The Continuity of Consciousness
Human life runs
its course in three alternating states or conditions, namely, waking,
dreaming sleep, and dreamless sleep. The attainment of the higher
knowledge of spiritual worlds can be readily understood if a
conception be formed of the changes occurring in these three
conditions, as experienced by one seeking such higher knowledge. When
no training has been undertaken to attain this knowledge, human
consciousness is continually interrupted by the restful interval of
sleep. During these intervals the soul knows nothing of the outer
world, and equally little of itself. Only at certain periods dreams
emerge from the deep ocean of insensibility, dreams linked to the
occurrences of the outer world or the conditions of the physical
body. At first, dreams are only regarded as a particular
manifestation of sleep-life, and thus only two states are generally
spoken of, namely, sleeping and waking. For spiritual science,
however, dreams have an independent significance apart from the other
two conditions. In the foregoing chapter a description was given of
the alteration ensuing in the dream-life of the person undertaking
the ascent to higher knowledge. His dreams lose their meaningless,
irregular and disconnected character and form themselves more and
more into a world of law and order. With continued development, not
only does this new world born out of the dream world come to be in no
way inferior to outer physical reality as regards its inner truth,
but facts reveal themselves in it representing a higher reality in
the fullest sense of the word. Secrets and riddles lie concealed
everywhere in the physical world. In the latter, the effects are seen
of certain higher facts, but no one can penetrate to the causes whose
perception is confined merely to his senses. These causes are partly
revealed to the student in the condition described above and
developed out of dream life, a condition, however, in which he by no
means remains stationary. True, he must not regard these revelations
as actual knowledge so long as the same things do not also reveal
themselves during ordinary waking life. But in time he achieves this
as well: he develops this faculty of carrying over into waking
consciousness the condition he created for himself out of dream life.
Thus something new is introduced into the world of his senses that
enriches it. Just as a person born blind and successfully operated
upon will recognize the surrounding objects as enriched by all that
the eye perceives, so, too, will anyone having become clairvoyant in
the above manner perceive the whole world surrounding him peopled
with new qualities, things, beings, and so forth. He now need no
longer wait for his dreams to live in another world, but he can at
any suitable moment put himself into the above condition for the
purpose of higher perception. This condition then acquires a
significance for him similar to the perception, in ordinary life, of
things with active senses as opposed to inactive senses. It can truly
be said that the student opens the eyes of his soul and beholds
things which necessarily remain concealed form the bodily senses.
Now this
condition is only transitional to still higher stages of knowledge.
If the student continues his esoteric exercises he will find, in due
time, that the radical change, as described above, does not confine
itself to his dream life, but that this transformation also extends
to what was previously a condition of deep dreamless sleep. Isolated
conscious experiences begin to interrupt the complete insensibility
of this deep sleep. Perceptions previously unknown to him from the
pervading darkness of sleep. It is, of course, not easy to describe
these perceptions, for our language is only adapted to the physical
world, and therefore only approximate terms can be found to express
what does not at all belong to that world. Still, such terms must be
used to describe the higher worlds, and this is only possible by the
free use of simile; yet seeing that everything in the world is
interrelated, the attempt may be made. The things and beings of the
higher worlds are closely enough related to those of the physical
world to enable, with a little good will, some sort of conception of
these higher worlds to be formed, even though words suitable for the
physical world are used. Only the reader must always bear in mind
that such descriptions of supersensible worlds must, to a large
extent, be in the nature of simile and symbol. The words of ordinary
language are only partially adopted in the course of esoteric
training; for the rest, the student learns another symbolical
language, as a natural outcome of his ascent to higher worlds. The
knowledge of this language is acquired during esoteric training
itself, but that does not preclude the possibility of learning
something concerning the higher worlds even from such ordinary
descriptions as those here given.
Some idea can be
given of those experiences which emerge from the insensibility of
deep sleep if they be compared to a kind of hearing. We may speak of
perceptible tones and words. While the experiences during dreaming
sleep may fitly be designated as a kind of vision, the facts observed
during deep sleep may be compared to auricular impressions. (It
should be remarked in passing that for the spiritual world, too, the
faculty of sight remains the higher. There, too, colors are higher
than sounds and words. The student's first perceptions in this world
do not yet extend to the higher colors, but only to the lower tones.
Only because man, according to his general development, is already
more qualified for the world revealing itself in dreaming sleep does
he at once perceive colors there. He is less qualified for the higher
world unveiling itself in deep sleep; therefore the first revelations
of it he receives are in tones and words; later on, he can here, too,
ascend to colors and forms.)
Now, when these
experiences during deep sleep first come to the notice of the
student, his next task must be to sense them as clearly and vividly
as possible. At first this presents great difficulty, the perception
of these experiences being exceedingly slight. The student knows very
well, on waking, that he has had an experience, but is completely in
the dark as regards its nature. The most important thing during this
initial stage is to remain quiet and composed, and not for a moment
lapse into any unrest or impatience. The latter is under all
circumstances detrimental; it can never accelerate development, but
only delays it. The student must cultivate a quiet and yielding
receptivity for the gift that is presented to him; all violence must
be repressed. Should he at any period not become aware of experiences
during sleep he must wait patiently until this is possible. Some day
this moment will assuredly arrive. And this perceptive faculty, if
awaited with patience and composure, remains a secure possession;
while should it appear momentarily in answer to forcible methods, it
may be completely lost for a long time.
