Attaining Your Desires
Genevieve Behrend
"All we have willed or hoped or dreamed of good, shall exist, not its semblance, but itself." Browning.
The thing that which hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done.
Ecclesiastes 1:9.
The sages of the centuries, each one
tincturing their thought with their own soul essence, have united in
telling us that,
"As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he." It has
been established by the experience of the ages that always the law is
the
same. But HOW shall one think in their heart, so that
only goodness may blossom and ripen into rich deed and rare result?
What is the apparently mysterious secret by which
life's dull metal is transmuted into precious mintage?
It is my purpose to tell you in this
little book. I desire to crystallize the heart-coinings of my revered
master, Judge Thomas
T. Troward, as reflected through the mirror of my mind
and soul. I have adopted as my means of expression, the dialogue style,
familiar to all students of that greatest of all
speculative philosophers, Plato. I am convinced, through years of study
of
this almost superhuman mind, that this literary form
is the one most nearly calculated to convey the most subtle shades of
meaning, the richest depth of soul-sounding.
I know that my readers will agree with me that if they will put themselves in my place, as students, and let me answer them
as my master answered me, it will clarify their interest and intensify their joy in these lessons.
What I wish particularly to convey to
you within these pages is the method of scientific right thinking, and
to awaken in
you the desire to try to use this method in order to
form the habit of thinking ONLY the thoughts you wish to see
crystallized
in a worthy achievement or result. In addition, I want
to direct your thoughts toward a better understanding of that Spirit
of God, or Good, which points the way to the roseate
dawn of a new civilization. The rapidity with which the ideas of man
are changing causes humanity to realize that this new
civilization is already manifesting itself through a clearer
understanding
of the relation between man and his Maker.
The epochal keynote of the present
generation is that mind is the kingdom in which man reigns supreme. As
the poet says, "A
brute I might have been, but I would not sink I' the
scale." In endeavoring to make conscious use of thought-power, causing
it to produce desired material results, mankind is
beginning to understand the indispensability of absolute control.
My chief idea in sending forth this
message is to make it easier for you to live in hourly consciousness
that you have been
given dominion over every adverse circumstance and
condition which may arise. The conscious use of the creative power of
thought
to protect and guide you, as well as to provide for
you, is only attainable through understanding the "natural relations
between
mental action and material conditions."
Your reading of these lessons should
be with a steadfast determination to think rationally and effectively on
every word,
in order that the full meaning of each thought may be
thoroughly grasped and comprehended. Thought-power is the kingdom of
God in us, always creating results in our physical
forms corresponding to our normal sustained thought. As Troward has
said,
"Thought is the only action of the mind. By your
habitual thoughts you create corresponding external physical conditions,
because you thereby create the nucleus which attracts
to itself its own correspondence, in due order, until the finished work
is manifested on the material plane."
This is the principle upon which we shall proceed to work out a simple and rational basis of thought and action whereby we
may bring into outer expression any desired goal. Let us work together to this end.
G.B.
Troward - Philosopher And Sage
One of the really great minds and souls of modern
times - and indeed of any time - was Thomas Troward, late Divisional
Judge
of the Punjab, India. Of his writings, the late
William James of Harvard said, "Far and away the ablest statement of
that
psychology that I have ever met, beautiful in its
sustained clearness of thought and style, a really classic statement."
The
Boston Transcript editorially stated, "The author
reveals himself as easily the profoundest thinker we have ever met on
this
subject." The late Archdeacon Wilberforce, when
writing to Troward, signed himself, "Your grateful pupil."
Responding to the many requests from
Troward's friends and admirers for a more intimate glimpse of this great
man, I am pleased
to present to you a few phases of his daily life as I
saw them while studying with him. These may be all the more interesting
because of the fact that I enjoyed the unique
privilege of being the only pupil to whom he ever gave personal
instruction.
The Early Life of a Genius
Thomas Troward was born in Ceylon,
India, in the year 1847, of English parents and Huguenot ancestors. When
quite a young
boy he was sent to England to be educated at
Burmshtead Grammar School, but was most unhappy there, as he could not
fully
adapt himself to the humdrum life of the English
schoolboy. Later on, when he continued his education in the beautiful
Isle
of Jersey, its charm entered into his blood, and he
was thoroughly contented there. Perhaps the old Huguenot strain in him
found a congenial element in the semi-French
environment of the college. At the early age of eighteen the natural
bent of
his mind began to assert itself, and he won the
Helford College gold medal for literature.
When his studies were completed,
Troward went up to London for the Indian Civil Service examination, a
very stiff one, which
he passed with high credit. He returned to India at
the age of twenty-two in the capacity of Assistant Commissioner. An
incident
which occurred during the course of his examination
foreshadowed the trend of the life that was to replace the regulation
judicial career when the twenty-five years of service
had expired.
"Your Head is No Common One, Young Man"
One of the subjects, left for the end
of the examination, was metaphysics. Troward was quite unprepared for
this, having had
no time for research and no knowledge of what books to
read on the subject, so he meditated upon it in the early hours of
the morning, and filled in the paper with his own
speculations. The examiner, on reading it, was amazed, and asked "What
text-book
did you use for this paper?" "I had no text-book sir."
Troward answered. "I wrote it out of my head." "Well, then, young man,"
was the examiner's comment, "your head is no common
one, and if I am not mistaken, we shall hear from you again."
During Troward's career in India his
official work kept him very busy. His recreation was often spent with
canvas, paints
and brushes. He was an artist of no mean ability,
especially in marine subjects, and had won several prizes at art
exhibits
in England. He loved to study the tombs of sacred
Indian lore, or the scriptures of the Hebrews and of other ancient
peoples.
While studying these profound subjects, there was
unfolded to him, as in a vision, a system of philosophy which carried
with
it not only peace of mind, but also physical results
in health and happiness.
When relieved of his burdensome
official duties in the Indian Court, he returned to England, where a
manuscript of some hundred
folios slowly came into existence. At that time he had
no knowledge of Mental Science, Christian Science, New Thought, or
any of the "isms" of modern thought. His views were
the result of solitary meditation and a deep study of the scriptures.
The first edition of the now famous "Edinburgh
Lectures" was published in 1904. It was received with the almost
unanimous
opinion that its value could not be over-estimated, as
was true of his subsequent volumes. "Bible Mystery and Bible Meaning"
proved especially attractive to churchmen. His books,
by sheer worth, have found their way almost all over the world. In the
United States alone, more than 50,000 copies have been
sold. Perhaps no one was more astonished at their warm reception than
their simple-hearted, fun-loving author.
An Intimate Description
In physique Judge Troward was not the
usual English type, but was more like a Frenchman, of medium stature,
and not over five
feet six or seven inches. He was dark complexioned,
with small, bright eyes, a large nose, and a broad forehead. When I knew
him, he had a drooping mustache sprinkled with grey.
He had the bearing of a student and a thinker, as is indicated in his
writings.
His manner was simple and natural,
and he exemplified a spirit of moderation in all things. I never saw him
impatient or heard
him express an unkind word, and with his family he was
always gentle and considerate. He seemed to depend entirely upon Mrs.
Troward for the household management. Only in the
intimacy of his home did he entirely reveal his charming geniality and
radiating
friendship. His after-dinner manner was one of quiet
levity and a twinkling humor. He would enter into the conversations or
parlor games of the family with the spirit of a boy.
He did not care for public amusements.
One evening, after an excellent
dinner of soup, joint of lamb, vegetables, salad, dessert, and wine, he
rolled a cigarette,
and, to my great surprise, offered it to me with the
query, "Do you smoke?" Receiving a negative reply, he began to smoke
it himself. Noticing my poorly concealed expression of
surprise, he remarked, "Why should you be shocked at anything which
you can thank God for? I can thank God for one
cigarette after, possibly a second, but never a third." After he had
finished
his smoke, his youngest daughter, Budeia, played the
violin for us. I observed that he became completely absorbed in the
beautiful
harmony. He told me afterwards that, although he was
intensely fond of listening to music, he was in no sense a musician.
Although Troward did not indulge in
outdoor sports, he loved nature, and would sit for hours by the sea with
his sketch-book,
or tramp the lonely moors in solitary meditation. He
said there were times when he obtained his best inspirations while
walking
in the open. He often invited me to go with him,
although frequently he seemed to be unconscious of my presence, being
entirely
absorbed in his own thoughts.
Truth from the Trance
At times he would lapse into a
trancelike swoon (his Maltese cat on the table by his side), the swoon
sometimes lasting for
hours. At such times the members of his family would
take particular care not to disturb him. When he emerged from these
lapses
of the senses, he would write down the truths which
had been revealed to him. Once he wrote on his memorandum pad, " 'I AM'
is the word of power. If you think your thought is
powerful, your thought is powerful."
It may be interesting to recall that
such authorities as Barnett and the new American Encyclopedia, in their
biography of
Socrates, mention similar trancelike experiences of
his. While serving in the Greek army, Socrates suddenly found his feet
seemingly rooted to the earth, where he remained in a
trance for twenty-four hours. He awakened with a spiritual knowledge
that transformed his life, and, later, the lives of
many others. The similarity of the life of this Athenian philosopher to
that of Troward is that both relied chiefly upon
intuition and common sense for their theory and system of living.
A difference between Troward's
teaching and that of Christian Science is that he does not deny the
existence of a material
world. On the contrary, he teaches that all physical
existence is a concrete corresponding manifestation of the thought which
gave it birth. One is a complement of the other.
I once asked him how one could impart to others the deep truths which he taught. "By being them," he answered. "My motto is,
'Being, and not possessing, is the great joy of living.'"
Following a Trusted Guide
Judge Troward, although modest and
retiring in his habits of speech and slow to express a personal opinion,
was always willing
to discuss any current subject, but extremely reticent
and diffident about his own writings. Never, to my knowledge, did he
mention them unless approached on the subject. As a
teacher, he was positive, direct, and always impersonal.
When our lesson was given indoors, he
always sat in a large morris chair, and, seeming not to be aware of my
presence, he
would think aloud. To follow his thought was like
following a trusted guide through the most difficult places, the darkest
and least explored regions of thought. As I followed,
the personality of the man became obscure, and I was only conscious
of the clear, commanding voice, and the light of the
inward torch which he bore. It was beyond doubt quite natural that he
who made so clear the true meaning of individuality
should in his teaching betray little of the personal or emotional
element.
After I had been carefully guided to
the most comforting conclusions, in the same quiet, unassuming manner as
in the beginning
of our mental journey, my guide would gently remind me
that he had given me a few suggestions which I might follow if I felt
inclined, but which were offered only in the friendly
spirit of a fellow-traveler. He always tried to impress upon me that
every effort to accomplish mental control (which, in
turn, meant control of circumstances) should be undertaken with absolute
confidence of success.
The length of a lesson depended upon
my ability to absorb what he was telling me. If he were convinced in
fifteen or thirty
minutes that I understood quite naturally the reason
why, for example, "If a thing is true." There is a way in which it is
true," that lesson was concluded. If it took me an
hour or more to get into the spirit of his thought, the lesson was
prolonged.
At the end of a lesson he would quietly remark, "Never
forget that 'seeking' has 'finding' as its correlative: 'knocking,'
'opening.'" With this reassuring statement, he would
light his lantern and step into the denseness of the night to walk three
miles to his home.
A Home-Loving Philosopher
Being a home-loving man, Troward
delighted in his flower garden, and in the intimacy of his home, which
he had provided with
every comfort. He particularly enjoyed the seclusion
of his studio and study, which were arranged to meet his personal needs
and moods. His studio was in the most remote part of
the house, and here he would spend hours of relaxation with canvas and
paints. His study, however, was on the ground floor,
and to it he would retire for meditation and research, usually in the
early hours of the morning. He rarely worked at night.
He had spent the greater part of the
day he died sketching out of doors. When he did not join his family at
the dinner hour,
Mrs. Troward went in search of him. She found him in
his studio, fully dressed, lying on the sofa in a state of physical
collapse.
About an hour later he passed away. The doctor said
that death was caused by hemorrhage of the brain. I am sure that Troward
would have said, "I am simply passing from the limited
to the unlimited." He died on May 16th, 1916, in his sixty-ninth year,
on the same day that Archdeacon Wilberforce was laid
at rest in Westminster Abbey. It was no ordinary link that bound these
two men, as you will note in the reproduction of the
letter that follows, Troward's last letter to me.
Thomas Troward regarded death very
much as he would regard traveling from one country to another. He
remarked to me several
times, that he was interested in the life beyond and
was ready to go. His only concern seemed to be the sorrow that it would
cause his wife and family. When the time came, his
going was exactly what he would have wished it to be.
