He feels the Presence of something higher than himself, wise, noble,
beautiful, and worthy of all reverence. Yet it is really himself - the best part
come at last into unfoldment and expression.
INTUITION THE BEGINNING
1
The spiritual nature can only be discovered
spiritually - not intellectually, not emotionally, and certainly not physically.
Such a spiritual discovery can only be attained intuitively.
2
The mystery into which we have been born is not
penetrable by weaving fancy or logical intellect. But intuition, if we are
patient enough and willing enough to follow it, can lead us into an overwhelming
experience where we discover that IT is there, always there.
3
It is not through any intellectual process of
reasoning from premise to conclusion that we come to know we exist, but through
an immediate and spontaneous intuition.
4
Intuition moves thought and penetrates feeling, so
that it is often mistaken for them. Yet its true nature is something other than
both theirs.
5
Intuition is the mind's inner light.
6
Where ego merely believes, intuition definitely
knows.
7
There is an intermediate entity, compounded of the
ego's best part and the point of contact with the Overself. Call it the higher
mind, the conscience, or the intellectual intuition, if you wish.
8
The discovery of its presence makes possible a form
of communication between person and Overself which is passive, not active. That
is, he is directed guided or corrected in and through his human faculties,
intuitively. The person acts, does, thinks, speaks, and decides as if he were
doing so completely alone. But he is not: he is responding to the Overself, to
the effects of its presence, now unhindered by his ego.
9
Whether we call an intuition a "thought-feeling" or
an "emotive thought," it is still something that is deeper than thinking,
different from ordinary feelings.
10
There is a sacred oracle within, to which the
problems of life and living can be carried in our calmer moments. Its laconic
answers may or may not need interpretation.
11
In this matter we mistake the common type for the
normal type. The mystically minded person is not usually met with, but he is
nearer true normality than the materially minded one. For one part of his
human psyche - the intuitive - is at least functioning, whereas it is "dead" in
the other man.
12
There is a faculty in man which knows truth when
it sees it, which needs no argument, reflection, or cogitation to attest or
prove what it knows.
13
There is another way of knowing beside the
ordinary way, through the channels of eyes or thoughts, a way which can be found
only by quietening the mind and stilling the emotions.
14
Here is this wonderful potency in man lying
largely unused, this faculty of intuition that links him with a higher order of
being.
15
However arguable his theories may be, the
scientific facts which Freud produced are less debatable. And he must be praised
for having included among them the important fact that highly complicated mental
acts are sometimes performed unconsciously. An immense accumulation of facts and
experiences is contained within the deeper level of the mind as in a storehouse
upon which we may unknowingly draw. The possibility - nay, the certainty - of
intuition becomes perfectly explicable when the existence of this deeper level
is accepted. The successful transference of any of these facts or any lessons of
these experiences from the hidden to the conscious region constitutes one
particular form of what we call an intuition.
16
The need for advancing individuals is to go beyond
the intellect, to draw from the intuition or to find inspiration.
17
How many minds have pondered over life and
searched for its meaning, only to feel baffled in the end, and held back by
their own limitations? For although the active intellect naturally asks such
questions, only the intuition can answer them adequately. But the latter is the
least cultivated of all our faculties and the most torpid, and this is why we
have no access to the answers, and why the questions remain troublesome or even
torturing.
18
The same mind which men use to understand that two
added to three totals five cannot be used to understand that he who loses
himself finds himself.
19
The messages which come to the human race from the
kingdom of heaven, mercifully come through different channels of its psyche. The
Word may be received in abstract mental activity as well as utter mental
stillness, in passive aesthetic appreciation as well as active creation.
20
The intuition is a mystical faculty, whose
messages may dawn slowly on the conscious mind or emerge into it suddenly.
21
These intuitive feelings tell us that a deeper
kind of Being is at the base of our ordinary consciousness.
22
It is almost impossible to put into thoughts that
which is above thoughts. But hints, suggestions, and symbols may render some
service. Only intuition, which comes up by itself, can come closer still to the
truth and deliver what is more like it.
23
If intellect fails to touch Reality, what can? The
answer is intuition and inspiration.
24
That intuition is often mistaken for insight
reveals one of the defects of mysticism. There are some who even question the
validity of all insight, and, indeed, this is a sensible question to raise. The
whole problem needs threshing out in a paper on the subject. Meanwhile, I must
remind those who were troubled by what was written in the appendix to The
Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga that insight is not concerned with mundane
matters, but only with what is beyond our time-space dimensions. Quite
obviously, no one has the right to apply such a term to views concerning such
matters as intellectual theology or physical diet. Intuition can, however, deal
with these quite effectively - when it is, itself, checked by reason.
25
If we lack the capacity to comprehend, gauge, or
perceive the Infinite, we do have the capacity to feel its presence intuitively.
26
Spirit - impenetrably mysterious, without form or
figure, yet as real to the mystic as matter is to the materialist - finds its
voice in man and Nature, in art and circumstance.
27
Faint glimmerings fall upon our sight from above
through furtive gleams of intuition.
28
These delicate intuitive impulses can produce no
impression on ordinary minds.
29
We can convince the intellect that the soul exists
- but the only really adequate proof is intuitive personal experience of it.
30
The discovery of the soul's existence is not a
result of intellectual analysis or of emotional feeling but of intuitive
experience.
31
The intuition should be accorded the highest place
among man's faculties. It should always lead or direct them.
32
Knowledge of the facts concerning man and his
nature, his general destiny and spiritual evolution, can be gained by the
intuition; but information concerning the details of his personal history must
be gleaned, if at all, by the psychical faculty.(P)
33
The intuition appears indirectly in aesthetic
ecstasy and intellectual creativity, in the pricking of conscience, in the
longing for relief from anxieties, or peace of mind. It appears directly only in
mystical realization.(P)
34
The intuition comes from, and leads to, the
Overself.(P)
35
It is the strength or feebleness of our intuition
which determines the grade of our spiritual evolution. What begins as a gentle
surrender to intuition for a few minutes, one day resolves into a complete
surrender of the ego to the Overself for all time.(P)
36
The intuitive method should not be asked to solve
problems which can easily be solved by the reason; otherwise it may fail to
respond. On the other hand, when intuition is working, intellect should retire.
37
To find your way to the major truths it is not
enough to use the intellect alone, however sharpened it may be. Join intuition
to it: then you will have intelligence. But how does one unfold intuition? By
penetrating deeper and hushing the noise of thoughts.
38
Intuition tells us what to do. Reason tells
us how to do it. Intuition points direction and gives destination. Reason
shows a map of the way there.(P)
39
To the inexperienced or ignorant the conclusions
of reason and the discoveries of intuition may clash, but to the matured they
accommodate and adjust themselves harmoniously.
40
We may oppose one thing to another if both are on
the same plane, but not if they are on unequal planes. Intuition is not
anti-intellectual but super-intellectual.
41
When intuition guides and illuminates intellect,
balances and restrains the ego, that which the wise men called "true
intelligence" rises.
42
The intuition never needs to hunger for truth.
