THE GOSPEL OF COMMON SENSE
Of all the attributes which we of
the twentieth century should most strenuously encourage,
that of common sense ranks first, in the face of the
hysteria which threatens to weaken, if it does not
swamp, all the wonderful new spirit of progress which
is abroad.
Common sense applied to everything
alone can restore our equilibrium as a nation, because
as the years of this new century go on hysteria seems
to increase. Nothing in the way of a public event
can happen, from the just condemnation of a criminal
for some atrocious crime, to the sinking of an ocean
mammoth ship, but a large section of the public makes
an outcry inspired by altruism or so-called humanitarianism,
both developing into hysteria.
Let us look at the reason of this
carefully, and we shall see that this state of things
is the direct result of an irresponsible employment
of the gigantic power of thought. Some few excitable
brains start an idea, the circulation of which is
made possible by the modern facilities for expression
in the press. And because the majority of readers
do not think for themselves, they are drawn into the
current of unrest which has thus been suggested to
their imagination, each individual augmenting its
strength until it grows into a torrent of folly.
This proves the tremendous importance
it is to a nation that each of its units should realise
his own responsibility in regard to this matter.
The moment that such a thing could be accomplished that
is, that the understanding of the power of thought
could be brought home to people there are
millions of sound, honest folk who would deliberately
try to use their possession of it for the good of
themselves and the race, and who would bring up their
children to do likewise.
The wave of complete materialism which
passed over Europe during what we call the Victorian
period discouraged any personal investigation of forces
beyond what could actually be proved by the senses.
Numberless examples of natural phenomena were laughed
to scorn as the illusions of the ignorant. People
read their Bibles, wherein there are countless instances
shown of the power of thought, and never dreamed of
applying the teaching to themselves. How such
a materialistic age ever accepted Christ’s miracles
is a matter for wonderment, although now, looked at
from the point of view of those who have investigated
the currents of nature, the miracles are merely a
proof of Jesus’ divine understanding of these
currents and forces in their greatest measure.
We modern people are only as yet at the experimental
stage, and hedged in by timidity and custom, but there
is no reason why we should not advance if we desire
to do so.
Think how the power of thought showed
itself about the Titanic disaster! There
is no need now to go over its hysterical effects upon
us on land, how in our misery and anxiety we praised
and blamed from excitable imagination, before any
actual facts could be known to justify either course.
But let us instead try to imagine what in its glorious
form it did upon that great ship on the night of her
overwhelming.
Everything seems to have been calm
and in fair order. Why? Because it has been
now proved that the majority of those on board did
not think the ship could sink. Only a
limited number of men knew that she not only
could, but would, and these glorious and splendid
souls did their duty to the last, with the awful knowledge
of certain death in their hearts. Their names
should be written in letters of gold heroes,
indeed! But, meanwhile, the power of thought had
kept all calm, and had permitted the saving of the
women and children without panic.
Think for a moment what would have
happened if the passengers of all classes had been
aware, from the first moment of the collision, that
all were bound to go down who could not find places
in the boats. The power of thought would then
have created a mad panic of fear which no officers’
pistols could have kept in check, and which might have
produced a rush upon the lifeboats which would have
swamped them all. But as it was, the power of
thought in the few individuals who realised the general
peril, was used by them in a godlike suppression of
their own emotion, which produced an answering vibration
of calm in the majority under their care.
I do not want to refer to the awful
story except in so far as it is a concrete illustration
of what I wish to write about the power
of thought examined with common sense in its relation
to the happiness of each individual, and the responsibility
of its employment by each individual for the benefit
of the community not from the desire to
use this opportunity to circulate propaganda for any
of the new ethical teachings, but simply from a common-sense
point of view to see what good we can get out of a
belief that is, I suppose, common to them all.
Now let us consider what most of us
do actually know about this power of thought.
We all are aware that no picture can be painted, no
machinery invented, before a clear vision of it has
been realised in the creator’s brain. Not
a single conscious action can be put into motion and
force without its having first occurred to the imagination.
The painter’s hand and brush would be of no avail
undirected by his brain or mind, which has first mentally
visualised what it wishes to create in fact.
