CHARACTER BUILDING THOUGHT POWER
by RALPH WALDO TRINE 1896
Introduction by - Joey Pagan
Ralph Waldo Trine is one of the early New Thought Authors on The Law of Attraction. Here is one of his early short booklets that is on point, and well written information. It will give you a better understanding and knowledge that you are in control of your mind and no matter what happens, you will make your life the best.
CHARACTER BUILDING THOUGHT POWER
by RALPH WALDO TRINE 1899
UNCONSCIOUSLY we are forming habits every moment of our lives. Some
are habits of a desirable nature; some are those of a most undesirable
nature. Some, though not so bad in themselves, are exceedingly bad in
their cumulative effects, and cause us at times much loss, much pain and
anguish, while their opposites would, on the contrary, bring as much
peace and joy, as well as a continually increasing power. Have we it
within our power to determine at all times what types of habits shall
take form in our Iives? In other words, is habit-forming,
character-building, a matter of mere chance, or have we it within our
own control? We have, entirely and absolutely. "I will be what I will to
be," can be said and should be said by every human soul.
After this has been bravely and determinedly said, and not only said,
but fully inwardly realized, something yet remains. Something remains
to be said regarding the great law underlying habit-forming,
character-building; for there is a simple, natural, and thoroughly
scientific method that all should know. A method whereby old,
undesirable, earth-binding habits can be broken, and new, desirable,
heaven lifting habits can be acquired, a method whereby life in part or
in its totality can be changed, provided one is sufficiently in earnest
to know and, knowing it, to apply the law.
Thought is the force
underlying all. And what do we mean by this? Simply this: Your every act
- every conscious act - is preceded by a thought. Your dominating
thoughts determine your dominating actions. The acts repeated our own
hands to determine exactly what thoughts we entertain. In the realm of
our own minds we have absolute control, or we should have, and if at any
time we have not, then there is a method by which we can gain control,
and in the realm of the mind become thorough masters. In order to get to
the very foundation of the matter, let us look to this for a moment.
For if thought is always parent to our acts, habits, character, life,
then it is first necessary that we know fully how to control our
thoughts.
Here let us refer to
that law of the mind which is the same as is the law in Connection with
the reflex nerve system of the body, the law which says that whenever
one does a certain thing in a certain way it is easier to do the same
thing in the same way the next time, and still easier the next, and the
next, and the next, until in time it comes to pass that no effort is
required, or no effort worth speaking of; but on the opposite would
require the effort. The mind carries with it the power that perpetuates
its own type of thought, the same as the body carries with it through
the reflex nerve system the power which perpetuates and makes
continually easier its own particular acts. Thus a simple effort to
control one's thoughts, a simple setting about it, even if at first
failure is the result, and even if for a time failure seems to be about
the only result, will in time, sooner or later, bring him to the point
of easy, full, and complete control.
Each one, then, can grow the
power of determining, controlling his thought, the power of determining
what types of thought he shall and what types he shall not entertain.
For let us never part in mind with this fact, that every earnest effort
along any line makes the end aimed at just a little easier for each
succeeding effort, even if, as has been said, apparent failure is the
result of the earlier efforts. This is a case where even failure is
success, for the failure is not in the effort, and every earnest effort
adds an increment of power that will eventually accomplish the end aimed
at. We can, then, gain the full and complete power of determining what
character, what type of thoughts we entertain.
Shall we now give attention to some two or three concrete cases? Here
is a man, the cashier of a large mercantile establishment, or cashier
of a bank. In his morning paper he reads of a man who has become
suddenly rich, has made a fortune of half a million or a million dollars
in a few hours through speculation on the stock market. Perhaps he has
seen an account of another man who has done practically the same thing
lately. He is not quite wise enough, however, to comprehend the fact
that when he reads of one or two cases of this kind he could find, were
he to look into the matter carefully, one or two hundred cases of men
who have lost all they had in the same way. He thinks, however, that he
will be one of the fortunate ones. He does not fully realize that there
are no short cuts to wealth honestly made. He takes a part of his
savings, and as is true in practically all cases of this kind, he loses
all that he has put in, Thinking now that he sees why he lost, and that
had he more money he would be able to get back what he has lost, and
perhaps make a handsome sum in addition, and make it quickly, the
thought comes to him to use some of the funds he has charge of. In nine
cases out of ten, if not ten cases in every ten, the results that
inevitably follow this are known sufficiently well to make it
unnecessary to follow him farther. Where is the man's safety in the
light of what we have been considering? Simply this: the moment the
thought of using for his own purpose funds belonging to others enters
his mind, if he is wise he will instantly put the thought from his mind.
