Now, are there any questions?
QUESTION: You were speaking about tuning in; how
does one "tune in" from one state into another? I mean the technicalities.
ANSWER: It becomes an automatic process when you
pursue this work of self-search while also envisaging the ultimate aim.
Just by thoroughly understanding your innermost problems and deviations,
you begin to solve them to some extent, and your concepts begin to change.
Your outlook and values begin to change, subtly, slowly but surely. In
that different outlook and concept, characterized by a higher degree of
awareness, the "tuning in" takes place automatically. You cannot tune
in simply by forcing yourself to feel or think something. You can help
it along by trying to feel and perceive it, but in a natural and relaxed
way, without expecting immediate results. Do this for the sake of perceiving
reality to a better degree, rather than in expectation of a drastic change.
There is no magic formula; it is a question of increasing awareness that
follows the work of self-development and self-knowledge as a byproduct.
You can accelerate this automatic growth process a little by cultivating
certain thoughts; by obtaining spiritual nourishment; by using this lecture
as additional material. All this together is bound to bring a different
vibration into your whole being. And with this different vibration you
will tune into a different force or current. The vibrations emanating
from you now, with all their disturbances and contradictory feelings,
tune into negative currents. These are just as much part of your world
as the positive ones. You automatically tune into that which corresponds
to your own vibration. Your own vibration is the sum total of your personality:
your character, your general outlook on life, your inner health or lack
of it; your healthy, constructive, and creative abilities or the lack
of them; your awareness and the feeling of being alive and fulfilling
a purpose and knowing or sensing this purpose, or the lack of it. That
aggregate causes your vibration. That vibration, in turn, determines the
forces or currents that you tune into.
Perhaps you expected a particular formula. That I cannot give.
QUESTION: In other words, it is a state of mind
and emotion. According to that emotional state, I will attract certain
currents. Now, suppose the state of mind is such that one rather attracts
the negative forces. Then the question is: how do I go about gradually
changing these currents? Because if I start to think and visualize that
there are positive and negative currents, it makes me think that I have
to be careful not to tune into these negative forces. If I find myself
in that state of mind, how do I switch in order to contact the positive?
ANSWER: What I spoke about tonight does not change
your own approach to your work in the slightest. You seem to feel that
you are in greater danger and more exposed to forces beyond your control
because you now consider the fact that these forces exist already. Before,
the idea that you simply experienced negative emotions of your own gave
you a feeling of greater protection. This is all wrong. The fact that
you produce the condition that makes you tune into already existing forces
does not make you more helpless. The contrary is true. If rightly understood,
the knowledge that you produce the condition will give you greater strength
and insight so as to become one with the positive currents. In fact your
very reaction is the proof of the basic human struggle and unfounded fear
of leaving the state of separateness. You illustrate just what I was trying
to convey: you erroneously feel that you are safer in your isolation and
that you become more exposed as part of one whole. Such an attitude makes
you feel that you are the victim of other people's influence upon you,
or of factors beyond your control. You will have this wrong impression
as long as your inner self-responsibility is not fully established. When
it comes about, you will automatically see that the truth is not at all
the way you see it now.
Your immediate approach to the problem is always the same.
First understand the basis of your fears. When you go deeply enough, not shying
away from following through, you are bound to see that you are in error. All
fears -- with the exception of the healthy fear of self-preservation -- all
psychological fears are based on illusion, on misconceptions. When you understand
the basis of your fears, you will be able to give them up naturally. You will
then have the transcendent insight that the fear is unnecessary, illusory,
and completely senseless. Through that realization you will -- again, not
abruptly but gradually -- cease being afraid. Thus you will tune into a different
current. The awareness and understanding of the negative is the essential
part. All fears and other negative emotions are the result of confused and
untrue thinking, whether conscious or unconscious. By going deeply enough
in analyzing such negative emotions, you are finally bound to re-evaluate
your thinking and your concepts, and thereby straighten out the confusion.
Often the greatest difficulty is that people are not even aware
that they are afraid. When you know you are afraid, you are so much better
off. So the first step is to gain awareness that you have fears. The second
step would be to pin down exactly what it is you are afraid of, why, and where
it comes from. This is hard work, I admit it. It needs patience and perseverance.
It needs the absolute will to find out. The moment you find the origin and
the underlying misconception, the fear begins to vanish. Many of my friends
have experienced that, at least to some degree. That is the only way. Harboring
the fear that you might tune into the wrong current would be the most unproductive
approach imaginable. Thinking that you must guard yourself against it by forceful
measures would avail you nothing. You cannot protect yourself by isolating
yourself even more. The only way to master that which you fear is by the willingness
to go through it if it cannot be avoided. Therein lies the acceptance of one's
present imperfection. It means acceptance of life as a whole, also the necessary
negative manifestations due to one's remaining imperfections. This is the
only healthy approach.
QUESTION: I was talking about the transition time;
one is afraid that there is fear. It takes a long time to find out where
that fear is. In the transition time one automatically attracts these
negative currents. I'm looking for help during the particular time of
transition. Because, as you said, it does not come overnight. So how do
I go about it?