While the intellect is seeking and starving for it, the intuition already knows
and feels it.
43
Intuition is truth drawn from one's own self, that
is, from within, be it a practical or a spiritual truth, whereas intellect
squeezes its conclusion out of presented evidence, that is, from without.
44
Calculation may be pushed by the ego to the point
of cunning. The first is quite proper to the business world and the mathematical
sphere, but in the area of spiritual seeking it has only a limited
applicability. The second is quite useless here. What is here of greater worth
than both is intuition. But because this latter faculty is little developed in
most people, they have to be content for the time with simple trust. But this is
not a faculty; it is a trait of character. It may mislead a person if he puts it
into the wrong channel, or it may serve him well if he places it properly.
45
While the intellect argues waveringly at length,
the intuition affirms confidently in an instant. While the one gropes among the
appearances and shadows of truth, the other walks straight toward truth.
46
Ordinarily, ample time is needed to accumulate
data and deliberate properly before correct decisions or judgements can be made.
None of this is necessary to make them intuitively, for the intuition itself
operates out of time and beyond thought.
47
An intuitive idea is quite different from one
derived from the customary process of logical thinking. Unless it is distorted
or muddled by the man himself, it is always reliable. Can we say the same of an
intellectual idea?
48
The best wisdom of a man does not come out of
acuteness of thinking; it comes out of depth of intuition.
49
The danger of intellectualizing these intuitions
is that they flee while we prepare to examine them. This is why our theological
seminaries produce so many competent religious orators, but so few inspired
religious prophets. This is why the art schools produce so many people who can
draw good lines and space drawings so well, but so few who can draw something
that is individual and outstanding. The intellect is necessary to the complete
person, but it should be kept in its place and made to realize that when it
approaches such an intuition, it treads on holy ground.
50
Reasoned thinking can only check the guidance or
revealing of intuition, whereas the latter can actually guide and illumine the
path of the former.
51
Where the shrewdest judgement finds itself
bewildered, the mysterious faculty of intuition moves unhesitatingly and surely.
52
It was a period of absolute clarity, when the
thought of a problem was welded into one with its solution, when there was no
gap of time between question and answer.
53
If anyone has a clear intuition about a matter, it
would be foolish of him to trust intellect alone in the same matter.
54
The intellect is one medium of understanding, the
intuition is another.
55
The intuition should give orders which the
intellect should carry out. The reasoning and practicality needed to do so and
to attend to their details will then be provided by the intellect itself. But
the original function of giving direction and the authority of giving command
will be vested in the intuition alone.
56
Intuition reaches a conclusion directly, without
the working of any process of reasoned thinking.
57
What the thinking intellect in him cannot receive,
the mystical intuition can.
58
The secret has yielded itself again and again, but
not to man's logical thinking; it has yielded itself only to man's subtle
intuition.
59
"After long thought and observation I became aware
of a second brain or gland, locked in the region of the heart, which commanded
with authority. I discovered that most of the difficulties of life were the
result of the head-brain attempting to do the work of the heart-brain. It was
like a skilled laborer trying to assume the place of a high-powered engineer."
(source unknown)
60
His first step is to detect the presence of the
higher Power consciously in himself through vigilantly noting and cultivating
the intuitions it gives him.
61
He must educate himself to recognize the first
faint beginnings of "the intuitive mood" and train himself to drop everything
else when its onset is noticed.
62
Intuitive feelings are so easily and hence so
often drowned in the outer activity of the body, the passions, the emotions, or
the intellect, that only a deliberate cultivation can safeguard and strengthen
them.
63
We may ardently want to do what is wholly right
and yet not know just what this is. This is particularly possible and likely
when confronted with two roads and when upon the choice between them the gravest
consequences will follow. It is then that the mind easily becomes hesitant and
indecisive. The search for the wisest choice may not end that day or that month.
Indeed, it may not end until the last hour of the last day. This is how the
aspirants are tested to see if they can humble the ego with the realization that
they are no longer capable of making their own decision but must turn it over to
the higher self and wait in quiet patience for the result. But when finally the
intuitive guidance does emerge after such deep, sincere, and obedient quest of
God's will, it will do so in a formulation so clear and self-evident as to be
beyond all doubt.
64
He has to bring his problems and lay them at the
feet of the higher self and wait in patience until an intuitive response does
come. But this is not to say that he has to lay them before his timid fears or
eager wishes. The first step is to take them out of the hold of the anxious
fretting intellect or the blind egoistic emotional self.
65
One of the first steps is to watch out for those
infrequent moments when deeply intuitive guidance, thoughts, or reflections make
their unexpected appearance. As soon as they are detected, all other mental
activities should be thrown aside, all physical ones should be temporarily
stilled, and he should sink himself in them with the utmost concentration. Even
if he falls into a kind of daze as a result, it will be a happy and fortunate
event, possibly a glimpse.
66
The secret is to stop, on the instant, whatever he
is doing just then, or even whatever he is saying, and reorient all his
attention to the incoming intuition. The incompleted act, the broken sentence,
should be deserted, for this is an exercise in evaluation.(P)
67
The whole of this quest is really a struggle
towards a conception of life reflecting the supreme values. Hence throughout its
course the aspirant will feel vague intuitions which he cannot formulate. Only a
master can do that.
68
It is better to wait, if intuition is not at once
apparent, till all favourable facts are found and till full knowledge is gained
of the unfavourable ones before deciding an issue.
69
The intuition grows by use of it and obedience to
it.
70
The intuitive faculty can be deliberately
cultivated and consciously trained.(P)
71
Intuitive guidance comes not necessarily when we
seek it, but when the occasion calls for it. It does not usually come until it
is actually needed. The intellect, as part of the ego, will often seek it in
advance of the occasion because it may be driven by anxiety, fear, desire, or
anticipation. Such premature seeking is fruitless.(P)
72
When one has reviewed a problem from all its
angles, and has done this not only with the keenest powers of the mind but also
with the finest qualities of the heart, it should be turned over at the end to
the Overself and dismissed. The technique of doing so is simple. It consists of
being still. In the moment of letting the problem fall away, one triumphs over
the ego. This is a form of meditation. In the earlier stage it is an
acknowledgment of helplessness and weakness in handling the problem, of personal
limitations, followed by a surrender of it (and of oneself) to the Overself in
the last resort. One can do no more. Further thought would be futile. At this
point Grace may enter and do what the ego cannot do. It may present guidance
either then, or at some later date, in the form of a self-evident idea.(P)
73
The commonest error is to try to produce and
manufacture intuition. That can't be done. It is something which comes to you.
Hence don't expect it to appear when concentrating on a problem, but if at all
after you've dismissed the problem. Even then it is a matter of grace -
it may or may not come.(P)
74
He must watch vigilantly for the impulses of
self-interest which interfere with the truth of intuitions or reflections.
75
We must be ready to fly in the face of worldly
wisdom if our inner mentor so bids it. We shall not rue the day we acted so.
76
The giving up of all earthly desires, the
liberation of the heart from all animal passions, the letting go of all egoistic
grasping - these attitudes will arise spontaneously and grow naturally if a man
is truly quest-minded, so that his intuition will assert itself little by
little.