If he is a foot he will entertain it. In the degree in which he
entertains it, it will grow upon him; it will become the absorbing
thought in his mind; it will finally become master of his will power,
and through rapidly succeeding steps, dishonour, shame, degradation,
penitentiary, remorse will be his. It is easy for him to put the thought
from his mind when it first enters; but as he entertains it, it grows
into such proportions that it becomes more and more difficult for him to
put it from his mind; and by and by it becomes practically impossible
for him to do it. The light of the match, which but a little effort of
the breath would have extinguished at first, has imparted a flame that
is raging through the entire building, and now it is almost if not quite
impossible to conquer it.
Shall we notice another concrete case? A trite case, perhaps, but one
in which we can see how habit is formed, and also how the same habit
can be unformed. Here is a young man, he may be the son of poor parents,
or he may be the son of rich parents; one in the ordinary ranks of
life, or one of high social standing, whatever that means. He is good
hearted, one of good impulses generally speaking, a good fellow. He is
out with some companions, companions of the same general type. They are
out for a pleasant evening, out for a good time. They are apt at times
to be thoughtless, even careless. The suggestion is made by one of the
company, not that they get drunk, no, not at all; but merely that they
go and have something to drink together. The young man whom we first
mentioned, wanting to be genial, scarcely listens to the suggestion that
comes into his inner consciousness that it will be better for him not
to fall in with the others in this. He does not stop long enough to
realize the fact that the greatest strength and nobility of character
lies always in taking a firm stand on the aide of the right, and allow
himself to be influenced by nothing that will weaken this stand. He
goes, therefore, with his companions to the drinking place. With the
same or with other companions this is repeated now and then; and each
time it is repeated his power of saying "No" is gradually decreasing. In
this way he has grown a little liking for intoxicants, and takes them
perhaps now and then by himself. He does not dream, or in the slightest
degree realize, what way be is tending, until there comes a day when he
awakens to the consciousness of the fact that he hasn't the power nor
even the impulse to resist the taste which has gradually grown into a
minor form of craving for intoxicants. Thinking, however, that he will
be able to stop when he is really in danger of getting into the drink
habit, he goes thoughtlessly and carelessly on. We will pass over the
various intervening steps and come to the time when we find him a
confirmed drunkard. It is simply the same old story told a thousand or
even a million times over.
He finally awakens to his true condition; and through the shame, the
anguish, the degradation, and the want that comes upon him he longs for a
return of the days when he was a free man. But hope has almost gone
from his life. It would have been easier for him never to have begun,
and easier for him to have stopped before he reached his present
condition; but even in his present condition, be it the lowest and the
most helpless and hopeless that can be imagined, he has the power to get
out of it and be a free man once again. Let us see. The desire for
drink comes upon him again. If he entertain the thought, the desire, he
is lost again. His only hope, his only means of escape is this: the
moment, aye, the very instant the thought comes to him, if he will put
it out of his mind he will thereby put out the little flame of the
match. If he entertain the thought the little flame will communicate
itself until almost before he is aware of it a consuming fire is raging,
and then effort is almost useless. The thought must be banished from
the mind the instant it enters; dalliance with it means failure and
defeat, or a fight that will be indescribably fiercer than it would be
if the thought is ejected at the beginning.
And here we must say a word
regarding a certain great law that we may call the "law of
indirectness." A thought can be put out of the mind easier and more
successfully, not by dwelling upon it, not by, attempting to put it out
directly, but by throwing the mind on to some other object by putting
some other object of thought into the mind. This may be, for example,
the ideal of full and perfect self mastery, or it may be something of a
nature entirely distinct from the thought which presents itself,
something to which the mind goes easily and naturally. This will in time
become the absorbing thought in the mind, and the danger is past. This
same course of action repeated will gradually grow the power of putting
more readily out of mind the thought of drink as it presents itself, and
will gradually grow the power of putting into the mind those objects of
thought one most desires. The result will be that as time passes the
thought of drink will present itself less and less, and when it does
present itself it can be put out of the mind more easily each succeeding
time, until the time comes when it can be put out without difficulty,
and eventually the time will come when the thought will enter the mind
no more at all.
