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A man's mind may be likened
to a garden, which may be intelligently cultivated or
allowed to run wild; but whether cultivated or neglected,
it must, and will bring forth. If no useful seeds are put
into it, then an abundance of useless weed-seeds will fall
therein, and will continue to produce their kind.
Just as a gardener
cultivates his plot, keeping it free from weeds, and
growing the flowers and fruits which he requires so may a
man tend the garden of his mind, weeding out all the
wrong, useless and impure thoughts, and cultivating toward
perfection the flowers and fruits of right, useful and
pure thoughts. By pursuing this process, a man sooner or
later discovers that he is the master gardener of his
soul, the director of his life. He also reveals, within
himself, the flaws of thought, and understands, with
ever-increasing accuracy, how the thought-forces and mind
elements operate in the shaping of character,
circumstances, and destiny.
Thought and character are one, and as character can only
manifest and discover itself through environment and
circumstance, the outer conditions of a person's life will
always be found to be harmoniously related to his inner
state. This does not mean that a man's circumstances at
any given time are an indication of his entire character,
but that those circumstances are so intimately connected
with some vital thought-element within himself that, for
the time being, they are indispensable to his development.
Every man is where he is
by the law of his being; the thoughts which he has built
into his character have brought him there, and in the
arrangement of his life there is no element of chance, but
all is the result of a law which cannot err. This is just
as true of those who feel "out of harmony" with their
surroundings as of those who are contented with them.
As a progressive and evolving being, man is where he is
that he may learn that he may grow; and as he learns the
spiritual lesson, which any circumstance contains for him,
it passes away and gives place to other circumstances.
Man is buffeted by circumstances so long as he believes
himself to be the creature of outside conditions, but when
he realizes that he is a creative power, and that he may
command the hidden soil and seeds of his being out of
which circumstances grow; he then becomes the rightful
master of himself.
That circumstances grow out of thought every man knows who
has for any length of time practiced self control and
self-purification, for he
will
have noticed that the alteration in his circumstances has
been in exact ratio with his altered mental condition. So
true is this that when a man earnestly applies himself to
remedy the defects in his character, and makes swift and
marked progress, he passes rapidly through a succession of
vicissitudes.
The soul attracts that
which it secretly harbors; that which it loves, and also
that which it fears; it reaches the height of its
cherished aspirations; it falls to the level of its
unchastened desires and circumstances are the means by
which the soul receives it own.
Every thought-seed sown or allowed to fall into the mind,
and to take root there, produces its own, blossoming
sooner or later into act, and bearing its own fruitage of
opportunity and circumstance. Good thoughts bear good
fruit, bad thoughts bad fruit.
The outer world of circumstances shapes itself to the
inner world of thought, and both pleasant and unpleasant
external conditions are factors, which make for the
ultimate good of the individual. As the reaper of his own
harvest, man learns both of suffering and bliss.
Following the inmost desires, aspirations, thoughts, by
which he allows himself to be dominated (pursuing the
will-o'-the wisps of impure imaginings or steadfastly
walking the highway of strong and high endeavor), a man at
last arrives at their fruition and fulfillment in the
outer conditions of his life. The laws of growth and
adjustment everywhere obtain.
A man does not come to
the alms-house or the jail by the tyranny of fate or
circumstance, but by the pathway of groveling thoughts and
base desires. Nor does a pure-minded man fall suddenly
into crime by stress of any mere external force; the
criminal thought had long been secretly fostered in the
heart, and the hour of opportunity revealed its gathered
power. Circumstance does not make the man; it reveals him
to himself. No such conditions can exist as descending
into vice and its attendant sufferings apart from vicious
inclinations, or ascending into virtue and its pure
happiness without the continued cultivation of virtuous
aspirations; and man, therefore, as the lord and master of
thought, is the maker of himself and the shaper of and
author of environment. Even at birth the soul comes of its
own and through every step of its earthly pilgrimage it
attracts those combinations of conditions which reveal
itself, which are the reflections of its own purity and
impurity, its strength and weakness.
Read The Rest Of This Profound Book And Begin To Change Your Thoughts.
We Are The Product Of Our Inner Most Thoughts.
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