77
Often intuition does not advise him until the time
for an action or a decision or a move is nearly at hand. So he must wait
patiently until it does and not let intellect or imagination construct fanciful
plans which may be cancelled by intuition's arisal.
78
Will he be willing to follow its lead if it bears
him in a contrary direction to the one he thought it ought or would do?
79
Without this constant listening for intuitive
guidance, and submission to it, we waste much time putting right the mistakes
made or curing the sickness which could have been prevented or bemoaning the
calamity which willpower could have averted. None of these are God's will, but
our own causation.
80
Being guided intuitively does not mean that every
problem will be solved instantly as soon as it appears. Some solutions will not
come into consciousness until almost the very last minute before they are
actually needed. He learns to be patient, to let the higher power take its own
course.
81
"We can thank intuition for many of the inventions
that surround us every day," said C.G. Suits, General Electric Company's chief
of research. "I know that intuition has invariably set me on the right track. My
hunches come to me most frequently in bed, in a plane, or while staring out of a
pullman window....When a problem really has me stumped I'm apt to write down all
the details as far as I can go, then put it aside to cool for forty-eight hours.
At the end of that time I often find it's solved itself.... In any case, the
most interesting sensations are the elation that accompanies the hunch and the
feeling of certainty it inspires that the solution which has been glimpsed is
right. Learn to relax. Intuition can't operate when your conscious mind is tied
up in knots. Among the best ways to relax are hobbies, provided they are not
taken too seriously."
82
These intrusions from a realm beyond conscious
thinking may be heavenly ones. If so, to resist them would be to lose much and
to accept them would be to gain much. But they have to be caught on the wing.
Their delicate beginnings must be recognized for what they are - precious
guides.
83
The more he follows this intuitive leading the
more he not only learns to trust it but also develops future response to it.
84
It is a loss, and a grave one, to let himself
remain torpid to intuitive feeling so much of the time, while alert and alive to
every lesser and lower feeling.
85
There are times, however, when, in a hard problem,
reason will come into conflict with intuition but when the latter is so
overwhelmingly strong that it seems he must perforce yield to it. In that case
he should do so. Time alone can show the truth of such a matter. Let him
therefore not fall into the peril of dogmatizing about it. Let him rather
withhold judgement and await its issue patiently.
86
Intuition does not always flash suddenly out of
the depths of the mind into consciousness: quite often it forms itself very
slowly over a period of hours, days, or even weeks.
87
Who hears this quiet whisper of intuition? Who,
hearing, obeys? Not only is it mostly unnoticed but its guidance is also
unsought; men prefer, and follow, the ego's direction.
88
It begins as an uncertain and intermittent
feeling: it ends as a definite and persistent intuition.
89
If men followed their intuition more there would
be fewer tragedies that could have been prevented or regrets that could have
been avoided.
90
The student should make his own research and
observation on the need of accepting first intuitive impressions as being the
best guidance.
91
The unregarded feeling which first comes when an
object, a person, or an event confronts one is mostly the correct intuition
about it. But it must be caught on the wing or it will be gone.
92
If we understood this capacity to receive first
impressions better, we should value them accordingly.
93
The subtlety and depth of his intuitions will
increase with quickness, readiness, and obedience of his response to them.
94
Intuition must be caught quickly and inspiration
must be followed up at once if they are to remain and not vanish away.
95
If we respectfully meet each intuitive feeling and
give it our trusting collaboration, it will little by little become a frequent
visitor.
96
First, we have to become willing to receive
these divine intuitions.
97
These intuitive feelings do not respond to direct
frontal demands for their appearance. They must be gently coaxed out of their
deeper levels where they reside, quietly lured out of their shy seclusion.
98
To open ourselves and receive an intuition we must
surrender the ego and submit the intellect to it.
99
If he is to interpret it aright and not miss its
importance, he should let himself go when he feels this inner prompting. Let it
absorb his being, draw him inwards to a deepening sense of its self.
100
The deeper mind is so close to the source of our
karma that we may at times get its right guidance not only intuitively from
within but also circumstantially from without.
101
The interval between the coming and the going of
an intuitive thought is so short that he must immediately and alertly respond to
it. If he misses it, he will find that the mind can go back to it only with
difficulty and uncertainty.
102
We can receive a new truth more easily in the
mind's quietude than in the mind's agitation. When thinking is stilled,
intuiting begins. Such internal silence is not useless idleness, it is creative
experience.
103
The Overself may use some event, some person, or
some book as a messenger to him. It may make any new circumstance act in the
same way. But he must have the capacity to recognize what is happening and the
willingness to receive the message.
104
To let the intuitive feelings come
through requires an inner passivity which meditation fosters but which
extroversion inhibits.
105
Submit yourself as an empty vessel to be filled
with the intuitive leading of Overself. Do not stop short of this goal, do not
be satisfied with a half-and-half sort of life.
106
The intuition first presents itself to us as a
fine delicate filament which we must treat tenderly if we do not wish to lose
it.
107
His need is to recognize these half-formed
intuitions for what they are, to rescue them from their vagueness, develop,
nurture, and formulate them.
108
When this first faint intrusion is sensed, the
need is for utter relaxation, for becoming passive and yielding. Only so can the
aspirant follow intuitive prompting more and more inwards until it becomes
stronger and stronger, clearer and clearer.
109
His early development of intuition is largely a
matter of confused and uncertain impressions.
110
When seeking intuitional light upon a subject,
the aspirant is advised to put his body in a recumbent position. This, passive
as it is, will correlate with the passivity of mind that he should cultivate at
such a time.
111
Because an intuitive feeling is usually soft and
delicate where egoistic ones are often strong and passionate, it is too many
times not recognized for what it is, until someone else formulates it and offers
it from outside, as a statement of truth or a suggestion for action.
112
An intuition which is vague and weak in the
beginning may become clear and certain in the end - if allowed to grow.
113
With this beginning of the momentary "catch" in
attention, he must follow by waiting with much patience, listening inwardly all
the while.
114
Have faith in your inner promptings and accept
their guidance. When you are uncertain about them, wait and they will gradually
clarify themselves.
115
He is to defend himself against false
intuitions, not only by silencing wishful thoughts, but also by purifying the
personal emotions.
116
They are messages brought from the infinite for
the blessing and guidance of finite man. But he must recognize their value and
esteem their source.
117
Often he will not respond and allow an intuition
to form itself within his mind, because he does not immediately realize what is
happening, does not feel a birth is beginning.
118
In the search for guidance when we have to make
a momentous decision, or take an important step, it is well to go into the
"Silence" with our problem. We may not get the answer quickly or even directly
but if we are well-experienced in this kind of seeking, a light may eventually
emerge from the dark and shine down on the problem.
119
He should not form a preconception of what the
answer ought to be, for thereby he imposes the ego's dubious solution in advance
upon the higher mind's. Instead he should be entirely unbiased and try to
receive the answer, as well as respond to it, in a perfectly free way.
120
What is sometimes so hard to do is to trust this
intuitive monitor when it contradicts the voices of those who are monitorless.
