Recommended Free Books on Metaphysics, The
Secrets, Human Potential, Success, and Wealth
Growth:
THE IDEAL MADE REAL OR APPLIED METAPHYSICS
FOR BEGINNERS BY
PROF. CHRISTIAN D. LARSON
FOREWORD.
The purpose of this work is to present practical
methods through which anyone, the beginner in
particular, may realize his ideals, cause his
cherished dreams to come true, and cause the
visions of the soul to become tangible realities
in everyday life.
The best minds now believe that the ideal can
be made real; that every lofty idea can be applied
in practical living, and that all that is beautiful
on the heights of existence can be made permanent
expressions in personal existence. And so popular
is this belief becoming that it is rapidly permeating
the entire thought of the world. Accordingly,
the demand for instructive knowledge on this
subject, that is simple as well as scientific,
is becoming almost universal.
This book has been written to supply that demand.
However, it does not claim to be complete; nor
could any work on "The Ideal Made Real"
possibly be complete, because the ideal world
is limitless and the process of making real
the ideal is endless. To know how to begin is
the principal secret, and he who has learned
this secret may go on further and further, forever
and forever, until he reaches the most sublime
heights that endless existence has in store.
No attempt has been made to formulate the ideas,
methods and principles presented, into a definite
system. In fact, the tendency to form a new
system of thinking or a new philosophy of life,
has been purposely avoided. Closely defined
systems invariably become obstacles to advancement,
and we are not concerned with new philosophies
of life. Our purpose is the living of a greater
and a greater life, and in such a life all philosophies
must constantly change.
In preparing the following pages, the object
has been to take the beginner out of the limitations
of the old into the boundlessness of the new;
to emphasize the fact that the possibilities
that are latent in the human mind are nothing
less than marvelous, and that the way to turn
those possibilities to practical use is sufficiently
simple for anyone to understand. But no method
has been presented that will not tend to suggest
new and better methods as required for further
advancement. The best ideas are those that inspire
new ideas, better ideas, greater ideas. The
most perfect science of life is that science
that gives each individual the power to create
and recreate his own science as he ascends in
the scale of life.
(Great souls are developed only where minds
are left free to employ the best known methods
according to their own understanding and insight.
And it is only as the soul grows greater and
greater that the ideal can be made real. It
is individuality and originality that give each
person the power to make his own life as he
may wish it to be; but those two important factors
do not flourish in definite systems. There is
no progress where the soul is placed in the
hands of methods; true and continuous progress
can he promoted only where all ideas, all methods
and all principles are placed in the hands of
the soul.
We have selected the best ideas and the best
methods known for making the ideal real, and
through this work, will place them in your hands.
We do not ask you to follow these methods; we
simply ask you to use them. You will then find
them all to be practical; you will find that
every one will work and produce the results
you desire. You will then, not only make real
the ideal in your present sphere of life, but
you will also develop within yourself that Greater
Life, the power of which has no limit, the joy
of which has no end.
THE IDEAL MADE REAL
To have ideals is not only simple but natural.
It is just as natural for the mind to enter
the ideal as it is to live. In fact, the ideal
is an inseparable part of life; but to make
the ideal real in every part of life is a problem,
the solution of which appears to be anything
but simple. To dream of the fair, the high,
the beautiful, the perfect, the sublime, that
everyone can do; but everyone has not learned
how to make his dreams come true, nor realize
in the practical world what he has discerned
in the transcendental world. The greatest philosophers
and thinkers in history, with but few exceptions,
have failed to apply their lofty ideas in practical
living, not because they did not wish to but
because they had not discovered the scientific
relationship existing between the ideal world
and the real world. The greatest thinker of
the past century confessed that he did not know
how to use in every day life the remarkable
laws and principles that he had discovered in
the ideal. He knew, however, that those laws
and principles could be applied; that the ideal
could be made real, and he stated that he positively
knew that others would discover the law of realization,
and that methods would be found in the near
future through which any ideal could be made
real in practical life; and his prophecy has
come true.
To understand the scientific relationship that
exists between the real and the ideal, the mind
must have both the power of interior insight
and the power of scientific analysis, as well
as the power of practical application; but we
do not find, as a rule, the prophet and the
scientist in the same mind. The man who has
visions and the man who can do things do not
usually dwell in the same personality; nevertheless,
this is necessary. And every person can develop
both the prophet and the scientist in himself.
He can develop the power to see the ideal and
also the power to make the ideal real. The large
mind, the broad mind, the deep mind, the lofty
mind, the properly developed mind can see both
the outer and the inner side of things. Such
a mind can see the ideal on high, and at the
same time understand how to make real, tangible
and practical what he has seen. The seeming
gulf between the ideal and the real, between
the soul's vision and the power of practical
action is being bridged in thousands of minds
today, and it is these minds who are gaining
the power to make themselves and their own world
as beautiful as the visions of the prophet;
but the ideal life and the world beautiful are
not for the few only. Everybody should learn
how to find that path that leads from the imperfections
of present conditions to the world of ideal
conditions, the world of which we have all so
frequently dreamed.
The problem is what beginners are to do with
the beautiful thoughts and the tempting promises
that are being scattered so widely at the present
time. The average mind feels that the idealism
of modern metaphysics has a substantial basis.
He feels intuitively that it is true, and he
discerns through the perceptions of his own
soul that all these things that are claimed
for applied metaphysics are possible. He inwardly
knows that whatever the idealist declares can
be done will be done, but the problem is how.
The demand for simple methods is one of the
greatest demands at the present time, methods
that everyone can learn and that will enable
any aspiring soul to begin at once to realize
his ideals. Such methods, however, are easily
formulated, and will be found in abundance on
the following pages. These methods are based
upon eternal laws; they are as simple as the
multiplication table and will produce results
with the same unerring precision. Any person
with a reasonable amount of intelligence can
apply them, and those who have an abundance
of perseverance can, through these methods,
make real practically all the ideals that they
may have at the present time. Those who are
more highly developed will find in these methods
the secret through which their attainments and
achievements will constantly verge on the borderland
of the marvelous. In fact, when the simple law
that unites the ideal and the real is understood
and applied, it matters not how lofty our minds
and our visions may be we can make them all
come true.
