1
Among the young there is a section which, if it
could be convinced that there is a higher purpose in life, would respond to the
call. There is also another section which would not respond because it is
stupefied by life, passion, and, especially, negative feelings.
2
Young persons, whose enthusiasm is fresh and whose
minds are open, especially need to become convinced by these teachings. In this
way they would not only lay one of the best possible foundations for their
future, but also be of the greatest possible service to others.
3
The young do not know, but some among them want to
know. They want to know why they are here and what is the purpose of their
lives, how they are to conduct themselves, and whether or not there is a deity.
But for all this they need guidance and they need instruction. They come more
quickly with faith to a teaching than their elders do, and that which could be
their uplift could also be their downfall. For they are more easily misled than
their elders. Those who know and can ought to do something to assist them.
4
Those who come to this quest in their early years -
with all the hopes, enthusiasms and energies of youth - are lucky. But they have
also the naïveté, inexperience, imbalance, and unrealistic expectations of
youth.
5
A new type of youngster has been coming into
incarnation since the war - or rather types, for there are good, bad, and mixed
among them. They are different from the earlier generations. Here and there one
finds open minds with wider outlook who are seeking Truth and that are not
limited to their background, their environment, or their traditions, but imbued
with a willingness to look to the Orient also.
6
Youth rightly refuses to be overwhelmed by tradition
but wrongly refuses to take up its share of tradition.
7
Contemporary youth has been born into a world where
for the first time they can see as a definite possibility destruction of life
upon this planet, including human life everywhere. Inevitably and naturally they
protest, some very violently, against this immoral misorganization which their
elders have brought about.
8
Those of the young who fiercely reject all
restrictions which hamper their freedom because they want to be themselves, to
keep their individuality, are right in a blind unseeing uninformed way. They are
free to be their best selves. Until they recognize this truth they need
control, from within and from without.
9
Youth would be better advised to sift out and
preserve whatever spiritual values may be found in the past and combine them
with the best material values of our own day.
10
The young have had courage and honesty but in
losing faith they have lost discipline and replaced society's old follies with
new ones.
11
To young idealists it is among the important
things in life to seek for its secrets, to question why they are here, and not
to stop until there is some kind of answer.
12
Somewhere between youth's vital exuberant faith
and age's blasé withered sleep there is the right attitude. Somewhere there is a
state of mind which lacks youth's faculty of self-deception and rejects age's
pessimistic summing-up of it all.
13
With the young, theories necessarily take the
place of experience; with the old it is the reverse; with both there may be a
foolish unbalance.
14
Although I deplore the condemnation of everything
bygone, everything old, which is indulged in by so many of the young today, I
agree with them that new times may bring new forms of inspiration and that the
Truth, the Reality, does not necessarily have to be tied to tradition or look
heavy with age or be stiff with the shapes given to it by our forefathers; it
can be new, fresh, vivid, original. I include under this heading not only
religious and metaphysical matters, but also artistic ones.(P)
15
Too many of those who rebel against the old forms,
whether of society, art, thought, or politics, demand new forms vociferously -
but why should the new be worthier than the old? It may be, but it is not to be
welcomed merely because it is new. It is to be welcomed when it gives a chance
to be better than the old.
16
The idea of authority is hotly contested by the
young, who fail to see that it is just as necessary as the idea of non-authority
or freedom. This is true whether it is imposed on us by the higher laws
governing existence or by other persons who are qualified to do so or even
imposed by ourselves in the form of ideals and standards.(P)
17
Where traditional views no longer conform to
contemporary knowledge and needs, adaptation, sometimes even reform, must be
brought in wisely. The older persons, fearful of change, resist it. So the
pressures of life use the younger ones, who are more open to it but who often
move too hastily, too far, and too unwisely. But they are a necessary
counterbalance until a new generation arises which learns, accepts, and
understands the World-Idea and seeks to live in harmony with it.
18
In the end it will be to the good that so many of
the young are scrutinizing the values and institutions of the society in which
they are born, that they are asking troublesome questions, and that they are
concerned with the ultimate ends of all these activities. Most of us who were
born in an earlier generation may deplore and criticize the violence, the folly,
and the unbalance with which this re-examination (and its accompanying protests)
is being made, but the need to explore new ways is plain.
19
It is when he is close to the period of puberty
that these oppositional tendencies get strong enough to plainly assert
themselves. From then on, the presence of inner conflict is felt as a feature of
the moral character.
20
Of what use is it that a young man shall have the
admirable strength of a lion if he also has the stubborn foolishness of an ass
and the undisciplined passions of a goat? Balanced growth is better.
21
Life is stretching before the young person as a
wonderfully interesting adventure, and the future is his chance to bring out all
that is best in him.
22
The eagerness to acquire social position and to
accumulate worldly possessions is more likely to be found in younger than in
older persons.
23
The young feel too fresh, too alive, to concede
that they also will grow old, feeble, haggard.
24
That period when he is half-youth, half-man is a
dangerous one for a growing person. For the passions of anger and lust appear
but the reason and willpower wherewith to control them do not yet develop.
25
If the young are to judge aright, they must call
in and consider the experience and intellect of the old to help them. This does
not at all mean that the old are to judge for them. On the contrary, the young
are entitled to criticize severely and scrutinize cautiously whatever advice
they receive. Too often, the old have lost vision and dropped idealism. Too
often, only the young possess these important attributes.
26
While young, their minds are conditioned by the
limitations of their elders, by the moral level of their times, by forceful
appeals to passion and emotion uncountered by reason or experience.
27
The young wish to free themselves not only from
outworn ideas and modes, which may be a good move, but also from what they
consider outworn virtues, which may be a bad one. The qualities of character and
the patterns of behaviour which society esteems are not all to be rejected.
