IX.
Concerning the Ego-Feeling and the Human Soul's Capacity for Love;
and the Relation of these to the Elemental World
WHEN the
human soul consciously enters the elemental world, it finds itself obliged
to change many of the ideas which it acquired in the physical world;
but if the soul strengthens its forces to a corresponding degree, it
will be quite fit for the change. Only if it shrinks from the effort
of this acquiring strength, may it be seized by the feeling of losing,
on entering the elemental world, the firm basis on which it must build
up its inner life. The ideas which are gained in the physical world
only offer an impediment to entering the elemental world as long as
we try to keep them in exactly the same form in which we gained them.
There is, however, no reason except habit for adhering to them in this
way. It is also quite natural that the consciousness, which at first
only lives in the physical world, should be accustomed to look upon
the form of its ideas which it has shaped there, as the only possible
one. And it is even more than natural, it is necessary. The life of
the soul would never attain its inner solidarity, its necessary stability,
if it did not develop a consciousness in the physical world which in
a certain respect lived in fixed ideas, rigorously forced upon it. Through
everything which life in the physical world can give the soul, is it
able to enter the elemental world in such a way that it does not lose its
independence and firmness of nature there. Strengthening and reinforcement
of the life of the soul must be gained in order that that independence
may not only be present as an unconscious quality of the soul on entering
the elemental world, but may also be kept clearly in the consciousness.
If the soul is too weak for conscious experience in the elemental world,
on entering it the independence vanishes, just as a thought does which is
not imprinted with sufficient clearness on the soul to live on as a
distinct memory. In this case the soul cannot really enter the
supersensible world at all with its consciousness. When it makes the
attempt to enter, it is again and again thrown back into the physical
world, by the being living within the soul which may be called the
guardian of the threshold. And even if the soul has, so to speak, nibbled
at the supersensible world, so that on sinking back into the physical
world it retains something of the supersensible in its consciousness,
such spoil from another sphere often only causes confusion in the life
of thought. It is quite impossible to fall into such confusion if the
faculty of sound judgment, as it may be acquired in the physical world,
be adequately cultivated. By thus reinforcing the faculty of judgment,
the soul will develop the right relation to the events and beings of
super-sensible worlds. For in order to live consciously in those worlds,
an attitude of the soul is necessary which cannot be developed in the
physical world with the same intensity with which it appears in
supersensible worlds. This is the attitude of surrender to what is being
experienced. We must steep ourselves in the experience and identify
ourselves with it; and we must be able to do this to such a degree that
we see ourselves outside our own being and feel ourselves within some
other being. A transformation of our own being into the other with which
we are having the experience must take place. If we do not possess this
faculty of transformation, we cannot experience anything genuine in
supersensible worlds. For there all experience is due to our being able
to realise this feeling, “Now I am transformed
in a certain definite way; now I am vitally present
in a being which through its nature transforms mine in this particular
way.” This transformation of self, this conscious projection of
oneself into other beings, is life in supersensible worlds. By this
process of conscious self-projection into others, we learn to know the
beings and events of those worlds. We come to notice that with one being
we have a certain degree of affinity; but that, by virtue of our own
nature, we are further removed from another. Variations of inner experience
come into view, which, especially in the elemental world, we must call
sympathies and antipathies. For on encountering a being or event of
the elemental world, we feel an experience emerging in the soul which
may be denoted sympathy. By this experience we recognise the nature
of the elemental being or event. But we must not think that experiences
of sympathy and antipathy are only of account in proportion to their
intensity or degree. In the physical world it is indeed in a certain
sense true that we only speak of a strong or weak sympathy or antipathy
as the case may be. In the elemental world, sympathies and antipathies
are not only distinguishable by their intensity, but also in the same
way as, for instance, colours may be distinguished from each other in
the physical world. Just as we have a physical world of many colours,
so can we experience an elemental world containing many sympathies or
antipathies. It has also to be taken into account that antipathy in
the elemental realm does not carry with it the meaning that we inwardly
turn away from the thing so described; by antipathetic we simply mean
a quality of the elemental being or event which bears a similar relation
to the sympathetic quality of another event or being as does blue to
red in the physical world.
We may speak
of a “sense” which man is able to awaken for the elemental
world in his etheric body. This sense is capable of perceiving sympathies
and antipathies in the elemental world just as the eye becomes aware
of colours and the ear of sounds in the physical world. And just as
there one object is red and another blue, so the beings of the elemental
world are such that one radiates a certain kind of sympathy, and another
a certain kind of antipathy to our spiritual sight.
This experience
of the elemental world through sympathies and antipathies is again
something not confined to the clairvoyantly awakened soul; it is always
at hand for every human soul, being part of its nature. But in the ordinary
life of the soul the knowledge of this part of human nature is not
developed. Man bears within him his etheric body; and through it is
connected in manifold ways with beings and events of the elemental world.
At one moment of his life he is woven with sympathies and antipathies into
the elemental world in one way; at another moment in another way.
The soul, however, cannot
continuously so live as an etheric being that sympathies and antipathies
are always active and clearly expressed within it. Just as waking life
alternates with sleep in physical existence, so does a different state
contrast with that of experiencing sympathies and antipathies in the
elemental world. The soul may withdraw from all sympathies
and antipathies and experience itself alone, regarding and feeling merely
its own being. Indeed, this feeling may reach such a degree of intensity
that we may speak of willing our own being. It is then a question of
a condition of the soul's life not easy to describe, because in its
pure, original nature it is of such a kind that nothing in the physical
world resembles it except the strong, unalloyed ego-feeling or feeling
of self in the soul. As far as the elemental world is concerned we may
describe this state as one in which the soul feels the impulse to say to
itself with regard to the necessary surrender to experiences of sympathy
and antipathy: “I will keep entirely to myself and within
myself.”
