Are there any questions regarding this topic?
QUESTION: Would you say that the action of emptying
is the surrender of the outer self, saying "I am in confusion, I
ask to know from supreme will and supreme intelligence what is the truth."
And that the impressing is the uniting, the identifying with this inner
intelligence, this true, higher self, in acting with the force purely
as it comes from the source, without distortion, without imaging, without
limiting? Is that the way it goes?
ANSWER: That is quite right. In fact, what I said
at the very end, just now, is exactly that. You see, as long as man is
in this false struggle, the struggle that is based on nonsensical premises
-- and I deliberately call it by such a strong name, for, if you examine
every one of your images from this point of view, you will recognize that
the premise itself is nonsensical -- he must be divided within himself.
He is not only divided in his motivations -- energy currents going into
conflicting directions -- but he is primarily separated from this highest
self of wisdom, intelligence, strength, happiness, love, and abundance.
Everything good that exists in the universe is in man. But he cannot reach
this source, which is so near him, unless he perceives the false struggle
and understands it. This can happen only when he turns inward and allows
himself to listen to his soul movements. Unless he requests this source
to manifest, he will remain ignorant of it. His outer, volitional intelligence
must call this deep inner intelligence into play. Thus the two will unify
after all the material that kept the two separated is absorbed. Then integration
-- the aim -- will occur. So long as man harbors false ideas the original
oneness is split. On either side, as it were, there exists one set of
intelligence. The two can melt when the outer, conscious one deliberately
reaches toward the inner, still hidden one, removing those false elements
that have created the split in the first place. Only through working on
such a Path can this goal be accomplished.
I should like to examine a frequent situation in order to demonstrate
this point. Let us assume you are tired and depressed, hopeless and at the
point of giving up your efforts because your struggle does not bring relief.
You do not wish to abandon your goal but you just cannot see a way in which
to seek. This stagnation is a result of your energies being geared to the
unconscious false struggle. Now what to do? Instead of going on struggling
on a conscious level by forcing yourself to adopt truths your psyche is as
yet unable to absorb, focus your efforts on the simple realization that this
highest of all wisdoms must exist in you -- even if at the moment you do not
feel it, and perhaps even doubt its existence. Honestly acknowledge your doubt,
but also honestly allow for this realization which will open the way. If you
are truly open to the inner source, you can request its guidance. But what
usually happens, my friends, is that when you examine yourself in such a situation,
you do not even get to the point of considering to reach for this higher source
of wisdom within yourself. It does not occur to you, although you have discussed
it many times and theoretically you know of its existence. Why not? If you
look deeper inside, you will find that at such moments you do not even want
to believe that this highest source of intelligence and beauty exists in you.
For some strange reason you do not want it, you even fight against it. As
long as you are unaware of this, you cannot truly give up this false struggle.
There is something in you that does not want to accept this possibility.
You must come to the point of ascertaining this tiny voice
that says No to the possibility of its own higher consciousness; the voice
that is frightened of that marvelous truth, that you carry all you need and
can possibly wish for within yourself.
Now, my friends, by that I do not mean that you can get to
such realizations without help. Of course not. In order to find this perfect
source, you need help. Since a healthy balance between expressing and impressing
does not mean the one versus the other, so a healthy balance between accepting
help and accepting self-responsibility does not mean the one versus the other.
The two, in both instances, are not mutually exclusive, but interact in harmonious
interplay. To the degree you learn the harmonious interplay in both instances,
your innermost self becomes your outer self. There is no longer separation
or conflict between the two. The superimposed intellect, the outer intelligence,
is filled with, motivated, and moved by this inner source of all, the original
source of all -- which is in you. This must never, never be forgotten. It
exists in you, right now, and is completely accessible. To the degree that
you know it, to that degree it can manifest.
QUESTION: What you have just expressed so perfectly
fits the stage where I am at present and with which we are concerned in
my private work. I have a feeling that I have such a fear of this self-responsibility.
Is that true?
ANSWER: Yes, indeed. In fact many of my friends
find themselves in this same phase at present. In your case there is,
as you very correctly surmise, a very great fear of self-responsibility.
The fear is, of course, completely unjustified. It may help you if I show
the following: because you are afraid of self-responsibility, you are
constantly dependent on circumstances outside your control. Therefore
you feel helpless, you feel like a straw in the wind, as if you have no
power over life and circumstances. Now, that much you know. But in order
to understand this a little better, it is important to see the following.
