1
Is this a world of exile from our spiritual home or
is it a world of education for our spiritual home? If it is the first then all
experience gained in it is worthless and useless. But if it is the second then
every experience has meaning and is related to this universal purpose.
2
The truth does not lie wholly with the Hindus, who
liken life to the illusions of dream, nor with the Buddhists, who despise it as
a burden and a misery, nor with the hedonists, who value it only for the
pleasure it yields. Surely the truth must contain and reconcile all these points
of view?
3
Where is the incentive to improve oneself or
society, to make something of one's career, one's life, to be ambitious or enjoy
art - what is there to live for if everything is illusion?
4
The value which so many put on life is paltry
compared with its real value.
5
No man has any choice as to whether or not he should
seek the kingdom of heaven, his higher Spiritual Self. Every man is seeking it,
knowingly or unwittingly, and is preordained to do so. There is no escape. There
is no satisfaction for him outside it.
6
It is not necessary to divide mankind into two
categories - the believers and the infidels - for all alike are on this quest,
only many do not know it.
7
The difference is that the seeker consciously enters
on this quest whereas the ordinary man, although also pursuing it, does so
blindly and unknowingly.
8
Many persons mistakenly suppose that they have
escaped from difficult problems by avoiding the environments or the individuals
associated with those problems. This is mere escapism, useful as a relief but
useless as a final and sole solution.
9
What matters is not only the quality of a man's
consciousness but also the quality of his day-to-day living, not only the rare
special mystical ecstasies that may grace his experience but also his
relationship with the contemporary world and his attitude toward it. It is not
enough to be a mystic: he cannot avoid the common road which all men must
travel. In brief, can he be in the world but not of it? Can he sanctify the
ordinary, the customary; those actions, this business, that very work for a
livelihood; the contacts with family, friends, critics, and enemies? After all
he is a human being with personal concerns; he cannot live for
twenty-four hours a day in abstract ideas alone, or in religious withdrawnness:
he has a body of flesh, a relevant duty or responsibility to perform in the
world outside.(P)
10
To refuse to explore experience for its meaning by
denying its very existence, merely because it is painful experience, is simply
to evade the very purpose of incarnation here on earth. It is only by striving
to understand the significance of what happens to us, only by drawing out the
lessons of life from it, that the higher truth about one's self and about the
universe can ever reveal itself.
11
Common sense is still needed here. We are in the
body; we are surrounded by the world. It would be hypocritical to dismiss the
first as non-existent and reject identification with it. And to talk as if one
could even thrust the second away would be madness and self-contradiction.
12
It is utterly absurd to ignore the potent effect
of one's surroundings, to try to put them aside as unimportant, to write them
off in forgetfulness, to deny their existence as mere illusion, or even to
consider such efforts as an indispensable part of spiritual training.
13
Our very existence as persons makes it necessary
to give proper attention to the body and its needs, and to the worldly
surroundings in which it lives. They cannot be dismissed, much less despised,
without falling into an insane mysticism or an off-balance metaphysics.
14
Those who reject the external order of things are
as foolish as those who reject the eternal order.
15
The unsolved problems which life in the world has
brought him represent either debts requiring payment or weaknesses requiring
amendment. If they are too much for him, flight to some peaceful retreat in
Nature's green solitudes may offer relief - for a time. Such desertion of the
world is not wrong, provided he uses it to help prepare himself for an eventual
solution of the problems.
16
A reincarnated monk may tend to seek the haven of
a cloister through inability or unwillingness to cope with a world which is
admittedly difficult to cope with. Yet the world offers him an experience which
may be just what he needs to draw out latent forces.
17
Life forces him to pay attention to the world: its
denial in metaphysics or dismissal in yoga does not invalidate this necessity.
18
We must respect the facts of experience even
though we try to transcend them.
19
It is not enough to look into himself. Even if he
does find the kingdom of heaven there, Nature compels him to look out of himself
too.
20
The worldly realities have to be recognized for
what they are, treated with respect, and behaviour must be brought into
accordance with them. What is the use of denying the world as "unreal," of
dismissing the body as "nothing," as I have heard Indian mystics do, when all
the time both are obstinately present to the senses and dominant in the mind?
The world has to be dealt with, the body has to be tended, whatever views,
opinions, or beliefs one holds.
21
Meeting the needs of physical existence is a
justifiable and necessary duty if one is to survive. This involves realistic
acknowledgment of the body's functions and practical connection with the world
around.
22
It is not the goal to be unaware of the hard
realities around him.
23
To throw away external experience is to throw away
man's third-best tutor. Life also has its voice and speaks in this way to
correct wrong theory and to discipline wrong action. The transcendental
intelligence behind our personality has put us in this world neither to deny it
nor to hide from it, but to accept it and learn its valuable lesson.
24
An intellectual recognition of the transiency of
life is not the same as a temperamental despondency about life. The first may be
allied with enthusiasm, serenity, and humour but the other may not.
25
If anyone feels the truth of Shakespeare's lament
that "time will come and take my love away," if he complains that worldly
transiency mars his pleasure in favourable circumstances, he ought also to
rejoice that the same transiency mellows his pain in untoward circumstances, for
time is just as likely to take them away too!
26
By abandoning so-called security, he finds a real
freedom.
27
The very treasures for which they lose their
ideals, their morality, eventually slip away from them, as if to teach a lesson.
28
During times of great suffering, he may best
countenance his bereavement by taking it as a reminder of the transiency of
earthly life, and of the necessity to cultivate the interior life of spiritual
growth. By so doing, he helps himself and also others.
29
Man's life is not a static square: it is a turning
circle. Change is either coming or leaving him at some point, in his mind, body,
or circumstance.
30
It is in the nature of all things that they must
perish, of all possessions that they must pass into other hands, of all desires
that their satisfaction shall bring with it an accompaniment or a consequence
that is not desirable. But to dwell only on this aspect is to become wrapped in
negativity and obsessed by it.
31
All worldly happiness suffers from being
incomplete and imperfect. Most worldly happiness is transient and unstable.
32
All mortal unions which begin in one year must be
ended in another, must be divided after short or long time. One must learn how
to stand alone if need be.
33
He must needs attend to the things of earth and
self. But if he over-attends to them, if he dwells over-long in their midst,
then loss, pain, or death will come to teach him the lesson of their transience.
34
The uncertainty of fortune and the brevity of
satisfaction are two lessons of our time.
35
We who are spiritually minded move against a
background which is materialistic and uninspired.
36
The tragic antithesis between the divine and the
material afflicts us at every turn.
37
Those who are seeking material fulfilment are at
cross-purposes with those who are not; the one group is obeying the law of its
being just as much as the other, yet they are moving in opposite directions.
38
It is not that they do not understand each other's
tongues so much as that they do not understand each other's emotions. Such is
the wide difference between men for whom the quest is nothing and those for whom
it is everything.
39
The difficulties of being completely honest,
truthful, and sincere, of keeping to idealism in a materialistic or mad world,
afflict only the living. The dead are luckier. Not for them the compromises, the
white lies, the half-measures, and the glib hypocrisies.
40
To recognize any situation as factual is one
thing, but to reconcile it with spiritual life is another.
41
The quest's ideals draw him one way, the world's
temptations pull him otherwise.
42
His problem is how to stay in the world and do the
world's work without losing his spiritual integrity.
43
Down through the centuries there have always been
men who made hearsay their truth, appearances their reality, and conformity
their virtue. They are the gregarious many, the countless victims of those twin
illusions: the ego and the world.
44
They are too concerned with earning their
livelihoods, with the members of their families, and with attending to personal
wants to bestow thought upon such abstract topics as life's higher meaning. They
are not to be blamed but they are also not to be imitated.
45
There are millions of men and women living today
whose whole conception of life is so entirely materialistic that they not only
do not comprehend a spiritual conception, but do not even want to comprehend it.
46
They find a completely worldly life sufficient for
their needs. They do not want, do not miss, and are quite indifferent towards
spiritual things.
47
Most people react mechanically, not creatively, to
surroundings and situation, events and persons. In this they are like children
and animals, not like truly and fully human beings acting from knowledge and
power.
48
The present state of the masses is hardly to be
envied. Lives of humdrum toil, varied by a little sensual excitement, existences
estranged from true happiness - the divine calm of the spirit is remote from
them.
49
They readily fill all the day and even part of the
night with activities intended to satisfy their worldly desires but grudge the
few minutes required to satisfy their spiritual aspirations through prayer and
meditation. Time, which is flowing like a tidal river through and away from
their lives, thus carries them farther away from - and not nearer to - the
higher purpose for whose realization they were sent into bodies on this earth.
50
Most men are enslaved by things and nearly
all men by thoughts. They know nothing of the tremendous sensation of
freedom which comes from the philosophic insight into both.
51
In the ordinary man there is no desire constantly
to improve the moral nature, no hunger imperatively to enter the mystical
consciousness. Spiritually, he is in a state of inertia, unwilling and unready
to use any initiative in enlarging the horizons of the ego. Most, but not all,
of this inner laziness can be traced to the fact that he is the victim of his
own past, the prisoner of his own particular innate tendencies and habitual
thinking. Nevertheless, the same evolutionary process which has placed him where
he now is will also advance him to a higher point.
52
The truth is that few wish to trouble themselves
with following such a way of regeneration, and most prefer the comfortable sloth
of accepting their deficiencies as normal qualities of the human being.
Therefore they allow one thing after another, one event after another, to detain
them from making the mystical ascent and so waste a whole incarnation before
they are even aware that it is wasted. Is their spiritual life to wait like a
whining beggar on those intervals of leisure which a materialistic existence
throws them like sops to Cerberus? Some aspirants have even turned away from the
quest because other things claimed a stronger interest. Others have given up its
goal simply because they believe it to be unattainable. And then there are those
who are literally afraid of devoting themselves to the quest. It seems in their
eyes to demand too much or give too little.
53
The first interest of the common people today is
better economic conditions. The interest in religion, if it comes at all into
their lives, is naturally somewhat distant from this one. The interest in
mysticism, if it manifests in groups here and there, is still more distant from
it. The interest in philosophy, if it awakens in a few individuals, is so far
off from the interest in improving their lot as to be almost shadowy.
54
Those who are uninterested in any higher purpose,
meaning, or activity which transcends their routine lives, who are spiritually
unconscious, are to be neither condemned nor defended. They are simply immature.
55
In what way have the basic desires of
people today changed from those of four, three, two, one thousand years ago?
Shelter, food, sex, and clothes are still sought now as then. But the forms they
have taken and the opinions or beliefs held about them have changed.
56
Man as a sense-bound beast is in conflict with man
as a spiritual being.
57
Those who are satisfied to remain with their
animal instincts form the larger group. Those who are struggling to advance
beyond them form the smaller one.
58
Some say change systems if you want to improve
men. Their opponents say change men if you want to change systems. Both state
partial truths, both suffer from their limitation of refusing to acknowledge
that the argument of the other side is essential to a complete judgement. The
animal hungers and aggressive urges in human nature account for many or most of
our more serious troubles: they cannot be altered as easily as we alter
policies.
59
If men will not use their intelligence to examine
and sift their traditional inheritances, social and individual, they must expect
to suffer the sins of the fathers being visited upon the children.
60
Most are conventional; they do not like to appear
unusual. They feel uneasy if they are with someone different from others. This
makes them good citizens and communally helpful.
61
All these people have lost flesh-and-blood
reality; they seem like marionettes, directed here and there by egoistic motives
or animal reflexes in some cosmic play.
62
As they get more "civilized," their way of living
gets more artificial, unnatural, and insensitive. How else explain the foods
they eat, the noises they endure, the doctrines they espouse, and the tasks they
toil at?
63
Theirs is the happiness of slaves and prisoners,
slaves to the senses and prisoners of the body. It is the happiness of ignorance
because it does not know what joy and freedom, what calm and beauty, lie beyond
both.
64
Unfeeling toward these delicate vibrations,
unaware of the nature of soul, they pass by the gate of the kingdom of heaven in
ignorance of its existence and worth.
65
Caught up in all the trivialities of daily living,
never having time for That which life is really all about, they should not
wonder that their end is either a secret sorrow or a complacent self-deception.
66
The fact is that the truth has forever been open
to mankind but man has rarely opened himself to the truth.
67
Of what use to offer the subtlest ideas and most
refined sentiments of philosophy to crude, untutored minds which could see only
madness in mentalism, only horror in ego-merger, and which responds so
predominantly to animal instincts?
68
Our age is too ready with its cynicism, too sure
of its materialism.
69
The man who has no awareness of his true self
enjoys a certain sense of real living but it is largely a self-deceptive
enjoyment.
70
Just because they move about and engage themselves
actively they believe they are getting on, but that could be an illusion. Many
get nowhere but find this out only when it is too late.
71
Modern man does not usually know that he is
unwhole, divided in himself and ignorant of himself, and that the healing of
this division is essential to health and happiness.
72
Those who respond to the dictations and commands
of authority form the largest group - the masses. Those who respond to the
directives of their intellect form the next one. Those who respond to their own
intuitive determinations form the smallest group.
73
It is natural for a generation which thinks that
being sophisticated means being intelligent to think also that being spiritual
means being idiotic.
74
The average life is commonplace and repetitive;
the average mind is inert and asleep.
75
They have no higher conception of themselves and
hence no ideal to strive for.
76
This inner emptiness of their lives results in
boredom, depression, irritation, and confusion.
77
Modern man lives in his body for material ends,
almost independently of the rest of him. He has run his head into the noose of
one-sided life.
78
To exploit the physical resources of Nature is not
materialism, but to make such exploitation the chief purpose of human existence
is materialism.
79
There is no peace in our restless daily existence,
no poise in our restless minds and hearts.
80
We are wealthy in techniques and skills, poor in
wisdom and insight. We have too much selfishness, too little goodness. Most of
us are caught in a tangled web of activity, but few of us seek release from it.
81
If we examine the enormous volume of writing
appearing in novel and play, film and radio, we shall find that two themes
dominate. Scripts on crime or violence, sexual adultery or promiscuity, occupy
more time than any other subjects. Sadism and salaciousness are human
distortions, the development of animal attributes channelled through the human
intellect - the very attributes which, as remnants of our prehuman stage of
existence, are now in line to be overcome and eradicated if we are to conform to
evolutionary purpose.
82
The fact is that most people are unacquainted with
the mystical point of view, uninformed about mystical teachings, and unattracted
by mystical practices. This is partly because there are few mystics in the world
and not much reliable information about mysticism, and partly because the
dominating trends of most people are materialistic ones. The values which they
consider the most important are sensuous ones.
83
The contempt of mysticism prevails among so many
who do not know what mysticism even means.
84
So long as human beings do not know and feel their
real being within the greater being of God, so long will friction and hostility
prevail among them.
85
Beauty is too noticeably absent from their minds,
manners, and homes; truth is not an idea whose discovery would be exciting;
goodness is taken for granted but only on the most ordinary bourgeois level.
86
All their ideas of truth are limited by the
illusions, falsities, uglinesses, and weaknesses which limit and hold their own
minds.
87
When Radhakrishnan was sent as the first
ambassador to Russia of the newly created Indian Republic and presented his
credentials to Stalin, the latter, on learning that his visitor was a professor
of philosophy, answered, "We have to fill the people's bellies first, not teach
them philosophy." This reminded me of Napoleon's visit to one of the Italian
universities after his army had victoriously crossed the border for the first
time by crossing the Alps. He went through some of the rooms in the university
and came into one where a class was being taught. On learning that the students
were being taught metaphysics he exclaimed, "Bah!" and went out. What is behind
the attitude of those two men, Stalin and Napoleon, an attitude we often come
across in less exalted circles? Is it not that people realize that a man who is
hungry because of his poverty and inability to buy enough food is unlikely to be
able to put his mind into the creation of art for its own sake or to think of
lofty abstract ideas for their own sake with sufficient concentration?
88
Most people live upon the mere surface of their
consciousness, knowing nothing of the great Power and intelligence which support
it.
89
Those who are so immersed in outer activities that
they have no inner life at all die before they are dead.
90
At one extreme are those who are held captive by
convention; at the other, those who delight in flouting public opinion.
91
The common attitude regards that which is beyond a
man's comprehension as being therefore beyond his concern.
92
The peasant mentality is a stable, solid, and
reliable thing but it is unashamedly interested only in the smaller concerns of
life. It would be openly materialistic too were it not for the inheritance of a
conservative tradition of conformity to religion, strong but narrow, outward,
and superstitious. That it has little time or use for culture is obvious.
93
All these people are trying to evade personal
responsibility by finding someone else to make their decisions and be
responsible for the results, someone behind whom they can hide from the world's
stresses and under whose aegis they can shirk the necessities of thinking,
willing, and experiencing.
94
Their need is for definite, invigorating ideas
which will deliver them from wearisome perplexity and for an illuminating faith
by which to live in a darkened world.
95
There is no inner aim, no spiritual significance,
no worthwhile objective in their lives. They move through the years towards -
nothing. They move from action to action without any consistency of principle.
They grope through life like players in a game of blindman's bluff. They either
do not know how to conduct their existence or else they fail to conduct it in
the right way. In both cases they need help, guidance, direction. But
unasked-for advice is unwelcome.
96
The conventional attitude which left Mozart to die
in a pauper's grave but set up elaborate marble monuments to numerous
mediocrities is not one to be admired.
97
It will not be by surrounding men with social
benefits that they will take to the spiritual path. America is evidence of that.
On the other hand, excessive deprivation of such benefits is equally an
obstacle, for it continuously concentrates the immature mind on physical needs.
What is needed, therefore, is a safe balance between these two extremes.
98
The masses should also be given what they inwardly
need, not always and only what they demand.
99
It is often the minorities who hold the better
views, for wisdom is not usually in the majority.
100
Today the mass-man resents the idea that anyone
is better than he is, or entitled to more than he has. He demands equality in
every way, from sharing responsibility to sharing rewards. Education, which was
to have made him a gentleman, has missed the mark and made him a grumbling
complainant, full of demands.
101
In ordinary times the less evolved masses were
not pressed to accept a faith far beyond their mental reach or to submit to an
ascetic discipline which they could not bear. But these are extraordinary times.
The young postwar generation has an intelligence quotient nearly one-third
higher than the earlier ones. The desire for knowledge is world-wide.
102
Their interests revolve only around themselves,
or around those lengthenings of themselves called families.
