QUESTION: I would like a clear definition of what the soul is. I think it has been done, but if I could have a brief definition, I think it would clarify this lecture.
ANSWER: There are many interpretations of what the soul is, and they may all be quite accurate. If they seem contradictory, then it is because words are limited to describe an inner process that exists on a different dimension from that of human language. Therefore it is easy to become confused with words and verbal explanations. This is the reason that higher dimensions can never be made accessible by verbal learning, but only by inner experience. This becomes possible only when the inner errors and the distortions are dissolved.
QUESTION: Then karma is the memory of the soul from former unresolved problems?
ANSWER: I would not say the memory. It is the result of all the previous incarnations. Karma is the effect which the soul has produced.
QUESTION: The sensitivity is carried along?
ANSWER: Of course. The sensitivity, the perception, the ability to experience. All these faculties have scales. One person's sensitivity may be on the lowest note of the keyboard, another person's on the highest. The latter may exist either in the healthy way or in the unhealthy way. Karma is the result of everything up to the present point.
QUESTION: You gave attributes to the soul of a physical, material nature. You gave it roundness and malleability in a physical sort of substance. Is it localized, like any other organ in the body?
ANSWER: No, it is not localized in that sense. It is a body, consisting of matter similar to your earth matter, although not perceivable with your physical organs. It is a subtle body. When I spoke of roundness, it does not mean that it is a round form, like a ball. The surface of the subtle body can have all the attributes I discussed. You might compare it with the consistency of skin and flesh. Only, the surface of the subtle body of the soul has much more variety than the variety of physical skin and flesh. The words are so limited that I realize that they often seem preposterous, but this is the best way of conveying it. For I do wish to give you an idea of what the soul-body may look like.
QUESTION: May I ask about the relationship between the subconscious and the soul?
ANSWER: The soul is the unconscious mind, or at least part of it. Much of what the soul contains is conscious, if you consider what I have said about it. But the unconscious motivations, the unconscious attitudes, the unconscious driving forces, and the unconscious inclinations are also from the soul. Then there are also the deeper regions of the unconscious self which go to the real spiritual being.
QUESTION: We claim that attitudes determine the happenings in our lives. How is it that people with bad motives so often derive all the happiness and success in life? I know of such cases.
ANSWER: I have answered this question in previous sessions, but I may answer it briefly again. In the first place, man's view is very limited and his way of judging is based on his ability to see cause and effect immediately together. When the effect does not immediately follow the cause, then he loses the link, and therefore is unable to see their interrelationship. Thus, if he nevertheless attempts to judge, then his judgment must be faulty. It is often the case that cause and effect are far removed in time. In other words, a human being may experience the effect of a cause from way back, while the new causes he institutes have not yet taken effect, but will do so later. With increasing spiritual development, inner health, and oneness, then cause and effect come closer together. When they are separated in time, then an inner chasm and a division of the soul must exist. The overall development of the soul, its potential for growth at this period regarding particular areas of development, is still limited when cause and effect are removed from one another. Only when the potential is greater than the development are cause and effect closer together.
QUESTION: How do you explain the function of drama, myth, fairy tales in the personal development of the human being?
ANSWER: I believe that the foregoing lecture really answers this question. I suppose the questioner means the effect that myth, drama, and fairy tales have upon a human being. Any effect from the outside always depends on its assimilation. In other words, on the impressionability of the soul. Whether fairy tales and myths have a good influence both on a growing person and on the adult person cannot be put into a generalization. It depends on the material and on the interpretation. We can only consider a young child, for when a person is an adult, then it is up to him to utilize and to assimilate an impression. He is no longer dependent on the interpretation provided by others. But a young child is dependent on the interpretation given by the adults who surround him. Such an interpretation may not occur in words, but in the atmosphere that he emanates. The adult's feelings have a much stronger influence than his words. Whatever he really understands will make itself communicated to the child. If an apparently cruel fairy tale or myth is taken literally, then a soul particle that is already afflicted will be influenced negatively, and therefore will be negatively impressed. The healthy soul substance will not react negatively when a fairy tale is misinterpreted. False myths will not have a negative effect either. For not all myth is truthful. Untruthful literature, or other influences, as well as misunderstood and misinterpreted truthful influences, will take effect only where the soul is already afflicted. Where the soul is afflicted, and either truthful interpretations or truthful influxes occur, then the soul is given a chance to assimilate such helpful influences. Whether or not it does so depends on the person.
QUESTION: I should like your differentiation between feelings and emotions.
ANSWER: There is a difference between the two. One way of describing the difference would be to say that a feeling is deeper-rooted and more permanent. By this I do not wish to imply that feelings do not change. I do not mean permanent in time, but in quality, in consistency, in character, in being. A feeling may actually change faster, in time, than an emotion, and yet it is permanent in essence. This is very difficult to explain, and in order to understand, then you would have to perceive this with your inner faculties. An emotion is something that is much more superficial, even though it may be retained longer due to circumstances, as discussed in this lecture. Yet it has a less permanent character, even though it may last longer in time. An emotion comes from superficial conditions in the soul. Reactions and responses, which are based on superimposed modes of coping with life and which do not come from the real person, are emotions. The seal self sends forth feelings. Hence a feeling is something much more substantial. This cannot be evaluated by the apparent worth of the feeling. (look this up)necessarily an emotion. A positive reaction is not necessarily a feeling, while a negative one is not necesarily an emotion.You may have an unpleasant feeling, yet it is based on truth, on reality. An emotion is based on a subjective inner condition. Let me give you an example. Let us suppose that you sense a detrimental, negative quality either in someone else, or in yourself. If this quality is a fact, then you deal with a feeling, even though it may be highly unpleasant. However, you may have the same perception, but you do not sense this fact because you do not merely observe what is, just because you are frightened, suspicious, guilty, resentful because some image or some pseudo solution is at work. In this instance, the same correct perception is an emotion. When you do not push the feeling aside, then you will come to see that you have a valid intuition, be it about yourself or about someone else. When you do not push aside an emotion -- and you should not push aside an emotion, a feeling, or anything else, for that matter -- then you will come to recognize factors within yourself that make you subjective, that make you distorted, that take you away from reality. In short, you will see all the blocks that prohibit feelings and intuition. A feeling is something that reacts to reality, however temporary this respective reality may be, but it exists now.
QUESTION: Am I correct in understanding that anything can be either feeling or emotion. Fear, for instance?
ANSWER: Yes. That is right. But, my friends, my advice is this: do not try to label it. That is always a dangerous procedure. If you instantly give it one name, as distinct from another, then you somehow close a door to further understanding. Rather, try to deal with it as it comes up, to see whether or not it is based on objective factors, or on personal, colored, subjective ones.
February 1, 1963
Copyright 1963 by Center for the Living Force, Inc.