To proceed, the principal obstacle must first
be removed; and this obstacle is the tendency
to lose faith whenever we fail to make real
the ideal the very moment we expect to do so.
This tendency is present to some degree in nearly
every mind that is working for greater things,
and it postpones the day of realization whenever
it is permitted to exercise its power of retrogression.
Many a person has fallen into chronic despondency
after having had a glimpse of the ideal, because
it was so very beautiful, so very desirable,
in fact, the only one thing that could satisfy,
and yet seemingly so far away and so impossible
to reach. But here is a place where we must
exercise extraordinary faith. We must never
recognize the gulf that seems to exist between
our present state and the state we desire to
reach. On the other hand, we must continue in
the conviction that the gulf is only seeming
and that we positively shall reach the ideal
that appears in the splendors of what seems
to be a distant future, although what actually
is very near at hand.
Those who have more faith and more determination
do not, as a rule, fall down when they meet
this seeming gulf; they inwardly know that every
ideal will some time be realized. It could not
be otherwise, because what we see in the distance
is invariably something that lies in the pathway
of our own eternal progress, and if we continue
to move forward we must inevitably reach it.
But even to these the ideal does at times appear
to be very far away, and the time of waiting
seems very long. They are frequently on the
verge of giving up and fears arise at intervals
that many unpleasant experiences may, after
all, be met before the great day of realization
is gained; however, we cannot afford to entertain
such fears for a moment nor to think that anything
unpleasant can transpire during the period of
transition; that is, the passing from the imperfections
of present conditions to the joys and delights
of an ideal life. We must remember that fear
and despondency invariably retard our progress,
no matter what our object in view may be, and
that discouragement is very liable to cause
a break in the engine that is to take our train
to the fair city we so long have desired to
reach.
The time of waiting may seem long during such
moments as come when the mind is down, but so
long as the mind is on the heights the waiting
time disappears, and the pleasure of pursuit
comes to take its place. In this connection
we should remember that the more frequently
we permit the mind to fall down into fears and
doubts the longer we shall have to wait for
the realization of the ideal; and the more we
live in the upper story of life the sooner we
shall reach the goal in view. There are many
who give up temporarily all efforts toward reaching
their ideals, thinking it is impossible and
that nothing is gained by trying, but such minds
should realize that they are simply making their
future progress more difficult by retarding
their present progress. Such minds should realize
the great fact that every ideal can be made
real, because nothing is impossible.
To reach any desired goal the doing of certain
things is necessary, but if those things are
not done now they will have to be done later;
besides, when we give up in the present we always
make the obstacles in our way much greater than
they were before. Those things that are necessary
to promote our progress become more difficult
to do the longer we remain in what may be termed
the "giving up" attitude, and the
reason why is found in the fact that the mind
that gives up becomes smaller and smaller; it
loses ability, capacity and power and becomes
less and less competent to cope with the problems
at hand.
Whenever we give up we invariably fall down
into a smaller mental state. When we cease to
move forward, we begin to move backwards. We
retard progression only when we cease to promote
progression. On the other hand, so long as we
continue to pursue the ideal we ascend into
larger and larger mental states, and thus increase
our power to make real the ideals that are before
us. The belief that it is impossible to make
real the ideal has no foundation whatever in
truth. It is simply an illusion produced by
fear and has no place in the exact science of
life. When you discern an ideal you discover
something that lies in your own onward path.
Move forward and you simply cannot fail to reach
it; but when you are to reach the coveted goal
depends upon how rapidly you are moving now.
Knowing this, and knowing that fear, doubt,
discouragement and indifference invariably retard
this forward movement, we shall find it most
profitable to remove those mental states absolutely.
The true attitude is the attitude of positive
conviction; that is, to live in the strong conviction
that whatever we see before us in the ideal
will positively be realized, sooner or later,
if we only move forward, and we can make it
sooner if we will move forward steadily, surely
and rapidly during every moment of the great
eternal now. To move forward steadily during
the great eternal now is to realize now as much
of the ideal as we care to appropriate now;
no waiting therefore is necessary. To begin
to move forward is to begin to make real the
ideal, and we will realize in the now as much
of the ideal as is necessary to make the now
full and complete. To move forward steadily
during the great eternal now is to eternally
become more than you are; and to become more
than you are is to make yourself more and more
like your ideal; and here is the great secret,
because the principle is that you will realize
your ideal when you become exactly like your
ideal, and that you will realize as much of
your ideal now as you develop in yourself now.
The majority, however, feel that they can never
become as perfect as their ideal; others, however,
think that they can, and that they will sometime,
but that it will require ages, and they dwell
constantly upon the unpleasant belief that they
may in the meantime have to pass through years
and years of ordinary and undesirable experience;
but they are mistaken, and besides, are retarding
their own progress every moment by entertaining
such thoughts.
If all the time and all the energy that is
wasted in longing and longing, yearning and
yearning were employed in scientific, practical
self development, the average person would in
a short time become as perfect as his ideal.
He would thus realize his ideal, because we
attract from the without what corresponds exactly
to what is active in our own within. When we
attain the ideal and the beautiful in our own
natures, we shall meet the ideal and the beautiful
wherever we may go in the world, and we will
find the same things in the real that we dreamed
of in the ideal. When we see an ideal we usually
begin to long for it and hope that something
remarkable may happen so as to bring it into
our possession, and we thus continue to long
and yearn and wait with periods of despondency
intervening. We simply use up time and energy
to no avail. When we see an ideal the proper
course to pursue is to begin at once to develop
that ideal in our own nature. We should never
stop to wait and see whether it is coming true
or not, and we should never stop to figure how
much time it may require to reach our goal.
The secret is, begin now to be like your ideals,
and at the proper time that ideal will be made
real.
The very moment you begin to rebuild yourself
in the exact likeness of your ideal you will
begin to realize your ideal, because we invariably
gain possession of that of which we become conscious;
and to begin to develop the ideal in ourselves
is to begin to become conscious of the ideal.
