Discouragement
flies before the thought of God, when we become conscious
of our partnership with Him.
Eight
hundred and sixty men, women and children on the average
in New York City commit suicide every yearmuch more
than two a day. In one year Bellevue Hospital treated two
hundred and thirty-five people who had tried to kill themselves.
In other large cities of the world the suicide toll is even
larger than in New York.
It
is estimated that more than fifteen thousand people commit
suicide each year in the United States. In the entire civilized
world, a million people each yearmore than five hundred
a dayare guilty of self-destruction!
Just
think of the tragedy of it,one suicide every three
minutes somewhere on the earth!
Since
life is so precious to the normal man that even the basest
criminals count the days and the hours before their execution,
dreading the cutting off of life even in a prison cell,
why do so many people take their own lives? Because they
are discouraged.
The
psychological aspect of the suicide has never been properly
studied, but in nine cases out of ten, if not in every case,
discouragement is the cause of self-destruction.
Not
long ago a young musician in New York, in a fit of despondency,
committed suicide. He was so poor that he had been obliged
to pawn his violin. Discouraged at his lack of success and
filled with fear at the possibility of not being able to
redeem his beloved violin, which was a very rare one, he
decided that life under such conditions was not worth living,
and then and there ended it.
These
crises on the mental or physical plane are a part of every
life. How we meet them is the test of our courage, the measure
of our faith in God and our conscious oneness with Him.
In
a description of his sensations under fire a British officer
fighting in northern France in the great war said, Theres
a good deal of rot talked of heroism at present. If it is
all true, there are many millions of heroes in Europe just
now, and I leave that to you. Ive found it harder
to go straight in life than to go under fire.
We
are under fire all our lives, and the real hero
is the one who keeps straight on in spite of discouragements
and disappointments, never losing one jot of heart or courage,
never giving way to despair, trusting always in the Divine
Power that will lead him to his goal.
Many
a talented young artist has given up in despair because
critics discouraged him, told him, perhaps, that he did
not belong to any established school, and that if he did
not follow the conventional rules of art he would not be
recognized. These discouraged souls did not realize that
the one who listens to the voice in his own soul, and who,
trusting to the power within, blazes a new path, is the
one who most certainly attains distinction.
When
Ole Bull first came to this country, musical critics said
he would make no great impression here. They predicted that
his American debut would be a failure because he violated
so many of the laws of musical composition, that a certain
violinist, popular at the time, was head and shoulders above
him and that he would stand no chance in competition with
him. The name of that man who was so technically perfect,
but who lacked Ole Bulls soul, is not known to the
public today, while the name of Ole Bull is enshrined immortally
in the minds of American people in the minds of all
peoples.
Discouragement
is one of the greatest of human enemies. It is an unmitigated
curse. It has done more to dwarf the efforts of the race,
has thwarted more careers, stunted and starved more lives,
ruined more creative power than any other one agent. It
is a disease that is well-nigh universal in some form. Everybody
suffers more or less from it, is the victim of its poison.
It bombards us from within and without.
There
are always plenty of people who will attack you from without,
who will see reasons why you will not succeed in your undertaking,
who will tell you that it is impossible to overcome the
obstacles in your way, and unless you have a sublime faith
in yourself and a resolution which knows no retreat, which
takes no backward steps, you are likely to become discouraged
and then sidetracked.
Discouragement,
however, comes most frequently from within, and causes more
poverty and crime than almost any other one thing. It is
an indirect producer of poverty, because it paralyzes ability
and blights efficiency. A person is in no position to produce
anything when his mind is full of doubt and fear. When suffering
from discouragement ones whole being is negative,
demoralized. Courage, the leader of the mental faculties,
is paralyzed, and the judgment is not sound. No man is level
headed when he is discouraged or blue. He is in no condition
to look squarely at an issue, because his reasoning powers
are dulled and his enthusiasm is dampened. In other words,
there is anarchy in the whole mental kingdom and, until
the order is restored and courage again leads the way, the
faculties will not respond with their best.
This
was recently illustrated by the suicide of a man who feared
he could not raise the thirteen thousand dollars he believed
he needed to save himself from ruin. In settling up his
estate, however, it was found that the man was not in straitened
circumstances and did not really need any such amount to
keep his business going.
Time
and again it has been found that people who lost heart under
fire were just this side of victory over their difficulties
when they threw down their weapons and gave up the battle
in despair. How often has a letter or a telegram with good
news that would have heartened and encouraged a discouraged
one to fight on, come just after the sufferer had ended
it all! How often has a friend bearing relief come just
after the irrevocable deed had been done!