28
The young experimented with turning their
inherited way of life not only upside-down but also inside-out. The results have
taught them to be cautious.
29
Some of us have gone a little way beyond the cup
of youth, but have not gone so far as to taste the bitterness that rises into
the life of all who desert the simple instinct of reverence which walked beside
them in the childhood years.
30
The young advance eagerly toward the embrace of
life, the old withdraw from it.
31
As the old questions about existence - whether of
man, the universe, or God - clamour in the mind for answers, a conflict goes on
inside the young and educated about what they are to do with their lives.
32
The proper attitude for a young person not too far
from the threshold of adulthood is to keep his mind open, not shut in dogmatic
slogans, too often themselves the result of half-true, half-false suggestions
received from other minds.
33
It is one of the special services of youth to prod
its elders into action, and to spur a trend or reform into faster pace.
34
It is particularly the young who ought to feel the
wish to better character and ennoble life, the desire for self-improvement.
35
It is right that a young man should want to rise
higher in his chosen career, should struggle for the best and strive for the
Ideal.
36
The young are more likely to hold these new ideas
and generous ideals, and hold them enthusiastically. They are virile enough to
count action as a twin inseparable from thought.
37
Authority, against which the young rebel, has its
place however much those who filled that place in the past abused it and misused
it.
38
Past traditions may contain knowledge based on
experience: they should be scrutinized, sifted, and tested, not ridiculed and
rejected merely because of age.
39
It is a valuable part of a young person's earlier
life to seek out the adept and the sage, to take advantage of the opportunity of
sitting in contemplation with them, and to question them about the Way and its
Goal.
40
The young experiment, seeking thrills,
excitements, adventures - using the body, the passions, imagination, drugs,
sports, contests, music, and noise. A few respond to worthy ideals, others to
debased ones. The greatest adventure - the quest - has its adherents too but too
often they are led into semi-lunacy.
41
Driven by passion and deluded by romance, the
young will have to drink their wine and have it turn sour on them often, until
they weary of the repetition and turn away to a correct balance.
42
These young dissenters from the establishment,
whose methods procedures and practices are so often naïve childish and
amateurish, are yet in a number of cases pioneers of new ways to come, of the
movement towards the Overself. On the other hand, among these dissenting groups
there are others who manifest evil characteristics and instead of leading
towards the spirit, they are leading towards degradation and materialism.
43
Too young to understand either himself or the
world, too inexperienced to perceive the illusions and traps in life, he easily
falls victim to powerful leaders who are really misleaders or to agitators whose
aims are solely destructive or to religious prophets whose person and message
are half-insane.
44
Only stupid or insensitive persons will use a
right saying such as "clothes do not make the man" to support an action such as
wearing trousers with one leg black, the other white. Such bizarre dress may be
fashionable among certain members of the younger generation today, but it is
also expressive of unbalanced, bizarre minds.
45
If we want to win the young to any cause we must
appeal to their emotion and imagination, to their capacity for enthusiasm, and
to their willingness to make experiments.
46
One may admire those young people who refuse to
fall into line with those modern ways of earning a livelihood which they call
"the rat race"and who prefer to drop out of it. But merely to drop out in a
negative way and do nothing further or constructive about the situation is no
advance on the conformists and leads to sloth or idleness. Others have tried to
organize the dropouts by groups, into communes where they practise co-operative
living. Most of these have a short life and are then abandoned, but at least
they represent an attempt to be constructive. All this shows that a new kind of
economy is needed but has still to be found.
47
It is to be hoped that many fine young people who
are facing great hardships will become the pioneers of that new age of practical
spirituality which advanced spirits ardently desire to see inaugurated.
48
We all laugh at the tradition that the man of
self-supposed or obvious genius must make tracks for Chelsea if he lives in
England, or for Greenwich Village if he abides in the United States; must wear
his hair a little longer than the Philistines, knock his head daily against a
garret ceiling, and be satisfied with bread and cheese until Fortune picks him
out as her favourite. We laugh at this, I say, yet the young man may not be such
a fool as we commonly think. That rich and rare enthusiasm of his youth may come
from Something higher than his conscious self; these brave, if bitter, fights
with a mammon-centered civilization may receive urge and stimulus from the
Spiritual Warrior within.
49
Sometimes, if guided by real inspiration, naïve
innocence and high-flying idealism marry successfully; but more times, if they
are inspired by emotion alone and are quite irrelevant to the facts of a
situation, they do not.
50
Philo sadly noted that only a few of the young men
of his time took philosophy seriously enough to heed its counsels and study its
wisdom. True, they often went to lectures (since this was in Alexandria), but,
he complained, they took their business affairs with them, so that what they
heard was not listened to properly or, if listened to, was forgotten as soon as
they made their exit from the hall.
51
The human being cannot be kept forever in the
child state, neither physically nor mentally, neither in the home nor in the
church. This must be recognized if we are to have fewer problems, less friction,
more understanding, and more harmony.
52
There are shortcomings in every area of society.
But this is not reason enough for joining the ranks of those who would
precipitate chaos, destroy society, and, they fondly hope, start afresh.
Students who follow such leadership would find themselves, in the end,
completely misled. For what would follow would not only be a new and equally
large set of shortcomings, but a cruel tyranny which would necessarily enforce
the changes. But this is no excuse for society to remain static, to resist the
penetrating renewals it needs.
53
Throwing away the accumulated knowledge, the
truths, the skills, the quality, the forms, and the values inherited from the
past, merely because they are traditional and aged, does not necessarily provide
the young iconoclasts with creative power and inspiration.
