Personal Reality, Session 620
Your beliefs generate emotion. It is somewhat fashionable to place feelings
above conscious thoughts, the idea being that emotions are more basic and
natural than conscious reasoning is. The
two actually go together but your conscious thinking largely determines your
emotions, and not the other way around.
Your beliefs generate the appropriate emotion that is implied. A long period of inner depressions does not
just come upon you. Your emotions do not
betray you. Instead, over a period of
time you have been consciously entertaining negative beliefs that then
generated the strong feelings of despondency.
If emotion could be trusted above
conscious reasoning then there would be little point in aware thought at
all. You would not need it.
You are not at the mercy of your
emotions, either, for they are meant to follow the flow of your reasoning. Your mind is meant to perceive the physical
environment clearly, and its judgments about the environment then activate the
body’s mechanisms to bring about proper response. If your beliefs about existence are fearful,
then the emotional reactions will be those leading to stress. Your own value judgments need examination in
such a case.
Your imagination of course fires
your emotions, and it also follows your beliefs faithfully. As you think so you feel, and not the other
way around.
Later we will have some comments
regarding hypnotism. Here let me mention
that in those terms you hypnotize yourself constantly with your own conscious
thoughts and suggestions. The term
hypnosis merely applies to a quite normal state in which you concentrate your
attention, narrowing your focus to a particular area of thought or belief.
You concentrate with great vigor
upon one idea, usually to the exclusion of others. It is a quite conscious
performance. As such it also portrays
the importance of belief, for using hypnosis you “force-feed” a belief to
yourself, or one given to you by another – a “hypnotist”; but you concentrate
all of your attention upon the idea presented.
Here, as in normal life, your
emotions and actions follow your beliefs.
If you believe you are sick then for all intents and purposes you are
sick. If you believe that you are
healthy then you are healthy.
There is much written about the nature of healing, and there will be
material in this book dealing with it, but there is also healing-in-reverse, in
which case an individual loses a belief in his or her health and accepts
instead the idea of personal illness.
Here the belief itself will
generate the negative emotions that will, indeed, bring about a physical or
emotional illness. The imagination will
follow, painting dire mental pictures of a particular condition. Before long physical data bears out the negative
belief; negative in that it is far less desirable than a concept of health.
I mention this here simply because
in the overall development of an individual, an illness may also be used as a
method to achieve another, constructive, end.
In such a case belief would also be involved: Such a person would have to believe that an
unhealthy condition was the best way to serve another purpose.
Other means would seem closed to
him because of various personal beliefs that would form a vacuum in his
experience – that is, he would see no other way, perhaps, to achieve the same
end. This will be discussed much more
thoroughly later in the book.
One belief, of course, can be
dependent upon many others, each generating its own emotion and imaginative
reality. The belief in illness itself
depends upon a belief in human unworthiness, guilt and imperfection, for
example.
The mind does not hold just active
beliefs. It contains many others in a
passive state. These lie latent, ready
to be focused upon and used; any of them can be brought to the fore when a
conscious thought acts as a stimulus.
If you are focusing upon ideas of
poverty, illness or lack, for example, your conscious mind also holds latently
concepts of health, vigor and abundance.
If you divert your thoughts from the negative ideas to the positive
ones, then your concentration will begin to alter the balance. The vast reservoir of energy and potential
within you is called into action under the leadership of your conscious mind.
Because you are reasoning as
creatures, because you have available such varieties of experience, the [human]
species developed reasoning abilities that are meant to evolve and grow as they
are used. Your consciousness expands as
you use it. You become “more” conscious
as you exercise these faculties.
A flower cannot write a poem about
itself. You can, and in so doing
your own consciousness turns around about itself. It literally becomes more than it was. Existing in such diversified, rich
environment-possibilities, the human psyche needed and developed a conscious
mind that could make fairly concise and accurate “minute by minute” judgments
and evaluations. As the conscious mind
grew, now, so did the range of imagination. The conscious mind is a vehicle for the
imagination in many ways. The greater
its knowledge the further the reach of imagination. In return imagination enriches the conscious
reasoning and emotional experience.
You have not learned to use your
consciousness properly or fully, so that it seems that imagination, emotions
and reasoning are separate faculties, or sometimes set against each other. The mature conscious mind, once more, accepts
data from the exterior world and from the interior one. It is only when you believe that
consciousness must be attuned only to the exterior conditions that you force it
to cut itself off from inner knowledge, intuitional “voices”, and the depths
from which it springs.
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