103
The lack of time given in everyday living to
religious devotion, let alone mystical practice, is partly responsible for the
materialistic tone of society and, indirectly, for the moral degradation of
society.
104
How few nourish their character on high
principles, how many on cynical opportunism!
105
The masses float conventionally with the stream
of religious authority; the individualized swim against it. The many merely echo
what they have heard, like parrots; the few investigate it.
106
"There is nothing more absurd than to be of the
same mind with the generality of men, for they have entertained many gross
errors which time and experience have confuted. It is indeed our sluggishness
and incredulity that hinder all discoveries, for men contribute nothing towards
them than their contempt or, what is worse, their malice." - from The
Fraternity of the Rosy Cross,
107
They who reject the Quest live to no purpose
beyond living itself, to no higher end than satisfying natural necessities.
108
They are unlikely to recognize a true teacher,
much less respond to him.
109
Millions of people accept and hold certain
beliefs because they get comfort from them, not because they have verified them
and found them true. They are treating emotional pleasure as a better guide than
rational judgement.
110
When life has cheated their hopes and illness
has darkened their years, their shallowness and frivolity may appear
insufficient and inadequate.
111
The soul-suffocating conditions of repetitive
factory work creates not only an unhealthy boredom, but also an insensitivity to
the finer things of life.
112
The lower self seems uppermost in humanity and
directs its activities. The higher self is something unreal, remote, and
impossible.
113
This blind unwillingness to see that man is more
than his body has multiplied crime and dissolved virtue.
114
Those existentialists who find life meaningless
must themselves necessarily become aimless.
115
They live for no worthy purpose, certainly for
no high one, and so they live largely in vain.
116
Men of unlit minds will either humbly respect
such a teaching or impulsively scoff at it.
117
The world is not ready for a fresh mystical
revelation, not ready to follow a new religious seer, because it is not ready
for a self-denying and flesh-denying life. It would not know what to do with
such a revelation and it could not accept the discipline preached by such a
seer.
118
What is it that motivates these people? First it
is selfishness, second it is materialism, third it is inertia. But the
selfishness is often masked under the guise of tradition, the materialism is
often hidden under the form of religion, and the inertia is often covered by
convention.
119
Where vulgarians throng to dance and barbarians
eat corpses, there philosophy must isolate itself, withdrawn, while the karmic
hurricane collects itself.
120
They are not sinners but mummies. Even sinners
may be vital, may repent; but these are the dead-in-life, stiff with bourgeois
hypocrisy and conventionality.
121
If they are without virtue, faith, moral
principle, and God, the cause can be summed up as simple lack of interest in
such matters.
122
In the end the psycho-physical progress of the
mass depends upon that of the individual.
123
In the end society consists of its individual
members. They are the materials out of which it is built. How then can it be
better in quality than the general average of their individual quality?
124
In the past only a small number of persons had
the interest, the equipment, or the time for such a quest. In the future there
will be many more. But in the present, though the interest grows and the
information swells, the limits remain.
125
The hunger for reality does not take a
philosophical form in the less evolved herd. It may there take a political form,
a social form, an emotional form, and so on. Only with the herd's own evolution
will its awareness of the true objective evolve.
126
We are half-formed creatures, with only parts of
us developed. The whole Man is yet to come.
127
Only when society reaches a higher level, when
civilization evolves to a finer state than exists at present, can we expect that
the proper respect and appreciation will be given to those higher truths
literally shining with light to which only a comparative few give themselves.
128
If men do not have sufficient vision to see the
importance of philosophy, that is not their fault any more than it is the fault
of a tender plant not to be a mature tree.
129
Business can render honest useful service to
society without falling into the absurd self-flattery and the blatant
charlatanry of its publicity. Its easy ethical attitudes and easy surrender to
economic pressures are responsible for the wholesale perversion of a profession
such as writing. The advertisement which fails to go into hypocritical
rhapsodies about some very ordinary product is uncommon. The advertisement
writer who fails to hypnotize himself into seeing or imagining all kinds of
exaggerated virtues about a product is uncommon. The advertised description
which honestly tells you both what is right and what is wrong with the product
is nonexistent. Such publication of the half-lie as if it were the whole truth,
of the cheap and sensational or the exaggerated and misrepresentative, is
another form of that crude immature culture whose world-spread is so rapid in
our time.
130
Every important source of ideas, whether it be
the press, literature, radio and film, the arts, or the schools and colleges
needs to be brought into line with this ultimate purpose of moral and spiritual
re-education.
131
The masses listen to scraps of news with
eagerness as it pours out of the
radio, as it is illustrated by the television, or as it is printed in the journals published every day. In this way their curiosity is momentarily satisfied, but only momentarily. It arises afresh day after day until it becomes a thirst.
There are two points of interest here which may not be generally noticed. The first is that curiosity is not all bad - it is a kind of caricature of the desire to know and to understand. It is related, if rather remotely, to that wonder which Plato said is a beginning of philosophy. The second point is that the satisfaction of continuing this curiosity scatters attention until the scattered condition becomes a permanent part of the mental character. Philosophy departs from this state through sustained interest in its study, concentrated practised attention in its meditation, and independent thought for its application in living. All these run counter to the scattered mental condition of the mass of mankind.
132
Most advertising depends on the power of
suggestion, not on service. Therefore it is selfish, to some extent
hypocritical.
133
The sort of journalism, and today even
literature, which is mere backbiting gossip in print expresses the affinity of
writer with reader; both fit this low plane.
134
The great technical advances which have been
made in the past two centuries have not been made without cost. Before that
period the psychiatrist was unknown because his service was not needed. Although
man has done so much to improve his environment, he has also done much harm to
himself. His nerve system and his muscular system are markedly weaker, his
emotional nature more frayed and unstable, his faith in and sensitivity to the
higher power markedly less.
135
Many of the forms of so-called progress which we
have seen in the past century and a half were really corrections of the evils
which the beginning of the Industrial Age had brought into being. They were not
really new forms, real progress, but rather rectification of the wrongs we had
done. Cities have grown immense in many countries, bringing many evils,
difficulties, and problems which never existed before. The machine which can do
so much to help us if used with wisdom and caution has become a Frankenstein.
Chemicals have followed the same path in medicine and food, making it more
difficult to get pure food, or to get well-healed without introducing new and
hostile complications.
Of course, a world-wide spiritual awakening - by which I do not mean a merely religious awakening - could also remove the threat of self-destruction. But this century has been a period of challenge, and it is for the human beings to accept this challenge and rise to it positively if they want a positive result. So far we have seen mostly that the high degree of knowledge and skill which science has developed has been developed on a lavish scale financially for the weapons and instruments of destruction, and much less for pacific purposes.
If this short survey of the situation seems depressing, it will not alter the general structure of the World-Idea. The cycles through which we pass, the grim and the grand, must one day also bring us to a union of this high intellectual development exemplified by science with the less materialistic and gentler ideals which originally spread out from the East.
136
Progress must be meticulously and carefully
defined as a theory, and the facts offered in proof of it must be as full and
complete as possible, so that their adverse side may be included as well as
their beneficial side - a point which becomes very obvious in the case of
science. Therefore, it is not enough to point out the magnificent progress of
technical, engineering, and scientific activities; there must also be a
scrupulous examination of the pollutions and sicknesses, the dangers and hazards
which they have brought into existence. The same critical examination is needed
for the moral, the ethical, the religious, and the metaphysical progress of
scholarly activities.
137
Without unreasonably rejecting the contributions
of modern ways of living or the useful arts of twentieth-century civilization,
or the practical techniques of science and industry, we may still refuse to let
them dominate us to such an extent that the intuitive elements in human nature
are overwhelmed and lost. We must complement and balance them.
138
The whirring machine is not a sin against life
but rather a part of its larger fulfilment. For man cannot improve his
intelligence without inventing machines. Ascetics, mystics, and sentimentalists
who complain that the machine has maimed and killed should also remember that it
has served and saved. And when the same people mourn over the lost Arcadian
happiness of primitive mankind they might remember that men who lived in
frequent fear of wild beasts and hostile tribes could not have been ideally
happy.
139
We have done much to improve the architecture of
a house but little to expand the consciousness of the person who lives in it.
140
If industrial civilization has enriched our
outer life it has also impoverished the inner life. It need not have done so if
we had brought about a proper equilibrium between the two and if we had done so
under the light of the guiding principle of what we are here on earth for.(P)
141
We fuss about with so many things that we miss
the fundamental and profoundest thing of all. Peace, inward beauty, and sanity
are singularly absent from the mad, mechanized life of our large cities.
142
The victims of modern civilization are supposed
to have more leisure. But do they really have it?
143
Mass-production of goods may cheapen their cost
and thus spread their use, but this benefit is offset by the loss of the
craftsman's skill, the artist's individuality. Everything has to be paid for, as
always. We get nothing for nothing.
144
We live in a condition of spiritual languor, of
lost spiritual vision, and decayed intuition.
145
Our mistakes have been to make the body's
possessions and comforts, its machines and devices, so sufficient unto
themselves that the mind's higher needs have been overlooked or brushed aside.
146
The discontent, rebelliousness, bitterness, and
violence on the part of workers in industry which we have seen rising like a
tide through the past century, in several cases ending in open revolution is not
altogether or rather only a matter of more wages and fewer working hours. It is
also a matter of the kind of work which they have to do. When men work
with machines they get worked upon by the machines themselves,
they begin to lose their humanness and become more mechanical. And if the work
is a mere repetition of a previous operation done at speed - as we saw
theatrically presented in Charles Chaplin's film Modern Times - the
worker's situation psychologically gets worse. The dehumanization of large
masses of people creates negative emotions and materialistic thoughts within
them. This is not to say that the machine is an evil thing. It has its place,
especially where it saves unpleasant, dirty, or fatiguing labour. This is only
to say that it should be kept in its place and not allowed to overwhelm the
worker inwardly.
147
It is less urgent to invent new mechanical
devices than it is to correct old moral defects.
148
A wife and mother of three children who went out
daily to work told me feelingly how much the automatic washing machine had meant
to her in saved toil and time, how greatly it had relieved her from the
dismaying burden of the family laundry. Here was a vivid and incontestable
instance of machinery's positive value and necessary place in human life.
149
We have had proof enough that without a prior or
accompanying spiritual growth, technical improvements lead to mixed evil and
good results - with the evil ones always in excess.
150
We moderns have tried to make Nature serve our
purposes. We have built a civilization on science and technology. But in the
process of making material things our slaves, we have ourselves become slaves to
them.
151
The present spectacle affords ironic evidence of
the paradoxical nature of our vaunted "progress."
152
The products of applied science, the inventions
of modern industry, and the energies which drive engines need not have evil
consequences if they are used in inner freedom, not in enslavement.
153
The man of an earlier generation who looked
through the slot of Edison's kinetoscope and was thrilled by what he saw would
be pitied by cinema-audiences of the present generation for getting so much
emotion out of so little an experience - such is the complacency bred by
familiarity.
154
We live in an age of division of labour. It may
make for industrial efficiency for a man to spend his whole life putting the
heads on pins, but I fancy that he will be something less than a man at the end
of fifty years. The artisans of old time, both in Europe and Asia, were equipped
to practise all of a craft or even several arts at once. Moreover they created
their own designs and then executed them by their own hands.
155
The machine may be used against men and women,
as in war, or for them, as in peace. The ascetic notion, popularized by such men
as Tolstoy and Gandhi, that it is necessarily harmful and always evil is
unphilosophical.
156
Is it really necessary to choose between the way
of the world, which leads to the possession of things, and the way of the
Spirit, which leads to the possession of oneself?
157
Again paradox is truth. The brevity of
life, possessions, beauty, and such is true and good reason to abandon all:
world, love, and so on. But the opposite is also true. We can enjoy beauty,
life, and all the rest if detached. So both sides together equal
the whole truth. So I join no sect or teaching - alone.
158
In the true concept of spiritual life, there is
plenty of space for the rational, normal, and practical life also.
159
To work effectively in this world of everyday
without repudiating or forgetting the world of the Spirit - this is his duty.
160
This mystical preachment on the gospel of
inspired action is written for those who find themselves tangled up in the
affairs of this world and must make the best of it. I counsel them to make the
best of it by making the better of their inner life. I suggest that it is better
to aspire aright and rise spiritually than to remain like a stagnant pool. And I
would remind them that their worldly work can be carried out on a basis of
service plus self-interest, where now it may be carried out on a basis of
self-interest alone; for to serve is to put the spirit in action.
161
It is not necessary to renounce life in the
bustling world. It is necessary, however, to change its basis, to transform its
character, to make it echo the voice of the Ideal, which is to lead us upwards
towards better things.
162
The ugly way so many human beings behave is
simply a revelation of the ugliness in human nature. The mystically inclined
person may not like this sombre reality and may prefer a fantasy of how he would
like them to be. Yet so far as his fantasy includes the picture of a divinity
within their hearts, this is also true and is the bright reality which must be
put into balance with the darker one.
163
He has to keep his feet on solid earth, but
without letting himself get earthbound.
164
Instead of falling into the common attitude of
classifying the natural everyday side of human nature as hostile to the mystical
inner side, as an incompatible opposite, why not bring both sides together in
harmony? This can be done intellectually by understanding mentalism, and
emotionally by appreciating or creating inspired art.
165
We have to work with the actual but we can do so
by the light of the ideal.
166
Wang Yang-ming maintained that wisdom and virtue
could not be gained by meditation alone. He asserted that the daily experience
of dealing with ordinary matters was also needed, providing that experience was
sincerely reflected upon by conscience, reason, and intuition.
167
He need not seek flight to isolation or to
monasticism. He can participate in the world's life without being soiled by the
world's evil. He can continue to grow in knowledge of truth and devotion to the
Good even in the midst of such profane activities. But to succeed in this a
correct attitude toward them and toward their results must be acquired.
168
Living in the world as we are, having to submit
to demands which the world makes upon us, we must learn how to deal with them in
a correct way. By correct I mean in harmony with our inner goal.
169
The harder the situation is to bear, the more it
should arouse a wise ambition in him to get out of it. Ambition requires,
however, an all-around awakening and remaking of his personality. He can fight
and be ambitious and yet hold on to ideals; there is no need to lose them.
Balance is to be the ideal.
170
If he is to be in the world and of the world, he
will still remain undeceived by the world.
171
Both attitudes are required for a proper result:
the idealistic which looks to a new and better future, the practical which
recognizes the limitations of its heritage from the past.
172
It is out of this new conflict in the personal
situations through which he passes, the conflict between idealism's abstract
call and actuality's practical demands, that he has the chance to discover his
balance.
173
Only to the extent that a man can find harmony
within himself can he adjust harmoniously with his world.
174
What is wrong if we claim some happiness from
this world, provided we keep our balance, the heart anchored to an allegiance
higher than the world, the mind always remembering for what it is really here?
175
Contrast remains the essence of all human
experience.
176
A civilized life ought to possess better quality
things - art, music, and literature, some touch of refinement somewhere, and a
little basic knowledge of food values and perils, of personal hygiene and health
preservation.
177
Precisely because it comes with the truth,
because it is associated with the discovery of reality, the final phase of
philosophy - sahaja - cannot be segregated from the business of living.
178
Each man finds what he is looking for, and the
world is a mirror of his own self. The frog is lured to grovel in the mud
surrounding a lotus whereas the butterfly is lured by the fragrance of the
flower itself. The philosophic student perceives quite clearly that the
lotus-flower of reality which looks so lovely in the bright gay sunshine cannot
be separated from the roots which look so ugly in the black muddy slime. He
makes a perfectly balanced adjustment to the world as he finds it, not merely as
a concession to a compulsive environment, but because Philosophy does not stand
aside from human needs nor remain unrelated to human affairs.
179
If his fidelity to worthy ideals remains through
situations which test character and he reacts honourably to events which expose
it, he finds that in the end his real welfare in the world also remains. Whether
he is encircled by business affairs or pressed by everyday work or worthily
consumes time in other ways, his lasting good will not suffer. Only the less
important surface life may do so. Even there he may be saved from entering wrong
courses.
180
It is a paradox of the strongest irony that the
place where we can best find the Overself is not in another world but in this
one, that the chance to grow enduringly out of darkness into light is better
here.
181
This is the extraordinary paradox of the Quest,
that it is a road leading out of daily life and yet far inseparable from daily
living itself.
182
If he puts everything in its place - the lower
and lesser things where they belong, the higher and greater ones above them -
what has he to fear from the world? He can still remain active in it; flight
will be unnecessary. If he does not forget the final purpose of all this worldly
activity, that through the body's life and the mind's existence he may seek and
find his true self, the Overself, the inner failure and superficiality of so
many lives will be avoided.
183
It is needful to relate this earthly life to the
divine one, not only in isolated sessions of meditation but also in the whole of
the daily existence. When this is fully done the consequences are unpredictable,
the effects on oneself and others incalculable.
184
The high moods created in meditation must be
brought into contact with the personal daily life, must bear fruit there; and
although this happens anyway quite automatically to some extent, it could happen
to a much larger extent if turned into a conscious deliberate process.
185
This earthly life is the "narrow gate" which
opens onto the kingdom.
186
Whoever lives in such a society, his heart in
the Real, his mind in the True, is as much absent from it as he is present.
187
For sincere questers there is, or should be, an
interest in life which grows with time.
188
It is here, in the ordinary and uneventful tasks
of the day, that he may find just as much opportunity to practise nonattachment,
to suppress egoism, and to express wisdom.
189
The flow of current events and the incidents of
day-to-day living ought not be allowed to shake him from his stand in the truth.
They give him the chance to view them metaphysically from the Eternal Now, and
psychologically from the ideal Self.
190
"What is the path?" the Zen Master Nan-sen was
asked. "Everyday life is the path," he answered.
191
We are told that economic necessities must be
satisfied before spiritual ones. But why not both together, side by side, since
there is no separation between them? The way in which we gain the mundane
ends is always governed by our spiritual background.
192
Why do men embark on this quest? Is it not
because it gives them hope? Here we should not confuse hope with optimism.
193
Wisdom takes advantage of opportunity, spiritual
not less than material, but foolishness neglects it.