But in the end he will discover by results that this is practical wisdom.
121
Sometimes an intuition appears as a vague
feeling which haunts a man and which he cannot shake off.
122
If he firmly believes in his own hidden
intuitive powers, he will be able to ascribe much of his success to his
readiness to follow their guidance, despite the opposition of logic and
circumstances.
123
When we keep ourselves busy with everything
external and our minds with thoughts about everything external, the intuition is
unable to insert itself into our awareness. Even if it whispers to us, we will
not realize what is happening. If we continue to ignore it, we may lose the
capacity to hear it at all. It is then that we have to retrain ourselves to do
so. The practice of meditation is one such way of training our receptivity.
124
The source of intuitive knowledge lies outside
the conscious mind. The vehicle which conveys that knowledge need not
necessarily be within us. It may be without us, in the form of a book, a person,
or an event to which we are led, guided, or prompted.
125
We blunder in life and make endless mistakes
because we have no time to listen for the Overself's voice - Intuition.
126
A change of attitude towards his problems may
help to clear the way for intuition to operate on the conscious level. These
inner promptings - when authentic and not ego-biased, and when double-checked by
reason - can guide him to wiser decisions concerning both outward work and inner
life.
127
If we would heed our intuitions as much as we
heed our desires, the trick would be done. Illumination would come in not too
long a time.
128
Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the
telephone: "Of course, it will be a little thing, but do not ignore it. Follow
it up, explore all around it; one discovery will lead to another, and before you
know it you will have something worth thinking about to occupy your mind. All
really big discoveries are the results of thought."
129
In trying to get an intuitive answer, it is
important to formulate the problem or the questions clearly and as sharply as
you can.
130
Let him wait tranquilly for the intuitive
feeling to warm and enlighten him, as flowers wait tranquilly for the morning
sun to warm them.
131
We leave the word to go away to the thought
(which the mind does almost at once) but we ought to leave a wordless intuitive
feeling only to go deeper into it.
132
Again and again his thoughts should return to
whatever memorable experience brought him an intuitive feeling that he was on
the right track, or to whatever sudden lighted understanding of mentalism
flashed into his head after study or reflection.
133
If he feels the intuition but does not attend to
it then, however slightly, the very faculty which produced it begins to lose
strength. This is the penalty imposed for the failure, and this shows how
serious it is.
134
If he is always alert for this intuitive
feeling, he will throw aside whatever he is doing and meditate upon it at once.
He will depend more and more on these casual exercises, in contrast to the
dependence on fixed routine exercises in the Long Path.
135
Treasure every moment when the intuition makes
itself felt and, most especially, when it takes the form of a glimpse into
higher truth; it is then that other things should be well put aside in order to
sustain and prolong the experience.
136
If his own scepticism, sensualism, or
materialism does not offer too hard a resistance, the intuition which is working
its way to formulation, expression, and understanding may finally gain
acceptance. This opens a new cycle for him.
137
If only he heeds its intuitive message, the
higher self will not fail him. He will make his way to true balanced sanity and
deep inner calm. Without searching for others, knowing that in himself God's
representative resides and that this can give the right kind of help, he will
depend for self-reliance on an ever-presence.
138
If one cultivates sufficient faith, out of the
cosmic mind will come the response to his aspirations and, eventually, the
answers to his questions. To receive this, one must learn to keep a constant
vigil for intuitive feelings and messages of the most delicate nature, and to
trust his inner promptings. His attention should always have God at its centre.
139
By constant prayer and aspiration to his higher
self, the student will get intuitive promptings from time to time. He should
catch them when they appear and yield himself to them: in this way he will get
the necessary guidance from within.
140
Once you learn to recognize the intuitive voice,
follow its dictates; do not hesitate to conform with them nor try to make up an
excuse for failing to do so if the guidance is unpalatable.
141
If the seeker will heed this intuitive feeling
it may lead him to a clue, a thread by holding which he may grope his way to
clearer and stronger feeling until it becomes a certainty.
142
Whatever be the personal problem, if reason,
experience, and authority cannot solve it, carry it inwards to the deep still
centre. But you must learn to wait in patience for the answer, for the blockage
is in you, not in it. A day or a month may pass until the response is felt,
thought, or materialized.
143
There is a feeling of sacredness, of holy peace
at such moments, and they should be cherished for the precious moments that they
are. They contain hints of the communion with the Higher Self, elements of
something beyond the ordinary self, and possibilities of transcending the past
with its debris of memories and mistakes.
144
In every important move he will seek guidance
from the intuitive levels of being as well as from the intellectual.
145
These messages are all formulated by the faculty
of intuition. Hence their lofty tone. But the emotions, desires, and intellect -
being on a lower level - ignore the message in practice and action. Hence,
disobeyed, they bring suffering or disappointment.
146
Sometimes the intuitive bidding of Overself will
be in favour of his own private interests but sometimes it will be at variance
with them.
147
Where the wakeful consciousness is not easily
reached owing to its preoccupations, then the dream consciousness will be more
receptive to the message.
148
Sometimes an intuition does not stay behind. It
flashes through consciousness for a small fraction of a second and is gone.
Unless it is detected and recognized during this quick passage while it is still
fresh, we are hardly likely to do so afterwards.
149
Amid the toils and agitations of everyday
living, through all the boiler pressure of crisis events, such intuitions can
gain entry only with difficulty. Yet we need their help and solace more than we
know: we need their stimulus to enkindle fresh hope and more faith.
150
Either a man possesses this intuitive sense or
he does not. It cannot be created by argument or analysis.
151
They betray the higher part of themselves every
time they resist, reject, or merely ignore the intuitive feelings which come so
delicately into consciousness.
152
In the seeming self's activity, personal
willpower is used and personal effort is made. In the Overself's activity, both
these signs are absent. Instead there is a passive receptivity to its voice -
intuitions - and obedience to its guidance.
153
The intuitive feeling or the seminal idea may be
planted in a man's heart today but it may need twenty to thirty years before it
comes to sufficient growth in his conscious mind.
154
When the inner voice says what we do not like to
hear, we are apt to ignore it.
155
In its first manifestation, an intuitive idea is
too often such a tiny spark that we are more likely to miss it than not.
156
It is more prudent to obey warning premonitions
than to ignore them.
157
Take time over problems, let your final
decisions wait until they are fully ripe.
158
Where is the wisdom in forcing a quick decision,
which could easily be a wrong one, merely to get a decision at all?
159
Intuition is the voice which is constantly
calling him to this higher state. But if he seldom or never pauses amid the
press of activity to listen for it, he fails to benefit by it.
160
Such intuitions manifest themselves only on the
fringe of consciousness. They are tender shoots and therefore need to be
tenderly nurtured.
161
The more he follows a course contrary to
intuitive leading, the more will errors and mishaps follow him.
162
These feelings may be cultivated as a gardener
cultivates flowers. Their visitation may be brought on again, their delight
renewed.
163
In the end he will rely on this little inner
voice which, if he listens humbly, speaks and tells him which way to turn.
