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The Ideal Made Real
The Ideal Made Real
To have ideals is not only simple but natural. It
is just as natural for the mind to enter the ideal as it is to live.
In fact, the ideal is an inseparable part of life; but to make the
ideal real in every part of life is a problem, the solution of which
appears to be anything but simple. To dream of the fair, the high,
the beautiful, the perfect, the sublime, that everyone can do; but
everyone has not learned how to make his dreams come true, nor realize
in the practical world what he has discerned in the transcendental
world.
The greatest philosophers and thinkers in history, with but few
exceptions, have failed to apply their lofty ideas in practical
living, not because they did not wish to but because they had not
discovered the scientific relationship existing between the ideal
world and the real world. The greatest thinker of the past century
confessed that he did not know how to use in every day life the
remarkable laws and principles that he had discovered in the ideal.
He knew, however, that those laws and principles could be applied;
that the ideal could be made real, and he stated that he positively
knew that others would discover the law of realization, and that
methods would be found in the near future through which any ideal
could be made real in practical life; and his prophecy has come
true.
To understand the scientific relationship that exists between the
real and the ideal, the mind must have both the power of interior
insight and the power of scientific analysis, as well as the power
of practical application; but we do not find, as a rule, the prophet
and the scientist in the same mind. The man who has visions and
the man who can do things do not usually dwell in the same personality;
nevertheless, this is necessary. And every person can develop both
the prophet and the scientist in himself. He can develop the power
to see the ideal and also the power to make the ideal real.
The large mind, the broad mind, the deep mind, the lofty mind, the
properly developed mind can see both the outer and the inner side
of things. Such a mind can see the ideal on high, and at the same
time understand how to make real, tangible and practical what he
has seen. The seeming gulf between the ideal and the real, between
the soul's vision and the power of practical action is being bridged
in thousands of minds today, and it is these minds who are gaining
the power to make themselves and their own world as beautiful as
the visions of the prophet; but the ideal life and the world beautiful
are not for the few only. Everybody should learn how to find that
path that leads from the imperfections of present conditions to
the world of ideal conditions, the world of which we have all so
frequently dreamed.
The problem is what beginners are to do with the beautiful thoughts
and the tempting promises that are being scattered so widely at
the present time. The average mind feels that the idealism of modern
metaphysics has a substantial basis. He feels intuitively that it
is true, and he discerns through the perceptions of his own soul
that all these things that are claimed for applied metaphysics are
possible. He inwardly knows that whatever the idealist declares
can be done will be done, but the problem is how. The demand for
simple methods is one of the greatest demands at the present time,
methods that everyone can learn and that will enable any aspiring
soul to begin at once to realize his ideals.
Such methods, however, are easily formulated, and will be found
in abundance on the following pages. These methods are based upon
eternal laws; they are as simple as the multiplication table and
will produce results with the same unerring precision. Any person
with a reasonable amount of intelligence can apply them, and those
who have an abundance of perseverance can, through these methods,
make real practically all the ideals that they may have at the present
time. Those who are more highly developed will find in these methods
the secret through which their attainments and achievements will
constantly verge on the borderland of the marvelous. In fact, when
the simple law that unites the ideal and the real is understood
and applied, it matters not how lofty our minds and our visions
may be we can make them all come true.
To proceed, the principal obstacle must first be removed; and this
obstacle is the tendency to lose faith whenever we fail to make
real the ideal the very moment we expect to do so. This tendency
is present to some degree in nearly every mind that is working for
greater things, and it postpones the day of realization whenever
it is permitted to exercise its power of retrogression. Many a person
has fallen into chronic despondency after having had a glimpse of
the ideal, because it was so very beautiful, so very desirable,
in fact, the only one thing that could satisfy, and yet seemingly
so far away and so impossible to reach.
But here is a place where we must exercise extraordinary faith.
We must never recognize the gulf that seems to exist between our
present state and the state we desire to reach. On the other hand,
we must continue in the conviction that the gulf is only seeming
and that we positively shall reach the ideal that appears in the
splendors of what seems to be a distant future, although what actually
is very near at hand.
Those who have more faith and more determination do not, as a rule,
fall down when they meet this seeming gulf; they inwardly know that
every ideal will some time be realized. It could not be otherwise,
because what we see in the distance is invariably something that
lies in the pathway of our own eternal progress, and if we continue
to move forward we must inevitably reach it. But even to these the
ideal does at times appear to be very far away, and the time of
waiting seems very long.