I hope that these few intimate
touches will give to Troward's friends and admirers the information they
desire concerning
him. I will add a more personal touch for you by
presenting herein one of his first letters to me with facsimile of his
handwriting.
31 Stanwick Rd.,
West Kensington,
8th Nov. 1912
Dear Mrs. Swink,
I think I had better write you a few lines with regard to your proposed studies with me as I should be sorry for you to be
under any misapprehension and so to suffer any disappointment.
I have studied the subject now for
several years, and have a general acquaintance with the leading
features of most of the
systems which unfortunately occupy attention in
many circles at the present time, such as Theosophy, the Tarot, the
Kabala,
and the like, and I have no hesitation in saying
that to the best of my judgment all sorts and descriptions of so-called
occult
study are in direct opposition to the real
Life-giving Truth; and therefore you must not expect any teaching on
such lines
as these. We hear a great deal in these days about
"Initiation"; but, believe me, the more you try to become a so-called
"Initiate"
the further you will put yourself from Living Life.
I speak after many years of careful study and consideration when I say
that the Bible and its Revelation of Christ is the
one thing really worth studying, and that is a subject large enough in
all conscience, embracing as it does our outward
life of everyday concerns, and also the inner springs of our life and
all
that we can in general terms conceive of the life
in the unseen after putting off the body at death.
You have expressed a very great
degree of confidence in my teaching, and if your confidence is such that
you wish, as you
say, to put yourself entirely under my guidance I
can only accept it as a very serious responsibility, and should have to
ask you to exhibit that confidence by refusing to
look into such so-called "mysteries" as I would forbid you to look into.
I am speaking from experience; but the result will
be that much of my teaching will appear to be very simple, perhaps to
some
extent dogmatic, and you will say you had heard
much of it before. Faith in God, Prayer and Worship, Approach to the
Father
through Christ --all this is in a certain sense
familiar to you; and all I can hope to do is perhaps to throw a little
more
light on these subjects, so that they become to
you, not merely traditional words, but present living facts. I have been
thus
explicit, as I do not want you to have any
disappointment; and also I should say that our so-called "studies" will
be only
friendly conversations at such times as we can fit
them in, either you coming to our house or I to yours as may be most
convenient
at the time. Also I will lend you some books which
will be helpful, but they are very few and in no sense "occult."
Now if all this falls in with your
own ideas, we shall, I am sure, be very glad to see you at Ruan Manor,
and you will find
that the residents there, though few, are very
friendly and the neighborhood is pretty. But on the other hand if you
feel
that you want some other sort of learning, do not
mind saying so; only you will never find any substitute for Christ.
I trust you will not mind my writing to you like this, but I don't want you to come all the way down to Cornwall and then
be disappointed.
With kind regards
Yours sincerely, (Signed) T. Troward
Interpreting the Word
Feeling that an explanation of some of the words employed in an unusual way in these lessons may be helpful to the student,
I herein offer a list of such words, together with my interpretation and references from Troward.
Absolute
"That which is free from limit, restriction, or qualification." (Webster.) "An idea from which the elements of time and space
are entirely absent." (Troward.)
Example: Thinking in the absolute would be simply dwelling upon the intrinsic qualities of love without reference to whom
you love or the various forms through which love expresses itself.
Mind is absolute because of its self-reaction.
Being
Life, that unformed power of life which controls circumstances and conditions. Read Troward's "Bible Meaning and Bible Mystery,"
pages 77-79.
Belief
A certain quality in the creative
power of thought, which manifests on the external plane in exact
correspondence to the quality
of belief entertained. If you believe that your body
is subject to disease, then the creative power of thought of disease
results in a diseased body. Read Troward's "Edinburgh
Lectures of Mental Science," page 14.
Body
The instrument through which thoughts and feelings are expressed. The envelope of the soul.
Brain
The instrument through and in which the action of the Universal Parent Mind expresses itself in specific form as individual
thoughts. Brain is not the mind, but the mind's instrument.
Christ
A State of consciousness which is altogether good, and a quality of feeling which manifests in physical form. The most perfect spiritual concept.
Circumstances
The outward effect which corresponds to the inward tendency of thought.
Conception
William James says "...denotes neither the mental state nor what the mental state signifies, but the relation between the
two."
Concentration
"Bringing the mind into a condition
of equilibrium which enables us to consciously direct the flow of spirit
to a definite,
recognized purpose and then carefully to guard our
thoughts from inducing a flow in the opposite direction." - Edinburgh
Lectures
of Mental Science. Page 88. (Troward.)
Conditions
The result of mental tendencies. Harmonious thought produces harmonious physical and material conditions, which still further
react to sweeten thought.
Consciousness
Activity of mind which enables it to distinguish itself from the physical form in which it manifests.
Create
To bring into existence. Thought is creative, because it always brings into physical or objective existence forms which correspond to itself.
Death
Absence of life. Loss of consciousness, with no capacity to regain it. Example: If a thought has been absolutely eliminated
from the consciousness and cannot be recalled, it is dead to you.
Faith
"The divine promises and individual
faith are correlations." Combine them, and there is no limit to what you
can do through
the creative power in this quality of thought."
Essential thought. Therefore every call to have faith in God is a call
to
have faith in the power of your own thought about
God." (Troward)
A confident expectant attitude of
mind. Such a mental attitude renders your mind receptive to the creative
action of the spirit
of life. Have faith in the force of your own thought.
You have many times experienced what it will do. Jesus' statement, "Have
faith in God and nothing shall be impossible unto
you." is not a mere figure of speech; it is a scientific fact, simply
stated.
Your individual thought is the specialized working of
the creative power of life. (All Life.)
Intelligence
The Universal Infinite Mind. The highest intelligence is that mind which understands itself as the instrument through which
the Intelligence which brought it into existence operates.
Love
Universal Life and Universal Law are one. The law of your being (your life) is that you are made in the image of God (the Creative Power which brought you into existence) because you are God's very self specialized.
The law of your life is that your
mind is "the individualization of Universal Mind at the state of
self-evolution in which
your mind attains the capacity for reasoning from the
seen to the unseen and thus penetrating behind the veil of outward
appearance.
So because of the reproduction of the divine creative
faculty in yourself, your mental states or modes of thought are bound
to externalize themselves in your body and in your
circumstances." (Troward.)
Spirit
It is impossible to analyze the
nature of Spirit (or Life), but we can realize that whatever else Spirit
may be, it is a self-creating
power which acts and reacts upon itself, reproducing
itself in inconceivable forms from the cosmos to man. (Just as your mind
acts and reacts upon itself when you are memorizing.)
Origin of all visible things. As it
is independent of time and space, it must be pure thought, the
embodiment of stored consciousness.
A self-acting and self-reacting non-physical creative power or force. Its action can only be thought because thought is the
only conceivable non-physical action.
Thought
The specialized action of the original, creative Spirit or Mind.
Truth
That which lives in you is truth to you.
Visualizing
Inward or mental vision. (Visioning). Life's creating power taking particular form. The act of producing in your mind the
picture of any contemplated idea.
Word
Your individual thought is the specialized word or action of the originating mind-power itself.
"That which starts the etheric vibration of life moving in a special direction," corresponding to the word, which originates
special movement.
"The seed which gives rise to the thing." Plant your word-seed in the Subjective Mind of the universe, and you are sure to
receive a corresponding thing, just as truly as poppy seed produces poppies.
Faith gives substance to things unseen. (The unseen word or thought.)
How to Get What You Want
"Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free."--St. John 8:32
Sage: If a thing is true, there is a definite way in which it is true. And the truest thing in Life is that it contains inherent
within itself absolute joy and liberty of mind, body, and affairs.
Pupil: Do you mean that my understanding of Life's laws can give me the realization of perfect liberty in my individual life?
Sage: Yes, providing you do
not make the common error of judging everything from a material
standpoint only. Recent research in
physical science has established the fact that there
is enough power in a lump of clay to destroy a city. All the average
mind is able to see is the inert clay, whereas, in
reality, it is the physical instrument which contains the invisible
power.
Pupil: Then when I understand the law of vibration, I can get anything I want; achieve anything I desire?
Sage: Life fills all space,
and through the understanding and use of Life's laws, you can give
direction to a particular quality
of creative force, which, if held in place by the
will, is absolutely certain to reproduce in a corresponding physical
form.
What every human being wants is more liberty and more
joy in life. From whatever angle you study the subject of Life, you
will find that degrees of livingness and liberty are
invariably manifested by varying degrees of intelligence. What you would
term inanimate life represents the lower forms of
intelligence; in plant life you recognize a higher degree of
intelligence.
To illustrate this, look at a flower. Is it not
beautiful? Does it not prove to you the indisputable presence of a Great
Intelligence
which is expressing itself as beauty, form, and color,
and above all, joy?
Pupil: Yes.
Sage: Still you will not find
it difficult to recognize in the animal kingdom a quality of Life and
Intelligence which is greatly
in advance of that manifested in the flower. Then the
intelligence which expresses itself in the mind of man as the power
of initiative and selection is the highest expression
of Intelligent Life. Thus you see that the inanimate, the plant, the
animal, and the human all represent the same Universal
Life, the only difference being in the varying degrees of intelligence.
For example: You are expressing a very high degree of
intelligence in desiring to understand the laws of Life. When you have
discovered some part of these laws, you will ascend
the scale of intelligence as you make practical application of your
discoveries.
Another example: Two men leave college with the same
degrees and situated very similarly relative to social and financial
position. Both study the laws of Mind; both are
obliged to struggle. One, by making a great mental effort, keeps
mentally
above the discouraging conditions, and finally becomes
a smooth read, while the other one becomes disheartened and ill, barely
eking out a miserable existence. You can readily see
where the high form of intelligence was manifested in these two cases.
Intelligence was there, but it could only grow by
being used constructively.
How Degrees of Intelligence Prove Man's Place in the Universe
Sage: The greater your
intelligence, the more easily you can call into action the highest order
of creative energy. The more highly
you develop your intelligence (and I do not mean by
this intellectuality or book learning --I mean self-education) the more
you will find your old limited ideas of what you are
not, cannot be, do, or have, imperceptibly slipping away. By using your
intelligence and resting upon it to guide you Godward,
you will come to recognize that you are as much a part of the very
highest Intelligence as a drop of water in a part of
the ocean. This steady recognition on your part, carried into your
everyday
affairs, will give you control over adverse
circumstances, which you realize are, after all, only effects of lower
degrees
of intelligence, and will deliver you from falling a
victim of a material universe. You are not a victim; you are a part of
the Universe.
Pupil: Just what do you mean by "effects of lower degrees of intelligence?"
Sage: I mean, by a lower
degree of intelligence, one that is unable to recognize itself as being
one of the highest forms of life.
The highest degree of intelligence is that form of
life which is able to recognize itself as related to all existing
Intelligence.
For example: You can easily recall the last difficult
situation you came through. It was the expression of the highest form
of Intelligence which enabled you to think your way
out of that.
The Intelligence Which Distinguishes Us from the Ape
Sage: You recognized your
difficulty, but you also recognized your intelligence as being able to
draw to itself, from out the whole
Universe, ways and means of meeting that perplexing
problem. The Law is ever the same. When you are convinced that every
physical
circumstances or thing has its origin in corresponding
activities of the mind (thought), you are able to conquer adversity
in any form, because you know you can always control
your thoughts. You must always be determined do to your own thinking.
Pupil: It is not difficult for
me to understand that the flower is the result of some invisible power,
which must be Intelligence,
but for me to realize that this same life and
intelligent power in my life is not easy. I had not been taught to think
in
this way. However, you have made me realize that if I
wish to learn, I must put into practice the directions you have given
me. So when I needed to have five hundred dollars at a
certain time and could not see any possible means of getting it, I
tried to follow your instructions by mentally seeing
myself as doing the thing I wished to do. I visualized myself paying
my obligation, and in some way, which is still a
mystery, I was able to feel quite calm about it. I made my mental
picture
and actually forgot to worry about the ways and means,
and the money came. I did not quite understand then, and I do not know
now, just how it happened. All that I am able to
realize is that, by my obedience to your teaching, the day was saved for
me, and I shall not forget it.
Now I would like to know if we inherit our tendencies of mind?
Sage: Most of us inherit our
thoughts, just as we inherit the color of our eyes. If you intend to
understand the relation existing
between mental action and material conditions
sufficiently well to control your circumstances, you must think for
yourself,
and in your own way, irrespective of what your
ancestors thought, even though some of them might have brought desired
results.