54
Their elders do not move quickly enough to alter
society to youth's satisfaction - hence its violence. But it is the elders who
have the experience, judgement, knowledge, and power, even if they lack the
will. Change will come, but the two classes must get together if it is not to
come through catastrophe.
55
The culture, the education, the arts and styles -
yes, it must be said, even the religion - inherited from the past belong to the
past. The young need a new world, a better one, a new way of life and thought,
even a new diet in food and drink.
56
Our sympathy goes out particularly to young
seekers. They are perforce inexperienced in the ways of the spirit and the ways
of the world. They are often bewildered by the contradictions and differences
between schools of thought. Their enthusiasm is warmer and their idealism more
generous, which makes them more liable to errors in thought and blunders in
conduct. Their need of guidance is both evident and urgent.
57
The Stoic teaching that passion should be
controlled by reason does not appeal to today's younger generation. But its
merit remains.
58
These young street-hooligans who "cosh" harmless
old people or rob small shopkeepers with violence are savages dressed up in the
garb of civilized beings. But they have not even the advantages of tribal laws
and taboos and standards that savages have, for they have no upbringing, no
manners at all.
59
It is the lot of most young people either to be
wanting to enter that transitory emotional condition which is falling in love or
to be trying to.
60
The Angry Young Men, who write bitter pieces about
squalid environments and personal frustrations, see no spiritual joy in life, no
divine harmony back of the universe.
61
The young, with their passing enthusiasms, their
undiscriminating evaluations, and their unconsidered decisions, should avoid
irrevocable commitments.
62
Misled by coarse materialists into hatred,
violence, and destructive activity, the idealistic young fall into error and
confusion.
63
In today's world, adolescents have a confused and
sometimes even dangerous outlook. Not a few new excitements come into their
being; the taste for emotional, intellectual, physical, and sexual adventure
disturbs their balance.
64
Do not ask from a child the intellectual
comprehension which only a grown-up person can give.
65
It is good that the young are trying to work out
ideas and paths for themselves. We must praise their independence. But it is not
good if they express smart cynicisms at the expense of their elders merely
because of the difference in age. It is worse if they make savage attacks on
others who follow traditional, orthodox, or conservative customs and,
especially, conservative good manners.
66
The limited character of the conditions under
which most humans have to live and the adverse character of so many of the
experiences they meet with, the millions of hearts filled with tormenting
restlessness and frustrated longings and the millions of heads filled with
uncertainties and strivings, the inescapable orbit of pleasures followed by
pains and of attractions succeeded by repulsions, preclude the attainment or
retainment of real happiness. The unsatisfactory final character of life's
pleasures and the disappointments in the expectations it fosters are not so
apparent, however, to the inexperienced young as to the well-experienced aged.
Nevertheless, we have yet to meet the man, however young and enthusiastic he may
be, who is fully satisfied with what he has got, or who is not dissatisfied
because of what he has not got.
67
"O son, though thou art young, be old in
understanding. I do not bid thee not to play the youth, but be a youth
self-controlled. Be watchful and not deceived by thy youth." This advice is from
Qabus Nama, an eleventh-century Persian book of conduct. It was written
as instruction for his son by a prince on the southern shore of the Caspian Sea.
68
We elders have something to learn from the younger
generation today, as they have a lot to learn from us. It is among them that
sympathetic reception for higher knowledge is mostly found today.
69
A time comes to turn from youth and become a man,
to put aside sloppy sentimentality and look at the hard realities which must be
lived with.
70
It is proper for the young to be ambitious, to
develop their potential capacities and improve their personalities. But they
should not be left with the idea that this is all that life requires from them.
71
There is both good and bad in the spirit of revolt
which so many students show. The good is a challenge to seek truth, an alarm to
wake up from moral sleep and mental sloth.
72
Youth - and in some cases it extends into the
thirties - with its inexperience, naïveté, imaginativeness, romanticism, and
immaturity - easily falls into illusion, glamour, or a sloppy sentimentality.
73
What the young do not know is that while they may
revere or worship some older person for a special talent, or romantically fall
in love with some girl for her beauty, to live with the one or the other in
close association for many years may prove an unpleasant experience.
74
He is too fastidious to accept the unwashed dirty
clothes and bodies, the jerky slangy careless speech, the crude, often rude,
arrogant ill-bred manners of the boorish, without some feeling of repulsion.
After all, even Lao Tzu was a protester, but he still remained a refined
gentleman in manners.
75
Once past the age of puberty, it is to be expected
that young persons want experience, for they know that this is the period of
initiation into life's possibilities and of preparation for adulthood. But
through their very ignorance they fall more easily into the lures of drugs,
promiscuity, alcohol.
76
They know what it is to be young. They do not know
what it is to grow old.
77
But the generations move on and these young
persons will become old ones.
78
If he has a protest to make, let him do so in a
civilized manner. Being young does not excuse him (any more than does being old)
from the requirement of normal decency, that he conduct himself properly when
among others, with some measure of self-control and self-restraint.
79
The ancient civilizations of China and India
traditionally respected, even venerated, the aged. Such was the high value
assigned to experience. But modern civilization has reversed this attitude,
denounced its older generation, and let its younger ones take the lead. The less
experience, the more honours! The defiant ones, the angry ones, the rebellious
ones, shape our thought, clothes, ideas, manners, morals.
80
Youth with its vigour gets needed action, with its
hope formulates needed changes.
81
The young man who has not yet been ambushed and
captured by ambition and sensuality is susceptible to enthusiastic idealism.
82
Neither a tame conformity nor a wild
rebelliousness is helpful to most youths.
