The
Nature of Sleep
Berlin, 24 November 1910
In
the present scientific considerations is little talk of such
phenomena to which we want to dedicate this hour. Any human
being should still feel that the sleep is something that
positions itself in our life phenomena in such a way, as if it
gives us the biggest riddles of life. One has probably always
felt this mysterious and the important of the sleep when one
spoke of the sleep as “the brother of death.” We
have now to restrict ourselves at the discussion of the sleep
as such, because the following talks still lead us to the
consideration of death in certain respects.
All
that the human being must count to his soul experience in the
immediate sense, all mental pictures, all sensations and
feelings that represent the soul drama of the human being, all
pains, and sufferings, also the will-impulses sink down as it
were in an uncertain darkness if the human being falls asleep.
Some philosophers could doubt about themselves, so to speak, if
they speak of the being of the soul and spirit, which reveals
itself in the human nature, and from which they must admit that
it seems to lose itself in nothing within every course of the
day — even if it may be conceptualised and investigated
ever so well. If we look at the phenomena of the soul life in
such a way as one is used to look at them, actually,
academically, as well as unprofessionally, we must say, they
are extinguished during the sleeping state, they are away. For
that who wants to look only at that of the soul, which
expresses itself in the bodily, the human being is as it were a
riddle if he thinks deeper. For the real bodily functions,
bodily activities continue during sleep. Only the mental stops.
Now one has to ask oneself only whether one speaks quite
correctly about the bodily and the mental if one really
encloses this mental in its entirety in that what appears as
extinguished with falling asleep. Alternatively, whether
already the usual observation of life — refraining now
completely from spiritual-scientific or anthroposophic
considerations — can show, nevertheless, that this mental
is also active and effective when it is enveloped by the sleep.
However, if one wanted to gain some clearness about these
concepts, one could also say, if one wants to observe the
phenomena of life in the right sense in this field, one must
have precise concepts.
I
would like to mention from the start that also in relation to
this issue spiritual science or anthroposophy is not able to
speak as in general as one likes it today. If we speak of the
nature of sleep, we speak only of the sleep of the human being.
For spiritual science knows very well — this has been
touched repeatedly in the last talks concerning other fields
— that the same outer appearance of various beings can be
based on quite different causes within the concerning beings.
We have indicated this for the death, for the entire spiritual
life and for the arrangement of the spiritual life with the
animal and the human being. Today it would lead too far to
speak still about the sleep of the animals. Therefore, we want
to say in advance that I speak about the sleep of the human
being only.
We
human beings are able to speak of soul phenomena within
ourselves by our consciousness, because we are aware of that
what we imagine what we want what we feel. Now the question
must arise — and it is exceptionally important just for
our today's observations: are we allowed throwing together the
concept of consciousness, as we know it as the normal human
consciousness in the present, automatically with the concept of
the human soul and mind? I would like to use a comparison at
first in order to argue about these concepts clearer. A human
being can walk around in a room and he is nowhere able to look
at something of his face at the different places of the room.
At one single place where he is able to look in a mirror, he
can see something of his own face. There the figure of his face
faces him in the picture. Is it not an immense difference for
him whether he walks around only in the room and lives in
himself or whether he sees what he lives in such a way also in
the mirror? Perhaps, it could be with the human consciousness
in a somewhat enlarged scale. The human being could live, so to
speak, his soul life, and he would become aware of this soul
life — as he lives it — only because it faces him
in a kind of mirror. This could be very well. We could say, for
example, it is conceivable that the human soul life continues,
no matter whether the human being wakes or sleeps. However, in
the awake state the human being perceives his soul life by a
reflection — we say by a reflection within his physical
nature at first — and he cannot perceive it in the
sleeping state, because it is not reflected in his
corporeality.
Indeed, we would have proved nothing with it; however, we would
have obtained two concepts at least. We could differentiate the
soul life as such and the awareness of the soul life. We could
imagine that for our consciousness, for our knowledge of the
soul life, as we stand in the normal human life, everything
depends on the fact that we get the soul life reflected by our
corporeality because we could know nothing of it if we did not
get it reflected. Then we would completely be in a state like
in sleep. We try now, after we have obtained these concepts, to
imagine the phenomenon of the awake life and sleep.
Someone who is able to observe life really can feel very clear,
one would like to say, “behold” how the moment of
falling asleep takes place really. He can perceive the mental
pictures, the feelings becoming weaker, their brightness and
intensity decreasing. However, these are not the very
essentials. While the human being wakes, he lives in such a way
that he creates order in his whole image life from his
self-aware ego, summarises all mental pictures, as it were,
with his ego. Since at the moment when we would not summarise
our mental pictures with our ego in the awake life, we would
not lead a normal soul life. We would have a group of mental
pictures that we would call our mental pictures, and another
group at which we would look as something strange, as an
outside world. Only the human beings who experience a splitting
of their ego what is a morbid state for the present human being
could have such a splitting of their image life in different
groups.