Pupil: That seems as
impossible as reaching the horizon. However, if you tell me that I can
arrive at the place where circumstances
and conditions will be under my control, through a
steady and determined effort to find out the truth along these lines, I
shall do my own thinking from this moment. My present
condition, however, seems beyond the control of any human being, much
less myself and there have been times when I did
control certain conditions, but at other times the same conditions were
beyond
my control. Why was that?
The Secret of Controlling Your Life Forces
Sage: The reason you
succeeded, without understanding the power which you possesses, was that
you used it unconsciously, according
to the law of its own nature, and reached harmonious
results (as in the incident that you have just related). Your ability,
at all times, to use the unfailing power which is
yours depends upon your recognition of its presence. The reason for your
times of failure is that the distressing condition so
wholly absorbs your attention that you are unable to think of anything
else. At such times you entirely lose sight of the
fact that your individual mind is the instrument through and in which
the
very highest form of intelligence and unfailing power
is endeavoring to express itself. Also, that it always takes the form
of your habitual thought. Therefore, when you believe
that a situation is beyond your control, so it is.
Pupil: Which means that my
control of circumstances is entirely measured by my capacity to know
that the life and intelligence in
me is the same Life and Intelligence which brought me
into existence? The same Life in trees and all nature, and I tune in
with all Life? Will this steady recognition give me
direct contact with all the power and intelligence which exists? Would
simply dwelling on this thought solve any situation
which might arise?
Sage: No. "Faith without works
is dead." God without expression is a nonentity. Thought without action
is powerless. But your recognition
that you are inseparably connected with the joy, life,
intelligence, and power of the Great Whole, unwavering maintained and
carried into practical application, will solve any
problem, because your thought calls into specific action ideas of the
very
highest degree of intelligence and power, which
naturally controls the lesser degrees. "The Lesser modes of life are in
bondage
to the law of their own being because they do not know
the law." Therefore, when you know the Laws of Life, this knowledge
gives you ideas which enable you to control all
adverse circumstances and conditions.
Pupil: This is all so new to me, I do not quite grasp your meaning. Will you please give me an illustration?
How to Light the Pathway of Your Life
Sage: Well, suppose you were
in a room where every comfort had been provided for you, but the room
was in total darkness, and you
were unable to locate the things you desired, although
you were conscious of their presence. You were told that the room was
electrically lighted, and instinctively you began to
grope your way along the wall, where you were accustomed to look for
a light switch. For hours you passed your hands up and
down the walls as far as you could reach until you were quite fatigued.
You were about to give up the search and make the best
of a bad situation, but, overlapping this thought, there came the
resolve
that you would not abandon your effort until you had
located it. You were determined to enjoy the good things awaiting you,
so you renewed your search with the feeling of
assurance that ultimately you would find a way to turn on the light.
After more fruitless endeavor, you
paused to rest, and to wonder where that switch could possibly be, "It
must be here, and
I shall find it," you said to yourself, and again you
passed your hands over the walls, although you felt certain that you
had gone over every inch that you could reach. This
time your thoughts and movements were not quite so tense, although
equally
determined. As your hands moved slowly up and down,
your mind caught the idea that the switch might not be on the wall at
all. You paused a moment, and the suggestion that it
might be on the floor registered in your consciousness. But reason
stepped
in and argued, "Impossible. Whoever head of a light
switch being placed on the floor!" But, the suggestion persisted, "why
not try"
You have gone over what first seemed the most reasonable places to find it. Try the floor." So then you began to reach out
uncertainly with your feet for some projection on the floor which might be a light switch.
Finding the Light
Almost instantly your feet came into
contact with an unfamiliar object. You put your hand on what seemed to
be a push button,
but no light appeared. Nevertheless, you now felt
quite sure that you had located the switch. You paused, and
involuntarily
asked yourself, "How does this thing work? It won't
push and it won't pull." Back came the answer within yourself like a
spoken
word. "Sidewise." You moved it sidewise, and the room
as flooded with light. Your joy at thus finding a responsive
intelligence
within yourself could not be expressed in words. It
was a rapture of the heart which many have felt at times.
Pupil: Oh, I am so glad that the switch was found through clinging to the right mental attitude! Does such persistent effort always
meet with such a satisfactory reward?
Sage: Yes, persistent, confident endeavor always brings satisfaction. In order to give you a complete picture from which you may
logically reason in the future, let us consider the same situation from an opposite angle.
Imagine yourself in the same room
under the same conditions. After several attempts at feeling around in
the dark, you begin
to feel tired, more or less discouraged, and you
reason with yourself thus "Oh, what is the use? There may be a light
switch
in this room, and the room may contain everything I
require, and again it may not." But something indefinable in yourself
convinces you that not only is the light there, but
so, also, are the things you enjoy and desire. You answer right back to
yourself, "Well, if everything is here which I need
and would enjoy, what a pity that I cannot find the switch! What a
strange
and unreasonable way some people have of doing things!
I wonder why the light was not already turned on for me."
Pupil: You make it seem that one almost involuntarily and invariably blames circumstances or people for his failures.
"The Fault, Dear Brutus, Lies Not in the Stars, But in Ourselves, That We are Underlings"
Sage: You must admit that it
is rare to find anyone who realizes that the cause of his failure or
continued misfortune lies within
himself. The reason for this is an almost universal
lack of understanding on the part of the individual that a certain
quality
of thought brings to the consciousness a recognition
of an intelligent power capable of attracting to him, and directing him
to, the fulfillment of his purpose and the attainment
of his desire. On the other hand, the inversion of this same power
effects
a negative result.
Pupil: You mean that a certain quality of thought enables one to do and be what he wishes, while the misuse of the same power seems
to thwart one's purpose?
Sage: Yes. The idea is to use
your power of thought and feeling positively, in order to attain
positive results. Use it negatively,
and you get negative results, because the unchangeable
law is, "Intelligence always manifests in responsiveness." The whole
action of the evolutionary process of Life, from its
first inanimate beginning up to its manifestation in human form, is one
continual intelligent response.
If you would induce yourself to
recognize the presence of a Universal Intelligence which permeates all
nature, you must also
recognize a corresponding hidden deep down in all
things --in the trees, the weeds, and flowers, in the animals, and in
fact,
in everything --which is ever ready to spring into
action when appealed to. It will respond to your call as a child would
obey when bidden to come and play.
In your first experience in the dark
room, your all-absorbing thought was not so much about the darkness as
about the light,
and how it could be turned on. The positive "I will"
quality of your thought brought up from the depth of your inmost soul
a steady flow of intelligent power, which finally
penetrated through to your intellect and guided your hand to the switch.
Pupil: But the second time when I also thought I must find the switch, there was no enlightened response. It seems to me that this
is one's everyday experience. The first case seems like a miraculous coincidence.
Don't Look for Coincidences in Life: Every Effect Has Its Cause
Sage: Oh, no. All is Life, and
all is law and order. There are no coincidences in reality, no "happen
so's." You will realize this
if you will recall some of your own experiences
similar to the ones used in the illustrations. You often feel that you
must
have "light," and, after several attempts to avail
yourself to it, your thought and feeling settle into the "I cannot do
it"
groove; "it may be possible for those who know how,
but I don't," etc. The best method of learning the truth about this is
to live your past experiences over again. Analyze what
your thoughts and feelings were when you succeeded, and when you
failed.
Then draw your own deductions. No written or spoken
words equal this kind of instruction.
Remember that all space is filled
with a responsive Intelligence and Power ever ready to take any form
which your sustaining
thought-demand creates. This power can work only in
terms of the thought instrument through which it operates. Humanity
generally
admits Jesus' ability, Jesus' power to use the spirit
of intelligent life to produce material conditions --as in turning water
into wine, but they doubt their ability to use the
same Power in themselves, in spite of Jesus' assurance, "All things are
possible unto you." Now this statement is either true
or false. If true it is because your mind is the instrument in and
through
which this intelligent Principle of Life takes
initiative action, and this action, in turn, is always in accordance
with the
laws of life, which are subjective in their nature.
Life's Greatest Purpose is to Express Joy, Beauty, and Power
Pupil: Am I right in
concluding that this lesson in life, which is an ever-present,
limitless, intelligent power, is ready at all
times to be guided in any direction that my sustained
thought may give it? If I permit to be anxious, discouraged,
dissatisfied,
I bring into action repelling, destructive forces?
Life's purpose is to give expression to Its joy, beauty, and power,
through
Its particular instrument, my thought. Is this right?
Sage: You have grasped the
letter of the lesson in a remarkable way. Now it remains only for you to
experience the happiness of
what you have learned. Do this by putting your
knowledge to practical application, never losing sight of the fact that
no
matter what justification you may think you have at
the time, any feeling of discouragement, dissatisfaction, or anxiety
causes
the fulfillment of your right desire to recede further
and further away from you. Whereas, by persistent and determined
endeavor
to trust your own desires and ambitions as the
specific expression of the universal loving, guiding, and protecting
Principle,
you will find that your supply for their fulfillment
will unfold to you greater and greater liberty in every direction.
Pupil: When one does not wish
to entertain negative thoughts, how can the sense of discouragement and
anxiety be shut out? I am
sure that it is not because one enjoys feeling worried
that it seems so difficult to eliminate it. Do you mean that it is
as possible to snap out of a thought one doesn't want
as it is to step from one room to another? I should like to know how
that is accomplished, as I have many unwelcome
thoughts which I am wholly unable to dismiss at the time. After a period
they
leave, but it seems to me they use their own sweet
will about it. I have honestly tried to rid myself of thoughts, which
seemed
to cling all the tighter when I tried to throw them
off. It would be wonderful to cast off a thought as one would a garment!
How can it be done?
Sage: By keeping a positive attitude of mind regarding your innermost desire as an accomplished fact, whether it be for a state
of mind or for a thing. You cannot think positive and negative thoughts at the same time.
Pupil: Oh, is that true? It seems to me I have often been speaking to someone on a certain subject while my thoughts were on an
entirely different one.
You Can Actually Think of Only One Thing at a Time
Sage: You were thinking one
thing and saying another. You had only one thought. You automatically
said one thing while thinking
another. In short, your words were not the expression
of the thought in your mind. Suppose you give yourself a test; try to
think of yourself as a success and a failure at the
same time. You will find it impossible to think positively and
negatively
simultaneously.
In our next lesson we will take this
up more extensively and prove why it is true. Also why you, as an
individual, can control
circumstances, whether they be mental, physical, or
financial, through the understanding of your personal relationship to
the Intelligence which governs the universe.
Pupil: I know that what you
say is true, but just what method should I employ to accomplish this?
There are times when I become
cross and impatient with myself because I give way to
anxiety and fear (the very things which I know now will cause my
defeat).
And yet I will do it, just as I will eat something I
like even though I know it will disagree with me. Could you give me a
formula to use at such times?
How to Drive Anxiety Out of Your Mind
Sage: When the triad of
enemies --fear, anxiety, and discouragement --assails you, poisoning
your mind and body, weakening your
power to attract what you want, begin instantly to
take deep breaths, and repeat as fast as you can, aloud or silently, the
following affirmation, which is an antidote to the
poison and a powerful assurance and attraction of Good:
"The Life in me is inseverably connected with all the life that exists, and it is entirely devoted to my personal advancement."
If you are alert and can make this
affirmative thought overlap the negative, anxious suggestion, you will
very soon free yourself.
If the tendency to dwell on these erroneous beliefs
keeps recurring, go where you can be alone, repeat your affirmation, and
endeavor to lift your mind up to your words, much as
you would lift your breath from the bottom to the top of your lungs.
Never be impatient with yourself because you do not
quite succeed in your every endeavor. It is your intention that counts,
not necessarily the absolute fulfillment of the
letter. The ALL-KNOWING POWER THAT IS understands and rewards
accordingly.
Be diligent and patient, and you will surely succeed.
How to Overcome Adverse Conditions
"There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so." --Shakespeare.
Sage: If you wish to overcome
adverse conditions or to maintain a favorable one, it is necessary to
have some knowledge of the
fundamental or originating Spirit, and your relation
to It. The true order of these fundamental principles of life which you
are endeavoring to understand does not require you to
deny the reality of the existing physical world, or to call it an
illusion.
