1
The spiritual self, the Overself, has never been
lost. What has happened is that its being has not been recognized, covered over
as it is with a multitude of thoughts, desires, and egocentricities.
2
The day will inexorably come when this pen shall
move no more and I wish therefore to leave on record, for the benefit of those
who shall come after, a sacred and solemn testimony that I know - as surely as I
know that I am not this pen which scribes these lines - that a being, benign,
wise, protective, and divine, whom men call the Soul, whom I call the Overself,
truly exists in the hearts of all; therefore all may discover it.
A day will break surely when every man will have to bend the knee to that unknown self and abandon every cell of his brain, every flowing molecule of his heart, his blood, into its waiting hands. Though he will fear to do so, though he will fear to give up those ancient idols who had held him in bond so long and have given him so little in return, though he will tremble to loose his moorings and let his soul drift slowly from them with sails set for that mysterious region whose longitude few men know and whose shores most men shun, yet he will do so all the same. For the presence of man's own innermost divinity is the guarantee that he must inescapably seek and find it.
3
Whoever has been led into the cave of timeless life
will poise his pen in a futile attempt to find words which will accurately
measure this sublime experience. He rises renewed from the exquisite embrace of
such a contemplation. He learns in those shining hours. That which he has been
seeking so ardently has been within himself all the time. For there at the core
of his being, hidden away underneath all the weakness, passion, pettiness, fear,
and ignorance, dwells light, love, peace, and truth. The windows of his heart
open on eternity, only he has kept them closed! He is as near the sacred spirit
of God as he ever shall be, but he must open his eyes to see it. Man's divine
estate is there deep within himself. But he must claim it.
4
The other part of the answer is that the Overself is
always here as man's innermost truest self. It is beginningless and endless in
time. Its consciousness does not have to be developed as something new. But the
person's awareness of it begins in time and has to be developed as a new
attainment. The ever-presence of Overself means that anyone may attain it here
and now. There is no inner necessity to travel anywhere or to anyone in space or
to wait years in time for this to happen. Anyone, for instance, who attends
carefully and earnestly to the present exposition may perhaps suddenly and
easily get the first stage of insight, the lightning-flash which affords a
glimpse of reality, at any moment. By that glimpse he will have been uplifted to
a new dimension of being. The difficulty will consist in retaining the new
perception. For ancient habits of erroneous thinking will quickly reassert
themselves and overwhelm him enough to push it into the background. This is why
repeated introspection, reflective study, and mystical meditation are needed to
weaken those habits and generate the inner strength which can firmly hold the
higher outlook against these aggressive intruders from his own past.
5
Those who are unable to grasp this explanation the
first time may do so at a later attempt, while those who will not grasp
it and refuse to consider it further thereby indicate that they are not subtle
enough to receive its truth. They will continue to seek reality among the
cozening deceivers of superficial experience, but it will ever elude them there.
6
Although It is at the very heart of human beings,
the Overself is very far from their present level of consciousness. Nothing
could be closer yet this is the supreme paradox of our existence and the
strangest enigma confronting our thought.
7
The Overself is implicit in all humanity but
explicit only in a few solitary figures.
8
Its golden note of harmony falls dead upon our muted
ears.
9
The Overself is not a goal to be attained but a
realization of what already is. It is the inalienable possession of all
conscious beings and not of a mere few. No effort is needed to get hold of the
Overself, but every effort is needed to get rid of the many impediments to its
recognition. We cannot take hold of it; it takes hold of us. Therefore the last
stage of this quest is an effortless one. We are led, as children by the hand,
into the resplendent presence. Our weary strivings come to an abrupt end. Our
lips are made shut and wordless.
10
No situation in human life lasts totally unchanged
forever, just as no condition on the very planet which harbours that life lasts
forever. It is folly to demand changelessness. And yet we do. Why? Because
beneath this conscious desire for fresh experiences there is the unconscious
longing for That which is the permanent core of selfhood. The stilled,
one-pointed, and reverent mind may know it, the self may dissolve in it.
11
We carry the divine presence with us everywhere we
travel. We do not directly profit by it simply because we are not
directly conscious of it. The effort to arouse such awareness is a worthwhile
one, bringing rich reward in its train.
12
The soul is always with us but our sense of its
presence is not.
13
There is a spiritual element in every man. It is
his essence.
14
Although we are divided in awareness from the
higher power, we are not divided in fact from it. The divine being is immanent
in each one of us. This is why there is always some good in the worst of us.(P)
15
Goethe: "You give me space to belong to myself yet
without separating me from your own life."
16
The Overself is always present but man's attention
seldom is.
17
Because the soul is present deep down in each
human heart, none is so depraved that he will not one day find the inward
experience of it.
18
There is a zone of utter calm within man. It is
not only there but always there. Those who suffer, fret, or are confused may
doubt or deny this - understandably and pardonably.
19
It is always possible for a man to gain
enlightenment anytime anywhere even though it may not be probable, for he has
within himself the Light itself as an ever-present Reality. What does happen and
what is probable is that some moment during the course of a lifetime a glimpse
may happen, and the glimpse itself is nothing less than a testimony to that
ever-presence, a witness telling him that it is true and real.
20
Just then, as thoughts themselves stop coming into
his mind, he stops living in time and begins living in the eternal. He knows and
feels his timelessness. And since all his sufferings belong to the world of
passing time, of personal ego, he leaves them far behind as though they had
never been. He finds himself in the heaven of a serene, infinite bliss. He
learns that he could always have entered it; only his insistence on holding to
the little egoistic values, his lack of thought-control, and his disobedience to
the age-old advice of the Great Teachers prevented him from doing so.
21
These rare moments of spontaneous spiritual
exaltation, which cast all other moments in the shade and which are remembered
ever after, could not have been born if that divine element into which they
exalted us did not already exist within us. Its very presence in our hearts
makes always possible and sometimes actual the precious feeling of a
non-material sublimely happy order of being.
22
It is not really a goal to be reached, nor a state
to be attained, nor something new to be added to what he now has or is. But if
he insists on thinking that it is any of these things, there is no other course
open than to take the appropriate action, make the necessary effort, for such
achievement. His labours are really self-imposed, a consequence of incorrect
thought about himself.
23
Is this benign state a past from which we have
lapsed or a future to which we are coming? The true answer is that it is
neither. This state has always been existent within us, is so now, and always
will be. It is forever with us simply because it is what we really are.
24
It is not as if he has to find something foreign,
making communication too distant and too difficult, for this is his very native
being, giving him meaning and awareness.
25
If the real Self must have been present and been
witness to our peaceful enjoyment of deep slumber - otherwise we would not have
known that we had had such enjoyment - so must it likewise have been present and
been witness to our rambling imaginations in dream-filled sleep and to our
physical activities in waking. This leads to a tremendous but inescapable
conclusion. We are as near to, or as much in, the real Self, the Overself, at
every moment of every day as we ever shall be. All we need is awareness of it.
26
A man's refusal to allow spiritually intuitive
feelings to awaken in him cannot obliterate the presence of the source of those
feelings. He bears that presence ever within him and one day must reconcile
himself willingly, knowingly, even yearningly, with it.
27
The Overself is always within call, for its hiding
place is no farther than a man's heart. But if the call does not go forth, or
goes forth without faith, or is not sustained with patience, the response will
not come.
28
God is ever present with us but we are ever
turning away from him. No one is forsaken except those who look only to, and
into, the ego, and even then only for a time.
29
In one sense that world of the Overself remains
always inaccessible and inexpressible, but in another sense it is as close as
breathing and as palpable in the highest art forms or in the illuminated man's
presence as a fragrant perfume.
30
By his ignoring of the Overself's presence, man
commits his greatest sin and shows his worst stupidity.
31
If God did not exist then we humans would not
exist. A divine ray, atom, soul, call it what you wish, is present in each of
us. Some are aware of this, others must one day come to this knowledge.
32
The Overself is always present in man's heart. If
he does not receive awareness of this fact in his mind, that is because he makes
no proper and sustained effort to do so.
33
You may be an insignificant creature in the
vastness of the cosmos, but the divine life - of which that cosmos is but a
channel - is in you, too. Have enough faith in your divine heritage, take it
into your common everyday life and thought, and in some way, to some people, you
will become very significant and important.
34
We live all the time in unfailing, if unconscious,
union with the Overself.
35
Perhaps the most wonderful thing which the
illuminate discovers is that his independence from the infinite life power never
really existed and was only illusory, that his separation from the Overself was
only an idea of the imagination and not a fact of being. Even the desire to
unite with the Overself was only a dream, and consequently all lesser desires of
the ego were merely dreams within a dream.
36
I began to enter consciously into the real "I" and
to comprehend by realization that it was always there, that nothing new had been
found, and that this was eternal life.
37
The truth is this second self - or rather the
feeling of its presence - has been shut up so long, that we have come to look
upon it as non-existent and to regard the rumours of its actual experience as
hallucinations. This is why religion, mysticism, and philosophy have so hard a
battle to fight in these times, a battle against man's inevitable incredulity.
38
For centuries theologians have argued about the
meaning of Jesus' declaration that the kingdom of heaven was at hand. Most of
them have given it a historical interpretation. Only those who could approach
the mind of Jesus have given it a mystical interpretation. For only they can see
that he meant that the kingdom of the Overself is really as close to us as is
our own hand. All such argument is useless when it starts from different planes
of knowledge and the arguers never really meet each other.
39
Everywhere we see people in bondage to their egos.
