1
The Long Path is unutterably irksome whereas the
Short Path is gloriously attractive. The one is associated with toil and
suffering; its emblem is the Cross. The other is associated with peace and joy;
its emblem is the Sun. Yet, those who would prematurely desert the one for the
other will find their hopes frustrated in the end, however enthusiastic and
rapturous the experience may be in the beginning. This is because Nature, the
Overself, will not let them enjoy permanently what must be taken into every part
of their being, properly cleansed and prepared to absorb it, with the being
itself properly equilibrated to endure the experience of absorption without
stimulating the ego.
2
The introduction of the Short Path ought not to be
mistimed; it ought not to be introduced until enough work has been done to
prepare a moral and intellectual basis for it, and enough balance secured. Then
only will its capacity to lead the seeker toward the glorious climax of his
quest be actualized. If introduced too early it merely stimulates egotism,
animates intellectual pride, or simulates illumination.
3
Most beginners are not usually ready for the entire
Short Path. They ought not attempt more than its simpler practices, such as
those concerned with recollection of the Quest and remembrance of the Overself.
If they attempt the more advanced exercises, such as self-identification with
the Overself or cultivation of the attitude which rejects evil's reality, they
are likely to put themselves in a false, self-deceived position. That is, the
attempt to ignore the ego does not eradicate it but merely alters its pattern.
If it seems to be absent because the divine is present, the transformation has
taken place in imagination, not in actuality. It would be better to postpone the
advanced part until they have done enough preparatory work on the Long Path, and
thus cleansed their emotions, developed mental controls, and balanced their
temperament.
4
There is no need to think twice to understand that
this is a dangerous doctrine. If a man believes that he is already divine and
has nothing more to gain in that way, pitfalls lie ahead of him: first,
self-deception leading to spiritual arrogance; second, indolence leading to lack
of any effort to purify character and better the mind. The end could be a smug
dwelling in illusion, very far from the divine reality it is supposed to be. Out
of such illusions step forth the ambitious leaders of little groups or large
movements, claiming special knowledge, power, vision, authority, even
messiahship.
5
If the Long Path is to be utterly avoided and no
self-restraints or trainings practised, in what way is this different from being
an ordinary person who behaves as he pleases? Indeed, even the Zen master Ma-tsu
admitted as much when he said, "If there is no discipline, this is to be the
same as ordinary people."
6
Properly used - and especially at the proper time,
after due preparation - the Short Path is an essential phase of every man's
quest. But misunderstood and wrongly used, by the wrong person at the wrong
time, regarded solely as a cheap easy and rapid way to success, an excuse for
dodging labour and for evading discipline, it is turned into something
meretricious.
7
The dangers inherent in the Short Path have to be
noted and even proclaimed. The self-identification with the divine leads to the
idea that since it is sinless the practiser is sinless, too, and whatever he
does is right. Such an idea can come only to those who unconsciously seek
excuses to justify the satisfaction of their desires. To them, the Long Path
with its exhortations to self-control and self-discipline is something to be
evaded. Another danger is the conceited belief that since the divine is
ever-present, the goal has been attained and nothing further need be done - no
exercises, no study, no meditation, and of course no ascetic regimes. It is such
dangers which were part of the reasons why, in former times, the hidden teaching
was not communicated to any persons until their character was first secretly and
carefully tested for maturity and their mind was tested for fitness. This
caution was as existent in Christian circles as in Hindu ones. Today, since it
has largely been broken down, the results are to be seen in the West as well as
in the East, among solitary obscure individuals as well as among publicized
cults. They are to be seen in mental derangement and immoral licence, in
parrot-like prattle and charlatanic deception.
8
Whether the ego is constantly anxious about itself,
as on the Long Path, or constantly joyous in itself, as on the substitutes for
the true Short Path, it is still the old ego.
9
Holding on to this awareness of the Overself
automatically brings with it control over the body's appetites and desires. This
is one of the benefits of success on the Short Path, but such easy spontaneous
control lasts no longer than the awareness.
10
Those who use terms or utter phrases which
transcend all meaning, delude themselves and mystify others to no purpose. If
the experiences and insights of the Short Path are beyond intellectual
comprehension, and consequently beyond intellectual communication, the proper
way to consider them is in perfect silence - not in speech or writing.
11
Where the Short Path has been followed exclusively
and without the guidance of a tested inner voice or a master competent in both
paths, the man is bereft of the background of self-discipline and self-training
which the Long Path provides. He will then have to pick his way over the
stonefalls of hallucination and along the verge of precipices of paranoia.
12
The Short Path advocates who decry the need of the
Long Path altogether because, being divine in essence, we have only to realize
what we already are, are misled by their own half-truth. What we actually find
in the human situation is that we are only potentially divine. The work of
drawing out and developing this potential still needs to be done. This takes
time, discipline, and training, just as the work of converting a seed into a
tree takes time.(P)
13
It is as sure as the sun's rising that if the mass
of people are taught that good is no better than evil, both being merely
relative, or no more valuable than evil, both being concerned with the illusory
ego, they will fall into immorality, wickedness, and disaster. To teach them the
Short Path before they have acquired sufficient disciplinary habits from the
Long one will only degrade them.(P)
14
Those who are attracted to the Short Path because
apparently it makes none of the disciplinary demands which the Long Path makes,
who are repelled or frightened by the self-subjugation and self-abnegation which
the latter requires, will not have so easy an escape as they think.