83
If the young lack the quality of reverence, is it
not because nothing and nobody within their experience so far has seemed worthy
of it?
84
If so many young people reject the moral codes
which they have inherited as well as the social aims which are put upon them, it
might be worthwhile for society to practise some self-criticism.
85
It is the instinct of the young to seek
satisfaction of their passions and emotions untempered by caution and
undisciplined by prudence.
86
I am with the young in their revolt against the
limited concepts of a civilization which does not know or care about the
dangerous and undesirable goal toward which it is moving. But I leave them when
they become either parasitical drifters, unkempt and unclean, or violent
destructive protesters who naïvely imagine that anarchy and chaos will
automatically be followed by a state paradise.
87
The picturesque appellation of American slang to
these young fugitives from the whole educational-economic system - "dropouts
from the rat race" - implies a mentality of negative criticism of modern society
which usually is sterile. Such persons take as alternatives an aimless existence
of drifting, hitchhiking, drugs, sex, petty theft, or other things.
Sadhus, faqueers, monks, nuns, and hermits may also be fugitives,
yet their reaction is positive and affirmative. They have replaced the lost aim
in life by what seems to them to be a higher one, by the cultivation of the
soul, by the labours of self-purification and holiness or by the exploration of
the spiritual consciousness. Some even devote themselves to the service of
humanity in some form. All accept, at least theoretically, a moral restraint
absent in the other group.
88
If the irate youngsters among us feel so strongly
that they have something to give society in leading the way to reform or
renovation of varied activities, we ripened elders have also something to give -
what they lack but what their proposed changes need. We know for a start, what
is impracticable. We know, where the pitfalls are. We know the difference
between well-conceived proposals based on the facts of life and the other kind.
We have learned, or had to learn, to live in society with responsibility.
89
The young need guidance, it is true, and so need
to accept the authority of elders who have had more experience until they can
replace it by their own. But they ought not claim this freedom prematurely or in
its totality when they are only partially ready for it.
90
Whatever a man's work be in the world, whether he
be close to the earth - and hence Nature - or far from it in an office, his life
was never intended to become trapped only in that, concerned only with that. In
a confused way, half-blind but instinctive, this is one of the promptings behind
the violent protest and even rebellion of the postwar youth.
91
Let the mass of those who disagree with society's
goals and ways protest in their own young rebellious manner, but the
better-balanced will not turn to such destructiveness. They will set up a
constructive attitude, a positive manner, and produce practical affirmations
rather than sterile negations.
92
Today the adventurous young are uncovering the
texts and truths which lie outside the boundaries of official schooling, but
they are also - alas! - wading into marshlands where dubious practices and cults
take their energies and minds.
93
Balance is a quality which youth seldom shows yet
sorely needs.
94
The younger generation not only insists on
understanding but also on feeling. Hence their interest in psychedelic drugs.
95
We see the young too often misled into embracing
erroneous, distorted, or illusory ideals. It is pathetic, but they are usually
too insistent on buying their own experience so they must pay the price.
96
People talk of the innocence of a child, but some
children are so vicious that they will pull the wings off a captured fly.
97
The young are easily caught by superficial slogans
and illogical arguments because they lack the patience, the balance, and the
mental equipment to look beneath slogans and arguments.
98
The young are tired of bloodless sermons and dead
observances - they demand living truths.
99
To deny the worth of traditions altogether, as
young rebels and protesters, wrongly in some cases and rightly in others, so
often do, is to deny the value of the very things whose use makes the denial
possible: the experiences, skills, crafts, creations, knowledge, labours, and
environments now inherited.
100
There is too much destructive criticism among
younger people, too little positive thinking, too much scavenging and debunking.
101
A stirred and awakened section of the people,
mostly young, protest against the pollutions of air, earth, water, and food we
suffer from. What of the degradations of character too?
102
The demolition of society is sought by
communists; of the materialism which supports both capitalist and communist
societies, by idealists. For materialism, especially when allied to technology,
mutilates the human beings caught in it.
103
We make so many mistakes, especially when young,
through sheer inexperience that it is not fair to ourselves to accept the blame
for them.
104
Our generation has seen many women and young men
come nearer their own. It was right and reasonable that masculine tyranny should
go and that senile governance should be overthrown. This long overdue and much
welcome advance is admirable, but it does not justify going to the farther
extreme of romantic idealization of anyone and everyone merely because he is
young and she is a woman. The danger of this species of thinking and this course
of action, which have always led in the end to disaster, is that they still
infatuate young, shallow minds. From the silly notion that the old would make no
mistakes, we are in danger of swinging pendulum-like to the equally silly notion
that the young can make no mistakes. Nearly all the leaders of Nazi Germany were
young men. Yet the mess into which they got their own country and indeed all
Europe was unparalleled in history.
105
The younger generation, which mistook its
cynical sophistication for wisdom and its exuberant worldliness for realism, got
unwelcome shocks and unpleasant surprises when it had to face the war.
106
The wild feelings which make these young people
sneer at the pursuit of virtue and applaud the practice of violence spring from
their lower nature.
107
Humanity is not so enlightened in our times that
it can afford to dispense with the best thoughts of former times.
108
In an atmosphere of world unrest, religious
dryness, political selfishness, and sexual saturation, it is not surprising that
so many of the young go intellectually astray and get morally lost.
109
The miserable mental confusion of so many young
rebels is pathetic, but it is also perilous to society. Apart from a minority of
intelligent idealists, who sooner or later separate themselves individually from
their mixed-up contemporaries, the others are neurotic and irresponsible
drifters, dirty in clothes and bodies, compulsive and impulsive, victims of
false teachings or hallucinatory ideas. If this was truer of the 1960s in
America it is still true in other countries.