With the normal human being, it is essential that all mental
pictures relate to a point in perspective: to the
self-conscious ego. At the moment of falling asleep, we feel
clearly how, so to speak, the ego is overpowered by the mental
pictures at first, even though they become darker. They assert
their independence, live an own way of life. Single clouds of
mental pictures form, as it were, within the horizon of the
consciousness, and the ego loses itself to the images. Then the
human being feels the sense-perceptions becoming duller and
duller and he feels finally how the will impulses are
paralysed. Now we must point to something that few human beings
observe quite clearly. In addition, the human being feels that
at the moment of falling asleep something makes itself
noticeable like an enclosed being in an uncertain fog which
works cooling now and again, or becomes noticeable with other
feelings at certain places of the body: in the hands, in the
joints, in the temples, in the spine et cetera. Someone who
falls asleep can observe these feelings. This are — one
would like to say — such trivial experiences, as one can
do them every evening while falling asleep if one wants.
Such human beings make better experiences already who more
exactly observe the moment of falling asleep by a finer
education of their soul life. Then they can feel something like
waking up in spite of falling asleep. Everybody can observe
these things really who gets into the habit of applying some
methods because it is a generally human phenomenon. At the
moment when the human beings feel something like waking up with
falling asleep it is in such a way that one can really say,
something wakes up like a spreading conscience, something like
the morality of the soul wakes up. This is the case really. It
becomes apparent in particular that such persons observe that
experience of the preceding day life with which they are
satisfied in their conscience. They feel this at this moment of
the moral waking up in particular.
At
the same time, this feeling is completely contrary to the
feeling of the day. The human being falling asleep feels, as if
his soul poured out itself about a world that awakes now and
which primarily expresses itself as a feeling extending about
what the soul can experience by itself like by a spreading out
conscience in relation to its moral inwardness. Then there it
is a moment of inner bliss, which, however, seems much longer
for the falling asleep, when it extends about such things with
which the soul can agree and it is often a feeling of deep
strife if it has to reproach itself.
Briefly, the moral human being who is pressed down during the
day by the stronger sensory impressions expands and feels as
something particular when he falls asleep. Everybody who has
appropriated a certain method or maybe a sensation only
concerning such observations knows that a certain longing
awakes at this moment that we can describe possibly in this
way: one wants that this moment, actually, may extend in the
uncertain that it does not find an end. Then, however,
something comes like a jolt, a kind of inner movement. Now this
is quite exceptionally difficult to describe for the most human
beings. Spiritual research can describe this inner movement to
a hair's breadth, of course. It is as it were a demand that the
soul makes to itself: you must extend still further; you must
pour out yourself even further! However, while it puts this
demand to itself, the soul loses itself for the moral life in
the surroundings. It is, as if you distribute a droplet of
colour in water: at first, you still see the colour if,
however, the drop is distributed in the whole water, the colour
grows weaker and weaker, and, finally, it disappears.
It
is this way if the soul just starts swelling up, living in its
moral reflection, there it still feels; but the feeling stops
when the jolt, the inner movement occurs as the drop of colour
loses itself in the water. This is no theory; one can observe
this and it is accessible to everybody as a scientific
observation. If we observe falling asleep this way, however, we
are able to say, the human being intercepts with falling asleep
as it were something that can no longer be in his consciousness
afterwards. The human being has — if I may help myself
now of the two ideas contrived before — as it were a
moment of saying farewell to the mirror of the bodily in which
the phenomena of life appeared reflected to him. Because he
still has no possibility to let reflect what should be
reflected in the body in something else, the possibility stops
perceiving what he is.
However, one is also able to perceive the phenomena of the day
again in a certain way — if one is not arbitrary and does
not want to be obstinate concerning the soul and the effect of
that what goes there into an uncertain darkness. In another
context, I have already drawn your attention to it that the
human being who is forced to memorise this or that, to learn
things by heart, manages this much easier if he sleeps on them,
and that the biggest enemy of learning by heart is the
avoidance of sleep. The possibility and the ability are there
again to memorise easier if we have slept on the thing, than to
learn something by heart in one go. However, it is this way
also with other soul activities.