Everywhere, too, the sage sees the Overself waiting, always present, for them to
turn from themselves to It.
40
The overlooked part is his consciousness; the
forgotten self is his knowing power. These exist uninterruptedly, even in
apparently subconscious forms like deep sleep and swoon. Yet he denies this
share of his in the Real Being, identifies with the body instead of making it
merely an object of awareness.
41
The Overself is in the heart of every man but few
care to seek it out until pressure of its grace from within, or fatigue with the
world-life without, drives them to do so.
42
The Overself exists in all of us - the bad as well
as the good, the stupid as well as the clever.
43
When the divinity in his own self is found at
last, he will afterwards find its light reflected upon every other man and woman
he encounters.
44
Every man is sacred did he but know it.
45
If we say that the Overself resides in each man we
say something that is not quite true nor quite false. It would be better to say
that each man first feels the Overself - when he does have the good fortune to
feel it - as residing within his heart, but the result of further development is
to show him that the contrary, although a paradox, is also correct, which is
that he resides in the Overself!
46
The godlike abides in each of us but only the
master knows and feels its glory.
47
The mind keeps on moving about until sleep
overcomes it...and because it never stopped to collect itself, it still does not
know the higher and better part of itself - the Overself.
48
The divine presence is constant, it does not go
away: but man himself is too often absent, heedless, interested elsewhere. But
each return gives him a glimpse which he calls a grace.
49
The soul is present and active in every man. This
is why it is quite possible for every man to have a direct glimpse of the truth
about his own inward non-materiality.
50
Nothing can ever exist outside God. Therefore, no
man is bereft of the divine presence within himself. All men have the
possibility of discovering this fact. And with it they will discover their real
selfhood, their true individuality.
51
This is the truth that must be proclaimed to our
generation, that the Soul is with us here and now - not in some remote world or
distant time, not when the body expires - and that it is our joy and strength to
find it.
52
There is no pint of seawater in which salt is not
present in solution. There is no human entity in whom a divine soul is not
present in secret.
53
Not even a solitary Crusoe passes through life
alone. Everyone passes through it in fellowship with his higher self. That such
fellowship is, in most cases, an unconscious one, is not enough to nullify it.
That men may deny in faith or conduct even the very existence of their soul is
likewise not enough to nullify it.
54
This, the real I, is always accessible to him in
meditation and always is the half-known background of his conscious self at
other times.
55
So long as the Overself is sought elsewhere than
where It is, as apart from the seeker himself, so long will the quest for it end
in failure.
56
The divine being is present in all people, from
the crudest to the most cultured.
57
It is present in every person but only dim echoes
may succeed in emerging from the hinterland of consciousness.
58
The absence of the ego is the presence of the
Overself. But this is only a surface impression in the person's thought, for the
Overself is always present.
59
We may have the intuitive assurance that this
higher power does exist even when we have no personal experience of it
and no direct knowledge of its nature.
60
Amid all the perplexities and oscillations of
life, the witnessing and understanding Overself waits with infinite patience. No
one is ever left out. This is the only God we can hope to know, the true Teacher
for all. Those who yearn to unite with it should plead persistently for its
Grace.
61
The Overself's power to alter circumstances,
create opportunities, and uphold persons is available to anyone who fulfils the
requisite conditions. These include some amount of mental preparation and moral
purification, some clear perception of the fact that the Overself is present
here and now, an instant and constant remembrance of this fact, and finally a
willingness to trust completely to its providential help, supply, and support no
matter how undesirable or intolerable a situation seems to be.
62
In every grade of life's manifestation, from every
quality of human character, the divine is always present and never absent.
63
There are resources within man's grasp that could
redeem his character and transform his life, yet they lie untouched and
undeveloped.
64
The silent secret part of the self is forever
there, forever asking a little surrender of attention. But few give it.
65
All the time it is silently asking: "Will you not
turn toward Me, accept Me, for I am your other self?"
66
In one sense, we have never left the divine
Source, never lost our divine identity.
67
The Presence is inseparable from human existence,
even though so many human beings may find the statement incredible, imaginative,
or merely tied to a religious faith. If it would only announce itself more
loudly! But mankind has to accept its ways on its own terms. Those who wish may
learn what they are.
68
There is something godlike in every person. By
finding it in ourselves, we rise above the common human life as that in turn
rises above the animal.
69
And you will perceive that the Overself is always
there, albeit you will have repeatedly to raise your eyes from earth and your
mind from ego to come into realization of this truth.
70
Because we draw our very life from the spiritual
principle within us, we can only ignore the truth that this principle
exists but can never lose its reality.
71
Retreat into his mystical home is ever open to
him, withdrawal into the blissful privacy of the Overself is his blessed right.
72
God is both outside and inside us, is everywhere
around and deep within. It is there but waits to be recovered by the individual
consciousness.
73
Where can he find this peace or practise this
presence except in himself? This done, he can go about his daily business
anywhere and everywhere.
74
Jesus spoke in simple crisp sentences about this
great fact that heaven - the state of real happiness - is within man even here
and now.
75
Deep within man there is Something which waits for
his discovery, something which reveals itself when he has penetrated far enough
or when grace grants it or karma favours it.
76
This divine soul never withdraws from man's life,
is never absent from man's fate. For the very purpose of these last two is to
draw him to seek and find the soul.
77
The truth is that never for a moment are we really
separate from our inner self.
78
It is simply asking man to accept himself for what
he is.
79
A single train would still be too large to carry
all the men in America who are living in the awareness of the Overself.
80
There is a centre in every one's Self which is
divine and radiant.
81
The same Overself is behind us all, contains us
all.
82
This is the divine element whose continuing
presence in man confers a guarantee of eventual salvation.
83
In all of us there is this resplendent being
dwelling in the deepest concealment, linking us with the Supreme Being.
84
In its own perfect silence and with its own
perfect patience, the Overself awaits us.
85
Look where you will, go where you will, the higher
power is there, whether in silence or in action.
86
The Sufi-Muhammedan sage-poet, Ibn al-Arabi:
87
The Overself can become very real to him when
feeling its ever-presence in all his experience, when awake to its
now-ness.
88
The revelation of truth may come directly from
within himself because of the presence of the divine spark within himself.
89
Since the higher individuality is a stable thing,
it is not to be achieved by any efforts but is to be discovered as present.
90
The doorway to truth stands wide open throughout
the day.
91
If men would, or could, believe that with every
breath they are acting in concert with the cosmic rhythm, that in clinging to
the self they are actually sharing the divine presence!
92
It is a presence which can be felt directly in
daily active life, although not so vividly as when removed from the world and
concentrated upon in solitary meditation.
93
The Overself appears to all alike, regardless of
colour or race, when they have made themselves ready for It. Anybody who has so
misunderstood the message in my books as to believe differently, is mistaken.
94
To be satisfied with anything less than this
egoless Self is to worship at the shrine of an idol.
95
The Overself is neither a cold metaphysical
concept nor a passing wave of emotion. It is a Presence - sublime,
sacred, and beneficent - which grips your heart, thought, and body by its own
mysterious power, making you regard life from a nobler standpoint.
96
The divine soul is the real essence of each
person. If we do not come into the full experience of its existence, all our
religion is a mere surface emotionalism, all our metaphysics a mocking
intellectualism.
97
Once you are clearly aware of the presence of the
Overself, you will find that it will spontaneously provide you with a rule of
conduct and a standard of ethics at all times and under all circumstances.
Consequently you will never be at a loss to know what to do in difficult moral
situations, nor how to behave in challenging ones. And with this knowledge will
also come the power to implement it.
98
When this contact with the Overself is
established, its power will work for you: you will no longer go through the
struggles of life alone.
99
This is not to say that the spiritual contact will
remove all difficulties and perplexities from your inner life, but that it will
give you added power to deal with them.
100
From this seeming nothingness deep within he
draws a peace of mind, an emotional freedom, a sense of God's living presence
that the world's harshness cannot dislodge.
101
The appearance of the sacred presence
automatically extinguishes the lower desires. The holding on to that presence
wherever he goes and whatever he does as if it were his real identity, will help
to establish that release as a lasting fact.
102
As he becomes more sensitive to the Overself's
presence, he knows that he has only to turn to it to receive divine strength and
nourishment.
103
When all other sources of help have been tried,
there is no other source left to man than the divine Overself, by whatever name
he calls it or under whatever symbol he pictures it.
104
Once the Overself is felt in the heart as a
living presence, it raises the consciousness out of the grip of the
egoistic-desire parts of our being, frees it from the ups and downs of mood and
emotion which they involve. It provides a sense of inner satisfaction that is
complete in itself and irrespective of outside circumstances.
105
The extraordinary thing is not that he will feel
the divine self is with him but that it has always been with him.
106
"How quiet it is!" exclaimed Lao Tzu, in
describing the Overself. "Yet it can transform all things."
107
The stillness has magical powers. It soothes,
restores, heals, instructs, guides, and replaces chaos and tumult by orderliness
and harmony.
