Self - Suggestion- Chapter 5
The
making of the idea to be used in self-suggestion is a simple matter if the idea
is to be simple and familiar. One finds no difficulty in recalling all memories
of yawns which may be needed to work over and draw upon so that a fresh mental
image of a yawn can be constructed. Nor does one have to put more than a small
amount of vital force and "will" into the idea before it is called to
the attention of the low self and begins to act as a suggestion.
But
when it comes to making a general idea which may include several steps or
stages to complete an action or to bring about a new condition in the body or
surroundings, the low self cannot help much. It can give all the memories
needed by the middle self to work with, but it does not say gleefully,
"Hey! that's something I know all about! So you want me to yawn? Stand
back and give me time. I'll yawn for you, and how!"
If
one plans to construct a set of idea images which will be used to suggest
something new to the low self, or something which will force it to change a
fixed habit it has already developed, the low self may look on silently and
with apprehension. In some cases it may be frightened and very doubtful, or it
may be rebellious and headstrong, already deciding that it will resist.
It
is the better part of valor to be cautious in making one's approach under these
conditions. The middle self will do well to walk carefully around and around
the proposition, viewing it from all angles before getting down to work on it.
One
of the easier approaches, and one which brings delightful results with very
little effort, is to be found in setting the mood for next day. We all tend to
fall into the habit of carrying certain moods around with us day after day. If
something happens to change the mood to a lower or darker level of
"blues" or discouragement or fear, then we live at that level for a
time. Or if an event is such that it makes us excited, happy, eager or
confident, we rise to that level for a time, enjoying it to the full, and then,
as the old habit pattern brings pressure to bear on the low self, we sink back
to the usual level.
Dr.
Hart's method of raising and keeping the mood level has been discussed. In
Dianetics and Scientology a similar effort was made and the mood level was
charted as "tone". Tone levels were numbered from low to high and the
things which caused low tone were listed in contrast with the things which
caused high tone. The high tone levels were pointed out to be identifiable by
comparison to one's views on life and one's daily actions. The goal and
criterion were normal living. Normal living included among other things the
acceptance of responsibility such as is found in marrying, earning a living and
serving the general social structure of the community by having children and
rearing them well. Other and less difficult things were also listed as normal,
and the individual was urged to get rid of his "engrams" as fast as
possible so that a rise in tone could be more rapidly accomplished.
It
all boils down in the last analysis to something which must be taken up and
considered before the mood level is attacked. This is the matter of getting
oneself to WANT to make a change for the better. Odd as it may seem, a very
considerable number of people are found who are so complexed or so influenced
by obsessing spirits that they do not wish to be happier--to have the happiness
that comes with the brighter moods. For these individuals and the ones who are
psychotically deranged and who live in a mood of unreasonable excitement and
continuous exhilaration, neglecting the duties of life, self-suggestion is not
the answer. They need a psychiatrist. If the mood into which they sink becomes
too low and dark, there is grave danger of a stay in a mental hospital.
There
is the benefit of better health and energy to be had by using self-suggestion,
and if one finds in oneself no interest in feeling active, alert and physically
and mentally fit, that also is a danger sign. What we have come to call
"psychosomatic illness" comes from bad mental conditions, and many
who are ill fall under the classification of those who "enjoy illness".
These also need mental therapy from a doctor rather than urging to try to get
past their heavy complexes or obsessions and on with the use of
self-suggestion.
The
majority of us, however, are near enough to being normal, even if subject to
mood and other changes. Self-suggestion is for us if we can overcome the habit
of living each day with changes of any kind resisted by the low self, and can
sit down and take stock of our lives, ourselves, our reactions to those around
us and our attitude toward the work we have to do.
There
are many things which cannot be scored on a mood chart, but which can be
recognized in ourselves if we ask, "What, if anything, is bothering me?
What do I dislike? Why do I dislike it? What do I find too hard or too tiresome
or too boring?"
When
we have written down the answers which come to us concerning the things we do
not like, we can ask, "What do I want? How would I like to change myself?
How would I like to have people treat me? Would I like to be more loved,
recognized, praised or admired?"