On the contrary, by admitting the existence of the
physical, you thereby see the completion of a great invisible, creative
process. This enables you to assign physical
manifestations to their proper places in the creative series, which your
former
way of thinking did not enable you to do. You now
realize that, while the origin of life is not in itself physical or
material,
it must throw out physical and material vehicles
through which to function as its means of expression, in varying degrees
of intelligence, such as the vegetable or the animal
kingdom, and the human, as illustrated in our last lesson. All are forms
of life, because of that inner Principle of being
which sustains them. The Life Principle with which you are primarily
concerned
is the life of thought and feeling in yourself. You
are a vehicle or distributing medium of the creative Spirit of Life. If
you understand this, you will have some idea of what
the originating Spirit of Life is in Itself, and your relation to It
as an individual.
Pupil: Since thought and
feeling are the origin of all things, would it not be necessary to get
into the spirit of their origin
in order to control circumstances? Is it true that my
thoughts and feelings are the same as those of the limitless Power and
Intelligence of the universe?
How You Can Control Circumstances and Erroneous Conditions
Sage: In essence they are the
same. You are able to control the circumstances and conditions relative
to your individual world,
of which you are the center, by making your thoughts
and feelings correspondent in quality (at least in a degree) to what
you believe are those of the originating, intelligent
forces of life.
Pupil: Is it true that the
life in me contains everything that I, as an individual, could ever
require? Are my thoughts and feelings
the centralizing power of my particular world? If so,
then Browning explains the situation when he says, "We carry within
us the wonders we seek without us." If I know and
practice this great fact, the wonder of Life's understanding power will
come forth in me by its own divine right, and assume
command over all my problems in exactly the same degree that I recognize
it. Is that correct?
Sage: Yes, Browning has voiced
the truth in that sentence. The divine Principle in you is complete,
and is the only Life there
is. But this should not lead you into the error of
believing that you are not to exert yourself. Remember that the
life-germ
in you is an Intelligence which can call into specific
action all of life's forces from out the entire universe, but it can
only work through your intelligence in correspondence
to what you confidently believe it can and will do. Therefore, be
practical
in your reasoning, and diligent in your deeds.
Suppose I give you an example: You
have a glass of dirty water. In order to have the clear water, you would
continue to pour
the clean water into the glass of dirty water until
every drop of the dirty water had flowed out of it, wouldn't you? The
same rule applies to adverse conditions. Pour into
them a steady stream of confidence in the power of God in you to change
them, and they will change, correspondingly.
Pupil: I understand. You mean that I should use my common sense, coupled with a steady faith in God and earnest, concentrated mental
effort?
Common Sense and Your Mental Faculties
Sage: That is it. Use your
common sense and all your mental faculties as far as they will take you.
However, you should never try
to force a situation. Always allow for the Law of
Growth. Remember that conditions will grow into the correlative shape of
your firmly held mental attitude "under the guidance
of the All Creating Wisdom." If you will follow this method of
reasoning,
you will soon form the habit of examining your own
attitude of mind for the key to your progress and enjoyment of life.
Endeavor
to keep before your mind's eye the thought that every
physical or material condition in your life corresponds to your habitual
thought tendency, and your thought tendency will
eventually become the reproduction of the way you regard your personal
life,
as related to all life.
Pupil: Shall I be able to
overcome one limitation after another, as I develop the knowledge and
feeling of regarding the Life Principle
in me as the source of all physical experience? As I
advance along these lines, shall I grow into the liberty of enjoying
life in my own way?
Sage: In studying the law of
your own being, the important thing to realize is that you, as an
individual, are a specializing center,
through which the power or essence of Life takes forms
which correspond exactly to your most habitual conceptions. Try to
realize more and more thoroughly, both in theory and
in practice, that the relation between your individual mind and the
Universal
Parent Mind is one of reciprocal action. Grasp the
principle of reciprocity, and you will comprehend why you fall short
sometimes
of enjoying life, and how you can attain to full
enjoyment; just as the law of gravitation shows why iron sinks in water,
and can also be made to float.
Pupil: It is rather difficult for me to understand what you mean by the reciprocal action between my individual mind and the Universal
Parent Mind.
Suppose I am facing a big financial
problem, and I endeavor to bring my mind into a state of confident
expectancy through
meditation upon the ever-present supply in all forms
of life, and by repeating an affirmation which seems logical. Would that
do it? Where does the reaction come in? And how? If my
happiness in life depends upon this understanding, and upon living
in a state of conscious reciprocity with the Parent
Mind, it seems just now that it is a long way off, because I do not
grasp
your meaning. Should I feel a reaction within myself
when striving for a certain state of consciousness?
How Your Mind is Related to the Universal Mind
Sage: We said in our last
lesson that your mind was at outcome of the great Universal Parent Mind
which brought you into existence
for the direct purpose of expressing Itself through
you. The reciprocal action between your mind and the Parent Mind might
be compared with a tree and its branches. Your mind is
the specific expression of the Universal Mind from which it draws its
power to think. Just as a branch of a tree is a
specific part of a tree, not apart from it, but a part of it. Thus,
between
the Universal Mind or Life and its own specialized
expression (which is your mind), there is a perpetual interaction, as
with
the tree and its parts; its branches and its leaves
are continually drawing sustenance from the parent trunk. Your thought
action is the specialized, identical action of the
Universal Mind.
Example: Imagine yourself feeling a
bit downcast, when suddenly you are handed a telegram with the news that
the one person
in the world whom you love the most is on his way to
see you, and the messenger of some wonderful news! Can you not imagine
what a definite reaction you would have from news like
that! Well, you can stimulate the same quality of thought, that same
feeling of joy and surety between your individual mind
and its source, through mentally picturing yourself as doing the things
that you enjoy. See yourself happy, and lift your mind
up to it by constantly repeating a happy affirmation, and you will
readily realize the reaction in kind.
Pupil: I see. The way that
adverse conditions are to be overcome is through my recognition of the
reciprocal action going on continually
between my mind and the One great Universal Mind,
which brings about the same kind of a reaction that I would have from an
agreeable experience on the physical plane. I used to
think that conditions were overcome by ignoring them, and setting aside
the inherent law that caused them. I begin to realize
now (theoretically at least) that the laws of life cannot be ignored
nor destroyed, but, on the contrary, must be made to
work for us to produce a harmonious existence.
Sage: Adverse circumstances
are overcome by reversing the originating cause, which is your own
thought. Anxiety and fear always
attract conditions of their own kind. Reverse this
tendency and entertain only those thoughts which register harmony and
confident
assurance, and the adverse circumstances will recede,
and in their place will appear the conditions which correspond to your
changed mentality.
Pupil: Am I to regard my mind as a branch of the Universal Mind from which I draw all my substance?
Sage: Yes. You now have a
fairly good general idea of the two ultimates: the Universal and the
individual, and their relation to
each other. I think we should now consider the process
of specialization, that is, how to make nature's laws produce a
particular
effect which "could not be produced under the simple
generic conditions spontaneously provided by nature."
How to Remedy Nature's Shortcomings
Pupil: How can one create conditions not provided by nature?
Sage: Do not overlook the word
"spontaneous." By consciously and intelligently arranging your thoughts
in the new order, by looking
within yourself for the solutions of your problems,
instead of without, you will certainly find that ideas will come to you,
which, if followed, will produce new conditions other
than those provided by nature.
Pupil: How can I do this? Is this brought about by causing my thoughts to correspond to those which I think the Universal Mind must
have?
Sage: Let me give you an
illustration of what I mean. Take the case of a miller who has been
grinding his grain by hand. His instinctive
feeling is that there should be a more efficient way
of grinding grain, and he meditates a good deal on what this way might
be. One day, while walking in the country, his
attention is attracted, for the first time, to the power in a stream of
water
as it rushes past him. He pauses, and reflects on how
this power could be utilized for his particular purpose.
"Why not harness it and make it grind
my grain?" he asks himself. This unexpected inspiration thrills him
through and through,
not only because of its possibilities, but because of
his feeling of assurance that it can be accomplished. Immediately, the
desired result begins to picture itself in his mind.
By the side of the stream he sees his gristmill working under
conditions,
with a great wheel attached to it revolved by the
force of the running water, and thus grinding his grain. The force of
the
water spontaneously provided by nature has not been
changed; it has been specialized to meet an individual requirement.
How Nature Working Through Mind Can Grind the Grain
Pupil: Naturally the power of
the water could not of itself have ground the grain, but through the
interaction of the individualized
Universal Intelligence in the miller's mind, he made
this power "spontaneously provided by nature" do his bidding, just as
Burbank specialized nature's laws by making cactus
grow without thorns, and blackberries without seeds.
Sage: Yes, you have grasped my
meaning. Your comprehension of the interaction between the water-power,
or nature, and the individualized
Intelligence in the mind of man is scientifically
correct. You see now that it is an entire reversal of your old
conception.
Formerly, you took forms and conditions as symbols,
and inferred that they were the causes of mental states and material
conditions;
now you are learning that the true order of the
creative process is exactly the reverse, that thought and feeling are
the
originating causes which form corresponding external
conditions. This is the foundation principle upon which you can
specialize
the generic law of the whole creative process, and
cause it to bring all of its Intelligence and Power to bear, in meeting
your particular necessity.
Showing the Silver Lining of the Cloud
Pupil: You are right. I have been inverting the order of cause and effect. It always seemed to me that conditions both created and
controlled my thoughts, that is, I involuntarily accepted the thoughts which the conditions suggested.
For example: Suppose I want to be at a certain place at a certain time. My appointment is important and I shall be late. What
a terrible thing it will be! There seems nothing to be done. That is the way I used to think.
Now, in the new order of thinking, I
shall endeavor to mentally see myself as keeping my appointment, etc. I
shall get into
the spirit of the thought that nothing can impede my
progress or thwart my purpose, and I am sure that a way will open
enabling
me to materialize this thought on the physical plane. I
am sure that in some unforeseen way my engagement will be kept,
satisfactorily
to myself and to the other person. In fact, I have
experienced similar episodes.
Sage: Yes, almost everyone has
had such experiences as you have related, but very few profit by them.
The law is, "As a man thinks
so it becomes." If you wish to withdraw from an
undesirable situation, you must adopt the scientific method of
affirmative
thinking, and follow it up as a permanent factor in
life.
You will find that the universal
causative Power (call it what you will) always manifests as supreme
Intelligence in the adaptation
of means to ends. For instance, there is something
which you wish to do --build a house, sell something, or do a kind act
for someone. It is this supreme Intelligence
manifested through you that guides your activities. Without it, you
would be
unable to outline your intention, much less accomplish
your purpose. Your intelligence is the instrument through which the
One Great Intelligence of the universe is constantly
taking specific form. This being true, every idea which registers in
your mind was first formed in this One Infinite Mind. A
continual recognition of this fact will enable you to find your way
out of any sense of limitation which may arise in your
individual experience.
I once heard of a man who had an
intense desire to do big things. He asked his teacher to think with him
along the lines just
discussed --that the Intelligence of the universe was
taking specific form in his individual intelligence. His teacher agreed
providing the student's desire was great enough to
force him to arise every morning and take a two-mile walk, meanwhile
meditating
upon this interaction between the Universal
Intelligence and its special form, his mind. The student also was
instructed to
form the practice of making mental pictures for the
precise purpose of developing his intuition and imagination. One
suggestion
was that he should mentally see himself walking along a
beautiful, clear, flowing river, hearing the rippling water, and seeing
the reflection of the trees on its clear surface, and
then to transfer his mental picture to one depicting his own desire.
After following this practice for six months, an idea
of almost overwhelming magnitude came to his mind. This did not seem
unnatural, however, as it was so completely in accord
with his recent habit of picturing his all-absorbing desire. He joyously
continued his walks, his meditation, and
visualization, and finally the Universal Intelligence manifested in its
specific
form (his mind) by giving specific directions to bring
the big idea into successful operation.
Pupil: Could his mind have captured this big idea without the help of a teacher?
Always Learn to Do Your Own Thinking
Sage: Certainly. The idea did
not come through the teacher's mind; he simply started the student on
the right track. No one can
think for another. It was the result of his determined
effort to recognize his own individual intelligence as the instrument
in which the Greater Intelligence was constantly
taking form. All that the teacher did (all that anyone could do) was to
help
him to hold his thought along the path he desired to
go. The help of the teacher strengthened his conviction and faith in
the power in himself.
Pupil: Is this originating
power of life a forming power as well as a creating and direction one,
and did the teacher's thinking
along the same lines steady the student's thoughts?
Without the support of a more advanced mind, could anyone succeed in a
great undertaking?
