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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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A Road to Self-Knowledge
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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A Road to Self-Knowledge
Sixth Meditation
In which the Attempt is made to form a Conception of the Ego-Body
or Thought-Body
THE feeling of being outside our physical body is stronger during
experiences within the astral body than during those within the
elemental body. In the case of the elemental body we feel ourselves
outside the region in which the physical body exists, and yet we feel
connected with the latter body. In the astral body we feel the
physical body itself as something outside our own being. On passing
into the elemental body we feel something like an expansion of our own
being; but in identifying our consciousness with the astral body it is
as though we made a jump into another being. And we feel a world of
spiritual beings sending their activities into that being. We feel
ourselves in some way or other connected with or related to these
beings. And by degrees we learn to know how these beings are mutually
connected. To our human consciousness the world widens out in the
direction of the spiritual. We behold spiritual beings, for example,
who bring about the succession of epochs in the development of mankind
so that we realise that the different characters of the different
epochs are, as it were, stamped upon them by real spiritual entities.
These are the Spirits of Time or Primordial Powers (Archai). We learn
to know other beings, whose psychic life is such that their thoughts
are at the same time active forces of nature. We are led to understand
that only to physical perception do the forces of nature appear to be
constituted as physical perception imagines them to be. That in fact
everywhere, where a force of nature is acting, the thought of some
being is expressing itself just as a human soul finds expression in
the movement of a hand. All this is not as though man by the aid of
any theory is able in thought to place living beings at the back of
nature's processes; when we realise ourselves in our astral body we
enter into quite as concrete and real a relation to those beings as
that between human individuals in the physical world. Among the
spirits into whose realm we thus penetrate we discover a series of
gradations, and we may thus speak of a world of higher hierarchies.
Those beings whose thoughts manifest themselves to physical perception
as forces of nature we may call Spirits of Form.
Experience in that world assumes that we feel our physical being as
something outside us, in the same way as in physical existence we look
upon a plant as a thing outside ourselves. We shall feel this state of
being outside all that in ordinary life must be felt as the whole
compass of our own being, as a very painful one, so long as it is not
accompanied by a certain other experience. If the inner work of the
soul has been energetically carried on and has led to a proper
deepening and strengthening of the life of our soul, it is not
necessary that this pain should be very pronounced. For a slow and
gradual entrance into that second experience may be accomplished
simultaneously with our entrance into the astral body as our natural
vehicle.
This second experience will consist in obtaining the capacity for
considering all that, which before filled and was connected with our
own soul, as a kind of recollection, so that we stand in the same
relation to our own former ego as we do to our recollections in the
physical world. Only through such an experience do we attain to full
consciousness of ourselves as truly living with our own real being in
a world quite different from that of the senses. We now possess the
knowledge that that which we carry about with us and have hitherto
considered as our ego is something different from what we really are.
We are now able to stand opposite to ourselves, and we may form an
idea concerning that which now confronts our own soul and of which it
formerly said, That is myself. Now the soul no longer
says, That is myself, but, I am carrying that
something about with me. Just as the ego in ordinary life feels
independent of its own recollections, so our newly-found ego feels
itself independent of our former ego. It feels that it belongs to a
world of purely spiritual beings. And as this experience - a real
experience: no mere theory - comes to us, so we realise what that
really is which we hitherto considered as our ego. It presents itself
as a web of recollections, produced by the physical, the elemental,
and the astral bodies in the same way as an image is produced by a
mirror. Just as little as a man identifies himself with his reflected
picture, so little does the soul, experiencing itself in the spiritual
world, identify itself with that which it experiences of itself in the
world of the senses. The comparison with the reflected image is, of
course, to be taken merely as a comparison.
For the reflected image vanishes when we change our position with
regard to the mirror. The web woven of recollections and representing
what we in the physical world consider as our own being, has a greater
degree of independence than the image in the mirror. It has in a
certain way a being of its own. And yet to the real being of the soul
it is only like a picture of our real self. The real being of the soul
feels that this picture is needed for the manifestation of its real
self. This real being knows that it is something different, but also
that it would never have attained to any real knowledge of itself if
it had not at first realised itself as its own image within that
world, which, after its ascent into the spiritual world, becomes an
outer world.