Out
of such little examinations, especially if one tries to write down the answers,
there will come all sorts of unexpected ideas. Many of these will be provided
by the low self if it is invited from the first to give its feeling in the
matter of likes and dislikes. Betimes one may do well just to sit quietly with
pencil in hand and wait for the low self to get its ideas across. It is a new
process to the low self and it may take a little time to get the knack of it,
but given time, it will begin to present ideas as if they were old memories
suddenly floating into the mind.
These
old memories are very often the recalls of things which came earlier in one's
life and which, at the time, caused one to be much moved and to come to great
determinations to do or not to do, to try or not to try, something. Old lost
and forgotten ambitions, plans and desires will gradually be called to your
attention by the low self, and as they are brought up out of the memory they should
be studied carefully and one should make a firm decision as to whether the old
things once desired are still desirable or have served their purpose and should
be given up with finality. Old fears, angers, resentments and other things which
were accompanied by strong emotional reactions in the past need especial study
and rationalization. To reason about them and their meaning as they may apply
today is to rationalize the impressions and clean them up before letting them
sink back again into the memory storage.
A
host of our small feelings of fretfulness, dissatisfaction, dislike and,
especially, restlessness have their roots in old things such as these under
discussion. If left unrationalized in terms of what they actually mean today--not
what they meant in days past--they can trip us up as if they were tiny
complexes. Take time to clean house mentally with this catharsis and
prophylaxis, then you will have the board swept clear before you as you lay out
your plans to decide what betterment in moods you will most enjoy and will
begin working to get.
In
the experimental work done by the Huna Research Associates, a simple assignment
was given to find out approximately how long the average Associate could hold
his attention on a selected mental image before tiring and having the mind let
go its grip. This assignment was decided upon because of the disagreement on
many points by authors of books on concentration and meditation. Some writers
stated one thing, some another.
Among
the oldest of the writings to be consulted were those of Patanjali, whose
"Yoga Aphorisms" have been a favorite text in Yoga circles since
about 140 B. C. This early psychologist, as well as one of the several Kapilas
who wrote on Yoga at an even earlier date, may have had some contact with Huna.
Both wrote in Sanskrit, which is not a very flexible language and which is not
well adapted to hiding double meanings in words (as was the language used by
the ancient men who evolved Huna). But symbol words such as were used in Huna
are still to be recognized in the Sanskrit texts. All of the aphorisms were
originally called "sutras", which gives the odd meaning of
"threads", and commentators have been quick to explain that this has
something to do with the act of sewing or uniting things, being a reference to
the basic goal of Yoga--that of uniting the lower self with the higher. This
fits neatly into the Huna theory that the two lower selves are connected by a
large thread or cord of shadowy body substance to the High Self. These cords
may not be used for the normal interchange of vital force and thought forms
when the low self is prevented from doing its part in the interchange by a
feeling of guilt or by a complex of one kind or another. Another symbol found
in Huna and often in the Huna parts of the Bible, as well as in the religious
writings of India, is that of the "path" and of its being blocked or
open. In early Yoga texts the "gunas", or "knots", are
often mentioned, and one may assume with safety that the original Huna meanings
of the symbolic thread and knot were well known, even if lost in a maze of
speculation in the later periods.
Patanjali
wasted little time on the many and complicated bodily postures and breathing
exercises which came later to be regarded as so necessary for the gaining of
proper mental control and concentration. He advised the beginner to make
himself comfortable in a seated position, then to get on with the business of
quieting the mind and stopping the trains of thought flowing through it in
haphazard manner.
In
passing, it is interesting to note that in Yoga circles their concentration and
meditation exercises were aimed at three major benefits. First there was
"Hatha" yoga, or the department in which physical good was the goal.
Next there came "Raja" yoga or the work to correct and perfect the
reasoning and "will" power of the middle self and to bring the low
self under control. Third came the goal which overshadowed all else--that of
making and keeping normal contact with the High Self--the attainment of
"union".
These
are also the goals of Huna, and in self-suggestion we begin with the first two
steps, leaving the third to come later.