Sage: Certainly. If you are
sufficiently convinced of the absolute truth of your method, you do not
need any sustaining force outside
of your own conviction. You miss the point of your
relationship to the great whole if you do not realize that it is not
only
an originating, but also a forming power. Do you not
recognize its forming power throughout nature? You would not think of
trying to make a lily a rose. If you know that the
same Power that created the flowers also made your mind for the specific
purpose of operating in it, you would soon learn to
trust its formative nature in its operation through your intelligence.
Pupil: I understand. It is the power of Life in man which originates, creates, directs, and forms. In reality, there seems to be
nothing whatever for man to do in this great scheme of things except to enjoy life, if he can only learn how!
God and Company, Ltd.
Sage: The Law of Life is God
and Company. You are the Company, and you cannot in any sense be an idle
partner, if you wish to profit
by the partnership. Your part is a big one, and there
is plenty for you to do in providing a concrete center around which
the universal divine energies can operate.
Pupil: Does this mean that to realize my oneness with the joy of life I shall not find it as simple as it seems?
Sage: No doubt there will be
times when you will find it difficult to transfer your thought from
externals to the interior realm
of the originating principle, and to joyfully hold it
there until external conditions correspond with the ideas you have in
mind, but there should never be any strain. You are
attracted to the Universal Mind as your source of supply, along the
lines
of least resistance. That is to say, along these lines
which are the most natural to your individual and particular bent of
mind. In this way you infuse into the Universal Mind
your desires and ambitions, thus intensifying your power of attraction
(relative to the desire uppermost in your mind) from
the infinite forces.
For instance, let us suppose that you
feel very much alone, not altogether lonely, but alone (there is a
difference, you know),
and yearn for congenial companionship. At a certain
night and morning, go where you will not be interrupted, and mentally
picture yourself walking with a companionable friend
(no person whom you know, but an ideal one); then see yourself riding
with this same friend, and the two of you doing many
happy things together. Keep your picture in mind until all sense of
aloneness
has disappeared, and you feel an unmistakable sense of
companionship. Let that feeling register in your consciousness, and
try to recall it at will. If you will practice in this
way, you will very soon realize that this is the reciprocal action
between your mind and the Universal Mind. Once this
recognition is well established, your ideals will begin to express
themselves
in form.
Pupil: Then one's efforts should be wholly directed to the attainment of a higher degree of intelligence, rather than to the acquiring
of material things?
"God Will Provide the Food, but He Will Not Cook the Dinner"
Sage: Such a purpose is the
very highest, and aspirations along this line would surely externalize
corresponding things. Under
no circumstances should you allow yourself to form the
habit of idle dreaming. The material side of life should not be
despised,
for it is the outside of a corresponding inside, and
has its place. The thing to guard against is the acquiring of material
possessions as your ultimate aim. However, when
certain external facts appear in the circle of your life, you should
work
with them diligently and with common sense. Remember
that things are symbols, and that the thing symbolized is more important
than the symbol itself. "God will provide the food,
but He will not cook the dinner."
Pupil: My part then is to cook
the dinner, so to speak; to use the intelligence with which I have been
endowed, by making it a power
to attract, from out the universe, ideas that will
provide for me in any direction that I may choose to go, according to
law?
Sage: Yes, if you choose to go
with life's continual, harmonious movement, you will find that the more
you use the law of harmony
through progressive thinking, the more intimately
acquainted you will become with the law of reciprocity. This law
corresponds
to the same principles which govern physical science;
that is, "nature obeys you precisely in the same degree as you obey
nature." This knowledge always leads to liberty.
Pupil: How does nature obey me?
Sage: Nature's first and
greatest law is harmony. You see the results of harmonious law in the
beautiful world around you. If you
obey nature's suggestion, and follow the law you will
be the recipient of all the benefits contained in this law of harmony
that nature has to offer, such as health, strength,
contentment, etc., for all of her laws bring freedom and harmony. You
will find nature responding along the same lines, to
the extent that your thoughts and acts are in accordance with her
perfect
laws.
Pupil: Is the power of thought always creative, and does it always create conditions corresponding to itself? Can one know this
law sufficiently well to cause it to respond immediately?
Fifteen Minutes Night and Day are Not Enough
Sage: Thought as thought is
always creative, either good or bad. The length of time required for the
corresponding physical conditions
to appear in the circle of your individual environment
depends entirely upon your ability to recognize that your desired
course
is a normal, already existing, mental fact. It is not
enough to get into the spirit of your reasoning for fifteen minutes
night and morning, with the inward confidence that you
are directing a certain, unfailing power toward a desired physical
manifestation, and then spend the remainder of your
waking moments in doubt and fear. The whole question is, how does your
particular sustained thought affect you? If it
stimulates your feeling of faith, the response is immediate.
Pupil: Could you give me something to memorize which will help me to eliminate doubt and fear?
Sage: Yes. The thought I use
most frequently myself is this: "My mind is a center of divine
operation. The divine operation is
always for expansion and fuller expression, and this
means the production of something beyond what has gone before, something
entirely new, not included in past experience, though
proceeding out of it by an orderly sequence of growth. Therefore, since
the divine cannot change the inherent nature, it must
operate in the same manner in me: consequently, in my own special world,
of which I am the center, it will move forward to
produce new conditions always in advance of any that have gone before."
(Dore Lectures)
You should memorize this passage and
meditate upon it, endeavoring to make your mind a "center of divine
operation," by entertaining
only such thoughts as you feel are reflections of
God's thoughts. Whenever you sense that your way to freedom is
obstructed,
make a stronger endeavor to live with the spirit of
your affirmation, and you will soon find your mind receiving ideas,
which,
if followed, will guide you into the path of absolute
liberty.
The Devils of Doubt and Fear
Pupil: Doubt and fear are the devil, are they not? Is not fear the more destructive of all wrong elements? It seems to me that it
is every present in one form or another. Can this monster be entirely eliminated from one's mind?
Sage: Surely. Although fear is the most destructive of all the mental enemies, and, as you say, seems to be ever present, yet when
you realize that your fear is just as certain
to materialize as is your faith, you will grow more and more guarded as to the quality of thought which you harbor. Practice
makes perfect.
Pupil: Try as I will to inhibit fear, I am unable to succeed at present. At times I utterly fail, and I am overwhelmed with it.
How to Drive Out Fear
Sage: The moment you begin to
feel fearful, get into the open if possible, walk briskly for a mile or
two, taking deep breaths,
and holding your chin in and chest up. Think of
yourself as a monarch of all you survey and assume a corresponding
commanding
attitude. Repeat with every breath this affirmation:
"I am breathing in the Life, the Love, and the Power of the universe
RIGHT NOW!" Hold the breath a second, with the
affirmation in the center of your mind; then expel the breath with the
same
thought and send it out to mingle with the ether of
the universe. "I and my Father of Love are ONE."
If you cannot get out into the open,
assume, wherever you are, the same attitude. Take deep breaths, repeat
the affirmation,
and you feel certain that you are protected and
supplied with all the love and power which Life has to give, fear will
disappear,
and you can resume whatever you were doing.
Strengthening Your Will
"All we have willed or hoped or dreamed of good, shall exist;
Not its semblance, but itself; no beauty, nor good, nor power
Whose voice has gone forth, but each survives for the melodist,
When eternity affirms the conception of an hour."
Browning
Sage: The importance of the
will is so frequently misunderstood that I think we will consider its
true nature and purpose for a
while this morning. Almost everyone is conscious that
willing is not imagining. What the function of the will is, for the
most part, baffles and escapes our reasoning.
Pupil: I understand that most schools of mental science teach that one should not try to use or even understand the will, because
to make conscious use of will-power leads one astray.
Sage: It is most important that you should have sufficient knowledge of your will not to misuse it, or to be led astray through
lack of understanding its place and power.
Pupil: It is a compelling, creative power?
Sage: Correctly speaking, the will is neither one. It is in no sense creative. There are times, however, when a strong will can
compel certain external combinations.
Pupil: If will-power can produce certain external results, why not use it to that end?
Sage: Because it was not intended to be used in this way. Conditions brought into existence by mere force of will lack vitality;
consequently, the situations brought about by simple will power disappear as soon as the will relaxes.
Pupil: Do the things which are forced into being through the power of a strong will disappear simply because they lack vitality,
or because the compelling power relinquishes its hold?
Sage: Both, because of the lack of any real life in them, and because the energy of the will which supports them is withdrawn.
Pupil: I have read a great deal about the function of the will. What does it mean?
The Action or Function of the Will
Sage: It depends upon what you have read about the different kinds of will. The will is the power-control in your mind, which holds
your thought in a given direction until a result has been accomplished.
For example: Suppose you wish to go
to a certain place; without the will to go there, you could not even
start, nor could
you retain the thought of the place long enough to
arrive. You would start in the right direction, and then, because there
was not sustaining power in the thought, you might
turn and go in another direction.
Pupil: So it is the will which holds the thought to a given purpose until it is consummated; or keeps an idea in its place in one's
mind until it is objectified in form. It might be termed a thought-stabilizer.
Sage: Just so. It is the will
which holds your mental faculties in position relative to the creative
power which does the desired
work. Thought is always creative, as I have explained
in my book "The Edinburgh Lectures of Mental Science," page 84: "If,
using the word in its widest sense, we may say that
the imagination is the creative function, we may call the will the
centralizing
principle, its function being to keep the imagination
centered in the right direction." The will has much the same place in
our mental machinery that the tool-holder has in a
power-lathe. To my mind this is the will.
Pupil: It is a wonderfully clear statement. It means that success or failure is contingent upon but one thing: mental control, and
the will is this controlling factor.
Sage: The business of the will is always the same, that of keeping your mental faculties where they will do the work you intend
them to do.
Pupil: Suppose I were conducting a business, but my thoughts were more on an anticipated vacation than on my work. Naturally my
business would suffer. How could my will help me?
Practice "Will Exercises"
Sage: The case you relate
illustrates a weak will. You know that your thoughts should be kept on
your business, but your will is
too weak to do it. You should practice will exercises
to strengthen your mental energies. These will help you to focus your
attention on business or any desired activity.
Pupil: If one concentrated his entire attention on business during business hours, would he be able to relax it later and enjoy
his home and play?
Sage: With a properly trained
will, you can pick up a thought at choice, hold it until it has finished
its work, let it go again,
and then pick up another thought, repeating the
process again and again if you choose. In short, you can work when you
work
and play when you play.
Pupil: No doubt it can be done, but it seems to me now that it would be a terrible strain.
Sage: On the contrary, the well-trained, developed will maintains any position you desire without any strain on the nervous system,
and its use is never followed by a sense of fatigue.
Pupil: I have always found it a great strain to hold on to any thought which did not abide in consciousness naturally.
Sage: This is an indication of
a weak will, which should be strengthened through exercise, the
beginning of which should be "a
calm, peaceful determination to retain a certain
mental attitude in spite of all temptations to the contrary, knowing
that
by doing so, the desired result will surely appear."
Pupil: Is the will intelligent?
"A Developed Will is the Handmaid of Intelligence"
Sage: The developed will is the handmaid of Intelligence.
Pupil: What do you mean by that?
Sage: In training your will,
you will become conscious of the presence of a tremendous power which
acts on the plans of the very
beginning, or first cause, of every so-called physical
thing. This power is the primary Living Intelligence of the universe.
Tell yourself what you desire in a clear, concise way,
confidently knowing that it is certain to externalize itself as an
objective fact, because your will acts upon the
unformed creative, or primary, Intelligence, and causes it to take the
form
that you have determined upon.
Pupil: That does not sound so
difficult. Of one thing I am certain, that is, that my entire
environment is the result of my habitual
tendency of thought. Also, that when I know that I
should turn my thoughts into other channels, but do not, simply letting
them run along the lines of least resistance, it is
because my will is weak and untrained. Will you please tell me the
quickest
way that this can be remedied?
You Acquire Energy, as Well as Ambition, by Exercising the Will
Sage: I will give you a few
exercises for developing the will, and from these you can fashion others
to suit your own requirements.
In the first place, it is important to realize that
any tendency to strain will be detrimental and must be avoided. Such
exercises
are not only interesting, but stimulating, and if
persistently practiced will keep your ambitions from lagging. They will
give you new impulses, renewed energy, and
determination to be and to something better and greater than anything in
the past.
Once you are fully conscious of the place and power of
your will, in the mental realm, to keep the creative energy at work
in formulating your desires, you will realize that it
is very susceptible to training, and you will never again be content
to live without its constant use, for it would be like
living only half a life.
