Contact
7. Asking for Help and Helping Others
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 7 | June 17, 1957
Each emotional reaction, thought, opinion or tendency, even the smallest personality trait, is a luminous ray which is invisible to you, but belongs very personally to each individual being. In the same way, the fixed and yet eternally moving spiritual laws, which pertain to every possibility or modality of outer or inner reaction, also create such luminous threads. Wherever your personal rays agree with those of the spiritual laws, you fulfill your life and you are in harmony and bliss.
59. Questions and Answers
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 59 | February 19, 1960
QUESTION: Where is the borderline between compulsion and very strong desire?
65. Questions and Answers
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 65 | May 13, 1960
QUESTION: I have two questions in connection with the last lecture. The first is: I understood that the inner will you spoke of stems from the super-conscious. It was not clear to me whether the outer will then comes from a combination of the conscious and the subconscious?
94. Sin and Neurosis—Unifying the Inner Split
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 94 | December 8, 1961
Now let us try to determine the difference between your genuine, true self and the superficial self. Whenever you act out of your real self, you are in complete unity with yourself. There is no doubt, no confusion, no anxiety, and no tension. You are not concerned with the appearance of your act in the eyes of others, or about principles or rules. You are concerned with the effect of your action on others and on yourself and with its consequences; and you choose this particular alternative because, even though you recognize its imperfections, it still seems better to you than another alternative. It corresponds to your innermost nature. This does not apply, of course, to destructive actions of a crass nature.
96. Questions and Answers and Additional Comments on Laziness as Symptom of Self-Alienation
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 96 | January 19, 1962
We discussed some of the symptoms of self-alienation such as: not relating to yourself and to others as you and they are in your true selves; not experiencing yourself in your true strength; not identifying with yourself and your deep inner reality but instead with the superimposed layers of your personality; relying on public opinion rather than on your own convictions, on pseudo-solutions and defense-mechanisms that you have laboriously built up over the course of years.
110. Hope and Faith and Other Key Concepts Discussed in Answers to Questions
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 110 | January 4, 1963
QUESTION: How do faith in God and hope tie in with this path of self-purification? ANSWER: Do you see any contradiction between our path and faith in God and hope?
113. Identification with the Self
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 113 | March 29, 1963
And now, my friends, I wish to discuss a topic I have not gone into before, identification with oneself, as opposed to identification with others. Last time I talked about humanity’s relationship to time. I said, in essence, that very rarely do people live in the now. They push into the future. They pull back into the past. Often these two contradictory movements happen simultaneously. In both alternatives, you strain away from the now.
126. Contact with the Life Force
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 126 | June 26, 1964
Let us recapitulate certain aspects of the life force. The life force is profoundly intelligent. Its intelligence is always available, always present and ready to be applied not only to great, important issues; this super-intelligence “deigns” to express itself . . .
137. Balance of Inner and Outer Control
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 137 | October 29, 1965
The separation from the center is the wall of not knowing that this inner center of wisdom, love and power exists. You therefore do not seek contact with it, hence more confusion, error and ignorance arise. The less aware you are of this inner center, the greater your separation from it will be.
138. The Human Predicament of Desire for, and Fear of, Closeness
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 138 | November 26, 1965
Your relationship to another person can be successful only when you are motivated by your innermost being. If the relationship is determined solely by the outer intellect and will, these faculties cannot find the delicate balance of allowing your self-expression and also receiving the other’s self-expression.
148. Positivity and Negativity: One Energy Current
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 148 | December 2, 1966
It is not easy to reach an awareness where you can see yourself think, feel, and act destructively; where you are furthermore aware that this causes you misery, and yet are unable and unwilling to give up this way of being. It is a great measure of success, if this word can be used, to be aware of being in this state. But to accomplish the second part of this phase of your evolution, namely the letting go of destructiveness, the nature of destructiveness must be better understood.
149. Cosmic Pull Toward Union—Frustration
Pathwork Guide Lecture No. 149 | January 13, 1967
The life force therefore consists not only of the pull toward others, but also of pleasure supreme. Life and pleasure are one. Lack of pleasure is the distortion of the life force and comes from opposing the creative principle. Life, pleasure, contact and oneness with others are the goal of the cosmic plan.
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