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    13/01/07
    Are you lacking Self-Discipline? - Part 1

    A man does not live until he begins to discipline himself;
    he merely exists. Like an animal he gratifies his desires
    and pursues his inclinations just where they may lead him.
    He is happy as a beast is happy, because he is not conscious
    of what he is depriving himself; he suffers as the beast
    suffers, because he does not know the way out of suffering.
    He does not intelligently reflect upon life, and lives in a
    series of sensations, longings, and confused memories which
    are unrelated to any central idea or principle. A man whose
    inner life is so ungoverned and chaotic must necessarily
    manifest this confusion in the visible conditions of his
    outer life in the world; and though for a time, running with
    the stream of his desires, he may draw to himself a more or
    less large share of the outer necessities and comforts of
    life, he never achieves any real success nor accomplishes
    any real good, and sooner or later wordly failure and
    disaster are inevitable, as the direct result of the inward
    failure to properly adjust and regulate those mental forces
    which make the outer life.
    Before a man accomplish anything of an enduring nature in
    the world he must first of all acquire some measure of
    success in the management of his own mind. This is as
    mathematical a truism as that two and two are four, for,
    "out of the heart are the issues of life." If a man cannot
    govern the forces within himself, he cannot hold a firm
    hand upon the outer activities which form his visible life.
    On the other hand, as a man succeeds, in governing himself
    he rises to higher and higher levels of power and usefulness
    and success in the world. The only difference between the
    life of the beast and that of the undisciplined man is that
    the man has a wider variety of desires, and experiences a
    greater intensity of suffering. It may be said of such a man
    that he is dead, being truly dead to self-control, chastity,
    fortitude, and all the nobler qualities which constitute
    life. In the consciousness of such a man the crucified Christ
    ies entombed, awaiting that resurrection which shall revivify
    the mortal sufferer, and wake him up to a knowledge of tha
    realities of his existence.
    With the practice of self-discipline a man begins to live,
    for he then commences to rise above the inward confusion
    and to adjust his conduct to a steadfast centre within
    himself. He ceases to follow where inclination leads him,
    reins in the steed of his desires, and lives in accordance
    with the dictates of reason and wisdom. Hitherto his life
    has been without purpose or meaning, but now he begins to
    consciously mould his own destiny; he is "clothed and in
    his right mind."
    In the process of self-discipline there are three stages
    namely;
    1.Control
    2.Purification
    3.Relinquishment
    A man begins to discipline himself by controlling those
    passions which have hitherto controlled him; he resists
    temptation and guards himself against all those tendencies
    to selfish gratifications which are so easy and natural,
    and which have formerly dominated him. He brings his
    appetite into subjection, and begins to eat as a reasonable
    and responsible being, practising moderation and
    thoughtfulness in the selection of his food, with the
    object of making his body a pure instrument through which
    he may live and act as becomes a man, and no longer
    degarding that body by pandering to gustatory pleasure. He
    puts a check upon his tongue, his temper, and, in fact, his
    every animal desire and tendency, and this he does by
    referring all his acts to a fixed centre within himself.
    It is a process of living from within outward, instead of,
    as formerly, from without inward. He conceives of an ideal,
    and, enshrining that ideal in the sacred recesses of his
    heart, he regulates his conduct in accordance with its
    exaction and demands.
    There is a philosophical hypothesis that at the heart of
    every atom and every aggregation of atoms in the universe
    there is a motionless center which is the sustaining source
    of all the universal activities. Be this as it may, there
    is certainly in the heart of every man and woman a selfless
    centre without which the outer man could not be, and the
    ignoring of which leads to suffering and confusion. This
    selfless center which takes the form, in the mind, of an
    ideal of unselfishness and spotless purity, the attainment
    of which is desirable, is man's eternal refuge from the
    storms of passion and all the conflicting elements of his
    lower nature. It is the Rock of Ages, the Christ within,
    the divine and immortal in all men.
    End of part 1. Part 2 coming soon...
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