108
There is much confusion of understanding about
what happens to the ego when it attains the ultimate goal. Some believe that a
cosmic consciousness develops, with an all-knowing intelligence and an
"all-overish" feeling. They regard it as unity with the whole universe. Others
assert that there is a complete loss of the ego, an utter destruction of the
personal self. No - these are confused notions of what actually occurs. The
Overself is not a collective entity as though it were composed of a number of
particles. One's embrace of other human beings through it is not in union with
them but only in sympathy, not in psychic identification with them but in
psychic harmony. He has enlarged the area of his vision and sees himself as a
part of mankind. But this does not mean that he has become conscious of all
mankind as though they were himself. The true unity is with one's own higher
indestructible self. It is still with a higher individuality, not a cosmic one,
and it is still with one's own self, not with the rest of mankind. Unity with
them is neither mystically nor practically possible. What we discover is
discovered by a deepening of consciousness, not by a widening of it. Hence it is
not so much a wider as a deeper self that he has first to find.
With the rectification of this error, we may find the correct answer to the question: "What is the practical meaning of the injunction laid by all the great spiritual teachers upon their followers, to give up the ego, to renounce the self?" It does not ask for a foolish sentimentality, in the sense that we are to be as putty in the hands of all other men. It does not ask for an utter impossibility, in the sense that we are never to attend to our own affairs at all. It does not ask for a useless absurdity, in the sense that we are to become oblivious of our very existence. On the contrary, it asks for what is wise, practicable, and worthwhile - that we give up our lower personality to our higher individuality.
Thus it is not that the aspirant is asked to abandon all thought of his particular self (as if he could) or to lose consciousness of it, but that he is asked to perceive its imperfection, its unsatisfactoriness, its faultiness, its baseness and its sinfulness and, in consequence of this perception, to give it up in favour of his higher self, with its perfection, blessedness, goodness, nobility, and wisdom. For in the lower ego he will never know peace whereas in the diviner one he will always know it.
109
What this harmony means is that the hidden
centre of consciousness within the other person will be alike to the centre
within himself.
110
Through his higher self, a man can attain the
highest good.
111
The concept of the Overself is foundational. It
provides meaning for life.(P)
112
That man is verily ignorant who does not know
that what the Overself can give him is immeasurably greater than what he can
gain from any other source. For on the one side there is infinite power, on the
other only limited capacity.
113
Lots of words are not needed to communicate what
the Overself has to say. From its presence the truth, the power, and the virtue
can make themselves felt.
114
In that benign atmosphere, negative thoughts
cannot exist.
115
He who has discovered how to live with his
higher self has discovered a serenity which defies circumstance and environment,
a goodness which is too deep for the world's understanding, a wisdom which
transcends thought.
116
Even in the midst of worldly distresses, he will
feel the Overself's support to such an extent and in such a way that they will
seem to be someone else's, with himself as a merely continuous spectator of
them.
117
He lives in the gratifying consciousness that he
is supported by the divine will, the divine power.
118
To find the Overself is to eliminate fear,
establish harmony, and inspire living.
119
The power of the Overself to enlighten, protect,
and exalt man is as actual a fact as the power of electricity to illumine his
home - or it is nothing.
120
It is quite possible to open doors of inner
being without the aid of a teacher. One's own higher self will give him all the
guidance he needs, provided he has sufficient faith in its existence and its
assistance.
121
Alone and depending on his little, personal ego,
a man can do the merest fraction of what he can do when he becomes an instrument
of the Infinite Power.
122
When the star of a man's Overself rises into
ascendancy, he will no more feel lonely even if he be often alone. A sense of
the universe's friendliness will surround him, enfold him.
123
He always turns for his first defense against
the perils and troubles of this world to brief meditation upon the all-wise,
all-powerful Overself, and only after that for his secondary defenses to the
ego's human resources.
124
From the outside, by means of events, persons,
or books; from the inside, by means of intuitions, thoughts, feelings, and urges
- this is how the way is shown him by the Overself.
125
Out of this deep mysterious centre within
himself, he will draw the strength to endure distresses with fortitude, the
wisdom to manage situations without after-regrets, the insight to keep the great
and little values of everyday living in proper perspective.
126
The correct understanding of what man really is
is both self-humbling and self-glorifying.
127
If the consciousness of God in him makes him
very strong, the consciousness of his dependence on it keeps him very humble.
128
Its wisdom is a perfect solvent of human
perplexities, its tranquillity a perfect balm for human bruises.
129
Because he has access to this inward source, he
may live the loneliest of lives but it will not be loveless. The joy and warmth
of its ever-presence will abide with him.
130
In very truth the Overself becomes his beloved
companion, bringing an intense satisfaction and profound love which no external
friendship could ever bring.
131
The ever-presence of the Overself is to him
life's greatest fact. There is nothing to compare with it; he takes his stand
upon it. He rejoices in it. When the outside world does him injustice or
slanders him or hurts him or defrauds him, he turns inward, deeper and deeper
inward, until he stands in the presence of the Overself. Then he finds absolute
serenity, absolute love. Every lesser thing must dissolve away in its divine
atmosphere, and when he returns to mundane thought he feels no resentment
against the wrong-doers; if anything, he feels pity for them. He has lost
nothing, for good name and property are but the accidents of existence, whereas
the presence of the Overself is a basic essential, and he has not lost that
reality. So long as It loves him and so long as he loves It there can be no real
loss.
132
We do not live self-sufficient and
self-sustained lives but depend wholly on the Overself in every way and at every
moment.
133
Under great strain and amid grave dangers, the
aspirant will find courage and endurance in the talismanic power of remembering
the Higher Self. It is always there.
134
It is from this source that he will draw both
strength to rise above his own temptations and love to rise above other men's
hatred.
135
It is a state where inner resistances are no
more, inner conflicts are not known.
136
It is the presence of the Overself in us that
creates the germ of our aspirations for a higher life. It is the warm sunshine
and cold rain of experience that nurtures the germ. It is the influence of
spiritual individuals that brings the growth through its varying stages.
137
All nerve tensions are lost in this holy
quietude. An exquisite mood of well-being takes their place.
138
He who perpetually feels the presence of the
divine soul within himself, thereby obtains an effortless control of himself.
139
The doubts and fears, the hesitations and
suspicions, the jealousies and bitternesses, the enmities and hatreds of common
life can never enter here.
140
Jallaluddin Rumi gave a beautiful and fitting
name to the Higher Self in many of his poems. He called it "the Friend."
141
There is a sense of perfect safety, a sense
which particularly and strongly reveals itself at times of danger, crisis, or
distress.
142
It is a fact more real than we usually grant
that the continuous presence of the Overself makes men's satisfaction with
wholly material living both impermanent and impossible.
143
The extent of the peace and strength, the
confidence and beneficence which lie stretched out beneath the little ego's
troubled life is like unto the oceans: no other simile will suit.
144
Mysterious pools of wisdom and goodness are
underneath the personality, if only we could find our way to them or else bring
gushes from them to the surface.
145
In this higher part of his being he feels
completed within himself, at-oned with Nature and as self-sufficient as Nature.
146
The Overself is present as the supreme Fact in
his, and all, existence even as it is present as an emotional necessity in the
religious man's existence.
147
All his finest emotions, his deepest wisdom, his
creative faculties, his truth-discriminating intuitions come into being because
of the Overself's central if hidden presence.
148
Many will dispute this possibility, but it is
certainly possible for your higher self to guide and instruct you directly -
through and within yourself. It is not an existence far apart from yourself.
149
If in your divinest being you are the Overself
and if the rest of you is both path and goal, the way and the truth, what do you
need a guru for, why step outside yourself? But people do not care for such
questions. They look for teachers locally or in India and thus look always
outside themselves, outside the Overself.
150
In it, in this gentle divine atmosphere, he
lives and moves and has his being, and this is one reason he has to follow
Shakespeare's counsel and be true to himself.
151
This is the really Real, its moral directions
the rightest of the Right.
152
The joy that emanates from the Overself has a
healing quality. It dissipates anxieties and eradicates neuroses.
153
Its power can carry him through a grave crisis
with unfaltering steadiness.
154
Do not think so much of looking for outside
help. Your Higher Self is with you. If you could have enough faith in its
presence, you could look inwards. With persistence and patience, it would guide
you.
155
Without this awareness he is not a whole man,
for he is not functioning in all his being.
156
It is a truth by whose light a man lives nobly
and in whose comfort he may die serenely.
157
Where the ego fails or falters, the Overself
proves equal to every occasion.
158
Enfolded by that inner strength, one ceases to
fear, to be anxious, or to dread the future.
159
For him the most worthy achievement is to live
in this state of being and to love it.
160
It is always there, always present in him
although not always easily reachable. It is the secret centre of his being. This
conscious contact with it gives a feeling of marvellous security, of
mountain-like strength.
161
He feels as sheltered by its presence inside him
as the seed by the earth outside it.
162
In its warm glow, men find a holy therapy for
their suffering, a healing remedy for their disordered and dismembered selves.
163
In its sacred presence fear and suffering must
take their inevitable departure.
164
He can assert this protective truth against
whatever evils and dangers may appear from time to time.
165
The Overself is there and in its presence he
becomes indifferent to the praise of friends or the venom of enemies.
166
He dwells in some inner fortress - safe,
protected, and sure of himself. He is hardly touched by the turmoil of passing
events.
167
He will gain with time the sense of a Presence
which walks with him and dwells in him. It is a guide with practical value, too,
for it warns him what not to do if he would live ethically and avoid additional
suffering. Even if he does not advance so far as perfect realization, he will
advance.
168
The early Christian Fathers believed that only a
few privileged souls ever received this Grace of direct divine illumination.
169
In this healing presence the past is washed away
and old sins with it.
170
It is the part of his being which, being worth
most to him, deserves most from him.
171
Quite a number get a mysterious support and
consolation from simply knowing at second hand that the Overself is there, even
though they themselves cannot make any contact with it.