Perhaps you will feel an echo still this evening. You are so afraid to
acknowledge this highest source of all, the key to all life within yourself,
perfect wisdom, intelligence, strength, and beauty, because somehow you
feel that this would be wrongly proud. You fear that the mere consideration
of such a possibility would infer overestimation of yourself, it would
be giving yourself airs that you do not deserve. You fear that the possibility
that you can harbor such powers within yourself might be a gross over-evaluation.
In order to be a good, obeying child, you negate this possibility. You
are afraid of the pride, for which you may be punished, as well as the
disappointment. You do not take a chance on being disappointed, and therefore
you cannot find the truth of it. Does that ring a bell? (Yes, it helps
me.)
Perhaps you can now approach this problem with this new understanding.
Ask yourself "Am I willing to take a chance? I cannot be worse off than
I am now. I do not need unjustified hope. Even if my doubts about having these
powers and this source within me should be justified, it is better to know
and to go on from there than to keep this possibility constantly dangling
as a theory I do not ever dare to explore." In other words, commit
yourself honestly to the problem of your doubting. As long as you doubt and
do not give the positive side a chance, you do not honestly commit yourself
to the problem. How can a problem be resolved, or dissolved, if one does not
give it every chance through a full commitment to it? The full honest commitment
is in testing it again and again. Such fair testing cannot be terminated the
day after tomorrow, because too many misconceptions and false fears clog up
the channel. Giving it a full chance means deliberately reaching inside to
contact this source for the immediate purposes of this Pathwork of self-realization,
of creative living. Honest testing means an attitude of "I give the possibility
every chance." It does not say No to it before such a chance is extended,
in the false assumption that disappointment is unavoidable when you deny before
open-heartedly trying.
You, as so many other people, are constantly in negativity
because you do not dare to find out, once and for all, whether a given situation
or attitude is positive or negative; whether it is true or not true. You negate
before you find a true basis for accepting because you are so afraid that
your acceptance may prove disappointing. This is a very widespread general
situation. Have the courage to allow for the possibility for a positive alternative.
QUESTION: You speak of the outer self as "the child."
Is it not the very essence of the whole thing that the child must mature?
And in order for maturity to take place, for this growth pattern to be
fulfilled, there is this transition, this uniting with the higher self?
ANSWER: Yes. Only it might be misleading to believe
that the child is always necessarily the outer self. This might not always
be quite accurate. The child exists between a superimposed, or partly
superimposed, intellectual maturity and this highest source of all wisdom
and happiness. It dwells in-between. It is not completely outer or inner.
It is relative to the position of the viewer. In other words, when you
consider it from the outer maturity, from the level of where you know
better, the child is inner. When you consider it from the point of view
of the innermost self, it is outer. It is important to understand that
because the outer maturity -- which may be in part a genuine, integrated
maturity, but is also interspersed with a false, superimposed, merely
intellectual maturity -- is not cemented by emotional experience in certain
respects, it must try to ally itself with the real self in the endeavor
of teaching the "child" the truth. The outer maturity must not be confused
with the real self. It reaches up to a certain level, but where that level
ends, the stubborn, lost child, battling against false premises, still
exists. To bring out this child, in its full irrationality and ignorance,
is the expressing that I talked about. In order for the child to grow
up, it must learn what is true and what is false.
Many of you partly see the wrong conclusions, but it is still
a haphazard realization because the extent of the wrong assumption -- that
you are struggling with a problem which in itself does not exist -- is still
often overlooked. You must attain this comprehension and this awareness.
Whenever you are really stuck on this Path, when you are in
great anxiety, in a resistance that seems insurmountable, you can be quite
sure that this, in itself, is a wrong conclusion. For, you inordinately fear
something that has no existence. Nothing true ever needs to be feared in such
a way. Wherever you have made progress on this Path, you have found it to
be so. You have found that your actual faults never induce this despair. Despair
is a result of an untruthful verdict you have pronounced against yourself
or the world. It is connected with an imaginary problem. Unfortunately, even
though this fact was already ascertained by some of my friends, it might again
be forgotten, until it is recaptured on the next level.
May the material I have given you -- the lecture, as well as
the answers to your questions -- give you new incentive for your efforts and
hard work on your Path of self-realization and selfhood. Then you will find
within you that which you falsely believed to be far away.
My dearest friends, be blessed, and may these blessings, which
are an actuality, be able to reach everything in you that needs to be activated
in order to find yourself. Be in peace. Realize the truth, which is so liberating,
namely that there is nothing to fear; that fear and unhappiness are error.
Be in God.
The Guide
by Eva Pierrakos
February 5, 1965
Copyright 1965, 1978 by Eva Pierrakos
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