164
Do not deny your intuitive self as Judas denied
his master, as Peter denied him.
165
"There is also his subconscious mind, his
brilliant and seemingly effortless hunches. His judgements come forth
spontaneously like lightning, with no supporting brief of argument. He follows
his own subconscious with blind faith but insists that to have a hunch, you must
first have all the facts at your command, and your intelligence must be working
at full speed. Then suddenly and without conscious effort you think of a
solution which is really based on facts, but is not achieved by deliberate
cerebrations. With it comes an unexampled feeling of well-being." - author
unknown
166
He will learn sooner or later by the test of
experience to defer to this intuitive feeling whenever its judgement, guidance,
or warning manifests itself.
167
Edison said that all his inventions grew out of
initial flashes which welled up from within. The rest was a matter of research.
168
The intuitive element has to be awaited with
much patience and vigilant attention.
169
Is he fully open to intuitive feelings that
originate in his deeper being, his sacred self? Or does his ego get in the way
by its rigidities, habits, and tendencies? The importance of these feelings is
that they are threadlike clues which need following up, for they can lead him to
a blessed renewal or revelation.
170
The capacity to respond to spiritual intuitions
is latent in all men but trained and developed in few men.
171
From this hidden source comes at times guidance,
warnings, attractions, or aversions which ought to be construed as intuitive
messages. But for this they must first be recognized and believed: they pass too
quickly.
172
It is not that he puts out the antenna of his
intuition, so much as that he insulates its ends and thus provides clear
receptivity.
173
We may not forecast how quickly or how well
every student will progress in this art. For one may naturally possess much
sensitivity but another may possess little. And even when an intuition is
recognized immediately, the will may respond to it very slowly.
174
It is true that conscience is the voice of the
Overself in the moral life of man, but it is also true that he seldom hears its
pure sound. Most often he hears it mixed with much egotism.
175
The suppositions and anticipations, the
attractions and repulsions of the ego enter into its intuitive experiences and
impede or change them.
176
Most inner guidance is rarely purely intuitive
but more often a mixture of genuine intuition with wishful thinking. Hence it is
right in parts and wrong in others.
177
The original intuition itself may be a correct
one but its reception is so inexpert and so biased that the version accepted in
consciousness has deformed and somewhat falsified it.
178
The intuitive is so fine and sensitive a faculty
that the emanations of another mind may well disturb its activity or distort its
truth.
179
The intuitive approach is the most effective of
all, provided it is not clouded by suggestion from outside sources or blurred by
bias from inside ones.
180
Before a man complains that he is unable to get
intuition, he should remember that his own moral fault may be responsible for
this. It can not only prevent him from receiving true intuitions but also from
responding to them in action.
181
Amid the general rush of today's events it is
easy to miss an intuitive feeling.
182
Nor when the answer first comes, may we
understand it aright. We may mix it up with our own ideas or wishes, our own
expectations or fancies, and the result will be that the help received will not
work out quite as it should have done. We may have to spend further years
straightening out the message and, incidentally, ourselves. But again, it is
worth doing and nothing else is so much worth doing.
183
He will come to find that the guidance he
receives is perfect but his reception of it may still be imperfect.
184
The genuine intuition gets mixed up with guesses
and speculations about the matter, with reasonings and ruminations about it.
185
His intuition is unavoidably conditioned by his
own personality, inevitably shaped as it is because he is the kind of man he is.
186
It is not only his wishes and hopes which
interfere with correct receptivity to intuition but also his fears and
suspicions.
187
His normal everyday mind is slow to heed the
Higher Power and confused in interpretation of the prompting received.
188
One whose mind is too sharply critical to be
sensitive to finer mental radiations may fail to recognize the inner happening.
This may be because he himself is not sufficiently in tune with the high
frequency represented by Overself, or it may be because he is too impatient and
wants something which in his case can only be had with sufficient time.
189
When intuition points to something unwelcome to
the ego, the intellect looks for and usually finds an excuse to reject it. A man
who really and sincerely wants to find the Truth should be on the lookout for
hints, clues, and signs which would be useful to his Quest, for they constitute
the response from the Overself to his aspiration. The Overself can furnish him
with the Truth and puts these signals in his way.
190
No counsel could be safer and better than that
which proceeds from a man to himself by way of intuition. But first let him be
sure that it is intuition.
191
Intuition carries its own assurance with it.
Those skilled, proficient, and accustomed to it, who are able to recognize the
authentic signs, can safely accept and trust themselves to it. But the beginner
and the inexperienced need to check and test it, lest they are led astray by
some impostor posing as the real thing or by some impulse sincerely presuming
itself to be the real thing.
192
To accept the ever-rightness of these intuitions
is one thing; to separate them from their imitators is another.
193
Intuition will not mislead you but your
conscious mentality, which is its receiving agent, may do so. For your
consciousness may partially deviate from its message, or even wholly pervert it,
in giving deliverance to exaggerations or extravagances, impossibilities or
delusions, thus filling you with useless hopes or groundless fears.
Consequently, at the very time when you suppose that you are being infallibly
guided by intuition you may in fact be strongly guided by pseudo-intuition -
which is something quite different. You may believe that you are honouring
higher guidance when in actuality you are dishonouring it. The situation is
therefore much less simple and much more complex than most people know. To get
intuitive direction when, for example, two or more conflicting courses of action
confront you is not so easy as it seems and less easy still during a time of
trouble. For during such a time you will naturally catch at anything already
unknowingly or knowingly pre-determined by some complex to be the best way out
of it. The very desire for a particular thing, event, or action may put a
pseudo-intuition into your mind. If you want to be wary of this you should seek
corroboration from other sources and especially from right reason. Again, the
first thought which enters your consciousness after you have decided to seek
such direction and have committed your affair to the deeper mind, is not
necessarily an authentic intuition. Nor is the second thought such a one, nor
the third, and so on. If the impression is to be rightly received, it must be
patiently received, and that quite often means that you must sleep on it, and
sleep on it perhaps for several days, sometimes weeks. The trustworthy intuition
is really there during all this time but the obstacles to knowing it are also
there in yourself. Do not, therefore, lose the inner direction through haste nor
set up a stone image to be worshipped by mistake in its place. Nor is it enough
to say that intuitive truths are self-evident ones. What appeared to be
self-evident to you twenty years ago may now appear self-delusive to you. Edit
your intuitions with your reason.
194
All men at some time or other receive intuitive
suggestions from within, whilst a few men receive them constantly. It is not
therefore that intuition is such a rare and extraordinary manifestation. What is
rare and extraordinary is its pure reception, its correct comprehension. For on
the one hand we receive along with an intuition the suggestions of environment,
education, heredity, and self-interest no less than the distortions of desire,
fear, and hope, while on the other hand we receive the doubts and questionings
of reason. Even if we correct the suggestions and adjust the distortions of the
first group, we remain uncertain and unclear because reason naturally wants to
know why? It wants to understand why an intuitive prompting should
be accepted. And by the very nature of an intuition it is often something which
neither past experience nor present logic can justify. This is not only because
all the facts of the case are not at our command but, because of their endless
ramifications or superphysical character, cannot possibly be at our command.