194
It is of immense importance, whether in the
internal spiritual life or the external worldly career, to cultivate the art of
detecting, recognizing, and accepting opportunity. Two factors need especially
to be remembered here. First, sometimes she presents her face plainly and
unmistakably, but more often she presents two faces each equally attractive and
each claiming to bear her name: or else she disguises herself under the garb of
commonplace events and unprepossessing personalities. Second, she never repeats
the same situation with the same chances in precisely the same way. With altered
conditions, the same causes cannot produce the same phenomena. To miss those
chances through ignorance or the blindness of unpreparedness, through logic's
limitation or the dismissing of intuition, is to miss portions of success or
happiness that could easily have been ours.
195
Understand that destiny often moves forward like
a game of chess. If you cannot see immediately your way to success in a career
or the solution of a problem, you should look for the first step in that
direction. For only after that has been taken will the second show itself, and
later the third, and so on. Learn to detect the beginnings of the way to
opportunity, even though opportunity itself is still not visible.
196
The opportunity is unrepeatable and unreceivable
in exactly the same way, for the passage of time - be it a moment or a century -
has forced change on both the situation and the person.
197
In making a decision as to the kind of life he
will lead, he has pronounced a judgement on the other kinds also. What happens
thereafter will itself judge his judgement.
198
A single mistake in the rejection of an
opportunity or in the choice of direction at a crossroad may lead to a
quarter-lifetime's suffering. The student may quite easily discover by analysis
the smaller lessons embodied in that suffering and yet may quite overlook the
larger lessons, for he may fail to ascribe major blame to the early rejection or
choice. He may still not realize how it all stems out of that primary root, how
each error in conduct that naturally happens after it becomes a channel for a
further one, and that in its turn for still another, so that the descent is
eventually inevitable and its attendant sorrows become cumulative. Thus all
traces back to the initial foundational error, which is the most important one
because it is the choice of wrong direction, because such a wrong choice means
that the more he travels through life, the more mistaken all his later conduct
becomes.(P)
199
If he accepts the hand of opportunity when it is
offered him, the effects will be favourable in every direction. If he feels the
premonition that he is on the verge of a new cycle, and makes decisions or acts
accordingly, the way into it will open out for him.
200
That man is immensely fortunate who is able to
detect opportunities when they come and who, having detected, proceeds to take
advantage of them.
201
What most people count as great misfortunes
sometimes open the door to new opportunities, ideas, or courses of action
leading to advantages that would not otherwise have come. It is wiser to defer
an appraisal of such events until they have shown their results as a whole to a
final view.
202
How little do we know that some small act, some
minor move, may lead to consequences that open up an entirely new phase of
experience.
203
If he acts too quickly on decisions made
impulsively, he may suffer loss or hurt. But if he is overly slow to take action
on decisions made long before, the consequence may be the loss of a good
opportunity.
204
This situation has happened in the lives of many
people. Where they have recognized its significance as a spiritual chance,
everything thereafter went well for them, but where they failed to recognize it,
everything went wrong, materially and spiritually.
205
If we do not make good use of our chances, they
come to us in vain. If our opportunities are ill-used, they will not recur for a
long time. Thus a life will teach us a better sense of values.
206
Situations develop where to take a certain
course would lead to immediate advantage, and he may feel tempted to take it.
But if, from the point of view of his spiritual growth, it is undesirable, what
does he gain in the end?
207
Opportunities are not always recognized as such
by the aspirant. He who expects them to come fully labelled for what they are
falls into error. The difficulty which seems to retard his steps on the
spiritual path hides within itself the chance to develop qualities and
strengthen weak places.
208
What could be more poignant than the
after-regrets at valuable opportunities thrown away through one's faults or
missed through one's blindness?
209
Error begets further error, creates its own
heirs. This is why the first step on a new course is the most important.
210
It is true that some opportunities by their very
nature can come only once in a lifetime.
211
When a decision has to be made, and different
sides of one's nature are pulling in different directions, creating inner
conflict, bewilderment, and rendering a firm decision impossible, what is the
aspirant to do? Find the true guidance? Let him first surrender the problems to
the Higher Power. This surrender is best formulated through the medium of a
heartfelt prayer in which there is earnest desire first to learn and then to
accept the guidance. This must be done with the utmost concentration and
sincerity, seeking to learn the Higher Will and being ready to abide by it even
if it disagrees with personal desires.
After this is done, wait calmly for days or even weeks with faith that the solution to the problem will eventually come. If it does not come directly from within as an intuitive certitude, then it may come through some event or contact or as a distant trend forming itself in outward circumstances and pointing to a specific direction.
212
The need to guide his personal life more
intuitively comes home to him after every major mistake has been committed and
its effects felt. He sees then that it is not enough to calculate by intellect,
nor feel by impulse, nor act on emotion, for these have led him to sufferings
that could have been prevented, or caused other people sufferings that bring him
regrets. He learns that it is necessary to listen inwardly, to wait in mental
quiet for intuitive feeling to arise and guide him.
213
Success in the perplexing game of living is only
possible when decisions based on balanced truthful thinking become easy and
natural. But in turn, truthful thinking is only possible when every egoistic
motive, every emotional weighting, and every personal wish and fear is removed
from the thought process.
214
If a situation is fraught with anxiety and is
also either unavoidable or unalterable, the first procedure is to organize all
your forces to meet it calmly. The second is to call on the higher power for
help by turning to it in relaxation and meditation.
215
However difficult the circumstances of his
surface life may become, the student must cling to his faith that the Overself
really is, and that if he seeks Its guidance It will lead him to the
wisest solution of his problem. This does not necessarily or always mean that he
should stop his own personal efforts. On the contrary, he should use his reason
and judgement to the best degree of which he is capable, and also consult others
who are more experienced or more expert than he is. But after he has done all
that he can do, he should hand over his problem to the Overself. He must prove
that he has really surrendered it by releasing himself from further anxiety
concerning the outcome. He must be confident that the higher power, which is
always with him, can meet his needs. He must be patient enough to wait and
courageous enough to accept a solution which offends his egoism. Then, outer
help or inner guidance or an answer to his problem will be forthcoming.
216
He must learn to depend on the infinite source
of his being for everything, but only after he has done all that his limited
mind and ability can do.
217
It is correct practice for a man to abandon his
anxieties or fears and turn them over to the Overself, but it is incorrect for
him to do so without or before analysing their nature, origin, and lesson.
218
The practice of trying, by "going into the
silence," to rise above mundane difficulties before they are properly
understood and before one's own responsibility for them is honestly
assessed, is a premature one.
219
However harassing a problem may seem to us, if
we can give up our egoistic attitude towards it, if we can keep the lower
emotions away from it, the best possible solution under the circumstances will
develop of its own accord. There is veritable magic in such a change of thinking
and feeling. It opens the gate to higher forces and enables them to come to our
help.
220
Each problem is to be solved by the simple
method of turning it over to the Overself and then dismissing it from mind. The
ego is faulty and blind; what it cannot solve or manage, the Overself can. But
this method requires time and patience.
221
Sometimes the guidance will evolve naturally out
of the situation, the circumstances, the events. He will then only have to be a
spectator, but he must still supply the intuitive interpretation and recognition
of this recognition.
222
Take your peril to the Overself, identify your
real being with the Overself and not with the vanishing ego. Then you will be at
the standpoint which perceives that you are as secure and safe as the Overself
is. Hold your position as the final and highest one. Reject the very thought of
being in danger. There is none in the Overself.
223
The problem which the ego has created for you
but which the ego cannot solve for you will dissolve under the impact of the
Overself's light.
224
He should make it an unfailing practice to turn
inwards in moments of need for help and in moments of perplexity for direction.
225
No other act is so urgent or so important as
this, to turn now in thought and remembrance, in love and aspiration, toward the
Overself. For if you do not but turn toward that other and worldly act which is
so clamant and demanding, you fall into a tension which may lead to error and
consequent suffering. But if you do turn toward the Overself first and then act,
you rise up to inner calm and consequent wiser judgement.
226
After he has meditated sufficiently on his
problem, he should drop it from mental view altogether and wait, passively and
patiently, surrendering it to the intuitive element within himself. If he can
get deep enough, absorbed enough, he will touch this element and may instantly
receive a solution from it. If he cannot, it will be necessary to try again
another time, and perhaps even several times. Then, either in that passive
contemplation or unexpectedly during the day, or abruptly on awaking from sleep,
the elusive answer to his question may be presented to him as a clear
self-evident fact.
227
Work quietly for a few minutes daily in handing
your problem over to the Higher Power, confessing you have done what you could,
and praying from the depths of your heart for the right solution. However, on no
account dictate what that solution should be. Examine the lesson behind your
sufferings in dealing with problems of the past, acknowledge the mistakes and
repent them. Then wait and watch what happens during the coming weeks or months.
The advantage of this method is that it "works"; the disadvantage is that it
gives us what is best for our next spiritual step forward, which is not always
to personal liking but is always for our best in the long run. The important
thing is to adopt and maintain an attitude of surrender - not to another person
but to the Overself - in the face of adverse emotions.
228
Without recourse to an experienced teacher it is
going to be a longer and harder road than with it. For he will be compelled to
find his way by a trial-and-error method.
229
It is not easy to know always what to do in
certain situations, and this creates anxious states of mind and may lead to
vacillating decisions. In that case it is better to make the experiment of
waiting a little and praying to the Higher Self for guidance before falling
asleep. Then, immediately after awakening, or rather in that brief state between
sleep and waking, one should remain passive to whatever thought, message, or
picture presents itself. This may require repetition day after day until the
result is successful.
230
He must wait indefinitely until intuition
supplies the needed answer or, if the matter is more urgent, wait only for a
definite period and then review the situation again, ask humbly for guidance,
and force a decision even though it is at risk.
231
Why fatigue yourself trying to make a difficult
decision? Why not hand the problem over to the higher power, which knows better
than you? Where logic fails to guide, surrender and intuition may take its place
and prove their worth. Having turned the problem over to the higher power, just
leave it to time. This does not necessarily mean you have nothing further to do.
There may be action required, but in that case quietly await the signal or
guidance: let it appear of its own accord in its own hour, meanwhile trusting
yourself to the Power, giving your problem to its wisdom, and letting your
destiny take its course under this new association.
232
One must be on guard against the ego. He should
test his actions by their motives; let him ask himself whether his teacher would
act in the same way. Seeking guidance should be combined with the active use of
his own reason about any matter, because the highest reason coincides with the
highest guidance. In financial matters, especially, he should make reason the
touchstone.
233
He has to ask himself: What is it that the
Overself is impelling me to do? The answer will hardly ever be a spontaneous
one. He will have to wait patiently for days or weeks or perhaps months before
it will be heard sufficiently clearly and definitely.
234
He may bring his problem into the presence of
the Light, and seek guidance upon it. But he ought not to do so before first
seeking the Light itself for its own sake. If he does, and makes the contact, it
will throw his problem aside, and he must allow it to do so. He must be patient
and let the matter of guidance come up later, or at another time.
235
Act neither too soon nor too late. Await the
proper occasion with patience. Its coming will announce itself if you are
sensitive to intuitional prompting. But if calculating doubt or emotional desire
or other people's suggestions get in the way, you may misread the fitting time
and spoil the opportunity.
236
If he will take the Overself's timing rather
than his own, if he will cease struggling against this destiny and resign
himself to it, he will begin to note and understand that many of the greatest
events of his life have happened without his having any part in bringing them
about.
237
To shirk all responsibility and get someone else
to make his decision in a perplexing situation contributes little or nothing to
his own growth, but to seek help from more experienced persons in making his
decision is quite proper.
238
Often the guidance does not come till the time
when it is needed, the answer to our questioning does not make itself heard
until the eleventh hour. Until then we must learn to wait in hopeful patience
and in trustful expectation.
239
It is a mistake to assume that the sought-for
guidance must necessarily reveal itself in all its entirety and all at once. It
may, but quite often it does not show more than the next step to be taken or the
next truth to be assimilated. The later ones are then withheld until this is
done. Why should they be given in advance before we have demonstrated our faith
in the first lead already given and our willingness to put it into practice?
Moreover, the proficient disciple must learn to live in the eternal Now and its
resultant peace, not be anxious about the imagined future and its possible
events.
240
At the moment of his greatest need - which
usually means at the moment when a decision can no longer be deferred - the
event will happen or the guidance will come which will show him the way out of
his problem.
241
Only by the application of philosophic
technique, referring every difficulty as it manifests to, and dissolving it in,
the Infinite Mind, will it be possible successfully to handle such problems.
242
When confronted with an external situation which
they are unable to cope with, some seek escape from the necessity of dealing
with it. The philosophic method is to face and analyse the facts.
243
It is of practical importance in the affairs of
his life not to enter any undertaking nor make a decision nor begin a day
without first entering into a meditation. This will tend to introduce proper
deliberateness and dismiss hasty carelessness from his decisions, to insert
intuitive guidance into his activities, and to warn him against wrong
enterprises.
244
The intuition may be slow in revealing itself
but when it does the inner certitude it provides, the strong consciousness of
being right, will enable him to act decisively and swiftly.
245
It is said proverbially that practice makes
perfect and that habit makes easy. Certainly he who diligently cultivates the
habit of relying on his intuitive forces for guidance and on his higher ones for
courage, will do what he is bidden unswayed by his ego's criticism or other
people's opposition. The worth of following such a course will prove itself by
its results, for they will, in the end, promote the true happiness and real
welfare of all concerned.
246
The history of his future will test his choices
of the present and tell him whether they are wise or not. His mistakes will
punish him, his right decisions reward him.
247
He will avail himself of the guidance of
circumstances if he can detect the hand of the higher power in them.
248
If he turns away from his problem and to the
Overself, the moment its peace is felt or its message of truth is heard, he may
take this as a sign that help in some way will assuredly come to him.
249
He should not assume that the guidance must
manifest itself in one particular way alone. On the contrary, it may come to him
in a variety of ways, and may even be transmitted through someone else.
250
God may help us, or God's healing may come to
us, indirectly. Instead of a miracle happening abruptly we may be led
intuitively to the knowledge which, or to the person who, will reveal what we
can do to serve or save ourselves. The end result may thus be the same as the
miracle, but we shall have guided our lives toward it by our own informed
effort.
251
As soon as he turns it over to the Higher Power
to deal with, what is he doing? First, he is withdrawing the ego from trying to
manage the matter. Second, he is placing the other person in the Overself's care
or inserting the situation in the universal harmony. In the first case,
management will no longer be limited by the short sight of his desires and the
shallow penetration of his intellect. In the second case, the person will be
exposed to the recuperative, renewing, and pacifying powers of the Overself or
the situation will be benefited, through the mentalistic nature of the universe,
in the best possible way for the ultimate good of all concerned in it.
This procedure is not the treatment suggested by rainbow-dreaming teachers, for it begins by noting the actual condition, however unpleasant or unhealthy that may be. It analyses by all the means within its reach the nature, the causes, and the effects of the condition: only then, only after this is done, does it turn away from miserable actuality and try to see the glorious ultimate ideality. From the moment that he consciously gives recognition to the Overself and its perfection, he opens the door to its forces.
252
If, while managing a situation, you are filled
with anxiety or taut with tension, take it as a warning sign that you are
managing with the unaided ego alone. That is, you have forgotten, or failed, to
turn it over to the higher power, to put it in the hands of the Overself.
253
To become as a child, in Jesus' sense, means to
become permeated with the happiness, with the joy, which a child's freedom from
responsibilities and anxieties brings it. All problems being turned over to the
higher power, the philosopher enjoys the same inner release.
254
The practice of turning to the Overself for
relief, help, guidance, or healing in a grievous crisis is most effective only
when, first, the will acts resolutely to put away thoughts of anguish, second,
the turn is made swiftly, and, third, the will continues to keep the mind
dwelling steadily on the benefic qualities of its sacred object, idea, or
declaration.
255
He will not rigidly hold to any course of
worldly action which he has charted, but will hold himself open to a change
indicated by higher leading at any time. He knows that such an indication may
come from within intuitively or from without circumstantially.
256
If it is a truly intuitive decision or choice,
one of the signs validating it will be the feelings of satisfaction and serenity
which immediately follow it.
257
If he has sought guidance through intuition or
meditation but found only a barren result, he should watch whether circumstances
themselves decide his course for him. If they do, it could well be that this is
the outer response to his inner request.
258
While you are thinking about a problem and in
search of an answer to it, you cannot get the intuition which is its true and
final solution. But when you are no longer doing so, the answer appears. This
happens with the genius during the interval between two thoughts but with the
ordinary man during sleep.
259
The guidance, the message, the answer, the
solution he seeks may come in different ways at different times. It may appear
as a pictured symbol or be received as a mentally-thought sentence or flash
through his consciousness as a self-evident intuition.
260
If he is seeking to solve a problem and receives
as the fruit of his meditation a vague peaceful happy feeling, this is not
necessarily the end; it often means that at a subsequent time he will receive a
very definite solution, either from within or from without.
261
It is good for him to try the method of simple
prayer for obtaining the illumination he needs upon the specific problems which
trouble him. He may address prayer to whatever higher power he most believes in
or to his own higher self.
262
If in doubt regarding any great difficulty,
close your eyes, think of a master, silently call on his name, then patiently
wait. The force using him may come to your help.
263
If the technique of turning a problem or
situation over to the higher power fails to yield favourable results, the fault
lies in the person attempting to use it, not in the technique itself. If he is
using it as an attempt to escape from coping with the problem or as a refusal to
face up to the situation, and thus as an evasion of the lessons involved, it
will be better for his own growth to meet with failure. And even among those who
claim to have perceived the lessons, they may not have really done so but may
have accepted only what suited their egos and rejected the rest. The full
meaning of the experience must be taken deeply to heart and applied sincerely to
living before the claim to have learned it can be substantiated.
264
Counsel given in individual cases and isolated
instances should not be taken always as meant for every case and for universal
application.
265
Human beings are too varied for all to follow a
single line. In personal temperament and moral character, in intellect and
feeling, in aptitude and skill, differences are great enough to make necessary
different prescriptions for the way of life.
266
The hardship, the difficulty, or the problem
which he cannot meet by his own strength he may meet with the help of the divine
strength.
267
Seeking help from the higher power need not mean
turning away altogether from ordinary dependence on human power and skill.
268
Whatever outward changes he may find it
desirable to make, or whatever decisions he may have to come to, he should do so
in a way that will help him fulfil his high purpose, even while at the same time
they take care of his earthly life. By attending to the deepest inner promptings
that may come to him in moments of relaxed calm, he may get valuable pointers
toward the best direction in which to make these changes and adjustments.
