful predicaments with the same infinite tolerance that the higher power
does. Only time, as it brings him to discover and desert the ego's outlook, can
do that.
286
Pain lessens or even destroys attachment to the
world and the body. Its misery is not all loss or waste. Attachments hold shut
the door to heaven: when they are removed or reduced, we get the door to open
much more easily.
287
Where suffering fails to detach us from the
thing or the person outside us, from our body, or from the ego inside us, it
fails to achieve its metaphysical purpose. To that extent it is wasted, even
though the surface lesson it conveys, the practical purpose, is successfully
achieved.
288
We must cultivate the philosophical spirit which
seeks, through calm reflection, to learn and profit by the widest experiences
and the commonest errors. It is important that disillusionment should not create
bitterness, that we should blame no one but ourselves for our premature
judgements. We shall be shamefully defeated in our quest of the Overself if the
pain of our experiences makes us less generous intellectually when it ought to
make us more so. Yes, our heart must not shrink; the more it has suffered, the
more it should expand in forgiveness, in compassion, and in freedom from
prejudice.
289
The quality of compassion presupposes the
existence of some form of suffering toward which it is directed.
290
There is no situation so bad, no predicament so
undesirable, no crisis so formidable that it cannot be transformed, either in
its physical actuality or in our mental picture of it, into a good. But this
requires a willingness to work upon it spiritually, that is, egolessly.
291
Perhaps more trials, more sufferings, will bring
about the reformation of life and character which more preaching and teaching
have failed to bring about.
292
Poignant suffering may foster profound thought.
293
Those who trouble to follow virtuous lives and
ask why God should strike them down with some great misfortune or some grave
malady and leave other uncaring ones unscathed, may find a possible answer in
the idea of karma, but they will find a certain answer in the idea that their
suffering is an ego-melting and ego-crushing process. Only after this experience
is the truth about happiness revealed.
294
What else can be so beneficial and so necessary
to him than an experience which tends to detach him from his ego? With some
persons or at some times, it may be a joyous experience; with others or at other
times it may cause suffering.
295
Every self-created unpleasant episode can be
turned to constructive worth. It then becomes a disguised blessing if it arouses
one to develop the qualities needed to overcome its painful consequences and to
prevent a recurrence of similar episodes. It may sound a call to desert an old
road of thinking and to discard an old way of living. It may even give a chance
for a new man to be born.
296
Long ago Virgil believed that the
agriculturist's troubles were sent to him by the powers that be to sharpen his
wits. This view could be considerably broadened, if applied to life's troubles
generally. They can not only sharpen wits, in the effort to overcome or evade
them, but also nurture moral attributes.
297
Those sufferings which he brings upon himself
will serve a useful purpose if they surprise him into discovering his
inefficiencies and shock him into discovering his incompetencies. For after the
first emotional wave of shame and the second emotional wave of despair have
passed, he has the chance to set about putting himself right.
298
No man is so uneducable that suffering leaves no
residue in his mind.
299
A member of the former Czech government, now
imperilled anew in the Red blight which has fallen on his land, told me about
his three-and-a-half years' suffering in the worst Nazi concentration camps.
"Now, alas, I have lost the capacity to weep. My heart is tired, does not feel
emotion. I have borne all and am above it all." Thus he had learned a forced
detachment. Although it cannot be a durable one, some reserve will remain.
300
The aspirant who has experienced a great deal of
suffering during his lifetime may be comforted by the thought that, undoubtedly,
much unfavourable karma has been thus worked off. Moreover, such experiences
lead to a better balanced personality, as a rule, which is as essential for the
Quest as meditation.
301
If the aspirant could assume a perfectly
impersonal point of view he would be able to see how much of his spiritual
development he owes to the heartache, loss, and suffering which he once
complained about or regarded pessimistically. He would then understand how these
very factors have helped immeasurably to deepen his determination, sharpen his
intelligence, and, above all, improve his character.
302
Disillusionment often breeds sourness and
cynicism. But if it passes away it may leave true balance and philosophy.
303
Wisdom may grow out of anguish just as
practicality may grow out of necessity.
304
A dangerous situation in which we become
involved while dreaming may so frighten us as to cause us to awaken with a
start. The situation is entirely imaginary, yet it is enough of itself to shock
us out of the whole sequence of imaginary situations which constitute the dream
life and into the relative reality of waking life. In the same way, the
sufferings of earthly life, although ultimately just as illusory as the rest of
that life, awaken us to search for reality that transcends it.
305
The world would like to settle down, but every
now and then comes iconoclastic news which disturbs its comfortable rest in a
most unwelcome manner. But unless the gods send things to stir up men, this rest
is likely to pass into sleep and the sleep will pass into spiritual death.