Still another case. You may be more or less of an irritable
nature-naturally, perhaps, provoked easily to anger. Someone says
something or does something that you dislike, and your first impulse is
to show resentment and possibly to give way to anger. In the degree that
you allow this resentment to display itself, that you allow yourself to
give way to anger, in that degree will it become easier to do the same
thing when any cause, even a very slight cause, presents itself. It
will, moreover, become continually harder for you to refrain from it,
until resentment, anger, and possibly even hatred and revenge become
characteristics of your nature, robbing it of its sunniness, its charm,
and its brightness for all with whom you come in contact. If, however,
the instant the impulse to resentment and anger arises, you check it
then and there, and throw the mind on to some other object of thought,
the power will gradually grow itself of doing this same thing more
readily, more easily, as succeeding like causes present themselves,
until by and by the time will come when there will be scarcely anything
that can irritate you, and nothing that can impel you to anger; until by
and by a matchless brightness and charm of nature and disposition will
become habitually yours, a brightness and charm you would scarcely think
possible today. And so we might take up case after case, characteristic
after characteristic, habit after habit. The habit of fault-finding and
its opposite are grown in identically the same way; the characteristic
of jealousy and its opposite; the characteristic of fear and its
opposite. In this same way we grow either love or hatred; in this way we
come to take a gloomy, pessimistic view of life, which objectifies
itself in a nature, a disposition of this type, or we grow that sunny,
hopeful, cheerful, buoyant nature that brings with it so much joy and
beauty and power for ourselves, as well as so much hope and inspiration
and joy for all the world.
There is
nothing more true in connection with human life than that we grow into
the likeness of those things we contemplate. Literally and
scientifically and necessarily true is it that "as a man thinketh in his
heart, so is he." The "is" part is his character. His character is the
sum total of his habits. His habits have been formed by· his conscious
acts; but every conscious act is, as we have found, preceded by a
thought. And so we have it - thought on the one hand, character, life,
destiny on the other. And simple it becomes when we bear in mind that it
is simply the thought of the present moment, and the next moment when
it is upon us, and then the next, and so on through all time.
One can in
this way attain to whatever ideals he would attain to. Two steps are
necessary: first, as the days pass, to form one's ideals; and second, to
follow them continually, whatever may arise, wherever they may lead
him. Always remember that the great and strong character is the one who
is ever. ready to sacrifice the present pleasure for the future good. He
who will thus follow his highest ideals as they present themselves to
him day after day, year after year, will find that as Dante, following
his beloved from world to world, finally found her at the gates of
Paradise, so he will find himself eventually at the same gates. Life is
not, we may say, for mere passing pleasure, but for the highest
unfoldment that one can attain to, the noblest character that one can
grow, and for the greatest service that one can render to all mankind.
In this, however, we will find the highest pleasure, for in this the
only real pleasure lies. He who would find it by any short cuts, or by
entering upon any other paths, will inevitably find that his last state
is always worse than his first; and if he proceed upon paths other than
these he will find that he will never find real and lasting pleasure at
all.
The question is not, "What are the conditions in our lives?" but,
"How do we meet the conditions that we find there?" And whatever the
conditions are, it is unwise and profitless to look upon them, even if
they are conditions that we would have otherwise, in the attitude of
complaint, for complaint will bring depression, and depression will
weaken and possibly even kill the spirit that would engender the power
that would enable us to bring into our lives an entirely new set of
conditions.
In order to be concrete, even at the risk of being personal, I will
say that in my own experience there have come at various times into my
life circumstances and conditions that I gladly would have run from at
the time—conditions that caused at the time humiliation and shame and
anguish of spirit. But invariably, as sufficient time has passed, I have
been able to look back and see clearly the part which every experience
of the type just mentioned had to play in my life. I have seen the
lessons it was essential for me to learn; and the result is that now I
would not drop a single one of these experiences from my life,
humiliating and hard to bear as they were at the time; no, not for the
world. And here is also a lesson I have learned: whatever conditions are
in my life today that are not the easiest and most agreeable, and
whatever conditions of this type all coming time may bring, I will take
them just as they come, without complaint, without depression, and meet
them in the wisest possible way; knowing that they are the best possible
conditions that could be in my life at the time, or otherwise they
would not be there; realizing the fact that, although I may not at the
time see why they are in my life, although I may not see just what part
they have to play, the time will come, and when it comes I will see it
all, and thank God for every condition just as it came.
