And now, your questions.
QUESTION: You mean to say that when a person's attitude
toward life is correct and positive, then his feelings will be right also,
and consequently his actions will benefit him and others? That it all
depends on this fundamental attitude?
ANSWER: Yes, that is what I am saying. This may
sound very simple, but, as you all know, it is a laborious path to establish
this fundamental attitude, so that it accords with the universal forces.
QUESTION: We are planning to make some changes and
improvements in the discussion sessions. Would you have any suggestions?
ANSWER: Yes. I will not go into technical details.
This is something my friends can work out among themselves. The laborious
road of trial and error is a test from which each individual can learn.
When you build something together in this way, you will gain a sense of
accomplishment that has much more value than simply following advice.
Then your spirit will be in it. This, after all, is the only thing that
matters. Therefore the question is really how to go about it so that your
spirit is in it together, with as many participants as possible.
To help in that direction, I will remind you of the purpose
of these sessions. The idea of these discussion groups is to help you put
into practice, to assimilate, a theoretical knowledge, and to apply it to
your private lives. If you approach the discussion with this outlook and you
constantly remind each other of that, it will keep you from abstract theorizing.
You would not really need meetings to just theorize, which comes easily for
most of you anyway. Let your aim be to voice where you do not emotionally
understand something. Then, through private and group work, you will first
verify that such emotional understanding is still lacking. You know so well
that the first step toward understanding is always acknowledgment and concise
verbalization of what one does not understand. This is half the battle. Let
each person pronounce what may be intellectually but not yet emotionally understood;
what is not yet a living experience. Then the others may help with clarification,
perhaps by way of examples. Personal exposure is not necessary; the discussion
can be kept general. This should not be confused with the group work. The
important thing is to help you toward an emotional assimilation. Others who
have the experience, perhaps through having worked out a particular point
under discussion, may show you how to arrive at this assimilation.
However, if here or there something is not intellectually understood,
then, of course, these study groups are the place to air it. If your pride
prevents you from doing so, it is not only to your detriment, but also to
the detriment of the entire venture. The right spirit, humility, and honesty
will make your discussions a living, dynamic experience. Otherwise, they will
become dull and dragging.
The speed with which these study groups can grow into a meaningful
venture depends, first, on the pride of the timid ones, who do not wish to
expose their "ignorance," and, second, on the pride of the boisterous ones,
who show off their "knowledge" to impress others. Both have burning questions.
Some of these are quite conscious, others are unformulated, vague, out of
laziness and pride. Such inner non-participation is a passive pretense that
hinders the quality of the discussions. If every participant prepared the
questions by voicing what he does not understand, both intellectually and
emotionally, I can promise that these discussion groups will turn out profitable
for all concerned.
Let these discussions also serve as opportunities to probe
yourselves. What is the motive for sharing? What is the motive for not doing
so? To the degree you voice your confusions, these discussions will prove
of immeasurable value. Help will then be given as much to those who pronounce
their confusion as to others, especially by the example that is set. Then
your group will truly become a school, where each person is pupil and teacher
at the same time. If you keep this in mind and try to love it, all the outer
details will easily fall into place. They are unimportant. Trial and error
and the improvements you will make along the way will come easily and without
friction. If this basic spirit prevails, it will draw others along, because
it is the strength of the spirit that matters. And even those who are too
timid and blind and lazy will be swept along by the truthfulness, the self-honesty,
and the humility of those who actively participate. This will make the venture
blossom.
QUESTION: I have a personal question. It refers
to this lecture. Many years ago, following a dream interpretation you
gave me, I found out that I was hiding my guilt about my mother behind
something else. Then I found out that I don't love myself, so how can
I possibly love others? I felt all of a sudden that this might be the
real guilt. But when you came to the second part of this lecture, about
the unwillingness to go through the day's little chores, I realized that
this also holds true for me, and the idea came to me that perhaps I am
hiding my real guilt because I am egocentric.
ANSWER: You are quite right, but you will have to
find particularly how this holds true, how this egocentricity manifests.
It has to become more than mere general knowledge. Your momentary awakening
is the first step in the right direction; it is truly a new awareness
of self. You may recall that I have often said that too much perfectionism
is a substitute for withdrawal from loving in one form or another. The
greater your soul's readiness for loving -- or, to put it differently,
the greater your potential for spiritual development -- the more your
soul protests when love is obstructed. Therefore, the "protest" itself,
unpleasant as it may feel, is the medicine.
I have said this often, but it is not yet fully understood.
Nor do psychologists sufficiently understand that the neurosis itself is,
in a sense, the first step to the cure of the soul. The sickness is not caused
by outer events, but by a violation of the soul that prevents it from developing
its potential. This is always a personal matter, and, in the last analysis,
a spiritual or moral one. It is a question of integrity. Without such painful
manifestation the person would be unaware that something was amiss. In truth,
what is considered an illness is, at the same time, a medicine. In that lies
one of the benign qualities of spiritual and universal law.
On the one hand, you feel a great love force. It is part of
your nature. But it is counteracted by a prohibition. This prohibition causes
the problems. You have to find it specifically. You are almost there; you
actually find yourself on the threshold of the full realization of this core
problem in you. Not daring to love may apply only to certain areas of your
life, not to all relationships. When you verify this point, you will ascertain
the source of the real guilt that produces the unjustified guilt, as well
as the perfectionism.
My dearest, dearest friends, the love force -- the life force
-- is abundantly flowing toward each one of you, and also to my absent friends.
I think you can all feel it. You feel the light and the strength. Rejoice
on this path. There is nothing more meaningful. There is nothing that makes
more sense, no matter how painful life may sometimes be, no matter how many
times you may feel a relapse or a stagnation. If you persevere, the light
will become steadier and stronger. If you are more outspoken and more direct,
this entire group will grow more and more. Those who find themselves in a
hopeless depression will be less inclined to hide. Instead, they will go to
those who find themselves strong at the moment -- who have successfully passed
through such a stage and have come out of it through this work. They will
communicate with them and will thus be helped. This is true love, this is
true relating. You all have much to learn about this. You are at the beginning
of a very concise stage of your development. You all have learned a great
deal and have thus come nearer to the point where this group, as a whole,
will become a functional love group.
And now, be blessed, all of you. Be in peace and in God.
The Guide
by Eva Pierrakos
November 9, 1962
Copyright 1962, Eva Broch
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