Once this
perceptive faculty is acquired and the experiences during sleep are
present to the student's consciousness in complete lucidity and
clarity, his attention should be directed to the following point. All
these experiences are seen to consist of two kinds, which can be
clearly distinguished. The first kind will be totally different from
anything that he has ever experienced. These experiences may be a
source of joy and edification, but otherwise they should be left to
themselves for the time being. They are the first harbinger of higher
spiritual worlds in which the student will find his way later on. In
the other kind of experiences the attentive observer will discover a
certain relationship with the ordinary world in which he lives. The
subjects of his reflections during life, what he would like to
understand in these things around him but cannot understand with the
ordinary intellect, these are the things concerning which the
experiences during sleep give him information. During every-day life
man reflects on his environment; his mind tries to conceive and
understand the connection existing between things; he seeks to grasp
in thought and idea what his senses perceive. It is to these ideas
and concepts that the experiences during sleep refer. Obscure,
shadowy concepts become sonorous and living in a way comparable only
to the tones and the words of the physical world. It seems to the
student ever more and more as though the solution of the riddles over
which he ponders is whispered to him in tones and words out of a
higher world. And he is able to connect with ordinary life whatever
comes to him from a higher world. What was formerly only accessible
to his thought now becomes actual experience, just as living and
substantial as an experience in this physical world can be. The
things and beings of this physical world are by no means only what
they appear to be for physical perception. They are the expression
and effluence of a spiritual world. This spiritual world, hitherto
concealed from the student, now resounds for him out of his whole
environment.
It is easy to
see that this higher perceptive faculty can prove a blessing only if
the opened soul-senses are in perfect order, just as the ordinary
senses can only be used for a true observation of the world if their
equipment is regular and normal. Now man himself forms these higher
senses through the exercises indicated by spiritual science. The
latter include concentration, in which the attention is directed to
certain definite ideas and concepts connected with the secrets of the
universe; and meditation, which is a life in such ideas, a complete
submersion in them, in the right way. By concentration and meditation
the student works upon his soul and develops within it the
soul-organs of perception. While thus applying himself to the task of
concentration and meditation his soul grows within his body, just as
the embryo child grows in the body of the mother. When the isolated
experiences during sleep begin, as described, the moment of birth is
approaching for the liberated soul; for she has literally become a
new being, developed by the individual within himself, from seed to
fruit. The effort required for concentration and meditation must
therefore be carefully and accurately maintained, for it contains the
laws governing the germination and fruition of the higher human
soul-being. The latter must appear at its birth as a harmonious,
well-proportioned organism. Through an error in following the
instructions, no such normal being will come to existence in the
spiritual spheres, but a miscarriage incapable of life.
That this higher
soul-being should be born during deep sleep will be easily grasped,
for if that delicate organism lacking all power of resistance chanced
to appear during physical every-day life it could not prevail against
the harsh and powerful processes of this life. Its activity would be
of no account against that of the body. During sleep, however, when
the body rests in as far as its activity is dependent on sense
perception, the activity of the higher soul, at first so delicate and
inconspicuous, can come into evidence. Here again the student must
bear in mind that these experiences during sleep may not be regarded
as fully valid knowledge, so long as he is not in a position to carry
over his awakened higher soul into waking consciousness as well. The
acquisition of this faculty will enable him to perceive the spiritual
world in its own character, among and within the experiences of the
day; that is, the hidden secrets of his environment will be conveyed
to his soul as tones and words.
Now, the student
must realize at this stage of development that he is dealing with
separate and more or less isolated spiritual experiences. He should
therefore beware of constructing out of them a complete whole or even
a connected system of knowledge. In this case, all manner of
fantastic ideas and conceptions would be mixed into the soul-world,
and a world might thus easily be constructed which had nothing to do
with the real spiritual world. The student must continually practice
self-control. The right thing to do is to strive for an ever clearer
conception of the isolated real experiences, and to await the
spontaneous arrival of new experiences which will connect themselves,
as though of their own accord, with those already recorded. By virtue
of the power of the spiritual world into which he has now found his
way, and through continued application to his prescribed exercises,
the student experiences an ever increasing extension and expansion of
consciousness during sleep. The unconscious intervals during
sleep-life grow ever smaller, while more and more experiences emerge
from erstwhile unconsciousness. These experiences thus link
themselves together increasingly of their own accord, without this
true unity being disturbed by all manner of combinations and
inferences, which in any case would only originate in an intellect
accustomed to the physical world. Yet the less the habits of thought
acquired in the physical world are allowed to play into these higher
experiences, the better it is.
By thus
conducting himself the student approaches ever nearer to the
attainment of that condition, on his path to higher knowledge, in
which the unconsciousness of sleep-life is transformed into complete
consciousness. When his body rests, man lives in surroundings which
are just as real as those of his waking daily life. It is needless to
say that the reality during sleep is different from physical reality
surrounding the physical body. The student learns — indeed he
must learn if he is to retain a firm footing in the physical world
and not become a visionary — to connect the higher experiences
of sleep with his physical environment. At first, however, the world
entered during sleep is a completely new revelation. This important
stage of development, at which consciousness is retained in the life
during sleep, is known in spiritual science as the continuity of
consciousness. The condition here indicated is regarded, at a
certain stage of development, as a kind of ideal, attainable at the
end of a long path. What the student first learns is the extension of
consciousness into two soul-states, in the first of which only
disordered dreams were previously possible, and in the second only
unconscious dreamless sleep. Anyone having reached this stage of
development does not cease experiencing and learning during those
intervals when the physical body rests, and when the soul receives no
impressions through the instrumentality of senses.
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