306
When man becomes so engrossed in his own work
and so entangled in his own creations that he does not know he is more than
body, then life itself will one day jolt him out of his error. The body's needs,
comfort, and surroundings must receive his attention. But they should not
receive attention out of all proportion to their value. Is he here on earth for
these things alone? Is the higher purpose of life to be entirely ignored? A
sounder balance is required.
307
So long as the mass of men are contented with
illusion and seek neither truth nor reality, so long will they be beset with
adversities, dragged from pleasures, surprised by shocks, and tossed about from
one birth to the next.
308
The shock of unexpected trouble may be followed
by a mental awakening, may lead to the asking of questions about life and from
Life. It stops the habit of half-dead, mechanical, routine thinking for a while.
309
The average man's mode of living becomes fixed
by routine, by convention, and by the community. Unless he is an exceptional
person, he is not particularly interested in teachings and counsel that directly
oppose the desires, feelings, inclinations that he has come to regard as normal.
No matter how true those teachings may be or how excellent the counsel, he will
remain deaf to both until whipped into an about-face listening to them by sheer
pressure of last-resort necessity, the desperate attempt to find relief or
escape when all the usual channels fail him. Suffering becomes first his
awakener and later his tutor.
310
Suffering assaults our shallowness and disturbs
our ethical apathy.
311
If they are not born with the desire to pursue
truth, meaning, and peace, men will not awaken until catastrophe comes.
312
Despite the imperfections and limitations of
this earthly human existence, enough is caught and kept by it to provide a link
with that invisible but little-known divine plane of being which is its source.
It is this secret connection which pushes men to seek through their desires for
happiness or pleasure, to pursue their ambitions or hopes until nothing is found
except frustration. It is then that they can turn nowhere else except inward.
For subconscious memory of the hidden link revives and points out its direction.
So the true and final quest begins. Still only dimly aware of its goal, its
power and beauty and serenity, he gets new hope, sometimes a gleam or two of
true light.
313
You may have lost your long-held fortune, your
wife may have shamefully betrayed you, your enemies may have spread false
accusations against you, while your private world may have tumbled to pieces
over your head. Still there remains something you have not lost, someone who has
not betrayed you, someone who believes only the best about you, and an inner
world that ever remains steady and unperturbed. That thing and that being are
none other than your own Overself, which you may find within you, which you may
turn to when in anguish, and which will strengthen you to disregard the clamant
whine of the personal distress. If you do not do this, there is nothing else you
can do. Whither can you turn save to the inner divinity?(P)
314
The presence of tears in the human constitution
is another expression - remote though it be - of his divine connection.
315
Katherine Mansfield, the story writer, died
early but not before she could write that the closing years of bodily suffering
had changed her outlook on life. She had come from doubt about God to faith in
God, from despair to a feeling that perfect Love behind the universe called for
perfect trust from her. The tuberculous body, which had kept her so immobilized
for so long a time, brought her nevertheless to a kind of meditation wherein she
lay, feeling the stillness within grow more and more palpable and the aspiration
to merge in it grow stronger and stronger.
316
Suffering forces man to pause on his onward way
and reflect, however briefly, upon its cause, and search, however wrongly, for
its cure. At such a moment he may be led to consider his life as a whole and so
be led to the Quest itself.
317
When a man reaches the breaking point in his
suffering, he is more likely to turn to the inner life. But when pleasure and
health and prosperity fill the years, why should he?
318
His understanding of human misery and tragedy,
their roots and growth, will develop with the quest's own development.
319
These sufferings cause us to seek relief and act
as spurs to stimulate aspiration, as propelling forces toward spiritual efforts,
as goads to drive us on to the quest. Without them we would live on the surface
of things, squandering our energies on the petty, and tend to miss the true
meaning of life.
320
The prophets and teachers may attract a man's
interest in the path, but only misfortune and suffering will compel him to
follow it.
321
The pressure of a difficulty or trouble for
which no ordinary physical solution seems available has forced some people to
seek an extraordinary solution. This has been their first introduction to a
spiritual teaching, their first recognition that hard realism has failed them.
322
The philosopher is quite capable of enjoying
life even though he is deeply determined to realize life's highest goal. He is
well able to get some fun out of life even though he does not believe with the
thoughtless crowd that this planet was born to be an amusement park, or
constructed as a dancing hall.
323
Philosophy is not darkly pessimistic and
fatalistic, as a surface view makes some think. Nor, on the other hand, is it
childishly optimistic and voluntaristic, as some mystical cults are. It takes
fair and proper note of the real state of the world, refusing to be deceived by
misconceptions and illusions or by wishfulness and egoism.
324
This is not to devalue worldly experiences but
to look at them in a new way.
325
He who can rise superior to circumstances,
crises, or vicissitudes is an admirable character, but we deem him hardly human.
