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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Mission of the Archangel Michael
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Mission of the Archangel Michael
Schmidt Number: S-3920
On-line since: 23rd November, 2003
The Ancient Yoga Culture and the New Yoga Will. The Michael Culture of the Future
YOU HAVE seen from my lectures of the last few days that it is
necessary, for a complete understanding of the human being, to
distinguish the various members of the human organism and to realize
the incisive difference between that which we may call the human head
organization and that which constitutes the rest of the human
organization. As you know, the rest of the human organization consists
of two members, so that on the whole we obtain a three-fold membering,
but for the comprehension of the significant impulses in mankind's
evolution with which we are faced at the present time and in the
immediate future the differentiation between head man and the
organization of the rest of man is primarily important.
Now, if we speak spiritual-scientifically about the human being by
differentiating between head man and the rest of man, then these two
organizations are, at the outset, pictures for us, pictures created by
nature herself for the soul element, for the spiritual element, whose
expression and manifestation they are. Man is placed in the whole
evolution of earth humanity in a way which becomes comprehensible only
if one considers how different is the position of the head
organization in this evolution from that of the rest of the human
organization. Everything connected with the head organization, which
chiefly manifests as man's life of thought, is something that reaches
far back in the post-Atlantean evolution of mankind. When we focus our
attention upon the time which followed immediately after the
great Atlantean catastrophe, that is, the time of the sixth, seventh,
eighth millennium before the Christian era, we shall find a soul mood
holding sway in the regions of the civilized world of that period
which can hardly be compared with our soul mood. The consciousness and
whole conception of the world of the human being of that time can
scarcely be compared with that which characterizes our sense
perception and conceptual view of the world. In my Occult Science,
an Outline {Anthroposophic Press, New York} I have called this
culture which reaches back into such ancient times, the primeval
Indian culture. We may say: the human head organism of that time was
different from our present head organism to a great degree and the
reckoning with space and time was not characteristic of this ancient
people as it is of us. In surveying the world, they experienced a
survey of immeasurable spatial distances, and they had a simultaneous
experience of the various moments of time. The strong emphasis on
space and time in world conception was not present in that ancient
period.
The first indications of this we find toward the fifth and fourth
millennium in the period we designate the primeval Persian
period. But even then the whole mood of soul life is such that it
can hardly be compared with the soul and world mood of the human being
of our age. In that ancient time, the main concern of the human being
is to interpret the things of the world as various shades of light,
brilliancy, and darkness, obscurity. The abstractions in which we live
today are completely foreign to that ancient earth population. There
still exists a universal, all-embracing perception, a consciousness of
the permeation of everything perceptible with light and its
adumbration, shading, with various degrees of darkness. This was also
the way the moral world order was conceived of. A human being who was
benevolent and kind was experienced as a light, bright human being,
one who was distrustful and selfish was experienced as a dark man.
Man's moral individuality was, as it were, aurically perceived around
him. And if we had talked to a man of this ancient, primeval Persian
time about that which we call today the order of nature, he would not
have understood a word of it. An order of nature in our sense did not
exist in his world of light and shadow. For him, the world was a world
of light and shadow; and in the world of tones, certain timbres of
sounding he designated as light, bright, and certain other timbres of
sounding he designated as dark, shadowy. And that which thus expressed
itself through this element of light and darkness constituted for him
the spiritual as well as the nature powers. For him, there existed no
difference between spiritual and natural powers. Our present-day
distinction between natural necessity and human freedom would have
appeared to him as mere folly, for this duality of human arbitrary
will and the necessity of nature did not exist for him. Everything was
to be included for him in one spiritual physical unity. If I
were to give you a pictorial interpretation of the character of this
primeval-Persian world conception, I would have to draw the following
line. (It will receive its full meaning only through that which will
follow.)
Click image for large view
Then after this soul mood of man had held sway for somewhat more than
two thousand years, there appeared a soul mood, the echoes of which we
can still perceive in the Chaldean, in the Egyptian
world conception, and in a special form in the world conception whose
reflection is preserved for us in the Old Testament. There something
appears which is closer to our own world conception. There the first
inkling of a certain necessity of nature enters human thoughts. But
this necessity of nature is still far removed from that which we call
today the mechanical or even the vital order of nature; at that time,
natural events are conceived of as identical with Divine willing, with
Providence. Providence and nature events are still one. Man knew that
if he moved his hand it was the Divine within him, permeating him,
that moved his hand, that moved his arm. When a tree was shaken by the
wind, the perception of the shaking tree was no different for him from
the perception of the moving arm. He saw the same divine power,
as Providence, in his own movements and in the movements of the tree.
