“Only the perfect man can teach in silence, because he has reached it, and therefore he alone can stimulate it in others. He speaks through the silence infinitely more potently than through any human language. But those who are not yet Jivanmuktas naturally prefer to use speech and pen.” Inspirational Life Book:Concentration: A Guide to Mental Mastery Source: Concentration: A Guide to Mental Mastery
“Still another barrier for many people which closes the door to success is the mania or passion for reading too many books, because of their inability to make a definite choice. Getting one on a theme which interests them, they invariably soon seek something “new,” and as soon as that has been read, they again start their interminable searching. Their lives pass without being properly and reasonably used. Such men forget that books are much more numerous than the weeks and months they have yet to live through. So what is the good of having read even half of them and dying before making any use of the things which men know only mentally? After all, books are usually for us only crystallized stores of borrowed thoughts created by other men, and not always of use to us, since in all fields of literature they so frequently offer only fiction or near-fiction, which can hardly help an earnest seeker. Although the mind is only a secondary power in man, compared with the higher wisdom consciousness known in Samadhi, which is devoid of thoughts, faults in the structure of that mind are almost an absolute barrier impossible to over come in any study, and especially in the present one. Inadequate comprehension is the same as insufficient knowledge of a foreign alphabet for someone who wants to read in that particular language. It may happen that it is not merely an unquenchable thirst for reading which drives a man from one author to another, but the fact that he is not satisfied with any so far encountered. In such a case there is nothing more to say then: “Seek and ye shall find.” Thought Book:Concentration: A Guide to Mental Mastery Source: Concentration: A Guide to Mental Mastery
“The very aim of meditation is firstly subjugation of the mind, so that it can no longer be an obstacle to a clear vision of the Supreme cliché. Secondly, it is the full silencing of that mind, so that consciousness becomes similar to the mirror-like surface of a quiet lake or pool. I can see the real Reflection of Truth in it then, but not otherwise.” MindI CanRealConsciousnessVisionClearMeditationQuietReflectionMirrorsAimObstaclesSurfaceSupremeLakesPoolSubjugationClear VisionSilencing Book:Meditation: An Outline for Practical Study Source: Meditation: An Outline for Practical Study
“Everything is flowing. The Great River of Time takes everything with it, and nothing in this world remains unchanged or stabilized.” WorldTimeThis WorldRiversRemains Book:Meditation: An Outline for Practical Study Source: Meditation: An Outline for Practical Study