To give thought to time is to stop and measure
time in consciousness, and every stop in consciousness
means retarded progress. Real progress is eternal;
it is a forward movement that is continuous
now, and in the realization of such a progress
no thought is ever given to time. To live in
the life of eternal progress is to gain ground
every moment. It means the perpetual increase
of everything that has value, greatness and
worth, and the mind that lives in such a life
cannot possibly be discouraged or dissatisfied.
Such a mind will not only live in the perpetual
increase of everything that heart can wish for,
but will also realize perpetually the greatest
joy of all joys, the joy of going on. The discouraged
mind is the mind that lives in the emptiness
of life, but there can be no emptiness in that
life that lives in the perpetual increase of
all that is good and beautiful and ideal.
The only time that seems long is the time that
is not well employed in continuous attainment,
and the only waiting time, that seems the hardest
time of all, is the time that is not fully consecrated
to the highest purpose you have in view. When
we understand that we all may have different
ideals we will find that we have an undeveloped
correspondent in ourselves to every ideal that
we may discern, and if we proceed to develop
these corresponding parts there will be some
ideals realized every day. Today we may succeed
in making real an ideal that we first discovered
a year ago. Tomorrow we may reach a goal towards
which we have been moving for years, and in
a few days we may realize ideals that we have
had in view during periods of time varying from
a few weeks to several years; and if we are
applying the principles that underlie the process
of making real the ideal, we may at any time
realize ideals of which we have dreamed for
a life time. Consequently, when we approach
this subject properly we shall daily come into
the possession of something that is our own.
All the beautiful things of which we have dreamed
will be coming into our world and there will
be new arrivals every day.
This is the life of the real idealist, and we
cannot picture a life that is more complete
and more satisfying; but it is not only complete
in the present. It is constantly growing larger
and more desirable, thus giving us daily a higher
degree of satisfaction and joy. When we discern
an ideal that ideal has come within the circle
of our own capacity for development, and the
power to develop that ideal in ourselves is
therefore at hand. The mind never discerns those
ideals that are beyond the possibility of present
development. Thus we realize that when an ideal
is discerned it is proof positive that we have
the power to make it real now.
Those who have not found their ideals in any
shape or form whatever have simply neglected
to make their own ideal nature strong, positive
and pronounced. To live in negative idealism
is to continue to dream on without seeing a
single dream come true; but when the ideals
we discern in our own natures become strong,
positive working forces our dreams will soon
come true; our ideals will be realized one after
the other until life becomes what it is intended
to be, a perpetual ascension into all that is
rich, beautiful and sublime.
Whether we speak of environments, attainments,
achievements, possessions, circumstances, opportunities,
friends, companions or the scores of things
that belong in our world, the law is the same.
We receive an ideal only when we become just
like that ideal. If we seek better friends,
we shall surely find them and retain them, if
we develop higher and higher degrees of friendship.
If we wish to associate with refined people,
we must become more refined in action, thought
and speech. If we wish to reach our ideals in
the world of achievement, we must develop greater
ability, capacity and power. If we desire better
environments, we must not only learn to appreciate
the beautiful, but must also develop the power
to produce those things that have true quality,
high worth and real superiority. The great secret
is to become more useful in the world; that
is, useful in the largest and highest sense
of that term. He who gives his best to the world
will receive the best in return.
The world needs able men and women; people who
can do things that are thoroughly worth while;
people who can think great thoughts and transform
such thoughts into great deeds; and to secure
such men and women the world will give anything
that it may hold in its possession. To make
real the ideal, proceed to develop greatness,
superiority and high worth in yourself. Train
the mind to dwell constantly upon the borderland
of the highest ideals that you can possibly
picture; but do not simply yearn for what you
can see, and do not covet what has not yet become
your own. Proceed to remake yourself into the
likeness of that ideal and it will become your
own. To proceed with this great development,
the whole of life must be changed to conform
with the exact science of life; that is, that
science that is based upon the physical and
the metaphysical united as the one expression
of all that is great and sublime in the soul.
The new way of thinking about things, viewing
things and doing things must be adopted in full,
and this new way is based upon the principle
that the ideal actually is real, and therefore
should be approached not as a future possibility,
but as a present actuality. Think of the ideal
as if it were real and you will find it to be
real. Meet all things as if they contained the
ideal, and you will find that all things will
present their ideals to you, not simply as mere
pictures, but as realities. View the whole of
life from the heights of existence; then you
will see things as they are and deal with things
accordingly; you will see that side of the whole
of existence that may be termed the better side,
and in consequence, you will grow into the likeness
of that better side. When you grow into the
likeness of the better side of all things, you
will attract the better side of all things,
and the ideal in everything in the world will
be made real in your world.
HOW TO BEGIN: THE PRIME ESSENTIALS
To formulate rules in detail that will apply
to each individual case is neither possible
nor necessary. All have not the same present
needs nor the same previous training; but there
are certain general principles that apply to
all, and these, if followed according to the
individual viewpoint, will produce the results
desired. If the proper beginning is made, the
subsequent results will not only be greater
and be realized in less time, but much useless
experience and delay will be avoided. These
principles, or prime essentials, are as follows:
1. Learn to be still.
When you undertake to live an ideal life and
seek to promote your advancement in every direction,
you will find that much cannot be gained until
your entire being is placed in a proper condition
for growth; the reason being that the ideal
is ever advancing toward higher ideals, and
you must improve yourself before you can better
your life. It has been found that all laws of
growth require order, harmony and stillness
for proper action; therefore, to live peacefully,
think peacefully, act peacefully and speak peacefully
are important essentials. This will not only
put the entire being into proper condition for
growth, but will also conserve energy, and when
you begin to live the larger life you will want
to use properly all your forces; neither misusing
or wasting anything. To acquire stillness never
"try hard," but simply exercise general
self control in everything you do. Never be
anxious about results, and they will come with
less effort, and in less time. Whenever you
have a moment to spare relax the whole person,
mind and body; just let everything fall into
the easiest position possible. Make no effort
to relax, simply let go. So long as you try
to relax you will not succeed. While in this
relaxed condition be quiet; do not move a muscle;
breathe deeply but gently, and think only of
peace and stillness. Before you go to sleep
at night relax your entire system, and fall
asleep with peace in your mind; bathe your mind
and body, so to speak, in the crystal sea of
the beautiful calm.