269
He will find that at the exact point in time and
the essential point in place where his real need is, a way out or over or
through his problem will appear. This is not always the point which this
clamouring ego may determine it to be. Silencing the ego by going into the
stillness within is the best way to draw this help.
270
Why should we bear all the grievous burdens of
the ego? By turning them over to the higher self, not prematurely but after
analysing their lessons and doing what we ought to, we gain relief.
271
With the onset of crisis or stress, trouble or
calamity, he turns his mind instantly toward the Higher Power. This can be done
easily, effortlessly - but only after long self-training and much practice in
thought control.
272
He will not let others push him into activities
that are not his duty or inclination; he is responsible for and must make his
own decisions.
273
It is ironically paradoxical, this discovery
that the very higher power to which we must turn in our helplessness is within
ourselves.
274
Whatever the difficulty, you will certainly face
it better and may solve it sooner if the ordinary approach through reason and
practicality is controlled and illumined by the final approach through the
higher self. This is done by dwelling on its never-leaving presence and healing
power.
275
To lose one's faith in the higher laws and
powers when the dice of destiny come up with an unfavourable number is not only
a sign of weakness but also a sign that one's faith was incomplete. It has
touched the emotions only or the intellect only but it has not touched both of
them, while it has still to touch the will.
276
Although proper judgement may call for a
particular decision, inexorable necessity may call for quite a different one.
277
There are certain periods in a man's life when
he can find no help outside himself, just as there are occasions when help from
others comes easily enough.
278
You are more likely to get light on your problem
if you avoid getting tense or feeling frustrated about it.
279
The need to make a rapid decision may create
panic in an uncertain mind. Here again the best counsel is to go into the calm
Silence, push aside the insistent thoughts of pressure, and wait in patience for
mental quiet to manifest itself. Then only can intuitive guidance emerge.
280
Bring your need, your problem, even your desire
into the silence and let it rest there. If you do this often enough, it will be
corrected for you should it be partly wrong, or totally eradicated should it be
wholly wrong, or miraculously satisfied or solved should it be right for you!
281
He who, like others, looks to material things,
but, unlike others, only as secondary to his dependence on the higher power,
finds in experience his final confirmation. As Lao Tzu said: "The Tao knows how
to render help."
282
Even where men are ignorant of the law of karma,
the higher self provides warnings to them when they deviate from the right path;
but, alas, they do not heed these delicate feelings which speak from within and
are often called the voice of conscience.
283
When confronted with a troublesome situation, he
must feel, "I, in my ego, can do little." The problem must be turned over to a
higher power for solution.
284
He does not accept the situation in the merely
fatalistic resignation which puts up with anything, but learns to live with it
in living trust that the higher power will bring it to the best possible
ultimate issue.
285
If he has done everything that is in his power,
the results are not in his hands and must consequently indicate destiny's will
for him. They do not belong to his own will and must be accepted by him. Time
will show their wisdom.
286
On all occasions when the intuition's prompting
is absent and the intellect's judgement is doubtful, prudence suggests a pause.
287
It is better not to act than to act prematurely,
not to decide than to decide without sufficient reason or intuition to support
one.
288
By giving himself more time to wait upon his
problem, he may give himself an intuitive, and hence deeper, understanding of it
than a merely calculated and shallower one.
289
Action taken prematurely under the pressure of
need may turn a right course into a wrong one.
290
Timeliness is a necessary ingredient of
successful action.
291
If he feels clearly guided to a mission which
seems impossible, he may safely leave to the Overself the means of carrying it
out.
292
So long as he fails to see that the answer to
his problems is within himself, but prefers the glib and easy explanation that
it is in his environment, so long will the problem remain unsolved.
293
In all critical situations, try to become very
very quiet, seeking the help or guidance to come up from the deeper levels of
being.
294
To say turn a situation over to the Overself is
tantamount to saying turn it over to the Universal Power to deal with.
295
All questions can find some kind of an answer in
this mental silence; no question can be brought there often enough without a
response coming forth in time. It is needful to be patient and to have faith
during the waiting period. The inner monitor is certainly there but we have to
reach it.
296
Sometimes when every other road seems implacably
blocked, the right road to travel is indicated.
297
He may be obliged by circumstances to follow a
course of action that he might not otherwise have even considered.
298
At the very moment that any problem produces
thoughts of despondency, turn that problem over to the higher power again, and
try to remain inwardly calm.
299
They should heed the warnings of experience, the
guidance of elders, the injunctions of religion; but they need not do so without
having critically scrutinized and carefully weighed what is thus proffered to
them.
300
Whatever is proper to a particular situation
should be done; rules should not be followed blindly.
301
The arrogant do not seek help and consequently
do not get it.
302
Can he put his personal problems, interests, or
difficulties into the hands of the higher Power? This is both the first and the
last procedure, but in between he may be led to call for the services of reason,
observation, experience, authority, and specialized knowledge.
303
I have known questers who have reached a
cul-de-sac when an intensifying problem finally entered the critical stage.
Then, following this teaching, they decided to hand it over to the Overself
entirely and be done with further cogitation and agitation about it. The tension
came to a swift end, proving that they had really handed it over and were not
deceiving themselves. They waited patiently for direction to be given them.
Sometimes this came quickly, overwhelmingly, and clearly - sometimes it came
slowly, gently, and weakly.
304
Despite Saint Francis, it must be stated that a
wide observation and experience shows poverty to be not necessarily holy, nor
prosperity evil.
305
The practicality of the ordinary common man is
praiseworthy: it is not to be regarded as materialistic.
306
Efficiency in work and tidiness in homekeeping
are not so materialistic as they sound. Even the mystic will benefit by them no
less than the worldling, for they will save time which he can give to what he
deems the more important activities of his life.
307
The problem of earning a livelihood under modern
conditions and in harmony with the Quest's ethics is more complicated and less
easy to solve for some people than for others. There are professions,
occupations, pursuits, and trades which at times demand transgression of these
ethics. If any general principles can be laid down, they are that earnings,
profits, or dividends should be honestly made and that no suffering should be
inflicted on any living creature.
308
It is true that more wealth means more
opportunity and that this in turn, if rightly used, may lead to more wisdom. But
it is not necessarily true that more wealth leads to more wisdom.
309
This foolish attempt to climb higher and higher
in the Tower of Babel which they have built arises out of false notions of
success and failure. They measure success by the conditions surrounding a man
and assess failure in the same way. There is a harsh lesson that life will
ultimately teach them - that there is no equivalent compensation for the loss of
spiritual values.
310
The need of money is second to the need of good
health, and both are second to the need of spiritual strength. All three are
important, for most other desired things depend heavily on them.
311
If money occupies a large part of their
thoughts, are they to blame for that? Life being what it is, necessity demands
such attention, realism compels it. Only when higher purposes are displaced,
neglected, or ignored because of this stress on the money-thought are imbalance
and materialism produced.
312
The possession of money, as of power, is not an
evil and may, by its wise use, be a positive good. But, by providing new
temptations, it may also bring into activity weaknesses lying below the surface
of a man's character.
313
Success can easily lead a man to failure if it
becomes an intoxicant instead of a lubricant.
314
The man who is unwilling to put a deliberate
restraint on his desire nature cannot possibly find peace of mind. Yet a
noteworthy feature of life in certain Western countries is the encouragement of
new wants, the stimulation by advertising and salesmanship of new hungers for
possession.
315
The suffering of the rich cannot be put on the
same level as the suffering of the poor, for the rich have compensations which
are unavailable to the poor.
316
The search after happiness takes people to
different activities and places, but rarely to the right ones. This is because
they confound pleasure with happiness.
317
The ultimate value of all this activity in
business, profession, politics, family, and so on is not in carrying them on
successfully, but in using them to carry one's own mind nearer to enlightenment.
318
In a man's enthusiasm, which is so natural and
so pardonable, for a great invention he has made or a great piece of work he may
have done, he can become somewhat one-sided and indeed almost obsessed. Then it
is good if he understands that it is necessary for him to restore the balance of
his personality because it is unhealthy and unwise to stake so much of his
happiness and thought upon what is, after all, a worldly activity. The
frustrations and disappointments which may have been experienced in connection
with his work will have carried this lesson behind them.
319
It is better for a man, as for a nation, to have
less riches and more truth, than less truth and more riches.
320
Poverty is a stiff test of moral fibre.(P)
321
Being poor makes some men turn to materialism as
the harsh real truth, but it turns other men to religion, as giving the
consolation and support they need. Suffering of any kind and derived from any
cause turns the sufferers either to or from a spiritual faith. It depends on
several factors which it shall be in individual cases. We see this especially
during and after a war involving the whole nation.
322
We still live in a world of slaves - slaves to
money, to position that yields money, to things that cost money, to people who
possess it. Money buys nearly all these things and persons. The sage is free in
one way because of his inward indifference to money, and the millionaire is free
in another way because he has all the money he needs.
323
Simone de Beauvoir: "Material independence is
one of the necessary conditions for inner liberty." Is this true? Sometimes yes,
other times not.
324
If it is for rich men to always learn the lesson
that comfort does not mean happiness, it is for poor men to learn that simple
living may go with a serene mind.
325
The businessman who is an adept at knowing how
to make a living may be an idiot at knowing how to live.
326
What does all this extroverted activity or
intellectual agitation mean, after all? It means that the human mind is unable
to bear facing itself, looking into itself, being by itself.
327
The man whose name has become celebrated in
certain circles, however limited, so that he is to that extent a public figure,
must beware of the perils that beset his exposed position. He should especially
be careful of those who try to draw him into confidential conversation in order
to betray his confidence at a later date.
328
Every ambition achieved likewise means an
addition to our troubles.
329
With conditions in the business world fostering
the ego's over-growth as they do, I have often advised young men of exceptional
talent engaged in or entering this world to make money quickly with the special
purpose of escaping from it. Then they can give adequate time to the study and
meditation and retreat they need for their philosophic interests. Thus they use
their business career as an expedient, not to satisfy ambition.
330
Ambition is a good for the young man but becomes
a bad when he overreaches himself. For then it is at the expense of others who
have to suffer for it.
331
Does he really want the outer things for which
he is striving more than he wants the inner qualities they are blocking?
332
He who gains a fortune is born again. He who
lives in penurious squalor is as one dead. Those who despise wealth have never
known it.
333
When men must struggle for their livelihood to
such a degree that they have no energies and no time left for higher pursuits,
it is futile to expect them to be fit for metaphysical study or mystical
exercises.
334
Those Europeans who sneer at American dollar
worship are really sneering at the effort to raise personal standards of living,
to improve life on earth, and to provide the body with a worthwhile environment.
335
Despite Somerset Maugham's assertion that "there
is nothing better than to be like everybody else," the commonly accepted and
familiar view, the normal and ordinary way of living - these may have to be
reversed when the truth hits one's consciousness.
336
Most people submit to the conventions and obey
the unwritten laws which in the society or the community prevail at the time.
The man who refuses to submit or to obey is manifesting either a disordered mind
or an unbalanced temperament, or is showing personal courage in being loyal to a
high idea or ideal at whatever cost.
337
We have no plaint to make against convention as
such. Every arrangement for human living inevitably becomes conventional as soon
as it becomes stabilized. Our plaint is rather against conventions which have
become insincere, hypocritical, hollow, out-of-date, blind, or unjust.
338
He has to devise a way of living that will
respect these principles without alienating him from the social world in which
he has to live. The task may be an impossible one but he must try.
339
To live with men as one of them, yet not to live
within their narrow limitations, is his duty and necessity.
340
Let others not mistakenly believe that he has
adopted a non-cooperative attitude, has fled from reality, renounced a human
existence in exchange for an illusory one in an imaginary world, or deserted the
paths of sanity and reason. If he wants to live in comparative outer peace with
them, he must make certain outer concessions. It is better to behave as
unprovokingly as possible, to hide his deeper thoughts behind a screen, and to
avoid being labelled as a religious fanatic or intellectual faddist. It is
especially unwise to uncover one's philosophical thoughts before everybody. He
must try to adjust himself smoothly to his environment. This is a hard task, but
he must not shirk it and must do all that can be done in the given
circumstances. He must fulfil his reasonable obligations towards society, must
co-operate in turning the great wheel of human activity, must contribute his
share in achieving the general welfare; but he should reserve the right to do so
in his own way and not according to society's dictation. And because he has
outstripped those around him in important ways, because he is already thinking
centuries ahead of them, it is unlikely that he will succeed wholly in fending
off their criticisms or even in avoiding their hostility. For with all his
endeavours to placate them and with all his sacrifices for the sake of harmony,
human nature being what it is - a mixture of good and evil, of the materialistic
and the holy - crises may sometimes arise when society will attack him. If the
inner voice of conscience bids him do so, then he will perforce have to make a
firm stand for principles. It is then that he must summon enough courage to do
what is unorthodox or to say what is unpopular and display enough independence
to disregard tradition or ignore opinion. Up to a certain point he may walk with
the crowd, but beyond it his feet must not move a step. Here he must claim the
privilege of self-determination, concerning which there can be no compromise;
for here, at the sacred bidding of the Overself, he must begin to live his own
life. Consequently, although he will always be a good citizen he may not always
be a popular one.(P)
341
Let us not betray the good that is in us by a
cowardly submission to the bad that is in society.(P)
342
It is only the beginner who enthusiastically and
indiscriminately discusses with friends, relatives, or strangers the new
teachings or exciting truths which have only recently been accepted by him. The
proficient student is also the prudent one. He restrains his feelings against
the temptation of telling everyone everything. Thus his ego is checked instead
of being displayed.
343
To make a public exhibition of asceticism, to
display the peculiarities of one's soul always and everywhere, to cut oneself
off showily from the common life, is to be not a spiritual aspirant but a
spiritual egoist.
344
It is not in any arrogance that he must be true
to himself against the pressures of society.
345
Every man whose activity brings him before the
public - be he a politician, an artist, or a writer - becomes a target for
gossip, and if because of his spiritual and cultural interests he lives a quiet,
almost hermitlike existence, the gossip will turn to misunderstanding and
criticism.
346
They see or sense that he never gives himself up
entirely to the society in which he happens to be, that he keeps always a
certain inward reserve and outward constraint. This puzzles, irritates, or
annoys some, or arouses suspicion in others. Thus the seed of future hostility
towards him is sown by their own imperfection.
347
The Silence which befriends him gives others a
queer undesirable feeling.
348
He who is not content to follow the mob, who
seeks to be an individual person and not merely appear to be one, needs
strength and bravery to resist the mob's pressure.
349
If he insists on a way of life that is
unconventional, he must accept the criticism which follows it. And if it is
worthwhile he will pay this price quite cheerfully.
350
Among the traditions of Jesus current with
Muhammedan mystics, there is one which mentions that the more people reviled him
the more he spoke good of them. When one of his disciples complained about this
as being an encouragement to them, Jesus answered, "Every man giveth of that
which he hath." He who seeks to enjoy the smiles of truth must be willing to
endure the criticisms of uncomprehending observers, the sneers of unbelieving
ones, the frowns of convention, for he who is not prepared to conform must be
prepared to suffer.
351
Mentally he may have to resist the ideas of the
community in which he lives when they are thrust upon him through customs,
conventions, conversations, and religion.
352
He has to contend not only with the foolishness
of his fellow humans but also with the destructiveness of Nature itself, not
only with the tendency of institutions and organizations to decline from their
best to their worst, ending with the "letter" and losing the "spirit," but also
with his own personal weaknesses and shortcomings.
353
Whoever rebels against the majority's view,
whoever dares to think and speak independently, must be prepared to endure
mental, or even physical loneliness.
354
Tolerance is needed if we are to live with even
a minimum of harmony in society. To the philosopher it comes easily as a natural
result of his development. But it need not be practised at the expense of the
equally necessary attributes of prudence and caution. There is a point where it
must stop, a point where it leads to greater evil than good.
355
But be warned that the same power which, on
your side, brings you into a goodwill relationship with all people also
isolates you from them. For it withdraws you from the herd's narrow outlook and
petty interests to seek higher aspirations.
356
Independent judgement is an asset if it is
sufficiently well-informed - if not, then it may be a liability.
357
He endeavours to live his own life in his own
way, as much as circumstances allow and prudence dictates.
358
Where he knows that other persons will not be
sympathetic to these teachings, he will be prudent to remain silent about them.
Where his friends know of his own interests and disparage them, he will be wise
to avoid futile arguments.
359
When he is in the crowded city he will keep
himself inconspicuous, lest he draw other men's attention to himself, and with
that their thoughts, impinging on his sensitive mind and disturbing its calm.
360
He must not be afraid to be in a minority of
one. Millions may be arrayed against the Idea in which he believes. It is easy
then to conclude that they are right, he wrong.
361
With those whose minds are shuttered, it is
foolish to enter into any discussion, even if they try to force it (in order to
show how foolish you are to hold such views). One might as well speak out of the
window to the empty air, so it is better to save breath.
362
To live in the world by the higher laws a man
must keep it at a certain distance. This may not be flattering to the world but
it will give him more serenity.
363
He learns not to waste time arguing about his
beliefs or views, not even to explain them to those who merely wish to air their
hostility and criticisms.
364
He will have to put up with unthinking and
ill-formed opposition from his environment, from friends and family alike. They
may become openly alarmed at his deviation from the so-called normal but really
abnormal standards which rule them, take fright at symptoms of purification
which may develop, and cry out about his impending illness or dissolution and
other imaginary disasters. Others, more indulgent, will tolerantly smile at his
eccentricity, his fanaticism, as their prejudice will name it. But in the
sequence, if he demonstrates the obvious benefits of his reform by abounding
health, vigour, and cheerfulness, this opposition may die down and vanish.
365
If it be snobbish to prefer the best in
spirituality, in culture, and in art, then we must accept the abusive term of
snob.
366
The world is apt to regard these self-improvers
as smug and complacent, selfish and conceited, and the world is sometimes right.
But it is also sometimes wrong.
367
Just or humble people admire and respect moral
superiority, but the others are provoked by it into hostility, for, whether
consciously or unconsciously, they recognize that it shows up their own
shortcomings. Jesus whipped the moneychangers out of the temple, but the rabbis
put them back again and put Jesus on the cross.