However, we would be able to convince ourselves quite easily
that it is impossible to learn something generally, to acquire
something where the soul has to co-operate if we do not always
insert the states of sleep in our states of life. One can
conclude from such phenomena that our soul needs to withdraw
from the body every now and then to get strength from a field
that is not within the body because within the bodily the
suitable forces are just worn out. We have to imagine if we
wake up in the morning, we have brought recovering forces from
the state in which we were to develop abilities which we could
not develop if we were only always tied up to our body. The
effect of sleep appears in our usual being this way if one
wants to think straight and does not want to be obstinate.
What appears in general and where one already needs some good
will, if one stops in the usual life to hold together the
single phenomena, appears in no uncertain manner if the human
being goes through developments that can lead him to the real
beholding in the spiritual life. I would like to explain here
what happens if the human being has developed the forces
slumbering in his soul to attain that state where he does not
perceive by the senses and understand by the mind. —
Further details of that follow in the talk How Does One
Attain Knowledge of the Spiritual World? where the methods
should be discussed quite comprehensively. — However,
some of the experiences should be now emphasised which a human
being can do who really goes through such exercises. They
provide his soul as it were with spiritual eyes, with spiritual
ears by which he is able to behold in the spiritual world that
is not an object of speculation, but an object, as the human
being perceives the colours and forms, warmth, cold and tones
with his physical senses. Already in the former talks, I have
explained how one attains true clairvoyance.
This spiritual development, these exercises consist really of
the fact that the human being gets out something what he has in
himself, attains other cognitive organs, and experiences as it
were a jolt in the soul and thereby perceives a world that is
always around him he cannot perceive, however, in the normal
state. If the human being goes through such exercises, his
sleep changes at first. Everybody knows this who has come to
real own spiritual researches. Now I want to speak of the very
first state of the change of the sleeping life with the
actually clairvoyant, spiritual-scientific human being.
The
first beginnings of this possibility of spiritual research let
the human being appear not very different from the usual,
normal state of consciousness. Since, if the human being
carries out such exercises that we discuss later, he sleeps
completely as well as another person at first and is
unconscious exactly the same way as any other human being.
Nevertheless, the moment of waking up shows something
particular to someone who has gone through spiritual-mental
exercises. I want to portray some quite concrete phenomena to
you that are facts.
Assuming that a human being who does such exercises thinks very
sharply about something that also another human being could
think, he tries — because he maybe faces a very hard
problem — to tighten all his mental powers to come behind
the matter.
He
may fare exactly the same way as a pupil fares: his mental
strength is not sufficient to solve the task. This can
absolutely happen. If he already has more possibilities of
experience about inner mental states in connection with bodily
ones by his exercises, however, he feels something particular
if he is not able to do anything. Then he feels other than it
is usually the case that he has an opposition in his physical
organs, for example, in his brain. He feels properly, as if the
brain resists to him as we feel resistance, for example, if we
want to hammer down a nail with a too heavy hammer. There the
brain starts gaining reality. As the human being normally uses
his brain, he does not feel it in such a way, as he uses an
instrument, for example, a hammer. The spiritual researcher
feels his brain, he feels independent compared to his thinking.
This is an experience. However, where he cannot solve a task,
there he feels that he can no longer carry out certain
activities that he must carry out with thinking. He loses the
power of the instrument and feels this quite clearly. This is a
fact that one can experience certainly.
If
now the spiritual researcher sleeps on the problem and wakes
up, it can very often happen that he copes with the task.
However, he feels quite exactly at the same time that he has
done something before waking up that he has worked something.
He feels that he was able to set something in motion, to make
something active in himself during the sleep. He was forced to
use his brain in the awake state. He knows this. However, he
could no longer use it correctly because it resisted to him
— as I have described. In the sleeping state — he
feels this — he does not depend on the use of the brain.
He could create a certain mobility without using the too
strongly tired or claimed brain. Now he feels something quite
peculiar: he perceives his activity that he has exercised in
sleep, but not directly. The Lord does not give his friends
their need in sleep (changed German saying referring to
Psalms 127:2). Nevertheless, he is not spared to solve the
problem in the awake state. It can happen to him; but normally
it is not in such a way, and in particular, not with such
things which one has to solve with the brain.
Then the human being feels something that he has not known
before in the sensory world at all, he feels his own activity
like in living pictures, in strange pictures which are in
motion — as if the thoughts which he would need were
living beings which strike up all kinds of interrelations. He
feels his own activity of thought that he has exercised in
sleep like a range of pictures. This feeling is hard to
describe because one sticks to it in quite peculiar way and
must say to himself, you are that! On the other side, he can
distinguish this feeling again certainly from himself as he can
distinguish an outer movement, which he does from himself.
