Has it never happened to you to lose yourself for a moment
in a swift and satisfying experience for which you found no name? When the
world took on a strangeness, and you rushed out to meet it, in a mood at once
exultant and ashamed? Was there not an instant when you took the lady who now
orders your dinner into your arms, and she suddenly interpreted to you the
whole of the universe? a universe so great, charged with so terrible an
intensity, that you have hardly dared to think of it since. Do you remember
that horrid moment at the concert, when you became wholly unaware of your
comfortable seven-and-sixpenny seat? Those were onsets of involuntary
contemplation; sudden partings of the conceptual veil. Dare you call them the
least significant moments of your life?
Almost without thinking, we jump to rationalize these
moments or ignore them entirely. We turn them into feelings and dismiss them.
The most difficult task is to see these moments for what they are — glimpses of
Reality. To see Reality, you have to be directed away from the rickety,
temporal self to the unchanging world of the Whole. The task will be a
difficult one. Each moment of attention toward Reality will be met by boredom
and restlessness. You will be attacked by your own incapacity.
CONNECT
CONNECT
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