To
get back to the matter of tests made by the Huna Research Associates. Tests
were carried on to see how long a mental image could be held. It was quickly
learned that the low self is in control of all efforts to keep a given image in
the focus of attention. It tires quickly, and despite the determination of the
middle self to keep the attention on the image, will allow it to slip back into
the memory storage. If the middle self is not alert, the low self will
substitute some other image and start a train of thought more to its liking.
Some
Associates reported a holding time for images of hardly more than five seconds.
Others, especially those who had taken training in concentration, reported
holding times of up to three minutes. The average was about thirty seconds.
More
experiments were tried, and in these the mental picture was allowed to move.
Faces smiled, and heads nodded, lips moved and spoke, eyes opened and closed.
With this changing of the image, the tiring or exhaustion of vital force on the
part of the low self-appeared to be avoided. It was as though the two selves
were able to use up the force in one idea or mental image, then lay it aside
and take up another, much as one might exhaust the charges in one tiny storage
battery after another. The ideas in their molds of shadowy body stuff, after being
allowed to sink back into the memory storage place for an instant to absorb
more vital force, could be recalled and held again for the same length of time.
Moving trains of these images could be held with ease because they moved on as
fast as the force in them was used up. But, although the time of concentration
was extended almost indefinitely, the focus was diffused instead of pointed and
sharp.
The
experiments helped evolve a method of concentration in which the image
concentrated upon was let go as if to rest it for an instant, then called back
and held again. This gives a feeling of rhythmic and slow "pulsing"
of the image. It allows an image to be held for a long period of time, and this
is very useful. It allows the mental image to be built up more strongly and
made to hold a larger and larger charge of "will" force. The pulsing
method also prevents the intrusion of other images or the marching across the
stage of mind of a parade of unrelated ideas. It may be said to mark a milestone
of discovery in the preparation of ideas to be used in self-suggestion.
Other
ways of making mental images were tested, such as compounding sets of little
ideas which were needed to make up a larger general concept composed of a whole
cluster of thought forms. Here the minds of some were found to be able to grasp
and hold more than the minds of others--hold wider and more detailed pictures
or images. For instance, in building a picture of oneself going out to win more
friends, there is the setting out, the meeting of new acquaintances, the doing
of specific acts, and the getting of desired responses. Here the picture has,
of necessity, to move, so must be run over and over like a short piece of film.
It falls under our heading of "meditation" rather than concentration,
but can be reduced and condensed in time and covered with a single suggestion
command, such as "Make friends." (We will come back to this
shortening process a little later.)
Tests
by the Associates also brought out sharply the fact that mental images of the
visual type may be difficult for some to construct, while impressions based on
some of the other senses are comparatively easy. Some found it easier and
better to imagine auditory or tactile impressions and concentrate upon them. Taste
and smell, or a combination of sensory impressions, helped on the making of a
mental image which was not of the visual type.
The
intensity of sensation with which mental impressions can be reproduced varies
greatly. Some can actually cause in themselves the sensation of seeing a color,
or of hearing a sound. Usually there are certain better loved colors or sounds
which the low self will recall and reproduce better than others.
What
was learned, by and large, was that we all have our strong and weak points when
it comes to making the idea structures to be used in self-suggestion. The
beginner needs to run through some tests to determine which are his strong
points and which his weak ones.
If
one tries concentrating on one color after another, it will soon be apparent
whether one color comes clearer than the others, or whether the low self is
able to hand up only memories of different colors rather than the sensation of
actually seeing them. If one finds a face is grey instead of in color when
recalled and held as something to concentrate upon for practice, that shows a
certain lack of visual ability. It may indicate that some of the other senses
should be tried in making experimental images. The touch of the fingers on the
cheek may be recalled and may bring back a vivid imaging, or the picturing of a
flower may be made suddenly easy if its perfume and the feel of its petals are
remembered, along with its color.
The
low self, of course, is right with us every step of the way in making the
images, and its cooperation is something to be courted, and, when obtained,
acknowledged with praise. Things which are hated or disliked are poor to use as
images, although old hurts and fears are easier to hold longer in
concentration. They may upset the low self badly and make it shy away from the
whole matter of self-suggestion. Happy and loved and pleasant memories are best
for practice, and by using them, the low self will soon come to enjoy the work
and help with valuable enthusiasm. If it learns to expect happy and pleasant
results, and if pleasant things, which do not run counter to habits, such, for
example, as smoking, are worked on in the mood field for a time, the low self
will learn to help make mental images with pleasure and confidence.