But a distinction was made between the God without and the God within;
he was, however, conceived of as unitary, the God in nature, the God
in man; he was the same. And it was clear to human beings of that time
that there is something in man whereby Providence that is outside in
nature and Providence that is inside in man meet one another.
At that time, man's process of breathing was sensed in this way.
People said: If a tree is shaking, this is the God outside, and if I
move my arm, it is the God inside; if I inhale the air, work it over
within me, and again exhale it, then it is the God from outside who
enters me and again leaves me. Thus the same divine element was sensed
as being outside and inside, but simultaneously, in one point, outside
and inside; people said to themselves: By being a breathing being, I
am a being of nature outside and at the same time I am myself.
If I am to characterize the world conception of the third culture
period by a line, as I have done for the primeval Persian world
conception by the line of the preceding drawing, I shall have to
characterize it through the following line:
Click image for large view
This line represents, on the one hand, the existence of nature
outside, on the other hand, human existence, crossing over into the
other at the one point, in the breathing process.
Matters become different in the fourth age, in the Graeco-Latin
age. Here the human being is abruptly confronted by the contrast
outside-inside, of nature existence and human existence. Man begins to
feel the contrast between himself and nature. And if I am again to
draw characteristically how man begins to feel in the Greek age, I
will have to draw it this way: on the one hand he senses the external
and on the other the internal; between the two there is no longer the
crossing point.
Click image for large view
What man has in common with nature remains outside his consciousness.
It falls away from consciousness. In Indian Yoga an attempt is made to
bring it into consciousness again. Therefore Indian Yoga culture is an
atavistic returning to previous evolutionary stages of mankind,
because an attempt is made again to bring into consciousness the
process of breathing, which in the third age was felt in a natural way
as that in which one existed outside and inside simultaneously. The
fourth age begins in the eighth pre-Christian century. At that time
the late-Indian Yoga exercises were developed which tried to call
back, atavistically, that which mankind had possessed at earlier
times, quite particularly in the Indian culture, but which had been
lost.
Thus, this consciousness of the breathing process was lost. And if one
asks: Why did Indian Yoga culture try to call it back, what did it
believe it would gain thereby? one has to answer: What was intended to
be gained thereby was a real understanding of the outer world. For
through the fact that the breathing process was understood in the
third cultural age, something was understood within man that at the
same time was something external.
This must again be attained; on another path, however. We live still
under the after-effects of the culture in which a twofold element is
present in the human soul mood, for the fourth period ends only around
the year 1413, really only about the middle of the fifteenth century.
We have, through our head organization, an incomplete nature
conception, that which we call the external world; and we have through
our inner organization, through the organization of the rest of man,
an incomplete knowledge of ourselves.
Click image for large view
That in which we could perceive a process of the world and at the same
time a process of ourselves is eliminated; it does not exist for us.
It is now a question of consciously regaining that which has been
lost. That means, we have to acquire the ability of taking hold of
something that is in our inner being, that belongs to the outer and
the inner world simultaneously, and which reaches into both.
This must be the endeavor of the fifth post-Atlantean period; namely,
the endeavor to find something in the human inner life in which an
outer process takes place at the same time.
Click image for large view
You will remember that I have pointed to this important fact; I have
pointed to it in my last article in Soziale Zukunft (The Social
Future) {Soziale Zukunft, Vol. III: Geistesleben,
Rechtsordnung, Wirtschaft (Spiritual Life, Rights order, Economy),
Vol. IV: Dreigliederung und soziales Vertrauen (The Threefold
Social Order and Social Confidence) (not translated into English)
where I seemingly dealt with these things in their importance for
social life, but where I clearly pointed to the very necessity
of finding something which the human being lays hold of within
himself and which he, at the same time, recognizes as a process of
the world. We as modern human beings cannot attain this by
going back to Yoga culture; that has passed. For the breathing process
itself has changed. This, of course, you cannot prove clinically; but
the breathing process has become a different one since the third
post-Atlantean cultural period. Roughly speaking, we might say: In the
third post-Atlantean cultural epoch the human being breathed soul; today he breathes air. Not only our thoughts have
become materialistic; reality itself has lost its soul.
