posted on Oct, 15 2003 @ 12:21 AM
oh yea if you read this it was by your own choice as i posted it by my own choice...
freewill and freedom to all...
Essence is the truth in man; personality is the false. ...As personality grows, essence manifests itself more and more rarely and more and more feebly
and it very often happens that essence stops in its growth at a very early age and grows no further. It happens very often that the essence of a
grown-up man, even that of a very intellectual and ...highly "educated" man, stops on the level of a child of five or six. This means that
everything we see in this man is in reality "not his own." What is his own in man, that is, his essence, is usually only manifested in his instincts
and in his simplest emotions. There are cases, however, when a man's essence grows in parallel with his personality. Such cases represent very rare
exceptions especially in the circumstances of cultured life. Essence has more chances of development in men who live nearer to nature in difficult
conditions of constant struggle and danger.
Culture creates personality and is at the same time the product and the result of personality. We do not realize that the whole of our life, all we
call civilization, all we call science, philosophy, art, and politics, is created by people's personality, that is, by what is "not their own" in
them
The element that is "not his own" differs from what is man's "own" by the fact that it can be lost, altered, or taken away by artificial
means.
...In Eastern schools ways and means are known ...to separate man's personality from his essence. For this purpose they sometimes use hypnosis... If
personality and essence are separated by one or another means, two beings are found who speak in different voices, have completely different tastes,
aims, and interests, and one of these two beings often proves to be on the level of a small child. ...And it happens that a man full of the most
varied and exalted ideas, full of sympathies and antipathies, love, hatred, attachments, patriotism, habits, tastes, desires, convictions, suddenly
proves quite empty, without thoughts, without feelings, without convictions, without views. Everything that has agitated him before now leaves him
completely indifferent. Sometimes he sees the artificiality and the imaginary character of his usual moods or his high-sounding words, sometimes he
simply forgets them as though they had never existed. Things for which he was ready to sacrifice his life now appear to him ridiculous and meaningless
and unworthy of his attention. All that he can find in himself is a small number of instinctive inclinations and tastes. He is fond of sweets, he
likes warmth, he dislikes cold, he dislikes the thought of work, or on the contrary he likes the idea of physical movement. And that is all.
As a rule a man's essence is either primitive, savage, and childish, or else simply stupid. The development of essence depends on work on oneself.
In order to enable essence to grow up, it is first of all necessary to weaken the constant pressure of personality upon it, because the obstacles to
the growth of essence are contained in personality.
As has been said earlier, in the case of less cultured people, essence is often more highly developed than it is in cultured man. It would seem that
they ought to be nearer to possibility of growth, but in reality it is not so because their personality proves to be insufficiently developed. For
inner growth, for work on oneself, a certain development of personality as well as a certain strength of essence are necessary. ...An insufficiently
developed personality means a lack of... knowledge, a lack of information, a lack of the material upon which work on oneself must be based. Without
some store of knowledge, without a certain amount of material "not his own," a man cannot begin to work on himself, he cannot begin to study
himself, he cannot begin to struggle with his mechanical habits, simply because there will be no reason or motive for undertaking such work.