368
Pythagoras, gentle compassionate apostle of the
bloodless diet, killed by the Crotona mob, had to die for venturing to show a
higher ideal - just as Socrates died for shaming his jurors with their inferior
ethical standard. Plato was driven into exile for more than twenty years because
he dared to teach truth. Above all it was Jesus, put to death for endeavouring
to show men a kingdom not of this world, the kingdom of heaven. Thus the roll of
light-bringers could be extended: those deprived of life and those persecuted
but left to live, and those who escaped despite opposition. How low the level
from which the half-animal men have yet to rise!
369
People like to be regimented, so the odd man who
abhors mediocrity is himself abhorred. No one may appear different from the mass
except at his own peril.
370
It is inevitable that the thoughtful will move
ahead of the mass of public opinion. But they must beware and restrain
themselves - not too much but also not too little.
371
The belief that a change of city or land may
lead to a change of mental condition is not altogether without basis, even
though we still take the ego and its thoughts with us wherever we go.
372
Travel is worthwhile if one can visit the man
who can make a contribution to his inner life.
373
There are situations in life and associations
with persons which try patience. There are environments which appear to imprison
him. The natural impulse is to run away from them or to resist them in
bitterness. It may be well to avoid continuing the experience if he can. But let
him enquire first if he has gained from it the hidden lesson and profited by the
hidden opportunity to grow.
374
When a set of physical circumstances or a
personal association becomes a source of strain rather than of pleasure, he may
consider withdrawing from it. But this consideration should be governed by
wisdom, detachment, and impersonality.
375
If changing an environment, residence,
association, group, or situation is an attempt to escape the problems of
oneself, no betterment can result from it. But if there has been a sincere and
sufficient attempt to change oneself while in that environment, then the move
may prove helpful. It is a fact that the man who is willing to try will find
that even where he cannot master himself just where he is, if he continues his
efforts unabatedly, destiny will unfold a new and different set of circumstances
or environment where the fruits of his efforts will more easily and more quickly
show themselves.
376
He cannot prevent himself taking an interest in
his worldly welfare, for he has a physical body and is planted in physical
surroundings. To pretend otherwise is either to repeat, parrot-like, what he has
heard or read, or it is to be a hypocrite, or it is to exhibit the phase of
temporarily insane unbalance which some seekers pass through at one time or
another. His spiritual aspirations are blocked, hindered, helped, or promoted by
his external circumstances. To see the truth of this, it is enough to take a
single aspect of them - the social one. Is it of no concern to him, and will it
be all the same in effect, if he has to spend the whole of his life with
materialistic men and women who could not even understand what the quest means,
or with those who are very far advanced along the quest? Will he not profit more
by the latter contact?
377
The consciousness of race acts as a handicap to
and throttles their ambitions and suffocates much that is good in them, but, on
the other hand, to others it acts as a spur and develops ambition. Why does he
continue, for the years of life left him, to put up with the annoyances of being
despised by one neighbour and rejected by the other? If people place so much
value, on a man's colour and so little on his character, if the mere accident of
birth - and he has to be born somewhere, unfortunately! - is to be the sole
criterion of one's value without regard to personality or soul, then the quicker
he shakes off the dust of this place the better. Why does he tolerate such
stupidity? Why not go to some country where there is less or no colour
prejudice?
378
Mental attitudes are generated by circumstances,
events, and historic changes. They are often what they are precisely because of
where they are and what has happened to them.
379
Whatever stays in existence too long begins to
assume attributes to which it is not entitled. For it seems completely
necessary, quite unchangeable. Its power becomes absolute. Thus the past, so
rich a storehouse of guidance, warning, interest, and wisdom when studied with
fairness and in full freedom, becomes a tyrannical despot. If we are to
find its best values and its greatest usefulness, we should take time off
occasionally to forget it, to be detached from its rule, and to regard our way
of life differently - thus changing our standpoint and its landscape. These
periods may be short ones, but their fresh experiences will bring in some
corrective balance, their new habits will improve us or widen outlook. Thoughts
and things, principles and institutions will be measured, tested, weighed, and
revalued.
380
A new occasion offers a fresh start, an attitude
which need not be conditioned by his previous ideas.
381
When they are exposed to quite new environments
where the opportunities and temptations are also new, it is quite possible that
traits of character hitherto undisplayed and even possibly unknown to the
persons themselves will respond and appear.
382
Although it is ultimately true that the inner
work is the one thing that is necessary, it is sometimes immediately true that a
geographical change, or an environmental removal, or an occupational transfer
is necessary if stagnation is to be avoided.
383
Those who make their home in one place follow
the norm; those who live itinerantly do not. If those in the first and by much
the larger group have the advantage of stability and the reputation of
respectability, those in the second and smaller group gain a kind of autonomy.
Among the first are the bourgeois and the professional; among the second, the
gypsy and, until lately, the Mongolian and the medieval friar and the Indian
sadhu.
384
The nomad without a fixed home has to accept the
uncertainty and unfamiliarity which accompany each new environment.
385
When the pressures of competition and the kind
of people in the environment make a man's moral values wobble, it is time for
him to reconsider his situation, perhaps time to leave for other environments or
to change the nature of his activity.
386
It is true that there are conventional, narrow,
and stiff people who travel like suitcases and learn nothing from their travels.
But it is more true that most people absorb something from others and are
liberalized by contact with foreign lands.
387
Philosophy does not reject human experiences,
but it does not yield recklessly to them either.
388
The student should live each day by itself,
doing his duty as it arises from the demands of routine existence and accepting
its responsibilities; he should leave the future to itself. If the day is lived
by the spiritual principles he has learned, tomorrow will automatically take
care of itself.
389
He is not asked to admire an attitude towards
life which involves weak acceptance of misfortune or helpless submission to
unpleasant surroundings. There is nothing spiritual in such an attitude.
390
Hope is the scaffolding of life. But unless the
hands go out in action we may stand upon it forever yet the building will never
be erected. That is why we who seek for Truth must work interiorly and work
intensely amid the common mortar and bricks of mundane existence. Our dreams of
a diviner life are prophetic, but we turn them to realities only when we turn
our hands to the tasks and disciplines presented by the world.(P)
391
We are in rebellion against all these miserable
advocates of the cause of misery who lean weakly on the worn-out excuse of God's
will being behind everything and who therefore advise man to do nothing. We have
raised the banner of rebellion against all those escapist mystics who defend
"do-nothingism" as a rule of life when confronted by world-misery, merely
because they themselves feel the bliss of inner peace; against all those
Oriental religionists who defend it because they have made a dogma of the
unalterability of karma; against all those unscientific metaphysicians who
defend it because they regard every painful event as the expression of divine
will and wisdom when it is so often the result of human will and stupidity; and
against all those monastic hermits who find specious explanations for allowing
others, who toil in the world, to wallow in ignorance or to agonize in
suffering. The peace felt by the mystic is admirable but it is still a
self-centered one; the karma propitiated by the religionist's prayers is
ultimately self-earned and therefore must be self-alterable; the divinely
ordered events of the metaphysician could not have happened without man's own
co-operation. Those who remain inert in the presence of widespread misery often
do so because they have not experienced it deeply enough themselves. The innate
foolishness and disguised indolence which bid us always bear karma unresistingly
and unquestioningly as being God's will, although advocated by so many Indian
mystical advocates of lethargy, are denied even by a great Indian seer like the
author of the Bhagavad Gita and by a great Indian moralist like the
author of Hitopadesha. The first proclaims to a bewildered seer, "Action
is better than inaction." The second, in a discussion of fate and dharma,
affirms, "Fortune, of her own accord, takes her abode with the man who is
endowed with energy, who is prompt and ready, who knows how to act."
Both Indian books quoted here were written by mystics. Yet they reflected this same superior standpoint. Why? Because their authors were philosophical mystics. There is thus a vast and vital difference between the attitudes of unreflective ordinary mysticism and philosophic ultramysticism. Anyone whose mind is not too bemused by personality worship and authoritarian prestige to see this difference may now appreciate why philosophy has a contribution of the highest value to make in this sphere.
392
The circumstances of his outer life must affect
the condition of his inner one. But this is true only to the extent that he
admits or counters them by his mute acceptance or dynamic resistance.
393
He can let the experience act as an alibi to
give way to some weakness or he can use it as a spur to arouse some latent
strength. He alone can cross the abyss between these alternatives.
394
When confronted by a formidable situation
involving human weakness or expressing human evil, he will choose to affirm
silently some great eternal truth covering the situation rather than letting
himself be discouraged by it.
395
There are times when boldness is better than
caution, when loneliness is preferable to society, and when emotional numbness
is more proper than emotional sensitivity. The occasion, the circumstance, the
timing are what then matter most.
396
To perform any action in the best way is to aim
at the least strain and the most effectiveness and the greatest economy of
movement.
397
The occasion, the event, the place, and the
person contribute their influence and affect one man more, another less. But if
aspiration is to come nearer to achievement, if he is not to be satisfied with a
merely ordinary inner existence, then there is a point beyond which he
cannot afford to let conditions impose the decisive factor, the determining
fiat.
398
Neither the over-cautious nor the under-cautious
attitude will suit this quest: a delicate balance moving between the two
extremes, adjusted by timeliness and circumstances, will help more and risk
less. This means that he will not be afraid of using his own initiative yet will
be careful enough not to meddle in activities unsuited to him. Decisions have to
be made, actions have to be done, and these depend in part on his own
characteristics, in part on the outer scene. But personal reactions to life out
in the world are intertwined with the quest, even coloured by it. So the Middle
Way will show its presence and results in both areas.
399
His objective is to let a situation command him
when it is wisdom to do so, but to take command of it when it is not.
400
There are times when adverse destiny becomes too
much for him. It is then that a humbling acceptance of things as they just have
to be is useful.
401
When we learn to accept the terms of our own
limitation, and go along with them, we not only gain greater peace but also get
more effective action. For to live in impossible unrealizable dreams is to end
in futility.
402
When confronted by hard inevitability, it is
more prudent to bow your head than to bang it.
403
You may accept the inevitable with bitterness
and resentment or with patience and grace. Mere acceptance alone is not
sufficient.
404
The indifference toward unalterable or the
resignation to unavoidable suffering preached by so many prophets was not
preached merely as an idealistic fancy, but, in most cases, as a realizable fact
out of their personal experiences. Admittedly, its accomplishment is quite hard.
For it depends in part on a complete concentration upon that which suffering
cannot touch - the hidden soul. But this is not to be confused with a defeatist
fatalism, a false resignation to God's will, or a harsh asceticism.
405
Holding the attitude that God is Supply makes us
at one with the Psalmist who sang: "The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want,"
but it does not exempt us from doing our share of the necessary work.
406
The situation of the human being, neither animal
nor angel but stretched out somewhere between both, is unique.
407
A forest ranger who had spent his life in
intimate contact with wild nature, animals, and trees then retired to city life,
whereupon he made a caustic remark which contained a great indictment. He said,
"Hell is people." This thought is curiously like that expressed by one of the
characters in a novel by Henry James. A man who was dying said to a visitor, "I
think I am glad to leave people." Now what is implied by these two statements?
It is not that human beings become a source of torment or of suffering to other
human beings. Put in the way these two persons have put it, it is of course not
wholly accurate and needs qualification. It would be more correct to say that
too many people cause too much trouble for others. If we ask why this is so, we
must admit that humans are a mixture of bad and good and that it is only a
minority which is striving to strain out the good and to discard the bad.
408
Whoever has dealings with others cannot afford
to ignore the double nature of human nature. Failure to recognize it leads to
confusing consequences. Looking neither for the good alone nor for the bad
alone, but remaining emotionally detached during such an act of recognition, is
a philosophical attribute. He who possesses it may hold no illusion about the
mixed motives in others and yet still practise goodwill toward them. This must
be so, for the primal source of all Goodness inspires him daily and constantly
to hold to this practice.
409
Few people are all good or all bad. Few have
motives which are not double. This is not to doubt their sincerity, but to
explain human nature.
410
This is the final vindication of the practical
truth that you must deal with human nature as it is, not as you would like it to
be or as you imagine it to be. The man of today lives, moves, and has his being
in his personal ego and will continue to do so until he has learned, grasped,
thoroughly understood, and completely realized the truth of the illusiveness of
the individual self. Until that happy day arrives, it is far wiser to take a
human being as he is and simply to place checks and restrictions upon his
egoism.
411
We take people too much at their surface value,
their present position and possessions, not reckoning the truth that unless we
get first into the sphere of thought wherein their minds move, we do not really
know them and their real worth. The superiority of the man must in the end
triumph over the inferiority of his position.
412
We mean so well but act so ill.
413
Nature has made no two human beings alike.
However much he may share his views and life with another person, each man will
have his own individual differences in thought and conduct. Hence attractions
and repulsions, frictions, and misunderstandings will sooner or later arise
between men. Perfect harmony with everybody and in everything on this earth is
an unrealizable dream.
414
But this said, we must also accept the higher
fact that beneath the egoic differences there subsists the Overself's unity and
it is our sacred duty to realize it inwardly while tolerating difference
outwardly.
415
It is not necessary for the aspirant to seek
frantically any new outward relationships to things or people; these should and
will evolve naturally, so to speak, from his own growing spirituality. "Seek ye
first the kingdom of heaven, and all these things shall be added unto you." By
denying the ego and by frequent meditation all things are influenced for him in
ways he cannot now realize. As he directs his mind and heart to the Overself,
his character, his disposition, even the outer contacts and relationships will
become attuned and re-adjusted.
416
It is better to leave past personal history
where it belongs; the attempt to revive old relationships is a misguided one; it
becomes either a nuisance or a failure.
417
He will learn to measure the worth of another
man or of an experience by the resulting hindrance to, or stimulation of, his
own growth into a diviner consciousness.(P)
418
He may find himself planted by destiny among
people with whom he is ill at ease, leading to tensions in himself and perhaps
in them. Since he has not chosen this mental and emotional arrangement, there is
probably an opportunity in it to work in an unaccustomed way on himself for his
ultimate self-improvement.
419
It is easy and common to blame others who cross
our path or belong to our surroundings as being the provocative cause of our
irritability or resentment. But if we forgive them instead and hold them in the
thought of goodwill, not only will our relationship with them improve but we
ourselves will profit exceedingly.
420
Where a wrong is done us by someone generally we
may be sure that the experience represents the expiation of a wrong which we
have done to someone in a past incarnation. It is useless to cry out against the
injustice of the injury when the cause lies deep within our own history. It is
best to put aside the natural feeling of resentment and, understanding as well
as we may what it is we are expiating, take its lessons to heart.
421
However virtuous our intentions, we not
infrequently work harm to others. This shows that it is not enough to be good.
Wisdom must direct our goodness, must bestow on us the capacity to foresee what
is likely to ensue from our actions.
422
Every person who is important to him, every
relationship that arouses emotion or thought is there for a meaning.
423
Our relations with other persons can produce
deep joy or utter misery. If the second result is brought about, we need to
amend our thinking, for however wrongly another person may behave there is some
reason why he was chosen by destiny to let us feel the painful effects of his
behaviour.
424
It is not hard to understand that the varied
events of life which destiny fashions for us are devised to develop us by
affording the range of experience which educes the response of our thoughts and
feelings. But it may be much harder to understand that even the living creatures
who enter our range of experience have entered for the same evolutionary
purpose. The men women and pet animals who extract affection or aversion from
our hearts, calculation or argumentation from our brains, unwittingly serve that
purpose.
425
Society exists for the individual. Its high and
hidden purpose is to make perfect the men who compose it. This is not to say
that it exists for the exploiters and the parasites.
426
If each person could look at his own life not
only in an impersonal way but also with philosophic insight, he would perceive
the meaningfulness of the happenings in his life, of the relations with other
persons, and even the larger backgrounds themselves. All served a higher purpose
or fulfilled a higher service, leading him from half-animal to truly human
being, or obeyed a moral law such as karma.
427
The more he behaves with kindly qualities
towards others, the more will their behaviour towards him reflect back at least
some of these qualities. The more he improves his own mental and moral
conditions, the more will his human relations bring back some echo of this
improvement.
428
Those who claim service of humanity as their
only motive lay themselves open to suspicion. Outside the few who have
transcended ego - the very few - it is ordinarily the case that every service
has to be paid for, and that none is really free.
429
We need not be afraid to help others because we
are afraid to interfere with their karma. Reason must guide our sympathy, it is
true, and if our beneficent act is likely to involve the beneficiary in
continued wrong-doing or error it may be wiser to refrain from it. It is not
generosity to condone his sin and to confirm him more strongly in his foolish
course. But the law of karma can be safely left to provide for its own
operations. Indeed it is even possible that it seeks to use us as a channel to
modify or end this particular piece of suffering in the other person. To refuse
to relieve suffering, human or animal, because it may be an interference with
their karma is to misapply one's knowledge of the law of karma.
430
We do not love our neighbour as ourself for the
simple reason that we cannot. He loves himself quite enough anyway and does not
need our addition. But, this said, we are ready to serve him amicably.
431
When a man's conduct is incorrect, it is
sometimes wiser to stop further efforts to help him on the outer plane - however
much we feel sorry for him - and let him learn the bitter lessons which he
needs.
432
If people would only take care of their own
business and let other people mind theirs, there would be less friction in the
world and more peace between the nations. The late Bernard Baruch, American
financier and presidential adviser, said on his ninety-fourth birthday that the
greatest lesson he had learned during his very long life was to mind his own
business. For the Quester, with his special aims higher than the ordinary, it is
even more advisable not to mix himself up unnecessarily in other people's
affairs or destinies where he is not really responsible for them.
433
The best way to help the other person who is in
trouble is not to get swept away by his feelings and emotions of suffering. It
is enough to register them at the moment of meeting, but thereafter one must
stand detached if real help is to be given from a superior source. Real help is
not sentimentality.
434
Weighted down with the burdens of his own
unsolved problems as he is, he will add those of other people at his peril. Only
when he has shown himself competent to master his own will it be time to tackle
theirs and will he be in a position to do so effectively.
435
It is not that he seeks non-involvement in, or
becomes indifferent to, other people's problems, but that theirs, and his own,
are now seen from a higher vantage-point and a wider perspective.
436
He will rarely interfere with those who are
happy in their opinions.