These are some of the difficulties which confront man at his present stage of
evolution and which render so many so-called intuitions unreliable or
undependable even though their original birth was genuinely what it claimed to
be. What is the remedy? Only careful, ruthless, and impartial analysis of each
and every intuition, constant vigilance over and checking of the results which
ensue when they are accepted, and long self-training through several years can
finally bring us to the clear recognition of what is or is not authentic
intuitive guidance, suggestion, or information.
195
He would not be so bad a judge of value as to
prefer reason over intuition, whenever he had the absolute certainty that it
was intuition. But past experience has shown how difficult it is to
arrive at such certitudes, how deceptive are the masks which impulse, desire,
rashness, and selfishness can assume. Until, therefore, his development has
reached the point where a genuine intuition is at once recognized as such and a
pseudo-intuition quickly detected for what it is, he must not abandon the use of
reason but rather regard it as a most valuable ally.
196
How can he tell if inner guidance is truly
intuitive or merely pseudo-intuitive? One of the ways is to consider whether it
tends to the benefit of all concerned in a situation, the others as well as
oneself. The word "benefit" here must be understood in a large way, must include
the spiritual result along with the material one. If the guidance does not yield
this result, it may be ego-prompted and will then hold the possibility of
error.(P)
197
An intuitive feeling is one untainted by the
ego's wishes, uncoloured by its aversions.(P)
198
Wrong personal intention may be negated by right
intuitive guidance, but it is not easy to recognize the latter as such. The
difference between a mere impulse and a real intuition may often be detected in
two ways: first, by waiting a few days, as the subconscious mind has then a
chance to offer help in deciding the matter; second, by noting the kind of
emotion which accompanies the message. If the emotion is of the lower kind, such
as anger, indignation, greed, or lust, it is most likely an impulse. If of the
higher kind, such as unselfishness or forgiveness, it is most likely an
intuition.(P)
199
You may recognize the voice of wisdom when
having to make a decision by the fact that it proceeds out of deep inner calm,
out of utter tranquillity, whereas impulse is frequently born in exaggerated
enthusiasm or undue excitement.(P)
200
A compelling inner conviction or intuition need
not necessarily collide with cold reason. But as an assumed intuition which may
be merely a bit of wishful thinking or emotional bias, it is always needful to
check or confirm or discipline it by reasoning. The two can work together, even
whilst recognizing and accepting each other's peculiar characteristics and
different methods of approach. Hence all intuitively formed projects and plans
should be examined under this duplex light. The contribution of fact by reason
should be candidly and calmly brought up against the contribution of inward
rightness made by "intuition." We must not hesitate to scrap intuitively formed
plans if they prove unworkable or unreasonable.(P)
201
The promptings that come from this inner being
are so faintly heard at first, however strong on their own plane, that we tend
to disregard them as trivial. This is the tragedy of man. The voices that so
often mislead him into pain-bringing courses - his passion, his ego, and blind
intellect - are loud and clamant. The whisper that guides him aright and to God
is timid and soft.(P)
202
So subtle is the oncoming and so mysterious is
the working of the true intuition, so open and blatant is the fantasy that is
false intuition, that the first test of authenticity is indicated here.(P)
203
The corrective separation of true from false
intuitions, and of impersonal from personal impressions, follows a careful
disciplining of the consciousness and a cautious vigilance over the feelings.
204
He can learn with time, and from the visible
results it always brings, a better estimate of the truth or falsity of these
impressions and intuitions. When the results injure him, he may know that the
acceptance of that which led to them was an error; a careful study of such
errors will point the way to their avoidance in the future.
205
The intuitive consciousness eludes common sense
at some times but aligns with it at other times.
206
The day will come when constant effort and long
practice will permit him to recognize true from pseudo-intuition with the speed
and certainty with which a musically trained ear recognizes notes and times
(tunes) in a played piece.
207
When a strong intuitive feeling contradicts -
much more if it nearly swallows up - a conventional sense-impression, it is wise
to become alert and reconsider the report.
208
Intuition is always sure of itself, but few
persons are always sure whether what they feel is actually intuition or not.
They may test it against reasoned analysis.
209
It is not surprising that after the Hitler
fiasco thoughtful minds which were once prone to believe sincerely in the
existence of such a faculty as intuition and willing to accept its revelations,
as made by others, found their confidence in it gravely shaken. We ventured to
point out that egoistic emotions and unconscious complexes frequently masquerade
as mystical intuitions, that criticism should be directed solely against such
pseudo-intuitions and should not be casting doubts upon the existence of genuine
intuition itself.
210
It is admittedly hard to distinguish intuition
from its counterfeits, but one way to do so is that it often opposes personal
emotions. Thus we may feel strongly and naturally prejudiced against a certain
course of action yet a gentler feeling may be in its favour.
211
If it is authentic intuition, he will feel
increasingly convinced by it as days and weeks pass until in the end its truth
will seem unarguable to him.
212
When his self-training and checked experience
have gone far enough, the doubts and uncertainties regarding these intuitive
feelings will vanish. By that time, they will appear in his consciousness as
peculiar and unmistakable.
213
What intuition reveals the deepest thought
confirms.
214
The notion that the Overself's voice is
necessarily accompanied by occult phenomena or heard clairaudiently inside
oneself is a very limited one. It may be totally unaccompanied by anything
strange or, as if it were conscience, felt rather than heard. Or it may speak to
one indirectly through any other person or any circumstantial event that touches
one's path.
215
The passing of time will either disprove his
judgements or prove them correct. He ought to note carefully this eventual
result and compare it with the feelings which possessed him at the time of
making his original decisions. In this way he can learn to see for himself the
difference between the marks of a true intuition and those of a false one.
216
An intuition comes into the mind suddenly. But
so does an impulse. Therefore it is not enough to take this mark alone to
identify it. It is strong; so is an impulse. It is clear; so is an impulse. To
separate the deceptive appearance from the genuine reality of an intuition, look
for the trail of assurance, relief, and peace to follow in its wake.
217
It is never present without certain qualities
being present with it, too. There is first an utter serenity, then a steady joy,
next an absolute conviction of its truth and reality, finally the paradoxical
feeling of a rock-firm security despite any appearance of adverse outer
circumstances.
218
The process is partly an unconscious one, they
know, because something is being done to them by this higher power. They cannot
exactly define why they must accept its truth, but its mental effect is almost
hypnotic. It is an intuition which is self-supporting, which must be accepted
upon its own mysterious authority. Nor do they accept it because of its inherent
strength alone. They accept it also because of its inherent beauty.
219
Intuitive feelings hover in him, half-guessed
at, half-doubted: he does not know what to accept, what to reject, because he
does not feel certain whether they are mere ordinary thoughts or authentic
messages from heaven.
220
If it be asked how to prevent oneself from being
deceived by these pseudo-intuitions, it can be said that a useful rule is to
check them against other sources on the same subject and see if they all
harmonize. If, for example, fifty inspired men who have written on the subject
teach what contradicts the alleged intuition, then there is something wrong on
one side or the other and careful investigation is called for. It is always
safer to ascertain what the great scriptural texts or the classic mystical
testaments have to tell on the matter and not depend solely on what one's
intuition tells.