They are frequently on the verge of giving up and fears arise at
intervals that many unpleasant experiences may, after all, be met
before the great day of realization is gained; however, we cannot
afford to entertain such fears for a moment nor to think that anything
unpleasant can transpire during the period of transition; that is,
the passing from the imperfections of present conditions to the
joys and delights of an ideal life. We must remember that fear and
despondency invariably retard our progress, no matter what our object
in view may be, and that discouragement is very liable to cause
a break in the engine that is to take our train to the fair city
we so long have desired to reach.
The time of waiting may seem long during such moments as come when
the mind is down, but so long as the mind is on the heights the
waiting time disappears, and the pleasure of pursuit comes to take
its place. In this connection we should remember that the more frequently
we permit the mind to fall down into fears and doubts the longer
we shall have to wait for the realization of the ideal; and the
more we live in the upper story of life the sooner we shall reach
the goal in view. There are many who give up temporarily all efforts
toward reaching their ideals, thinking it is impossible and that
nothing is gained by trying, but such minds should realize that
they are simply making their future progress more difficult by retarding
their present progress. Such minds should realize the great fact
that every ideal can be made real, because nothing is impossible.
To reach any desired goal the doing of certain things is necessary,
but if those things are not done now they will have to be done later;
besides, when we give up in the present we always make the obstacles
in our way much greater than they were before. Those things that
are necessary to promote our progress become more difficult to do
the longer we remain in what may be termed the "giving up"
attitude, and the reason why is found in the fact that the mind
that gives up becomes smaller and smaller; it loses ability, capacity
and power and becomes less and less competent to cope with the problems
at hand. Whenever we give up we invariably fall down into a smaller
mental state.
When we cease to move forwards we begin to move backwards. We retard
progression only when we cease to promote progression. On the other
hand, so long as we continue to pursue the ideal we ascend into
larger and larger mental states, and thus increase our power to
make real the ideals that are before us. The belief that it is impossible
to make real the ideal has no foundation whatever in truth. It is
simply an illusion produced by fear and has no place in the exact
science of life. When you discern an ideal you discover something
that lies in your own onward path. Move forward and you simply cannot
fail to reach it; but when you are to reach the coveted goal depends
upon how rapidly you are moving now. Knowing this, and knowing that
fear, doubt, discouragement and indifference invariably retard this
forward movement, we shall find it most profitable to remove those
mental states absolutely.
The true attitude is the attitude of positive conviction; that is,
to live in the strong conviction that whatever we see before us
in the ideal will positively be realized, sooner or later, if we
only move forward, and we can make it sooner if we will move forward
steadily, surely and rapidly during every moment of the great eternal
now. To move forward steadily during the great eternal now is to
realize now as much of the ideal as we care to appropriate now;
no waiting therefore is necessary. To begin to move forward is to
begin to make real the ideal, and we will realize in the now as
much of the ideal as is necessary to make the now full and complete.
To move forward steadily during the great eternal now is to eternally
become more than you are; and to become more than you are is to
make yourself more and more like your ideal; and here is the great
secret, because the principle is that you will realize your ideal
when you become exactly like your ideal, and that you will realize
as much of your ideal now as you develop in yourself now. The majority,
however, feel that they can never become as perfect as their ideal;
others, however, think that they can, and that they will sometime,
but that it will require ages, and they dwell constantly upon the
unpleasant belief that they may in the meantime have to pass through
years and years of ordinary and undesirable experience; but they
are mistaken, and besides, are retarding their own progress every
moment by entertaining such thoughts.
If all the time and all the energy that is wasted in longing and
longing, yearning and yearning were employed in scientific, practical
self development, the average person would in a short time become
as perfect as his ideal. He would thus realize his ideal, because
we attract from the without what corresponds exactly to what is
active in our own within. When we attain the ideal and the beautiful
in our own natures, we shall meet the ideal and the beautiful wherever
we may go in the world, and we will find the same things in the
real that we dreamed of in the ideal.
When we see an ideal we usually begin to long for it and hope that
something remarkable may happen so as to bring it into our possession,
and we thus continue to long and yearn and wait with periods of
despondency intervening. We simply use up time and energy to no
avail. When we see an ideal the proper course to pursue is to begin
at once to develop that ideal in our own nature. We should never
stop to wait and see whether it is coming true or not, and we should
never stop to figure how much time it may require to reach our goal.
The secret is, begin now to be like your ideals, and at the proper
time that ideal will be made real.
The very moment you begin to rebuild yourself in the exact likeness
of your ideal you will begin to realize your ideal, because we invariably
gain possession of that of which we become conscious; and to begin
to develop the ideal in ourselves is to begin to become conscious
of the ideal. To give thought to time is to stop and measure time
in consciousness, and every stop in consciousness means retarded
progress. Real progress is eternal; it is a forward movement that
is continuous now, and in the realization of such a progress no
thought is ever given to time.