Each one is so apt
to think that his own conditions, his own trials or troubles or sorrows,
or his own struggles, as the case may be, are greater than those of the
great mass of mankind, or possibly greater than those of any one else
in the world. He forgets that each one has his own peculiar trials or
troubles or sorrows to bear, or struggles in habits to overcome, and
that his is but the common lot of all the human race. We are apt to make
the mistake in this — in that we see and feel keenly our own trials,
or adverse conditions, or characteristics to be overcome, while those of
others we do not see so clearly, and hence we are apt to think that
they are not at all equal to our own. Each has his own problems to work
out. Each must work out his own problems. Each must grow the insight
that will enable him to see what the causes are that have brought the
unfavorable conditions into his life; each must grow the strength that
will enable him to face these conditions, and to set into operation
forces that will bring about a different set of conditions. We may be of
aid to one another by way of suggestion, by way of bringing to one
another a knowledge of certain higher laws and forces — laws and
forces that will make it easier to do that which we would do. The doing,
however, must be done by each one for himself. And so the way to get
out of any conditioning we have got into, either knowingly or
inadvertently, either intentionally or unintentionally, is to take time
to look the conditions squarely in the face, and to find the law whereby
they have come about. And when we have discovered the law, the thing to
do is not to rebel against it, not to resist it, but to go with it by
working in harmony with it. If we work in harmony with it, it will work
for our highest good, and will take us wheresoever we desire. If we
oppose it, if we resist it, if we fail to work in harmony with it, it
will eventually break us to pieces. The law is immutable in its
workings. Go with it, and it brings all things our way; resist it, and
it brings suffering, pain, loss, and desolation.
But a few days ago I was talking with a lady, a most estimable lady
living on a little New England farm of some five or six acres. Her
husband died a few years ago, a good-hearted, industrious man, but one
who spent practically all of his earnings in drink. When he died the
little farm was unpaid for, and the wife found herself without any
visible means of support, with a family of several to care for. Instead
of being discouraged with what many would have called her hard lot,
instead of rebelling against the circumstances in which she found
herself, she faced the matter bravely, firmly believing that there were
ways by which she could manage, though she could not see them clearly at
the time. She took up her burden where she found it, and went bravely
forward. For several years she has been taking care of summer boarders
who come to that part of the country, getting up regularly, she told me,
at from half-past three to four o'clock in the morning, and working
until ten o'clock each night. In the winter time, when this means of
revenue is cut off, she has gone out to do nursing in the country round
about. In this way the little farm is now almost paid for; her children
have been kept in school, and they are now able to aid her to a greater
or less extent. Through it all she has entertained no fears nor
forebodings; she has shown no rebellion of any kind. She has not kicked
against the circumstances which brought about the conditions in which
she found herself, but she has put herself into harmony with the law
that would bring her into another set of conditions. And through it all,
she told me, she has been continually grateful that she has been able
to work, and that whatever her own circumstances have been, she has
never yet failed to find some one whose circumstances were still a
little worse than hers, and for whom it was possible for her to render
some little service.
Most heartily she appreciates the fact, and most grateful is she for
it, that the little home is now almost paid for, and soon no more of her
earnings will have to go out in that channel. The dear little home, she
said, would be all the more precious to her by virtue of the fact that
it was finally hers through her own efforts. The strength and nobility
of character that have come to her during these years, the sweetness of
disposition, the sympathy and care for others, her faith in the final
triumph of all that is honest and true and pure and good, are qualities
that thousands and hundreds of thousands of women, yes, of both men and
women, who are apparently in better circumstances in life, can justly
envy. And should the little farm home be taken away tomorrow, she has
gained something that a farm of a thousand acres could not buy. By going
about her work in the way she has gone about it the burden of it all
has been lightened, and her work has been made truly enjoyable.
Let us take a moment to see how these same conditions would have been
met by a person of less wisdom, one not so far-sighted as this dear,
good woman has been. For a time possibly her spirit would have been
crushed. Fears and forebodings of all kinds would probably have taken
hold of her, and she would have felt that nothing that she could do
would be of any avail. Or she might have rebelled against the agencies,
against the law which brought about the conditions in which she found
herself, and she might have become embittered against the world, and
gradually also against the various people with whom she came in contact.
Or again, she might have thought that her efforts would be unable to
meet the circumstances, and that it was the duty of someone to lift her
out of her difficulties. In this way no progress at all would have been
made towards the accomplishment of the desired results, and continually
she would have felt more keenly the circumstances in which she found
herself, because there was nothing else to occupy her mind. In this way
the little farm would not have become hers, she would not have been able
to do anything for others, and her nature would have become embittered
against everything and everybody.
True it is, then, not, "What are the conditions in one's life?" but,
"How does he meet the conditions that he finds there?" This will
determine all. And if at any time we are apt to think that our own lot
is about the hardest there is, and if we are able at any time to
persuade ourselves that we can find no one whose lot is just a little
harder than ours, let us then study for a little while the character
Pompilia, in Browning's poem and after studying it, thank God that the
conditions in our life are so favorable; and then set about with a
trusting and intrepid spirit to actualize the conditions that we most
desire.