437
Although he may often see the straight line
between cause and effect, between shortcoming in character and trouble in
circumstance, he may find it better to practise a prudent reticence. Few like to
be preached at.
438
When he travels away from his home, he should go
humbly, as a seeker, to learn and not to teach, to meet inspired souls and gain
their help rather than to meet students and offer help to them.
439
Over-anxious solicitude for family relatives may
not always be helpful to them.
440
Whoever gets caught in the misery and
unhappiness and self-pity of a person in distress and lets himself remain in
that depressed condition, cannot render as much help - if any at all - as the
one who is detached, imperturbable, but compassionate.
441
Because the philosophic outlook is
all-comprehensive, because it excludes nothing, it must include both the
celibate and the marital condition. It recognizes that each has its hour and
place in an individual's life.
442
If one man thinks he can get along better alone,
he is quite entitled to his view and it may be that his quest requires it. But
if another man thinks otherwise and seeks the companionship of marriage, he too
must be granted the right to follow his particular expression of the quest.
Neither one is an absolute. The married man is not in any way relieved of his
responsibility to seek and find physical control, just as the celibate man is
not relieved of responsibility for mental control. Nor does this apply only to
aspirants. The same liberty must also be granted even more - and not less, as so
many misinstructed beginners believe - to men of attainment, masters, and all
who have finished their quest.
443
Marriage is not inconsistent with the
philosophic path, but it often is with the mystical path.
444
There is no reason to feel that love for a
marriage partner is at variance with efforts toward self-evolvement. In its best
sense, mutual love is an aid for both to progress and develop as individuals.
445
There is certainly no bar to the highest
spiritual attainment through marriage. If the greatest sages of the past have
been single (or have lived as single men) this was not because marriage would
have interfered with sagehood - for it cannot do so - but because they wanted to
keep the external life as free as they could in order to carry out their work as
fully and as freely as possible.
446
The necessity of achieving mental harmony and
union of ideals in marriage counsels great caution in selecting one suited to be
a life-companion. A wrong decision in this matter may be disastrous in every
way, whereas a right one will be helpful in many ways.
447
Marriage is a most important matter, and is not
to be entered into without a sufficient period of waiting: both persons are
better able to check the wisdom of the step in this matter. If it turns out to
be the right step, the time-test will see its survival and greater chances for
happiness. If it is the wrong step, a feeling of uneasiness will soon develop -
proving that the marriage would be based on physical infatuation, and thus could
not ordinarily be other than short-lived and unsuccessful.
448
Those on the quest need to know each other quite
well before marrying. This means they need to know the other person's negative
as well as positive characteristics. Then they have to decide whether they are
able and willing to spend the rest of their life living with those negatives,
that is, whether the positive qualities which attract them are strong enough to
overbalance the opposite ones.
449
It is the duty of married questers to teach one
another. This not only includes the teaching of what each has learned of truth
from guides, books, and life but also the pointing out of characteristics which
need correction, nurture, development, or eradication. Who else can know these
details so well as the person who is the life partner, the constant observer of
the other's actions, the intimate sharer of thoughts and moods? But such
pointing out must be done calmly, impartially, lovingly, or it will fail in its
purpose.
450
There are many who will deem the philosophic
attitude a callous one. This is partly because they misunderstand it and partly
because they identify themselves too strongly with their emotional nature. It is
inevitable that, with the growth in philosophic understanding and practice, the
affections grow larger and deeper too, while their visible demonstration becomes
calmer and more equable. Since philosophy is more concerned with realities than
with appearances, more concerned with being than with seeming, merely
conventional responses in emotional speech and expected action mean less to its
practitioner than the silent inward existence of love. He does not feel any need
to give continual evidence of what he feels in order to reassure the other
person, who unconsciously fears that love may pass away at any time. Nor does he
want to take such possession of the other as never to allow her to leave his
side, always holding her in a narrow, confining domesticity.
451
It is certainly possible for a married man to
attain enlightenment, for historic records supply the proof. My own contacts
with both Oriental and Occidental illuminati confirm it. But it is possible only
if his marriage is more than a mere animal mating. How far this discipline
should go will depend on how far he wants his enlightenment to go and how much
he is willing to subject himself to the necessary conditions. Marriage, like
other normal human relationships, need not be denied if a man is ready to take
the chances and risks it involves and if he chooses a partner who is likely to
promote his quest rather than obstruct it.
452
The married relation offers an outlet for human
affection and human tenderness. In this sense it becomes one of several
opportunities which life offers for the disciplining of the ego. This applies
both to the daily throwing together of two human personalities as well as to the
consummation of the marriage in sex.
453
The serious obligations and powerful
distractions which come with marriage constitute two of the reasons why celibacy
has so often been recommended or enjoined for those who would scale spiritual
heights. It is held that if they are to gain the leisure and strength needed for
such climbing, worldly ties must be loosened and animal feelings must be
controlled.
454
A sage's marriage cannot dim to the slightest
degree or in actual fact whatever goodness or purity he may have, except in the
eyes of those ignorant of what sagehood essentially is.
455
If marriage is taken to be a license to be sunk
in sensuality then it is certainly a bar to this quest. But if it is recognized
as a call to self-discipline, just as freedom is in a different way, it need not
be so.
456
Young people, whose heads have been turned and
whose emotions have been titillated by the romantic drivel of so many foolish
novels and so many fantastic films, are likely to have exaggerated ideas about
the happiness which can be derived from sex, courtship, and marriage. That is,
they see only the bright side and do not know that a dark one also exists.
457
It is not enough for two persons to get married
because they love one another. They must also suit one another.
458
It is wrong for fanatics to condemn marriage,
for it may provide a person with the means of working out the psychic and moral
problems with which he or she is faced.
459
That is a worthy love worth finding which
enables both the man and the woman to grow and fulfil themselves. But that is
mere passion, a poor substitute for love - and sometimes not even that, but mere
social or economic convenience - which maims and cripples the inner being of one
or the other person. A marriage in which wife or husband is spiritually
suffocated is an undesirable relationship, a waste of precious, unregainable
years. Yet fear of all the risks and troubles which a break would involve
embalms the situation, when faith in the power of Life (God) to support and
provide for a right decision would bring growth and fulfilment.
460
Immature persons can only make a marriage that
is itself immature.
461
Where there is an element of doubt concerning a
marriage problem, it is better to wait before plunging into action, to ruminate
over past blunders and profit by them. The issues may slowly become clearer. If
it is right to marry a particular person, the sense of rightness will remain and
increase. But if it is wrong, then either the feeling of such wrongness will
slowly manifest itself or the person will be taken away or some other hindrance
will block this action. This refers, of course, only to one who is under direct
guidance of a master or directly intuitive to his higher self.
462
Marriage is a risky experiment for those who
have any degree of advancement along the path. The conditions under which it may
succeed are hard to satisfy, but occasionally such successes occur. The higher
degrees of the Quest call for a total renunciation of everything earthly,
animal, and human. This must be inwardly attained, it must be real in thought
and feeling, after which it does not matter whether or not there is outward
renunciation in any direction. A mere external asceticism solves no problems but
it is helpful to beginners. That other self of the aspirant which is his divine
soul will, as and when its presence becomes vivid and intimate, become also the
Most Beloved. No man or woman could give him its equivalent in satisfaction,
however much he loves and however much that love is returned. He may marry if he
wants to, but it must be with the clear knowledge that marriage is unable to
yield him more than second-best happiness.
463
It is excellent to look for a mate among those
with the same spiritual ideals and educational status as yourself, but it is not
enough. What about physical fitness, hygiene, and compatibility? What about
emotional harmony, blending, and suitability?
464
A man who marries a girl less than half his age
inevitably becomes a father figure to her. It is not fair to her nor prudent of
him to enter into such a marriage, even if she ardently desires it.
465
When a husband informs his wife that he has
decided to find his happiness elsewhere, she can fight to hold him against his
will - which is pardonable - or she can accept it because she thinks of his
happiness first and her own second - which is divine. Time is the only healer of
her wounds but they will surely be healed. When the storm of hurt feelings goes
completely, a great peace will arise in her. Then she will see that she did the
right thing to gain her own happiness too, quite apart from doing the right
thing as a seeker.
466
Whether one sort of breaking marriage can be
mended depends on three factors: the actualities of the wife's character, the
possibilities of her husband's character, and the predestined fortunes of both.
Such a situation needs generous forbearance, foresighted patience, deeper
understanding of human nature, and, above all, emotional self-control. The
suffering wife should secretly pray for her husband's spiritual welfare, not
hysterically and sentimentally for his return to her. Let her be assured that if
she can bring herself to adopt an unselfish attitude in this matter, if she will
repay evil deed by good thought, and hurt feeling by forgiveness, she will not
lose in the end.
She must not waste her strength in emotional self-pity, but rather try to build up a reasonable attitude. And if she is a quester, she must not forget the lesson behind her marital experience of not staking all her happiness on somebody else. She must first look within for it, and then only can others give some of it to her. She herself must make the most important contribution to her own happiness.
467
When a separation, divorce, or break-up of
relationship comes between two persons - be they friends, spouses, or associates
of some kind - it may appear sudden in happening but it already exists on the
subconscious plane. The event merely brings it to the surface.
468
If a man is single or a widower, it is
understandable that feelings of loneliness will often enter into his
consciousness. But the aspirant must remember that it would be unfair both to a
prospective partner and to himself to enter into an unsuitable marriage. It
would only hurt him and bring unhappiness to his partner. His emotion needs to
be disciplined, and he must wait for a partner suitable to his development and
aspiration. If he has already had the marriage experience, he should consider
seriously whether he really needs to remarry at all. He should weigh in the
balance, from the standpoint of his own personal character and circumstances,
whether its advantages and limitations outweigh the advantages and limitations
of devoting the remainder of his life entirely to the quest of truth. The
married life is compatible with these spiritual objects but not easily so.
469
Socrates once declared, "I am a man and like
other men a creature of flesh and blood." He was married and had three sons. Yet
this did not prevent him from attaining a lofty wisdom and the highest
intellectual clarity and magnificent moral rectitude.
470
If marriage is regarded as a sphere of
self-discipline - and especially of that discipline which seeks to transmute and
absorb the sex urge - why should philosophy object to it? For parenthood will
then become a means of honourable service, not a gutter of grovelling
sensuality.
471
A simple equation will clear the sentimental
nonsense which hazes the whole subject. How can two imperfect creatures give one
another a perfect happiness?
472
One proof that marriage is no bar to
enlightenment was reported to me at the time of writing this paragraph. A young
married woman in the condition of early pregnancy with her second child had been
practising meditation for short sessions at irregular intervals, as her
circumstances did not offer opportunity for more. There was a feeling of
frustration and nothing came out of the practice. One night she had retired to
bed but not yet fallen asleep. Suddenly, without any preparation or warning, a
mystical experience rapidly developed and lasted for about one and a half hours.
"It was the most beautiful condition I have ever known - utter fulfilment,
peace, contentment, and love for all," she described it.
473
For young people under twenty years of age to
undertake the risks of emotional romantic marriage without consultation with,
and respect for, older and more experienced persons, is somewhat improvident. To
do so with little acquaintance and knowledge of one another is still more
improvident. And without accurate horoscopes plus knowledge of each other's
spiritual status, the risks keep increasing. Too often the young fall victim to
lust, which is taken to be sufficient basis for marrying.
474
No human relationship, not even the most
romantic of marriages, is always and continuously free from its jarring moments,
its boring ones, or its annoying ones. The two members have their limitations;
they are still finite and, in some ways perhaps, frail human beings. They still
make mistakes sometimes and are sorry for them afterwards.
475
It is only romantic fancy or wishful thinking
which creates the common belief that there is only one person who is suited,
made, or fated to marry some other particular person.
476
The solemn man and the frivolous flighty woman
are fit mates for marriage provided they are not extreme opposites. Temperaments
may oppose, but must not be too extremely opposed. The finest successes of Hymen
come from the coupling of circumferential opposites who possess a central unity.
This cryptic phrase calls for interpretation.
477
The need of a mate is only an idea after all.
Treat it as such and you will be better able to control it.
478
If he is on the quest, he will at least take
care that she only shall be invited to share his life permanently who is not
only in harmony with his temperament and aspiration, but also aware of his
defects and limitations.
479
The finer side of marriage - companionship,
partnership, affection, and considerateness - is not less important than the
sexual side.
480
The woman who is to mate the evolved man should
arouse a love for which body and mind, heart and intuition are all in perfect
accord. This is an ideal, of course, and he may not be able to find its
realization. But at least he will know in what direction to seek.
481
Marriage would then be allowable but restricted
to the twin purposes of providing companionship, with its mutual service, and
furnishing physical bodies for a few incoming egos of spiritual seekers. This
form of modified marriage would reject lust.
482
Children born from such a consecrated marriage
will necessarily be superior children - not in every way, but in some special
way, and certainly in fine moral character.
483
The craving for a mate of the opposite sex is
the unconscious feeling of the need for someone to balance him. It may, and
does, get mixed up with other needs, but this fundamental one remains.
484
So many couples are yoked but not united,
married but not mated.
485
That there is a connection between romantic
delusions and subsequent neuroses (usually after marriage) can often be seen.
This was also seen by ancient classical philosophical writers. Marriage can
become a monotony, perhaps a boredom. Where has the romantic love gone? How much
better would all have been if both had looked at, the realities from the
beginning? If the facts of life are looked at, the romances change their
appearance: they are mostly not eternal, often changeable; the beauties fade
away, the ecstasies turn to pain or worry, the attractions to repulsion. In
short, the end is disappointment. The deification of the allegedly loved one may
be changed to its opposite - vilification - so self-deceptive is the whole
experience in many cases, so misunderstood are the physical symptoms and so
adolescent are the emotional ones.
486
Marriage is as much a partnership as any
business one is.
487
The marriage which is either unsatisfactory to
one of the partners or unhappy for both of them may always take a different turn
if regarded from a different viewpoint - a higher one.
488
Women have too often allowed financial necessity
to cause them to enter an ill-suited marriage, as men have allowed sexual
difficulty to cause them either to do the same or to evade any marriage at all.
489
Tibet's most famous guru, Marpa, was happily
married. Not all the most esteemed gurus and not all the best disciples are
necessarily bachelors.
490
It is said and sedulously propagated by married
couples that the bachelor is a selfish man. The truth is that a married man is
not less selfish. His wife and children are merely extensions of his own ego.
491
Socrates suffered from a scolding, nagging, and
bad-tempered wife. One day she gave him a farewell parting by pouring dirty
water on him from an upper storey while he was in the street. This caused his
friends to complain to him and ask why he endured it. Instead of complaining, he
pointed out to his friends that this gave him the impetus, and provided some of
the means, to become a philosopher.
492
In its highest meaning, love is simply mental
and emotional empathy.
493
Marriage brings about an interfusion of
destinies and auras which may have important consequences. If the partner is
actively opposed to the ideals and ideas of the quest, the aspirant will find it
much more difficult to follow its star, if not be indeed completely halted for a
time.
494
To flee into marriage in order to escape from
loneliness is not the highest motive for marrying, although often a common one.
495
When the student who is truly seeking to make
progress on the Quest is confronted by an obvious failure in daily life - in
marriage for example - he or she must realize there is a karmic lesson involved
here, one which has not yet been properly learned. It would be extremely unwise
for such a person to contemplate marrying again, before the important meaning of
the message has been thoroughly taken to heart. So long as there remains any
uncertainty in the matter, so long is it best to wait. Time alone is lost by
such waiting, whereas the mistake of venturing blindly into another marriage
might cause far greater grief. Guidance will come to the troubled seeker if he
or she prays for it - and is patient.
496
When one has suffered through an unhappy
marriage, a second venture into matrimony should be approached with utmost
caution. If one has any doubts whatsoever, it is best to wait. It is the duty of
each to be certain that it is the right step. A little patience is all that is
needed. Even in the case where both individuals are students on the Quest, and
are anxious to follow it together, waiting will only confirm their hopes and
strengthen their chances for happiness.
497
The difficulties of rearing children, the
irritations of family life, and the monotony of much married existence are
problems which most people have had to face at some time or other. They must be
mastered, however, for one cannot desert duty without suffering pangs of
conscience. This mastery calls for much endurance and more gritting of teeth,
but the road can be smoothed greatly if he will try to cultivate something of
that spirit of inner detachment which the Overself is seeking to impart. To be
able to stand aside from the self occasionally, to treat his problems as though
they were someone else's, and to refer them at critical moments to a higher
power for solution, is of enormous benefit in every way. In this connection one
should read chapter 11 of The Secret Path.
498
The wife of one who seeks to follow this Quest
has the opportunity of bringing a happy future to herself in helping to bring it
to him. She also may walk beside him on that greater path of spiritual
attainment to which all are dedicated. She will then get from marriage not only
what she hoped for but much more besides.
499
It has been said in The Quest of the
Overself that a married couple should grow together in companionly worship
of the Light. If they do this they have found the basis of true marriage,
successful marriage. In India a newly wedded couple are pointed out in the sky
at night, by a Brahmin priest, a star called "Vashistharundhati." It is a
pleasant little ceremony and supposed to be auspicious. For Vashistha was a
great sage who lived thousands of years ago, Arundhati was his wife, and their
marriage was a model of its kind in perfect conjugal happiness, wifely devotion,
and mutual spiritual assistance. The ancient records link this star with this
couple in their legend. Now the invention of the telescope has enabled us to
discover that this star, which is the middle one in the tail of Ursa Major, or
the Great Bear, is really a double star; that is, it consists of two separate
stars situated so close to each other as to appear a unit to our naked eyes.
Moreover, it is also a binary star; that is, the pair revolve around a common
centre of gravity. Can we not see a wonderful inner significance in the old
Indian custom? For the marital happiness of Vashistha and his wife was due to
their having found a common centre of spiritual gravity!(P)
500
The wider our experience of this world, the more
must be our realization of the truth that it is the spiritual outlook and moral
attitude which really determine a society's socio-political form and active
course.
501
Every problem that harasses mankind today was
first born as a spiritual problem and only later grew into a political or
economic one.
502
Unless there be a change of moral ground, a
shift of ethical standpoint, a new spiritual approach, the hopes aroused by
political changes, shifts, and innovations will be false ones.
