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"THE SELF IS THE FRIEND OF
SELF
AND ALSO ITS ENEMY"
THIS sentence in the Bhagavad Gita has been often passed
over as being either meaningless or mysterious; on one hand worthless
to consider, and on the other hand impossible. Some students
have, however, made good use of the teaching contained in it.
It is a verse that bears directly upon Theosophy as applied to
our daily life, and therefore may well be scrutinized.
It indicates two selfs, one the enemy and also the friend
of the other. Evidently, without the suggestions found in Theosophy,
two selfs in one person cannot seem otherwise than meaningless,
except in those cases, admitted by Science, where there is a
aberration of the intellect, where one lobe of the brain refuses
to work with the other, or where there is some cerebral derangement.
But after a little study of the constitution of man-material
and spiritual-as we find it outlined in the Wisdom-Religion,
we easily see that the higher and the lower self are meant.
The next injunction, to "raise the self by the self,"
clearly points to this; for, as a thing cannot raise itself without
a fulcrum, the self which will raise us must be the higher one,
and that which is to be raised is the lower.
In order to accomplish this task we must gain an acquaintance
with the self which is to be raised. The greater and more accurate
that acquaintance is, the quicker will proceed the work of elevating
the being who attempts it.
Let us for a moment look at the obstacles in the way, the
reasons why, with so many, their understanding of themselves
is so plainly deficient.
Everyone knows that he can see the defects in the actions
and character of other men better than his own. Some, of course,
there are who do not allow that they have defects.
St. James says that a man looketh in a glass and straightway
forgetteth what manner of man he is. While I have often doubted
this, yet it is true in respect to that looking-glass which is
often by others held up to us to see ourselves in. We see for
a moment our appearance and then forget it.
There are some things, however, as to which it is often impossible
for us to know ourselves. Such of our tones as are harsh or disagreeable
we often cannot hear as others do. For there is hardly anything
so difficult as to really hear our own voice in its entirety
of tone and accent. We are so accustomed to it that we cannot
tell whether it be pleasing or repellent, musical or discordant.
We have to rely upon the statements of those who hear it. Indeed,
I doubt seriously if anyone can ever fully hear, in the way those
to whom we speak do, the tones of his voice, because it is conveyed
to us not only through the medium of the outer ear which receives
the vibrations made without us, but we receive it in addition
through the vibrations made within all through the skull, and
hence it must ever be a different voice for ourselves. So it
would not be profitable to pay too much attention to the sound
of our voice if we do so to the exclusion of that inner attitude
which nearly always determines the tone in which we speak; for
if our feelings be kind and charitable, it is more than likely
that the vocal expression of them will correspond. The cultivation
of the voice, so far as it is possible, can safely be left to
those teachers who aim to soften and polish it.
By taking a few examples from among the many about us and
assuming that they represent possible defects and peculiarities
of our own, we may arrive at something useful in our Theosophic
life.
Here is one who will constantly tell you that several others
are always very fond of talking of themselves and their affairs,
and appear to take no interest in the conversation unless it
has themselves for center. And after thus depicting the failings
of the others, this person-man or woman- immediately proceeds
to show that that is his own particular fault for from that moment
the burden of the conversation is "I" or "my"
affairs.
Our next subject is one who talks a great deal about altruism
and brotherhood, but would not give a dollar to any good cause.
Not perhaps from intentional niggardliness, but from sheer habit
of not giving and not helping.
Here is another who exemplifies the prominent defect of the
century, inattention. He listens to you, but only hears a part,
and then, when repeating what he says he heard you say, he gives
a version entirely at variance with yours. Or, listening to an
argument or discussion, he only attends to that part which being
familiar to him strikes him favorably.
Next we have the bigot who, while exalting freedom of thought
and the unity of all men, displays most frightful bigotry.
Then there is another who illustrates a variety of the first
to which I referred;-the man who wishes apparently only to impose
his own views upon you, and is careless about knowing what your
opinions may be.
Now all of these are only samples; but in some degree every
one of us has them all, perhaps slightly, but still there. They
are all the result of the predominance of the lower self, for
they all show a disposition to put the personal I to the
front. They are the present triumph of the lower self over the
efforts of the higher. They may be abated in some degree by attention
to their outer expression, but no real progress will be gained
unless work upon the hidden plane is begun. Such a defect as
that one of not listening long to another man's views, but hurrying
to tell him what you think yourself, is one that affects the
acquiring of new ideas. If you constantly tell others what you
think, you are gaining nothing. For your experience and views
are your own, well known to you. The repeated expression of them
only serves to imprint them more strongly on your mind. You do
not receive any of the new lights that other minds might cast
upon your philosophy if you gave them the opportunity.