Learning
to concentrate and meditate, as we use these terms, is hardest for those who
need most to get the low self in hand. With some the low self is headstrong
like a willful child, which cannot be made to pay attention for more than a moment
before it scampers away to indulge in its own play devices. If the
concentration time is less than twenty seconds, when using the
pulsation-of-image method, one needs to take time for daily practice. The time
of holding an image can be gradually lengthened and the low self brought under
control. The average time of from one to two minutes for such concentration is
good enough for self-suggestion purposes of a very effective kind.
The
meditation form of moving image should be something that can be held for at
least three minutes, but the low self may tire and run off with the show. It
may present pictures of its own which have not been dictated by the middle self
in its endeavor to make a set of general images covering larger actions and
situations, such as the one of making friends.
To
strengthen the idea structure of a thing concentrated or meditated upon, is
very simple. Patanjali wrote wisely that meditation is based on the meditations
which have gone before. In other words, one recalls from the memory store, with
the aid of the low self, the idea structures already worked upon, then works
them over still more. In this way, as in learning to memorize a poem, the
structures become familiar and strong and take on more and more vital force and
"will" charge. After a little practice the ideas can be recalled
instantly and one can go over them without half trying because the low self is
beginning to do part of the work. But to let the low self-do all the work will
be to stop laying the heavy and all-important charge of "will" force
on the structures, and that is to be avoided by carefully attending to the work
of going over and over the ideas.
It
has been the experience of a number of experimenters that very often, if the
middle self is firmly determined to follow through and get the low self to help
while making a drive to bring about certain better conditions, the low self
will begin to react to the charged ideas even before the time comes to relax it
consciously and give it the suggestion.
Things
like the yawn, or sleep, or awakening at a certain time in the morning, are
tasks which the low self already has been accustomed to care for. In these it
is often necessary only to make a single strong idea and dwell on it as a
picturing of what is desired, in order to have the low self react without the
formality of giving the suggestion. All it may need is to hear the middle self
say, "Tonight we will sleep deeply and soundly. We will have a really
profound and enjoyable and refreshing sleep, with pleasant dreams. In the
morning we will awaken exactly at six o'clock and we will be feeling ever so
refreshed and ready to begin the day." Next to the yawn, this suggestion
of better sleep is the easiest thing for the beginner to demonstrate.
With
practice one can begin to construct a trigger or release word, which when
spoken or thought, will recall the entire idea structure and hand it over to
the low self with its charges, causing reactions to begin at once. The entire
picture of a fine and restful night of sleep can be shortened gradually in the
recall-and-strengthen process by using fewer words in describing the good
sleep. It can be reduced to something like, "Sound sleep, and awakening at
six". If several meanings are assigned to a single word, that word can be
used as a trigger word, but usually there is no need for such great brevity
unless one may frequently be thrown into positions where the low self has to be
reminded by a single word what it must do or refrain from doing. The old idea
of counting to ten before letting the temper show, might serve as an example.
If this were used as a suggestion and the formula reduced to a single word,
"Count", it might start the desired reaction in the low self on the
instant under emergency conditions.
The
relationship of the middle and low selves is a very close one, and, normally it
is a happy one. But if a "house is divided against itself", the
pulling and hauling is very destructive. The low self is to be loved and
cherished, brought along patiently and carefully. It is not to be hammered over
the head with suggestion, but is to be told what glowing things you are
undertaking and how fine it will be for the low self to do everything possible
in its department of life to help bring about the new and happier state of
things. If the middle self can work up real enthusiasm over the change which is
to be made, and can match this enthusiasm with determination--which is the
exercising of the "will"--the work will be half accomplished before
it is begun. It will remain only for the middle self to get the low self to
relax once a day and then to turn over to it the heavily charged ideas in the
form of a suggestion. With the giving of the suggestion day after day, the
trigger words can be decided upon, and the results will grow more and more
apparent.