I beg you, my dear friends, not to see something negligible in what I
am now saying. For just consider what it means that reality itself, in
which mankind lives, has been transformed so that the air we breathe
is something different from what it was four millennia ago. Not
only the consciousness of mankind has changed, oh no! there was soul
in the atmosphere of the earth. The air was the soul. This is it no
longer today, or, rather, it is soul in a different way. The spiritual
beings of elemental nature of whom I have spoken yesterday,
they penetrate into you, they can be breathed if one practices Yoga
breathing today. But that which was attainable in normal
breathing three millennia ago cannot be brought back artificially.
That it may be brought back is the great illusion of the Orientals.
What I am stating here describes a reality. The ensouling of the air
which belongs to the human being no longer exists. And therefore the
beings of whom I spoke yesterday I should like to call them the
anti-Michaelic beings are able to penetrate into the air and,
through the air, into the human being, and in this way they enter into
mankind, as I have described it yesterday. We are only able to drive
them away if we put in the place of Yoga that which is the right thing
for today. We must strive for this. We can only strive for that which
is the right thing for today if we become conscious of a much more
subtle relation of man to the external world, so that in regard to our
ether body something takes place which must enter our consciousness
more and more, similar to the breathing process. In the breathing
process, we inhale fresh oxygen and exhale unusable carbon. A similar
process takes place in all our sense perceptions. Just think, my dear
friends, that you see something let us take a radical case
suppose you see a flame. There a process takes place that may
be compared with inhalation, only it is much finer. If you then close
your eyes and you can make similar experiments with every one
of your senses you have the after-image of the flame which
gradually changes dies down, as Goethe said. Apart from the
purely physical aspect, the human ether body is essentially engaged in
this process of reception of the light impression and its eventual
dying down. Something very significant is contained in this process:
it contains the soul element which, three millennia ago, was breathed
in and out with the air. And we must learn to realize the sense
process, permeated by the soul element in a similar way we have
realized the breathing process three millennia ago.
You see, my dear friends, this is connected with the fact that man,
three millennia ago, lived in a night culture. Yahve revealed himself
through his prophets out of the dreams of the night. But we must
endeavor to receive in our intimate intercourse with the world not
merely sense perceptions, but also the spiritual element. It must
become a certainty for us that with every ray of light, with every
tone, with every sensation of heat and its dying down we enter into a
soul-intercourse with the world, and this soul-intercourse must become
significant for us. We can help ourselves to bring this about.
I have described to you the occurrence of the Mystery of Golgotha in
the fourth post-Atlantean period which, if we wish to be accurate,
begins with the year 747 B.C. and ends with the year 1413 A.D. The
Mystery of Golgotha occurred in the first third of this period, and it
was comprehended at the outset, with the remnants of the ancient mode
of thought and culture. This ancient way of comprehending the Mystery
of Golgotha is exhausted and a new way of comprehension must take its
place. The ancient way does no longer suffice, and many attempts that
have been made to enable human thinking to grasp the Mystery of
Golgotha have proved unsuitable to reach up to it.
You see, dear friends, all external-material things have their
spiritual-soul aspect, and all things that appear in the
spiritual-soul sphere have their external-material aspect. The fact
that the air of the earth has become soul-void, making it impossible
for man to breathe the originally ensouled air, had a significant
spiritual effect in the evolution of mankind. For through being able
to breathe in the soul to which he was originally related, as is
stated at the beginning of the Old Testament: And God breathed
into man the breath as living soul, man had the possibility of
becoming conscious of the pre-existence of the soul, of the existence
of the soul before it had descended into the physical body through
birth or through conception. To the degree the breathing process
ceased to be ensouled the human being lost the consciousness of the
pre-existence of the soul. Even at the time of Aristotle in the fourth
post-Atlantean period it was no longer possible to understand, with
the human power of comprehension, the pre-existence of the soul. It
was utterly impossible.