15
To have come prematurely to this yoga would have
led to confusion of planes of reference, to self-deception, unbalance, and
merely verbal realization.
16
The Short Path leads to a continual happiness, for
it refuses to look upon the world's sorrows and one's own troubles but
cheerfully gazes beyond them toward the eternal and impersonal blessedness. But
since it can do this theoretically only, for realization depends on Grace, the
happiness may one day vanish when fact collides with faith.
17
Because good and bad have no meaning on the plane
where there is no opposition, no struggle between them, the "enlightened" man
who taught others to ignore this opposition and abandon this struggle, who told
them that to do what they will is the whole of the law, would thereby prove his
own lack of enlightenment. In other words, he would be a dangerous impostor or a
mere intellectual.
18
Yes, the Short Path extremists, and especially the
more poetic, imaginative, and artistic ones among them, may get their
illuminations more quickly and more frequently. But, because they have not
purified, straightened, and formed their characters, these are distorted,
crooked, or adulterated illuminations.
19
Most Short Path teachings lack a cosmogony. They
evade the fact that God is, and must be, present on the plane of manifestation
and expressing through the entire universe. Why?
20
They consider themselves to be free from the
possibility of committing sin, since they are joined to the divine
consciousness. They do not regard the moral codes of society as binding upon
them, since they are a law unto themselves. Whatever they do, it can only be
right. The dangers here are, of course, first, that the ego's desire may only
too easily be mistaken for the divine ordinance, and second, that all things are
permitted to them. Since they feel that they are in a state of grace, there is
no longer any controlling power to judge, criticize, or curb their acts, no
outside help to warn them when they go perilously astray.
21
It would be a misconception to use the Short Path
as an attempt to escape from one's own inadequacies.
22
The Short Path describes the consciousness
to be attained but fails to prescribe the way to attain it.
23
The danger of Short Path, and of the "As If"
exercise, is to fall into deception of oneself, or even into charlatanic
deception of others.
24
If the conscious practice of self-discipline and
the deliberate pursuit of virtue are discarded too soon, the practice of
unscrupled selfishness and the pursuit of unworthy pleasures will take their
place. The character begins to fall and a man who might have ennobled himself
and helped his fellows degrades himself and abrases them.
25
To make a fetish out of freedom from dogma, from
authority, from organization, from convention - as Krishnamurti does - is to
worship a good idea so blindly and so fanatically that bad results follow.
26
The Short Pathers want to rush towards their goal
in one all-sweeping operation. They lack the patience to move toward it step by
step. They do not comprehend that to fully attain their wish a high degree of
spiritual maturity is needed, that their way must have previously been prepared.
27
Men who are bundles of uncontrolled passions and
grasping desires can only imagine that they are ready - much less, likely - to
receive illumination because the true teaching of Sudden Enlightenment is
misinterpreted by them or by their instructors.
28
It is an ancient error which makes unimportant the
strivings for moral virtue provided they are replaced by strivings for ultimate
knowledge.
29
It is a perilous error which besets the right and
the left sides of the Short Path which lets the aspirant believe that he need no
longer trouble his head with questions of what is right and what is wrong in
ethics nor put upon himself the burden of any general or special discipline. If
his nature has run to extremes in these matters, if he has troubled himself too
long or too much with them, he will do well to relax and restore his balance.
But this is no sanction to fall into self-indulgence and slackness.
30
Belief in their own perfection may follow the
premature intellectual identification with Spirit. The belief that they have
become incapable of sin may follow as a consequence of the first one. Nothing
that they do can possibly be wrong. The end of all this is to bring disaster to
themselves and to dislocate the lives of others.
31
It is understandable that aspirants would like to
save themselves from the exertions demanded by the Long Path, and would prefer
to receive sufficient Grace to grant them the desired higher experiences. But if
they turn the existence of the Short Path into an excuse to avoid these
exertions, they are unlikely to gain what they want.
32
To seek to jump to the highest level, while
neglecting to improve bad ways of living or to correct the grievous weaknesses
of feeling or to eliminate the faults of undisciplined thinking, is foolish and
often useless.
33
Steep yourself in the pure being of Spirit; then
the ego's weaknesses and faults will automatically drop away from it. This is
the teaching and the truth of the Short Path. What is not told is how fleeting
the purification - so magically gained - must necessarily be.
34
Elbert Hubbard was a great soul and a great man.
The clear hard truth and Thoreauvian simplicity of his sentences show he was a
great writer, too. But he fell into that abuse of Short Path ethics which holds
that the man of understanding can do no wrong. He also failed to see the purpose
and worth of asceticism. He would have become a greater soul and a greater man
had he corrected those errors.
35
All stages of the quest, the advanced as well as
the elementary, are forms of ambition. They are still activities of the self,
continuations of its own life in different guises. All attempts to rise
spiritually, to develop, to gain "better" qualities or "mystical" experiences
are trying to run away from self through self-projected means. The end result
is, and must be, frustration or failure.
36
Those who are impatient with the restraints, the
labours, and the disciplines of the Long Path may take prematurely to the Short
Path. The result, as seen in the cases of younger people, is unhealthy. They get
intoxicated with their new freedom and may take unrestrictedly to drink, drugs,
sex, and general slovenliness of speech, manner, and dress. The absence of the
idea of sin from their outlook may produce an irresponsibility dangerous to
themselves and disturbing to society.