Pupil: May I ask a question
right here? I am a fairly good pianist but dislike to begin my practice,
and, although I enjoy it once
I have begun, to start is always a struggle. If I were
to compel myself to practice on the piano at a certain time every day,
would that develop and strengthen my will?
Sage: It would help, but the
greatest benefit would be in the direction of making you a better
musician. The best way to strengthen
your will is to practice exercises for the sole
purpose of strengthening the will, always remembering, while taking
them,
that your effort is for self-training and
self-control, to the end that you many realize yourself as a part of the
great universal
whole. In this way you gain a peaceful centralization,
which, though maintained by a conscious act of the will, is the very
essence of rest. With a well-developed, trained will,
your thoughts will never wander from the consciousness that "all is
life, and all is good, and nature, from her clearly
visible surface to her most arcane depths, is a storehouse for good."
You have the key to her great
treasures, and whatever appeals to you most at any particular time and
place, is that mode of
the universal Living Spirit with which you are at that
moment most in touch. Realizing this, you draw from out the universe
streams of vital energy, which make the very act of
living a joy, which radiate from you vibrations that can turn aside all
injurious suggestions. This is surely a good and
sufficient reason for developing the will.
Exercise for Strengthening the Will
The will is weak because of lack of
exercise. Training the will is very much the same as training the
muscles. Its development
is gradual. Only will can develop will; consequently,
you begin with what will you have, and expand and strengthen it thought
its action upon itself. The weak will manifests in two
phases: over-action and under-action; the former as impulsiveness,
impetuousness, and the life, and the latter as
lethargy, phlegmatism, etc.
It is good to begin each day with a
resolution not to hurry, and not to leave any task unfinished. Effort in
this direction
is of inestimable value. There should be only one
object in your mind with reference to your exercise --the development
and
strengthening of your will. At the time have no
thought of your improvement as a musician, for if there is any ulterior
motive,
your will-training will be lost sight of.
Cultivate the Feeling of Contentment
Cultivate the sense of contentment,
and begin your exercise with that feeling, determining to do it in a
happy frame of mind.
This is important. Take your exercise at a time of day
when interruptions are least likely to occur, for 7 consecutive days,
10 consecutive minutes a day. If an interruption
occurs during the exercise, start all over again. If you forget the
exercise
for one day before you have finished your course of 7
days, begin the entire set again and go through with it uninterruptedly.
Place a notebook and pencil by your
side before beginning. Now take fifty matches, beads, buttons, bits of
paper, or any other
small objects, and drop them slowly and deliberately
into a box one by one, with a feeling of contentment and satisfaction,
declaring with each movement, "I will to will." The
one and most important thought is that you are training your will for
the particular advantage of having a trained will, and
this is why you should cultivate the feeling of contentment. The only
method by which you can study the development of your
will is by self-analysis and introspection, so, when you have finished
your practice, ask yourself such questions as these:
"What did I think about the exercise while I was doing it? Did I believe
it would really cultivate my will, or did I do it just
because I was told to? Did I actually concentrate on dropping the
matches
into the box, or was I more concerned with their
arrangement, or was I distracted with other thoughts, good or bad? Was I
watching the time impatiently, or was I consciously
engaging in thoughts of satisfaction and contentment? Did I have a sense
of strain, or did it brace me up? Do I believe that it
will really train my will if I faithfully follow it up long enough
to prove it?" etc., etc.
Write down this series of questions and answers in your notebook. You will find it both interesting and encouraging to keep
this record and thus watch your progress.
Stimulating an Interest in Your Will Exercise
You can stimulate interest in your
exercise by varying your resolution or intention. That is, one time hold
a conscious attitude
of joyously willing to will, another of powerfully
willing to will, another of peacefully, and another contentedly, etc.,
etc. These variations in the exercise with the
suggestions for introspection, which have been slightly changed, were
taken
from the best authority, as far as I know, along the
lines of will-training, and I am positive will bring the attainment of
a firm, strong will, and an intelligent use of it.
Making Your Subjective Mind Work for You
"The most potent force in the universe is the influence of the subconscious mind. The proper training of the correlation between the subliminal and the objective faculties is the open sesame that unlocks the richest of all storehouses, --the faculty of remembering. And with remembering there follows natural reflections, vision, knowledge, culture, and all that tends to make of man a God, though in the germ." --Dr. Edwin F. Bowers
Pupil: The subject of the
subjective mind greatly interests me. I am sure that had I understood
what you have said concerning it,
I would have realized that all that was necessary to
obtain my desires was to think out exactly what I wanted, consciously
place it in my subjective mind, and it would at once
begin to attract ways and means for its corresponding physical or
material
fulfillment.
Sage: Indeed the study of the
subjective mind is an all-absorbing subject. I may be able to enlighten
and help you to make working
realities out of what now seems to be vague and even
mysterious. But it will rest entirely with you to put vitality into
these
suggestions, and that can only be accomplished through
using them.
Pupil: You mean that by making practical use of your suggestions, I will be able to attain practical results which will help not
only myself but others also?
Sage: That is the idea. It has
always seemed to me that the average person prefers the satisfaction of
giving to another what he
requires, rather than helping or teaching him how to
attract the desired things to himself, which would give him in addition
a feeling of assurance and liberty. You would
unquestionably enjoy giving to others, and the recipient would likewise
enjoy
receiving, but, as a rule, it tends to pauperize the
spirit of independence.
Pupil: If I were to put into
my subconscious mind a definite idea that all people have the same power
in their subconscious minds
to attract to themselves the things they desire
through their own efforts, would that thought register in their
subconscious
minds?
Sage: That would be the intelligent way of impersonally helping others to connect with their limitless supply.
Pupil: You have told me before that there was a definite way of impressing the subconscious mind with a particular thought. Would
you mind explaining this again?
"Get into the Spirit of Your Desire"
Sage: The process is quite
different from that of retaining an idea in the so-called intellectual
mind. It is necessary, above
all else, to get into the spirit of your desire, and
an effort to feel relaxed and confident will help you to do this. "The
spirit of a thing is that which is the source of its
inherent movement." For example, if you wish to impress your
subconscious
mind with the sense of contentment, you must meditate
on the quality of contentment. See how that affects you. If in response
to your meditation you feel relaxed and confident, you
may be sure that your subconscious mind has been impressed with that
thought. This is getting "into the spirit" of
contentment; not because of certain physical reasons, but because of
your recognition
of life's action in you in this specific direction.
You have the whole of Universal Mind to draw from. There is no limit to
the creative power of your subjective mind once you
have impressed it with your intention. This example applies to
everything
great or small.
Pupil: Since my subjective mind is a part of the Universal Mind, if I impress it with an idea or desire, does this impression pass
automatically into the Universal Subjective Mind?
Sage: Your subjective mind is
in essence the same as the Universal Subjective Mind with which it is
inseparably connected. It should
be understood that your subjective mind receives its
impressions from the objective mind and never from material things. It
is therefore necessary to withdraw your thought from
the material or physical thing you desire, and to mentally dwell upon
the spiritual symbol of it, which is the inherent
source of its formation.
How to Visualize and Objectify the Mental Image
All this may seem somewhat involved
to you, because it is the study of the intangible rather than the
tangible, but it will
unfold to you as we go on, and it will seem quite
simple. All we know of the invisible is gained from what we see it do on
the plane of the visible. Perhaps an illustration will
give you a clearer idea of that interior part of your being, which
is the support of all that which must naturally
subsist in the universal here and the everlasting now.
First, endeavor to realize yourself
as pure spirit, the essential quality of which is good. Pure spirit is
pure life, and
naturally, the only thing it could desire is to
manifest more and more life, without reference to the forms through
which
the manifestation takes place. Consequently, "the
purer your intention, the more readily it is placed in your subconscious
mind," which instantly passes it into the Universal
Mind.
For example: If you want a house, a
certain kind of a chair, a sum of money, or anything else, you should
first ponder studiously
on how the desired object originated. Meditating thus
on the original spirit of the thing in question starts the creative
power of your subjective mind (which is in touch with
all the creative energy which exists) operating in that specific
direction.
Suppose it is a house you desire. You
will go back to the original concept of it. The idea of a house had its
origin in a
primary need for shelter, protection from the
elements, and comfort, and out of these original desires there grew our
present
dwellings. So you proceed to build a house in your own
consciousness first, thinking only harmonious, constructive thoughts
regarding it. This kind of thinking (or building)
gives your subjective mind definite material to work with, and because
of
its amenableness to suggestion, coupled with its
native creative power, it will go ahead and eventually bring the house
into
manifestation.
Pupil: If I earnestly and righteously desire a certain kind of a home, how shall I proceed?
Sage: You should first form a
clear conception in your objective mind of the sort of a house which you
desire; whether one, two,
or three stories; the number and size of the rooms;
how many windows and doors; in short, you should mentally picture the
completed house, both inside and out. Go all around
the house; look over the exterior; then go indoors and examine it
carefully
from cellar to garret in every detail. Then drop the
picture and dwell in the spiritual prototype of the house.
Pupil: I do not fully understand what the spiritual prototype is?
Sage: The simplest method of
finding a spiritual prototype of any object is to ask yourself to what
use it is to be put, what does
it stand for, in other words, what is the reason for
its being? As we have been saying, a house is a place of shelter,
comfort,
protection. It might be called a refuge.
Pupil: Then if I want a house
(really a home), and there seems no ordinary way of my having it, I am
to impress my desire upon by
subjective mind, by mentally picturing the type of
house I want, in conjunction with the ideas of shelter, comfort, and
protection,
and mentally live in that state of mind, while, in
order to supplement a mental atmosphere of "pure intention," I admit no
thoughts of discord, such as anger, jealousy, doubt,
fear, etc., but entertain thoughts of love, joy, beauty, and harmony.
Would this not be literally living in my true mental
abode. And could I not expect to see it objectified in a material home?
What the House Symbolizes
Sage: Yes, because every
physical or material thing is the result of an idea first possessed in
consciousness. These ideas, which
are universal by nature, are specialized by your
mental picture, and your concentrated effort to inhibit thoughts which
concern
the operation of the laws of life. This habit of
thought-formation, if persisted in, opens the way for the physical
manifestation
of the mental picture, whatever it may be, the case in
point being a house. A house is an effect of a need for shelter,
comfort,
protection, and the like.
Pupil: I have never thought
before of what a house really symbolized. It seems quite natural now to
think of it as an externalized
object of an inward originating idea of comfort,
shelter, and protection, which you have taught me is its prototype. Now,
my natural impulse would be to go into the house and
bolt the doors and windows, if I were afraid of some outside invasion
and wanted to protect myself. Yet this might not
always give me a feeling of security. From where does that sense of real
protection come?
Living in the Sense of Protection
Sage: The first necessity
would be for you to have the house to go into, before you could bolt the
doors and windows against unwelcome
intrusion or impending danger. After having acquired
this refuge, it alone would not insure complete protection. The feeling
of protection is established within yourself through
your knowledge that you are protected by the Almighty, Ever-Present,
Intelligent Power of Life. Surely you know you are
alive, and this understanding brings a sense of security which locked
doors
or barred windows cannot give.
Pupil: It would be wonderful if one could constantly live in that thought of protection!
Sage: It is to this end we are
journeying. As we have seen, in the mind of man there is a power which
enables him to contact the
unlimited universal Power of God, Spirit, and thereby
envelop himself in it. One of the most satisfying and comforting
feelings
possible is this one of being protected from within
oneself.
Pupil: I see. One should endeavor to keep the suggestion of one's real self, which is one's real protection, constantly in mind;
that self which is one with all Life and all Intelligence, which not only preserves but provides for all.
To return to the subject of the
house. It being, then, the outward fulfillment or manifestation of a
desire or need for shelter
and protection, the mode of procedure necessary to
procure it would be to get into the spirit of Life's intelligent
protection,
and it in turn would attract the necessary conditions
to bring into tangible being a house, or whatever form of refuge was
most required, and visualized?
Sage: Mentally entering into the spirit of Life's amenable creative force, it will take any special form your desire gives it,
which is mentally pictured or visualized. The house is only an illustration.
Pupil: I understand. Now suppose one wanted more money or better health. What would be the prototype for these?
Sage: It is always best to
find one's own prototype. Let us refer to the suggestions I have already
given you. What does money
symbolize? For what is it to be used? For myself, I
find that the prototype for money is Substance, and my method for
manifesting
more money is to mentally picture the sum I require
for a particular purpose, either in bank-notes, check, or draft,
whichever
seems the most natural. After making a clear, distinct
picture, I enlarge my vision of money as the symbol of life's
substance,
as applied to the use I intend to put it to. I believe
that money is the greatest factor for constructive exchange that we
have today.