We are faced with the strange historical fact that the greatest event,
the Christ Event, breaks in upon the evolution of the earth, yet
mankind must first become mature in order to comprehend it. At the
outset, it is still capable of catching the rays of the Mystery of
Golgotha with the remnants of the power of comprehension originating
in primeval culture. But this power of comprehension is gradually
lost, and dogmatism moves further and further away from an
understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. The Church forbids the
belief in the pre-existence of the soul not because
pre-existence is incompatible with the Mystery of Golgotha, but
because the human power of comprehension ceased to experience the
consciousness of pre-existence as a force, the air having become
soul-void. Pre-existence vanishes from head-consciousness. When our
sense processes will become ensouled again, we shall have
established a crossing point, and in this crossing point we shall take
hold of the human will that streams up, out of the third stratum of
consciousness, as I have described it to you recently. Then we shall,
at the same time, have the subjective-objective element for which
Goethe was longing so very much. We shall have the possibility of
grasping, in a sensitive way, the peculiar nature of the sense process
of man in its relation to the outer world. Man's conceptions are very
coarse and clumsy, indeed, which maintain that the outer world merely
acts upon us and we, in turn, merely react upon it. In reality, there
takes place a soul process from the outside toward the inside, which
is taken hold of by the deeply subconscious, inner soul process, so
that the two processes overlap. From outside, cosmic thoughts work
into us, from inside, humanity's will works outward. Humanity's
will and cosmic thought cross in this crossing point, just
as the objective and the subjective element once crossed in the
breath. We must learn to feel how our will works through our eyes and
how the activity of the senses delicately mingles with the passivity,
bringing about the crossing of cosmic thoughts and humanity's will. We
must develop this new Yoga will. Then something will be
imparted to us that of like nature to that which was imparted to human
beings in the breathing process three millennia ago. Our comprehension
must become much more soul-like, much more spiritual.
Goethe's world conception strove in this direction. Goethe endeavored
to recognize the pure phenomenon, which he called the primal
phenomenon, by arranging the phenomena which work upon man in the
external world, without the interference of the Luciferic thought
which stems from the head of man himself; this thought was only to
serve in the arranging of the phenomena. Goethe did not strive for the
law of nature, but for the primal phenomenon; this is what is
significant with him. If, however, we arrive at this pure phenomenon,
this primal phenomenon, we have something in the outer world which
makes it possible for us to sense the unfolding of our will in the
perception of the outer world, and then we shall lift ourselves to
something objective-subjective, as it still was contained, for
instance, in the ancient Hebrew doctrine. We must learn not merely to
speak of the contrast between the material and the spiritual, but we
must recognize the interplay of the material and the spiritual in a
unity precisely in sense perception. If we no longer look at nature
merely materially and, further, if we do not think into it
a soul element, as Gustave Theodore Fechner did, then something will
arise which will signify for us what the Yahve culture signified for
mankind three millennia ago. If we learn, in nature, to receive the
soul element together with sense perception, then we shall have the
Christ relationship to outer nature. This Christ relationship to outer
nature will be something like a kind of spiritual breathing process.
We shall be aided by realizing more and more, with our sound common
sense, that pre-existence lies at the basis of our soul existence. We
must supplement the purely egotistical conception of post-existence,
which springs merely from our longing to exist after death, by the
knowledge of the pre-existence of the soul. We must again rise to the
conception of the real eternity of the soul. This is what may be
called Michael culture. If we move through the world with the
consciousness that with every look we direct outward, with every tone
we hear, something spiritual, something of the nature of the soul
element stream out into the world, we have gained the consciousness
which mankind needs for the future.
I return once more to the image: You see a flame. You shut your eyes
and have the after-image which ebbs away. Is that merely a subjective
process? Yes, says the modern physiologist. But this is not true. In
the cosmic ether this signifies an objective process, just as
in the air the presence of carbonic acid which you exhale signifies an
objective process. You are dealing here with the objective element;
you have the possibility of knowing that something which takes place
within you is at the same time a delicate cosmic process, if you
become but conscious of it. If I look at a flame, close my eyes, let
it ebb away it will ebb away even though I keep my eyes open,
only then I will not notice it then I experience a process
which does not merely take place within me, but which takes place in
the world. But this is not only the case in regard to the flame, if I
confront a human being and say: this man has said this or that, which
may be true or untrue, this then constitutes a judgment, a moral or
intellectual act of my inner nature. This ebbs away like a flame.