Draw the analogy from this, and you will see that what
you think about must have an enormous bearing upon
your life. If thought, when inspired by desire,
is strong enough to cause the hand to reproduce the
vision of the imagination of the artist, this is an
incontestable proof that thought is a very strong force
indeed. You will agree with this if you each
individual who is reading these words begin
to examine yourself with truth.
Admitted, then, that you perceive
the force of thought. Now consider what miserable
thinking is likely to bring you. It, according
to the analogy above, can only eventually attract
for you in fact the miserable conditions that
you have dwelt upon in imagination. If, on the
contrary, you think constantly of fine and prosperous
things, you must by this reasoning, be connecting
yourself with the currents which can bring them in
their material form.
Therefore, every time you say “I
am ill,” or think “I am ill,” are
you not helping the illness to materialise? because
the power of thought, which you cannot deny as the
initial cause of every action, has then been turned
to aid the condition of ill health.
Supposing for some cause you really
are ill, why then help this evil state to augment
by your thoughts? Rather impede its progress as
far as you can by creating good-thought conditions.
You may reply, “But I am constantly
doing this, and yet nothing good comes.”
Pause and use your common sense by remembering that
for twenty thirty forty years
perhaps, when you did not analyse matters, you were
laying up for yourself numberless stumbling-blocks
by wrong thinking, which according to the law we are
discussing must be surmounted before you can start
on a clear road. And the reason why you do not
immediately receive the result of your good thoughts
is that you are still under the action of your bad
ones. But if you recognise this law of the power
of thought, you need not incur for yourself any further
debts to pay.
And to recognise it as a law you have
only to use your common sense to see that it is not
conceivable that thoughts can have no effect outside
your own brain. They cannot be wasted and go into
nothingness, they must strike some answering
vibration somewhere, and it is surely rational to
suppose they will strike the kindred vibration rather
than some totally different one, as the Marconi messages
strike the pole in tune to them. At least, it
is worth while trying to believe this, because if
you can it will make you happier.
Alas! I am not a scientist who
can dogmatically prove every fraction of my beliefs.
I only want to awaken my readers to think for themselves
upon this interesting subject, for the facts are there
for us all to investigate, unaided by scientists,
if we will.
So without any more argument, shall
we take it for granted that you are with me thus far,
and have seen my point? Yes. Then let us
examine what our thoughts do for us.
For example, let us suppose a man
has a disease which is believed to be incurable.
His thoughts tell him so constantly, and the thoughts
of his friends, often expressed in words, convince
him still further of his misfortune. He is certain
nothing he can do will make it better, and any remedy
that is applied will only meet with failure. He
has made his mental picture of an incurable disease;
and so he is helping the material result to accomplish
itself. But, as hope springs eternal in the human
breast, he still goes from doctor to doctor for fresh
advice, while unconsciously nullifying the benefit
he might receive from doing so by his attitude of
mind in holding the belief that nothing can cure him.
We must all of us know of cases like this, and have
seen the gradual increase in the person’s illness.
Now supposing that the starting-point
is the same; the disease certainly is there, but the
man is determined not to aid and augment this state
of things, so whenever the thought presents itself
that he has an incurable disease he persistently banishes
it and replaces it with one that he will grow well.
He will be aiding that condition; he will be making
himself the pole in tune to receive the answering
vibrations of his mental picture. He will know
that he must be drawing to himself every chance that
science has up till this time of the world’s
day been able to invent or discover for the betterment
of such a disease as his. He will know that he
is giving nature a free hand, and as far as he is
able, he is opening every door to the probability
that he may grow well. Now, if we admit the power
of thought, we must admit it has power to go both
these ways. Is it not worth while trying to think
good things for ourselves, then, instead of evil ones?
It does not seem possible, as I understand
some assert, that by mere thinking and believing we
can cure even a broken arm. Because, although
the principle may be right in its eventuality, no one
on earth can be quite advanced enough yet to draw
these forces to himself sufficiently strongly to demonstrate
it as Christ did. But we are at the stage when,
by our thoughts, we can certainly aid physical means
of betterment. Thus when we or our friends are
ill, it lies in our own hands whether we will aid
or retard our or their recovery.