Thus, one has pictures, imaginations of an activity that has
been carried out before waking up. Now one can notice if one
has learnt to watch out for himself that these pictures of an
activity, which was before waking up, combine with our brain
and make it a more movable, more useful instrument. Therefore,
one can accomplish something that one was not able to do before
because a resistance was there to think, for example, certain
thoughts. These are subtle things, but without them, one cannot
come surely behind the secret of sleep. One feels that one has
exercised no activity like in the awake state, but an activity
that was used to the restoration of certain things in the
brain, and that one has rebuilt the instrument, as one could
not build up it before. One feels like a master builder of his
own instruments.
The
sensation that one has with such an activity is substantially
different from that of an activity of the day. For the activity
of the day, one has such a feeling that one can compare to it,
as if one draws something after a model. There I am forced to
comply with every line or colour spot of the picture that
stands before me. With those things which appear as pictures at
the moment of waking up and which visualise an activity during
the sleep, one has the feeling, as if one invented the lines
and created figures from oneself without being bound to a
model. With such a phenomenon, one has intercepted as it were
what the soul has done, before it has woken up: one has
intercepted the activity of the regeneration of the brain. For
one finds out gradually that that what one feels like a kind of
covering the cerebral organs with that what one reminds there
as figures is nothing else than a reconstruction of that what
was destroyed during the day. One really feels like a master
builder.
Now
the difference between a spiritual researcher who perceives
such thing and a usual human being consists only of the fact
that the spiritual researcher just perceives this, while the
usual human being cannot pay attention to it and does not
perceive it. Since the same activity, which the spiritual
researcher carries out, every human being carries out, only the
usual human being does not intercept the moment when the organs
are built up anew from the activity during sleep.
We
take such an experience and compare it with that what we have
said before about the decreasing brightness of the everyday
thought-life while falling asleep. One can look at this latter
phenomenon really only in the right light if one either
delivers oneself from the mental pictures of that worldview
working very suggestively which believe to stand on the firm
ground of natural sciences, or if one gets involved with the
results of the present physical research. There the more
exactly thinking human beings cannot help to admitting the
independence of the mental from the bodily after the results of
the physical research, for instance, of the brain research.
It
is very interesting that recently a popular book appeared where
everything of that what deals with the spiritual life and the
origins of the spiritual life is shown wrongly, completely
without any insight. Nevertheless, some very clever things are
stated in this book Brain and Personality or the Physical
Relations of the Brain to the Mind by William Hanna Thomson
(1833-1918, American physician and author). Above all, he went
into the brain research of the present and into some things,
which present themselves, otherwise, for example as symptoms of
fatigue that are very instructive. However, I have already
explained that conscious activity only tires the muscles or
nerves. As long our muscles serve the organic activity only,
they cannot get tired, because it would be bad if, for example,
the heart muscle and other muscles had to rest. We get tired
only if we exercise an activity that is not innate to the
organism if we exercise an activity that belongs to the
conscious soul life. Therefore, one must say, if the soul life
were born out like the heart activity, the immense difference
between getting tired and not getting tired would not be
explicable at all. Hence, the author of that book feels just
forced to concede that the mental relates to the physical like
the rider to the horse, that it is quite independent of the
physical. This is an immense concession from a scientifically
thinking person. One could receive quite peculiar feelings if a
person, forced by the physical research of the present, has to
concede that the mental life relates to the physical like the
rider to the horse that is after the picture of the centaur
that one has imagined in former times when one looked more at
the spiritual.
It
is evident by nothing that the author of this book has thought
this, but this thought comes to the fore by the scientific idea
again, and one gets feelings of such ideas, which are due to
times, when many human beings still had a certain clairvoyance.
Indeed, certain modern ideas about the centaur seem to comply
better with that what a gentleman said to me once. The person
concerned meant: the Greeks saw the Scythians or other horse
peoples coming from the north, but they saw them maybe coming
through a fog, they could not exactly distinguish those figures
and thought that they would have grown out of the horses. The
materialist may be content with such an explanation.
Nevertheless, just the scientific researches of the present
urge to concede the independence of the mental from the
physical.
Thereby something strikes us most certainly, and we can pursue
such things best of all if we imagine certain phenomena that
are not everyday; however, such phenomena exist and cannot be
denied. I know the story that a simple peasant started talking
Latin suddenly at his hour of death, a language that he had
never used, actually, and from which one could prove that he
had heard it only as a little boy in the church once. This is
no fable, but reality. Of course, he understood nothing of it
when he had heard or recited it. Nevertheless, it is true. From
that, any human being would have to form the idea, that the
surroundings working on us still contain quite different things
in themselves than what we take up in our usual consciousness.