It is an objective world process. If you think something good about your
fellow-man: it ebbs away and is an objective process in the cosmic
ether; if you think something evil: it ebbs away as an objective
process. You are unable to conceal your perceptions and judgments
about the world. You seemingly carry them on in your own being, but
they are at the same time an objective world process. Just as people
of the third period were conscious of the fact that the breathing
process is a process that takes place simultaneously within man and in
the objective world, so mankind must become aware in the future that
the soul element of which I spoke is at the same time an objective
world process.
This transformation of consciousness demands greater strength of soul
than is ordinarily developed by the human being of today. To permeate
oneself with this consciousness means to permit the Michael culture to
enter. Just as it was self-evident for the man of the second and third
pre-Christian millennium to think of the air as ensouled
so must it become self-evident for us to think of light as
ensouled; we must arouse this ability in us when we consider light the
general representative of sense perception We must thoroughly do away
with the habit of seeing in light that which our materialistic age is
accustomed to see in it. We must entirely cease to believe that merely
those vibrations emanate from the sun of which, out of the modern
consciousness, physics and people in general speak. We must become
clear about the fact that the soul element penetrates through cosmic
space upon the pinions of light; and we must realize, at the same
time, that this was not the case in the period preceding our age. That
which approaches mankind today through light approached mankind of
that former period through the air. You see here an objective
difference in the earth process. Expressing this in a comprehensive
concept, we may say, Air-soul-process,
Light-soul-process. This is what may be observed in the
evolution of the earth. The Mystery of Golgotha signifies the
transition from the one period to the other.
Click image for large view
My dear friends, it does not suffice, for the present age nor for the
future age of mankind, to speak in abstractions about the spiritual,
to fall into some sort of nebulous pantheism; on the contrary, we must
begin to recognize that that which today is sensed as a merely
material process is permeated by soul.
It is a question of learning to say the following: there was a time
prior to the Mystery of Golgotha when the earth had an atmosphere
which contained the soul element that belongs to the soul of man.
Today, the earth has an atmosphere which is devoid of this soul
element. The same soul element that was previously in the air has now
entered the light which embraces us from morning to evening. This was
made possible through the fact that the Christ has united Himself with
the earth. Thus, also from the soul-spiritual aspect, air and light
underwent a change in the course of the Earth evolution.
My dear friends, it is a childish presentation that describes air and
light in the same manner, purely materially, throughout the millennia
in which Earth evolution unfolded. Air and light have changed
inwardly. We live in an atmosphere and in a light sphere that are
different from those in which our souls lived in previous earthly
incarnations. To learn to recognize the externally-material as a
soul-spirited element: this is what matters. If we describe purely
material existence in the customary manner and then add, as a kind of
decoration: this material existence contains everywhere the spiritual!
This will not produce genuine spiritual science. My dear friends,
people are very strange in this respect; they are intent on
withdrawing to the abstract. But what is necessary is the following:
in the future we must cease to differentiate abstractly between the
material and the spiritual, but we must look for the spiritual in the
material itself and describe it as such; and we must recognize in the
spiritual the transition into the material and its mode of action in
the material. Only if we have attained this shall we be able to gain a
true knowledge of man himself. Blood is quite a special
fluid, but the fluid physiology speaks about today is not a
special fluid, it is merely a fluid whose chemical
composition one attempts to analyze in the same way any other
substance is analyzed; it is nothing special. But if we have gained
the starting point of being able to understand the metamorphosis of
air and light from the soul aspect, we shall gradually advance to the
soul-spiritual comprehension of the human being himself, in every
respect; then we shall not have abstract matter and abstract spirit,
but spirit, soul, and body working into one another. This will be
Michael-culture.