110
It is out of their despairs and disillusions
that some of the young have turned to violence.
111
If this hostility of the young is allowed to
proceed to its extreme point, not freedom but chaos and anarchy must be the
consequence.
112
It is absurd for the young rebels to try to
sever themselves completely from the past. It simply cannot be done. The
attitude which they should adopt is to take what is worthwhile from the past and
discard the rest. But the influence of the past is present, whether they want it
or not. Change is governing every phase of life, every period of a single
lifetime, and every phase of this planet's history. Unless this is recognized
and reckoned with in our practical dealings, we are bound to suffer because of
our attachments to objects, things, persons, and ideas.
113
The young person today standing on the threshold
of adulthood should use this propitious time to analyse past experience for its
practical and spiritual lessons; also to formulate ideals and aspirations, as
well as plans for future life. Such mental pictures, when strongly held before
the mind's eye and taken as subjects for concentration, have creative value and
tend to influence physical conditions. They should be accompanied by silent,
heartfelt prayer for strength, balance, wisdom, and guidance.
114
Old age is a time to gather up one's good
points, one's few strengths, as squirrels gather their food for the coming
winter.
115
The young do not know the melancholy ponderings
on the brevity of human experience which come to the generation whose time is
nearly run out, or the subsequent futility of all those ambitions which drive
men through the vital years, or the final emptiness of all those fleshly
experiences which titillate the senses. Buddha has persistently emphasized these
frustrations in his teachings, yet it is the need and work of a philosopher to
come to terms with age, to accommodate more equably the other things in his
life.
116
Age slows down the energies and withers the
ambitions; too often it halts the aspirations.
117
Cynicism comes easily to the old, idealism to
the young, but one day - in a later incarnation perhaps - both may learn that
they cannot have life on their own terms: destiny predominates, for there is a
World-Idea and a karmic adjustment.
118
In the evening of one's life, there should be
the proper attribute - dignity.
119
Aged people discover not only that the world
does not want them, but also that they do not want the world. The withdrawal
from one another tends to be mutual. I speak, of course, only of those who keep
to Nature's rhythms, not of those modern creatures who ignore its message that
age is a time for reflection, not bustling action; for severance of attachments,
not for clinging harder to them. This artificial juvenility which they affect
would have been pitied by Manu, the ancient Hindu lawgiver, who allotted four
age-periods to each human life, the last for concentration on spiritual
concerns.
120
It is questionable whether the young are able to
judge values correctly. But then it is equally questionable whether the old, in
their smug complacency, are willing to judge them correctly.
121
There is a healthy, wise, and necessary
conservatism and a stuffy, stupid, and obsolete conservatism. The distinction
between them must be kept clear.
122
If the years bring him a larger outlook, as I
feel they have brought me (and I am nearer seventy than sixty), old truths come
alive with new meaning.
123
The dogmas learned in youth may enter into the
revelation learned in maturity.
124
Those whose good fortune has given them enough
to satisfy many desires ought not wait for old age to see how these
satisfactions were passing and uncertain. They ought to do the heroic thing and
detach themselves from the desire while there is still vigour in their feeling
and their will.
125
The old find themselves beyond the reach of
passions and the touch of mad impulses. For many there is peace and for some
almost a candidature for saintliness.
126
Old infirm people who become weary of the body
and hence weary of themselves have no way out except the larger identification
with something larger than the body self.
127
An intuitive wisdom may come with the years,
which will serve better than calculated information.
128
Who, in a lifetime's history, fell into no
indefensible activities, avoided all bad judgements, and made no serious
mistakes?
129
Red passion cools with greyed age.
130
The withdrawals from activity and worldliness
which he refuses to make willingly at the behest of reason, may have to be made
unwillingly with the coming of age.
131
The elderly who have come at last to accept the
unlikeable fact of their age, but who do so with rebellious groans and emotional
melancholy, learn by bitter experience in every department of their existence
that it is a fact which cannot be ignored.
132
Among the benefits of old age is the fact that
one can look back and try to comprehend what one had to do to uplift oneself in
this lifetime. While one was involved in the experiences, their real lessons
were too often obscured by unbalanced emotion or blocked by fast-held ego.
133
The instinctive urge to go back home after a
period of absence comes to young children and to old men. Not only is some
comfort expected there, but also a kind of safety, a form of security. It might
even be called a private refuge from the all-too-public world.
134
Why go back to the hopes of youth - however
exciting - if their cost is the deceitful illusions of youth?
135
Plato suggests the age of fifty to be a suitable
turning point for a man to pass over from mere experience of life to constant
meditation upon the higher purpose of life. Cephalus, the patriarch in Plato's
Republic, was glad to be free from the lusts of youth, which he denounced
as tyrannical, and to be in the state of relative peace which, he asserted,
comes with old age.
Youth cries out for romance and love. The silencing of that cry naturally and properly belongs to age. Yet it seems a pity that this early enthusiasm and tumultuous energy, which could in most cases partially and in some cases even wholly be devoted to the quest, should not be so used.
Youth is progressive, age is conservative. Both tendencies are needed, but they are not needed in equal proportions. Sometimes the one should be emphasized more weightily, sometimes the other.
Those who have reached the middle years are likely to know more about life than those who have not. They are certainly more capable of sustaining attention and concentration than callow youths. Hence they are better able to receive the truth and to accept the value of philosophy than the young. Old age ought to become the tranquil period which ruminates over the folly and wisdom of its memories; it is to reflect upon, and study well, the lessons garnered from experience.