Thought
is at the bottom of all progress or retrogression, of all success or
failure, of all that is desirable or undesirable in human life. The type
of thought we entertain both creates and draws conditions that
crystallize about it, conditions exactly the same in nature as is the
thought that gives them form. Thoughts are forces, and each creates of
its kind, whether we realize it or not. The great law of the drawing
power of the mind, which says that like creates like, and that like
attracts like, is continually working in every human life, for it is one
of the great immutable laws of the universe. For one to take time to
see clearly the things he would attain to, and then to hold that ideal
steadily and continually before his mind, never allowing faith — his
positive thought-forces — to give way to or to be neutralized by
doubts and fears, and then to set about doing each day what his hands
find to do, never complaining, but spending the time that he would
otherwise spend in complaint in focusing his thought-forces upon the
ideal that his mind has built, will sooner or later bring about the full
materialization of that for which he sets out. There are those who,
when they begin to grasp the fact that there is what we may term a
"science of thought," who, when they begin to realize that through the
instrumentality of our interior, spiritual, thought-forces we have the
power of gradually molding the every-day conditions of life as we would
have them, in their early enthusiasm are not able to see results as
quickly as they expect and are apt to think, therefore, that after all
there is not very much in that which has but newly come to their
knowledge. They must remember, however, that in endeavoring to overcome
an old or to grow a new habit, everything cannot be done all at once.
In the degree that
we attempt to use the thought-forces do we continually become able to
use them more effectively. Progress is slow at first, more rapid as we
proceed. Power grows by using, or, in other words, using brings a
continually increasing power. This is governed by law the same as are
all things in our lives, and all things in the universe about us. Every
act and advancement made by the musician is in full accordance with law.
No one commencing the study of music can, for example, sit down to the
piano and play the piece of a master at the first effort. He must not
conclude, however, nor does he conclude, that the piece of the master
cannot be played by him, or, for that matter, by any one. He begins to
practice the piece. The law of the mind that we have already noticed
comes to his aid, whereby his mind follows the music more readily, more
rapidly, and more surely each succeeding time, and there also comes into
operation and to his aid the law underlying the action of the reflex
nerve system of the body, which we have also noticed, whereby his
fingers co-ordinate their movements with the movements of his mind more
readily, more rapidly, and more accurately each succeeding time; until
by and by the time comes when that which he stumbles through at first,
that in which there is no harmony, nothing but discord, finally reveals
itself as the music of the master, the music that thrills and moves
masses of men and women. So it is in the use of the thought-forces. It
is the reiteration, the constant reiteration of the thought that grows
the power of continually stronger thought-focusing, and that finally
brings manifestation.
There
is character building not only for the young but for the old as well.
And what a difference there is in elderly people! how many grow old
gracefully, and how many grow old in ways of quite a different nature.
There is a sweetness and charm that combine for attractiveness in old
age the same as there is something that cannot be described by these
words. Some grow continually more dear to their friends and to the
members of their immediate households, while others become possessed of
the idea that their friends and the members of their households have
less of a regard for them than they formerly had, and many times they
are not far wrong. The one continually sees more in life to enjoy, the
other sees continually less. The one becomes more dear and attractive to
others, the other less so. And why is this? Through chance? By no
means. Personally I do not believe there is any such thing as chance in
the whole of human life, nor even in the world or the great universe in
which we live. The one great law of cause and effect is absolute; and
effect is always kindred to its own peculiar cause, although we may have
at times to go back considerably farther than we are accustomed to in
order to find the cause, the parent of this or that effect, or
actualized, though not necessarily permanently actualized, condition.
Why, then, the vast difference in the two types of elderly people?
The one keeps from worryings, and fearings, and frettings, and
foundationless imaginings, while the other seems especially to cultivate
these, to give himself or herself especially to them. And why is this?
At a certain time in life, differing somewhat in different people,
life-long mental states, habits, and characteristics begin to focus
themselves and come to the surface, so to speak. Predominating thoughts
and mental states begin to show themselves in actualized qualities and
characteristics as never before, and no one is immune.
In the lane leading to the orchard is a tree. For years it has been
growing only "natural fruit." Not long since it was grafted upon. The
spring has come and gone. One-half of the tree was in bloom and the
other half also. The blossoms on each part could not be distinguished by
the casual observer. The blossoms have been followed by young fruit
which hangs abundantly on the entire tree. There is but a slight
difference in it now; but a few weeks later the difference in form, in
size, in color, in flavor, in keeping qualities, will be so marked that
no one can fail to tell them apart or have difficulty in choosing
between them. The one will be a small, somewhat hard and gnarled, tart,
yellowish-green apple, and will keep but a few weeks into the fall of
the year. The other will be a large, delicately flavored apple, mellow,
deep red in color, and will keep until the tree which bore it is in
bloom again.