How to Develop Health and Harmony
In the case of money, you would hold firmly in your mind the fact that the Substance of Life fills all space. It is, indeed,
the starting point of all things, whether it takes the form of desired sums of money or of something else.
For physical health you would
endeavor to keep your thought as harmonious as possible, and mentally
picture yourself as well
and doing the useful, happy things in your daily life
that a healthy person would naturally do, always understanding that
the originating Life Principle in you must act
harmoniously upon itself in order to produce harmonious physical
results.
Pupil: Then the most important
point in demonstrating health is not so much the mental picture, as the
control of thought in a definite
center, irrespective of conditions or symptoms
--really living in the prototype, a wholly perfect and harmonious
expression
of God the Father Spirit, the source of health and
life?
Sage: Exactly, and this is
where your trained will comes in to help you to hold your picture and to
steadfastly live in your prototype.
The mental picture is the seed you plant, so to speak,
and the quality of thought which you entertain most persistently
impresses
itself upon the subconscious mind and starts the
creative energy molding itself into the form of your mental picture.
Pupil: Then Life's only
creative power is Subjective Mind, which reproduces on the outward or
physical plane the idea with which
it has been impressed. What a field of possibilities
this stupendous fact opens up if one could only prove it!
Sage: To obtain continuous
good results it is a necessity to properly understand your relation to
this great unformed, highly impressionable
power you are dealing with. "Never try to make
yourself believe what you know is not true." Unless your faith is built
upon
the solid foundation of absolute conviction, you will
never be able to make practical use of it.
Pupil: This solid foundation of conviction, --how can it be established permanently? One day I feel sure of it, and the next my
assurance seems to have turned to stone, and nothing I can do will bring it to life again!
Use Your Creative Power Constructively, Never Destructively
Sage: You give your
unqualified consent that you possess this creative power when you use it
constructively instead of destructively.
Remember, that the creative energy has only one method
of operating, which is its reciprocal action from the Universal Mind
to your subjective mind, and then from your subjective
mind back into the Universal Subjective Mind which is its source, and
which unfailingly corresponds to the thought which
originally generated it. Your greatest aim should be to irrevocably
convince
yourself that the Originating Spirit which brought the
whole world into existence is the root of your individuality.
Therefore,
it is "ever ready to continue its creative action
through you." Just as soon and just as fast as you provide these thought
channels, you will find yourself the possessor of an
unfailing reproductive power.
Pupil: I suppose I am not
unlike others, in that I am always willing to take all the credit for
the good which comes to me, and
unwilling to take the credit for my miseries, placing
the blame on somebody or some condition over which I believe I have
no control. How can I overcome this wretched tendency?
Sage: I can only repeat, by
endeavoring steadfastly to remember that the only creative power there
is has but one way of working,
which is that of reciprocal action. There is only one
primary cause; the Universal Subjective Mind, of which your own
subjective
mind is a part. To gain in understanding, it is
necessary to be persistent in impressing your subconscious mind with the
fact
of its relationship to the unlimited whole. Bring your
every thought and feeling into obedient connection with the best there
is in you. This old saying has a world of truth in it:
"What thou see'st, that thou be'st; dost if thou see'st dust; God if
thou see'st God."
Hold the Thought of What You Are, to Guide You into What You Want to Be.
Pupil: Which means, I suppose, that the law is always the same. The thought I maintain becomes a fact in my mental as well as in
my physical plane, so I must hold the thought of what I really am in order to become what I would like to be?
Sage: Yes, endeavor never to lose sight of this fact.
Pupil: Like the illustration you gave of the house, it has its birth in the idea of protection, irrespective of any physical form?
Sage: Protection is an
inherent quality of life; consequently it fills all space, ever ready to
be called into any form of expression.
If you get into the spirit of that idea, you will see
how quickly corresponding results will appear. Because the quality of
the subject mind is the same in you as it is
"throughout the universe, giving rise to the multitude of natural forms
with
which you are surrounded, also giving rise to
yourself." It really is the supporter of your individuality. Your
individual
subjective mind is your part in the great whole, as I
have declared before. The realization of this will enable you to produce
physical results through the power of your own
thought.
Pupil: That reveals to me your
meaning in "The Edinburgh Lectures" where you say, "One should regard
his individual subjective mind
as the organ of the absolute, and his objective mind
as the organ of the relative." I will never forget that fact again.
Cultivate the Idea of Protection
Sage: The idea in the absolute
is the very beginning (or nucleus) of the thing, regardless of the form
through which it expresses.
For instance, the pure idea of protection exists in
life itself (is one of its innate qualities) and has no relation to a
house or any building erected for that purpose.
Pupil: Then it is my objective mind or intellect which suggests to this self-existing, absolute power the idea of this relationship?
Sage: Quite so, and if you
will pattern the thought you have just expressed, telling your
subconscious mind over and over again
that it is the one and only creative power, which
always brings into physical manifestation corresponding forms of the
ideas
with which it is impressed, you will realize the joys
of success.
Pupil: I "see through a glass darkly." Is there no way to develop a keener sense of just how to awaken the subconscious mind so
that it will respond more quickly?
Sage: I will be happy to give
you a copy of a letter I once wrote in response to a question similar to
yours. This letter was considered
so helpful that the men to whom it was written had it
put into pamphlet form, now out of print. It seems to me that the main
thing that I said in that letter was "Don't try!"
Pupil: Why! I thought that trying was to be my main endeavor, even though it was difficult?
A Letter of Golden Leaves
The Sage's Letter
"To answer your question as to how a
"Keener sense of the subjective mind may be awakened," the answer is
'Don't try. Don't
try to make things what they are not.' Subjective mind
is subjective just because it lies below the threshold of
consciousness.
It is the Builder of the Body, but we can neither see,
hear, nor feel it building.
Just keep in your conscious mind a
quiet, calm expectation that subjective mind is always at work in
accordance with the habitual
thought of your objective mind...and then subjective
mind will take care of itself.
Then the question is, how to keep the
conscious thought in a life --enjoying and life-giving current. My
answer to this is
very simple, thought perhaps old-fashioned. It is,
keep looking at God. Don't trouble about theology, but try to realize
the
Universal Divine Spirit as perpetually flowing through
all things; through insensible things as atomic energy; through animals
as instinct; through man as thought.
If this be so, then your
manifestation of God will correspond with your habitual thought of God.
Quietly contemplate the Divine
Spirit as a continual flowing of Life, Light,
Intelligence, Love and Power, and you will find this current flowing
through
you and manifesting in a hundred ways, both mentally
and physically, in your affairs.
You do not make this current, but you
prepare the conditions which will either cause it to trickle through
thinly and weakly,
or flow through strongly. You prepare the conditions
on the interior side by a mental attitude of looking into the light (God
is Light) with the expectancy of thence receiving life
and Illumination, and on the exterior side by not denying in your work
what you are trying to hold in your thought, --for
yourself the simple Law of Enjoyment of all that you can enjoy, ruled by
moderation, and toward others equally the simple Law
of Honesty and Kindness.
I know you have heard these things
ever since you were a child, but what we all want is to realize our
connection with the
building power within. The connection is this: that
the Spirit, as it flows through you, becomes you, and it becomes in you
just what you take it for, just as water takes the
shape of the pipe it flows through. It takes shape from your thought. It
is exceedingly sensitive --how much more, then, must
the pure Life Principle itself be sensitive? Think over this. Think it
over and then think. Think of it kindly, lovingly,
trustfully, and as a welcome companion. It will respond exactly. Think
of it as a Living Light, continually flowing through
and vivifying you, and it will respond exactly.
If you ask why it does this, the
answer is because IT is the Infinite of your Real Self. Let this answer
suffice you. You
will only darken the Light by trying to analyze the
Divine Spirit. You cannot dissect God. This doesn't mean being
impractical,
but getting to the very root of truly practical. We
have our ordinary business to do, but, believe me, it is the scientific
method to bring everything into the Divine Light.
Then let your ideas be desires to see
it in the Divine Light, let your ideas regarding it grow quietly of
themselves, and
you will see it in its proper and true light whatever
the thing may be. Then when you have seen what the thing really is,
go on and handle it in accordance with the four
principles of Cheerfulness, Moderation, Honestly and Kindness. Don't
worry,
and don't try to force things; let them grow, because,
by recognizing the continual flow of the Spirit, you are providing
the conditions, for Life is the Light which will make
them grow the right way.
Don't bother about subjective mind
and objective mind, or theories of any sort, or description, either mine
or anyone else's;
but just do what I have said and try it for six
months, and I think you will find you have got hold of the Power that
Works,
and, after all, that is what we want.
It is all summed up in this: Live
naturally with the Spirit and don't worry. Remember, you and your Spirit
are One, and it
is all quite natural. You will perhaps say that this
is too simple. Well, we don't want to introduce unnecessary
complications.
Try practicing and leave the theory to take care of
itself.
"Living Spirit is not to be found in a book."
Sage: Many have written me
from all parts of the world voicing you expression. Once a lady in New
York City wrote asking me to
explain to her exactly what I mean in the pamphlet
about Spirit becoming you. Thinking you might like to see a copy of my
reply, I brought it along for you.
Pupil: Thank you so much. Am I at liberty to keep these letters?
Sage: Quite.
The Letter of the Master
With regard to the sentence in the
pamphlet on the Subjective Mind about the Spirit becoming you, I really
don't see how to
express my meaning any more clearly. What I mean is
that in a cat it becomes a cat; and in a cabbage it becomes a cabbage;
but in man, who is conscious, living intelligence, it
becomes conscious, living intelligence. And if so, then since the Spirit
is Infinite you can by prayer and meditation draw upon
it for increase living intelligence, i.e., all depends on your mode
of recognition of it.
In the sentence you quote, 'It is
exceedingly sensitive,' etc,. I am not referring to the water, but the
Spirit. I mean that
if subconscious mind in ourselves is sensitive to
suggestion, the creative principle is sensitive to suggestion, the
creative
principle from which it springs must be still more so,
and takes shape from your thought accordingly. But you must remember
that the pamphlet was not written for publication. It
was merely a private letter, and I was never consulted on the subject
of publishing it, or perhaps I should have worded it
more carefully.
Supply and demand is a very large
subject, but eventually you will always have to come back to the
teaching of Jesus, "Ask
and ye shall receive." We may write volumes on the
subject, but in the end it always comes to this, and we have gained
nothing
by going a long way around. I am coming more and more
to see that the teaching of Jesus is the final embodiment of all that
writers on those subjects are trying to teach. In the
end we have to drop all our paraphernalia of argument and come back
to His statement of the working method. All the Bible
premises are based on the divine knowledge of your mental constitution,
and by simple reliance on it we therefore afford
centers through which the Creative Power of the Universe can act in
correspondence
with our recognition of it.
'According to your faith so be it
unto you.' Our faith is our real thought. If our real thought is
expectation of disease
and poverty, and so open the door to it. The whole
purpose of the Bible is to direct our thought (which is our faith) in
the
right way, instead of leaving us to form it
invertedly. Therefore, as the basis for our faith, the Bible gives us
Promises.
Pin your faith to the Promises, and you need not
bother your brains to argue about it. The more you argue, the more you
will
pin your faith to your own argument and your
understanding of the law; and as a logical sequence you make the
fulfillment
of your desire depend on your correct arguing and
exact knowledge, so that the result is you are depending entirely upon
yourself
--and so you are 'no forarder' and are just simply
where you were.
On the other hand by simply believing
the Divine Promises, you transfer the whole operation to the Divine
Spirit (your subjective
mind), and so you have a good ground of expectation,
and by your mental receptive attitude you become a 'fellow worker' with
God. You allow the All Creating Spirit to work in,
for, and through you. This is the conception St. Paul always had in his
epistles, in all of them showing the weakness of
relying on Law, and the strength of Faith in Promises. This also, I
think,
was Jesus' meaning when He said: 'Blessed is he that
hath not seen and yet hath believed.'
Well, I hope that these few remarks
will be useful to you, but I am wondering how this point of view will
appeal to an American
audience, and that is another reason why I am rather
doubtful about coming over. The more I think of this subject, the less
I see in trying to make 'Supply,' 'Health.' and all
the usual New Thought topics the subject of a set of mechanical rules
like the rules of arithmetic. It throws the burden
back on yourself, while your whole object is to get rid of it. It is the
old temptation of Eden over again --the Tree of
Knowledge, reliance on our own acquisition of Knowledge; on the Tree of
Life,
--reliance of God's own nature and His desire for
expression in us and through us, which is the meaning of all the
promises.