These methods alone will work wonders in a few
weeks. While you are at work hold yourself from
anxious hurry or disturbed action; work in the
attitude of poise and you will accomplish much
more in the same given time and you will be
a far better workman.
Train yourself to come into the realization
of perfect peace by gently holding a deep strong
desire for peace and by ordering all your actions
to harmonize with the peaceful goal in view.
The result will be "the peace that passeth
understanding," and for this alone your
gratitude will be both boundless and endless.
2. Rejoice and be glad.
Cheerfulness is not only a good medicine, but
it is food for mind and body. The cheerful life
will fill every atom with new life, and it is
to the faculties of the mind what sunshine is
to the flowers and trees. To be happy always
is one of the greatest things that man can do,
and there are few things that are more profitable
in every sense of that term. No matter what
comes, be glad; and live in the conviction that
all things are working together for good to
you. As your conviction is so is your faith;
and as your faith is so it shall be unto you.
When you live in the conviction that all things
are working together for good you will cause
all things to work together for good, and you
will understand the reason why when you begin
to apply the real science of ideal living. No
matter how dark the cloud, look for the silver
lining; it is there, and when you always look
at the bright side of things you develop brightness
in yourself. This brightness will strengthen
all your faculties so that you can easily overcome
what obstacles may be in your way, and thus
gain the victory desired. Direct your attention
constantly to the bright side of things; refuse
absolutely to consider any other side. At first
this may not be possible in the absolute sense,
but perseverance never fails to win. However,
do not try hard; gently direct your attention
to the bright side and know that you can. Ere
long it will be second nature for you to live
on the sunny side. The value of this attainment
is very great; first, because joyousness will
increase life, power, energy and force; this
we all know from personal experience, and we
wish to have all the life and power that we
can possibly secure; second, because the happiest
soul never worries, which is great gain. Worry
has crippled thousands of fine minds and brought
millions to an early grave.
We simply cannot afford to worry and must never
do so under any condition whatever. If we have
that habit we can remove it at once by the proper
antidote, which is joyousness. After you have
trained yourself to look only for the bright
and the best, the bright and the best will come
to you, because you will be using your powers
to bring those very things to pass; therefore,
rejoice and be glad every moment. Let your heart
and your soul sing at all times. When you do
not feel the joyous music within, produce it
with your own imagination, and ere long it will
come of itself with greater and greater abundance;
your soul will want to sing because it feels
music, and there are few joys that equal the
joy that comes when music is felt in the soul.
There are so many things that are sweet and
beautiful in life that when we once find the
key to harmony we shall always rejoice. In the
meantime, be happy for the good you have found,
and through that very attitude you will develop
the power to attract better things than you
ever had before. This personal existence is
brimful of good things and happy souls will
find them all.
3. Love everybody and be kind.
If you wish your path to be strewn with roses,
just be kind. Give your best to the world, and
the best will come to you without fail; if it
does not come today, never mind; just go on
being kind and refuse to consider disappointments.
Never hold in mind those things that you do
not wish to retain; you thus cause those things
to pass away. This "shall also pass away"
is true of everything that is not pleasant;
but unpleasant things will not pass away so
long as we hold them in thought. That which
you let go from your mind will pass away from
you entirely. Train yourself to be kindness
in a permanent state of mind, because you cannot
afford to criticize, condemn or be angry at
any time. We know that anger not only disturbs
the mind, but also destroys the cells of the
body, and no one can be angry without losing
a great deal of life and energy. To find fault
never pays; it simply brings enmity, discord
and criticisms; besides, the faults we constantly
see in others will develop in ourselves. The
critical mind is destructive and the critical
attitude is weakening to the entire system;
therefore, no one can be his best who permits
himself to think or talk about the flaws of
life. Be good and kind to everybody; it is one
of the royal paths to happiness and peace. When
anyone does wrong, do not condemn; help him
out; help him find the better way. "Cast
your bread upon the waters;" it will surely
return; sometimes more quickly than you expect
it.
Therefore, give abundantly of all that is best
in your life, and nothing is better than kindness
and love. When you begin to live an ideal life
you will desire more and more to live the largest
life possible, and to accomplish this you must
learn to be much to everybody. Your purpose
must be to be useful in the largest and truest
sense of that term; and nothing can promote
this purpose so thoroughly and so extensively
as universal kindness.
This does not imply, however, that you are to
permit yourself to be imposed upon or unjustly
used by the unscrupulous. It is our duty, as
well as our privilege to demand the right at
all times, and to demand justice for everybody
and from everybody, but this should be done
in kindness, with the antagonistic attitude
eliminated. The love that loves everybody is
not the love that seeks to gain personal possession
of some object of affection. We refer to that
larger kindness that excludes no one from our
whole souled good wishes. This form of love
is the greatest power in the world, and the
one who loves the most in this larger, truer
sense will accomplish the most. The reason why
is found in the fact that a great love invariably
brings out all that is large, great and extraordinary
in human nature. To state that the one who takes
the greatest interest in the welfare of the
world does the most to promote his own interests
may seem to be a contradiction of terms; but
it is true, and it proves conclusively that
the one who gives his best to the world will
invariably receive the best in return. Never
permit yourself to say that you cannot love
every creature that lives; say that you do love
everything that lives, and mean it. What you
say you are doing that you will find yourself
doing. This greater love illumines the mind,
gives new life to every fibre in your being,
removes almost every burden and eases the whole
path of existence. Love removes entirely all
anger, hatred, revenge, ill will, and similar
states, a matter of great importance, for no
one can live an ideal life while such states
of mind remain. To have a sweet temper and loving
disposition and a kind heart is worth more than
tons of gold. We are all finding this to be
true, and we realize fully that the person who
loves everybody with that larger loving kindness
has taken a long step upward into that life
that is real life. This is not mere sentiment,
but the expression of an exact scientific fact.