Why is it that elderly persons tend to become more religious as well as more sickly than younger ones? All the usual answers may be quite correct on their own levels, but there is one on another and deeper level which is the ultimate answer. The life-energy of the Overself flowing into and pervading the physical body begins, in middle age, a reaction toward its source. The individual's resistance to the attack of disease is consequently less than it was before. His interest in and attraction to the objects of physical desires begin to grow less, too, while the force that went into them now begins to go toward the Overself. When this reversal expresses itself in its simplest form, the individual becomes religious. When the energy ceases to pervade the body, death follows.
136
There is a pattern of growth in all the
different parts of a human being. If man reaches his physical maturity in the
twenties, he reaches his intellectual maturity in the thirties, emotional
maturity in the forties, and intuitional in the fifties. This is one of the
reasons why those who are really interested in religion and mysticism come so
largely from the middle-aged and elderly group.
137
It was formerly believed that one advantage - or
disadvantage, depending on the point of view - of old age was the reduction or
even disappearance of youthful passions, especially sexual passions. But this is
true in some cases, not in others.
138
Men are apt to complain of old age: Buddha even
listed it as one of the sights which set him on his course to search for a way
out of life's suffering. But there is one advantage of being an old man: one
will not easily accept illusions for the sake of their false comfort.
139
The disadvantages of being a celebrity, the
fatuity of worldly honours, are more likely to be recognized by the old than by
the young.
140
In old age he accepts the need to release
himself from ties which formerly held so much interest for him, but now assume
the shape of burdens - or else of obligations for which the strength is lacking.
141
Those who have reached the seventh decade of
life and fulfilled the biblical span of years have usually suffered enough
troubles and calamities to become somewhat dulled by the suffering when a new
trouble appears. It does not have the same force, the same weight as the others.
The reaction is slower and less; their feelings may perhaps be translated as:
this is part of human existence, this too may pass.
142
Just as sex makes him delight in the flesh, so
sickness makes him repelled by it. Out of the balance which is struck between
them, he may glean a truer understanding of life. Hence it is the wisdom of the
Universal Mind which places sex commonest in the early part of his earthly
existence and sickness commonest in the later part. If men and women take to
religion or reflection in their middle years, it is because they have by then
accumulated enough data to arrive at better attitudes or juster conclusions.
143
In a young man ambition is a virtue, but in an
old man it is a vice.
144
It is to the chronically infirm and the rapidly
aging that moments or moods of the futility in life come all too often. It is
not only the consequence of disgust with their general condition. It is also the
beginning of a forced almost Buddhistic reflectiveness. For questions come with
the condition. What is the use of going on with such an unsatisfactory
condition? It serves no purpose useful to them or to others. This
dissatisfaction becomes the source of their much-belated look into the meaning
of life itself. Hitherto their interest was not so wide nor so deep: self, body,
family, possessions - such was their limit.
145
Look at the last cycle, the last years, of a
fully ripened man. Clemenceau took to Vedanta as did Jung, Thomas Merton to
Buddhism.
146
He reaches with old age less cynicism than the
refusal to accept illusions.
147
Bernard Shaw somewhere insists that all men who
are over forty - presumably with the exception of himself - are scoundrels.
Perhaps. But they are also potential philosophers. For I do not believe that it
is possible to arrive at the breadth and depth, the balance and perception,
which must mark the approach to philosophy, before that age.
148
Year after year it all recedes, the expectations
and the dreams, until desires diminish and ambitions fade.
149
The closing years of life should bring a man to
recognize its moral affirmation, if he failed to do so earlier.
150
When our eyes are focused too closely on our
experiences, we are apt to distort or exaggerate them. But when we can see them
from the distance afforded by later years, we can take advantage of better
perspective and thus gain a truer sight. This is one value of ageing years.
151
With the years moved over a man's head into old
age, regrets, confessions, and disheartening recognitions are less reluctantly
forced from him.
152
In passing through the last season of the body's
life, the chill winter of old age, he passes through a series of deprivations
and losses. If in the past he thought too optimistically of life and enjoyed the
body's pleasures, now he is forced to revise his views and redress the balance.
153
Looking back on the past years, be they thirty
or sixty, all seems now a dreamlike experience.
154
Another disadvantage shared by some old people
is loss of continuity of consciousness. This shows in failure to concentrate
attention or remember names, and inability to hold the full length of a sentence
in mind.
155
If the body did not wither or fail us in our
needs, this could be such a beautiful time, with all the fullness of art,
culture, intellect, even spirituality within our understanding. But the snows of
old age are falling; and soon . . .
156
The tendencies of the period take a man along
with them, the atmosphere absorbs him, and it may not be until middle life when
time, experience, maturity, suffering, disillusionment, and revelation have done
their work that he comes to realize what has happened to him and asserts his
spiritual independence.
157
The prospect of becoming too old to stir out of
the house, or too ill to stir out of bed, too helpless to depend on their own
efforts, frightens prouder souls.
158
So many persons of my generation have passed on
that it is hard to remember which ones are still living and which are not. It is
all a grim reminder of my own precarious position. The menace is countered by
two qualities the years have taught me to seek: resignation and calm.
159
I am too conscious of belonging to a generation
widely different from theirs, alien in too many ways from theirs, so that as old
friends die off or move into distant silence I do not venture to replace them.
Solitude surrounds me more and more, but I accept it contentedly.
160
Cicero tried to console the aged by writing a
very lengthy essay counselling them to ignore their difficulties and pointing to
the compensations they possess. But I suspect that most of the readers it is
intended for will be more irritated than helped, more annoyed than comforted, by
its somewhat unconvincing pages.
161
Old age brings its infirmities and
enfeeblements, its humiliations and lonelinesses, its feelings of being useless
and being unwanted.
