THOUGHT AS A FORCE IN DAILY LIVING
Some years ago an experience was told
to me that has been the cause of many interesting
observations since. It was related by a man living
in one of our noted university towns in the Middle
West. He was a well-known lecture manager, having
had charge of many lecture tours for John B. Gough,
Henry Ward Beecher, and others of like standing.
He himself was a man of splendid character, was of
a sensitive organism, as we say, and had always taken
considerable interest in the powers and forces pertaining
to the inner life.
As a young man he had left home, and
during a portion of his first year away he had found
employment on a Mississippi steamboat. One day
in going down the river, while he was crossing the
deck, a sudden stinging sensation seized him in the
head, and instantly vivid thoughts of his mother,
back at the old home, flashed into his mind. This
was followed by a feeling of depression during the
remainder of the day. The occurrence was so unusual
and the impression of it was so strong that he made
an account of it in his diary.
Some time later, on returning home,
he was met in the yard by his mother. She was
wearing a thin cap on her head which he had never seen
her wear before. He remarked in regard to it.
She raised the cap and doing so revealed the remains
of a long ugly gash on the side of her head.
She then said that some months before, naming the time,
she had gone into the back yard and had picked up
a heavy crooked stick having a sharp end, to throw
it out of the way, and in throwing it, it had struck
a wire clothesline immediately above her head and had
rebounded with such force that it had given her the
deep scalp wound of which she was speaking. On
unpacking his bag he looked into his diary and found
that the time she had mentioned corresponded exactly
with the strange and unusual occurrence to himself
as they were floating down the Mississippi.
The mother and son were very near
one to the other, close in their sympathies, and there
can be but little doubt that the thoughts of the mother
as she was struck went out, and perhaps went strongly
out, to her boy who was now away from home.
He, being sensitively organised and intimately related
to her in thought, and alone at the time, undoubtedly
got, if not her thought, at least the effects of her
thought, as it went out to him under these peculiar
and tense conditions.
There are scores if not hundreds of
occurrences of a more or less similar nature that
have occurred in the lives of others, many of them
well authenticated. How many of us, even, have
had the experience of suddenly thinking of a friend
of whom we have not thought for weeks or months, and
then entirely unexpectedly meeting or hearing from
this same friend. How many have had the experience
of writing a friend, one who has not been written
to or heard from for a long time, and within a day
or two getting a letter from that friend the
letters “crossing,” as we are accustomed
to say. There are many other experiences or facts
of a similar nature, and many of them exceedingly
interesting, that could be related did space permit.
These all indicate to me that thoughts are not mere
indefinite things but that thoughts are forces, that
they go out, and that every distinct, clear-cut thought
has, or may have, an influence of some type.
Thought transference, which is now
unquestionably an established fact, notwithstanding
much chicanery that is still to be found in connection
with it, is undoubtedly to be explained through the
fact that thoughts are forces. A positive
mind through practice, at first with very simple beginnings,
gives form to a thought that another mind open and
receptive to it and sufficiently attuned
to the other mind is able to receive.
Wireless telegraphy, as a science,
has been known but a comparatively short time.
The laws underlying it have been in the universe perhaps,
or undoubtedly, always. It is only lately that
the mind of man has been able to apprehend them, and
has been able to construct instruments in accordance
with these laws. We are now able, through a knowledge
of the laws of vibration and by using the right sending
and receiving instruments, to send actual messages
many hundreds of miles directly through the ether
and without the more clumsy accessories of poles and
wires. This much of it we know there
is perhaps even more yet to be known.
We may find, as I am inclined to think
we shall find, that thought is a form of vibration.
When a thought is born in the brain, it goes out just
as a sound wave goes out, and transmits itself through
the ether, making its impressions upon other minds
that are in a sufficiently sensitive state to receive
it; this in addition to the effects that various types
of thoughts have upon the various bodily functions
of the one with whom they take origin.
We are, by virtue of the laws of evolution,
constantly apprehending the finer forces of nature the
tallow-dip, the candle, the oil lamp, years later
a more refined type of oil, gas, electricity, the latest
tungsten lights, radium and we may be still
only at the beginnings. Our finest electric lights
of today may seem will seem crude
and the quality of their light even more crude, twenty
years hence, even less. Many other examples of
our gradual passing from the coarser to the finer in
connection with the laws and forces of nature occur
readily to the minds of us all.
