IMAGINATION
IT
IS IMPOSSIBLE to make real progress in penetrating to the
higher worlds without going through the stage of imaginative
knowledge. This by no means implies that during occult training the
human being is compelled to remain for a certain time at the
imaginative stage as though it were something like a class to be
attended at school. In certain instances this may be necessary, but
by no means as a general rule. It depends entirely upon what the
occult student has experienced before entering upon his occult
training. It will be shown in the course of this discussion that the
spiritual environment of the occult student is important in this
regard, and that depending on his orientation to this spiritual
environment diverse methods have been instituted for treading the
path of knowledge.
It can be of the utmost importance to know what follows if one is
preparing to undergo occult training. Not merely as an interesting
theory does this come into consideration, but as something by which
manifold practical points of view can be gained if one is to succeed
on the “path to higher knowledge.”
It is often said by those striving toward a higher development: I
wish to perfect myself spiritually; I wish to develop the “higher
man” within me; but I have no desire for the manifestations of
the “astral world.” This is understandable when one takes
into consideration the descriptions of the astral world found in
books dealing with such things. There, to be sure, appearances and
beings are spoken of that bring all sorts of dangers to men. It will
be said that under the influence of such beings a man may easily
suffer harm to his moral disposition and mental health. It will be
brought home to the reader that in these regions the wall dividing
“the good from the evil path” is as “a spider's
web” in thickness, and that the plunge into immeasurable
abysses, the fall into utter depravity, lies all too near. — It
is, of course, impossible simply to contradict such assertions. Yet
the standpoint taken in many cases as to treading the occult path is
in no way a correct one. The only reasonable point of view is the one
that says, rather, that no one should be deterred from traveling the
way of higher knowledge because of dangers, but that in every case
strict care must be taken to weather these dangers. It may happen
that one who asks an occult teacher's guidance will be counselled to
postpone actual training for a time, and first undergo certain
experiences of ordinary life or learn things that can be learned in
the physical world. It will then be the task of the occult teacher to
give the seeker the right instructions for accumulating such
experiences and learning such things. In most cases, by far, the
occult teacher will be found to proceed in this way. If then the
student now is sufficiently attentive to what happens to him, after
he has come into contact with the occult teacher, he will be able to
observe many things. He will find that henceforth things happen to
him as if “by accident,” and that he can observe things
that he would never have been exposed to without this link with the
occult teacher. If the student does not notice this and becomes
impatient, it is because he has not paid sufficient attention to what
has happened to him. It is not to be believed that the influence of
the teacher upon the student will show itself in distinctly visible
“tricks of magic.” This influence is rather an intimate
matter, and he who would explore its nature and essence without
having first reached a certain stage of occult training will surely
err. The student injures himself in every case in which he becomes
impatient over the waiting time prescribed for him. His advance will
be none the less rapid on this account. On the contrary, his progress
would be slowed down if he were to begin too soon the training he
often impatiently awaits.
If the student allows the waiting time or the other advice and hints
given to him by the occult teacher to influence him rightly, he will
be actually preparing himself to hold his ground before certain
trials and dangers that approach him when he encounters the
unavoidable stage of Imagination. This stage is unavoidable for this
reason: Everyone who seeks communication with the higher world
without having passed through it can only do so unconsciously and is
condemned to grope in the dark. One can acquire some dim sense of
this higher world without Imagination; one can without it certainly
attain to a sense of being united with “one's God” or
“one's higher self,” but one cannot in this way come to a
true knowledge in full consciousness and bright, luminous clarity.
Therefore, all talk about coming to terms with the “inferior
spiritual worlds” (the astral and the devachanic) being
unnecessary, that the one thing needful is for man to awaken the “God
within him,” is no more than illusion. — Whoever is
satisfied with this approach should not be interfered with in his
strivings, and the occultist would not so interfere. But true
occultism has nothing at all to do with such strivings. It makes no
demand upon anybody to become a pupil. But in him who seeks its
discipline it will awaken no mere dim perception of himself as
“godlike,” but will also try to open his spiritual eyes
to what actually exists in higher worlds.
Of course, the “divine self” is contained in every man.