37
Those who turn to the Short Path because they are
in revolt against irksome disciplines and trying exercises, and who turn to the
other extreme of letting all impulses loose, forget that if they have set
themselves a purpose high above the ordinary there must be some submission of
impulse to that purpose, some restraint of aimlessness by discipline. But this
said, there is some wisdom in their revolt. The restraint which is imposed from
outside by others is of very limited value; but that which is put upon a man by
himself from within will achieve much more lasting results.
38
The Short Path follower who wrongly believes
himself to be suddenly and miraculously changed will still show in his life and
character the unmistakable signs of his old self's continuance.
39
Beware of losing balance in the study of
metaphysical truth or in the practice of the Short Path, of imagining that you
are surpassing the intellect and getting spiritually illumined. Beware of
getting intellectually drunk with your own self-importance and emotionally
intoxicated with your own self-glorification. Such study can be very
stimulating. Beware of coming to believe that you have found the Divine in a
single flash, overnight. Have you really become God? Is omnipotence really
yours?
40
The wish to attain realization of the Overself
becomes father to the belief that realization is actually happening!
41
The claim that if the true self is found, all the
qualities and attributes which pertain to it will also be found, naturally and
automatically, at the same time is a valid one. How could the qualities and
attributes of the lower nature thrive or even exist in that rarefied air? They
would instantly be displaced by the higher ones. But what is overlooked by, or
unknown to, the makers of this claim, is that the period of such displacement
would, and could, only be a temporary one. "Nature never leaps toward what she
will eventually bring about," Goethe announces, and truly. As soon as the
impetus which launched him into the deep waters of the Spirit exhausts itself,
as it must if he is still unpurified, unprepared, and undeveloped, the man will
be thrown back to the place where he belongs. His illumination will not have
enough basis to be securely established and so will turn out to be only a
passing glimpse.
42
Those who believe they can skip all this
preparatory work and still realize their latent possibility are foolish. The
obstructions will not remove themselves by themselves. They can be overwhelmed
for a time, while the glimpse prevails, but they will certainly become evident
again when the glimpse fades.
43
It is tempting to skip the natural order of
development through various graduated stages, with all the time and patience,
work and practice which that entails. But what is so cheaply gained will have a
corresponding value.
44
Some of the literary statements by Short Path
advocates are so extreme as to show that the writers are drunk with words,
carried away into completely forgetting where they are (in a body), ignoring the
difference between Being (knowing that the world is appearance, idea) and
denying that the world exists.
45
Those who come to the Short Path without competent
guidance or proper preparation are often either emotionally intoxicated by the
prospects of easy attainment that it seems to offer or intellectually carried
away into spiritual arrogance. The humility which is inbred by the difficulties
of the Long Path will be thrown away to their peril.
46
The Short Path devotee who believes he has nothing
to do and can leave all to the master, or to the Overself, believes wrongly.
Such spiritual idleness may lull him pleasantly into a thin contentment but this
is not the same as real inner peace won by grappling in the right attitude with
difficulties as they come, or by keeping the personal will submissive during
tests and obedient during temptations.
47
There are certain other dangers to which
enthusiasts for the various Short Paths are exposed. They read books devoted to
descriptions of the attainments and goals and become captivated by what they
read and charmed by what they are taught. Then they begin to imitate what they
can and to imagine what they cannot. In the end they fall into ego-centered
fantasies and ego-fostered deceptions. They think they are more exalted in
attainment than they really are. But so subtle is this disguised spiritual
egoism that they are quite unaware of their peril until disaster deflates it.
48
The man who thinks of himself instead of the
Overself when practising a Short Path exercise, who is unable to forget his
little ego, is a traitor to that Path.
49
It is well not to be boastful about one's
attainments on the Long Path, still less about one's achievements on the Short
Path.
50
The person who has undergone little preparation or
purification before feeling the mystic's peace in some unexpected experience
does not feel what the person who has had both his preparation and purification
feels. In the first case it is an unbalanced peace, whereas in the second case
it is a balanced peace. This is one reason why it vanishes after a time in the
first case and why the complementary work of the Long Path is needed.
51
The high-level teaching has been taken advantage
of by the weak or the egotistic to defend their weaknesses or egotism. Personal
freedom and self-expression are rightly sought but in the wrong way and for the
wrong reasons.
52
It is a matter of simple observation that these
Vedantic teachings are unfortunately not adequate to meet all the demands of a
worthwhile life. They have no more useful advice to give concerning the physical
body than, as I was told by one guru: "Take it to the doctor when it falls sick.
Give it no attention otherwise and forget it."
53
The Short Path schools are correct in asserting
that if we gain the Overself we shall also gain the purity of heart and goodness
of character which go with it. But they omit to point out that such a gain will
be quite temporary if we are unable to remain in the Overself.
54
They believe it is possible to attain truth
without tears, without discipline, and without training.
55
The lack of clear definition of the two
approaches, and the failure to make a proper distinction between them, cause
much confusion, many errors, and some self-deception.
56
To begin the Short Path without ever having done
some of the corrective work of the Long one, may result in the old defects being
supplemented by the new ones. The desire for quick gains and shortcuts is
understandable but the desire for unearned and undeserved gains, to get
something for nothing, leads to deception in the spiritual as in the financial
world.
57
Although the Short Path obviously offers a far
more attractive picture, it balances the attraction with the danger of
neglecting those self-chastening and self-disciplinary preparations which are
indispensable.