221
There are four chief ways in which guidance may
be given. They are: intuitive feeling, giving in a general way approbation or
rejection of a proposed course of action; direct and precise inner message; the
shaping of outer circumstances; and the teaching of inspired texts. If all four
exist together, and if they all harmonize, then you may step forward in the
fullest assurance. But if there are contradictions between them, then great
caution and some delay is certainly advisable.
222
It is also needful to remember that the higher
self can only be known by the higher part of the mind, that is, the intuition.
The emotions are on a lesser and lower level, however noble or religious they
may be. The immense satisfaction which the ecstatic raptures give is no
indication that he is directly touching reality, but only that he is coming
closer to it. They may seem purely spiritual, but they still belong to the ego's
feeling nature and if he believes otherwise he will fall into self-deception.
Only through the pure intuition, freed from emotional egoism and transcending
intellectual illusion, can he really make a contact with the Overself. And that
will happen in a state of utter and perfect tranquillity; there will be none of
the emotional excitement which marked the successful practice of the earlier
stage of meditation exercises.
223
When the deliverance of intuition cancels the
deliverance of reason, he may trust himself to the first, but only when he is
sure it is what it purports to be.
224
When he finds some of his own intuitions
formulated and printed in someone else's book, he feels their truth is confirmed
and his own mind comforted.
225
He has the right to judge an intuition
rationally before submitting to it, but what if his judgement is itself wrong?
226
Intuition may support reason but must supplant
it only on the gravest occasions.
227
The sudden revelation of correct understanding,
whether in certain situations or about uncertain problems, may come unexpectedly
or abruptly anytime during the day. It springs up of its own accord or it
appears in a dream as a message.
228
If the intuitive feeling leads him gently at
some times, it also leads him firmly at other times.
229
An intuition is directly self-revealing; it does
not depend on what kind of thought and study were done before it appeared. It is
also self-evident: the correctness of the guidance given or information imparted
becomes obvious and doubt-dispelling.
230
A truth is intuitively discerned when it is so
lit up that it appears perfectly self-evident, when the receiving consciousness
is very calm, and when the lapse of time tends to strengthen its authority.
231
The intuitive answer may come in one of several
ways, but the commonest is either a self-evident thought or a deep heartfelt
feeling.
232
It is a truth so plainly self-evident that he
cannot help thinking it. This is how intuition usually appears and is usually
recognized for what it is.
233
Develop theme that another sign to recognize
intuitions is their unexpectedness.
234
The mysterious appearance of an intuition may
well make us ask where it comes from. At one moment it is not there; at the next
it is lodged in the mind.
235
Sometimes we are wiser than we know and utter
involuntary answers which surprise us with their unexpected wisdom or unknown
Truth. This is one way intuitions are born.
236
Because it comes from within, it comes with its
own authority. When it is "the real thing," the seeker will not have to question
examine or verify its authenticity, will not have to run to others for their
appraisal of its worth or its rejection as a pseudo-intuition. He will know
overwhelmingly what it is in the same way that he knows who he is.
237
Education and experience alone do not make the
mind; there is something higher that mixes itself in now and again with
disconcerting incomprehensible spontaneity.
238
One reason why an intuition is so often missed
is that it flashes into the mind as disjointedly, as abruptly, and as
inconsequentially as a person or a thing sometimes comes momentarily into the
field of vision through the corner of an eye.
239
The marks of an authentic intuition include
conclusiveness and finality.
240
When a man hesitates too long over taking a
course which intuition tells him he should take, and in which his higher life is
concerned, it may be that destiny will intervene and make him suddenly realize
that this is the way, and that all doubts should be thrown out.
241
An intuition may be sudden and unexpected, quite
contrary to the line of previous thought about the matter. This is certainly
true of many appearances but it is not true of other ones.
242
An intuition may come into the mind apparently
by hazard, unsummoned, unexpected.
243
Every thought which comes down to us from that
serene height comes with a divine authority and penetrating force which are
absent from all other thoughts. We receive the visitant with eagerness and obey
it with confidence.
244
Intuition is not the equal but rather the
superior of all other human faculties. It delivers the gentlest of whispers,
commands from the Overself, whereas the other faculties merely carry them out.
It is the master, they are the servants. The intellect thinks, the will works,
and the emotion drives towards the fulfilment of intuitively felt guidance in
the properly developed spiritually erect man.
245
The philosopher is simultaneously a thinker and
a believer, but his ruling role is neither. It is that of an intuitionist.
246
The intuition must lead all the rest of man's
faculties. He must follow it even when they do not agree with its guidance. For
it sees farther than they ever can, being an efflux from the godlike part of
himself which is in its way a portion of the universal deity. If he can be sure
that it is not pseudo-intuition, truth in it will lead him to life's best,
whether spiritual or worldly.
247
The man who is not thrown off his balance is the
man who lets intuition rule all his other functions.
248
The passage in time before his intellect will
yield and acknowledge the rightness of what his intuition told him about a
person at their first meeting, may be a long one.
249
He will have to maintain his loyalty to the
intuition against the cautions, the excessive prudence, of a frightened
intellect.
250
In the fully trained philosopher, intuition is
the most active faculty.
251
The intuition is to collate all these different
functions of the personality, and direct them towards its truest welfare.
252
A man is really free when his intuition directs
his intellect and rules his energies.
253
The verdict of intuition may be vindicated by
time but he cannot always afford to wait for it.
254
Feeling is as much a part of true insight into
the Real as knowing. It gives life to the end result. It is evoked by
enlightened writings and inspired art works. Thinking may not rightly claim
overlordship here, but intuition, the silent voice of the Overself, may do so.
255
Here, just on the very frontiers of wakeful
consciousness, amidst daydreams and intuitions, thoughts and premonitions, lies
hidden treasure. It is precisely in this inward region which ordinary men
dismiss as worthless, unreal, and false that the mystic finds worth, reality,
and truth.
256
There is an inner light in all people which
could, with time, convert their perplexed questionings into solid certitudes.
There is this remarkable fact that hard problems which the unaided intellect
cannot solve, gnawing anxieties upon which our past experiences throw no helpful
light, may become illumined and solved with ease if we adopt this practical
method of applying intuition to them. Among all the varied powers of the mind, a
properly unfolded intuition is indeed one of the most priceless anyone could
have. It always warns against wrong courses and often counsels the right ones.
"I sometimes have a feeling, in fact I have it very strongly, a feeling of
interference...that some guiding hand has interfered," confessed Winston
Churchill in a speech during October, 1942. On the other hand, intuition may
help us and allay our fears where reason alone merely increases them.
257
The intuitively governed mind is the undivided
mind. It does not have to choose between contrasts or accept one of two
alternatives. It does not suffer from the double-facedness of being swayed this
way or that by conflicting evidence, contradictory emotions, or hesitant
judgements.