But why this incident from nature's garden? This. Up to a certain
period in the fruit's growth, although the interior, forming qualities
of the apples were slightly different from the beginning, there was but
little to distinguish them. At a certain period in their growth,
however, their differing interior qualities began to externalize
themselves so rapidly and so markedly that the two fruits became of such
a vastly different type that, as we have seen, no one could hesitate in
choosing between them. And knowing once the soul, the forming, the
determining qualities of each, we can thereafter tell beforehand with a
certainty that is quite absolute what it, the externalized product of
each portion of the tree, will be.
And it is quite the same in human life.
If one would have a beautiful and attractive old age, he must begin it
in youth and in middle life. If, however, he has neglected or failed in
this, he can then wisely adapt himself to circumstances and give himself
zealously to putting into operation all necessary counter-balancing
forces and influences. Where there is life nothing is ever irretrievably
lost, though the enjoyment of the higher good may be long delayed. But
if one would have an especially beautiful and attractive old age he must
begin it in early and in middle life, for there comes by and by a sort
of "rounding-up" process when long-lived-in habits of thought begin to
take unto themselves a strongly dominating power, and the thought habits
of a lifetime begin to come to the surface.
Fear and worry, selfishness, a hard-fisted, grabbing, holding
disposition, a carping, fault-finding, nagging tendency, a slavery of
thought and action to the thinking or to the opinions of others, a
lacking of consideration, thought, and sympathy for others, a lack of
charity for the thoughts, the motives, and the acts of others, a lack of
knowledge of the powerful and inevitable building qualities of thought,
as well as a lack of faith in the eternal goodness and love and power
of the Source of our being, all combine in time to make the old age of
those in whom they find life, that barren, cheerless, unwelcome
something, unattractive or even repellent to itself as well as to
others, that we not infrequently find, while their opposites, on the
contrary, combine, and seem to be helped on by heavenly agencies, to
bring about that cheerful, hopeful, helpful, beautified, and hallowed
old age that is so welcome and so attractive both to itself and to all
with whom it comes in contact. Both types of thoughts, qualities, and
dispositions, moreover, externalize themselves in the voice, in the
peculiarly different ways in which they mark the face, in the stoop or
lack of stoop in the form, as also in the healthy or unhealthy
conditions of the mind and body, and their susceptibility to disorders
and weaknesses of various kinds.
It is not a bad thing for each one early to get a little "philosophy"
into his life. It will be of much aid as he advances in life; it will
many times be a source of great comfort, as well as of strength, in
trying times and in later life. We may even, though gently perhaps, make
sport of the one who has his little philosophy, but unless we have
something similar the time will come when the very lack of it will
deride us. It may be at times, though not necessarily, that the one who
has it is not always so successful in affairs when it comes to a purely
money or business success, but it supplies many times a very real
something in life that the one of money or business success only is
starving for, though he doesn't know what the real lack is, and although
he hasn't money enough in all the world to buy it did he know.
It is well to
find our center early, and if not early then late; but, late or early,
the thing to do is to find it. While we are in life the one essential
thing is to play our part bravely and well and to keep our active
interest in all its varying phases, the same as it is well to be able to
adapt ourselves always to changing conditions. It is by the winds of
heaven blowing over it continually and keeping it in constant motion, or
by its continual onward movement, that the water in pool or stream is
kept sweet and clear, for otherwise it would become stagnant and covered
with slime. If we are attractive or unattractive to ourselves and to
others the cause lies in ourselves; this is true of all ages, and it is
well for us, young or old, to recognize it. It is well, other things
being equal, to adapt ourselves to those about us, but it is hardly fair
for the old to think that all the adapting should be on the part of the
young, with no kindred duty on their part. Many times-old age loses'
much of its attractiveness on account of a peculiar notion of this kind.
The principle of reciprocity must hold in all ages in life, and
whatever the age, if we fail to observe it, it results always sooner or
later in our own undoing.