58
The Short Path tries to get round the ego by
ignoring it altogether!
59
Nearly everyone would most likely choose a way
which evaded all the long discipline of thought and feeling, all the stern
reform of bodily habits, and yet brought him swiftly to the goal and gave him in
full its glorious rewards. This choice is pardonable and seemingly sensible. But
observation and experience, study and research, show that such a way exists only
in theory, not in factuality; that its dramatic successes are the rare cases of
a very few geniuses; that those who take this seemingly easy and short road
mostly arrive, if they arrive at all, at a state of intellectual intoxication
and pseudo-illumination; and that where their reward for this Short Path
practice is a genuine Glimpse, they wrongly believe it to be the End of the Road
and cease all further effort to grow.
60
People who follow the Short Path because it seems
to offer miracles are trying to escape from the irksome necessity of dealing
with their lower self and overcoming it, but they try in vain. No master, no
cult, no particular breathing exercise or meditation practice can take the place
of this necessity. All are nothing more than another help in the struggle.
61
Must we crawl like the worm, inch by inch, or is
there really the possibility of sudden enlightenment? Must time be allowed to do
its work or can some magic act abruptly? Can there be any adequate substitute
for the experiences, the reflections, and the operations of many lifetimes? Or
are we merely showing ignorance when we assert that immediate awareness is too
good to be true?
62
The Zenist who asserts that enlightenment comes
all of a sudden is correct, but the evolutionist who insists that time and
development are still needed is also correct.
63
The offer of instantaneous spiritual illumination
is too good to be missed. But it may also prove too good to be true. The fact is
that it is true only for a very few, false for the great majority.
64
It is said by the advocates of the Short method
that the power of the Spirit can remove our faults instantaneously and even
implant in us the opposite virtues. That this has happened in some cases is made
clear by the study of the spiritual biography of certain persons. But those
cases are relatively few and those persons relatively advanced. This miraculous
transformation, this full forgiveness of sins, does not happen to most people or
to ordinary unadvanced people. A world-wide observation of them shows that such
people have to elevate themselves by their own efforts first. When they embrace
the Short method without this balancing work done by themselves upon themselves,
they are likely to fall into the danger of refusing to see their faults and
weaknesses which are their worst enemies, as well as the danger of losing the
consciousness of sin. Those who fail to save themselves from these perils become
victims of spiritual pride and lose that inner humility which is the essential
price of being taken over by the Overself.(P)
65
Those who believe in the Short Path of sudden
attainment, such as the sectarian following of Ramana Maharshi and the
koan-puzzled intellectuals of Zen Buddhism, confuse the first flash of insight
which unsettles everything so gloriously with the last flash which settles
everything even more gloriously. The disciple who wants something for nothing,
who hopes to get to the goal without being kept busy with arduous travels to the
very end, will not get it. He has to move from one point of view to a higher,
from many a struggle with weaknesses to their mastery. Then only, when he has
done by himself what he should do, may he cease his efforts, be still, and await
the influx of Grace. Then comes light and the second birth.
66
It is a legitimate criticism that most exponents
of the Short Path make it seem just too easy: heaven is always just around the
corner!
67
The notion that by the simple yet miraculous event
of attaining union he can be rid of all his faults and weaknesses is an
attractive one. But is it a true one? Can they all drop off at once? Some
schools of religion and mysticism answer affirmatively. But philosophy says that
the new kind of man he wants to become can be formed only by slow degrees,
little by little.
68
That inspired and excellent little book, Brother
Lawrence's The Practice of the Presence of God, is an example of Short
Path teaching. The contemporary biographer of Lawrence writes: "He could never
regulate his devotion by certain methods as some do.... At first, he had
meditated for some time, but afterwards that went off." "All bodily
mortifications and other exercises are useless," he thought, "but as they serve
to arrive at the union with God by love." Now it is all very well for Brother
Lawrence to decry techniques and to tell aspirants that his prayer or method was
simply a sense of the presence of God. He himself needed nothing more than to
attend to what was already present to, and existing in, him. But how many
average aspirants are so fortunate, how many possess such a ready-made sense or
feeling? Is it not the general experience that this is a result of long previous
toil and sacrifice, an effect and not itself a cause?
69
Can we justify the Short Path Sudden Enlightenment
school by the sudden, instantaneous character of spiritual healing of the body
when it includes a spiritual conversion or moral "cure^^? If the latter is
possible, why not the former, as both are of the same family?
70
We would all like some magic formula which could
be applied in a few minutes, at the end of which time we would be different
persons. The evil, the ineffectual, and the unattractive traits in us will be
dramatically shed; the good, the dynamic, and the charming ones will be
strikingly enhanced. But alas! life is not so easy as that.
71
Whether it be through Existentialism in France or
through Zen Buddhism in the United States, the attraction towards metaphysical
nihilism among young men and women of the postwar world has drawn attention in
cultural circles. In the States, they became known under their own title of "The
Beat Generation." John C. Holmes, one of their literary leaders, said in a New
York newspaper interview, "The second war ended in 1945 and by 1947 everybody
was talking of the next one. By 1948 who could believe that any international
organization would be able to work this thing out? So that thrust you back right
on yourself. What you felt yourself, your eagerness for life, that was the
important thing, and that meant jazz, liquor and fun." I might add that for many
others it meant drugs too. A Greenwich Village friend who saw these types almost
daily told me that by "fun" these devotees of Beat meant the free indulgence in
sex.