Thus have we hypnotized ourselves into a negative complex. But the really great
ones are not supermen, they are truly men. It is for us to be what we divinely
are; this the sages have perceived and accomplished.
326
We have to endure this ever-changing, unstable,
and undependable characteristic of the world just as others do, but at least we
are not taken by surprise and at most we can keep a kind of peace above it all.
We have to face the brutal fact that life on this earth is not intended to
afford lasting satisfaction or continuous pleasure - as so many used to think
before the war - but our philosophical studies have prepared us to cope with it.
Thus detachment becomes a part of our daily experience.
327
If the quest is good only for our brighter hours
and not for our darker ones, it is no good at all. But if men desert it because
of their troubles, then they have neither properly understood it, nor ever
adequately followed it. For the quest is our best support when times are worst
and emergencies are gravest.
328
If they have no assurance from within
themselves, then they are forced to seek it from without; if the Overself's
supporting intuition is lacking, then money and possessions, status and family
must support them; if there is no faith that the higher laws by which they live
will protect and care for them, then there must be fear that the world is a wild
jungle around them; if they are unaware that at the very core of their being
they are unbreakably linked with the World-Mind which is at the very core of the
universe, then they have to tremble at the thought of their helpless situation
when the great blows fall.
329
Should we not say with Plato that it is better
to suffer wrong than to do wrong? The problem of suffering does not exhaust
itself with its practical aspect. We have also to consider its metaphysical one.
If we have the intellectual and moral courage to do this without the egocentric
attitude and the surface emotionality which normally govern our approach to it,
it will be possible to see it in a clear light. Such is the self-discipline
which philosophy asks from its students and such is the emancipated outlook it
gives in return.
330
We form different conceptions of the same event
as we pass during life to various standpoints. Yet these conceptions will
approach nearer to or diverge farther from the ultimate truth about it which
philosophic insight would yield us. This is the worth of our passage through
space and time, for it is bringing us to a standpoint beyond space and time.
331
Even if this philosophic attitude towards
adversity and calamity did nothing more to change matters than to change his
attitude towards them, it would have done enough. Even if it could not save him
from the suffering they cause but enabled him to suffer with understanding, it
would have done enough. Even if it only guided him to study his suffering and to
listen to the message that it had to deliver to him, it would have done enough.
332
While he is a tenant of this body, so long as it
lasts, while he finds himself in this world, receiving from it and giving to it,
a man must pay due attention to care of the body and work in the world. This is
his lot. If he becomes a quester, it still remains his lot. But his inner
attitude to it will change, will be grounded on a higher level and ruled by a
higher ethic.
333
He is to meet each experience with his mind,
remembering his relationship to the higher self and, consequently, the higher
purpose of all experiences. He is never to forget the adventure in identity and
consciousness that life is.(P)
334
The philosopher will look his sorrows and
troubles, his cares and burdens, in the face. He will not deny them. But he will
not attach to them the interpretations which are commonly attached to them.
Instead of lamenting his ill-fate, he will seek out the reasons why they
particularly are present in his life. Instead of sinking into melancholy, he
will remember that he is more than the ego, and refuse to let go of the peace
that is behind and above it.
335
Will he accept also some disappointing,
unpleasant, but inevitable occurrence just as calmly as a fortunate and pleasant
one? Yes, he will, perhaps a little sadly but not sadly enough to disturb his
inner peace. But knowing that the event itself is caused neither by the
arbitrary fiat of a personal God nor by the chance deed of his own self, he will
seek to understand its derivation and to trace the current of causation back to
its source.
336
He will then be able to take all the happenings
of his life as divinely preordained, to accept them without revolt as being
perfectly right for him.
337
Thus the very events and experiences of everyday
life, which usually involve a man more and more in egoistic outlook and worldly
attachment, usually involve the faithful philosophic student less and less.
338
A shallow person enjoys the acclaim of others: a
profounder one couples it with the critiques of his enemies. This is not
necessarily because he is humbler but because he is honester.
339
His must be a life guided more by principles
than by circumstances.
340
The very situations which drag other men down
become for him a means of growth.
341
Insofar as the training gives him more
discriminating judgement and a better sense of proportion, it gives him more
fitness to hold responsible situations or to dispose of important matters.
342
When we learn to play aright this gorgeous game
called life, to move with a magnificent insouciance through all the glamours and
repulsions, the fears and tensions, which hold in thrall nearly all mankind, we
find true freedom.
343
Life may be hallowed or degraded or left just as
it seems - commonplace and trivial. It all depends upon the attitude, the
inspiration or lack of it.
344
The thoughts we hold and the actions we perform
are dictated in the end by our attitude towards life.
345
If untoward circumstances obscure our pleasure
in life and obstruct our aims in life, they also teach us something of the
ultimate truth about life. If we react to them according to the blind instincts
of the ego, they plunge us into greater darkness: if, however, we react
according to the inner promptings of the Overself, they lead us toward greater
light.