The former looks clever but isn't. The latter looks
childish but is the fulfillment of all law, and is life.
If you see things in this light,
which I am sure is the true one, the model you will have to take for the
'School of the Builders'
is 'The stone which the builders rejected has become
the head of the corner.' The reference is to the great pyramid and the
topmost stone --also to our crowning stone in
Westminster Abbey --and of course it refers superlatively to Christ. But
properly
instructed builders do not reject this stone. On the
contrary, they recognize it as both the Foundation and the apex of the
Building of the Temple. You remember how St. Paul
calls himself a wise master-builder.
Is it any use for me to come to
America to teach these things, which is some form or another have been
taught there ever since
the arrival of the Mayflower? Of course, I can talk
about Vibration, Nervous System, the Pyramid, and the like, and the
working
of Natural Laws; but the Creating Principle is apart. A
worshipper of God and a student of Nature; is what one of our old
thinkers called himself. The Power is of God and is
received by Man and Man exercises it upon nature. That is the true
order.
One meaning of the Masonic symbol of
the five pointed star is that everything returns to its starting point.
Start from the
apex of the triangle and trace the line around and you
come back to the apex. If, then, your starting point is in Heaven,
you go back to Heaven and the Divine Power, and so get
rid of the burden; but if your starting point is on earth (i.e., your
own acquisition of knowledge of laws), you get back to
earth, which is indicated by the inverted triangle.
You will find the Promises of man's power over Nature, Conditions, etc., fully stated in Mark 11: 22-25, and no teaching can
promise more than this."
God Has Ripened a Great Mind
Pupil: No words can express what a privilege I feel it to have you thus unfold and make clear to me the truths I have struggled
so hard to understand. God has surely blessed you with one of the greatest minds of the present generation.
Sage: Not at all. There are
many who know much more than I along these lines. For myself, however, I
am certain that there is but
one God, that God and man are one, and that my mind is
a center of Divine Operation; this in itself is a blessing. Much has
already been written on these subjects; it is all so
simple.
Sage: I am happy indeed that
these lessons have been helpful. It has been a great pleasure for me to
have exchanged ideas with
you, and I know that you will pass them on to others
whenever you feel they will be helpful. It seems to me that you now have
all the material necessary to build for yourself a
foundation and superstructure of absolute faith in God and of the power
of God in you, which is your subjective mind. This
knowledge, well established, gives you dominion over every adverse
circumstance
and condition, because you are in conscious touch with
your limitless supply. "Only believe in the God within, and all things
are possible unto you."
Pupil: I know it is simple to you, but to us, who are struggling between certainty and uncertainty, it is a rare benefit to be able
to sit and listen at the feet of certainty.
Hourly Helps
Sage: I want in this lesson to give you, in the most practical form, the means whereby you may meet the disquieting things of life
--the things which wear soul, spirit, and body almost to the snapping point.
I want you to take these admonitions and instructions into your most intimate life and keep them bright and shining by daily
use.
They will help you hourly in overcoming destructive elements, and in attracting constructive ones.
Anger
When anger begins to stir you, take
deep breaths; hold your thought on the inflow of breath as being rays of
light, breathing
deeper and deeper. Continue the deep breaths until you
have taken twenty-five inhalations; hold each one while you count to
seven. Then expel slowly, keeping your thought
steadily on the inhalation, mentally seeing it go all through your
lungs, and
penetrating every part of your body's rays of light.
Then meditate upon any real live thought about yourself, such as being
one with all life and good. A little practice in this
way will soon relieve you of the tendency to anger.
Anxiety
When conditions are not to your
liking and you find yourself thinking more and more about how unhappy
you are because of them,
stay out of doors in the open all you possibly can.
Endeavor to walk at least two miles every day, breathing deeply of the
fresh air with this thought: "I am breathing in the
Life, the Love and the Power of the universe, right now." Do not permit
your thought to slip back into the old groove. Fill
your mind with this declaration about yourself. You have been given
dominion
over every adverse condition through your power of
thought. Persist in your steady recognition of this fact. Tell yourself
over and over again that all is well right now in your
thought and feeling; consequently outside conditions must and will
correspond.
Disease
If your body is the expression of
thought, then disease must be the result of a belief that your body is
subject to disease.
Tell yourself many times a day that all physical
disease is the result of discordant thoughts, and when you have actually
accepted this statement as a truth, you will be
careful to entertain only healthy, harmonious thoughts for yourself or
another.
For example, if you feel a headache coming on, begin
at once to take deep breaths, and repeat with each breath that breath
is Life, and that life is perfect health. "I am alive,
so the health of life is manifesting in me right now."
Disappointment
This subtle destructive power should
be shut out at all times by the recognition of your direct contact with
all the joy there
is, because you are one with its Source, Universal
Good. If the joyous life does not express itself through the exact
channels
which you expect, know that it will do so through
others. Life wants to express joy through you, for it made you an
instrument
in which and through which to do it. Because you are
here for that purpose. You can and do enjoy all the good which Life has
to give. Take some physical exercises while holding
that thought. A good one is to sit on a chair and take a deep breath;
then slowly exhale, and as you exhale, gradually bend
at the hips until you can touch the floor with the tips of your fingers.
Repeat this seven times with the affirmation: "The joy
of God is flowing in me and through me right now."
Discontent
When this enemy to peace and
happiness begins to advance, sing, sing, sing, right out loud if you
can, or else do it mentally.
Sing anything you like. Watch your breath control, and
every night put into your subconscious mind the thought that God
brought
you into existence for the purpose of expressing all
of Life's harmonies, both in you and through you, and it is your divine
right to BE harmony and to be harmonious in your daily
experience. Meditate upon the harmony you see expressed in nature and
endeavor to apply it in your thought, and then express
it.
Discouragement
This is failure on your part to
recognize the Almighty limitless Source of Supply (God) as your
never-failing, co-operative
partner. When you are assailed with the thought of
discouragement, immediately ask yourself, "What kind of a power was it
that brought me into existence, and for what purpose?"
Then repeat slowly and thinkingly, "I do believe and I am persuaded
that God is an ever-present, never-failing source of
protection and supply." Watch your thoughts lest any contrary to this
affirmation be lurking around in the corners of your
mind, and stick to it with all the will that you have, and you will
break
down the suggestion that there is any power in
discouragement.
Envy
Envy is due to a sense of separation
from God, Good. Endeavor to realize that where there is life, all that
life has to give
is present in its entirety at all times and in all
places, and will come into visible expression through the persistent
recognition
of this grand fact.
Fear
One writer has said that fear is the
only devil there is. Certainly it is the most destructive power one can
entertain. When
fear comes to assail you, close the door of your mind
against it with this positive thought: "The only creative power there
is, is thought. All things are possible to him who
believes that the God which brought man into existence did so for the
purpose
of expressing His Fatherly love and protection in His
child. I believe in God, the Father almighty, as my life, my
intelligence,
manifesting in my consciousness now." As you think
this, walk briskly or take strenuous exercise. Whenever you sense fear
returning, inhibit it instantly by substituting any
thought which affirms the power of God in you. In short, fear is
absolutely
overcome by withdrawing your thought from the physical
reason or argument which would cause you to believe in a power other
than God, and the spirit of Life and Love as your
birthright.
Indecision
This is a lack of the realization
that your intelligence is the instrument through which the Intelligence
of the universe
takes specific form. An effort to realize this fact
should be a habit of mind, rather than spasmodic attempts made only with
the necessity for decision arises.
Jealousy
This is love's greatest enemy, and if
permitted to dwell within your consciousness, will ultimately destroy
your ability to
enjoy your life. It is the reaction of the fear of
loss and can be overcome through prayer and watchfulness. Reason along
these lines: "God is Life and God is Love. I am life
and I am love. I cannot lose Love any more than I can lose Life." When
you are tempted to feel jealous, walk long distances
as frequently as possible and keep your thought on Love itself, not on
any one person whom you love, but just Love and its
attributes. Think of God as Love. Keep all thought of personality out
of mind, and you will find that love will spring up in
you as a fountain of everlasting love and life and fill your
consciousness
through and through.
Self-Condemnation
The instant you begin to blame
yourself for having done the wrong thing or for not having done the
right thing, put this thought
into your consciousness to the exclusion of every
other: "Infinite Intelligence and Wisdom are expressing themselves in me
more and more right now." Take the exercise of bending
the body from the hips (without bending the knees) so that you can
touch the floor with the tips of your fingers,
inhaling as you lift the body, and exhaling every time you bend. Repeat
this
exercise sixteen times, accompanied by the affirmation
just given.
Self-Indulgence
This is brought about by lack of
will-power: an evidence of a weak will. It means failure, because you
have no thought-power
to give the unformed energy of life the particular
thought-material necessary to produce desired results. Absolute mental
(thought) control is the one and only thing which is
necessary for you to do, to be, or to have what you want. Without it,
you scatter your forces. If you permit your thoughts
to run riot without restraint, the conditions of your life will become
chaotic. For example: A friend does something of which
you do not approve, or perhaps your present circumstances are
undesirable.
Refuse to let your thought dwell on the injustice of
your friend, for dwelling on it would only produce greater unhappiness
for you. Control your thought and do not think of your
friend in this connection. Instead, consider the many fine attributes
of friendship, and this will restore harmony. Do the
same in regard to your unpleasant circumstances. Don't picture them
mentally
and say to yourself, "How dreadful they are!" But
repeat the glorious truth which I have previously referred to: "My mind
is a center of divine operation." etc., and divine
operation is always for greater advancement and better things. You will
experience this if you cling faithfully to this line
of reasoning.
Sensitiveness
A highly sensitive mind is simply a
"self-mind," a form of unadulterated selfishness. Your feelings are hurt
because someone
says something which you do not like, or does
something which displeases you. Or conversely, he fails to say or to do
what
you think he should. To eradicate this baneful
thought-habit, use the same method of argument as for self-indulgence,
and
if faithful in your mental work, your efforts will be
rewarded, and you will free yourself.
Unhappiness
A continually unhappy state of mind
is the direct result of constantly viewing life from the physical
standpoint as though
that were life's only reality. Every night, before you
go to sleep, put well into your subconscious mind this thought: "There
is but One Mind to think about me or to make laws over
me, and that is the Mind of Divine Love and Divine Power." Every
morning
meditate upon this thought. Use it as your shield and
buckler at the first suggestion of any sense of unhappiness. You will
soon find that the tendency to be discontented and
unhappy will vanish, and happier conditions will come into your
experience.
Putting Your Lessons into Practice
Just as I am completing this manuscript for the
printer, the idea suggests itself that it will also be helpful to give a
definite
idea, in formula form, of how to be and have what you
want.
First, you should endeavor to learn
to be as near the perfect reflection of your own idea of God as
possible, in thought and
action. It may seem impossible at first thought, to
even approach such a goal, but reflection upon the thought that God made
you out of Himself, because He wished to see and feel
Himself in you, will help you to persevere. When you first began to
learn to read, no doubt you felt in your childish way
that it would be wonderful to read as well as the grown-ups could; you
kept on trying and then you read. Perhaps you have a
big desire which you would give your life to have fulfilled. In reality
it is only necessary for you to give a few moments
each day to earnest effort, in getting into the spirit of this idea of
God and living in it every waking hour. Then endeavor
to find the Spiritual Prototype for your desire. By this I mean inhibit
all thought of the physical side of your desire.
If you desire a true companion, close
your mind entirely to all personality and physical being, and dwell in
thought and feeling
on the spirit of love and true comradeship, without
reference to any physical person. The person is the instrument through
which these particular qualities manifest, and not the
qualities themselves, as we often learn too late.
Or you may desire improved financial
condition. Here again it is not mere money you desire. It is that which
money symbolizes
--Substance, Liberty, Freedom from lack. Therefore,
you should go alone night and morning (or any time when you are certain
you will not be disturbed) and meditate first upon
your own true relation to God. After your feeling has been stimulated to
the point of certainty, then meditate upon the
ever-present, never-failing substance and freedom of God. Try not to
lose sight
of the fact that the greatest magnet for acquiring
money is Ideas. There is every reason that you should capture one of
these
big money ideas, if you will persistently follow the
suggestions given.
If you do this, you will not only
capture the idea, but also the courage to put the idea into practical
application. This
courage, put to positive uses, will bring you to the
goal of your desire-substance, love, friends, health, happiness, and
the peace that passeth all understanding.
May all these come to you in richest measure.