Holmes' conclusion was exactly the same as the one I made in The Spiritual Crisis of Man, that the world-crisis forced us to look to ourselves. But whereas he thought the next step was "jazz, liquor and fun," I thought it was to develop our inner spiritual resources.
Jack Kerouac's novels have been bestsellers and have done more to make known the ideas and conduct of the "beatniks," as he called them, than any other books. Neal Cassady, the hero of three of them and once his close friend, said, "Marijuana is the mystical shortcut to beatific vision, the highest vision you can get. He also said: "Everyone is trying to get out of their mind one way or another, and marijuana is the best, the easiest way to get to the Eternal Now."
It is true that Allen Ginsberg, the leading poet of the Beat Generation movement, spoke in the same interview of "beat" meaning "seeing the world in a visionary way, which is the old classical understanding of what happens in the dark night of the soul, in Saint John of the Cross' conception.... The primary fact of any beat writer of any interest is that each of them has individually had some kind of Kafkaian experience of what would ordinarily be called the supernatural. I had an illumination of eternity which lasted for a few seconds and returned three or four times. These were blissful experiences...I was loved by God." But this further statement merely shows the confusion and chaos which has mingled liquor and jazz with mysticism and Zen Buddhism. Need we be surprised to learn that Ginsberg was treated for three-quarters of a year in an insane asylum, or that he has experimented with several different kinds of drugs?
What is the real value of illuminations when the recipient is unbalanced to start with and becomes still more unbalanced after them? Is there not a clear case here for introducing the one thing these "Beat Generation" mystics reject - the discipline of the Long Path? They want the Overself's treasure but do not want to pay the price for it.
Even as I wrote these thoughts I was delighted to hear my old friend Dr. D.T. Suzuki, then the world's leading authority on Zen and Mahayana Buddhism, make a public protest in Boston against those Westerners who take shelter for their weaknesses under Zen's umbrella. "One has to be on guard," he said, "against the misunderstanding of the idea of freedom by many who study Zen. They seem to think it means the freedom to do what one likes, and especially the freedom to be licentious. Real freedom is very different from this and comes from a deeper level."
The fact is that these young people were not really looking for truth in its highest and purest sense. They were looking for thrills. They were mostly sensation-seekers just as much as the narcotic addicts are, although in a different way and through different means. The remainder were trying to get the supreme enlightenment free of cost, without giving up anything, without giving up the ego, without undertaking any discipline. They were caught in a coil of self-deception.
72
They boast they have no need of moral disciplines
and mystical exercises, no use for the writings, records, and biographies of the
great masters.
73
If it were possible to mount up to this summit in
a single step, as these schools claim, and then stay there, never coming down
again, then would not these schools have ousted all others in the competition of
ideas and practices for existence?
74
The Short Path teacher, such as Krishnamurti,
insists on explaining their own divinity to all people and rejects the assertion
that there are many incapable of understanding it.
75
The belief that one can take a headlong dive into
the Real and stay there permanently is rife.
76
The truth of Zen attitude - letting go of
restraints, avoiding reflection, refraining from self-observation, acting
spontaneously, and being natural - is that it is true only on the intuitive
level. It is there the only proper and possible attitude. But how few have
really attained this level! How many have merely taken their very ordinary
impulses, their very human desires, their very animal lusts, for profound
intuitions! Thus they merely continue to act as they would have acted anyway,
for the same reasons and by the same motives. The results will continue to be
the same too. They are as far from true enlightenment as everyone else but with
this great difference: that whereas the others do not pretend to be superior or
illumined, they do. It is a fantastic self-deception, a foolish egoism that if
exaggerated could lead to lunacy. Only a master can hold such an attitude with
perfect fitness and propriety, only such a one can afford to "let go" of all
self-control without falling into the dangerous swirling waters which are always
ready to engulf the man who behaves as he pleases, and gives himself up with
complete abandon to what he wrongly imagines is "walking on." This is why the
earlier Chinese Zen lectures and writings were often prefaced by the warning
that they were intended for persons who were already properly instructed and
established in "the virtues." Therefore the modern Western beginners should
not let the temptation to exploit Zen for their own personal purposes lead them
into a trap. The only "letting go" that they can safely indulge in is to let go
of the ego, the only safe "walking on" is to walk away from their attachments.
77
This is an old debate. More than a thousand years
ago several Indian Buddhist pundits met and argued with a Chinese Zen master
whether enlightenment is gradual or sudden.
78
Why has Zen attracted artists and intellectuals?
The answer usually given is that it has favoured expression through the arts and
offered relief from the strain of logic. This is true for some adherents, but
for others - the easy-going, work-shy "Bohemians" - the main attraction has been
its indifference to discipline, to training. Many of them are painters who put
blobs of formless colour on canvas and call it a work of art, musicians who
throw together a cacophony of disjointed sound and call it a melody. They have
evaded the harder way of learning the techniques of art already; it is a
continuation of the same attitude to evade the harder way of learning the
techniques of philosophical disciplined work on themselves. The Short Path
teaching seems so simple, its practices attack the goal so directly, and the
goal itself is set so near that no one need be surprised to observe the rapid
growth of interest in Zen recently. Who wants to work patiently through the
rigours of the Long Path, who wants to toil through preparatory stages when a
swifter, perhaps even sudden, way is available? Moreover, the Zenists assert
that they want to be "natural" and that moral discipline is artificial imitative
discipline. So they throw overboard all disciplines, all work on themselves, and
give lust, passion, impulse, and egoism a full and free rein.