503
Like Lao Tzu, Socrates held a low view of
politics. He did not believe it had any room for complete honesty, justice, and
truth. It was a clash of egos and a struggle for power. His opinion of the
multitude, their ethical standards and quality of correct judgement, was equally
low. But he believed it possible, given enough time, to lift them up and
persuade them to follow better ways. This was, however, a matter for working
upon a few individuals at a time, not publicly and politically but privately.
504
The thing that really matters in the life of a
nation is the quality of its leaders, the character of those who guide its
destinies. Young men may not realize that enthusiasm alone is not enough, that
character always does and always will count, that he who fits himself for
greatness will see whole kingdoms delivered into his hands. Inspiration brings
fortune in its train and inspired teachers will always rise.(P)
505
When those who occupy high position, who rule,
lead, advise, instruct, and inform, are unfit for their position and lack the
needed qualities, attributes, and consciousness, then society falls into
disorder; its levels get mixed up so that words, names, designations, and terms
become empty, distorted, or misleading. And as a result of the disorders which
break out, violence, hatred, and even wars - civil or international - afflict
the world.
506
No system is likely to be better than those who
administer it, while it is likely to be worse.
507
It is no adequate reason for the continuation of
a bad system to say that there are good people working under it. They would work
all the better under a good system.
508
Rudolf Steiner rightly taught that the true
spiritual things could flourish only in freedom and that they need to be
self-administered, independently of the state or political interference.
509
Where groups, sections, classes are unable to
co-operate for the common welfare, which includes their own, then only ought a
government step in to control them - not before.
510
If the world fails to stop another world war
from eventuating, it will be because highly centralized government is as much a
colossal failure as highly organized religion. Some organization in both spheres
is inescapable, but it is also destructive of their true purposes when carried
to an autocratic point.
511
The Western world needs a third economic form,
one that will make a place for the spiritual purpose of living. Communism will
never do it; capitalism has the chance to do it, although it has yet to make use
of its chance. With all its faults, capitalism does possess a moral code of
sorts whereas communism possesses none. From this lack comes the worst that
could befall a people unfortunate enough to be the victim of communism's
promises.
512
The third economic form will arise not only
through the two older forms first modifying and then synthesizing one another,
but also through the imperative needs of our own time forcing our inventiveness
and creativeness to add their special contribution.
513
Why not accept different forms of ownership
within the same national organization? Why not let public socialism and private
capitalism compete with each other? Why force all people within a single
ill-fitting form?
514
No two people are alike in mental reach, moral
stature, technical gifts, and practical capacity. Many differences of thought,
character, capacity, and physique exist and will always exist because the
variety in an infinite universe will always be infinite. There are no two things
or two creatures alike in Nature and consequently there is no equality in
Nature!
515
All men are not born equal in ability, and any
state built upon the thesis that they are is built upon a false foundation.
However, all men should receive equal good treatment and equal opportunity; but
that is a different matter.
516
Democracy is not the ideal form of society, but
when a hierarchy becomes rigid and selfish, it is just as imperfect, just as
much a failure.
517
There is far too much friction, abuse,
recrimination, and even hatred among the members of the different political
parties in many countries. All these are negative qualities and therefore
represent a negative aspect of democracy. They are of no help in any way to the
people, yet so long as democracy lasts there is no likelihood of their being
eliminated.
518
A culture like democratic culture which brings
knowledge and information to the masses but fails to bring them refinement of
manner or taste or speech and also fails to lift up their moral standards is a
very incomplete one.
519
People nowadays speak of democracy in the same
reverent way as formerly they used to speak of aristocracy and of monarchy. In
each of these three cases we will find that such forms of government and
civilization had both a good side and a bad side and when the bad side became
too heavy then the old form began to decay and eventually to be destroyed. We
all know the merits and advantages which the waves of democracy have spread
around the world, but what about the demerits - such things as coarseness and
shallowness, ill breeding and vulgarity, obscenity and tawdriness in art?
520
Politicians - more interested in their own
careers than in sincere public service, ambitious to gain their personal ends,
unwilling to rebuke foolish voters with harsh truth until it is too late to save
them, forced to lead double lives of misleading public statements and
contradictory knowledge of the facts, yielding, for the sake of popularity, to
the selfish emotions, passions, and greeds of sectional groups - contribute much
to mankind's history but little to mankind's welfare.
521
The pooling of common ignorance in democratic
debate does not remove that ignorance.
522
The multitude has the least capacity for truth,
the lowest moral and intellectual development, the shortest sight into
consequences. Mass rule leads downhill.
523
It is proper and kind that the proletariat
should have their claims and demands heeded, that what they call "social
justice" should be adequately available. But it is wrong to heed only theirs and
ignore other classes, especially the middle ones.
524
If you want the best - that is, a meritocracy
based on quality - then you must abandon democracy based on quantity.
525
If we need a higher class, an elite, let us have
it. But let it be based on merit, on outstanding contributions or services, not
on the accidents of birth, position, money - and let its members be themselves,
not labelled with gaudy titles which make spineless people fawn like sycophants
in their presence. In this Aquarian age, archaic hereditary dressed-up
aristocracies posturing theatrically have no place.
526
The business of minding our own business comes
first, that of attending to our neighbour's comes next. The need of
understanding the truth about ourselves is much more important than that about
others. Our own endless political worry is one consequence of being too
concerned with somebody else's political duty.
527
Since all men are obviously not equal, it would
be unwise to give all men equal rights. But every help and facility ought to be
given to enable those who want to improve themselves to do so.
528
If authority has judged wrongly, misused power,
or served selfish interests, these things should be scrutinized, plainly seen
for what they are, and correction or reform demanded. But these are insufficient
causes to reject all authority altogether. For when it is the voice of the
accumulated experience, mental and physical, of many centuries, it has something
to offer that is worth at least unbiased examination. But when it is
unscrupulous, barbarous, or tyrannical, then it justly earns the nemesis of
rebellion.
529
When Plato came to comprehend that politicians
could not improve the character of the people by their activities, when he saw
that politics did not conduce towards pursuit of the good, he gave up meddling
in it altogether and turned in another direction.
530
He must allow others the same liberty of thought
which he asks for himself, the same freedom of expression and the same right to
a private opinion, but these liberties are valid only so far as he seeks the
common welfare along with his own. If the others do not do so or do so under the
form of dangerous illusions which are harmful to society, then he has a right to
ask for restraints to be put upon them.
531
The lack of personal integrity, the satisfaction
with paltry triumphs over other politicians, and the misuse of words to their
almost utter falsification help to explain why modern democracy, with all its
benefits and achievements, has led in the end to a chaos and a menace which
darken the whole world.
532
If suitable conditions and helpful environments
do not exist in a society for enabling the higher purpose of life to be
fulfilled, for encouraging the studies and practices of philosophy, for
preparing a way of life suitable for religious devotion or seeking truth, that
society is materialistic. A wiser government and people will try to establish
the proper conditions to lift the whole nation and to make arrangements that
will meet the outward needs while not obstructing the inward ones as they do so,
to create more opportunities for those who wish to answer life's spiritual call
and improve themselves.
533
The failures of democracy are evident enough,
and not at all surprising when it allows the same political power to a simpleton
as to a sage.
534
An incursion into active politics by a man who
is neither ambitious nor naïve, who is sincere, honest, and really seeking to
serve the common welfare, must in certain countries end in dismay or withdrawal,
disillusionment or cynicism at its corruption or hypocrisy.
535
It was not merely because a people needed a
leader that the institution of monarchy came into being. It was also because
they needed to develop the quality of veneration, to acknowledge that there was
someone or something higher than themselves. It was only another step from
looking up to a king to reverencing the highest power - God.
536
If the World-Mind governs all things and all
beings, if this is the monarchy of God, then the monarchy of earth would be the
best form of government through being in conformity with it. The king's title
would not only be a worldly honour, but also a spiritual one. Monarchic
authority would be a sacred copy of the divine pattern. The democratic
distribution of power to each person equally would be the very contrary, hence
an impious and atheistic act. "The divine right of kings" would then be a phrase
full of meaning, truth, justice. All this has validity only if the monarch is
himself in harmony with God, if his character reflects God's goodness, if his
intelligence expresses God's wisdom: otherwise it falls to the ground. All this
implies that the king is truly inspired from above, is fully aware of his
Overself. If he is not born so, his duty is to strive to acquire this condition
as quickly as possible. If he is unable or unwilling to acquire it, then there
is no justification for a monarchical constitution's claim to superiority over a
democratic one!
537
It is safer to entrust the welfare of a nation
to the co-operation of its best men than to a single man, however wise
well-meaning and honest he may be reputed to be. History and experience offer
the best practical test of this statement's truth, but the doctrine of the
relativity of ideas also underlines it.
538
It is not generally known that Ben-Gurion, the
former president of Israel, was for many years closely interested in the study
of Indian philosophy and in the practice of hatha yoga. Perhaps the broadening
effect of his study tempered his attitude towards his country's enemies and
uplifted his aims for the nation? In an interview he once said, "The chief
danger facing Israel is not Arab hostility, it is Levantinism - we must not go
in for pure commercialism. We must make this country a centre of culture and
education."
539
The mistake which so many monarchs fell into,
and which led in the end to the virtual downfall of monarchy, was that they
regarded their subjects as persons to be exploited rather than as persons to be
served.
540
The principle of adoption seems less faulty than
both the principles of monarchy and republicanism. It allows the existing ruler
to choose his successor, provided the Senate confirms his choice. None of the
three systems is perfect, but this seems to offer more than the other two.
541
Society begins with the individual, goes on
through him, and its higher purpose is fulfilled in him alone. Political
thinkers, guides, and leaders who reject this truth will never escape from the
immensely difficult problem into which their half-true, half-false concepts must
incessantly lead them.
542
We do not find in authentic history any reliable
record of sage-kings, although myths of prehistoric China speak of them. Perhaps
the nearest to this ideal combination of knowledge, wisdom, goodness, and power
appeared in persons like Ashaka of India. Certainly with such government many
problems and evils associated with familiar forms - such as democracy,
aristocracy, monarchy, and dictatorship - would vanish.
543
We have to restore the supremacy and demonstrate
the practicality of the moral ideal in both political and economic affairs.
544
Those who shout constantly for freedom need to
be reminded of its corollary - responsibility. If they use their freedom to
behave antisocially or destructively then they are no longer entitled to it.
545
Those who demand freedom most, the violent
revolutionaries, may be the least free even when successful, for they are slaves
to their own violence, to the passion which propels them.
546
Plato's striking assertion that "until
philosophers are kings or kings philosophers cities will never rest from their
evils - no, nor the human race" is often quoted and indeed is provocative enough
to be worth quoting. But its exact truth is open to question. For if the great
prophets like Jesus and Buddha, invested with higher power in virtue of their
special missions as they were, could not make a single city rest from its evils,
not even all their followers, how is it possible that men not so invested could
do so? What they could unquestionably do would be to limit the area and strength
of those evils as well as to provide conditions which would tend to discourage
their future growth. Just as the world was saved by the work of Jesus and Buddha
from becoming measurably worse than it did become, so would it be possible for
the king-philosophers to bring about a similar result in their own ways and
lands.
547
The rancours of politics do not breed the calm
judicial atmosphere in which problems are best solved.
548
It was insane to allow freedom to those who seek
to destroy freedom.
549
To make the destiny of all the men women and
children in any land depend on the whim of a single individual who has shown no
sign of special fitness for such responsibility, no moral or mental superiority,
no administrative skill or personal courage, is to combine folly with injustice.
A would-be ruler - be he king or commoner - must prove his worth or go.
550
Independence is for those who are worthy of it.
Freedom is for those who can be trusted with it. Without such fitness both drift
into anarchy.
551
The hypocrisy which stains the United Nations is
visible and notorious, at least to those who know a little of what goes on
behind the scenes. Peace does not come out of moral insincerity. Nor does fear
provide a permanent foundation for it, however large atomic bombs may become.
Peace has vanished too many times in the past simply because it cannot stay too
long out there in the world when it is not present in here, in men's hearts.
History has tried all the varied forms of government and still has not solved
its own problem. The way is known but the will is feeble.
552
It is not enough to agitate for public
socio-politico-economic reform without, at the same time, seeking for private
and personal reforms.
553
Statesmen who possess competence but lack
character may be able to serve their people in some ways but will dis-serve them
in other ways.
554
Beware of politicians. The more they protest
their devotion to ideals, the less should they be believed, even though by
constant repetition of glibly spoken words the belief is now theirs too.
555
We have seen many politicians appearing on the
world stage in our lifetime and appealing to narrow human selfishness, but few
wise statesmen.
556
Each political party represents some sectional
and therefore selfish interest. No party seems to reconcile these conflicting
interests by seeking the welfare of its nation as a whole.
557
Although I do not hold with a hereditary
aristocracy and a hereditary royalty and would prefer to favour a meritocracy,
one must live among the masses in the midst of their commonness and vulgarity
and semi-animality to understand why the higher classes insist on separating
themselves from the lower ones.
558
The notions of democracy lead people to delude
themselves about facts which stare them in the face. The masses form a lesser
breed of human beings and no amount of political propaganda can alter the fact
that there are individuals who belong to a superior breed.
559
Lycurgus, the wise statesman, in the
constitution he drew up for Sparta, counterbalanced power: the Senate against
the people, the king against both.
560
Most people are the victims of suggestion and
are easily impressed by (and deceived by) appearances. They confound bigness of
size with greatness of soul; they call that nation "great" which has a big
empire, often won by ethically dubious methods. A big pack of wolves is not
something to admire or respect.
561
That government will do better which combines
the vigour of youth with the knowledge of age.
562
Fitness for high social rank or public office is
not necessarily transmitted by heredity, but if the parents already possess it,
their offspring is more likely to receive the kind of upbringing which will
favour his acquisition of such fitness. This is one argument for caste. But the
numerous failures show that no guarantee is possible.
563
"Who should lead the leaders?" asked Emerson.
564
It is natural for a politician to operate for
the benefit of his own nation, even to the detriment of other nations, to blind
himself to their rights in the effort to secure such benefit.
565
Those who believed that human goodness would
automatically follow economic improvement and political reform have had their
complete refutation in recent history.
566
Those who believe that the United Nations should
still be kept despite its imperfections ought to read Shirley Hazzard's full
documentation of its uselessness in her book Defeat of an Ideal. The harm
done by this dangerous and hypocritical piece of self-deception outweighs the
good.
567
Reactionaries have been responsible for much
human misery but then revolutionists have been responsible for just as much.
568
One danger of these fanatical movements is their
gradual erosion of conscience and their rationalized eradication of pity. This
they justify, and cover up, by pleading "political necessity." In the beginning
they take a man of high ideals, through which they attract him. In the end they
have degraded him into a monster of cold-blooded heartlessness.
569
If the United Nations is to be renovated
inwardly, the precondition is to regenerate it outwardly by bringing it back to
its proper home - small, pacific, neutral Switzerland.
570
The subterfuge and intrigue, the selfishness and
double-talk, the manipulation and friction which come with democratic leadership
in the political party system, inhere in the system itself. For politics is a
struggle for power.
571
The firm idealist who scorns compromise and the
bold reformer who scorns discretion have their place in society, to which indeed
their very stubbornness acts as spur or goad.
572
No one who accepts philosophical principles
could also accept the political doctrine which denies spiritual values, cancels
human rights, advocates the conferring of arbitrary totalitarian power upon the
small group, and uses violent, unscrupulous, and ruthless methods of achieving
its aims.
573
To achieve prominence is one thing but to
achieve power is another.
574
The clash between totalitarian ideologies and
democratic ones, between humanistic and religious ones, between intellectualist
and intuitive ones, has created a void in modern cultural life which can be
adequately filled only by philosophy.
575
Bolivar, the great South American liberator,
died disappointed and said that to serve the people was to plough the ocean.
576
Oscar Wilde was not led only by his customary
habit of exaggeration to observe that "those who try to lead the people can do
so only by following the mob." Follow the career of most politicians and the
truth in his statement will become clear.
577
Spiritual aristocrats are disdained by the
democrats and communists of today. They feel no need for deriving support from
spiritual sources. Men may talk of unity and write of brotherhood, but they
still work to exterminate each other.
578
They have all been tried, these different forms
of government - monarchy, oligarchy, democracy, and despotism - in some century
or some country, and in time they have all been found wanting. The notion that
one or the other is an advance is falsified by history.
579
How right was the Russian writer Maxim Gorki:
"It is necessary to lift oneself above politics. Politics has always a repugnant
character because it is inevitably founded on the lie, the calumny, and
violence." One could add "cynicism" and "hypocrisy."
580
Rasputin was not the only evil genius around the
ill-fated Russian czar. There were others, chief of whom was Badmaev, a Tibetan
black magician and witch-doctor. There were also several mystical idiots.
581
With his pure love of truth, the genuine
philosopher is politically nonpartisan. He does not tie a political name-tag to
himself for the reason that he wishes to be scrupulously honest in his attitude,
which means that he wishes to see all around a problem whereas a party view is
one which wishes to see only a single side of a problem - the side which best
serves its own selfish interest or best pleases its own irrational prejudices.
The problem of what path social advance shall take is complicated and a successful solution is hard to come by. The desirable is not always the practicable. And because the rightness of the solution of a particular social, political, or economic problem must rest ultimately on its philosophic sanction, let economics not be too proud to take counsel from philosophy, which seemingly lies outside its province but actually lies deep within it. Inspired forethought is our need. Philosophy is alive and can contribute something here in its own way. It is perfectly relevant to the grave issues of today and indeed of any day. Philosophy can offer a statesman the right general attitude to take when confronted by situations, events, and problems. It does not offer him the particular policy he should follow in each case but rather a serene light which can illuminate every human and social problem. Nobody overnight becomes an encyclopaedia of all human knowledge or an expert economist or an expert agriculturist simply because he becomes a student of philosophy. It is unable to provide a blueprint of a new world order with the ease with which an engineer's draftsman might provide a blueprint of a new machine. For you cannot deal so easily with uncertain human factors and intractable human selfishness as you can deal with wood and steel. But it can indicate the direction in which the new world order must travel if it is to travel rightly. And that is all we propose to do here. We decline to predict what world order is going to arise during the next decade. But we can indicate the principles of wise or foolish actions and safely venture to say that such-and-such results will occur if you follow or obey these principles. Philosophy can advance only general proposals, a broad ideology upon which practical endeavours should be based. How these principles are to be applied and the technical details to which their elaboration will lead are matters which must be left to the experts themselves. It is not philosophy's task to supply detailed plans but only to supply a few fundamental principles upon which those plans may be worked out by specialists.