It is in every created being. In stone, plant, and animal, the
“divine self” is also contained and active. But it does
not so much matter to feel and know this in general as to enter into
a living connection with the manifestations of this “divine
self.” Just as one can mutter over and over again that this
world contains the “divine self” veiled within it and
know nothing thereby of the physical world, so does he who seeks the
“divine kingdom of spirits” only in blurred and
indeterminate generalities know nothing of higher worlds. One should
open the eyes and behold the revelation of deity in the things of the
physical world, in the stone, in the plant, and not merely dream away
all these as only “appearances” with the true form of God
somehow “concealed” behind them. No, God reveals Himself
in His creations and whoever would know God must learn to know the
true essence of these creations. Therefore one must also learn to
behold what really goes on and is living in the higher worlds, if one
would know the “divine.” The consciousness that the
“God-man” dwells within one can at most provide a
beginning. But this beginning experienced in the right way, rises to
an actual lift into the higher worlds. But this is possible only for
one in whom the spiritual “senses” have been developed.
Any other view arrives only at the standpoint, “I will stay as
I am and attain only what is possible for me to attain in this way.”
But the aim of the occultist is to become a different human being, in
order to behold and experience other things than the customary ones.
It is precisely for this purpose that passage through imaginative
knowledge is necessary. It has already been said that this stage of
Imagination need not be conceived of as a school class that must be
gone through. It is to be understood that, particularly in
present-day life, there are persons who bring with them
pre-conditions enabling the occult teacher to call forth in them
inspired and intuitive knowledge simultaneously, or nearly so, with
the imaginative. But it is not at all to be understood that any
person could be spared passage through the imaginative stage.
The cause of danger inherent in imaginative knowledge has already
been pointed out in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
This cause is that upon entrance into that world
the human being in a certain sense loses the ground under his feet.
The source of his security in the physical world is for the moment to
all appearances entirely lost. Upon perception of something in the
physical world it is asked: Whence comes this perception? This is
mostly done unconsciously. But it is quite “unconsciously”
clear that the causes of the perception are objects “outside in
space.” Colours, sounds, odours go out from these objects.
Colours would not be seen floating free in space, nor sounds heard,
without consciousness arising as to the objects to which these
colours pertain as qualities, and from which these tones come. This
consciousness that objects and entities cause physical perceptions
gives to them, and thereby to man himself, his security and sure
hold. Anyone having perceptions without outward causes is spoken of
as abnormal and morbid. Such causeless perceptions are called
illusions, hallucinations, visions.
Now first of all, viewed entirely outwardly, the whole imaginative
world consists of such hallucinations, visions, and illusions. It has
been pointed out [in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds]
how, through
occult training, such visions, etc., are artificially produced. By
focusing the consciousness on a seed or a dying plant, certain forms,
which to begin with are nothing but hallucinations, are conjured up
before the soul. The “flame formation,” spoken of as
appearing in the soul through observation of a plant or the like, and
that after a time completely separates itself from the plant, is,
outwardly viewed, to be regarded on the same level as an
hallucination. It is the same in occult training when the imaginative
world is entered. What was customarily regarded as going forth from
things “outside in space,” or “clinging to them”
as properties — colours, sounds, odors, etc., — now float
free in space. Perceptions break loose from all outer things and swim
free in space, or fly around in it. Yet it is known with strict
accuracy that the things before us have not brought forth these
perceptions, but rather that they are self-induced by the human
being. So it is that one thinks one has “lost the ground under
one's feet.” In ordinary life in the physical world those inner
picturings that do not proceed from things must be guarded against
and are without ground or foundation. But to call forth imaginative
knowledge, the prime essential is to have colours, sounds, odours,
etc., fully torn loose from all things, “floating free in
space.”
