II
The Human Soul in the Light of Spirit Vision
If one resorts to dream phenomena in order to acquire knowledge of the
soul's nature, one ultimately is forced to admit that the object of
one's search is wearing a mask. Behind the symbolizations of bodily
conditions and processes, behind the fantastically connected memory
experiences, one may surmise the soul's activity. It cannot be
maintained, however, that one is face to face with the true form of
the soul.
On awaking, one realizes how the active part of the dream is
interwoven with the function of the body and thereby subject to the
external world of nature. Through the backward-directed view of
self-observation one sees in the soul life only the images of the
external world, not the life of the soul itself. The soul eludes the
ordinary consciousness at the very moment one would grasp it
cognitively.
By studying dreams one cannot hope to arrive at the reality of the
soul element. In order to preserve the soul activity in its innate
form one would have to obliterate, through a strong inner activity,
the symbolizations of the bodily conditions and processes, along with
the memory of past experiences. Then one would have to be able to
study that which had been retained. This is impossible. For the
dreamer is in a passive state. He cannot undertake any autonomous
activity. With the disappearance of the soul's mask, the sensation of
one's own self disappears also.
It is different with the waking soul life. There the autonomous
activity of the soul can not only be sustained when one erases all one
perceives of the external world; it can also be strengthened in
itself.
This happens if, while awake in the forming of mental pictures, one
makes oneself as independent of the external world of the senses as
one is in a dream. One becomes a fully conscious, wakeful imitator of
the dream. Thereby, however, the illusory quality of the dream falls
away. The dreamer takes his dream pictures for realities. If one is
awake one can see through their unreality. No healthy person when
awake and imitating the dream will take his dream images for
realities. He will remain conscious of the fact that he is living in
self-created illusions.
He will not be able to create these illusions, however, if he merely
remains at the ordinary level of consciousness. He must see to it that
he strengthens this consciousness. He can achieve this by a
continually renewed self-kindling of thinking from within. The inner
soul activity grows with these repeated kindlings. (I have described
in detail the appropriate inner activity in my books
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
and
An Outline of Occult Science).
In this way the work of the soul during the twilight of dreams can be
brought into the clear light of consciousness. One accomplishes
thereby the opposite of what happens in suggestion or auto-suggestion.
With these, something out of the semi-darkness and within the
semi-darkness is shifted into the soul-life, which is then taken to be
reality. In the fully circumspect activity of the soul just described,
something is placed before one's inner view in clear consciousness,
something that one regards, in the fullest sense of the word, only as
illusion.
One thus arrives at compelling the dream to manifest itself in the
light of consciousness. Ordinarily this occurs only in the diminished
half-awake consciousness. It shuns the clarity of consciousness. It
disappears in its presence. The strengthened consciousness holds it
fast.
In holding the dream fast it does not gain in strength. On the
contrary it diminishes in strength. Consciousness, however, is thereby
induced to supply its own strength. The same thing happens here in the
soul. It is just as it is when, in physical life, one transforms a
solid into steam. The solid has its own boundaries on all sides. One
can touch these boundaries. They exist in themselves. If one
transforms the solid into steam, then one must enclose it within solid
boundaries so that it will not escape. Similarly the soul, if it would
hold fast the dream while awake, must shape itself, as it were, into a
strong container. It must strengthen itself from within.
The soul does not need to effect this strengthening when it perceives
the images of the external world. Then the relationship of the body to
the external world takes care that the soul is aroused to retain these
images. If, however, the waking soul is to dream in sensory unreality,
then it must hold fast this sensory unreality by its own strength.
In the fully conscious representation [Vorstellen] of sensory
unreality one develops the strength to behold the spiritual reality.
In the dream state the autonomous activity of the soul is weak. The
fleeting dream content overpowers this autonomous activity. This
supremacy of the dream causes the soul to take the dream for reality.
In ordinary waking consciousness the autonomous activity experiences
itself as reality along with the reality of the sense world. This
autonomous activity, however, cannot behold [anschauen] itself; its
vision is occupied with the images of sense reality. If the autonomous
activity learns to maintain itself by consciously filling itself with
content unreal to the senses, then, little by little, it also brings
to life self-contemplation [Anschaung] within itself. Then, it does
not simply direct its gaze away from outer observation and back upon
itself; it strides as soul activity backward and discovers itself as
spiritual entity; this now becomes the content of its vision
[Anschaung].
While the soul thus discovers itself within itself, the nature of
dreaming is even more illumined for it. The soul discerns clearly what
before it could only surmise: that dreaming does not cease in the
waking state. It continues. The feeble activity of the dream, however,
is drowned by the content of sense perception. Behind the brightness
of consciousness, filled with the images of sense reality, there
glimmers a dream world. And this world, while the soul is awake, is
not illusory like the dream world of semi-consciousness. In the waking
state man dreams — beneath the threshold of consciousness — about
the inner processes of his body. While the external world is seen
through the eye and is present in [vorgestallt] the soul, there lives
in the background the dim dream of inner occurrences. Through the
strengthening of the autonomous activity of the soul the vision of the
external world is gradually dampened to the dimness of dream, and the
vision of the inner world, in its reality, brightens.
In its vision of the external world the soul is receptive; it
experiences the external world as the creative principle and the
soul's own content as created in the image of the external world. In
the inner vision, the soul recognizes itself to be the creative
principle. And one's own body is revealed as created in the image of
the soul. Thoughts of the external world are to be felt [empfunden] as
images of the beings and processes of the external world. To the
soul's true vision, achieved in the way described, the human body can
be felt [empfunden] only as the image of the human soul which is
spiritual.
In dreams, the soul activity is loosened from its firm union with the
body, which it maintains in the ordinary waking state; it still
retains, however, the loose relationship that fills it with the
symbolic images of bodily senses and with the memory experiences that
also are acquired through the body. In spiritual vision of itself the
soul so grows in strength that its own higher reality becomes
discernible, and the body becomes recognizable in its character of a
reflected image of this reality.
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