| 5. Through wrong Integration of an Idea. Every
disciple has a life plan, and some chosen field of service. If he has not such a field, he
is not a disciple. It may be the home or the school or a [63] larger field, but it is a
definite place wherein he expresses that which is in him. In his meditation life and
through his contact with his fellow disciples, he touches some idea of importance,
perhaps, to the world. Immediately he seizes upon it and seeks to integrate it into his
life purpose and life plan. It may have for him no definite use, and is not an idea with
which he should be working. The over-activity of his mind is probably responsible for his
so seizing upon this idea. All ideas sensed and contacted need not necessarily be ideas
with which every disciple should work. This the disciple does not always realize. He
therefore seizes upon the idea and attempts to integrate it into his plans, and tries to
work with energies for which he is not temperamentally suited. He imposes an energy
current upon his mental body with which he cannot cope and disaster follows. Many good
disciples demonstrate this over-fertile, over-active mind, and arrive at no good
constructive objectives, or life activity. They seize upon every idea that comes their
way, and use no discrimination of any kind. This is illusion, through acquisitiveness.
- Its cause
is selfish grasping for the little self, even if this is unrealized and the disciple
is glimmered by the idea of his own selfless interests.
- Its cure is
a humble spirit.
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