346
Karma is the precise result of what a man thinks
and does. His reaction to events and situations is the precise result of what he
is, his stage in evolution. Therefore, lesser reactions and hence better fortune
can come only when he elevates his evolutionary status.
347
Your thinking will have its effect not only upon
your inner character and outward activities, but also upon other people. This
last is quite conceivable when we remember that telepathy is no longer a mere
theory, but a proved fact.
348
How far does a man possess his external
condition? He can do much in this regard but he cannot do everything, for
obviously there are certain limits beyond which it is humanly impossible to go.
The balanced fact is that Man's thoughts make his surroundings and his
surroundings make his thoughts. When the materialist tells you that man is what
his environment makes him and when the idealist tells you that man is what he
creates out of himself, both are telling you the truth. But each is not telling
you the whole truth. The philosopher must accept both apparently contradictory
standpoints because he insists on seeing life whole, not in bits and pieces.
349
The philosophic man has to make up his mind that
his attitude towards every experience counts more than the experience itself,
that the way he thinks of it will either help or hurt his spiritual evolution.
If his reaction to an event weakens his character and dulls his intuition, then
it is really an evil one for him; if, however, his reaction is to utilize it for
his spiritual growth, then it will in the end be a fortunate event.
350
If we bring a correct attitude to our
life-experiences, they help us to gain greater inner balance and truer moral
understanding. But if we bring the wrong attitude, then these same experiences
plunge us into emotional unbalance and mental distortion.
351
Problems and troubles come to all alike at
different periods of their incarnation, to the wise and the foolish, the
passionate and the controlled, so that it would be futile to try to find one
person who has never had them. But wisdom or foolishness will be revealed by the
attitude, mental and moral, brought to deal with them, and by the dependence on
self alone or on self and Overself together.
352
Outward changes for the better are almost always
the result of improved inner conditions - that is, better, more inspired
thinking, plus elimination of negative thoughts and actions.
353
He may react to the experiences of life and the
course of events with either the animal part of his nature or the spiritual
part. The choice is his.
354
The mental states and emotional moods that are
strong and sustained within him are related to the events, environments, and
situations which subsequently form around him.
355
The state of mind is not just a product of
physical conditions: it is also a creative force which contributes toward those
conditions. It is both a hidden cause and an evident consequence.
356
Beware of your thoughts, for when long sustained
and strongly felt, they may be reflected in external situations or embodied in
other humans brought into your life. But they cannot, of themselves and devoid
of physical acts, make the whole pattern of your life - only the adept can do
that. For other factors are also contributing, such as the will of God - that
is, evolutionary necessity, or the World-Idea.(P)
357
When the sage looks back on the line of travel
which brought him to this illumination, he sees how everything that happened
could have been different only if he himself had been different. His sufferings
could have been avoided, yes, but only by his being transformed into another
person.
358
Assume attitudes that the spiritual teachers
hold up as desirable. Put them into your mental and emotional picture. Carry
them into your physical doing. For this is to be creative and to seize upon your
own inherent possibilities by belief and conviction. What you believe must be
really there and fully there, in the shadowy background of your mind as well as
in the clear foreground. The faith must be intense, active on all levels of your
being.
359
What happens to us is a continuing audit of what
we are.
360
This declaration of the power of mental attitude
to realize itself becomes invalid if the attitude assumed is a false one. We
have no right to demand what we are not entitled to.
361
In their mysterious way these forces of destiny
move in response to his inner needs as well as in reflection of his inner state.
362
He may transform opposition into opportunity
simply by a change of viewpoint.
363
As this inner work brings about a change in his
outlook, attitude, and especially consciousness, so a corresponding change or
test in his outer conditions will, after some lapse of time, come about.
364
Strain and misuse of the mind create harmful
habits. The one appears in tensions, the other in negative thoughts.
365
Each man responds to his surroundings and
contacts, his experiences and fortunes in his own personal way. "As you are, so
is the world," remarked the Ramana Maharshi at our first meeting.
366
Every important event or change in his life
offers a challenge to meet it properly, which means philosophically. This
applies, of course, equally to good fortune as well as bad fortune.
367
If you live inwardly in love and harmony
with yourself and with all others, if you persistently reject all contrary ideas
and negative appearances, then this love and this harmony must manifest
themselves outwardly in your environment.(P)
368
Life is still the greatest of games a man can
play. But he must play to win in every minute of it, with every move on the
board. Every time despair comes and whispers to him, he should put cotton-wool
in his ears. Man was born to master - not to be mastered. Faith can fight
despair, and win, too. Let him look upon his difficulties not as stumbling
blocks to trip him up, but as things waiting to be conquered.
