Part One: Dilemmas
Chapter One: The Purpose of this Book, and Some Important Comments About Exuberance and Health
The will to live can be compromised by
doubts, fears, and rationalizations.
Some people, for example, definitely want
to live, while they try to hide from life at the same time. Obviously, this leads them into
conflicts. Such people will impede their
own motions and progress. They become
overly concerned about their own safety.
If any of my readers feel this way, they may even hide these feelings
from themselves. They will concentrate
upon all of the dangers present in society in their own country, or in other
portions of the world, until their own frightened overall concern for safety
seems to be a quite natural, rational response to conditions over which they
have no control.
What is actually involved is a kind of
paranoia, which can become such a powerful response that it can take over a
person’s life, and color all projects.
If this has happened to any of my readers, you might recognize yourself
in any number of different scenarios.
You might be a “survivalist”, setting up stores and provisions to be
used in case of a nuclear disaster. It
may seem to you that you are quite justified in protecting yourself and your
family from disaster. In many such
cases, however, the people so worried about the occurrence of danger from the
outside world are instead concerned about the nature of their own energy,
and afraid that it might destroy them.
In other words, they do not trust the
energy of their own lives. They do not
trust the natural functioning of their bodies, or accept this functioning as a
gift of life. Instead they question it
at every point – even holding their breath at times, waiting for something to
go wrong.
Other people may actually impede those
portions of the body given to mobility, so that they limp, or tighten their
muscles, or otherwise tamper with their bodies so that the end result is one
that requires a cautious, hesitating approach to motion. Some may even cause themselves to have severe
accidents, in which they sacrifice portions of their bodies to retain a sense
of false safety.
These rather self-deceptive feelings are
not hidden deeply in the subconscious mind, as you might suppose. Instead, in the majority of cases they
consist of quite conscious decisions, made at one time or another on quite
surface levels.
They are not forgotten, but the people
involved simply close their own eyes, so to speak, to those decisions,
and pretend that they do not exist, simply to make their lives appear
smooth and to save face with themselves, when they know very well that the
decisions really rest on very shaky ground indeed.
I so not wish to simplify matters, but such
decisions can be uncovered very easily in children. A child might fall and badly scrape a knee –
so badly that limping is the result, at least temporarily. Such a child will often be quite conscious of
the reason for the affair: he or she may openly admit the fact that the injured
part was purposefully chosen so that a dreaded test at school could be missed,
and the child might well think that the injury was little enough to pay for the
desired effect that it produced.
An adult under the same circumstances might
become injured to avoid a dreaded event at the office – but the adult may well
feel ashamed of such a reaction, and so hide it from himself or herself in
order to save feelings of self-esteem.
In such cases, however, the adults will feel that they are victims of events
over which they have little or no control.
If the same kind of event occurs with any
frequency, their fear of the world and of daily events may grow until it becomes
quite unreasonable. Still, in most such
instances those inner decisions can be easily reached – but while people are
determined to “save face”, they will simply refuse to accept those decisions as
their own. People will to live,
to act or not to act. To a large extent,
they will the events of their lives – whether or not they are willing to
admit this to themselves, and they will to die.
Aside: Application to Jane’s Situation
All of this, of course, applies to Ruburt’s
situation – for once, indeed, he willed himself into immobility, willing
to sacrifice certain kinds of motion in order to safely use other kinds
of psychological motion, because he was afraid of his spontaneous nature, or
his spontaneous self.
He was afraid that it acted according to its
own reasons which might not be his own – or so he thought. Now he is beginning to understand that his
energy is the gift of his life – to be expressed, not repressed – and to
understand, again, that spontaneity knows its own order.
He just told you that when he begins to
speak for me he senses an entire tall structure of words, and unhesitatingly he
lets that structure form. The same is
true with his ability to move and walk; the more he trusts his energy, the more
his spontaneity forms its own beautiful order that results in the spontaneous physical
art of walking – and he is indeed well along the way. The changes have already begun in his mind, and
they will be physically expressed.
It is not coincidence, in your language, that
the word “will” refers to the future as in a line like “it will happen”, and also
refers to the decision-making quality of the mind.
I may or may not return, again according to
those rhythms of which I speak – but I am present and approachable.
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