Since that often depends on our education what we understand
and the like. Nevertheless, not only that what we understand
unites with us, but also we have the possibility in ourselves
to take up endlessly more things than those we take up
consciously. We can even observe with any human being that at
certain times images appear with him, which were not so
intensive at that time when he got to know them, so that he can
maybe remember nothing at all.
However, because of certain things they appear again, position
themselves maybe even in the centre of the soul life. We must
absolutely admit that the extent of our soul life is endlessly
larger than that what we can take up and enclose in our day
consciousness. This is very important. Since thereby our look
is directed to an inside which can impress our corporeality a
little only because it was hardly kept in mind, and,
nevertheless, it still lives on in us. We are thereby referred
to the subsoil of our soul life that, actually, must exist for
every reasonable human being. Since every reasonable human
being has to say to himself, what he consciously perceives
looking at the world is dependent on the equipment of his
senses and on that what he can understand. Nobody is entitled
to want to limit reality by that what he can perceive. It would
be quite illogical to want to deny to the spiritual researcher
that there is a spiritual world behind the physical world,
because the human being can only say what he sees and hears
about which he can think, and he can never judge about what he
cannot perceive. Since the world of reality is not the world of
the discernible. The world of the discernible is limited by the
senses. Therefore, one should never speak — as in the
Kantian sense — of limits of knowledge, or about what the
human being can know or cannot know, but only about that what
one faces with his sense-organs.
If
anyone considers this, he must say to himself, behind the
carpet of colours of the sensory world, behind that which the
warmth sense perceives as warm or cold et cetera, there is an
unlimited reality. Should influence us only what we perceive,
or only that reality which we perceive? It is logical only if
we imagine that a part of the whole reality is given by our
perception that behind that an unlimited reality is which is
real, however, also for us, because we are positioned in it, so
that that lives on for us what lives outdoors and influences
us. How does our conscious day life present itself then? Then
we have to imagine the conscious day life in such a way —
and there is no other possibility — that we open our
senses, our cognitive faculties to an immeasurableness and
oppose this immeasurableness. Because we have such eyes, such
ears, such a warmth sense et cetera we face a certain part of
reality; we reject, defend ourselves as it were against it, and
exclude it from ourselves. In what does our conscious activity
consist then? It is self-defending, excluding something.
Exerting our sense organs is restraining something unperceived.
What we perceive is the rest, that remains from that what
spreads out around us, and which we push back for the most
part. Thus, we feel actively positioned in the world, we feel
connected with it. We defend ourselves as it were by our
sensory activity against the plenty of impressions, while we
cannot endure — figuratively spoken — the entire
extensive infinity and take up a part of it only. If we think
in such a way, we must still think relations between our whole
organism, between our whole corporeality and the outside world
quite different from those, which we can perceive or understand
with our reason.
Then it is no longer abstruse to remember that the relations
that we have to the outside world live in us that also the
invisible, supersensible is active in us that the
supersensible, while it is active in us, uses the senses to
produce a part of the whole reality. Then, however, our
relation to reality is different from our sense-perception.
Then there is something in our relations to the outside world
that does not at all amount to nothing more than the sensory
perception that escapes from the day consciousness. Then it is
with us in such a way, as if we have to step with our being
before a mirror and say to ourselves, you are something
different; the mirror shows only the form, maybe also the
colours. However, there you think inside, there you feel
inside, the mirror cannot show all that to you, it shows only
what is dependent on its laws. As you are, however, as a soul
compared with your organism, you are something else than your
senses show to you; they limit you to what is commensurate to
their laws. So you face if you face a world — in similar
way as you stand before a mirror — which becomes possible
only by your senses!
If
you think this picture to an end, you are no longer surprised
that all life of our day consciousness depends very much on the
organisation of our senses and our brain, just as that what we
see of ourselves in the mirror depends on the state of the
mirror. Someone who looks at a distorting mirror and sees the
caricatured face gladly concedes that his picture does not
depend on him, but on the mirror. Thus, it depends on the
organisation of our reflection apparatus, and our mental
activity is limited, is reflected in itself so to speak, while
it is reflected in the bodily life. Then it is not miraculous
that the part — what one can also prove physiologically
— depends on the bodily, while this or that takes place
in the consciousness one way or the other, because everything
that the soul does depends on the organisation of our body if
we shall become aware of it.
Observation shows that the concepts which we have only
constructed in the beginning absolutely correspond to the
facts. The only difference is that our corporeality is a living
mirror. We let the mirror, into which we look, as it is.