79
Those who believe that they have the right to
demand a full and immediate enlightenment without previously setting up the
conditions favourable to its reception, will either become disappointed by their
failure or hallucinated by their imagined success. "Nothing for nothing" is
Nature's law. They must give if they want to get - give up some of the barriers
to enlightenment which exist in their own ego and to which they cling.
80
Those who seek swift enlightenment, who want to
pass from their present condition of obscurity with a speed that will be
miraculous, ought to ask themselves whether they are entitled to receive
something for nothing.
81
The Short Path enthusiast wants to catapult
himself suddenly from the quest's beginning to its ending, without having to
pass through all the usual intervening and successive stages.
82
He follows Zen or some other Short Path
cult, imagining it will enable him to jump out of his skin, to change the
entire polarity of his essential nature in the twinkling of an eye. And this too
without any effort. Does he really succeed in doing it? Only in his talk.
83
It is not enough to repeat a few high-sounding
phrases and expect to be immediately and totally illumined.
84
The hope of suddenly or swiftly getting
established in the Overself by way of the Short Path naturally attracts the
young and enthusiastic much more than the middle-aged and blasé. For the latter
have seen every development in their consciousness come on a little at a time,
and often brokenly.
85
It is true that enlightenment can remove our
accumulated moral defects all at once in a sudden and single joyous experience.
But it is also true that we are unlikely to get more than the first degree if we
have not previously worked upon ourselves to prepare properly for it.
86
Old cults like Zen and new ones like "The
Undivided Mind" offer freedom from moral restrictions and ascetic controls. This
attracts those who are seeking an excuse to let loose their physical instincts
and impulses. They do not see that such a doctrine of freedom is only for
adepts, not aspirants.
87
There is a special temperament which scorns the
process of gradual ripening, of natural growth. It belongs to the man who is
unwilling to work patiently and irritated by laborious self-discipline. He is
convinced that some secret may be found. Some method exists or some teacher is
available to bring about an immediate and successful result just as a
push-button does. All he has to do is to seek out and discover the Secret Method
or teacher.
88
It is easy to see why the Short Path is so
attractive to so many people. Why cultivate the virtues one by one, or the
qualities one at a time? Why plod through them in all their varied details? Why
engage in extreme effort and undergo patient discipline? Why weary yourself
labouring after what is so hard to obtain on the Long Path, when here is a way
whereby they will come of themselves, springing spontaneously and almost
unbidden into existence, easily and naturally?
89
It is really a kind of spiritual arrogance which
believes it has only to jump from its present standpoint to the divinest level,
as so many ill-equipped Zen adherents believe. Spiritual humility will seek, and
be satisfied with, a more modest result.
90
Today it is needful to describe plainly and simply
what the Zen Buddhist writers hide in puzzles and riddles. This is better for
the modern mentality.
91
If he is to satisfy his quest for higher joys, his
craving for inner peace, his longing for a knowledge of truth and reality, he
must pay a price. Such things are not free.
92
They look for an abrupt rebirth like Saint Paul's,
for a sudden upthrust of spiritual power.
93
Those who would like to get the prize all at once,
without work, sacrifice, or time, should not wrongly imagine that the Short Path
is for them.
94
They expect to be caught up in a spiritual
whirlwind and borne away after minutes into a spiritual ecstasy, from which
there would never again be any descent.
95
These schemes of spiritual redemption which claim
to proceed by leaps and jumps, which abolish the climb up ladders and the
crossing over bridges, will appeal to the unbalanced enthusiast and the
unpractical visionary.
96
Are they entitled to have all their defects
swiftly cast out and their deficiencies automatically supplied, just because
they have given their assent to a particular cosmic maxim, or their time to a
particular meditational practice?
97
These "Sudden Enlightenment" votaries, the
"Salvation by Saturday" brigade.
98
Nowhere in physical nature do we observe this leap
across a chasm but everywhere everything passes gradually and little by little
from one condition to the next. Why should the transition from ego to Overself
contradict this universal fact?
99
Those who are ill-qualified for the Short Path,
who come to it in order to escape the tiresome disciplines of the Long Path, who
want a sudden and swift enlightenment without having to pass through the
gradations of slowly preparing themselves for it, usually find themselves thrown
back in the end.
100
What is the use of trying to improve oneself by
Long Path methods? There will be no end to it. One can go on and on and on
practising it. After all, although this will give one a better ego, it will not
give one liberation from the ego itself. Furthermore, the idea of rebirth is
tied in with the idea of such self-improvement through many lives. Both in turn
are based on, and wholly enclosed in, the ego - hence illusory.
101
This constant preoccupation with the ego gives a
subtle power and importance to it, and draws him away from his real being in the
Overself. For it is what he takes into his consciousness which affects him in
character and body, in thought and conduct.
102
It comes to this paradox - that the farther they
travel on the path of ego-effort, the farther they move from their goal, and the
less they try to approach their Source the closer they come to it!
103
This constant looking at oneself, this endless
and exaggerated self-consciousness, may not lead to purification from fault and
humility if it breeds new faults and new prides.
104
If the Overself is timeless, unaffected by the
clock's ticking, how could acts performed in time, exercises of the mind done by
the clock, bring a man into the Overself's eternal consciousness?