And by a species of development of will the soul wrenches itself free
from the state of surrender to the elemental experiences of sympathy
and antipathy. This life in the self is, as it were, the sleeping state
of the elemental world; whereas the surrender to events and beings
is the waking state. When the human soul is awake in the elemental world
and develops a wish to experience itself only, that is to say, feels
the need of elemental sleep, it can obtain this by returning to the
waking state of physical life with a fully developed feeling of self.
For such experience, saturated with the feeling of self, in the physical
world is synonymous with elemental sleep. It consists in the soul's
being torn away from elemental experiences. It is literally true that
to clairvoyant consciousness the life of the soul in the physical world
is a spiritual sleep.
When
awakening to the supersensible world takes place in rightly developed
human clairvoyance, the memory of the soul's experiences in the physical
world still remains. It must remain, otherwise other beings and events
would be present in clairvoyant consciousness, but not the clairvoyant's
own being. We should in that case have no knowledge of ourselves; we
should not be living in the spirit ourselves; but other beings and
events would be living in our soul. Taking this into consideration,
it will be clear that rightly developed clairvoyance must lay great
stress on the cultivation of a strong ego-feeling. This ego-feeling
developed with clairvoyance is by no means something which only enters
the soul through clairvoyance; it is merely that we get to know that
which always exists in the depths of the soul, but which remains unknown
to the soul's ordinary life as it runs its course in the physical
world.
The
strong ego-feeling is ndrt there through the etheric body as such,
but through the soul which experiences itself in the physical body. If
the soul does not bring that feeling with it into the clairvoyant state
from its experience in the physical world, it will prove insufficiently
equipped for experience in the elemental world.
On the
other hand, it is essential for human consciousness within the physical
world that the soul's feeling of self, its experience of the ego, although
it must exist, should be modified. By this means it is possible for
the soul to undergo within the physical world training for the noblest
of moral forces, that of fellow-feeling, or feeling with another. If
the strong ego-feeling were to project itself into the soul's conscious
experiences within the physical world, moral impulses and ideas could not
develop in the right way. They could not bring forth the fruit of love.
But the faculty of self-surrender, a natural impulse in the elemental
world, is not to be put on a par with what is called love in human
experience. Elemental self-surrender means experiencing oneself in
another being or event; love is the experiencing another being in one's
own soul. In order to develop the latter experience, the feeling of self,
or ego-experience,
present in the depths of the soul, must have, as it were, a veil drawn
over it; and in consequence of the soul's own forces being thus dulled,
one is able to feel within oneself the sorrows and joys of the other
being: love, which is the source of all genuine morality in human life,
springs up. Love is the most important result for man of his experience
in the physical world. If we analyse the nature of love or fellow-feeling,
we find it is the way in which spiritual reality is expressed in the
physical world. It has already been said that it is in the nature of
what is supersensible to become transformed into something else. If what
is spiritual in man as he lives the physical life becomes so transformed
that it dulls the ego-feeling and lives again as love, the spiritual
remains true to its own elemental laws. We may say that on becoming
clairvoyantly conscious the human soul awakes in the spiritual world;
but we must say just as much that in love the spiritual awakens in
the physical world. Where love and fellow-feeling are stirring in life,
we sense the tragic breath of the spirit, interpenetrating the physical
world. Hence rightly developed clairvoyance can never weaken sympathy
or love. The more completely the soul becomes at home in spiritual worlds,
the more it feels lovelessness and lack of fellow-feeling to be a denial
of spirit itself.
The experiences of consciousness which is becoming clairvoyant, manifest
special peculiarities with regard to what has just been stated. Whereas
the ego-feeling — necessary as it is for experience in supersensible
worlds — is easily deadened, and often behaves like a weak, fading
thought in the memory, feelings of hatred and lovelessness, and immoral
impulses become intense experiences immediately after entering the
supersensible world. They appear before the soul like reproaches come to
life, and become terribly real pictures. In order not to be tormented by
them, clairvoyant consciousness often has recourse to the expedient of
looking about for spiritual forces which weaken the impressions of these
pictures. But by doing so the soul steeps itself in these forces, which
have an injurious effect on the newly-won clairvoyance. They drive it out
of the good regions of the spiritual world, and towards the bad ones.
On
the other hand, true love and real kindness of heart are experiences
of the soul which strengthen the forces of consciousness in the way
necessary for acquiring clairvoyance. When it is said that the soul needs
preparation before it is able to have experiences in the supersensible
world, it should be added that one of the many means of preparation
is the capacity for true love, and the disposition towards genuine human
kindness and fellow-feeling.
An
over-developed ego-feeling in the physical world works against morality.
An ego-feeling too feebly developed causes the soul, around which the
storms of elemental sympathies and antipathies are actually playing, to
be lacking in inner firmness and stability. These qualities can only
exist when a sufficiently strong ego-feeling is working out of the
experiences of the physical world upon the etheric body, which of course
remains unknown in ordinary life. But in order to develop a really moral
temper of mind it is necessary that the ego-feeling, though it must exist,
should be moderated by feelings of good-fellowship, sympathy, and love.
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