We are all in
Life's great play, a comedy and tragedy, smiles and tears, sunshine and
shadow, summer and winter, and in time we take all parts. We must take
our part, whatever it may be, at any given time, always bravely and with
a keen appreciation of every opportunity, and a keen alertness at every
turn as the play progresses. A good "entrance" and a good "exit"
contribute strongly to the playing of a deservedly worthy role. We are
not always able perhaps to choose just as we would the details of our
entrance, but the manner of our playing and the manner of our exit we
can all determine, and this no man, no power can deny us; this in every
human life can be made indeed most glorious, however humble it may
begin, or however humble it may remain or exalted it may become,
according to conventional standards of judgement.
To me we are here for divine self-realization through experience. We
progress in the degree that we manipulate wisely all things that enter
into our lives, and that make the sum total of each one's life
experience. Let us be brave and strong in the presence of each problem
as it presents itself and make the best of all. Let us help the things
we can help, and let us be not bothered or crippled by the things we
cannot help. The great God of all is watching and manipulating these
things most wisely and we need not fear or even have concern regarding
them.
To
live to our highest in ail things that pertain to us, to lend a hand as
best we can to all others for this same end, to aid in righting the
wrongs that cross our path by means of pointing the wrongdoer to a
better way, and thus aiding him in becoming a power for good, to remain
in nature always sweet and simple and humble, and therefore strong, to
open ourselves fully and to keep ourselves as fit channels for the
Divine Power to work through us, to open ourselves, and to keep our
faces always to the light, to love all things and to stand in awe or
fear of nothing save our own wrong-doing, to recognize the good lying at
the heart of all things, waiting for expression all in its own good way
and time, this will make our part in life's great and as yet not fully
understood play truly glorious, and we need then stand in fear of
nothing, life nor death, for death is life. Or rather, it is the quick
transition to life in another form; the putting off of the old coat and
the putting on of a new; the falling away of the material body and the
taking of the soul to itself a new and finer body, better adapted to its
needs and surroundings in another world of experience and growth and
still greater divine self-realization; a going out with all that it has
gained of this nature in this world, but with no possessions material; a
passing not from light to darkness, but from light to light; a taking
up of life in another from just where we leave it off here; an
experience not to be shunned or dreaded or feared, but to be welcomed
when it comes in its own good way and time.
All life is from within out. This is something that cannot be
reiterated too often. The springs of life are all from within. This
being true, it would be well for us to give more time to the inner life
than we are accustomed to give to it, especially in this Western world.
There
is nothing that will bring us such abundant returns as to take a little
time in the quiet each day of our lives. We need this to get the kinks
out of our minds, and hence out of our lives. We need this to form
better the higher ideals of life. We need this in order to see clearly
in mind the things upon which we would concentrate and focus the
thought-forces. We need this in order to make continually anew and to
keep our conscious connection with the Infinite. We need this in order
that the rush and hurry of our everyday life does not keep us away from
the conscious realization of the fact that the spirit of Infinite life
and power that is back of all, working in and through all, the life of
all, is the life of our life, and the source of our power; and that
outside of this we have no life and we have no power. To realize this
fact fully, and to live in it consciously at all times, is to find the
kingdom of God, which is essentially an inner kingdom, and can never be
anything else.
The kingdom
of heaven is to be found only within, and this is done once for all, and
in a manner in which it cannot otherwise be done, when we come into the
conscious, living realization of the fact that in our real selves we
are essentially one with the Divine life, and open ourselves continually
so that this Divine life can speak to and manifest through us. In this
way we come into the condition where we are continually walking with
God. In this way the consciousness of God becomes a living reality in
our lives; and in the degree in which it becomes a reality does it bring
us into the realization of continually increasing wisdom, insight, and
power. This consciousness of God in the soul of man is the essence,
indeed, the sum and substance, of all religion. This identifies religion
with every act and every moment of every-day life. That which does not
identify itself with every moment of every day and with every act of
life is religion in name only and not in reality. This consciousness of
God in the soul of man is the one thing uniformly taught by all the
prophets, by all the inspired ones, by all the seers and mystics in the
world's history, whatever the time, wherever the country, whatever the
religion, whatever minor differences we may find in their lives and
teachings. In regard to this they all agree; indeed, this is the essence
of their teaching, as it has also been the secret of their power and
the secret of their lasting influence.
It is the attitude
of the child that is necessary before we can enter into the kingdom of
heaven. As it was said, "Except ye become as little children, ye cannot
enter into the kingdom of heaven." For we then realize that of ourselves
we can do nothing, but that it is only as we realize that it is the
Divine life and power working within us, and it is only as we open
ourselves that it may work through us, that we are or can do anything.
It is thus that the simple life, which is essentially the life of the
greatest enjoyment and the greatest attainment, is entered upon.