A strong, continuous love will bring all good
to any one who lives and acts as he inwardly
feels.
4. Have faith in abundance.
Have faith in God; have faith in man; have faith
in yourself; have faith in faith. Believe in
everything, and you relate yourself to the best
that is in everything. We all know the value
of self confidence, but faith is infinitely
deeper, larger and higher. Self confidence helps
us to believe in ourselves, as we are at present,
and thus helps us to make a better use of the
talents we now possess; but faith elevates the
mind into the consciousness of our larger and
superior possibilities, and thus increases perpetually
the power, the capacity and the efficiency of
the talents we now possess. Faith brings out
the best that is within us and puts that best
to work now. He who follows faith may frequently
go out upon the seeming void, but he always
finds the solid rock, The reason is that faith
has superior vision and goes instinctively to
the very thing we desire to find. Faith does
not expect things to come of themselves. Faith
never stands and waits; it does things; but
while at work believes that the goal will be
reached and the undertaking accomplished. The
person who works in the attitude of faith can
never fail; because through faith he draws upon
the inexhaustible. The person who works in the
attitude of doubt can never be at his best.
Through the feeling of doubt he lowers his own
ability; he holds back his best power and employs
but a portion of his capacity; but the one who
works in faith will press on to the very limit
of his present capacity and then go on further
still, because the more faith he has the more
fully he realizes that there is no limit to
his capacity, that the seeming void that lies
before is positively solid rock all the way
and he may safely proceed. Whatever you do believe
that you can succeed in; do not for a moment
permit yourself to doubt; know that the Infinite
is your source, that you live in the universal
and have the boundless upon which to draw for
supply. If people or things do not come up to
your ideal never mind; give them time; continue
to have faith in their better selves; they will
also scale the heights. Expect them all to do
their best, and most of them will do so now;
the others will soon follow, if you live in
the faith that they will. The unbounded faith
of one soul can elevate the lives of thousands.
This is a statement that is just as true as
it is great, and we should constantly give it
the highest place in mind. The man who has faith
in the whole race is an inspiration to everybody.
Many a person has risen rapidly in the scale
because some one had faith in him. Faith is
the greatest elevating power that we know in
the world. Faith can convert any failure into
success and can promote the advancement of everybody,
no matter what the circumstances may be.
Have faith in yourself and you will advance
as you never advanced before. Have faith in
others and they will inevitably follow. Have
faith in the Infinite and the Supreme Power
will always be with you. This power will see
you through, whatever your goal may be. Therefore,
if you would enter the new life, the better
life, the ideal life, and inspire others to
do the same, have faith in abundance.
5. Pray without ceasing.
The true prayer is the whole souled desire for
the larger, the higher and the better while
the mind is stayed upon the Most High; and to
pray without ceasing is to constantly live in
that lofty desire. The forces of mind and body
always follow our desires; therefore, if we
would use our powers in building up a larger
life we must have high desires and true desires.
Turn your desires upward and keep them there;
desire the greater things only; never desire
anything less. Those powers within you will
cause you to become as true, as great and as
perfect as your heart has prayed that you might
become. To cause our desires, thoughts and states
of consciousness to rise to the very highest
states of being, we should employ the silence
daily; that is, we should enter into the absolute
stillness of the secret life of the soul. Through
the silence we shall find the secret of secrets,
the path to that inner world from which everything
proceeds. To begin, be alone and comfortably
seated. Or, you may enter the silence in association
with someone that is in perfect harmony with
yourself. Relax mind and body; close your eyes
and be perfectly quiet; turn your attention
upon the inner life of the soul and gently hold
your mind upon the thoughts of stillness and
peace. Affirm with deep, quiet feeling, "Peace
is mine." "I am resting in the stillness
of the spirit." "I have entered the
beautiful calm." "I am one with the
Infinite." "I am in the kingdom of
the great within." "I am in the secret
places of the Most High," and similar states.
While you make these statements feel that you
are peaceful and still and that you are now
in that inner world where all is quiet and serene.
When you feel this deep, sublime stillness you
can use other affirmations according to your
present needs. You may affirm that you are well
and strong and happy and harmonious, and that
you have full possession of all those qualities
that you know have existence in real life. To
feel the perfect peace of the soul, however,
is the first essential. After that is attained
your consciousness will deepen and you will
enter the great within to a greater and greater
degree.
While the mind is in this interior state of
being every thought you think will be a power,
and every desire you express will modify or
change everything in your life according to
the nature of that desire and in proportion
to its depth and unity with the Supreme. For
this reason you should train yourself to think
only right thoughts and create only the truest
desires while you are in the silent state. That
which you think or do while in the silence will
have a greater effect upon your life than that
which you may attempt while on the surface of
outer consciousness. Therefore, everything that
is important should be taken into the silence
and through the silence to the Infinite. This
corresponds perfectly with the statement "Take
it to the Lord in prayer." The real purpose
of the silence is to enable the mind to enter
the inner life and not only recreate all thought
according to the higher truth, but to enter
into a more perfect touch with the divine source
of things. The silence should be entered every
day for ten, twenty or thirty minutes. This
is a daily practice of extreme value. Though
you may not have any real results at first,
simply continue; you will reach your goal. When
you begin to become conscious of your interior
life and begin to live more or less in touch
with the world beautiful that is within you,
you will find that you can live in this high,
peaceful state the greater part of the time
and thus be in the silence almost constantly.
This is not only a most desirable attainment,
but it is the one great attainment toward which
every soul should work. When a person can live
in these higher realms always and constantly,
and desire the realization of the highest and
the best that he knows, the prayer without ceasing,
the true spiritual prayer is being fulfilled.
Such a prayer will be answered eternally. Every
day will bring us something that we truly wished
for, and every moment will be supplied with
all that is necessary to make the present full
and complete.
6. Think the truth.
When we learn to think the truth we have actually
come to the "parting of the ways."
Here we find where the old leaves off and the
new begins. In this state the wrong disappears
and the right is discerned and realized in an
ever increasing manner. The foundation of all
truth is expressed in the basic statement "MAN
IS A SPIRITUAL BEING CREATED IN THE IMAGE AND
LIKENESS OF GOD". Being created in the
image of God man is now divine and in possession
of all the divine attributes.