This is what our time demands. This is what ought to be grasped with
all the fibers of the soul life by those human beings who wish to
understand the present time. Whenever something out of the ordinary
had to be introduced into human world conception it met with
resistance. I have often quoted the following neat example: In 1837
(not even a century ago), the learned Medical College of Bavaria was
asked, when the construction of the first railroad from Fuerth to
Nuremberg was proposed, whether it was hygienically safe to build such
a railroad. The Medical College answered (I am not telling a fairy
tale, the documents concerning it exist): Such a railroad should not
be built, for people who would use such a means of transportation
would become nervously ill. And they added: Should there be such
people who insist on such railroads, then, it is absolutely necessary
to erect, on the right and left side of the tracks, high plank walls
to prevent the people whom the train passes from getting concussion of
the brain. Here you see, my dear friends, such a judgment is one
thing; quite another is the course which the evolution of mankind
takes. Today we smile about such a document as that of the Bavarian
Medical College of 1837; but we are not altogether justified in
smiling; for, if something similar occurs today, we behave in quite
the same manner. And, after all, the Bavarian Medical College was not
entirely wrong. It we compare the state of nerves of modern mankind
with that of mankind two centuries ago, then we must say that people
have become nervous. Perhaps the Medical College has exaggerated the
matter a bit, but people did become nervous. Now, in regard to the
evolution of mankind it is imperative that certain impulses which try
to enter Earth evolution really should enter and not be
rejected. That which from time to time wishes to enter human cultural
development is often very inconvenient for people, it does not agree
with their indolence, and what is duty in regard to human cultural
development must be recognized by learning to read the objective
facts, and must not be derived from human indolence, not even from a
refined kind of indolence. I am concluding today's lecture with these
words because there is no doubt that a strongly increasing battle will
take place between anthroposophical cognition and the various creeds.
We can see the signs for this on all sides. The creeds who wish to
remain in the old beaten tracks, who do not wish to arouse themselves
to a new knowledge of the Mystery of Golgotha, will reinforce their
strong fighting position which they already have taken up, and it
would be very frivolous, my dear friends, if we would remain
unconscious of the fact that this battle has started.
I myself, you can be sure, am not at all eager for such a battle,
particularly not for a battle with the Roman Catholic Church which, it
seems, is forced upon us from the other side with such violence. He
who, after all, thoroughly knows the deeper historical impulses of the
creeds of our time will be very unwilling to fight time-honored
institutions. But if the battle is forced upon us, it is not to be
avoided! And the clergy of our day is not in the least inclined to
open its doors to that which has to enter: the
spiritual-scientific world conception. Remember the grotesque
quotations I read to you recently where it was said that people should
inform themselves about anthroposophically-oriented spiritual science
through the writings of my opponents, since Roman-Catholics are
forbidden by the Pope to read my own writings. This is not a light
matter, my dear friends; it is a very serious matter! A battle which
arises in such a manner, which is capable of disseminating such a
judgment in the world, such a battle is not to be taken lightly. And
what is more; it is not to be taken lightly since we do not enter it
willingly. Let us take the example of the Roman-Catholic Church, my
dear friends; matters are not different in regard to the Protestant
Church, but the Roman-Catholic church is more powerful and we
have to consider time-honored institutions: if one understands the
significance of the vestments of the priest when he reads the Holy
Mass, the meaning of every single piece of his priestly garments, if
one understands every single act of the Holy Mass, then one knows that
they are sacred, time-honored establishments; they are establishments
more ancient than Christianity for the Holy Mass is a ritual of the
ancient Mystery culture, transformed in the Christian sense. And
modern clergy who uses such weapons as described above lives in these
rituals! Thus, if one has, on the one hand, the deepest veneration for
the existing rituals and symbolism, and sees, on the other hand, how
insufficient is the defense of and how serious are the attacks against
that which wishes to enter mankind's evolution, then one becomes aware
of the earnestness that is necessary in taking a stand in these
matters. It is truly something worth deep study and consideration.
What is thus heralded from that side is only at its beginnings; and it
is not right to sleep in regard to it; on the contrary, we have to
sharpen our perception for it. During the two decades in which the
Anthroposophical Movement has been fostered in Middle Europe, we could
indulge in sectarian somnolence which was so hard to combat in our own
ranks and which still today sits so deeply embedded in the souls of
the human beings who have entered the Anthroposophical Movement. But
the time has passed in which we might have been allowed to indulge in
sectarian somnolence. That which I have often emphasized here is
deeply true, namely, that it is necessary that we should grasp the
world-historical significance of the Anthroposophical Movement and
overlook trifles, but that we should also consider the small impulses
as serious and great.
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