Indeed, we can also impair the reflection. If we breathe on the
mirror, it also does no longer reflect correctly. But the
reflection in our physical nature which experiences the
activity of our soul is connected with the fact that, while we
reflect ourselves in our physical nature, the reflection itself
is an activity, a process in our corporeality, and that we put
that reflection as an activity before ourselves.
Thus, the bodily life presents itself really in such a way, as
if we write what we think in a certain respect and have the
letters then before ourselves. Thus, we write the activity of
the soul in our bodily life. What the anatomist proves is only
the letters, the outer apparatus, because we do not observe our
soul life completely if we observe it only in the bodily life,
we observe it only completely if we observe it independently
from it. However, only the spiritual researcher is able to do
this if he observes the soul life mirroring while it wakes up
in the conscious day life. It becomes obvious that the soul
life is like an architect who builds up something during the
night, and destroys it in the day life.
Now
we face the soul life in the awake state and in the sleeping
state. We have to imagine it as independent from the bodily
life in the sleeping state, as the rider is independent from
the horse. However, as the rider uses the horse and wears out
its forces, the soul uses the activity of the body, so that
chemical processes take place as the letters of the soul life.
With it, we come to a point where we have worn out the bodily
life, as it is limited in the senses, in the brain, so that we
have exhausted it at first. Then we must start the other
activity, initiate the reverse process, and rebuild the
destroyed. This is the sleeping life, so that our soul
exercises two contrary activities on our body. Indeed, while
waking we have round ourselves our world of images surging up
and down, of joy and grief, of feelings et cetera. However,
while we have this before ourselves, we wear out our bodily
life; we destroy it perpetually strictly speaking. While we are
sleeping, we are the architects and rebuild what we have
destroyed during the conscious life.
What does the spiritual researcher perceive now? He perceives
the architectural activity in peculiar pictures like in looping
movements; this reconstruction is a real process that is
contrary to the usual conscious day life. It is really no pipe
dream if one speaks of the fact that one recognises in these
intertwining movements that mysterious activity which the soul
carries out in the sleep: we restore what we have destroyed in
the day life. Hence, the recovering and the necessary of the
sleep.
Why
does now the sleeping life not become conscious? Why does the
wake life become conscious? Because we have something like
reflections with the processes which we carry out in the day
life. However, while we perform the other activity, restoring
the worn out, we have nothing at which it can be reflected. We
lack the mirror for it. Only the spiritual researcher can show
again what forms its basis. From a certain point the spiritual
researchers does not only experience the mental activity, as I
have described it, like a dream recollection of the sleep, but
in such a way, as if he is not dependent at all on the
instrument of the body, so that he can perceive an activity
then which takes place only in the spiritual. There he can say
to himself, you do not think with your brain now, but you think
in quite different forms, you think pictures independently from
your brain. However, the spiritual researcher can only get
around to experiencing such a thing as I have described if he
experiences that the whole that wraps around him as something
nebulous does not disappear falling asleep. He perceives this
fog at the temples, in the joints, in the spine. It becomes
something from which that is reflected which he does — as
that is reflected which we experience in the coarse bodily life
— if he can limit and withdraw his activity in himself.
The whole difference of the real clairvoyance from the usual
wake day life consists of the fact that the wake day life needs
another mirror to become conscious of the mental activity using
the corporeality, whereas the activity of the clairvoyant is so
strong if it radiates as soul activity that the emitted ray
withdraws in itself. Thus, a reflection takes place as it were
in the own inner experience, in a spiritual organism.
In
this spiritual organism, our soul exists at night, even if we
are no spiritual researchers. Therein it pours out. We do not
manage with the whole life of sleep if we do not get clear
that, indeed, our bodily processes — everything that
anatomy, physiology can investigate — cause nothing else
than the reflection of the soul processes, and that these soul
processes always live on in a spiritual existence from falling
asleep to waking up. If we think different, we cannot manage it
at all. We have to speak as it were of a mysterious soul life
that cannot enter at all the consciousness that the body gives.
If one sees images appearing with a human being that he has not
kept in his consciousness long since, one must say: there is
something else in the human being than the images of the
conscious soul life that have been taken up consciously.
I
have indicated already once that it is very easy to disprove
the things that are real for the spiritual researcher. However,
they are true. The spiritual research must speak of the fact
that the human being has the physical body that we see with
eyes, can touch with hands, and which anatomy and physiology
know. In addition, we have an inner member of the human being:
the astral body, the bearer of everything that the human being
takes up consciously that he really experiences during the day
life in such a way that he can receive it reflected by the
body. Between the astral body and the physical body is the
bearer of imaginations that remain unnoticed for years, which
are brought up into the astral body then and become conscious
life then. Briefly, between the astral body, the bearer of
consciousness, and the physical body the etheric body of the
human being is active. This etheric body is not only the bearer
of such imaginations going unnoticed, but it also is generally
the builder of the entire physical body.