582
Men of fine sensitivity and high ideals do not
usually feel at home in the atmosphere of active politics. They would need
pressure or persuasion before acceptance of such involvement.
583
Do not look for political success in a man who
is cultivating the sagacity which discriminates between appearance and reality,
who is practising goodwill unto all, who would serve all sections of the
community rather than the narrow selfish interests of a single one, who is
swayed neither by the plaudits of the crowd nor by the censure of parties, who
rejects from his speech the double-talk and hypocrisy which are such virtues in
the political profession.
584
The unethical degradations which admittedly
exist in the business, political, and social worlds cannot be made to disappear
by running away from them but rather by the uplifting influence of individuals
with superior personal character entering into them.
585
The world needs less politics and more
spirituality. Politicians deal with effects and do not go to the ultimate root
of most matters, that root which lies in human ignorance and sinfulness.
However, politics plays a necessary part in modern life. It would be impossible
in this era to do away with it anyway. The remedy is to purify, uplift, and
inspire political activities. This can be done by those who have attained some
spirituality, through their descent into the arena, if they feel suited to it.
586
It is not for us who are called to the
philosophic work to meddle directly in the turmoils of politics, for usually
such effort leads to nothing and brings the philosopher criticism or
persecution. If, however, he has some useful ideas to contribute, it is better
to do so indirectly, through other persons, than to directly get into the action
himself.
587
We cannot legislate the human race into a change
of heart. But we can legislate conditions which will be less obstructive to such
a change than existing conditions.
588
In its readiness to heed the new evolutionary
impulse affecting the human ego, the twenty-first century will reorient the
spirit behind the educational system.
589
The next century will not support an educational
system which encourages cruel competitive egoism in place of co-operation among
pupils, which freely punishes them because it rarely understands them, which
sets up examinations as a criterion of culture when they are merely criteria of
cramming, which tyrannically attempts to mold all minds alike to the same degree
within the same time instead of making allowances for ability, individuality,
sensitivity, tendency, and difference of innate capacity to progress, which
overdoes its tougher disciplines and underdoes its gentler ethics, which
worships the dead past and remains superciliously irrelevant to the contemporary
scene, which vainly loads memory instead of stimulating and satisfying
curiosity, and which has no place for a few minutes of mental quiet in its daily
progress.
590
It is the first and fundamental business of
education not to stuff the mind with memory-taxing catalogues but to train it to
think rightly; not to ignore inherent defects of character but to correct them;
not to set students adrift on the sea of adolescent or adult life without an
accurate chart but to supply it. If any system of instruction does not do this,
then whatever high-sounding names it may bear it is certainly not education. How
many have found that their education did not begin until the day after they left
school or college?
591
The next century will affirm that a true
education must include spiritual education, that without its presence in the
curriculum, pupils will step out of school into life only half-educated and only
half-prepared to meet its struggles. It is not only a well-informed mind that
education should develop but, just as much, a sensitive and balanced one. An
education which leaves a man completely ignorant of his higher nature is surely
not a finished one. He should leave the classroom with a mature approach towards
the major experiences which he is likely to get. And how can it be called mature
if he has not developed a mature understanding of himself, with a resultant
mature handling of himself?
592
Education ought to be a threefold affair: the
acquisition of information and knowledge, the acquisition of skills and training
for a livelihood, the improvement and refinement of the quality of the human
being. Under this last head I put spirituality.
593
Education should not be just for training the
workings of the mind, giving it sufficient information: it should also be for
making a finer person and a higher character.
594
There are certain influences upon children's
early years which are too important to be left to chance. So much of their
characters and happiness, destiny and health depends upon their experiences
during those early years. It is the duty of those who control homes, organize
schools, and lead churches - all three - to give children some help in shaping a
proper outlook in life, some knowledge of the higher laws, some guidance in
simple meditation practice.
595
To give full freedom to the young - whether
infants, teenagers, or those near adulthood, whether in home upbringing or
educational arrangements - is to abandon wisdom, prudence, and practicality.
Their possibilities of losing their way, making mistakes, and harming themselves
and others are merely increased.
596
The young must be taught to govern themselves,
and how this is best done. They must be instructed in the higher laws and
especially the law of consequences, so that they may avoid punishing themselves.
They must learn the power of thought, the harm of anger, the benefit of
surrendering the ego. They must regain the old-fashioned virtues of good
manners, tolerance, and respect for the older generation.
597
If education were touched with spirituality, in
its real and not sectarian meaning, the teenager would grow into maturity under
influences and in surroundings which would improve character, discourage bad
tendencies, instruct in basic higher truths, and train in controlling one's own
mind.
598
Who can measure the great tide of unnecessary
misery which the examination system has brought into being amongst children? The
child who has made a poor show feels that he has brought down upon himself the
displeasure of his parents, the ridicule of his schoolmates, and the
dissatisfaction of his teachers. Nor is this all. Failure to pass this torturous
ordeal creates inferiority complexes, anxiety neuroses, emotional warpings, and
torturing fears which may mar the child's entire adjustment to his life
afterwards. Moreover, the competitive character of his experience tends to
arouse jealousy and even hatred for the more successful children.
We have made a veritable fetish of competitive examinations. Students are not really taught; they are not allowed to study in the true sense but are forced to cram books and notes. The examination system inevitably forces them to become mental automatons, whereas a less mechanical system would encourage them really to learn. Pupils who cram their heads with "stuff" and merely repeat it in examinations do not necessarily develop their minds. The ultimate goal of education ought to be not learned pedantry, not the gaining of a diploma or degree, but the understanding and mastery of life. The mere stuffing of information should be quite subordinate to this goal.
The coming education will be based on new and higher principles, its efficacy tested less by the miserable system of competitive academic examinations which grade powers of parrot-like remembrance than by powers of enlightened intelligence. The general outlook of whole nations will be healthfully altered.
599
It may be that in the hard world outside school
walls and college precincts, public examinations play too useful a part to be
discarded; but in the gentler world within these walls and precincts it should
surely be enough if scholastic merits were evaluated on the basis of past
records of work done, enthusiasm shown, and interests manifested, records kept
for this special purpose. The elimination of the competitive system need not
mean the elimination of measurement of progress. Marks, percentages, and
form-gradings have their practical worth so long as they are not used to play
off one pupil against the others.
600
Anyone may launch himself on the sea of life
without having learned navigation, without having been equipped with the needed
training, knowledge, and qualifications which fit him to assume life's
responsibilities - be they choosing a wife, rearing a family, following a
profession, or keeping his body healthy. A true education would prepare the
young adequately from kindergarten to university in the art of how to live. The
prevalence of so much avoidable distress, misery, ignorance, and evil shows up
this lack. But the teachers, the masters, and the professors themselves need to
be taught first.
601
An education which does not end in some
spiritual understanding and some moral elevation is incomplete and imperfect.
But this cannot be accomplished within the customary school and college periods.
The higher education of the human being can begin only after his mind has
matured and only after he has had some social experience - that is, in adult
life. This is why it is equally important that grown men and women should go on
learning, should never cease to be students, and should turn the experiences of
life into lessons.
602
An education which teaches people to think, but
only to think materialistically; to live, but only to live for the old ideas
which have brought civilization to the verge of destruction; and which entirely
fails to teach them to intuit, is an imperfect and incomplete thing, or rather a
subtle illusion.
603
The school which omits any mention of the Quest,
the college which gives no hint of the higher consciousness in man, the
university which lets philosophy remain an unknown, disregarded, or merely
speculative subject - these do not adequately fulfil their function of preparing
students for life in the world outside their walls.
604
That education is incomplete which does not
instruct men in the art of spiritual communion, which does not teach them the
need to and the way to control thoughts, which carries them through a course in
physics but fails to continue into metaphysics, which informs mind but does not
reform character.
605
Going to school is one thing, getting educated
is another, although they coincide at times. Learning from a teacher is
preparation. Learning from life in the world is observation. Learning from
oneself is intuition.(P)
606
We live in an age when false statements are
passed off as true ones and when deceptive values are passed off as real ones,
when the dissemination of knowledge is getting more and more into the hands of
those who are themselves too young to wisely instruct the young, too unbalanced
to help the characters of the young, and too theoretical to be able to pass on
really practical information which will help their students.(P)
607
It is not enough for parents to protect a child
- they should also encourage and stimulate it to awaken spiritually.(P)
608
Good manners should be taught in school from the
most elementary to the highest university level, as was done in China when
Confucius' influence was predominant.
609
Promptings to righteous living need not depend
on the commandments of supernatural revelation alone. Religion ought not to be
the only guardian of moral values. Education should also fill this position.
610
It is not enough to provide a young person with
a technical education which will enable him to earn his living. There is also
the question of what he is living for. Is his life to have any higher quality
and value? Is his mind to have any higher awareness than a merely animal one?
611
The young are not usually taught that negative
thoughts and feelings may bring suffering and trouble to themselves and those in
their environments. Still less are they shown how to avoid, discipline, or
sublimate such thoughts and feelings.
612
Children imitate their elders as far as they can
and to a limited extent. If, therefore, parents want better children - better in
behaviour, in character, in themselves, and in their relationships with others -
then they must set constructive and desirable examples.
613
The conditions which surround a child, an
adolescent, and a young adult during the period of preparation for responsible
existence are very important. The impressions and suggestions, the training and
forming he or she receives from them contribute heavily toward the final
personality. Parent and teacher are giving forth more than they know.
614
Our universities turn out educated people in
ever-increasing numbers, but they do not necessarily turn out wise people.
615
Why should the universities teach only the
humanities and the sciences, but fail to teach a single student how to become a
full human being? Why do they not impart the only science which deals with THAT
WHICH IS? How many have told me that during the few minutes of a short Glimpse
they feel that more worthwhile knowledge came to them than they gained in all
their years of formal education in school and college!
616
"The academic people think they know everything
already," Jung once said sarcastically. To which I would add: that is because
they have never recovered from the effects of education. The higher the
education the harder it is to recover.
617
It is clearly the parents' duty to transmit to
their children, enough moral values to protect them in later life. But if the
children, through the inheritance of unruly tendencies brought over from former
lives, reject those values, the parents are blocked in their well-meant effort.
618
The individual character grown upon the tree of
rebirth must appear by maturity - indeed it begins even to show in the infant -
and no mother or father, however loving, can stop the process. But both parents
can do much to bring out the better characteristics and to weaken the worse,
just as a conscientious gardener can assist his plants.
619
What does it mean to be a human being? The
full answer to this question is not taught to the young (as it ought to
be) because few parents, teachers, and religious ministers really know it by
experience.
620
To educate is to elevate; if a school or college
fails to do this, its balance has been overthrown, its work has become
one-sided. And if a church, temple, or synagogue fails in its worship to
generate reverence towards the unknown God, rather than to things, it also is
unbalanced.
621
The young are either uncertain, if they are
modest, or too certain, if they are arrogant. In both cases they have yet to
learn how to separate fact from opinion - a faculty which may come only after
long development, or even not come at all.
622
No system of education can be a complete or an
adequate one if it omits to teach young persons how to meditate. This is the one
art which can assist them not only to develop self-control and to improve
character but also to master all the other arts through mastery of
concentration. When their minds have been trained to concentrate attention well,
all their intellectual capacities and working powers attain the most individual
expression with the least effort.
623
The loss of influence by the priests has been
balanced by the increase of power by the educationists. It is the teacher who
should give us what we cannot get from religion. But does he?
624
So long as the young are falsely taught to
identify the historic greatness of a nation with the successful aggressions of
that nation, so long will violence, crime, and selfishness spoil their
characters.
625
Where is the practicality of an education which
lets the young enter life only half-ready at best? For they know only one side
of the universe - the physical; barely two-thirds of man - the physical and the
intellectual parts; and little or nothing of the divine in man and universe. How
little they know, for instance, of the troubles which passion, when unbridled
and ungoverned, brings them. This does not refer to the physical troubles nor
even to those of human relationship, for these are visible enough, but to the
unseen psychic troubles inside themselves.
626
The education which fills mends and exercises
bodies may suit its purpose, but the education which, in addition, inspires is
infinitely superior.
627
An upbringing which supplies children with no
truth, light, virtue, or faith in the higher power behind the universe, which
passes on to them no spiritual help or strength, is reproachable.
628
An education worthy of the name would fearlessly
include comparative religion. If it taught nothing more than the folly of
intolerance, it would do much; but it does more - it helps the search for Truth.
629
Although this argument applies only to a part of
the question where education in philosophy is concerned, to this partial extent
it does pertain: "If we think them (the people) not enlightened enough to
exercise (power) the remedy is not to take it from them but to inform them by
education." - Thomas Jefferson, 1821
630
Education will place less emphasis on
selfishness-breeding competition between individual scholars and more on
tolerance-breeding progress of all the scholars. It will cease basing itself on
the old error that all of them start alike and equal, and begin to base itself
on the older truth that all of them start at different points and unequal
grades. It will be more effective because it will recognize the operation of
this universal law of repeated embodiment through successive earth-lives and
hence recognize that unrestricted competition in the schoolroom is a cruel and
unjustifiable thing.
631
Equality of opportunity is something which the
modern demand for social justice is achieving rapidly, but this ought not to
mean that children with more developed minds or higher evolutionary status
should sit alongside those with less developed and more primitive minds in the
school.
632
True education will nurture noble character
rather than egoistic calculation, foster sharp intelligence rather than routine
memory, train the student to the kind of technical work he or she likes to do
and can do, and teach things of lasting value rather than force useless ones
into the mind.
633
The futility of our lives is partially
exemplified in our preparation for them, for our education attacks every problem
but the most important: How to live? In the feverish overdoing of contemporary
body-worship, too much time and honour have been given to sport and athletics. A
transfer of some of this energy to the development of higher things has now
become overdue. We must first decide what the primary object of education is to
be. Does society thrive best on the information it has crammed or the virtues it
has displayed? Should it not rather possess both while placing its emphasis on
the second?
634
The young masses need to be taught the
significance of courtesy, the importance of good manners, the value of
refinement, long before they are taught the name of Chile's capital city.
635
Insofar as young men and women in their twenties
behave like immature adolescents in their teens, with lamentably low standards
of conduct, their upbringing is faulty and their education incomplete.
636
That is no bringing up of children which fails
to bring them up to seek betterment of self in the inner sense, to admire
virtue, strengthen character, and improve manners.
637
To be properly educated it is not enough to be
well-informed and well able to think; one's potential talents and faculties
should be brought out and developed. Such an education, although it begins with
a school, can only continue all through a lifetime.
638
Any education that does not teach us the truth
about ourselves, about the world, and about life is mis-education.
639
What is the use of educating so many young
people's heads when we leave their intuitive natures absolutely untouched,
uncultivated, and unused?
640
There is no true growth in our institutions
because there is no true growth at the centre of our being.
641
Let religion learn to adjust itself to science
and let science learn to adjust itself to philosophy, and let art learn to
adjust itself to all three. Then we may look hopefully for a true education in
our schools and colleges, a true life in our homes and workplaces.
642
If the young are not brought up to behave in a
civilized manner, they are not properly brought up at all.
643
Higher education is necessary if we want to
cultivate the higher mental faculties. The ordinary and elementary kind of
education does not do this.
644
We are not sufficiently informed about the
meaning of life and not sufficiently concerned with the purpose of life. In our
ignorance we deify the machine and destroy ourselves. In our indifference we
lose all chance of gaining peace of mind.
645
It is a striking comment on modern university
campus activity that the students of ancient India were forbidden to take part
in worldly affairs. Such activity properly belonged to the next (householder)
stage of their careers when, instructed spiritually and morally in duties and
obligations, they could take a constructive role in society.
646
The process of education never ceases, for
beyond kindergarten and college there is the school of life, and everyone must
attend it whether he likes it or not.
647
It is a widespread error which says that young
birds who have reached a sufficient age are pushed out of the nest by the mother
so that they may learn to fly of their own accord and live their own independent
lives. This happens only in the case of the eagle and the swallow. Almost all
other birds, when they are fully fledged, get out of the nest by their own
power, persuaded partly by hunger because the food is no longer brought to them
and partly by the persuasive inducements of the mother's call from a nearby
point.
648
Each of us has been endowed with intelligence,
determination, and ability, so that we may use these in order to grow
spiritually - and to learn how to properly care for ourselves and others.
649
If in their public contacts with others they
behave like half-savages; if they eat corpses as if they were half-cannibals; if
they sneer at real art and support a meaningless coarse and ugly pseudo-culture
of half-barbarian tastes: then after leaving university, college, or school they
ought to go elsewhere to correct or complete their education.
650
We see young men sent out from the seminaries,
ready to become ministers of religion. It is presumed by them and certified by
their teachers that they see the truths of religion and will impart them. It
does not occur to them, much less to their teachers, that they have been
blinded, that they see only other men's opinions and beliefs, put into hard
dogmatic form.
651
Education possesses a magic which we cannot
afford to despise. What Hitler did to the hearts and minds of millions of young
Germans through his grip on the system of public education was a miracle only to
those who do not understand how amenable the young are to the influence of
instruction and to the ideas sown in their minds. The war will not have been
utterly valueless if it teaches the world to divert some of the money which has
hitherto been spent on armaments into the channels of education.
652
Education cannot transform a child into what its
former earth-lives have never made it, but a spiritual education can certainly
modify its baser attributes and enhance its better ones.
653
Education will recognize that the study of
philosophy should occupy the last and highest place in a complete course. But it
is precisely this study which our present education sees no use for. The young
need philosophy no less than the old, for on the threshold of starting life,
with its varied possibilities and hard problems, they feel how useful some
guidance can be. The time to save a man is not in his old age, after he has
lived, but in his young age, before he has lived. It is then that he is most
susceptible to moral guidance, most suggestible by nonmaterialistic teaching,
and most imitative of good conduct. Later is often too late. The idea and
practice of spiritual development ought to be introduced into the schools and
colleges. How to do this and not be blocked by obstacles offered by sectarian
religion is the biggest problem.
654
The world will change, and change for the
better, when we put our schools in order, when we educate our children less in
geography and more in unselfishness, less in history and more in high character,
less in a dozen other subjects and more in the art of right living.