369
Truth and love will conquer in the end - however
far off that be - for they are deeply buried in the hearts of men and will be
slowly uncovered by the instruction which life itself gives. We must acquire
something of God's patience.
370
The human failing which makes so many worry and
create avoidable mental suffering about themselves and about others, can and
must be met by a strong positive endeavour to keep the mind in its highest
place. It is not in the nature of our godlike inmost self to feel depressed, to
suffer melancholy, or to express worry. If we are to turn to that nature as our
true being and basis for living, we will reject these negatives.
371
Why add to any dark or difficult situation? Is
it not enough to have to endure it that you must enlarge it by setting up the
tension of your negative emotions or disturbed thoughts about it? Keep them out
of it.
372
When he feels that his life is in the hands of a
higher power, his fortunes governed by great laws whose ultimate intent is utter
beneficence, his courage will be unassailable.
373
A time comes when we learn to stop worrying
about ourselves, when we take the burdens off our shoulders and, in Jesus'
words, "Take no thought for the morrow." We gain new fresh strength when we
refuse to worry ourselves into misery, when the possible or impending troubles
of the future are left where they belong.
374
But such calm does not mean he should do nothing
at all about the situation. If it is going to affect his personal circumstances
he may choose to take certain protective action, to avert or at least mitigate
its effects, just as he may choose to put up an umbrella or wear a raincoat if
the weather indicates the likelihood of rain.
375
This done, however, he still holds to his
positive mental attitude, not only because he refuses to live with fear, but
also because he refuses to become obsessed by the future and live in time.
376
Sometimes it is wise to follow Livy's counsel:
"In great straits and when hope is small, the boldest counsels are the safest."
Then the early manifestation of brief panicky fear will be followed by a new
courage, despair will be succeeded by determination, weakness will yield to iron
strength.
377
The anguish and cries of the ego in suffering
are, to the aspirant, an opportunity and an inducement to make the great
surrender and to rise to a nobler viewpoint. Giving way, in suffering, to
negative emotions of resentment, anger, despair, and bitterness is very easy.
The wiser attitude of doing all that can be done in a bad or difficult situation
and then calmly accepting the issue is much less easy, but it must be attempted.
378
It would be easy to misconceive the philosophic
attitude towards these negative feelings: anxiety, worry, fear, indignation, and
righteous wrath. Philosophy does not teach us to avoid facing the situation or
circumstance which gave rise to any of these feelings, but only to avoid the
negative reaction to it. It tells us to learn all we can from it, to understand
why it is there at all, to analyse its meaning and apply its lesson. Only after
this has been done, and especially only after we have attended to the correction
of whatever fault or failing in us helped to create the situation, are we
advised to forget it, turn our face away, and calmly put ourselves to rest in
thoughts and remembrances of the impersonal Overself. Only then is our sorrow
and suffering to be discarded, and we are to recall that there is no room for
despair in the truth. That reflective wisdom must be followed by courage and
even joy.
379
The ability to hold on during a single dark
period, when the frustrations and humiliations of poverty seem unbearable, may
turn the fortunes of one's entire life for the better.
380
No animal except man lives in such constant
fear, for no animal lives in the past, the present, and the future so much as
man.
381
As soon as we succumb to moods of despondency,
hopelessness, and helplessness, we are doomed. As soon as we triumph over them,
we are saved.
382
It is not that he is required to be unwrung by
calamitous events, or remain immune to them, but that after feeling the emotion
he is to remember the Quest and try to rise superior to it.
383
When he is born again, adversity becomes an
advantage, his evil hour becomes a good one. With it he lifts his drooping mood,
whips his irresolute spirits, and instills perseverance into his arduous
struggle.
384
We sometimes wonder whether we can bear more,
but no experience goes too far until it crushes the ego out of a man, renders
him as helpless as the dying person feels.
385
An American millionaire once told me how, in
quest of making his living, he tried New York. The twenty-five dollars he
arrived with went very soon and the penniless and friendless young man met with
rebuff after rebuff. Came a time when he was almost starving, and he had to
sleep out in a park because he could not afford a lodging-house. Finally his
troubles and utter loneliness brought him to the horror of trying to commit
suicide. But the strange hand of Fate sent someone to stop him; this very person
who intervened was carrying the burden of still worse woes upon her back - but
enduring them. When the young man heard of these from the lips of the woman who
saved him, he realized as in a flash how unmanly it was for him to give up the
struggle. So next morning determination took the place of despair. He started
out again to look for work. He persevered so doggedly that the same afternoon
brought him his first job.