What happens now, actually, in the sleep? It happens that the
astral body, the bearer of consciousness, leaves the physical
and etheric bodies together with the ego, so that a splitting
of the human nature takes place. If the human being is in the
wake day life, the astral body and the ego are in the physical
body and etheric body, and the processes of the physical body
work like reflecting processes by which everything that goes
forward in the astral body becomes conscious. Consciousness is
the reflection of the experiences by the physical body, and,
hence, we must not confuse consciousness with the experiences.
If the astral body goes out in the sleep, it is not able to
perceive anything in the world of the astral. The human being
is unconscious there.
Which ability does now the spiritual researcher attain, while
things also become conscious to him in sleep even if he does
not rely on his brain? He attains the ability to perceive in
something and to reflect his soul activity that lives for him
between the things and that can be perceived in the wake day
consciousness also as the own etheric body. The etheric body is
woven of that by which the clairvoyant perceives; so that for
him the external world becomes reflecting as for the soul life
of the normal human being the physical corporeality becomes
reflecting.
Now
there are interstates between waking and sleeping. Such an
interstate is the dream. In relation to its origin the
spiritual research shows that, indeed, the dreams are based on
something similar as the clairvoyance is, only the latter is
something trained, whereas the dreams are always fantastic. The
human being loses the possibility that the physical body
reflects his soul life if he leaves it with the astral body.
However, under certain unusual conditions that happen for every
human being, he can get the ability to receive the mental
experiences reflected by the etheric body. Indeed, we must
regard not only the physical body as an apparatus of
reflection, but also the etheric body, because as long as the
outer world makes impressions on us, the physical body works
like an apparatus of reflection. However, if we become quiet in
ourselves and process the impressions of the world, then we
work in ourselves, however, our thoughts are real,
nevertheless. We live our thoughts, and we feel that we are
dependent on something subtler than our physical body is,
namely on the etheric body. Then the etheric body reflects what
is in the lonesome contemplation that is not based on outer
impressions at first. Nevertheless, we are in our etheric body
in the wake day consciousness; we perceive what is reflected,
but we do not perceive the activity of the astral body
directly. While we are not able in an interstate between waking
and sleeping to receive outer sensory impressions but still
something in certain way that is connected with our etheric
body, the etheric body can reflect what we experience in our
soul with our astral body. These are the irregular dreams,
because the human being is in a quite unusual position.
If
we consider this, we realise something of the dream world that
is rather mysterious, otherwise. Hence, we have to imagine the
subsoil of the soul life narrowly tied up with the dream life.
While the physical body is the player of the soul life and our
day interests affect it, we are connected by the etheric body
often in the most remote kind with experiences which are long
behind us and which we become aware of only weakly because the
day life works strongly on us. Hence, they remain something
very strange to us. However, if we consider dreams now, which
are based on good observation, something strange can appear.
For example, a good composer experiences the picture that a
somewhat diabolical figure plays a sonata. He wakes — and
can write down the sonata. There something has become active in
him that worked like something strange in him. This was
possible because something was in him for which the soul of the
composer was ripe but could not appear in the wake day life
because the bodily life is only an obstacle and not suitable to
reflect. There we see that the bodily life is an obstacle and
that this is its significance. In the day life we can only
experience for which the bodily life — figuratively
spoken — is lubricated as a machine. The bodily life is
always an obstacle. However, we succeed to a certain degree in
using the bodily life. One needs “inhibitions”
everywhere. If a locomotive drives on the rails, there are also
inhibitions, the frictions by which it can drive, because
without friction the wheels could not rotate.
Our
bodily processes are the obstacles of our soul life in truth,
and these inhibitory processes are the reflecting processes at
the same time. If we are mature in our soul for something and
if we have not yet succeeded in “smearing our
machine,” the wake day life is a good hindrance. However,
if we leave our physical body, our etheric body — that
must appear to us as something completely strange because it is
of subtler nature — can express what lives in the soul
life. If then it is strong enough, it squeezes in the dream
life like in this case of the composer. This is less connected
with the daily interests than with concealed interests, which
are remote in the fine subsoil. Thus, for example, also in the
following. I note, I tell only something really observed. A
woman dreams — although she has children, whom she loves
very much, and a husband, who loves her exceptionally —
that she is engaged for the second time and experiences all
events with big joy. What does she dream? She dreams
experiences that are very far from her current life, which she
experienced once but which she does not recognise again,
because the usual daily interest is connected only with the
physical body. The etheric body reflects here what still lives
on in her etheric body due to another event because any happy
sensation has maybe released the dream.