Each individual is now in possession of infinite
wisdom, infinite power, infinite love, eternal
life, perfect peace, everlasting joy, universal
truth, universal freedom, universal good, divine
wholeness, spotless virtue, boundless supply.
True, these attributes exist principally in
the potential state, that is, they are possibilities
waiting in the within for unfoldment, development
and expression; nevertheless, they do exist
in every soul and to a degree that is limitless.
Therefore, every soul does actually possess
those attributes, and to speak the truth we
must recognize their existence and even now
claim their possession. To think the truth you
must think that you are divine in your true
being, and that you possess these attributes,
because this is the truth. You are divine in
your true being, because you are created in
the image of God, and you do possess the divine
attributes just mentioned because that which
is divine must necessarily possess the attributes
of the divine. To think contrary to this would
be wrong thought, and from wrong thought comes
all the wrong in the world. The average person
does think contrary to this thought; therefore,
he is almost constantly in bondage to sin, sickness
or trouble of some kind. Divine wholeness, that
is, perfect health of body and mind is yours
now, always was and always will be; therefore
it would be wrong for you to say, "I am
sick." Your real being is never sick, never
will be, because it is divine and you are the
real being; you are not the body; you possess
a body, and that body may be indisposed, if
you create wrong thought, but that body is not
you. You are a spiritual being created in the
image of God, therefore you are always well.
When sickness appears on the surface, that is,
in the body, know that it is on the surface
only; that sickness is not in you; you are real
being, and in real being perfect health reigns
absolutely and eternally. The sickness that
sometimes appears in the body is the result
of a recognition of untruth, either expressed
in wrong thinking or wrong living. Right thought,
that is, that thought that invariably follows
the recognition of absolute truth, would not
produce sickness; and no person could become
sick that is always filled and protected with
the power of right thought. When the light reigns
supremely, darkness cannot enter. Wrong thought
comes from a false conception of yourself, and
false conceptions will continue to form in mind
so long as you are ignorant of the truth. When
you know the truth, that you are the image of
God, perfect in your own true being, you will
think this truth and all your thought will;
consequently, only right conditions can exist
in your life, and all will henceforth be well
with you. When you see yourself as you are in
your true being, that you are even now strong
and well, in full possession of peace, love,
power, wisdom, freedom and all the good that
is in God, you will think of yourself accordingly
and such thought is right thought.
The result will be right conditions in mind
and body. From center to circumference your
entire being will be well and perfect, as it
always was and ever will be in the truth. To
think the absolute truth at first seems a contradiction
of known facts, because we are so used to judging
from appearances, but when we find that appearances
are simply the result of thought, that right
thought produces good appearances, and wrong
thought produces adverse appearances, and learn
that true being is the image of God, we shall
no longer see contradiction in thinking absolute
truth. When we think the truth about ourselves
we shall always think the truth about others;
we shall, therefore, not think of them as they
appear on the surface but as they are in the
perfection of real spiritual being. We shall
overlook, forgive and forget the wrong appearance,
knowing that it is but a temporary effect of
wrong thought, and we shall proceed to inspire
everyone to change that appearance by thinking
right thought, the thought of truth.
7. Live in the spirit.
To express this statement in its simplest terms,
we would say that to live in the spirit is to
live in the upper story of mind and thought,
or to live on the good side, the bright side
and the true side of everything. To the beginner
this is sufficient, because this simple change
in living must come before the higher spiritual
consciousness can be realized; but the change
though simple at first will completely revolutionize
life. Ere long, however, the consciousness of
the true side and the better side will become
so clear that to live in the spirit will mean
infinitely more than to simply dwell in the
upper story of mind, and when this larger experience
comes we shall know from our own illumined understanding
what it means to live in the spirit. When we
begin to think the truth all kinds of illusions
and false beliefs will gradually vanish, and
we shall not only understand that we are spiritual
beings, but we shall feel that we are all that
divine life can be. We shall positively know
that we are eternal souls living in a spiritual
world now, expressing ourselves in a physical
world, and we shall realize that we are actually
created in the image and likeness of the Infinite,
united with the Infinite and living in the life
of Infinite being. Through the fuller realization
of truth we will learn that the spiritual is
not some vague, far away something that saints
alone can know, but that spirit is the essence
of all things, the very life of all things visible
and invisible, and that spirit is in itself
absolutely good and perfect.
We will realize that there is but one substance
from which all things proceed and that substance
is the expression of spirit; we will see that
there is but one life, the spiritual life, and
that there is but one law, the eternal coming
forth in a greater and greater measure of life.
We will find that spirit is the basis of all
things, the soul of all things, and that therefore
all things are in reality very good and very
beautiful. We will find through the spirit that
evil is but a temporary condition produced by
man's understanding of the goodness and the
completeness of real being and that to so live
that we realize the absolute goodness and the
perfect harmony of the whole universe is to
live in the spirit. When we realize this we
are on the true side of all things and we feel
that we are. When we are in harmony with all
things we are in harmony with the Infinite and
can feel His presence always; and we also find
that to "dwell in the secret places of
the Most High" is to realize that we are
in that great sea of life, the great spiritual
sea, the universal state of being, the world
of divine existence. While we are in this upper
state, that is, in the spirit, we are away from
the false, and actually in the true. We are
in the spirit, and from the light of the spirit
we can see clearly the truth concerning everything.
From this place we may ascend to other and greater
heights and enter into the ever increasing realms
of life where existence becomes fairer and higher,
too beautiful for tongue to ever describe. What
is held in store for the soul that lives in
the spirit, eternity alone can reveal, but that
the life that is lived in the spirit is the
only true life thousands have learned, both
in this age and in ages gone by. To the beginner,
however, the first essential is to get away
from material life, that is, the common, the
gross, the superficial, the ordinary, the perverted
and the wrong; then to go up higher, to enter
the world of light and live in the more beautiful
realms of sublime existence. To live in the
spirit, live in the highest and most perfect
state now, and do not for a moment come down.
