While leading an adventure in Active Dreaming, I guided a group of brave and ready souls on a journey to a real place in the Imaginal Realm that I call the House of Time. It is the kind of locale that creators, shamans and mystics have always wanted to visit, a place where we may encounter an inner teacher who is the master of any field that compels our best attention and study, and where any book of secrets - even that Book of Life containing our sacred contract - may be accessible. If you would like to go there, you’ll find detailed instructions in my book Dreamgates.
While drumming for the group to provide
fuel and focus for the journey to the Library in the House of Time, I found
myself in contact with intelligences who have guided and inspired my work in
the past. It seemed that Ralph Waldo Emerson, in high collar and frock coat, had joined the
group. I do not say this was the individual spirit of the great sage; I do not
claim the privilege of a personal interview, and I am sure that wherever
Emerson may now be, he has many things to do. I say only that for a few moments
I seemed to be in the presence of a figure who embodied some essence of
Emerson's thought. I was eager to receive insights I could easily retain, while
my consciousness was working on several levels, including that of drumming for
the members of the group and watching over their own adventures.
My Emerson gave me three words: Rectitude. Plenitude. Attitude. The following morning, in the twilight before dawn, as the first pink suffused the gray sky, I tracked these clues through Emerson's essays and letters, and through the pedigrees of the terms themselves.
RECTITUDE
In its origin, rectitude
is the virtue of being straight, or upright, in your conduct and condition. It
derives from the Latin rectus or straight. It has nothing to
do with a narrow moralism. As Emerson wields this word, it is the property and
armor of the brave soul who dares to live by his own lights. In his famous 1838
address to Harvard Divinity School - a speech the faculty tried to suppress but
the senior class insisted upon - Emerson defined "the grand strokes of
rectitude" as "a bold benevolence", and that independence of
mind that enables us to ignore the counsel and caution of our friends when they
seek to hold us back from pursuing our calling, and the readiness to follow
that calling without concern for praise or profit. Those who can do this are
"the Imperial Guard of Virtue" and "the heart and soul of
nature." They "rise refreshed on hearing a threat"; they come to
a crisis "graceful and beloved as a bride"; they can say like
Napoleon at the Massena that they were not themselves until the battle began to
go against them.
PLENITUDE
Plenitude is fullness or
abundance, coming from the Latin plenus, or "full". For
Emerson, plenitude - abundance - is our natural condition, and we miss it only
by failing to live from the fullness and integrity of our own spirit. When we develop
self-trust, we gain "the plenitude of its energy and power to repair
harms," he instructs in his essay on Heroism. "There is no limit to
the Resources of Man," he adds in a letter on that theme. "The one
fact that shines through all this plenitude of powers is...that the world
belongs to the energetic, belongs to the wise."
ATTITUDE
Attitude has an even
more suggestive etymology. It first came into usage to describe the posture an
actor playing a role strikes on the stage. Go further back, and we find it is
kissing cousins with the word "aptitude" and both share a common root
in the Latin aptus which means "fit" or
"suited" - in short, ready something. Our attitudes indeed determine
what experiences we are apt to encounter on our roads of life. "The
healthy attitude of human nature," Emerson instructs us in his essay on
Self-Reliance, is "the nonchalance of boys who are sure of a dinner"
- in other words, the confidence that the universe will support us. In the face
of hardship and challenge, we need to strike that posture of determination that
"by [that] very attitude and...tone of voice, puts a stop to defeat,"
Emerson adds in his letter on Resources.
We are now entering one of the great open
secrets of life. "We are magnets in an iron globe," as Emerson wrote in an essay titled "Resources". "We have keys to all doors....The world is all
gates, all opportunities, strings of tension waiting to be struck."
We choose which doors will open or remain closed. We decide what we will
attract or repel in life according to whether we are straight, and full, and
ready.
Adapted from Active Dreaming: Journeying Beyond Self-Limitation to a Life of Wild Freedom by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library.
Painting: William James Stillman, "The Philosophers' Camp in the Adirondacks" (1858). Emerson is at the center of the scene.
Emerson portrait: Watercolor by Philadelphia artist Nile Livingston
"magnets in an iron globe"... what a quote!This needs pondering!
ReplyDeleteI had a similar experience recently, when after a frazzle-kind of
day in a big city, I saw a quote from Thoreau in the Metro, went home,
made tea, took down a book of his works...felt his presence in the room
and felt quite restored. Don't know how or why these things ,'syncs'
happen..I've stopped asking. Just glad they do. Thanks for confirming...
another 'sync'. Thanksgiving wishes and gratitude.