Long years ago, before any of these
psychic waves were discussed or given the least credence,
I remember a very celebrated American doctor telling
me, as a curious fact, that he often got his patients
over the crisis of typhoid fever by telling them cheerfully
beforehand that the dangerous moment was passed, and
they were not to worry over the seemingly worse physical
sensations they were perhaps about to experience these
were only the reaction. In that way, he said,
he removed the amount of fear from the mind of the
patient which otherwise might have been enough to
cause the extra exertion to the heart which would
have proved fatal at the critical moment. The
power of thought, you see, and nothing else, then
saved them.
To continue this line of reasoning
in mental, not physical, things. Supposing you
feel angry and resentful towards some one, and you
send out thoughts of hate and ill-will. The pole
in tune to such feelings in that person will answer
and return them to you, and a condition of evil will
be created. But supposing that, when perhaps the
justly angry and resentful thoughts present themselves,
you replace them instantly with kind and loving ones.
You will have disconnected yourself with the evil
thoughts of the other person, they can no longer reach
you, and if he has any good in him you will have connected
yourself with that good, and so peace can be established.
All this is common sense, which is
the only attitude of mind with which to approach any
new suggestion that we may get benefit from it, and
not through our arrogant ignorance dismiss it as nonsense,
until we have proved it to be such. A hundred
years ago the telephone would have been considered
either as magic or the vapourings of a madman if an
individual had tried to explain it. We say that
“France is developing a new spirit,” we
say “A wave of discontent seems to be passing
over such and such a community,” we are thus
unconsciously admitting the power of forces beyond
the perceptible. Why cannot we instantly grasp,
then, what the power of our everyday thought is doing
for us, and how careful we should be in its direction
to avoid augmenting the current of foolish and harmful
ones because unity is strength. There
are many grains of good to be got out of all new ethical
teachings, if only they can be sifted by common sense.
The unfortunate part is, that very often it is only
the faddists who expound them, and they go off at
a tangent. One reads several pages of illuminating
matter, and then, perhaps, one comes upon a chapter
devoted to proving that mankind must train itself to
live upon nuts or uncooked vegetables! Or that
the only way to learn concentration is for the pupil
to school himself mentally to stare for so many minutes
at an imaginary spot in the solar plexus!
Common sense revolts, although many
may not be sufficiently trained to make the deduction
that if God, the omnipotent, original, all-dominating
dynamo, gave the flesh of bird, beast and fish, and
the fruits and vegetables of the earth for mankind
to feed upon, it is a little ridiculous for one sect
to eliminate as food all but the special part of these
aliments of which it approves. Thus, common sense
being affronted, all the rest of the teaching is likely
to fall upon stony ground and only be received by
the faddists in tune to this particular argument.
No theory for the betterment of mankind will succeed
now with the mass of people or make any lasting mark
upon time unless its basic principle can stand practical
dissection.
So that upon this subject of the power
of thought, all that any one at the present stage
can do, no matter what his own personal beliefs may
be, is to try and awaken people to think about it themselves
and make their own investigations; to open a window
for any soul to look through and see what he can get
from it for himself. Because, as yet, the scientists
and psychologists have not been sufficiently interested
in the idea to endeavour to prove and demonstrate it
as an exact science beyond all controversy. When
this has been done, the intelligent will credit it
because they are convinced, and the ignorant because
they follow the others without reason.
All I hope to do by writing this article
is to point out that the power of thought is a vital
factor in our lives, and can really affect every hour
of them for good or ill.
Thousands of people who read the new
ethical or religious books which are abroad, and even
exploit their propaganda thousands who attend
the various meetings and services and lectures of the
different societies, be they “New Thought”
or any of the others on more or less the same lines never
dream of applying the teachings to a single ordinary
thing, and still go on with their tempers and melancholy
and flurry and fuss, just as they did before they
ever heard of the idea that they can control and eliminate
these things. An enormous majority of the public
are frightened at the very name of a new religion or
ethical teaching, and think it wrong even to investigate
what it teaches. But the broad-minded are unafraid
of any knowledge, and can gain good by knowing about
all developments of human thought, provided they approach
each point with common sense and without hysteria,
dismissing the idea of what we are accustomed to call
the supernatural, and realising that everything has
a perfectly natural explanation when it can be understood,
and it is only our ignorance which makes us shy at
it.
And so I would appeal to those who
credit this power of thought to employ it responsibly,
and to realise that they are all God’s atoms
in the great scheme of things, and must use their
personal force as a contribution to the vast thought-waves
which can advance, or which, when ill directed, can
sweep away a nation.