To live in the life of eternal progress is to gain ground every
moment. It means the perpetual increase of everything that has value,
greatness and worth, and the mind that lives in such a life cannot
possibly be discouraged or dissatisfied. Such a mind will not only
live in the perpetual increase of everything that heart can wish
for, but will also realize perpetually the greatest joy of all joys,
the joy of going on. The discouraged mind is the mind that lives
in the emptiness of life, but there can be no emptiness in that
life that lives in the perpetual increase of all that is good and
beautiful and ideal.
The only time that seems long is the time that is not well employed
in continuous attainment, and the only waiting time, that seems
the hardest time of all, is the time that is not fully consecrated
to the highest purpose you have in view. When we understand that
we all may have different ideals we will find that we have an undeveloped
correspondent in ourselves to every ideal that we may discern, and
if we proceed to develop these corresponding parts there will be
some ideals realized every day. Today we may succeed in making real
an ideal that we first discovered a year ago.
Tomorrow we may reach a goal towards which we have been moving for
years, and in a few days we may realize ideals that we have had
in view during periods of time varying from a few weeks to several
years; and if we are applying the principles that underlie the process
of making real the ideal, we may at any time realize ideals of which
we have dreamed for a life time. Consequently, when we approach
this subject properly we shall daily come into the possession of
something that is our own. All the beautiful things of which we
have dreamed will be coming into our world and there will be new
arrivals every day.
This is the life of the real idealist, and we cannot picture a life
that is more complete and more satisfying; but it is not only complete
in the present. It is constantly growing larger and more desirable,
thus giving us daily a higher degree of satisfaction and joy. When
we discern an ideal that ideal has come within the circle of our
own capacity for development, and the power to develop that ideal
in ourselves is therefore at hand. The mind never discerns those
ideals that are beyond the possibility of present development. Thus
we realize that when an ideal is discerned it is proof positive
that we have the power to make it real now.
Those who have not found their ideals in any shape or form whatever
have simply neglected to make their own ideal nature strong, positive
and pronounced. To live in negative idealism is to continue to dream
on without seeing a single dream come true; but when the ideals
we discern in our own natures become strong, positive working forces
our dreams will soon come true; our ideals will be realized one
after the other until life becomes what it is intended to be, a
perpetual ascension into all that is rich, beautiful and sublime.
Whether we speak of environments, attainments, achievements, possessions,
circumstances, opportunities, friends, companions or the scores
of things that belong in our world, the law is the same. We receive
an ideal only when we become just like that ideal. If we seek better
friends, we shall surely find them and retain them, if we develop
higher and higher degrees of friendship. If we wish to associate
with refined people, we must become more refined in action, thought
and speech.
If we wish to reach our ideals in the world of achievement, we must
develop greater ability, capacity and power. If we desire better
environments, we must not only learn to appreciate the beautiful,
but must also develop the power to produce those things that have
true quality, high worth and real superiority. The great secret
is to become more useful in the world; that is, useful in the largest
and highest sense of that term. He who gives his best to the world
will receive the best in return.
The world needs able men and women; people who can do things that
are thoroughly worthwhile; people who can think great thoughts and
transform such thoughts into great deeds; and to secure such men
and women the world will give anything that it may hold in its possession.
To make real the ideal, proceed to develop greatness, superiority
and high worth in yourself. Train the mind to dwell constantly upon
the borderland of the highest ideals that you can possibly picture;
but do not simply yearn for what you can see, and do not covet what
has not yet become your own. Proceed to remake yourself into the
likeness of that ideal and it will become your own. To proceed with
this great development, the whole of life must be changed to conform
with the exact science of life; that is, that science that is based
upon the physical and the metaphysical united as the one expression
of all that is great and sublime in the soul.
The new way of thinking about things, viewing things and doing things
must be adopted in full, and this new way is based upon the principle
that the ideal actually is real, and therefore should be approached
not as a future possibility, but as a present actuality. Think of
the ideal as if it were real and you will find it to be real. Meet
all things as if they contained the ideal, and you will find that
all things will present their ideals to you, not simply as mere
pictures, but as realities. View the whole of life from the heights
of existence; then you will see things as they are and deal with
things accordingly; you will see that side of the whole of existence
that may be termed the better side, and in consequence, you will
grow into the likeness of that better side. When you grow into the
likeness of the better side of all things, you will attract the
better side of all things, and the ideal in everything in the world
will be made real in your world.
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