The web of recollection which we now regard as our former ego may be
called the ego-body or thought-body. The word
body must in this connection be taken in a wider sense
than that which is usually called a body. By body
is here meant all that we experience as belonging to us and of
which we do not say, We are it, but, We possess
it.
Only when clairvoyant consciousness has arrived at the point where it
experiences, as a sum of recollections, that which it formerly
considered to be itself, does it become possible to acquire real
experience of what is hidden behind the phenomenon of death. For then
we have arrived at a truly real world in which we feel ourselves as
beings who are able to retain, as though in a memory, what has been
experienced in the world of the senses. This sum total of experiences
in the physical world needs - in order to continue its existence - a
being who is able to retain it in the same way in which the ordinary
ego retains its recollections. Supersensible knowledge discloses that
man has an existence within the world of spiritual beings, and that it
is he himself who keeps within him his physical existence as a
recollection. The question what after death will become of all that I
now am, receives the following answer from clairvoyant investigation:
You will continue to be yourself just to that extent to which
you realise that self to be a spiritual being amongst other spiritual
beings.
We realise the nature of these spiritual beings and amongst them our
own nature. And this knowledge is direct experience. Through it we
know that spiritual beings, and with them our own soul, have an
existence of which the physical existence is but a passing
manifestation. If to ordinary consciousness it appears - as shown in
the First Meditation - that the body belongs to a world whose real
part in it is proved by its dissolution therein after death,
clairvoyant observation teaches us that the real human ego belongs to
a world to which it is attached by bonds quite different from those
which connect the body with the laws of nature. The bonds which attach
the ego to the spiritual beings of the supersensible world are not
touched in their innermost character either by birth or by death. In
physical existence these bonds only show themselves in a special way.
That which appears in this world is the expression of realities of a
supersensible nature. Now as man as such is a supersensible being, and
also appears so to supersensible observation, so the bonds between
souls in the supersensible world are not affected by death. And that
anxious question which comes before the ordinary consciousness of the
soul in this primitive form: Shall I meet again after death
those with whom I know I have been connected during physical
existence? must, by any real investigator, who is entitled to
form a judgment based upon experience, be emphatically answered in the
affirmative.
Everything that has been said of the being of the soul experiencing
itself as a spiritual reality within the world of other spiritual
beings, may be seen and confirmed if we strengthen the life of our
soul in the way mentioned before. And it is possible to make this
easier and to help oneself along by the development of special
feelings. In ordinary life in the physical world we take up such a
position to all that we feel to be our fate, as to feel sympathy or
antipathy for different occurrences. A self-observer, who is able to
remain quite unbiased, must admit that these sympathies and
antipathies are some of the strongest that man is able to feel.
Ordinary reflection upon the fact that everything in life is a result
of necessity, and that we have to bear our fate, may certainly take us
a long way towards a deliberate attitude of mind in life. But in order
to be able to grasp something of the real being of man still more is
required. The reflection described will do excellent service in the
life of our soul. We may, however, often find that those sympathies
and antipathies of the kind mentioned, which we have been able to
discard, have only disappeared from our immediate consciousness. They
have retired into the deeper strata of human nature and manifest
themselves as a certain mood of the soul or as a feeling of slackness
or some other such sensation in the body. Real imperturbability with
regard to fate is only acquired when we behave in this matter in just
the same way as in the repeated concentrated surrender to thoughts or
feelings for the purpose of strengthening the soul in general. A
reflection only leading to intellectual understanding is not
sufficient. It is necessary to live intensely with such a reflection,
and to continue in it for a certain period of time while keeping away
all experiences appertaining to the senses or other recollections of
ordinary life. Through such exercises we arrive at a certain
fundamental attitude of mind towards fate. It is possible radically to
do away with sympathies and antipathies in this respect and finally to
consider everything that happens to us quite as unconcernedly as an
observer watches water falling over a mountainside and splashing down
beneath. It is not meant that in this way we ought to arrive at facing
our own fate without any feelings whatever. One who becomes
indifferent to anything that happens to him is surely on no profitable
track. We certainly do not remain indifferent to the outer world with
regard to things not touching our own soul as part of our fate. We
look upon things happening before our eyes with pleasure or with pain.