The next step towards imaginative knowledge is to find a new “ground
and foundation” for the picturings that are thus adrift. This
must occur in that other world that is now about to be revealed. New
things and entities take possessions of these inner picturings. In
the physical world, for instance, the color blue stays on a
cornflower. In the imaginative world likewise it must not remain
“free floating.” It streams, as it were, towards some
being, and whereas it floated unattached at first, it now becomes the
expression of a being. Something speaks through it that the observer
can only perceive in the imaginative world, and so these
“free-floating” picturings gather around definite
centers. It becomes clear that beings are speaking to us through
them. And, as in the physical world there are corporeal things and
beings to which colours, sounds, odors, and so forth, are attached or
from which they are derived, so now spiritual beings speak out
through them. These “spiritual beings” are, in fact,
always there; they hover continually around human beings. But they
cannot reveal themselves to them if the occasion is not given them to
do so. They are given this opportunity when one calls forth the
capacity to let sounds, colours, and so forth, arise before one's
soul, even when occasioned by no physical object.
The “spiritual facts and beings” are entirely different
from the objects and entities of the physical world. In ordinary
speech it is not easy to find an expression that even remotely
describes this difference. Perhaps it can best be approached by
saying that in the imaginative world everything speaks to man as if
it were directly intelligent, whereas in the physical world
intelligence can only reveal itself in a roundabout way through
corporeality. Exactly this makes for mobility and freedom in the
imaginative world — that the medium of the outer object is
missing, and the spiritual lives itself out with full immediacy in
the free-floating tones, colours, etc.
Now the basis of danger threatening the human being in this world
lies in the fact that he perceives the manifestations of “spiritual
beings”, but not the beings themselves. This is the case as
long as he remains only in the imaginative world and rises no higher.
Only Inspiration and intuition lead him gradually to the beings
themselves. — If, however, the occult teacher should awaken
these faculties prematurely, without having thoroughly introduced the
pupil to the realm of Imagination, the higher world would have for
him only a shadowy and phantasmal existence. The whole glorious
fullness of the pictures in which it must reveal itself when one
really enters into it, would be lost. Herein lies the reason why the
occult student needs a “guide.”
For the student, the imaginative world is at first only a “picture
world” of which mostly he does not know the meaning. But the
occult teacher knows to what things and entities these pictures
pertain in a still higher world. If the student has confidence in
him, he can know that later connections will be revealed to him,
which he cannot yet penetrate. In the physical world, the objects in
space were themselves his guides. He was in a position to prove the
accuracy of his inner picturings of them. The corporeal reality is
the “rock” upon which all hallucinations and illusions
must be shattered. This rock disappears into an abyss when the
imaginative world is entered. Therefore the teacher must serve as
another such rock. From what he is able to offer, the student must
sense the reality of the new world. From this it can be judged what
great confidence in the teacher must exist in any occult training
worthy of the name. When he can no longer believe in the teacher, it
is exactly the same in this higher world as if in the physical world
everything on which his faith in the reality of his perceptions had
been built were suddenly taken from him.
Apart from this fact, there is yet another through which the human
being might be thrown into confusion if he were to enter the
imaginative world without guidance, for the occult student has in the
first place to learn to know himself as distinct from all other
spiritual beings. In physical life man has feelings, desires,
longings, passions, ideas, and so forth. True, these are all caused
by things and beings of the outer world, but the human being knows
quite definitely that they form his inner world, and he distinguishes
them from the objects of the outer world as what is happening within
his soul. But as soon as the imaginative sense is awakened, this ease
of differentiation completely ceases. His own feelings, ideas,
passions, and so forth, literally step outside him and take on form,
color and tone. He stands before them now as before wholly strange
objects and beings in the physical world. It will be understood that
the confusion can become complete if it is remembered what has been
said in the chapter, “Some Results of Initiation,” in my
book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
The way in which the imaginative world appears to the observer is
described there. All appears there reversed as in a reflected image.
What streams out from man appears as if it were coming toward him
from outside. A wish that he cherishes changes into a shape —
for example, into the form of some fantastic looking animal, or again
into an entity resembling a human being. This appears to assail him,
to make an attack on him, or to cause him to do this or that. So it
can happen that the human being appears to himself as surrounded by a
wholly fantastic, often charming and seductive, often also horrible,
world of fluttering forms. In reality these are nothing other than
his thoughts, wishes, and passions, transformed into images. —
It would be a great error to believe it easy to distinguish between
this self transformed into images on the one hand and the real
spiritual world on the other. At first it is downright impossible for
the student to make this distinction. For the identical picture can
come from some spiritual being that speaks to men or from something
in the interior of the soul, and if one's development is unduly
precipitate at this point, there is danger of never learning to
separate the two in an orderly fashion. The greatest caution is to be
the rule in this regard. — Now the confusion will be still
greater in that the wishes and desires of the soul clothe themselves
in images of an exactly opposite character from what they really are.