172
It is real, it is present and active in our very
midst, its power and its guidance can be felt and recognized.
173
Why look to any man who is outside you - when IT
is inside you? And why forget that all men are imperfect whereas IT alone is
perfect?
174
In our present plight we cannot give ourselves
too many supports, and there is none better than that which is to be found in
the Overself.
175
There is some life-power from which we derive
our capacities and our intelligence. It is hidden and intangible. No one has
seen it but everyone who thinks deeply enough can sense that it is there, always
present and always supporting us. It is the Overself.
176
This is the ultimate beauty behind life, which
all people seek blindly and unknowingly in such varied external forms that
merely and momentarily hint, suggest, or herald its existence.
177
Ernest Wood's Yoga Dictionary defines
"Overself" as follows: "A term designed by Dr. P. Brunton to indicate that the
holy fount of our being and root of our consciousness is still ourselves, is
indeed our true self. The Sanskrit equivalent is adhyatma as in
Bhagavad Gita, Chapter VII and VIII." To Dr. Wood's learned definition I
would like to add Kutastma, what stands above or beyond illusion, and
also the Gita's picture of the higher element in man controlling the
lesser self. Further I would not leave out Buddha's transcendent atmosphere of
goodwill to all beings.
178
It is this grandeur of self that is the magnetic
pole drawing us to the Good, the Beautiful, the Just, the True, and the Noble.
Yet itself is above all these attributes for it is the Attributeless, the
Ineffable, and Infinite that human thought cannot grasp.
179
Both the inward and outward lives of every man
are controlled by a concealed entity - the Overself. Could he but see aright, he
would see that everything witnesses to its presence and activity.
180
He will feel that this nobler self actually
overshadows him at times. This is literally true. Hence we have named it the
Overself.
181
When man shall discover the hidden power within
himself which enables him to be conscious and to think, he will discover the
holy spirit, the ray of Infinite Mind lighting his little finite mind.(P)
182
If we could penetrate to the deeper regions of
personality, the deeper layer of consciousness, we would find at the core a
state that is utterly paradoxical. For it combines, at one and the same time,
the highest degree of dynamic being and the extreme degree of static being.
183
This is the abiding essence of a man, his true
self as against his ephemeral person. Whoever enters into its consciousness
enters into timelessness, a wonderful experience where the flux of pleasures and
pains comes to an end in utter serenity, where regrets for the past, impatience
at the present, and fears of the future are unknown.
184
Nothing could be nearer to a man than the
Overself for it is the source of his life, mind, and feeling. Nothing could be
farther from him, nevertheless, for it eludes all his familiar instruments of
experience and awareness.
185
Without the Overself no human creature could be
what it is - conscious, living, and intelligent.
186
Although awareness is the first way in which we
can regard the soul or Overself, the latter is also that which makes awareness
possible and hence a sub- or super-conscious thing. This explains why it is that
we do not know our souls, but only our thoughts, our feelings, and our bodies.
It is because we are the soul and hence we are the knower as well
as the act of knowing. The eyes see everything outside yet do not see
themselves.
187
The Overself is certainly the Way (within man),
the Truth (knowing the Real Being), and the Life (applying this knowledge and
practising this way in the midst of ordinary everyday activity).
188
We cannot accurately and strictly define the
Overself. It is really indescribable, but its effects are not. The feeling of
the Overself's presence and the way to awaken it may both be described for the
benefit of those who have neither experienced the one nor learned the other.
189
If the Overself could be expressed in words
there would be no need for Its silence.
190
We can know the Overself only by being
it, not by thinking it. It is beyond thoughts for it is Thought, Pure Mind,
itself.
191
Everything else can be known, as things and
ideas are known, as something apart or possessed, but the Overself cannot be
truly known in this way. Only by identifying oneself with It can this happen.
192
From the ordinary human point of view the
Overself is the Ever-Still: yet that is our own conceptualization of it, for the
fact is that all the universe's tremendous activity is induced by its presence.
193
That out of which we draw our life and
intelligence is unique and indestructible, beginningless and infinite.
194
Each of us feels that there is something which
directs his will, controls his movements, and constitutes the essence of his
awareness. This something expresses itself to us as the "I."
195
It is not only the hidden and mysterious source
of their own little self but also the unrecognized source of the only moments of
real happiness that they ever have.
196
At some time, to some degree, and in some way,
everything else in human experience can be directly examined and
analysed. But this is the one thing that can never be treated in this way. For
it can never acknowledge itself without objectifying itself, thus making
something other than itself, some simulacrum that is not its real self.
197
The Overself is a fountain of varied forces.
198
What does the coming of Overself consciousness
mean to man? It means, first of all, an undivided mind.
199
Listen to the Roman Stoics' definition of the
Overself: "the divinity which is planted in his breast" of Marcus Aurelius;
"your guardian spirit" of Epictetus.
200
This is the "UNDIVIDED MIND" where experience as
subject and object, as ego and the world, or as higher self and lower self, does
not break consciousness.
201
At the centre of every man's being there is his
imperishable soul, his guardian angel.
202
The Overself is not merely a mental concept for
all men but also a driving force for some men, not merely a pious pleasant
feeling for those who believe in it but also a continuing vital experience for
those who have lifted the ego's heavy door-bar.(P)
203
No one can explain what the Overself is, for it
is the origin, the mysterious source, of the explaining mind, and beyond all its
capacities. But what can be explained are the effects of standing consciously in
its presence, the conditions under which it manifests, the ways in which it
appears in human life and experience, the paths which lead to its
realization.(P)
204
It is a state of pure intelligence but without
the working of the intellectual and ideational process. Its product may be named
intuition. There are no automatically conceived ideas present in it, no
habitually followed ways of thinking. It is pure, clear, stillness.(P)
205
The very essence of that Stillness is the Divine
Being. Yet from it come forth the energies which make and break universes, which
are perpetually active, creative, inventive, and mobile.
206
Let no one imagine that contact with the
Overself is a kind of dreamy reverie or pleasant, fanciful state. It is a vital
relationship with a current of peace, power, and goodwill flowing endlessly from
the invisible centre to the visible self.(P)
207
Although it is true that the Overself is the
real guardian angel of every human being, we should not be so foolish as to
suppose its immediate intervention in every trivial affair. On the contrary, its
care is general rather than particular, in the determination of long-term phases
rather than day-by-day events. Its intervention, if that does occur, will be
occasioned by or will precipitate a crisis.(P)
208
There is a knowing element in man, the real
knower which makes intellectual knowing possible and which is
Consciousness-by-itself.
209
It is that part of man which is fundamental,
real, undying, and truly knowing.(P)
210
This is the element in the human being that is
covered with mystery, which is why, to some extent, the ancient pagan religious
secret or semi-secret organized institutional attempts to penetrate it were
titled "The Mysteries."
211
What could be closer to a man than his own
be-ing? What could be more inward than the core of his self-awareness?
212
Knowledge of law, language, or history can be
collected and becomes a possession but knowledge of the Overself is not at all
the same. It is something one must be: it owns us, we do not have it.
213
Stillness is both a sign that sense and thought,
body and intellect, have been transcended and a symbol of the consciousness of
the presence of the Overself.
214
Whatever is said or written about that august
truth, reality, consciousness, and perception of the Overself, and no matter how
eloquently, it will still be only a pathetic belittlement of its subject. That
is why seers like Lao Tzu in China and Ramana Maharshi in India declared it was
better to be silent and utter nothing at all.
215
To call this Overself "He" merely because the
multitude ignorantly call God so, is to ascribe sex to what is formless and to
give ego to what is impersonal, is to commit the disgusting blasphemy of
anthropomorphism.
216
Just as the eye cannot see itself as a second
thing apart, so the Overself (which you are) cannot objectify itself, cannot
become an object to be looked at or thought about. For in that case you would be
dealing with a pretender, while all your thinking could in the end only deliver
another thought, not the reality itself.
217
The Holy Ghost was called by Origen "the
active force of God."
218
This is its mystery, that seeing all, it is
itself seen by none.
219
Whatever men may say about it will not be enough
to describe it properly, justly, accurately. All such efforts will be clumsy but
they will not be useless. They will be suggestive, offer clues perhaps, each in
its own way.
220
What is its consciousness like? If we use our
ordinary faculties only, we may ponder this problem for a lifetime without
discerning its solution for it is evident that we enter a realm where the very
questioner himself must disappear as soon as he crosses the frontier. The
personal "I" must be like a mere wave in such an ocean, a finite centre in
incomprehensible infinitude. It would be impossible to realize what
mind-in-itself is so long as we narrow down the focus of attention to the
personal "I^^-thought. For it would be like a wave vainly trying to collect and
cram the whole ocean within itself, while refusing to expand its attention
beyond its own finite form.
221
All that he knows and experiences are things in
this world of the five senses. The Overself is not within their sphere of
operation and therefore not to be known and experienced in the same way. This is
why the first real entry into it must necessarily be an entry into
no-thing-ness. The mystical phenomena and mystical raptures happen merely on the
journey to this Void.
222
It is a consciousness where the "here" is
universal and the "now" is everlasting.
223
There is a sense of the total absence of time, a
feeling of the unending character of one's inner being.
224
The being which he finds at the end of this
inner search is an anonymous one. He may ask for a name but he will not get one.
He must be satisfied with the obscure response: "I Am That I Am!"