The present great interest on the
part of thinking men and women everywhere, in addition
to the more particular studies, experiments, and observations
of men such as Sir Oliver Lodge, Sir William Ramsay,
and others, in the powers and forces pertaining to
the inner life is an indication that we have reached
a time when we are making great strides along these
lines. Some of our greatest scientists are thinking
that we are on the eve of some almost startling glimpses
into these finer realms. My own belief is that
we are likewise on the eve of apprehending the more
precise nature of thought as a force, the methods
of its workings, and the law underlying its more intimate
and everyday uses.
Of one thing we can rest assured;
nothing in the universe, nothing in connection with
human life is outside of the Realm of Law. The
elemental law of Cause and Effect is absolute in its
workings. One of the great laws pertaining to
human life is: As is the inner, so always and
inevitably is the outer Cause, Effect.
Our thoughts and emotions are the silent, subtle forces
that are constantly externalising themselves in kindred
forms in our outward material world. Like creates
like, and like attracts like. As is our prevailing
type of thought, so is our prevailing type and our
condition of life.
The type of thought we entertain has
its effect upon our energies and to a great extent
upon our bodily conditions and states. Strong,
clear-cut, positive, hopeful thought has a stimulating
and life-giving effect upon one’s outlook, energies,
and activities; and upon all bodily functions and
powers. A falling state of the mind induces a
chronically gloomy outlook and produces inevitably
a falling condition of the body. The mind grows,
moreover, into the likeness of the thoughts one most
habitually entertains and lives with. Every thought
reproduces of its kind.
Says an authoritative writer in dealing
more particularly with the effects of certain types
of thoughts and emotions upon bodily conditions:
“Out of our own experience we know that anger,
fear, worry, hate, revenge, avarice, grief, in fact
all negative and low emotions, produce weakness and
disturbance not only in the mind but in the body as
well. It has been proved that they actually generate
poisons in the body, they depress the circulation;
they change the quality of the blood, making it less
vital; they affect the great nerve centres and thus
partially paralyse the very seat of the bodily activities.
On the other hand, faith, hope, love, forgiveness,
joy, and peace, all such emotions are positive and
uplifting, and so act on the body as to restore and
maintain harmony and actually to stimulate the circulation
and nutrition.”
The one who does not allow himself
to be influenced or controlled by fears or forebodings
is the one who ordinarily does not yield to discouragements.
He it is who is using the positive, success-bringing
types of thought that are continually working for him
for the accomplishment of his ends. The things
that he sees in the ideal, his strong, positive, and
therefore creative type of thought, is continually
helping to actualise in the realm of the real.
We sometimes speak lightly of ideas,
but this world would be indeed a sorry place in which
to live were it not for ideas and were it
not for ideals. Every piece of mechanism that
has ever been built, if we trace back far enough,
was first merely an idea in some man’s or woman’s
mind. Every structure or edifice that has ever
been reared had form first in this same immaterial
realm. So every great undertaking of whatever
nature had its inception, its origin, in the realm
of the immaterial at least as we at present
call it before it was embodied and stood
forth in material form.
It is well, then, that we have our
ideas and our ideals. It is well, even, to build
castles in the air, if we follow these up and give
them material clothing or structure, so that they
become castles on the ground. Occasionally it
is true that these may shrink or, rather, may change
their form and become cabins; but many times we find
that an expanded vision and an expanded experience
lead us to a knowledge of the fact that, so far as
happiness and satisfaction are concerned, the contents
of a cabin may outweigh many times those of the castle.
Successful men and women are almost
invariably those possessing to a supreme degree the
element of faith. Faith, absolute, unconquerable
faith, is one of the essential concomitants, therefore
one of the great secrets of success. We must
realise, and especially valuable is it for young men
and women to realise, that one carries his success
or his failure with him, that it does not depend upon
outside conditions. There are some that no circumstances
or combinations of circumstances can thwart or keep
down. Let circumstance seem to thwart or circumvent
them in one direction, and almost instantly they are
going forward along another direction. Circumstance
is kept busy keeping up with them. When she meets
such, after a few trials, she apparently decides to
give up and turn her attention to those of the less
positive, the less forceful, therefore the less determined,
types of mind and of life. Circumstance has received
some hard knocks from men and women of this type.
She has grown naturally timid and will always back
down whenever she recognises a mind, and therefore
a life, of sufficient force.
To make the best of whatever present
conditions are, to form and clearly to see one’s
ideal, though it may seem far distant and almost impossible,
to believe in it, and to believe in one’s ability
to actualise it this is the first essential.