One
thing which must not be forgotten is that when a suggestion is given to the low
self, one must not be an Indian giver and demand the idea back at once so that
it can be mulled over and worried as a dog worries a bone. The idea is to be
given bodily to the low self, and then the middle self is to stop thinking
about it--take its hands off and keep them off--until the next period of
suggestion. Let the low self- have its head and work out a way to begin to make
the appropriate reactions. One does not plant a seed, then dig it up daily to
see if it is growing. The low self is the moist soil, and the seed will have
been planted in it after making the soil as receptive as is humanly possible.
After the planting there must be faith that the soil will do its part and that
the seed will do its. If the middle self has full confidence and faith in the
outcome, the low self will also have faith and will do wonders to make the seed
grow. But if there is doubt on the part of the middle self, that doubt will be
shared by the low self and it will lose heart and not try to grow the seed.
Self-suggestion calls for team work. It calls for a happily carried out and
united effort--for integration of purposes, desires and determinations.
If
integration and full, smoothly working cooperation between the low and middle
selves is brought about, little difficulty will be experienced in including the
High Self in the team and so completing normal state of integration which, in
all ages, has been the goal of Huna and of closely related systems such as
Christianity, Gnosticism and early Yoga. One day it will become the goal of
philosophy. Then we shall have perfected a philosophical system which will match
what we cannot help but observe all about us--not the preconceived notions
which the philosophers may have borrowed or evolved in hit-and-miss fashion.
SELF-SUGGESTION
AND THE NEW HUNA THEORY OF MESMERISM AND HYPNOSIS – chapter-1, BY- MAX FREEDOM
LONG
VISHNU
PURAN-BOOK I - CHAPTER 11-22
VISHNU
PURANA. - BOOK I. CHAP. 1. to 10
THE ROLE OF PRAYER.
= THOUGHT: CREATIVE AND EXHAUSTIVE. MEDITATION EXERCISE.
HIGHER REASON AND
JUDGMENT= CONQUEST OF FEAR.
QUEEN CHUNDALAI, THE
GREAT YOGIN
THE POWER OF
DHARANA, DHIYANA, AND SAMYAMA YOGA.
THE POWER OF THE
PRANAYAMA YOGA.
KUNDALINI,
THE MOTHER OF THE UNIVERSE.
TO THE KUNDALINI—THE
MOTHER OF THE UNIVERSE.
Yoga Vashist part-1
-or- Heaven Found by Rishi Singh Gherwal
Shakti and Shâkta
-by Arthur Avalon (Sir John Woodroffe),
Mahanirvana Tantra-
All- Chapter -1 Questions relating to
the Liberation of Beings
Tantra
of the Great Liberation
श्वेतकेतु और
उद्दालक, उपनिषद की कहानी, छान्द्योग्यापनिषद,
GVB THE UNIVERSITY OF VEDA
यजुर्वेद
मंत्रा हिन्दी व्याख्या सहित, प्रथम अध्याय 1-10,
GVB THE UIVERSITY OF VEDA
उषस्ति की
कठिनाई, उपनिषद की कहानी, आपदकालेमर्यादानास्ति,
_4 -GVB the uiversity of veda
वैराग्यशतकम्, योगी
भर्तृहरिकृत, संस्कृत काव्य, हिन्दी
व्याख्या, भाग-1, gvb the university of Veda
G.V.B. THE
UNIVERSITY OF VEDA ON YOU TUBE
इसे भी पढ़े-
इन्द्र औ वृत्त युद्ध- भिष्म का युधिष्ठिर को उपदेश
इसे भी पढ़े
- भाग- ब्रह्मचर्य वैभव
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राजकुमार और
उसके पुत्र के बलिदान की कहानीः-
पुरुषार्थ और विद्या- ब्रह्मज्ञान
संस्कृत के अद्भुत सार गर्भित विद्या श्लोक हिन्दी अर्थ सहित
श्रेष्ट
मनुष्य समझ बूझकर चलता है"
पंचतंत्र- कहानि क्षुद्रवुद्धि गिदण की
कनफ्यूशियस के शिष्य चीनी विद्वान के शब्द। लियोटालस्टा
कहानी माधो चमार की-लियोटलस्टाय
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