225
The Overself is there, but it is hidden within
our conscious being. Only there, in this deep atmosphere, do we come upon the
mirage-free Truth, the illusion-free Reality.
226
There are deep places in men's hearts and minds
into which they rarely venture. And yet treasures are hidden there - flashes of
intuition, important revelations, extra strengths, and above all a peace out of
this world.
227
It is Conscious Silence.
228
The Knowing or Self-awareness of the Overself is
never absent; it is always seeing.
229
Yes, your guardian angel is always present and
always the secret witness and recorder of your thoughts and deeds. Whether you
go down into the black depths of hell or ascend to the radiant heights of
heaven, you do not walk alone.
230
Wherever they happen to be, in wide-scattered
countries, widely different climates, and far-apart centuries, men have
experienced this divine presence. What does this show? That it is not dependent
on place and hour, not subject to the laws of space-time.
231
Deep down in the mind and feeling of man is the
mysterious godlike Essence seemingly too deep - alas! - for the ordinary man,
who therefore lets himself be content with hearing from others about it and thus
only at second hand.
232
If we believe in or know of the reality of the
Overself, we must also believe or know that our everyday, transient life is
actively rooted in its timeless being.
233
It is the life-giving, body-healing, or
occult-power-bestowing force in man. It is not a theoretical conception but a
quickening, transforming power.
234
The problem of our relation to the Overself is
difficult to clear up satisfactorily in words. Hence the statements about it in
my book must not be taken too literally and too precisely. Words pertain to a
lower order of being. The Overself is not a discriminating observing entity in
our human and ordinary sense. But its power and intelligence are such that the
activities of discrimination and observation would appear to be at work
merely through its presence. Everything in our lives happens as if the
Overself took a direct interest and arranged its manifestation, and that is the
wonder and mystery of the human situation. Only by comparing this situation with
that of the dreaming man and his various dream egos can we even get a hint of
what its reality is.
235
There is a godlike thing within us which
theology calls the spirit and which, because it is also a portion of the higher
power within the universe, I call the Overself. He is wise indeed who takes it
as his truest guide and makes it his protective guardian.
236
In the end, after many a life on earth, he will
find that much of what he looks for in others will have to be found in himself.
But it will not be found in the surface self. It lies deeply submerged, in a
region where the purest forms exist.
237
Those who want to prolong their ego's little
existence into the Overself's life naturally draw back with shock or horror when
it is explained that there all is anonymous and impersonal.
238
It is nothing frigid, austere, or inhuman but a
warm serenity, a deep glowing peace.
239
The Overself is not only the best part of
himself but also the unalterable part.
240
I am well aware that I have used the term
Overself inconsistently and indifferently and that now a fresh definition is
imposed upon the work in my new book. Does the cancellation of the earlier
definitions render them false? By no means! They are perfectly correct when read
in their proper places; their defect is that they are incomplete; they
are not representative of the highest truth; they are true in the world of
religion, or of mysticism, as the case may be, but not in the world of
philosophy.
241
Although this does not think, its presence makes
thinking possible, and although it does not register on our five senses, it
makes all sense-impressions possible.
242
We cannot see, hear, or touch without the mind.
But the mind, in its turn, cannot function or even exist without the Overself.
243
It is from the Overself that every true prophet
receives his power. "I of myself am nothing," confessed Jesus.
244
The point in consciousness where the mind
projects its thoughts has been called by the ancients "the cave" or "the cave of
the heart." This is because to the outside observer there is nothing but
darkness in it and therefore the cave hides whatever it may contain. When, by an
inward re-orientation of attention, we trace thoughts, whether of external
things or internal fancies, to their hidden origin and penetrate the dark shroud
around it, we penetrate into Mind, the divine Overself. We cannot help
remembering Gray's apposite lines: "Full many a gem of purest ray serene, The
dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear."
245
The Overself does not evolve and does not
progress. These are activities which belong to time and space. It is nowhere in
time and nowhere in space. It is Here, in this deep beautiful and
all-pervading calm, that a man finds his real identity.
246
Everything that exists in time must also exist
in change. The Overself does not exist in time and is not subject to change.
247
Do not insult the Higher Power by calling it
unconscious; it is not only fully conscious but also fully intelligent. Your
real Self, which is this power, needs neither commands nor instructions from the
physical brain.
248
The Overself is not anyone's private property.
249
Why did Jesus give the opening of the Lord's
Prayer as "Our Father" and not as "My Father?" Was he not trying to get his
disciples away from the self-centered attitude to the cosmic one? Was he not
widening their outlook to make them think of mankind's welfare?
250
The Overself surrounds the borderline of the
ego, its perfection stretching into infinity.
251
There is no way of showing the Overself for
anyone's examination. Since the ego comes out of the Overself, the only way it
can see it again is to go back into it.
252
Miguel de Molinos: "The Soul is a pure Spirit
and does not feel herself. Its acts are not perceptible."
253
This beneficent, freedom-bestowing,
character-transforming, soul-awakening, gentle Presence is Overself.
254
The interpretation of "Overself" which I have
given in my book The Wisdom of the Overself is confirmed by the teaching
of a former Sri Shankaracharya of Kolhapur (1912) as told by one of his
disciples. He taught Atman - that part of the Absolute which is Man. He
interpreted it as "higher self."
255
Whether out in this world of ugly happenings or
deep within the mind in a heaven of beauty and peace, the observer is the same;
but in the first case he is the little limited ego and in the second case, he is
THAT from which the ego draws its sustenance - the Overself.
256
If there is not to be an endless series of
observers, which would be unthinkable, there must be an ultimate one, itself
unobserved and self-illuminated.
257
Somewhere at the hidden core of man's being
there is light, goodness, power, and tranquillity.
258
The infinite divine life dwells within all
embodied creatures, therefore in all mankind. It is the final source of his
feelings and his consciousness, however limited they are here in the body
itself.
259
There is nothing else like it; nothing with
which the Overself could be compared.
260
It has no form to be pictured and weighed,
measured and numbered; it makes no movement to be timed and no sound to be
registered on the ear drum.
261
It could be said that the innermost essence of a
man, be it his heart or his mind, is the Overself.
262
No person can hope to discover what God is like
since human beings do not possess the proper faculties for such an undertaking.
The best one can do is to create for himself an idea or interpretation of God
that will suit his understanding and help him. Some people call it by different
names; in fact, in my writings, I have referred to it as the Soul, the Overself,
the Higher Self, the True Self, and so on - all of which are quite correct.
263
The word Overmind should never have been
introduced but now that it is here it must be explained. There is only one
Reality. The nearest notion we can form of it is that it is something mental. If
we think of it as being the sum total of all individual minds, then it is
Overmind; if we can rise higher and know that it cannot be totalized, it is
Overself. The first explanation was originally introduced to explain why
abnormal phenomena can happen but not as a final explanation of what Mind and
Reality are. People have confused the two aims. Actually there is only One
thing, whatever you call it, but it can be studied from different standpoints
and thus we get different results. That thing is Mind - unindividuated,
infinite.
264
The planetary overmind is the active aspect of
the Overself but still only an aspect. It works with space and time although the
latter assumes dimensions far beyond that with which waking human capacity can
cope. The Overself in its passive purity is timeless and spaceless.
265
The Overself has not expressed itself in matter
simply because there is no matter! It has not improved itself by evolution, but
finite, individual minds have done so. The universal gods are the Overminds, the
sum totals of each system - that is, concepts of the human mind which are
dropped by the adept when they have served their purpose in bringing him to That
which is unlimited. Seek the kingdom first, and all these occult powers will be
added unto you.
266
The point in the heart is a focus for meditation
and also an experience during meditation. When, however, one rises to the
ultimate path he disregards the heart because the Overself has nothing to do
with localities or geography of any kind; it cannot be measured.
267
It is often asked why we have so little contact
with the Overself, why it is so hard to find the clues which shall lead us to
it.
268
There is more within him of the good than a man
suspects, even though experience may make him believe otherwise. But it lies in
a deeper layer, hence it needs a longer time to bring it up.
269
It is not the Reality found by speculation or
thinking alone, for intellect can err. It is the Reality found by the mystic
intuition of mystic experience, by Reason (as opposed to intellect) of
Philosophy, and verified by a realization more immediate and intimate than the
ego of ordinary life, with its passions, emotions, and thoughts, and deeper than
anything ever before experienced.
270
There is no single term satisfactory on all
points for use when referring to THAT. The name "Overself" is no exception to
this situation. But to those who object to this coinage of a new word, the
answer is best given by the editor of the latest edition of Fowler's Modern
English Usage, Sir Ernest Gowers: "I'm all in favour of new words. How else
would a language live and flourish?"
271
It is the observer which is itself unobserved.
272
It is as difficult to trace the spiritual source
of a man's life as it is to trace the mathematical source of pi, of
3.14159...
273
We may try to make this idea as clearly
definable as we can, but nothing put into words can in the end be more than a
hint, a clue, or merely suggestive.
274
Just as the pearl is well hidden within the
oyster and not apparent until searched for, so the Overself is well hidden in
man.
275
The Christ-self who was in Jesus is in us too.
276
It is like nothing that we know from experience
or can picture from imagination. Space does not hold it. Time does not condition
it.
277
There are some truths which are durable ones.
Change cannot change them. This is one of them.
278
If most men fail to recognize the Overself, if
they deny its presence in Nature or in themselves, can they be blamed? What else
is so elusive?
279
It was, I believe, Matthew Arnold who first used
this term "higher self," and it is certainly expressive enough for our present
purpose.