258
However bitter a situation may appear, the
accepted prompting of the Overself can bring sweetness into it; however trying
it may be, the same prompting can bring fortitude into it.
259
The man who has trained himself to listen for
the voice of intuition, which means trained himself to wait for it to speak and
disciplined himself to be inwardly alert yet also inwardly quiet for it, does
not have to suffer the painful conflicts and tormenting divisions which others
do when confronted by issues demanding a choice or a decision.
260
He will find, if he accepts this intuitive
leading, that although the unfavourable circumstances may remain the same,
unchanged, his attitude towards them does not. Out of this inner change there
will be given him the strength to deal with them, the calm to deal with them
unmoved, and the wisdom to deal with them properly.
261
There is no single pattern that an intuitively
guided life must follow. Sometimes he will see in a flash of insight both course
and destination, but at other times he will see only the next step ahead and
will have to keep an open mind both as to the second step and as to the final
destination.(P)
262
One of the functions of intuition is to protect
the body against unnecessary sickness by warning the man in it when he is
transgressing the laws of its hygiene, or by showing the right road. In this,
intuition is pitted against the body's past habits and animal appetites, the
emotional nature's desires, as well as the mind's ignorance immaturity and
inexperience - a combination of enemies which usually triumphs over it. Another
of its functions is to protect the man against avoidable calamity or preventable
loss, by consciously warning him of its impending existence or subconsciously
moving him out of its reach. But here it has opposed to it the egoistic desires
and habits or the emotional impulses and negative feelings which perceive only
the immediate and not the impending, the semblance of things and not the
actuality.
263
The intuitive life does not always know how or
why it acts, for it is often spontaneous and unconscious. But when it does
become at times intellectually self-conscious, its power in the world to affect
men is heightened, not lessened.
264
Like Socrates we possess an inner warning voice
which forbids certain courses of action but does not recommend better ones. It
is negative and not positive.
265
Intuition - which Bergson called the surest road
to truth - eradicates hesitancies. When you are in contact with the Overself in
solving a problem, you receive a direct command what to do and you then
know it is right. The clouds and hesitancies and vacillations which arise
when struggling between contrary points of view, melt. Whereas, if you are not
in contact with the Overself, but only being carried along through karma, then
you swing back and forth with emotion or opinion.
266
He is indeed fortunate whose intuition shows
itself in one impelling thought strong enough to outclass all other conflicting
thoughts.
267
The uncomfortable feeling that something is
wrong may combat the smooth plausible appearance of everything being right.
268
He can depend on one thing alone to show him the
right roads and the right master. It is intuition.
269
A man's life will be less troubled and his
happiness more secured, if his reason governs his body and his intuition governs
his reason.
270
If a man acts according to intuitive wisdom, all
will go well with him. This is not to say that he will be free from external
misfortunes. But if they come, they will be of the unavoidable kind and
therefore less in number than if they included those of his own direct making.
And even the others will be turned to profit in some way by the search for their
underlying meanings, so that although humanity calls them evil, he will
nevertheless gain some inner good from them.
271
If he is sensitive enough and can touch the
intuitive element within himself, either deliberately by sheer power of deeply
introspective concentration or spontaneously by immediate acceptance of its
suggestive messages, his decisions will be filled with utter conviction and
followed with resolute determination.
272
He may be sure of this, that whatever action the
Overself's leading causes him to take will always be for his ultimate good even
though it may be to his immediate and apparent detriment.
273
There is the feeling of being led, but not the
ability to see where, and to what, one is being led.
274
To the degree that the intuitive element can
displace all others for the rulership of his inner life, to that degree can a
healing and guiding calm displace the emotion of moods and commotion of thought.
275
The most satisfying proofs will come to him that
the Overself is really guiding the course of his outer life and really inspiring
the course of his inner life.
276
There will be decisions that he does not think
out logically, moves that he does not plan calculatingly. Yet the sequence of
further events will prove the one to be right, the other wise. For they will
have come intuitively.
277
He may have no idea how to get out of his
predicament. Yet suddenly he will make some unreasoned and unpremeditated act
which will do this for him.
278
His best moves are mostly the unplanned ones.
279
He would be wise to do nothing drastic unless
there is a clear and positive urge from the deepest part of being approving the
deed.
280
Such efforts will eventually open the way for
intuition to come into outer consciousness and, absorbing all lesser elements,
give him the great blessing of its guidance.
281
Jesus likened the Kingdom of Heaven to a grain
of mustard seed, which was a simile among the Jews for anything exceedingly
small. Why did he do so? Because, in its first onset, the Kingdom is not an
experience but an intuition - and the latter begins as an exceedingly faint and
tiny leading.
282
Whereas we can reach the intellect only through
thinking, we can reach the spirit only through intuition. The practice of
meditation is simply the deepening, broadening, and strengthening of intuition.
A mystical experience is simply a prolonged intuition.(P)
283
The prettily vague and poetically general
statements of spiritual truth, the woolly, sentimental, or foggy revelations and
communications, are heard or intuited only in the outer courts. When the
neophyte approaches the central inner court, what he receives is very precise
clear and exact. This is so until he reaches the inmost shrine, the holy of
holies itself. Here, words must come to an end for here he must "Be still and
know that I am God."
284
It is important that the feeling of "inward
drawing" which comes to him at times be at once followed up, whenever possible,
by a withdrawal from external affairs for a few minutes and a concentration on
what the feeling leads to. This practice is like a thread which, if followed up,
will lead to a cord, that to a rope, and so on. Thus he will benefit by the
grace which is being shed upon him, and not turn away unheedingly. But the mind,
at the beginning, leaves this intuitional plane all too quickly, so extreme
vigilance is called for to bring it back there.
285
What is more private, more intimate, than
intuition? It is the only means they possess wherefrom to start to get mystical
experience, glimpses, true enlightenment. Yet they insist on seeking among those
who stand outside them, among the teachers, for that which must be searched
after and felt inside themselves.
286
The hierophant in the Mysteries of Isis told the
aspirant at initiation: "In the dark hour that thou shalt find thy true self,
follow him and he will be thy true self, follow him and he will be thy genius,
for he holds the secret of thine existence."
287
The teaching that is most worthwhile comes
directly from your own inner being, not from another's.
288
To develop these brief intuitions and bring them
to maturity in lengthier moods, is his task.
289
That which guides him to the god within his own
being, that slender thread of intuitive feeling and intelligence, may at first
appear and disappear at intervals.
290
At first intuition is like a frail thread,
almost impalpable, of which he is just faintly aware; but if he heeds it, rivets
attention stubbornly to it, the visitations come more and more often. If he
follows the thread to its source, the message becomes clearer, stronger,
precise.
291
If you can attentively trace this subtle feeling
back to its own root, you will get a reward immeasurably greater than it seemed
to promise.
292
It is only by constant use that intuition can
mature into mystical enlightenment.
293
If one learns to cultivate these brief intuitive
moments aright, there can develop out of them in time mystical moods of much
longer duration and much deeper intensity. Still later, there could come to
maturity the ripe fruit of all these moods - an ecstatic experience wherein
grace descends with life-changing results.