It may be assumed, for instance, that vanity clothes itself in a
picture in this way. It may appear as a charming shape promising the
most wonderful things if its dictates are carried out. Its
pronouncements seem to set goals thoroughly good and worth striving
for; if followed, they plunge one into moral and other kinds of ruin.
Conversely, a good soul quality can clothe itself in unprepossessing
garb. At this point only the real knower can differentiate, and only
a personality unsusceptible to weakening in respect to a right aim is
steady in face of the seductive artifices of his own soul's imagery.
— From these considerations it will be recognised how necessary
is the guidance of a teacher who, with a sure sense, makes the pupil
attentive to what in this realm is phantasm and what is truth. There
is no need to believe that the teacher must always stand just behind
the pupil. The presence of the teacher close to the occult student in
space is not what matters most. Certainly there is the moment when
such spatial presence is desirable, and also when it is absolutely
necessary. But on the other hand, the occult teacher finds means of
remaining in touch with the pupil even when spatially far removed.
Besides, it must be observed that much of what takes place between
teacher and pupil in this sphere when they meet can go on working
often for months and perhaps for years afterward. But there is one
thing that must surely destroy the necessary link between teacher and
pupil. This happens if the pupil loses confidence in the teacher. —
It is particularly bad if this bond of confidence is broken before
the pupil has learned to distinguish the illusory reflections of his
own soul from true reality.
Now it could perhaps at this point be argued that if a connection
with the teacher occurs in this way, the occult student loses all
freedom and independence. He gives himself, so to speak, wholly into
the hands of the teacher. This is in truth, however, not at all the
case. The various methods of occult training certainly differ from
one another with respect to this dependence upon the teacher. This
dependence can be required to be a greater or a lesser one. It is
relatively greatest in the method that was followed by the Oriental
occultists, and even today is taught by them as their own. This
dependence is already proportionately less in the so-called Christian
initiation, and, properly speaking, its complete omission comes on
the path of knowledge that, since the fourteenth century, has come to
be advanced by the so-called Rosicrucian occult schools. On this path
the teacher can by no means be disregarded; that is impossible. But
all dependence on him ceases. How this is possible will be presented
in the continuation of these thoughts hereafter. Therein we shall
explain precisely how these three paths of knowledge differ: the
oriental, the Christian, and the Rosicrucian. In the Rosicrucian
approach there is nothing at all upsetting in any way to a modern
man's sense of freedom. It will also be described in this
continuation how one person or another as an occult student, even in
present-day Europe, may travel, not the Rosicrucian, but the Oriental
path, or the old Christian; although today the Rosicrucian is the
most natural. This way, as will be seen in due course, is not at all
unchristian. A man can go this way without endangering his
Christianity, as can also he who supposes himself to stand at the
pinnacle of the modern scientific world-conception.
But perhaps one other explanation is needed. One might feel tempted
to ask whether the occult student could not be spared going through
the delusions of his own soul. But if this happened, he would never
attain to that independent discernment so desirable for him. For by
no other means can the singular nature of the imaginative world be so
well grasped as by the observation of one's own soul. To begin with,
man knows the inner life of his soul from one side. He is immersed in
it, and this is just what the occult student has to learn — not
only to look at things from outside, but to observe them as if he
himself were within all of them. If his own thought world now meets
him as something foreign, and he already knows a thing from one side,
he can still learn to know it from another. He must himself become to
a certain extent the first example of such knowledge. Here in the
physical world he is accustomed to something quite different. Here he
looks upon all other things only from outside, but he experiences
himself only from the inside. As long as he remains in the physical
world, he can never see behind the surface of things. He can never go
outside himself, “slip out of his skin,” as it were, to
observe himself from outside. This objective observation of himself
is literally his first obligation in occult training, this helps him
learn also to look beneath the surface of outer facts and beings.
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