105
The Long Path, despite its magnificent ideals of
self-improvement and self-control, is still egoistic. For this determination to
rise spiritually is directed by willed ambition - willed by the higher
part of the ego.
106
Most of the work of the Long Path is, in the
end, ego-grounded. Many aspirants either adore or else hate themselves.
107
The follower of the Long Path may become filled
with anxiety about his future progress and guilt about his past or present
history. Or, like the early Stoics and the medieval ascetics, he may be
continually engaged in fighting himself. Struggle and war then become the
miserable climate in which he lives. Real peace of mind is far from him. If we
penetrate analytically to the base of this situation, we find that it exists
because he depends primarily on his ego's strength, not on the Overself.
108
Saint Teresa perfectly understood the nature of,
and difference between, the two paths, and described them well and briefly. She
wrote: "It is a great grace of God to practice self-examination, but too much is
as bad as too little, as they say: believe me, by God's help, we shall
accomplish more by contemplating the Divinity than by keeping our eyes fixed on
ourselves."
109
There are certain patterns of thought which
reflect the idea that attainment of this goal is almost impossible, and that the
needed preparation and purification could not be even half finished in a whole
lifetime. If these patterns are held over a long period of years, they provide
him with powerful suggestions of limitation. Thus the very instruction or
teaching which is supposed to help his progress actually handicaps it and
emotionally obstructs it. His belief that character must be improved, weaknesses
must be corrected, and the ego must be fought looms so large in his outlook that
it obliterates the equally necessary truth that Grace is ever at hand and that
he should seek to invoke it by certain practices and attitudes.
110
The fact is he is depending too much upon
himself and too little upon the Overself. After all, help cannot lift itself by
its own bootstraps.
111
Is the perfecting of character a cause of
enlightenment or is it an effect?
112
If they expect too little of themselves, they
become lazy and indifferent; if too much, they undergo needless torment. Too
much feverish tension or desire to make progress or get mystical experience has
driven aspirants a little mad in the past, although these have never been and
could never be philosophic aspirants but the religious or the occult-minded
sort. Their zeal is admirable but their fanaticism needs to be firmly
discouraged. They tie themselves in knots through wanting to create new virtues
when it is more important to remove the old hindrances, so as to open themselves
to the Overself and its grace. The belief that they alone, unaided, can attain
complete enlightenment by their own personal efforts, places too heavy an
obligation upon them, too large a burden, and it is not even a necessary one.
113
The Long Path seeker who solemnly inflicts
self-denials and self-disciplines upon himself in hope of finding freedom will
one day have to make the transition to the Short Path.
114
The Long Path keeps the mind continually
searching, whether for increased holiness or increased truth. It is never
quiet, content, at peace.
115
In looking back at the past, the more evolved
men find certain things unpleasant to remember and unbearable to analyse. This
is a helpful result for the Long Path: it weakens the lower elements of
character by strengthening disgust with them. But it is negative and depressing.
And in the end they must go on to the Short Path, where such preoccupation with
the ego is abandoned, where a positive and cheerful identification with Overself
is sought.
116
These contrary periods come to most seekers
until the Short Path is discovered, entered, and travelled. A stable attitude
will then be one of its natural effects; a steady calmness will be more easily
maintained than before.
117
All attempts to liberate the self from the self
by the self are obviously doomed from the start.
118
If self-hate becomes morbidly excessive it may
lead to suicide. This is one danger of the Long Path's asceticism.
119
It is certainly better to remove faults and
remedy weaknesses than to leave them as they are. But it is not enough to
improve, refine, ennoble, and even spiritualize the ego. For all such activity
takes place under the illusion that the ego possesses reality. This illusion
needs to be eliminated, not merely changed for another one.
120
The Long Path creates a condition favourable to
enlightenment, but since it is concerned with ego, it cannot directly yield
enlightenment. For its work of purifying the ego, however necessary and noble,
still keeps the aspirant's face turned egoward.
121
The principle of so improving or purifying or
training or developing the ego that it will gain illumination is a fallacious
one. For the ego is the false self, and nothing that is done to it can produce
the true self. To believe otherwise is to go on clinging to an illusion.
122
A knowledge of the heavenly Overself cannot be
had by studying, improving, or developing the benighted and fictitious ego. The
only way in which it can be got is by direct experience of it. This axiom is the
basis of the Short Path.
123
The Long Path exercises and disciplines are
excellent but their results are inconclusive. They give the chance to progress
but do not and cannot give final enlightenment and full self-mastery.
124
Everything that he accomplishes in the way of
self-improvement, self-purification, or self-mastery is accomplished by the
force of the ego. No higher power, no grace of the Overself, no faith that
transcends materialism is needed for these things. Whatever it is, and however
beneficial it be, reform of the ego's character will not lead directly to the
destruction of the ego's rule. For although the ego is willing to improve or
purify itself, it is not willing to kill itself.
125
The ego cannot produce an egoless result. This
is why the Long Path is only preparatory and cannot be a sufficient means to a
successful end.
126
The Long Path man makes his life into a problem
and his quest into a prison. By his understanding what he has done, the problem
will vanish. By his perceiving the situation as it really is, the walls of his
prison will fall down.
127
He must free himself of this egoistic way of
looking at his life, his character, his goal, which the spiritual life of the
Long Path, as well as the unspiritual life before it was engaged upon, really
possesses.
128
The Long Path of personal control and virtuous
practice is necessary and must be followed. But it is still within and related
to the world of darkness. It is useless as a means of entering the world of
light.