Indifference to life should not be sought, when we strive after
supersensible knowledge, but transformation of the direct interest
that the ego takes in its own fate. It is quite possible that by such
transformation the vividness of the life of feeling is strengthened
and not weakened. In ordinary life tears are shed over many things
that happen to our own soul in the way of fate. We are, however, able
to win our way to a standpoint where the unfortunate fate of others
awakens in our soul the same keen interest and feeling as are induced
by our own unhappy experiences. It is easier to arrive at such a
standpoint with regard to misfortunes that fate brings us than, for
example, with regard to our mental capacities. It is not so easy,
after all, to experience as great a joy when you discover a capacity
in another, as when you discover that you possess that capacity
yourself. When self-observation strives to penetrate into the depths
of the soul, much selfish satisfaction with many things which we can
do ourselves may be discovered. An intense, repeated meditative union
with the thought, that in many instances it is quite indifferent to
the course of human life whether we ourselves or others are able to do
certain things, may carry us a long way towards true imperturbability
with regard to that which we feel to be the innermost working of fate
in our own lives. Such inner reinforcement of the life of our soul, by
steeping it in thought, when rightly done, can never lead to a mere
blunting of our feeling for our own capacities. Instead they are
transformed and we realise the necessity of behaving in accordance
with these capacities.
And here we have already indicated the direction taken by this
strengthening of the life of the soul by thought. We learn to realise
something in ourselves which appears to the soul as a second being
within it. This becomes especially manifest, when we connect with it
thoughts which show how in ordinary life we bring about this or that
event in our destiny. We are able to see that this or that would not
have happened to us, if we had not behaved in a certain way at an
earlier period in our life. What happens to us to-day is truly in many
ways the result of what we did yesterday. We may now, with the
intention of carrying our soul's experience further than some point at
which we have arrived, look back upon our past experience. We may then
search out all that shows how we ourselves have prepared our later
destinies. We may try in so doing to go back so far as to reach that
point where the consciousness awakens in the child, which enables it
later in life to remember what it has experienced. If we set about
this retrospect in such a way that we combine with it an attitude of
mind which eliminates the usual selfish sympathies and antipathies
with regard to occurrences in our own destiny, then, having reached in
memory the above-mentioned point in our childhood, we face ourselves
in such a way as to be able to say: At that time the possibility of
feeling ourselves in ourselves and of conscious work upon the life of
our soul first presented itself; but this ego of ours was there
before, and it, although not working consciously within us, has
brought us our capacity for knowledge as well as everything we now
know. The attitude towards our own destiny just described brings about
what no intellectual reflection is able to produce. We learn to look
at the events of destiny with equanimity; we meet them with an
unprejudiced mind; but we see in the being who brings these happenings
upon us our own self. And when we look upon ourselves in this way, we
find that the conditions of our own destiny, already given us at
birth, are connected with our own self. We win our way to the
conviction that just as we have worked upon ourselves since the
awakening of our consciousness, so we had already been working before
our present consciousness awoke. Now such a working of ourselves up to
the realisation of a higher ego-being within the ordinary ego leads us
not only to admit that our thoughts have brought us to a theoretical
statement of the existence of such a higher ego, but also makes us
realise as a power within ourselves the living activity of this ego in
all its reality and feel the ordinary ego as a creation of the other.
This feeling is, in fact, the first step towards beholding the
spiritual being of the soul. And if it leads to nothing, it is because
we rest satisfied with the beginning only. This beginning may be a
scarcely perceptible dull sensation. It may remain so perhaps for a
long time. But if we strongly and energetically pursue the course
which has led us up to this beginning, we shall at last arrive at
beholding the soul as a spiritual being. And having brought ourselves
thus far we shall easily understand why some one, without any
experience in these matters, may say that in believing we see such
things we have only created an imaginative picture of a higher ego
through auto-suggestion. But one who has had the experience knows that
such an objection can only be derived from lack of this very
experience. For those who seriously go through this development
acquire at the same time the capacity to distinguish between realities
and the pictures of their own imagination. The inner activities and
experiences which are necessary during such a pilgrimage of the soul,
if it is a right one, make us practise the greatest circumspection
towards ourselves with regard to imagination and reality. When we
systematically strive to attain the experience of ourselves in the
higher ego as spiritual beings, we shall consider as the principal
experience that which is described at the beginning of this meditation
and look upon the rest as a help to the soul on its pilgrimage.
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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