280
Here is one thing which does not have to move
with the times, although the communication of it and instruction in it, do.
281
Here is the concentrated ultimate essence of his
being.
282
In this spiritual self we may find the origin of
life.
283
That which is within us as the Overself, being
godlike, is out of time and eternal.
284
There is something within him which is without
personal existence, without a name, and without scrutable face. It is the
Overself.
285
Here is the beginning, the middle, and the end
of all wisdom.
286
All power and all intelligence reside within it.
287
It is "the sacred spirit dwelling within us,
observer and guardian of all our evil and our good" of Seneca.
288
The Overself is shrouded in seemingly
inaccessible and impenetrable mystery.
289
In the gravest depths of a man's being he will
find, not fouling slime and evil, but cleansing divinity and goodness.
290
This is the irreducible essence of a man, where
he is.
291
It is inaccessible to the intellect, unknowable
by ordinary egoistic man. Yet there are some into whose consciousness It has
entered.
292
It is a felt presence.
293
That from which the intellect's power recoils
and the ego's pride suffers - that is the Overself!
294
He is not separate from his own experience, not
an observer watching it. For there is only the inner silence, with which he is
identified if he turns to examine the I, only the pure consciousness.
295
It is the presence of the Overself within us
which makes more consciousness possible, whether it be the consciousness of the
dream or the consciousness of waking.
296
There are two biblical quotations, one from the
Song of Solomon and one from Saint Paul, that accurately refer to the Overself.
This indeed is the real soul of man, whose finding here and now, during our life
on earth, is the task silently set us by life itself.
297
That which finds itself and lives in him, works
through him and is the God within: a holy Presence.
298
The real self is universal, in the sense that it
does not belong to him or to his neighbour.
299
"The pristine nature of the Self is effortless,
spontaneous Tapas. Incessant Tapas of that kind leads to the
manifestation of all powers." - Sri Ramana Maharshi.
300
This mysterious entity which dwells on the other
side of our earthly consciousness is not as unperceptive of us as we are of it.
301
The Overself is truly our guardian angel, ever
with us and never deserting us. It is our invisible saviour. But we must realize
that it seeks primarily to save us not from suffering but from the ignorance
which is the cause of our suffering.
302
This particular function of the Overself was
known also to the more percipient among men of the Middle Ages and of antiquity.
Thus Epictetus: "Zeus hath placed by the side of each, a man's own Guardian
Spirit, who is charged to watch over him."
303
Atma = higher self; Paramatma =
Mind; Ishvara = World Mind. Overself - all three generalized (preferred
by Hiriyanna). Jiva = individual ...(Tony's Center) "souls ...behind the
physicomental complex commonly called the individual ...the eternal
consciousness (Atman) as limited by the organism...the sense-organ, the
manas, and the antahkarana."
304
We found it necessary, in the interests of
greater precision and better exposition, to restrict the term "Overself" to
represent the ultimate reality of man, and to introduce the term "World-Mind" to
represent the ultimate reality of the universe.
305
The Overself is the representative of God in
man.
306
The Overself is a part of World-Mind. Whereas
World-Mind is beyond human capacity to know, the Overself is within that
capacity.
307
That point in man where the two worlds of
being - infinite and finite - can be said to touch, is Overself.
308
The gap between man's mind and God's mind is
uncrossable. But the gap between his everyday mind and the Overself - which is
close to God - is not. Through it he may penetrate a little deeper into the
mystery.
309
The Overself is so close to God, so akin to the
World-Mind, that no man need look farther, or aspire higher.
310
The Overself is the highest point in the human
being; it is there where he can find himself "made in the image of God."
311
It is true to say that the Overself possesses
properties which belong also to God. But because one man is like another,
we do not claim him to be identical with that other. The Overself is Godlike in
nature but not in identity.
312
The Overself is our knowledge,
experience, or sight of the World-Mind, of God, and is the only one we shall
ever get while we are still in the flesh.
313
There is a point where the human meets the
divine, where the conscious ego emerges from the all-encompassing Void. That
point we call the Overself.
314
There is some point in each individual being
where the human and the divine must join, where man's little consciousness bends
low before, or blends subtly with, the Universal Mind which is his ultimate
source. It is impossible to describe that intersection in any terms which shall
adequately fit it, but it can be named. In philosophy it is the Overself.
315
The essence of man is his Overself, which is an
emanation from Mind.
316
Here is the focal point of all spiritual
searching, here man meets God.(P)
317
The Overself is the point where the One Mind is
received into consciousness. It is the "I" freed from narrowness, thoughts,
flesh, passion, and emotion - that is, from the personal ego.(P)
318
That point where man meets the Infinite is the
Overself, where he, the finite, responds to what is absolute, ineffable and
inexhaustible Being, where he reacts to That which transcends his own existence
- this is the Personal God he experiences and comes into relation with. In this
sense his belief in such a God is justifiable.(P)
319
Overself is the inner or true self of man,
reflecting the divine being and attributes. The Overself is an emanation from
the ultimate reality but is neither a division nor a detached fragment of it. It
is a ray shining forth but not the sun itself.(P)
320
It is true that the nature of God is inscrutable
and that the laws of God are inexorable. But it is also true that the God-linked
soul of man is accessible and its intuitions available.(P)
321
This divine self is the unkillable and unlosable
soul, forever testifying to the source, whence it came.
322
Those who consider the hidden mind to be a mere
storehouse of forgotten childhood memories or adolescent experiences and
repressed adult wishes consider only a part of it, only a fraction. There is
another and even still more hidden part which links man with the very sources of
the universe - God.
323
That point of contact in consciousness where man
first feels God and later vanishes into God, is the Overself.
324
The Overself is a part of the One Infinite
Life-Power as the dewdrop is a part of the ocean.
325
In the normally covered centre of a man's being,
covered by his thoughts and feelings and passions as a person, a self, IT IS. It
is here that he is connected with the larger Being behind the universe, the
World-Mind. In this sense he is not really an isolated unit, not alone. God is
with him. It was a simple shepherd on Mount Horeb who, during a glimpse, asked
"Who art Thou?" Came the answer: "I am He Who IS!"
326
With this grand consciousness, man reaches the
APHELION of his orbit. He can go no higher and remain man.
327
Speaking metaphorically, we may say that the
Overself is that fragment of God which dwells in man, a fragment which has all
the quality and grandeur of God without all its amplitude and power.
328
The World-Mind's reflection in us is the
Overself.
329
The thoughts and feelings which flow like a
river through our consciousness make up the surface self. But underneath them
there is a deeper self which, being an emanation from divine reality,
constitutes our true self.
330
That which I call the Overself is intermediate
between the ordinary human and the World-Mind. It includes man's higher nature
but stretches into what is above him, the divine.
331
That which connects the individual man to the
Universal Spirit, I call the Overself. This connection can never be broken. Its
existence is the chief guarantee that there is hope of salvation for all,
not merely for those who think their group alone will be granted it.
332
It is his own greater self, his Overself,
that he thus experiences, although he may be so overwhelmed by its mysterious
Power, so awed by its ethereality, that he usually believes - and names - it
God. And in one mode of meaning, his belief is not without justification. For at
the core of the experience, he, the atom within the World-Mind, receives the
revelation that it is ever there and, more, ever supporting him.
333
It is this, the deepest part of his being, his
final essential self, which is a man's Overself, and which links him with the
World-Mind. It is this Presence within which evokes all his spiritual quality.
334
This is the essential being of a man, where his
link with God lies.
335
Epictetus helps us to understand, and our
intellect to define, the Overself. "Do you not know," he says, "that you carry a
god within you? ...You are a distinct portion of the essence of God and contain
a part of Him within yourself."
336
It is amazing paradox that the Overself
completely transcends the body yet completely permeates it: both these
descriptions are simultaneously true.
337
Although the Overself does not pass through the
diverse experiences of its imperfect image, the ego, nevertheless it witnesses
them. Although it is aware of the pain and pleasure experienced by the body
which it is animating, it does not itself feel them; although detached from
physical sensations, it is not ignorant of them. On the other hand, the personal
consciousness does feel them because it regards them as states of its own self.
Thus the Overself is conscious of our joys and sorrows without itself sharing
them. It is aware of our sense-experience without itself being physically
sentient. Those who wonder how this is possible should reflect that a man
awakened from a nightmare is aware once again in the form of a revived memory of
what he suffered and what he sensed but yet does not share again either the
suffering or the sensations.
338
The Overself perceives and knows the individual
self, but only as an imperturbable witness - in the same way that the sun
witnesses the various objects upon the earth but does not enter into a
particular relation with a particular object. So too the Overself is present in
each individual self as the witness and as the unchanging consciousness which
gives consciousness to the individual.
339
The "I" is immeasurably greater than the ego
which it projects or than the intellect, which the ego uses.
340
The normal man thinks he is body plus mind, with
emphasis on the body. But self-questioning and analysis show that, although he
certainly has these two things and is certainly associated with them, the "I" is
in fact neither of them. It is, by contrast, not changing and quite elusive. It
is not in space, as the body is, nor in time, as the mind is. It is, in fact, a
mystery. The attempt to find out what it is brings up the questions of
existence, life, activity, and consciousness.
341
All that anyone basically possesses unlost
through all his life is his "I." All that he really is, is this same "I."
The physical body, although seemingly inseparable from it, is something lived in
and used, as a house is lived in and a tool is used.