129
Such is the fertile nature of the ego that
openings for its improvement, reform, or amendment are endless. This is why the
Long Path must be abandoned at some time if the ego itself is to be uprooted.
130
To carry the Long Path work to such excess that
it fills you with powerful guilt complexes, that it makes you unrelaxedly harsh
and grim with yourself - this is to destroy yourself.
131
These Long Pathers, these self-conscious
strivers after near-perfection, are still striving within the ego and, in the
end, however nobly, for the ego. For they are trying to improve it, not lose it.
If the latter were their real goal they would be interested in neither its
improvement nor its worsening since both activities are only aspects. Why should
they deal with it at all? Why not try the opposite course, the Short Path, which
silences the ego, not by striving to do so but by ignoring it through fastening
attention upon the Overself?
132
The Short Path advocate may pertinently ask his
Long Path friend, "Why not make the end into the beginning? Why not directly
still the mind, empty it of thoughts, instead of attaching it to some idea and
concentrating upon that in the earlier stages only to drop it in the later ones?
Why let it go on what the Australians call 'a walkabout^?^^
133
Then he comes to realize the magnitude of what
he undertook in the first rush of enthusiasm, and the littleness of his
qualification for it. Then only does he see that the Long Path leads to an
inaccessible peak. He is overwhelmed and fails to see the great preparatory
service it rendered him.
134
Spirituality needs time to develop; the spark
needs fanning; but this need not be turned into an excuse for surrendering
completely to the Long Path's limitations.
135
The narrow limited presentation of the path to
enlightenment needs rebuttal. And this can be found in the cases of men who
entered and remained in the light not by the persevering practice of yoga, or by
personal guru-initiation, but by fastening interest, thought, feeling, devotion,
faith on the light itself solely and exclusively.
136
The struggles against himself, the attempts and
failures to live as if outer circumstances do not matter at all, lead the Long
Path follower in the end, and by stages, from arrogant enthusiastic faith to
humble anguished bewilderment, from acceptance to disagreement.
137
On the Long Path the aspirant is likely to probe
some of his shortcomings too pessimistically, to condemn himself for them, but
to be blind altogether to the most serious shortcoming of all - that of clinging
to the personal ego in all circumstances.
138
If the Long Path's searching work on
shortcomings is overbalanced, it increases his self-condemnation but strengthens
his feelings of separation from the Divine Being that is his root.
139
Yang Chu described the Long Path travellers as
searchers for a missing sheep who themselves got lost in the multitude of
efforts involving a plenitude of details.
140
The Long Path has no property in itself which
can turn darkness into light, the ordinary mentality into the illumined one.
141
Time continues itself, and the time-bound
consciousness with it. The Long Path does not liberate a man from it but only
improves him, at the best, prepares him. For what? For the Short Path, which
alone offers freedom.
142
The root of all his efforts in self-improvement
and self-purification is still the egoistic consciousness. Since that is the
very consciousness which must be given up to let in the egoless Spirit, he must
abandon these efforts and turn sooner or later to the Short Path.
143
It is as valid in logic as it is in practice
that nothing that is done in time can produce the timeless, therefore no amount
of study, purification, and meditation can make a man more divine than he is
now. Then why have such ways been given out?
144
Why should a man strain himself to the point of
having a nervous breakdown, or acquiring an ulcer, in trying to get the inner
peace which is preventive of nervous breakdowns and renders him immune to
ulcers?
145
To go on condemning oneself for past errors
until it is a fixed attitude of mind is to push Long Path work to an extreme.
146
He has been seeking an unbroken perfection that
no one has ever reached and no one can reach.
147
It is not enough to uncover his faults and
confess his weaknesses, not even enough to correct the one and remedy the other.
After all, these things concern only the stage of development he has already
reached, and the ego only. He must also turn toward higher stages and also the
egoless self.
148
The Long Pather can never be satisfied with the
work he has done on himself or failed to do.
149
The labours of the Long Path are good and
necessary. They weaken the ego and bring him part of the way toward the goal.
But they will end in despair if he does not learn that they cannot bring him the
rest of the way.
150
Moral disciplines have a definite place in life
to make us better human beings but they do not lift us to the Overself's level.
The Long Path, to which they belong, has a humanitarian value but not a
magically transcendent one.
151
In The Marble Faun, Nathaniel Hawthorne
writes: "We go all wrong, by too strenuous a resolution to go all right."
152
If he takes an excessive clinical interest in
his own moral and spiritual state, continually observing his conduct and
analysing his feelings to find the flaws in them, he loses his balance and
becomes inwardly unhealthy. In putting too much emphasis upon his failings, he
is giving too much attention to his own ego.
153
The idea that a man's own virtue can bring him
to the goal belongs to the Long Path.
154
He may well ask himself at this point, as Yen
Hui, the Chinese disciple of Confucius, asked, whether the Goal is not really an
inaccessible peak, attracting climbers yet always defeating them in the end.
155
It is not any kind of activity of the ego which
brings salvation. How could that happen? How can a man lift himself up by the
hair upon his own head? Just the same he cannot touch the Overself spirit by his
own virtue. It is only the activity of the Overself which will save him from the
ego. But this he must provoke or invoke by taking to the Short Path.
156
The Long Path gives many benefits and bestows
many virtues but it does not give the vision of truth, the realization of the
Overself, nor does it bestow Grace. For these things we must turn to the Short
Path.