At first this state will simply be a life that
is finer, larger and more harmonious, where
things move more smoothly and where the value
of life seems to constantly increase; but ere
long living in the spirit will mean far more
than merely a pleasing state of existence, and
the further we advance the more this wonderful
life will be, until we begin to understand the
great soul who declared: "Eye hath not
seen nor ear heard, neither hath it entered
into the heart of man what God has prepared
for them that love Him." In this connection
we must bear in mind that it is not necessary
to reach the supreme heights in spiritual life
before we can live in the spirit.
We can live in the spirit no matter where we
may be in the scale of life, because the spiritual
life has just as many degrees as there are human
souls. Live in the realization that this universe
has soul, that this soul is divine, and that
you live and move and have your being in that
great soul. Realize this as fully as your present
state of development will permit, and you have
begun to live in the spirit.
The realization of the divinity of the soul
side of all things will reveal to your mind
the great truth that all things are perfect
in their real state of being, and that the real
of everything lives in a universe of spirit,
a universe that is everywhere within us all
and about us all. However, before we begin we
must be convinced of the great truth that the
spiritual life is not mere sentiment nor a mere
feeling of mind and soul. The spiritual life
is the real life, the foundation of all life,
the essence of all life, the soul of all life,
and every true statement concerning the spiritual
life is an exact scientific fact readily demonstrated
by anyone who will apply the principle. And
happy is the soul that does apply this principle,
for such a soul will find life in the spirit,
not only to be real, but to be infinitely more
perfect, more wonderful and more beautiful than
anyone has ever dreamed.
THE FIRST STEPS IN IDEAL LIVING.
Give your best to the world no matter how insignificant
that best may be, and the world will invariably
give its best to you. There was nothing great
or remarkable about the widow's mite, but it
did produce remarkable results, and the reason
was she gave her very best. When we give our
best we not only receive the best in return
from the outer world, but we also receive the
best from the inner world. When you give your
best you bring forth your best, and it is the
bringing forth of your best that causes you
to become better and better. When you become
better you will meet better people and enter
into better environments, and everything in
your life will change for the better, because
like does attract like. To give much is to become
much, provided we give our best and give with
the heart. The giving that comes simply from
the hand does not count, no matter how large
it may be. It brings nothing back to us nor
does it bring permanent good to anybody else.
When you give your best you do not give from
your oversupply or from that which you cannot
use.
If you have something that you cannot use, it
does not belong to you, and you cannot give,
in the true sense of the term, what is not your
own. To give does not mean simply to give money,
unless that is the best you have; but rather
to give your own service, your own talents,
your ability, your own true worth and your own
real self. The man who lives a real life at
all times and under all circumstances is giving
his best and the very best possible that can
be given. A real life truly lived in the world
is a power, and the person who lives such a
life is a power for good wherever he may be.
The presence of such a person is an inspiration
and a light, as we all know. The man who loves
the whole world with heart and soul, and loves
without ceasing is doing far more for the race
than he who endows universities, and will receive
a far greater reward. We must remember, however,
that such a love is not mere sentiment. Real
love is a power and will cause the person who
has it to do his very best for everybody under
every possible circumstance. That person whose
heart is with the race will never be satisfied
with inferior work. He will never shirk nor
leave the problems of life to somebody else;
he will go in and push wherever something good
is being done, and he will constantly endeavor
to render better and better service where ever
his field of action may be Such a person will
give his best to the world, whether he gives
through the channels of art or mechanics, music
or literature, physical labor or intellectual
labor, ideas or real living. What he does will
be the best, and what he receives in return
will be the best that the world is able to give.
Give the best that you are through every thought,
word and deed; that is the principle; and your
life will be constantly enriched both from without
and from within. Through the daily application
of this principle you will develop superiority
in mind, soul, character and life, and the world
will be better off because you are here.
Expect the best from everybody and everybody
will do their best for you. There may be occasional
exceptions to this rule, but through close examination
we shall find that these exceptions are due
solely to our own negligence in applying the
law to every occasion. The man who expects the
best from everybody and has faith in everybody
will certainly receive more love, more kindness,
better friendship, better service and more agreeable
associates by far than the one who has little
or no faith in anyone. But, our faith in people
must be alive, and our expectations must have
soul. To live constantly in the fear that people
will do this or that, and that such and such
mistakes may be made, is to live in a confused
mental world, and where there is much confusion
there will be many mistakes.
Mental states are contagious; how that can be
is not a matter for present discussion, but
the fact that they are is extremely important,
and we all know that they are; therefore, if
we live in fear and confusion we will be a disturbing
element among all those with whom we associate,
and if our associates are not mentally strong
and positive, they will be more or less confused
by our presence, and they are very liable to
produce the very mistakes we feared. On the
other hand, when we have faith in people we
help them to have faith in themselves, and the
more faith a person has in himself the fewer
his mistakes and the better his work. When we
have faith in everybody and are constantly expecting
the best from everybody we create wholesome
conditions in our own minds, conditions that
will tend to develop the best in ourselves;
that person, however, who has no faith in others
will soon lose faith in himself, and when he
does there will be a turn for the worse in his
life. True, he may continue to possess a mechanical
self confidence or an exaggerated state of egotism,
but such a state will soon produce a reaction,
and failure will follow. The self confidence
that brings out the best that is within us is
always founded upon a living faith in the inherent
greatness of man; therefore, no one can have
real faith in himself unless he also has faith
in the greater possibilities of the race, and
no one can expect the best from himself and
give soul to that expectation unless he also
expects the best from others. This is a scientific
fact that anyone can prove in his own daily
experience. To expect the best from everybody
will cause everybody to do their best for you.
Look for the best everywhere and you will find
the best wherever you go. Why this is so is
a matter upon which many delight to speculate,
but the why does not concern us just now. It
is the fact that this law works that concerns
us, and concerns us very much. Not everybody
can fully understand why the best is always
found by him who never looks for anything but
the best, but everybody can look for the best
everywhere and thereby find the best; and it
is the finding of the best that attracts our
attention. It is real results that we are looking
for, and the simpler the method the better.