162
Those who feel the hopelessness of old age
probably outnumber those who reconcile themselves to it resignedly.
163
Adolescents have more of the joy of living and
particularly express it through song and dance. Old age has more of the burden
and misery of living.
164
There is a lack of joie-de-vivre in old
persons and an abundance of it in young ones. The feeling of getting near life's
greatest ordeal is not pleasant and is even depressing.
165
Certain undesired features attend human life on
this earth in every land and among every people. Birth and growth are followed
by the ageing and slowing-up processes which culminate in death. Parting from
those we love and association with those who are disagreeable are forced on all
of us at some time.
166
Life, which too often seemed like a comedy in
the past, may seem more like a tragic futility in the dismal last period of old
age.
167
Sophocles, in his calm, wise, but afflicted old
age, wrote, ". . . at the end Age, housed with sorrow, claims us," and also,
sadly expectant, "At last, to make an end . . . the dance done, every guest has
gone, save Death, the one last friend."
168
The old, the elderly, and even the middle-aged
become subject to anxieties pertaining to health or fortune, relationships or
events, which the young seldom have. If it be true, as Cicero asserted, that age
gives them the peace of freedom from passions - which if true is only partially
so - then the price has to be paid in the currency of these anxieties.
169
Age brings loneliness and lowered vitality.
Friends move away, fall away, or die off, and their reassuring nearness is no
more. Stairs become harder to climb, streets harder to walk. Life seems futile:
a heavy fatalism settles over the will.
170
A death of someone loved or respected may come
as a shock, but time dwindles its force, resignation lessens its sadness.
171
It is the testimony of all experience that good
fortune and misfortune are intertwined. Those who do not see this when young
will discover it later, for good and ill appear at separate times often, but
together when old. Life is thus a paradox, but also a series of compensations.
172
This increasing loss of memory which afflicts so
many elderly people need not be a cause of emotional depression, as it so often
is: we have more likelihood of some measure of mental peace when the burden of
unneeded or excessive memories falls away. It is something for which to be
grateful.
173
If age makes more people more rigid and less
doubtful about their opinions and beliefs, it makes a few humbler, questioning.
174
The pathetic bleakness of old age is balanced by
the wisdom of experience. The pleasures of the senses may be less, or even no
longer, available. But the fruition of knowledge is.
175
If the elderly man is to be saddened because the
energy and enthusiasm for his best actions lie behind him in the past, he is
also to be gladdened because the impulsions toward his worst actions lie there
too.
176
Every period of life, from childhood up to old
age, has its limitations, its lacks and deficiencies, but it also has its
compensations. If the old have unhappy periods because of their infirmities, the
young have unhappy moods because of their uncertainties.
177
For those without a higher viewpoint, the
prospect of old age is a difficult one. The clever attractive modern cosmetics
may take the years off a woman's appearance but they remain - oppressive and
disturbing - within her consciousness. Early enthusiasm for living must, in the
end, give way to a saddened recognition of our mortality. Reflection warns both
woman and man of the frustrations awaiting human desire, but it also tells them
of the compensations. These, however, must be earned. Foremost comes peace of
mind.(P)
178
It is not pleasant to reach old age. One tires
easily - not only physically but also mentally - and one begins to weary of the
routines of merely living, performing similar acts day after day. I speak of
course of the average person, mass humanity - but one who has kept his mind
alive, alert, eager to know, learn, and understand, who has developed his inmost
resources cultural and spiritual, can never get bored.(P)
179
It is true that a wider and longer experience
than the average may toughen a man's will and harden his standards, but it also
softens his sensitivity and opens up higher values - provided he lets Nature
do its work on him.
180
Those who pass through life untouched during all
those years by any sense of the mystery at its heart are to be pitied.
181
Any man who has reached the middle or late
period of his life has reached an age when the most important activity he can
undertake is to try to fulfil as much as possible of the higher purpose of his
life on earth. The basis for this activity must necessarily be self-improvement,
the building of character and the overcoming of the ego.
182
In the end, when all this agitation seems to
have been for little more than keeping the body alive, the failure to fulfil any
higher purpose will bring sadness.
183
The vivacity of youth may turn in time to the
serenity of age, but only for those who have let life teach them and intuition
guide them, who have observed their fellows and studied truth's texts and
humbled themselves before the Overself. The others gain little more than the
years, the infirmities, and the sadnesses.
184
Instead of wasting time excessively on sad
recollection of vanished years, elderly people can use it for comforting
meditation on life's highest meanings, and especially on one of the highest of
them all: MIND is all there is.
185
With the years - the world being what it is and
human beings what they are - experience often turns this idealism of the young
into the disillusionment of the middle-aged or the cynicism of the old. Only a
coming into awareness of the higher spiritual nature can balance and correct
this condition with the higher truth of the World-Idea, thus renewing hope and
giving peace.
186
There is no finer or more fitting way to spend
time during the evening years of life than in turning the mind toward reflection
and then stilling it in the Silence.
187
If those whom good fortune has given leisure
fritter it away in personal or social trivialities, then the passing years will
bring them no nearer the kingdom of heaven but only nearer to regrets at its
inaccessibility.
188
Alas! for the uncaught intuitions and the
undeveloped perceptions - our past is littered with them. How hard to see, how
easy to remain blind!
189
He who is at the beginning of old age should
have seen enough of life to know what is most worthwhile. He should hold on to
the Intangibles; better still, remember what he really is - such stuff as gods
are made of, immortal, timeless, watching the dreamlike show of this world. Let
him stay where he belongs - high above the puddles that surround him, the midges
that bite him - and be serene.