Not, then, to sit and idly fold the hands, expecting
it to actualise itself, but to take hold of the first
thing that offers itself to do, that lies
sufficiently along the way, to do this
faithfully, believing, knowing, that it is but the
step that will lead to the next best thing, and this
to the next; this is the second and the completing
stage of all accomplishment.
We speak of fate many times as if
it were something foreign to or outside of ourselves,
forgetting that fate awaits always our own conditions.
A man decides his own fate through the types of thoughts
he entertains and gives a dominating influence in
his life. He sits at the helm of his thought
world and, guiding, decides his own fate, or, through
negative, vacillating, and therefore weakening thought,
he drifts, and fate decides him. Fate is not
something that takes form and dominates us irrespective
of any say on our own part. Through a knowledge
and an intelligent and determined use of the silent
but ever-working power of thought we either condition
circumstances, or, lacking this knowledge or failing
to apply it, we accept the rôle of a conditioned circumstance.
It is a help sometimes to realise and to voice with
Henley:
Out of the night that covers
me,
Black as the pit
from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may
be
For my unconquerable
soul.
The thoughts that we entertain not
only determine the conditions of our own immediate
lives, but they influence, perhaps in a much more subtle
manner than most of us realise, our relations with
and our influence upon those with whom we associate
or even come into contact. All are influenced,
even though unconsciously, by them.
Thoughts of good will, sympathy, magnanimity,
good cheer in brief, all thoughts emanating
from a spirit of love are felt in
their positive, warming, and stimulating influences
by others; they inspire in turn the same types of
thoughts and feelings in them, and they come back to
us laden with their ennobling, stimulating, pleasure-bringing
influences.
Thoughts of envy, or malice, or hatred,
or ill will are likewise felt by others. They
are influenced adversely by them. They inspire
either the same types of thoughts and emotions in
them; or they produce in them a certain type of antagonistic
feeling that has the tendency to neutralise and, if
continued for a sufficient length of time, deaden sympathy
and thereby all friendly relations.
We have heard much of “personal
magnetism.” Careful analysis will, I think,
reveal the fact that the one who has to any marked
degree the element of personal magnetism is one of
the large-hearted, magnanimous, cheer-bringing, unself-centred
types, whose positive thought forces are being continually
felt by others, and are continually inspiring and
calling forth from others these same splendid attributes.
I have yet to find any one, man or woman, of the opposite
habits and, therefore, trend of mind and heart who
has had or who has even to the slightest perceptible
degree the quality that we ordinarily think of when
we use the term “personal magnetism.”
If one would have friends he or she
must be a friend, must radiate habitually friendly,
helpful thoughts, good will, love. The one who
doesn’t cultivate the hopeful, cheerful, uncomplaining,
good-will attitude toward life and toward others becomes
a drag, making life harder for others as well as for
one’s self.
Ordinarily we find in people the qualities
we are mostly looking for, or the qualities that our
own prevailing characteristics call forth. The
larger the nature, the less critical and cynical it
is, the more it is given to looking for the best and
the highest in others, and the less, therefore, is
it given to gossip.
It was Jeremy Bentham who said:
“In order to love mankind, we must not expect
too much of them.” And Goethe had a still
deeper vision when he said: “Who is the
happiest of men? He who values the merits of others,
and in their pleasure takes joy, even as though it
were his own.”
The chief characteristic of the gossip
is that he or she prefers to live in the low-lying
miasmic strata of life, revelling in the negatives
of life and taking joy in finding and peddling about
the findings that he or she naturally makes there.
The larger natures see the good and sympathise with
the weaknesses and the frailties of others. They
realise also that it is so consummately inconsistent many
times even humorously inconsistent for
one also with weaknesses, frailties, and faults, though
perhaps of a little different character, to sit in
judgment of another. Gossip concerning the errors
or shortcomings of another is judging another.
The one who is himself perfect is the one who has the
right to judge another. By a strange law, however,
though by a natural law, we find, as we understand
life in its fundamentals better, such a person is
seldom if ever given to judging, much less to gossip.
Life becomes rich and expansive through
sympathy, good will, and good cheer; not through cynicism
or criticism. That splendid little poem of but
a single stanza by Edwin Markham, “Outwitted,”
points after all to one of life’s fundamentals:
He drew a circle that shut
me out
Heretic, rebel, a thing to
flout,
But Love and I had the wit
to win:
We drew a circle that took
him in!