The man who will constantly apply this law will
not remain in undesirable environments very
long, nor will he occupy an inferior position
very long; better things will positively come
his way and he will not have to wait an age
for the change. The man who looks for the best
is constantly thinking about the best and constantly
impressing his mind with the best thought about
everything; and since man is as he thinks we
can readily understand why such a man will become
better and better; therefore, by looking for
the best everywhere he will not only find the
best in the external world, but he will create
the best in his mental world; this will give
him a greater mind, which in turn will produce
higher attainments and greater achievements.
That man, however, who is always looking for
the worst will constantly think about the worst
and will fill his mind with inferior thoughts;
that he, himself, will become inferior by such
a process is a foregone conclusion. We shall
positively find, sooner or later, what we constantly
look for; it is, therefore, profitable to look
for the best everywhere and at all times; we
become like those things that we constantly
and deeply think about; it is, therefore, profitable
to think only of the best whatever may come
or not. The average person may not find the
best the very first day this principle is applied.
Most of us have strayed so far away from this
mode of thinking and living that it may take
some time to get back to the path that leads
to the best; but one thing is certain, whoever
will look for the best everywhere, and continue
to do so for a reasonable length of time, will
find that path; besides, he will have more delightful
experiences while he is training himself to
apply this principle than he has had for any
similar period before. This, however, will be
only the beginning; the future has far greater
things in store, if he will continue to look
for the best and never look for anything else.
When things are not to your liking, like them
as they are. In other words, while you are working
for greater things make friends with the lesser
things, and they will help you to reach your
goal. The person who is dissatisfied with things
as they are and discontented because things
are not to his liking is standing in his own
way. We cannot get away from present conditions
so long as we antagonize those conditions, because
we are held in bondage to that which we resist.
If you want present conditions to become stepping
stones to better things, you must get on the
better side of present conditions, and you do
that by liking things as they are while they
remain with you. We must be in harmony with
the present if we wish to advance, because in
order to advance we must use the present, but
we cannot use that with which we are not in
harmony. This is a fact that deserves the most
thorough attention and will, when understood,
explain fully why the average person seems powerless
to rise above his surroundings. We must be on
friendly terms with everything that exists in
our present world if we wish to gain possession
of all the building material that our present
world can give, and we cannot secure too much
material if we desire to build a larger life
and a greater future. That which we dislike
becomes detrimental to us, no matter how good
it may be; nevertheless, it will always be with
us because it is impossible to eliminate permanently
that which we antagonize; when we run away from
it in one place we shall meet it elsewhere in
some other form; but that which we love will
constantly serve us and help us on to greater
things; when it can serve us no longer it will
disappear.
To like those things, however, that are not
to our liking may seem difficult, but the question
is why they are not to our liking; when we know
that everything in our present world is a stepping
stone to something still better it will be natural
for us to like everything. Those things may
not come up to our ideals, but that is not their
real purpose; it is not the mission of present
things to serve as ideals, their mission is
to help us to reach our ideals, and they positively
can do this if we will take them into friendly
cooperation. When you take a drive to an ideal
country place you do not dislike the horse because
he is not that country place; if you are humane,
you will love that horse because he is willing
and able to take you where you wish to go. If
you should dislike and mistreat that horse or
should fail to hitch him to the vehicle, you
would not reach your destination. This, however,
is the very thing that the average person does
with the things of his present world; these
things are the horses and the vehicles that
can take us to the ideal places we desire to
reach; but we must hitch them up; we must treat
them right and use them. To cause all things
that are about us now to work together with
us, we must be in perfect harmony with them;
we must like them as they are, and that becomes
comparatively easy when we know that it is necessary
for them to be what they are in order that they
may serve as our stepping stones; if they were
different there would be no stepping stones,
and we would have to remain where we are. When
we realize that everything that exists in our
present world has the power to promote our advancement,
if we properly use that power, and when we realize
that it is necessary to be in harmony with all
things to use the power that is within those
things, we shall no longer dislike anything;
we shall even make friends with adversity, because
the power that is in adversity can be tamed
by kindness and love; and when that power is
tamed it becomes our own. These are great facts
and easily demonstrated by anyone, and whoever
will apply these principles will find that by
liking everything that be finds he will secure
the cooperation of everything, and anyone can
move forward rapidly when all things are working
with him; consequently, by liking what he finds
he will find what he likes.
When you do not get what you want take what
you can get and call it good. It is better to
have something than nothing; besides, we must
use what we can get before we can become so
strong and so able that we can get whatever
we may want. When a person fails to realize
his ideals, there is a reason; usually the cause
is this: he simply longs for the ideal but does
not work himself up to the ideal.
And to work himself up to the ideal he needs
everything that he can get and use now; by taking
what he can get he secures something to work
with in promoting his present progress, and
by looking upon this something as good he will
turn it to good account. It is a well known
fact that we get the best out of everything
when we meet everything in the conviction that
it is good for something, because this attitude
invariably brings the mind into conscious touch
with the real value of that which is met. What
we constantly look for we are sure to find,
therefore, by calling everything good that we
get and by constantly looking for the real worth
of that which we get, the good in everything
that we get will be found; the result is that
everything we receive or come in contact with
will be good for something to us and will have
something of value to give us. Gradually, the
good will so accumulate that we shall have all
that we want; life will be filled with that
which has quality and worth, which means that
the development towards greater worth will constantly
take place, and development towards greater
worth means the constant ascension into the
realization of our ideals. By accepting and
using the good that we can now secure we add
so much to the worth of our own life that we
become worthy of the greater good we may desire;
in consequence, we shall positively receive
it. This process may not satisfy those who expect
to reach the top at once or expect to receive
the better without making themselves better,
but it will satisfy those who would rather move
forward gradually and surely than stand empty
handed waiting and waiting for ages hoping that
some miraculous secret may be found through
which everything can be accomplished at once.
The idea, however, is not that we should meekly
submit to things as they are and be satisfied
with what little fate may seem willing to give
us; that is the other extreme and is just as
detrimental to human welfare. Take everything
that legitimately comes your way; do not refuse
it because it seems too small; take it and call
it good, because it is good for something; then
make the best possible use