190
Deterioration of the body moves in as middle age
moves out. This may encourage the kind of pessimistic view which Buddha held in
India, the author of Ecclesiastes in Israel, and Schopenhauer in Germany, and
turn the mind toward spiritual consolation and spiritual seeking. If it does
not, it may even have the very opposite effect.
191
"If you have peace of mind, contentment, old age
is no unbearable burden. Without that, both youth and age are painful," said
Greek Sophocles to a much younger questioner.
192
The fresh vital enthusiasm of youth passes
implacably with the years. We are left like drooping petals. This is the sum of
our history, as Buddha noted, but the unloveliness can be borne if we find the
heavenliness of inner peace.
193
When we contemplate our remote actions we may
regret them, or when we remember old views we may disown them. For it is in the
nature of man to change as he gets older.
194
He learns the lesson of the relativity of all
things, especially human things. Time is the great scene-shifter. From careless
vivacious youth to fussy stiff old age, the perceptions change, the objects
thought about change, as the ageing process creeps in, settles in, bringing new
problems.
195
To the young we old people are complete
foreigners. Neither our ways nor our thoughts are theirs. More, they are not
interested in us at all, hence make no effort to understand. This is not a
criticism for, in return, the old behave towards the young in exactly the same
way.
196
Too well we of the older generation understand
youth with its follies and frailties; too seldom does youth understand us.
197
The need today is for young men with an old
outlook and for old men with a young outlook.
198
The moral errors of the naïve and inexperienced
young are understandable, although perhaps not excusable; but those of the
middle and older years are unpardonable.
199
The effect of age on the mind is as various as
human beings, but there is a general effect which is common to most persons.
200
Our elders are worthy of respect, but their
counsel is worthy of heeding only if they are old in soul as well as body, only
if they have extracted through many lifetimes all the wisdom possible from each
one. Experience without reflection misses most of its value, reflection without
depth misses much of its value, depth without impartiality may miss the chief
point. For all our experience, our life in the body and world, is a device to
bring out our soul.(P)
201
The mere number of years of existence is not
enough basis on which to judge a man's wisdom. The body's age is quite separate
from the soul's.
202
If it be true of some persons that wisdom comes
with age, it is also true of others that wisdom departs with age. The years may
settle a man's mind with great rigidity in early errors, so that he becomes
unteachable.
203
It is said that time brings a man more wisdom.
This is often true but it is also sometimes false. If he is unwilling to learn
from his own experience, if he is unteachable by observation of others, if he
does not see the pitfalls in good fortune and the values in bad fortune, then
time will bring him not more wisdom but more foolishness.
204
Too many men have grown old without growing up.
205
It is said that old persons like to indulge in
personal reminiscence. This would be useful if they did so to learn the lessons
enclosed in it, but this is mostly not the case. Their memories of the past are
only a clinging to, or bolstering of, their own egos.
206
If experience makes you bitter or cynical, smug
or selfish, then it has served you ill. The passing of years can teach wisdom
but only if you receive their message aright.
207
As past success recedes into memory with the
years, as he finds himself moving toward the last farewell, what can support
him? All three - past, present, and future - become a passing spectacle. He can
rest in none of them. The thought that all are thoughts in the end is saddening
and not sustaining.
208
Every man over a certain age is under sentence
of death. Some men below that age are equally threatened. Should not both groups
be sobered enough by such a remembrance to ask, "Why am I here?"(P)
209
The dying autumn leaves induce sad thoughts such
as: we are only passengers travelling through this world.
210
When we older men add up the years gone beyond
our reach, and estimate the number of those that may still be left for us, the
shock may induce us to put our lives on a newer basis. What better way than to
cast out all acidulous dismal negatives, to ally ourselves only with sunny
cheering positives?
211
The older one gets, the quicker time seems to
pass by. And for a really elderly person, the few short years which seem ahead
become calls to urgency, responsibility, and spirituality.
212
At the end of many years, after passing through
many varied experiences, as we draw close to the terminus of life, we realize
that we have not altered our character in fundamentals. We know then that many
lifetimes may be needed to change ourselves.
213
Only the young are capable of a strong passion
for truth but only the old are capable of living by it. This is the irony and
the tragedy of the Quest.
214
The time at the disposal of an old man is too
short to make himself over again, however repentant he may be, but it is not too
short for him to do the one thing just as needful, if not more so. He can hand
this problem, just like any other hard problem, over to the higher power, and
let the past go. It will then no longer be his anxious concern.
215
It might be well for us to realize that our
present earthly arrangements and possessions are all provisional; they do not
possess immortal life. We slip easily into the misapprehension that the things
which surrounded us when we were babies must consequently continue to surround
us when we are old men and women.
216
Time takes it all away - the strength from man,
the beauty from woman, life from both.
217
If time has confirmed his early faith, it has
rectified his early errors and shown his deficiencies. If it has proved the
correctness of some important intuitions dating back to inexperienced years, it
has forced him to undergo certain profound changes of view which were received
from outside and accepted then.
218
Alas! that a man begins to get a sense of
right values too late to make use of them, that he learns how to live only when
he is preparing to make an end of living itself.
219
Even the harshness of personal bitterness tends
to diminish with ripe old age as the man sees and feels how his own life is so
diminished.
220
These facts - the shortness, the transiency, and
the instability of human existence - become more and more apparent as youth and
the middle years depart, leaving men unconsoled, sadder, and, if they are
willing, wiser.
221
The limitations and finitude of human capacity
sadden him, the brevity and transiency of human satisfactions sober him.
222
The seemingly deplorable tragedy of life is that
by the time we really begin to understand what it is all about, materially as
well as spiritually, it is time to make our exit.