386
Address to Muslim College, India:
You, young men, will sooner or later have to go out into the unfamiliar and sometimes unfriendly world to make your own personal careers. The change from the sheltered seclusion of college life to the open struggle for existence will necessarily be an abrupt one; the adjustment to the new conditions which will have to be faced necessarily a hard one. Moreover, the conditions in the world today are admittedly disturbed and unsettled. You are therefore likely to meet with many gloomy prophets who will tell you dismally of the difficulties of getting on and of the impossibilities of getting good positions. Let me warn you against these melancholy pessimists who paint only one side of the picture and wrongly regard that grey side as being the whole picture. There is another and brighter side which is equally deserving of your consideration.
You may have a discouraging time at the start. Opportunities may be few. But they are always there for the right men. So long as you nurse the unflagging spirit of ambition, so long as you set up a staunch determination to overcome the obstacles in your way, to master the difficulties that may surround you, so long as you say to yourselves "I will" and "I must" instead of "I won't" and "I can't," you will find yourselves on the highroad to eventual success. For sooner or later there are always openings for bright, keen, and determined young men. Why? Because the world wants such men.
If you will only remain faithful to the principles of truth, goodness, and unselfishness which are embodied in religion, you will certainly bring to your help heavenly forces which will ultimately assist you in your career. Do not be deceived by the cynical talk of superficial croakers. A man who lives according to these principles will eventually win the respect of society, and society in its turn will reward him with her gifts of place, honour, and prosperity. Therefore you should endeavour to cultivate an optimistic frame of mind; you should regard whatever difficulties the future may bring not as permanent setbacks but as opportunities to arouse grit and to enable you to show forth the powers inside you that can overcome them.
You should read the biographies of men who have risen in life from humble circumstances to high positions, as well as the biographies of others who were more fortunately born and, by their good character, developed capacity, and keen determination, have left their mark on history. What they have done some of you at least can also do, while all of you can certainly create a habit of looking to the bright side of life and thus make life easier both for yourselves and for others.
387
Our outer lives to some extent reflect the state
of our minds. Many of the trials we have to bear would dissolve after we faced
ourselves and removed the negative characteristics within our minds. But there
are some karmic difficulties which cannot be altered, no matter how clear and
pure the mind becomes.
388
When we are brought face-to-face with the
consequences of our wrong-doing, we would like to avoid the suffering or at
least to diminish it. It is impossible to say with any precision how far this
can be done for it depends partly on Grace, but it also depends partly on
ourselves. We can help to modify and sometimes even to eliminate those bad
consequences if we set going certain counteracting influences. First, we must
take to heart deeply the lessons of our wrong-doing. We should blame no one and
nothing outside of ourselves, our own moral weaknesses and our own mental
infirmities, and we should give ourselves no chance for self-deception. We
should feel all the pangs of remorse and constant thoughts of repentance.
Second, we must forgive others their sins against us if we would be forgiven
ourselves. That is to say, we must have no bad feelings against anyone
whatsoever or whomsoever. Third, we must think constantly and act accordingly
along the line which points in an opposite direction to our wrong-doing. Fourth,
we must pledge ourselves by a sacred vow to try never again to commit
such wrong-doing. If we really mean that pledge, we will often bring it before
the mind and memory and thus renew it and keep it fresh and alive. Both the
thinking in the previous point and the pledging in this point must be as intense
as possible. Fifth, if need be and if we wish to do so, we may pray to the
Overself for the help of its Grace and pardon in this matter; but we should not
resort to such prayer as a matter of course. It should be done only at the
instigation of a profound inner prompting and under the pressure of a hard outer
situation.(P)
389
Suffering and pain are parts of the divine
pattern for human growth. They fulfil a wise and understandable purpose. But
this does not mean that we are to look upon all suffering and all pain as
necessary parts of that pattern. Some of it is avoidable and, to that extent,
not necessary.
390
The more he remembers to think of asking what
the divine intention is in these situations and hastens to co-operate with it,
the sooner will they be rectified.
391
But even for those who lack the capacity to
think for themselves or to intuit for themselves or to imaginatively work out
the lessons of possible experience, God has still provided a way of avoiding
pain. For He has provided the prophets and seers and holy messengers who point
out the right way to think and live.
392
The lessons which life, guided by infinite
intelligence and invested with infinite power as it is, seeks to make available
to us through the turning wheel of destiny may bring suffering but they also
bring the wisdom which will shield us from suffering in the future. This is
possible only if we accept the suffering as self-earned, humbly study its
lesson, and set to work on self-improvement. But if we are too proud, too weak,
too foolish to receive the lesson, then the same suffering will reappear again
and again in later years or later lives until we do. It will come as before
through the same events, at the right time and in the right place. Whether it is
life that punishes us through its eternal laws or we through our disobedience to
them, we cannot dodge the step to be mounted.
393
He should begin by searching through his
feelings to discover which one, if it exists, is the block to a speedier and
favourable end to the trouble, which one is shutting out the forces of help, as
well as which one is blinding him to the vital lesson behind the situation.
