| Book Excerpts:
THE WORLD A REFLEX OF MENTAL STATES
What you are, so is your world. Everything in the
universe is resolved into your own inward experience. It matters little
what is without, for it is all a reflection of your own state of
consciousness.
It matters everything what you are within, for everything without will
be mirrored and colored accordingly.
All that you positively know is contained in your
own experience; all that you ever will know must pass through the
gateway of experience, and so become part of yourself.
Your own thoughts, desires, and aspirations comprise your world, and,
to you, all that there is in the universe of beauty and joy and bliss,
or of ugliness and sorrow and pain, is contained within yourself.
By your own thoughts you make or mar your life,
your world, your universe, As you build within by the power of thought,
so will your outward life and circumstances shape themselves
accordingly.
Whatsoever you harbor in the inmost chambers of
your heart will, sooner or later by the inevitable law of reaction,
shape itself in your outward life.
The soul that is impure, sordid and selfish, is gravitating with
unerring precision toward misfortune and catastrophe; the soul that is
pure, unselfish, and noble is gravitating with equal precision toward happiness and prosperity.
Every soul attracts its own, and nothing can possibly come to it that does not belong to it.
To realize this is to recognize the universality of Divine Law.
The incidents of every human life, which both make and mar, are drawn
to it by the quality and power of its own inner thought-life. Every soul is a complex combination of gathered
experiences and thoughts, and the body is but an improvised vehicle for
its manifestation.
What, therefore, your thoughts are, that is your real self; and the
world around, both animate and inanimate, wears the aspect with which
your thoughts clothe it. "All that we are is the result of what we have thought.
It is founded on our thoughts; it is made up of our thoughts." Thus
said Buddha, and it therefore follows that if a man is happy, it is
because he dwells in happy thoughts; if miserable, because he dwells in
despondent and debilitating thoughts,
Whether one be fearful or fearless, foolish or wise, troubled or
serene, within that soul lies the cause of its own state or states, and
never without. And now I seem to hear a chorus of voices exclaim, "But
do you really mean to say that outward circumstances do not affect our
minds?" I do not say that, but I say this, and know it to be an
infallible truth, that circumstances can only affect you in so far as you allow them to do so.
You are swayed by circumstances because you have not a right understanding of the nature, use, and
power of thought.
You believe (and upon this little word belief hang all our sorrows and
joys) that outward things have the power to make or mar your life; by
so doing you submit to those outward things, confess that you are their
slave, and they your unconditional master; by so doing, you invest them
with a power which they do not, of themselves, possess, and you
succumb, in reality, not to the mere circumstances, but to the gloom or
gladness, the fear or hope, the strength or weakness, which your
thought-sphere has thrown around them.
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