ANSWER: Do you mean that the inner fear of leaving
the old state will attract you to new negative currents? But you are mistaken
in believing that the transition state produces new fears. The same old
fears have existed all along. You may merely become more conscious of
them now. This battle in man has been going on since time began. As long
as he has not made the transition, he fights against it because he is
unconsciously afraid of it. This fear may manifest in many outer symptoms,
yet deep down it is the basic fear of leaving the old state.
Man always thinks that because he is more conscious of a negative
condition, he is more endangered by it. It is just the opposite. The more
you are conscious of this or any other fear, or other negative conditions,
the less negative effect will it have on you. At any rate, you cannot impress
yourself enough with the fact that you are never a helpless prey to the influence
of others, nor are others of you.
QUESTION: If I understand correctly, I would like
to attempt an additional answer to both these questions which ask for
specific instruction about how to tune in. I don't feel that this lecture
was giving instructions other than to proceed with the general psychological
work, to study, and think upon it. It is rather a projection of what is
bound to happen by itself and as a result of this work. It is not a matter
of tuning into a fearful mood or a joyful mood. There is no such thing.
It is a gradual work and if one has fear for a while, there is just no
help for the time being, other than the work we are doing anyway. If we
do the work right over a period of time, then slowly the fear will begin
to change by itself.
ANSWER: That is exactly right. Thinking about it
may help create new perspectives. It may help to gain new understanding
from a different angle so as to better assimilate the findings you make
on this Path. That is all it can do. That is all any of these lectures
can do.
QUESTION: I would like to ask a question about fear
of success.
ANSWER: Of course, any such question can only be
answered very generally. Anyone with a problem like that would have to
work it out in his personal work because there are many variations, many
factors at play. And even if this general explanation should happen to
hold true exactly for one individual, it would still not suffice. It would
have to be felt through in the personal work.
Broadly speaking, fear of success would indicate a fear of
not being adequate to the success. You all know that the child in you wants
something handed to him on a silver platter, without the necessary responsibility,
work, decision, and cost. When you are mature, you accept all these factors,
but if the child in you does not, then fear of success may be the result of
this non-acceptance of maturity. Therefore, an additional fear is being created.
It is the fear of losing any possible success that may be gained. The deeper
knowledge of your soul transmits to you that you can only rightfully keep
what you rightfully earn by a mature attitude towards it. If this mature attitude
is lacking in any way, deep down you know that the success will be fleeting.
Therefore you try to avoid the shame and exposure, the failure and grief by
sabotaging the success at the outset by fearing it.
So the fear of success would be mostly due to: 1) feelings
of inadequacy; 2) lack of self-responsibility, however subtly expressed within
(not necessarily outwardly); 3) guilt, or the feeling of "I do not deserve
it." This, too, is connected with what I discussed here. Because one is unwilling
to assume mature responsibility, one naturally feels guilty in desiring the
goal nevertheless. If a person accepts full adult self-responsibility and
is willing to pay the price for anything, thus making a mature decision, there
will be no such guilt.
Whenever such a problem exists, if one goes deep enough, one
is bound to find the elements discussed here. You may find them in variations,
particular personal variations, but basically the aspects covered here are
bound to be present in some form.
On a deeper, spiritual level, however, another element enters
as well. This is very closely connected 1) with the psychological factors
I just discussed, and 2) with the subject I talked about tonight -- and which
I also mentioned in previous lectures, in different connections.
You may remember that in a previous talk I discussed the fear
of happiness that exists to some degree in every human being. That fear of
happiness is closely connected with the new state I discussed tonight. It
is the state in which you are a part of a whole, instead of an end of yourself,
The blind and ignorant part in the human soul is struggling against the unknown
new state which is pure happiness. Any real kind of happiness must in some
way be connected with that new state of being, which will be yours after the
transition. Any kind of real success, not just a superficial one, that is
not looked for and experienced in that spirit of your being a part of The
Whole, with the common aim of bringing the entire universe towards that fulfillment,
will be shallow, unsatisfactory, and very temporary. It will not be rewarding
and is bound to be frightening in some way. True satisfaction and safety,
which should be the byproducts of real success, are incompatible with the
separate state, even though this separate state may not show clearly. It is
a subtle, unpronounced, and unconscious factor. That incompatibility creates
a fear of success.
I shall now retire with special blessings for this season.
Of course we, in our world, do not have or know "seasons." But you, in your
world, have chosen this particular time of the year to celebrate the birth
of One Who has come to demonstrate in the best possible way the transition
I have talked about. He has demonstrated it in symbols. For life in itself
is a symbol, much more so than your dreams. So with this special blessing
of Christ Who was love, and Who is love, and Who will always be love, I leave
you with strength and our love, and with our wishes that you may continue
your struggle on this one Path of finding yourselves and developing yourselves
so as to become that person you are meant to be. For there is nothing more
worthwhile and purposeful that you could possibly do, as long as you are truly
honest with yourself. For self-honesty is the first step towards love. So
be blessed, my dearest ones, be in peace, be in God.
The Guide
by Eva Pierrakos
December 9, 1960
Copyright 1996, The Pathwork Foundation, Inc.
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