There are other factors in our constitution which are powerful
for the production of faults. Every man has two lines of descent.
One is that which comes through his parents and has to do with
his mental and physical makeup. This line may run back into the
most strange and peculiar places, and be found winding in and
out among manners and minds not suspected by us. Suppose your
physical line of descent comes through Danes or Norwegians and
mine through the French. There will be to some extent a want
of sympathy and appreciation on the mental plane between us.
Of course this effect will not be apparent if the period of time
is long since our blood ran in those bodies, but still there
will be left some trace of it. There will be a tendency always
for the physical, including the brain, to show the characteristics
which result from the preponderance of inherited faculties and
dispositions. These characteristics belong wholly to the physical
plane, and are carried down from the centuries past by inheritance,
affecting the particular body you may inhabit in any one incarnation.
It is your Karma to have that sort of physical environment about
our inner self. Now the obstacles to the perception of truth
and to the acquirement of knowledge of self which are in consequence
of the physical inheritance, are difficult to perceive, involving
much study and self-examination for the bringing them to light.
But they are there, and the serious Theosophist will search for
them. These differences in the physical body, which we will call
for the time differences in inheritance, are of the highest importance.
They resemble the differences between telescopes or microscopes
made by different opticians, and tend to cause us to see truth
clearly or blurred, or surrounded by many-colored mists. What
we most desire to have is mental telescope that is not only powerful,
but also devoid of the colors which achromatic quality only will
dispel.
The second line of descent is that one which belongs purely
to the inner man; that is, the psychical line. It is obscure,
and, indeed, can only be discovered and defined by an adept or
a trained seer whose clairvoyance permits him to see that intangible
yet powerful thread which has so much to do with our character.
It is just as important as the physical descent, in fact more
so, because it has to do with the ever-living man, whereas the
physical tenement is selected by or follows upon the actions
which the inner man compelled the former body to perform. So
it may be altered at any time with ease if we live in obedience
to the higher law.
Passing from the broad line of descent in a nation, we find
each individual governed also by the family peculiarities and
faults, and they are not as easy to define as those that are
national, since few men are in possession of any facts sufficient
to ascertain the general family tendencies.
Coming down now to ourselves, it is almost axiomatic that
each one/s mind acts in a way peculiar to itself. There
is a tendency that daily grows stronger after our earlier for
the mind to get into a rut, its own rut or mode of looking at
things and ideas. This is of great importance. For the man who
has freed his mind so that it is capable of easily entering into
the methods of other minds is more likely to see truth quicker
than he who is fixed in his own ways.
We must then at once constitute ourselves our own critics
and adversaries, for it is not often that anyone else is either
willing or capable to take that part for us.
Our first step and the most difficult-for some, indeed impossible-is
to shock ourselves in such a manner that we may quickly be able
to get out of, or rather understand, our own mental methods.
I do not mean that we must abandon all our previous training
and education, but that we shall so analyze all our mental operations
as to know the certainty, to easily perceive, the actual difference
in method between ourselves and any other person. This is a thing
seldom undertaken or accomplished by men nowadays. Each one is
enamored of his own mental habits, and disinclined to admit that
any other one can be better. When we have become acquainted with
this mental path of ours, we are then in position to see whether
in any particular case our view is false.
This is the psychological and metaphysical equivalent of that
scientific process which classifies and compares so as to arrive
at distinguishing differences in things in order that physical
laws may be discovered. For while we remain in ignorance of the
method and path of our mind's actions, there is no way in which
we can compare with other minds. We can compare views and opinions,
but not the actual mechanics of the thought. We can hear doctrines,
but are unable to say whether we accept or reject from right
reasoning or because our peculiar slant on the mental plane compels
us to ratiocinate wholly in accordance with a mental obliquity
acquired by many years of hurried life.
The value of thus understanding our own mental bias to that
we can give it up at will and enter into a bias of another's
mind is seen when we consider that each of us is able to perceive
but one of many sides which truth presents. If we remain in the
rut which is natural, we pass through an entire life viewing
nature and the field of thought through but one sort of instrument.