342
To look at a man and at his life from the
outside is only to see half the man. To look at them from the inside is to see
the other half. Put these two fragments together and there is the whole man. Or
so it would seem. But what if behind his thoughts and feelings there were still
another self of an utterly different kind and quality? And this exactly is his
situation. He does not know all of himself, and he understands it even less.
Those who have been privileged to look behind the veil can only urge him to
recognize this incompleteness and teach him what steps to take to overcome it.
343
The divine soul in us is utterly above and
unaffected by the sense impressions. If we become conscious of it, we also
become conscious of a supersensual order of existence.
344
It is a higher self not only in a moral sense
but also in a cosmic sense. For the lower one issued forth from it, but under
limitations of consciousness, form, space, and time which are not in the parent
Self.
345
When we come to see that it is the body alone
that expresses the coming into life and the going into death, that in the true
self there is neither a beginning nor an ending but rather LIFE itself, we shall
see aright.
346
No men are without their sense of the Overself,
but they miscomprehend and therefore misapply it. The result is that ego, the
little part, is conceived to be the whole, the All.
347
Because the godlike is in each one of us, and
because no two of us are alike, each has his or her separate gifts, capacities,
or talents to express. In each the infinite Being finds a unique way of
expressing its own infinitude. Even if we have no gifts we have our individual
characteristics.
348
It is pure Being overlaid by many thoughts and
much feeling.
349
Here in the ego we may perceive a reproduction
of the sacred Overself under the limitations of time and space. Whoever grasps
this great truth knows henceforth that this Overself is no more distant from him
than his own heart and that what he calls "I" is inseparably united with what
men call God.
350
We do not subscribe to the belief that the
divine soul has somehow gone astray and got enslaved by the animal body.
351
His higher self is not polluted by his own
pollutions any more than sunlight is affected by the foul places in which it
often shines.
352
The higher self affects the ego but is not
affected by it. Its existence goes on quite independently of the serialized
earth appearances of the ego, and persists when the other ceases. The
insensitive can never know it, and may roundly deny it, but the others sometimes
receive unforgettable glimpses for which they give thanks to Allah for years
afterwards.
353
Just as space is unaffected equally by the evil
deeds or virtuous actions of men, so the Overself is unaffected by the character
or conduct of the ego. It is neither made worse by the ego's wrong-doing nor
better by its righteousness.
354
"I am the way, the Truth," announced Jesus. Who
is this I? In the narrow and shallower sense it is the master. In the
broader and deeper sense, it is the Christ-self within, the spiritual
consciousness.
355
Why did Jesus say, "I and my Father are one,"
but yet a little later add, "The Father is greater than I"? The answer is that
Jesus the man had attained complete harmony with his higher Self and felt
himself one with it, but the universal Christ-principle will always be greater
than the man himself; the Overself will always transcend the person.
356
Although it is still identified with him, since
it is his own mind at its best level, it is immensely grander wiser and nobler
than he.
357
It is an entity greater, nobler, wiser, and
stronger than himself yet mysteriously and inseparably linked to himself; it is
indeed his super-self.
358
Our bodies are born at some point of time and
somewhere in space but their essence, the Overself, is birthless, timeless, and
placeless.
359
This is a man's true individuality, not that
mentally constructed "I" (which deludes him into acceptance as such).
360
It is never anything else than its own perfect
self, never contrary to its own unique and infinite nature.
361
It is true that we are but poor and faulty,
sadly limited, and miserably shrunken expressions of the divine spirit.
Nevertheless, we are expressions of it.
362
The personal pronoun "I" really represents the
Overself, the divine part of man. What people usually refer to as "I" - the body
or the intellect or the emotions - is not the basic "I" at all.
363
You ask a question which (1) ought not to be
asked and (2) is quite unanswerable. Nevertheless I shall try: "What good is a
Consciousness of which we are unaware?" you argue. Answer: "No good!" But your
question is in error. There is some awareness, although a limited one.
This appears as your ego-consciousness, which is a reflection of the
Consciousness you ask about. Because the Universal and Infinite cannot be packed
into the personal and finite, your demand, natural though it be, is
unreasonable. Erigena, the first British - I beg pardon, Irish - philosopher
(ninth century) was much influenced by Dionysius the Areopagite (first century)
and it was under such influence that he wrote: "God Himself knows not what He
is, for He is not a 'what.'" So why ask a mere man?
364
Just as there is a sun hidden behind the sun,
the divinity which animates it, so in the human being there is a Mind within the
mind - and that is his Overself.
365
The personality is always limited and chained,
the higher individuality always infinite and free.
366
Each man is the expression of this infinite
life-power.
367
His awareness of life in the five senses will
rest upon another and inner awareness. A second and hidden self will thus seem
to support his outer one.
368
The true I yields quite a different
feeling, experience, and consciousness from the familiar physical ego.
369
There is a deeper level of every man's mind
which is not subject to his passions, not moved by his desires, not affected by
his senses.
370
It is not possible for the timeless, spaceless,
formless Overself to be degraded into activity by its time-bound, space-tied,
form-limited offspring the person.
371
The essence of man is not his earthly body. Nor
is it the ghostly duplicate of that body, as many spiritists and some
religionists think.
372
The Overself is the Higher mind in man, his
divine soul as distinguished from his human-animal nature. It is the same as
Plato's "nous."
373
The true unchanging self is apart from any
historical era and is not dependent on outer changes of custom and form.
374
The aim of the mystic is to know what he is,
apart from his physical body, his lower emotion, his personal ego; it is to know
his inner-most self. When this aim is successfully realized, he knows then with
perfect certitude that he is a ray of the divine sun.
375
How shall he know and understand that this very
awareness, of which so small is the fragment that he experiences, is a limited
and conditioned part of the Great Awareness itself, of God?
376
The inhabitant of this fleshly body, including
its accompanying invisible "ghost," is a sacred one.
377
There, within and yet behind his personal
consciousness, is this other sphere of his own being into which he must one day
be re-born as a chick from an egg.
378
This is his best self; this is what he really is
under all the defects.
379
The higher self is a paradox. It is both central
and universal. The two are together.
380
The knowledge that no two human beings are alike
refers to their bodies and minds. But this leaves out the part of their nature
which is spiritual, which is found and experienced in deep meditation. In that,
the deepest part of their conscious being, the personal self vanishes; only
consciousness-in-itself, thought-free, world-free, remains. This is the source
of the "I" feeling, and it is exactly alike in the experience of all other human
beings. This is the part which never dies, "where God and man may mingle."
381
There is only one Overself for the whole race,
but the point of contact with it is special and unique, and constitutes man's
higher individuality.
382
Whereas every human personality is different in
its characteristics from every other one, no human Overself is different in its
characteristics from any other one. The seekers of all times and all places have
always found one and the same divine being when they found the Overself.
383
This Overself is everywhere one and the same for
all men. The experience of rising into awareness of it does not differ in
actuality from one man to another, but the purity with which he absorbs it,
interprets it, understands it, does. Hence, the varieties of expression used
about it, the clash of revelations concerning it.
384
This is the paradox, that the Overself is at
once universal and individual. It is the first because it overshadows all men as
a single power. It is the second because it is found by each man within himself.
It is both space and the point in space. It is infinite Spirit and yet it is
also the holy presence in everyone's heart.
385
This other being is outside the "I" yet,
paradoxically, and in another sense, it is inside the "I." It is not himself yet
also it is himself. If these statements cannot be understood at first reading,
do not therefore denounce them. If you are really in earnest, approach them
prayerfully or, if your feelings cannot be made to run on that line, aspiringly
at the precise moments when you approach the mysterious moment that transmutes
your waking state into the sleep state. But do not expect to receive
satisfaction with the first trial nor even a twentieth - although this is always
possible. If you do not desert the enterprise through impatience, you will find
one day that you are at last able to read, clearly and correctly, the meaning of
these mystical words. Other people have done it, have emerged from the mind's
obscurity into the intuition's clarity, although at varying pace. They have
succeeded because the constitution of man, being double, makes it possible.
386
The mysterious character of the Overself
inevitably puzzles the intellect. We may appreciate it better if we accept the
paradoxical fact that it unites a duality and that therefore there are two ways
of thinking of it, both correct. There is the divine being which is entirely
above all temporal concerns, absolute and universal, and there is also the
demi-divine being which is in historical relation with the human ego.
387
It is possible for the fully illumined mystic to
experience two different states of identification with his Higher Self. In one,
he becomes conscious of the latter on IT's own plane; in the other, which he
experiences in deep trance only, even that is transcended and there is only the
ONE/Being. Yet this is not annihilation. What it is, (infinite) is beyond
human comprehension, and therefore beyond human description.
388
It is hard to tell in words about the wordless,
hard to formulate in intellect-born phrases what is beyond the intellect. To say
that the higher self is or is not individualized is to distort meaning and
arouse miscomprehension. But a simile may help us here. The drop of water which,
with the countless millions of other drops, makes up the ocean is distinct but
not separable from them. It is both different from and yet the same as them. At
the base of each man's being stretches the one infinite life alone, but within
it his centre of existence rests.
389
At the end of all its adventures, the lower self
may indeed have to go, but the indestructible higher self will not go. In this
sense there is no utter annihilation of the individual, no complete mergence of
it into an all-swallowing ocean of cosmic consciousness, as so many Western
critics of Eastern wisdom believe to be the latter's last word.