In the Orient the people
as a class take far more time in the quiet, in the silence, than we
take. Some of them carry this possibly to as great an extreme as we
carry the opposite, with the result that they do not actualize and
objectify in the outer life the things they dream in the inner life. We
give so much time to the activities of the outer life that we do not
take sufficient time in the quiet to form in the inner, spiritual,
thought-life the ideals and the conditions that we would have actualized
and manifested in the outer life. The result is that we take life in a
kind of haphazard way, taking it as it comes, thinking not very much
about it until, perhaps, pushed by some bitter experiences, instead of
molding it, through the agency of the inner forces, exactly as we would
have it. We need to strike the happy balance between the custom in this
respect of the Eastern and Western worlds, and go to the extreme of
neither the one nor the other. This alone will give the ideal life; and
it is the ideal life only that is the thoroughly satisfactory life.
In the Orient there are many who are day after day sitting in the
quiet, meditating, contemplating, idealizing, with their eyes focused on
their stomachs in spiritual revery, while through lack of outer
activities, in their stomachs, they are actually starving. In this
Western world, men and women, in the rush and activity of our accustomed
life, are running hither and thither, with no center, no foundation
upon which to stand, nothing to which they can anchor their lives,
because they do not take sufficient time to come into the realization of
what the center, of what the reality of their lives is.
If the Oriental would do his contemplating, and then get up and do
his work, he would be in a better condition; he would be living a more
normal and satisfactory life. If we in the Occident would take more time
from the rush and activity of life for contemplation, for meditation,
for idealization, for becoming acquainted with our real selves, and then
go about our work manifesting the powers of our real selves, we would
be far better off, because we would be living a more natural, a more
normal life. To find one's centre, to become centerd in the Infinite, is
the first great essential of every satisfactory life; and then to go
out, thinking, speaking, working, loving, living, from this center.
In the highest
character-building, such as we have been considering, there are those
who feel they are handicapped by what we term heredity. In a sense they
are right; in another sense they are totally wrong. It is along the same
lines as the thought which many before us had inculcated in them
through the couplet in the New England Primer: "In Adam's fall, we
sinned all." Now, in the first place, it is rather hard to understand
the justice of this if it is true. In the second place, it is rather
hard to understand why it is true. And in the third place there is no
truth in it at all. We are now dealing with the real essential self,
and, however old Adam is, God is eternal. This means you; it means me;
it means every human soul. When we fully realize this fact we see that
heredity is a reed that is easily broken.
The life of
every one is in his own hands and he can make it in character, in
attainment, in power, in divine self-realization, and hence in
influence, exactly what he wills to make it. All things that he most
fondly dreams of are his, or may become so if he is truly in earnest;
and as he rises more and more to his ideal, and grows in the strength
and influence of his character, he becomes an example and an inspiration
to all with whom he comes in contact; so that through him the weak and
faltering are encouraged and strengthened; so that those of low ideals
and of a low type of life instinctively and inevitably have their ideals
raised, and the ideals of no one can be raised without its showing
forth in his outer life. As he advances in his grasp upon and
understanding of the power and potency of the thought-forces, he finds
that many times through the process of mental suggestion he can be of
tremendous aid to one who is weak and struggling, by sending him now and
then, and by continually holding him in, the highest thought, in the
thought of the highest strength, wisdom and love. The power of
"suggestion," mental suggestion, is one that has tremendous
possibilities for good if we will but study into it carefully,
understand it fully, and use it rightly.
The one who takes sufficient
time in the quiet mentally to form his ideals, sufficient time to make
and to keep continually his conscious connection with the Infinite, with
the Divine life and forces, is the one who is best adapted to the
strenuous life. He it is who can go out and deal, with sagacity and
power, with whatever issues may arise in the affairs of everyday life.
He it is who is building not for the years but for the centuries; not
for time, but for the eternities. And he can go out knowing not whither
he goes, knowing that the Divine life within him will never fail him,
but will lead him on until he beholds the Father face to face.
He is building for the
centuries because only that which is the highest, the truest, the
noblest, and best will abide the test of the centuries. He is building
for eternity because when the transition we call death takes place,
life, character, self-mastery, divine self-realization, the only
things that the soul when stripped of everything else takes with it,
he has in abundance, in life, or when the time of the transition to
another form of life comes, he is never afraid, never fearful, because
he knows and realizes that behind him, within him, beyond him, is the
Infinite wisdom and love; and in this he is eternally centerd, and from
it he can never be separated. With Whittier he sings:
"I know not where His islands lift
Their fronded palms in air;
I only know I cannot drift
Beyond His love and care."
Ralph Waldo Trine 1896