394
There is no permanent way of escaping
difficulties other than the way of seeking spiritual realization. That is what
we have really incarnated for. This may seem hard on us, but life on earth as it
is known today is also hard for many people.
395
Those who turn cruel destiny or harsh accident
to opportunity by taking a spiritual profit from it, abandoning natural
bitterness and emotional rebellion, coming creatively in mind and positively in
feeling to their suffering, thereby bring about its redemption.
396
If he remains true to philosophic principles in
the various situations in which he finds himself, every so-called evil in them
will be consciously turned to good.
397
Acceptance of suffering is sometimes a key to
the way out of it. The greater the suffering, the greater are the possibilities
of Peace succeeding it - provided that the lessons to be learned from it have
been correctly interpreted and actively applied to daily life.
398
To see why our suffering is there and to know
that it will pass gives us a great advantage over the ignorant who suffer
blindly and forget its ephemerality; for it replaces rebellion and resentment
with patience and endurance.
399
To understand the true cause of the
trouble is already halfway to perceiving the remedy.
400
The wise man knows that suffering has been
essential to his development and has helped him to learn certain lessons. When
others fall into the same experience, therefore, he does not wish that they
should not have it so much as that they should learn the lesson of it. It would
be illogical to apply his wisdom in his own case but to withhold it in the case
of others. If a sentimentalist says that because he feels sympathy for others,
he wishes them not to suffer, then that is all the more reason - not less - for
wishing them not to suffer blindly.
401
Where the understanding of life is deep and
true, where the training of self for spiritual awareness has been long and
earnest, men suffer less from their personal troubles than where these things
are not present.
402
We may often escape the penalties which follow
wrong thinking and evil doing only by altering the one and counterbalancing the
other. But even such ameliorative measures must be taken in good time, or they
will be useless.
403
The aspirant who heeds the injunctions of the
Stoic sages and the Galilean preacher to dismiss excessive care for the external
paraphernalia and possessions of life, who believes in and practises the
doctrine of mental detachment, will not need to have forced upon him the
physical renunciation and physical detachment taught in a more salutary and
painful form by loss and misfortune.
404
From the first moment that we accept personal
responsibility for our troubles, we take the first step towards relieving them.
405
To escape mentally into the past in order to
take refuge from a present disagreeable situation may bring comfort but will not
bring help.
406
The more he can inwardly free himself from the
claims of his daily regime - that is, the more he can become emotionally
detached from it and transfer his interest, love, and desire to the higher self
- the greater will be his power to achieve dominance over undesirable
conditions.
407
If misfortune is explored with understanding and
its hidden message sought, it becomes something much more than an exercise in
faith and patience, as the religious-minded would have us believe.
408
The wisdom that one is offered the opportunity
to learn through experiences of suffering should lead not only to some
self-renunciation, but also to some true self-humblement beneath the will of
destiny, which has revealed itself as insuperable. Once he becomes inwardly
submissive, he will find that time quickly heals its own wounds, and that a
great peace will be bestowed on his inner life.
409
When one is sustained by truth and inspired by
communion, the most bitterly discouraging experiences can be borne, examined,
understood, and mastered.
410
Assets become problems by the fluctuation of
fate. But problems can be turned into assets by the wisdom of man.
411
"Failure" is a tricky word. We often apply it
indiscriminately upon hearing the glib voice of Appearance. Real failure is
rare. He only has failed who has lost his soul. Such are hard to find, though
millions today have chloroformed their souls.
412
Out of his own heart a man may seek guidance for
his future. His former sins become his future teacher. His errors, once
perceived, show him the right way. His thoughts, once overcome, provide him with
new strength and new virtues. His trials, met and mastered, open new doors of
consciousness to him. His weaknesses offer him a challenge and if he takes it up
and if he uses his will to transmute them, he will be the gainer.
413
It was one's own ignorance and immaturity which
made one act in a way which now seems very wrong and to be ashamed of. It is no
use accusing oneself forever and ever of it. It is better humbly to distill its
wisdom, gain its constructive teaching, and uplift one's character. For a man to
accept himself as he is would be foolish counsel if he had nothing more than his
sins and guilt, his ego and passions, his folly and stupidity. But it is because
he has a deeper self - one that links him with the gods - that it can now become
a wiser counsel. Let him take it now and work upon himself with this better
self.
414
Frankly confess your past mistakes, then analyse
and absorb their unpalatable lessons, and resolve to apply the unpleasant result
to your future actions. This is practical wisdom. It may be a saddening
procedure, and if it is to be an effectual one, it ought to be. But having done
it, be done with it. Turn your face toward the sun of hopefulness. Remember the
strength, light, and joy waiting to be drawn from your higher self.