390
Because of the paradoxically dual nature which
the Overself possesses, it is very difficult to make clear the concept of the
Overself. Human beings are rooted in the ultimate mind through the Overself,
which therefore partakes on the one hand of a relationship with a vibratory
world and on the other of an existence which is above all relations. A
difficulty is probably due to the vagueness or confusion about which standpoint
it is to be regarded from. If it is thought of as the human soul, then the
vibratory movement is connected with it. If it is thought of as transcending the
very notion of humanity, and therefore in its undifferentiated character, the
vibratory movement must disappear.(P)
391
If we are to think correctly, we cannot stop
with thinking of the Overself as being only within us. After this idea has
become firmly established for its metaphysical and devotional value, we must
complete the concept by thinking of the Overself as being also without us. If in
the first concept it occupies a point in space, in the second one it is beyond
all considerations of place.(P)
392
We may take comfort in the fact that the
Overself never at any moment abandons or obliterates the human personality,
however debased it becomes. Nor could it do so, whatever foolish cults say to
the contrary, for through this medium it finds an expression in time-space.
393
When we say that the Overself is within the
heart, it would be a great error to think that we mean it is limited to the
heart. For the heart is also within it. This seeming paradox will yield to
reflection and intuition. The mysterious relationship between the ego and the
Overself has been expressed by Jesus in the following words: "The Father is in
the Son, and the Son is in the Father."
394
The dictionary defines individuality as
separate and distinct existence. Both the ego and the Overself have such an
existence. But whereas the ego has this and nothing more, the Overself has this
consciousness within the universal existence. That is why we have called it the
higher individuality.
395
The fact that after awaking the mind picks up
the thoughts of the day before, that the individuality connects with the old
individuality of pre-sleep, proves the continuity of existence of a part of Self
both during sleep as during waking.
396
Every situation in human life can be approached
from two possible points of view. The first is the limited one and is that of
the personal self. The second is the larger one and is that of Universal Self.
The larger and longer view always justifies itself in the end.
397
Each Overself is like a circle whose centre is
in some individual but whose circumference is not in any individual.
398
We must not imagine that the subordination of
this sense of personal identity leads to any loss of consciousness - rather the
reverse. Man becomes more, not less, for he emerges into the fullness and
freedom of one universal life. He thinks of himself as: "I, A.B., am a point
within the Overself," whereas before he only thought: "I am A.B."
399
The higher self keeps the same kind of
individuality without being separate that each facet of a diamond keeps. The
light which shines through it shines equally through all facets alike, remaining
one and the same.
400
The individuality is beyond the personality -
its level is higher. The one must prompt while the other must watch the pitiless
destruction of its wishes and hopes, its values and desires, until only the pure
being of individuality is left.
401
It is a kind of impersonal being but it is not
utterly devoid of all individuality.
402
As a wave sinks back into the sea, so the
consciousness which passes out of the personal self sinks back into its higher
individuality.
403
This is the general mind behind our small
personal minds, the one behind the many.
404
There is no other way to settle doubts
concerning the soul with incontestable certainty than the way of getting
personal knowledge of it by a mystical glimpse.
405
Even when a man denies the Overself and thinks
it out of his view of life, he is denying and thinking by means of the
Overself's own power - attenuated and reflected though it be. He is able to
reject the divine presence with his mind only because it is already in his mind.
406
Buddhism points out that although Nirvana
is, there is no self to perceive it. As Buddhism denies a permanent self,
the question of what Nirvana is experimentally does not arise. Nirvana is
not a state of mind which is to be produced but is what is realized when the
long-cherished notion of "I" is given up. Nirvana, in short, is the miracle of
egoless being. The Buddha's doctrine of the soul was stated in negative terms
because he was controverting current misconceptions. He explained this in
Alagadupama Majjhima, 1, 135: "Even in this present life, my brethren, I
say that the soul is indefinable. Though I say and teach thus, there are those
who accuse me falsely of being a nihilist, of teaching the non-existence and
annihilation of the soul. That is what I am not and do not teach."
407
There is a long line of testimony, to which I
must add my own, that the Overself is no metaphysical abstraction or mystical
hallucination but a living and inspiring, if uncommon, part of human experience.
To know it is to know one's best self.
408
The Overself is not something imagined or
supposed. Its presence is definitely felt.
409
If a man asks why he can find no trace of God's
presence in himself, I answer that he is full of evidence, not merely traces.
God is present in him as consciousness, the state of being aware; as thought,
the capacity to think; as activity, the power to move; and as stillness, the
condition of ego, emotion, intellect, and body which finally and clearly reveals
what these other things simply point to. "Be still, and know that I am God" is a
statement of being whose truth can be tested by experiment and whose value can
be demonstrated by experience.(P)
410
When we realize that the intellect can put forth
as many arguments against this theme as for it, we realize that there is in the
end only one perfect proof of the Overself's existence. The Overself must prove
itself. This can come about faintly through the intuition or fully through the
mystical experience.(P)
411
Whoever needs proofs of the authenticity of this
experience has not had it.
412
The difficulty of collecting and studying,
sifting and describing the varieties of mystical experience which may be found
today is a barrier to the expansion of scientific psychology. For those persons
who are most eager to talk about their own experiences are the most dubious and
unreliable source. Those who are the least eager, feeling the matter to be too
private, personal, intimate, and sacred, are able to offer valuable evidence.
413
Testimony to the existence and reality of the
glimpse will be found in the literatures of all peoples through all times. It is
not a newly manufactured idea, nor a newly manufactured fancy. A man who denies
it is foolish so to limit his own possibilities, but he may learn better with
time.
414
These glimpses cannot rightly be dismissed by
the scientist as merely self-suggested or wholly hallucinatory. Nor can they
properly be regarded by the metaphysician as valueless for truth. As human
beings we live by experience, and they are personal experiences which help to
confirm the truth of the impersonal bases underneath them and which encourage us
to continue on the same path.
415
The Overself is a living reality. Nobody would
waste his years, his endeavours, and his energies in its quest if it were merely
an intellectual concept or an emotional fancy.
416
The Overself is not only a necessary conception
of logical thought. It is also a beautiful fact of personal experience.
417
There are three signs, among others, of the
Soul's presence in a Soul-denying generation. They are: moral conscience,
artistic imagination, and metaphysical speculation.
418
Criticism which knows only sensuous and
intellectual experience can be little valid here if, indeed, it is not entirely
irrelevant.
419
When a man confuses the nature of the mind with
its own thoughts, when he is unable properly to analyse consciousness and
memory, when he has never practised introspection and meditation successfully,
he can know nothing of the soul and may well be sceptical of its existence.
420
That the Overself is not the product of an
inflated imagination but has a real existence, is a truth which any man who has
the required patience and submits to the indispensable training may verify
himself.
421
It is not a dim abstraction but a real presence.
Not a vague theory but a vital fact.
422
To the man of insight there is something
strange, ironic, and yet pathetic in the spectacle of those who turn the
consciousness and the understanding derived from Overself against the
acknowledgment of Its existence.
423
Because he regards the theory and practice of
his subject from the inside, the mystic can discuss it with a correctness and
authority which most critics do not possess because they are outside it. They
are largely in the dark about it - he is actually in the light.
424
Those who have never felt it in themselves nor
seen it demonstrated in others cannot understand the blessedness of such a
state.
425
Because they are unready for it, they cannot
endure such an experience. The peace it imparts is too impersonal and would
suffocate them. The detachment which it creates makes the worldly life seem less
important and is too frightening.
426
The recognition that this experience does happen
is increasing rapidly in Western countries but in the East it has never been
doubted. The criticism that mystical experience is subjective and illusory is
being dropped, as it ought to be.
427
Those who have never experienced this state yet
venture to criticize it as illusory are dealing with mere words, not facts.
428
If the ordinary man seldom gets these subtler
experiences it is because his nature is too coarse, his mind too physically
based, his focus too personal to permit him to receive them.
429
Deep within his own heart, hidden within his own
consciousness, every person carries all the evidence for the truth of these
teachings that he or she is ever likely to need.
430
That arrogance which denies heaven to the
unorthodox does not trouble the mystic. He finds heaven here in this
life, now before the transition of death.
431
At such times, unexpected and unsought though
they are, he feels the nearness of God, the love of God, the reality of God.
Whoever ventures to call them delusions is himself deluded.
432
Do these moods of utter tranquillity have to
repeat themselves again and again to convince doubting man that there is indeed
a state of consciousness beyond the everyday so-called normal one? Is not such
personal experience the best offering of testimony from the Soul to its own
existence?
433
Not only philosophy, but the teaching of all
seers like Krishna and Jesus, would have to be pronounced fraudulent if the
Overself were not a fact.
434
In its oneness and sameness for participants the
world over, the mystic experience proves its validity.
435
Men who pronounce judgements or write opinions
upon mysticism without actual and personal experience of its mental states and
phenomena, who interpret it only from the outside and only as observers, cannot
be reliable authorities on the subject.
436
Those critics who are on the outside looking in,
do not and cannot know as much about the truth of mysticism as those who are
deep within its inside looking out.
437
There is only one way to settle his question of
whether the Overself exists and that is the very way most moderns refuse to
accept. Each must gain for himself the authentic mystical experience.
Sugar can really be known only by its sweet taste, the Overself only by opening
the doors of the mind to consciousness of its presence.
438
Those who have had this overwhelming experience
require no arguments to make them believe in the soul. They know that they
are the soul.
439
An experience which is so convincing, so real,
that no intellectual argument to the contrary can stand against it, is final.
Let others say what they will, he remains unswayed.