But by the other practice we may obtain as many different views
of truth as the number of the minds we meet. When another human
being brings his thoughts before us, we may not only examine
them in our way, but also take his method and, adopting his bias
for the time as our own, see just that much more.
It is very easy to illustrate this from ordinary life. The
novelist sees in the drawing-rooms of society and the hovels
of the poor only the material that may serve as the basis for
a new book, while the social schemer drives thought of hovels
away and sees in society only the means of gratifying pride and
ambition, yet the artist can only think of the play of color
and arrangement of figures, the harmony that delights his artistic
sense.
The plain man of affairs is not attracted by the complex events
of every day which have no relation to his business, whereas
the student of Occultism knows that very obscure events point
to other things yet in the future. In every stratum of society
and every art or profession we constantly have it brought home
to us that each man looks at any subject from but one or two
standpoints, and when a well-balanced mind is found looking at
events and men and thoughts freely from all sides, everyone sees
at once a superiority in the person, albeit they may not be able
to explain it.
But it is in Theosophic study especially that it is wise for
us to constitute ourselves our own critics and to adopt as far
as possible the practice of leaving our own mental road and taking
up some other. The truth is simple and not so difficult to arrive
at if we will follow the advice of the Hindu Upanishad
and cut away error. Error grows largely out of notions and preconceptions
educated into us by our teachers and our lives.
The influence of these preconceptions is seen every day among
those Theosophists who are seeking for more books to read upon
Theosophy. Their minds are so full of old notions which are not
violently expelled, that truth cannot be easily perceived. But
if they read fewer new books and spent more time in re-reading
those first attempted, meanwhile studiously endeavoring to enter
into all of the author's thought, much more progress would be
gained.
Take, for instance, the Key to Theosophy. It is full
of all the main doctrines of the Wisdom-Religion, and of hints
towards others. Many persons have read the book and then sought
another. They say they have mastered it. Yet if you put to them
some questions or listen to their own, it is apparent that only
that part of the work which in some way coincides with their
own previous training and line of thought has been grasped. Now
this is just the part they need not have dwelt upon, because,
being like to themselves, it may at any time be understood. But
if one will ever stand as one's own critic, then those parts
which seem obscure will be attacked, and, being viewed from all
sides, may be soon turned into a possession. And just because
such has not been the practice, it has come to be the fact that
some extremely valuable presentations of doctrine and philosophy
remain buried in earlier Theosophical books and magazines, while
those who once read them have gone feverishly on to other works
and forgotten that which have enlightened them.
The Theosophist who delights to call himself practical and
logical, an abhorrer of mysticism, should try to see what the
mystical Theosophist means, and the mystic one should read carefully
the words of the practical member to the end that he may counterbalance
himself. A wholly practical or entirely mystical mind is not
well balanced. And as long as the logical and practical man in
our ranks scouts mysticism and never reads it, so long will he
remain deformed and unbalanced in the eyes of those who see both
sides, because he is wrapped up in ideas and methods that are
only right in their own domain. The attitude of mind proposed
is not to be observed only toward our literature and the philosophy
studied; it is to be that of every hour and applicable to our
dealings with our fellow-men. It will lead us to discern the
common failings of refusing to consider the thoughts expressed
by another because his or her personality is disagreeable to
us. Often in our ranks we can find those who never pay any attention
to certain other members who they have decided cannot reason
properly or talk clearly. Now aside from all considerations of
charity and politeness, there is an occult law much lost sight
of, and that is that everyone is led insensibly by Karmic law
to address others on these topics and to afford an opportunity
to the person addressed of taking a leap, so to say, out of his
own favorite way, and considering life as seen through the eyes
of another. This is often brought about, if we permit it, through
the endeavor to control the irritation or dullness caused by
the way in which the other person presents the thought in his
mind. But if we refuse to use the opportunity, either by absolutely
running away or by covering our minds with a hard coat of indifference,
the new and bright idea just trembling into the field of our
consciousness is thrown back and lost in the dark recesses of
the mental plane. Or, taking another view, we may under Karmic
law be the one and only person just then fitted to elucidate
our brother's ideas, and we remain still the debtor to him if
we do not accept the opportunity. On either hand the result is
demerit.
Let us, then, conquer self in the field indicated, and thus
turn the inward insidious enemy and deceiver into the friend
and guide.
William Q. Judge
Branch Paper No. 5
August, 1890.
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