415
If, in looking over the past, he feels shame
over the crowd of his frailties, it is well. It is not good to forget
experiences from which he has not thoroughly absorbed the lessons. But when he
has done so, the sense of shame will depart and the sense of having been
cleansed will take its place. He has been granted absolution, and may be at
peace.
416
It is not always possible to judge appearances.
There are failures in life who are successes in character. There are successes
in life who are failures in character.(P)
417
If a man has failed in life, most likely he has
also failed to look to his higher self for aid or guidance.
418
A man's personal history may teach him what it
ought to teach him only as he is able to bring some part of his mind away from
his habitual ego-standpoint into an unfamiliar aloofness.
419
No failure is to be considered a total one. All
experience is tuitive, although the finest experience is intuitive. It is not
necessary to get unhappy, morbid or agitated about a failure, although it is
necessary to take its lessons seriously to heart.
420
It is not what the world calls success that
philosophy endorses. A man may suffer the ignominy of defeat and failure and yet
fulfil the highest function, the true purpose of his life. It is an ignorant and
mean definition of success which ties it to social recognition and worldly
prosperity.
421
A mistake comprehended as such may be the
beginning of new wisdom.
422
One reason why we need at times to break away
from the pattern of habitual thinking is that it is limited by our past
experiences. This tends to keep us from our greater possibilities and to inhibit
our true creativeness. If we were failures in the past, the auto-suggestion of
failure in the future handicaps us and is eventually converted from thought to
fact.
423
However much he may wince at the memory of them,
he is answerable for his mistakes and should so regard many of the pains and
penalties he suffers from. To the extent that he intellectually analyses the
whole course of his conduct and comes to the right conclusion about it so as to
discover where and how he went wrong, his anguish will be somewhat compensated
in the end. To do this he needs to perceive those weaknesses in himself which
led to his blunder and to set to work to eliminate them. If he omits this and
merely surrenders to the emotional suffering, letting himself go into barren
despair or falling into egocentric unbalance, he makes the bad worse.
Who has not made mistakes in the past? Wisdom lies in not making the same mistake twice. Situations which bring to the surface what might otherwise have lain hidden in his character and which put his quality to the test give him a chance to adjust himself accordingly. Every important event which leads to them has an inner as well as an outer significance, for it traces back to a karmic origin which is specially selected by the Overself because he is on this Quest to promote his self-knowledge and self-purification.
If he follows the deeper lead, these situations will surely work out for the best in the end, but if he follows the ego's lead, it may easily make a bad situation worse.
However the external situation develops he must cling to his ideals, to his faith in the higher power's intuitive guidance. In this way he does not depend on his own strength alone. At the same time, he can use all his human powers of judgement to fill in the details of what is necessary and right in his own personal behalf.
424
It is because all private history is never
written that people unconsciously falsify it by looking only at a saint's moral
successes and not at his moral failures. Did he never lapse back into a lower
condition of mind, suffer uncertainties about what to do, or fall into
despondency?
425
Human beings act wrongly or commit blunders
sometimes. Mature human beings admit these failures but immature ones place the
blame elsewhere.
426
If these things have humbled your self-love by
showing you that the thing so much loved has its ugly blemishes, they have
served a useful purpose. But you need not stay at this point. You don't have to
moan over it for the rest of your life.
427
His past failures in human relations should be
remembered with humbled, bowed head, and the lessons to be learned therefrom
thoroughly digested. He should be grateful for this privilege of gaining
self-correction.
428
To re-examine the events of ten, twenty, thirty
years ago, much more to relive them, can only be justified if it helps to loosen
one from the ego rather than fixing him more tightly in it. This requires a
detached learner's attitude.
429
Failures directly contribute towards success, if
he is wise enough to take their lessons so deeply to heart that his whole
character undergoes a change in consequence.
430
If he has the sagacity to take in the sad lesson
of these experiences and the practicality to turn it to moral profit, he is a
true student of philosophy.
431
Hold no experience longer than its allotted
time.
432
Listen to the message experience is trying to
give you, then learn it and obey it.
433
Every situation which shows up the ugly results
of his faults offers an invitation to repair them. Its profit lies in his
egoless acceptance.
434
It is the business of intelligence to study the
follies of misspent years, to reflect upon the mistakes of a wasted past, and to
extract both warning and knowledge from such experience. If it does this, if it
firmly resolves no longer to repeat endlessly those courses which bring loss and
pain, it will lead the man to victory over failure. He may have made every
blunder and committed every sin, but he can yet emerge triumphantly into peace.
435
But if man is to achieve this full welfare he
cannot live solely on a negative wisdom, cannot be guided merely by the lessons
gained from his mistakes. He also needs a positive truth to complement them.
436
If disillusionment is the prologue and substance
of our lives, the cheering message of a mysterious Hope shall be its epilogue.