A
man dreams that he goes through childhood experiences. These
childhood experiences are reflected quite wonderfully. An
especially important event grieving him deeply causes that he
wakes up. At first, the dream is very dear to him; however, he
soon falls asleep again and continues dreaming. Now a whole sum
of disagreeable experiences goes through his soul, and an
especially painful event wakes him. All that is extremely far
from his present experiences. He gets up because he is shaken
at the dream very much, walks around for a while in the room,
then he lies down again, and experiences in the dream events
that he has not experienced. All events that he has gone
through are tangled, and now he experiences something quite
new. The whole becomes a poem that he can even write down and
set to music afterward. This is a real fact. Now it will not be
difficult to imagine with the concepts that we have already
attained what has happened there. For the spiritual researcher
it presents itself this way: the man has suffered a break of
his development as it were at a particular moment of his life.
He had to give up something that lay in his soul. However, even
if he had to give up it, his etheric body has not left it. The
usual interests were only so strong to force back it. Where it
was strong enough because of inner elasticity, it squeezed in
the dream because the human being is delivered there from the
inhibitions of the wake day life. That is the person concerned
was on the brink to coming really to that what expressed itself
in the poem; but then it has been drowned.
Thus, we clearly recognise the independence of the soul life
from the outer bodily life in the dream. This must prove that
the idea of the reflection of the soul life in the bodily life
is very justified. Just the fact that the interests, in which
we are involved, do not impress themselves straight in our
immediate experience, shows that beside the life, as it runs in
the everyday life, another life runs alongside which I have
called a kind of waking up for the conscious finer observing.
Everything lives in it that is for our spiritual life —
as for example the conscience — independent of the bodily
life. Everybody feels this. Nevertheless, in the daily life
this other life turns out to be very much limited by our daily
interests. In the sleep, our soul appears completely fulfilled
with this moral quality. It really means immersing oneself in
the spiritual what we can call a jolt, an inner movement.
Spiritual-scientific research will arise as something by which
we consciously settle in the world in which the normal human
being settles unconsciously every time when falling asleep.
The
human beings have to familiarise themselves gradually with the
fact that the world comprises much more than what we can
understand with the senses and pursue with the reason, and that
the life of sleep is an area which we need because we just wear
the noblest organs in the daily life which serve for the life
of imagination. In the sleep, we restore them, so that they can
face the world strongly and can reflect our soul life in the
wake day life. Everything typical of the soul life could
thereby become clear to us. Who would not know that he feels
drawn, exhausted after a good, deep sleep? People often
complain it; but this is no symptom, but comprehensible. Since
strictly speaking the entire rest takes place only one or one
and a half hours after sleep. Why? Because we have well worked
on our organs, so that they do not only endure for some hours
again, but for the whole day. There we are not yet trained
immediately after waking, we can use them well only after some
time. One would have to speak about a certain kind of weariness
that one could be glad after one and a half hours that one can
familiarise oneself with the recovered organs. Since from the
sleep comes what we need: the architectural forces for the
organs, which are worn during the day.
Thus, we can say, our soul life is a life in independence, a
life from which we have something in the wake day life by our
consciousness that is a reflection. Consciousness is a
reflection of the relations of the soul to the surroundings. In
the wake day life, we are given to our surroundings, to
something strange, to something that we are not ourselves.
During sleep, however — and this is the nature of sleep
— we withdraw from all outer activity in order to work on
ourselves. The comparison for it is suitable: in the ship that
was on high sea, the sailors carpenter and mend when it drives
in the harbour. Who believes that nothing happens with us
during sleep could also believe that nothing needs to happen
with the ship when it is in the harbour after a trip. However,
it will drive out again, and there he will already see what
happens if it is not repaired. Thus, it would be if the soul
did not work on us during sleep. We are returned to ourselves
in sleep, while we are given to the outside world in the day
life. The normal human being is only unable to perceive what
the soul does in sleep in such a way, as he perceives the
outside world during the day.
In
the talk How Does One Attain Knowledge of the Spiritual
World?, we shall see that also in the spiritual a
reflection can be attained as knowledge by which the human
being can get perception in the higher worlds. All that shows
that just the soul if it is not aware of itself knows nothing
about its own activity, however, that it is occupied with
itself, works in itself, and gets the forces independently from
any corporeality that shall just serve the construction of the
bodily.
Thus, I would like to summarise what I have said and
characterise the nature of sleep with the words:
The soul returns itself.
It withdraws embraced by sleep
To spiritual regions,
If sensory narrowness depresses it!
|