Yet
we continue to read daily in the newspapers of people, young
and old, who lose faith and commit suicide because of failure
in business, loss of property, loss of friends, trouble
in the home, disappointment in lovefor a thousand
and one reasons. But they may nearly all be summed up under
the one head discouragement.
And
what is this Moloch to which so many lives are sacrificed?
It is simply a diseased mind. Discouragement is a mental
disease. It is just as truly a disease as smallpox, typhoid,
scarlet fever, or any other ailment which physicians diagnose
as physical disease. Discouragement is much worse than any
of these because it so often unbalances the sufferer and
drives him to crime, or to drink and consequent failure
and misery.
A
letter just received from a young man who is undergoing
a term of imprisonment for robbery shows how easily discouragement
drives some minds off the right path.
When
we make our slips, our bad breaks and unfortunate ventures,
our bad decisions, he writes, we are in a more
or less discouraged, despondent and unbalanced state, and
are willing to do almost anything to get rid of our fears
and anxieties for the moment. When our minds are negative
we are always cowards.
This
young man had been out of work for a long time, and when
a shiftless station agent with whom he was acquainted loaned
him his keys, he stole a book of Wells Fargo Express money
orders from the station and succeeded in passing some of
them before he was arrested. He says that the awful price
he has had to pay for his slip has taught him that it is
infinitely easier to do right than wrong, and that when
he leaves prison he is determined to do his best to redeem
his past.
Another
young man who was on the verge of discouragement tells how
he was turned right about face by the appearance and the
story of one who had fallen a victim to the discouragement
disease.
This
young man who was in business in New York had had such a
severe setback when the Great War broke out that he was
just ready to give up the struggle. Quite disheartened he
sat down one day on a bench in Madison Square to decide
just how he would wind up the business in which he had practically
failed and also to decide what he would do next.
While
sitting there thinking the matter over a ragged, dejected
tramp came along and sat down beside him. The man was evidently
a victim of drink and all sorts of dissipation, and looked
as though he was near a complete collapse.
The
young man, noticing his companions wretched appearance,
asked him how he happened to be in such a predicament. The
tramp, whose quick intelligence saw at once that there was
something very serious on his questioners mind, instead
of replying to his question asked him in turn what his trouble
was.
The
young man frankly confessed that his business was ruined,
and that he didnt know what he was going to do. Then
the tramp looking him straight in the eye said: My
friend, do you realize how rich you are compared with me?
You
have youth, health, and strength. Your vitality has not
been sapped by dissipation. You have everything to live
for, and as you value your life, dont give way to
discouragement. That was what ruined me. I am a well-educated
man, and was once a prosperous one. But years ago, after
a business failure, in such a crisis as you are now facing,
I lost my pluck and thought whiskey would brace me up, temporarily,
until I could get on my feet again. It did. I had never
drank before, and at first it seemed to me that I had found
a very valuable aid, something which would give me courage,
strength, initiative, something which would help me to dare
to take chances, which I had previously shrunk from. For
a time whiskey seemed to me to be the elixir of life.
It
braced up all my faculties and, apparently, doubled my brain
power. But I had to keep increasing the quantity I took
to get the desired effects, and then all at once I found
my will power was weakening, and the courage which whiskey
had temporarily stimulated gradually lessened until I had
less than before. Then I began to see what whiskey was really
doing and resolved many times to quit it. But the awful
craving, the cruel thirst for drink, together with my increasing
despondency and weakened will power, got the better of me
and I drank again and again until I could not quit. And
now, look at me! I am a wreck, without hope, without a future!
But
you have most of your life before you and really have nothing
to be discouraged about. You have done nothing dishonest
or disgraceful. The only disgrace is in quitting after failure.
And there is no failure that can not be retrieved. Men who
have done great things, made stepping stones of their failures.
The disgrace is not in falling, but in not rising every
time you fall.
Brace
up, and remember that, Not failure, but low aim is
crime.
The
young man was deeply impressed by the story of his unfortunate
companion. The evidences of superior intelligence and education
still manifest in the poor human wreck appalled him, and
he said to himself, If this unhappy wretch can still
look at life in that way, can see its great possibilities,
there is certainly something left for me. And after
doing what he could to help the man who had tried to help
him, he went out of Madison Square a new man, with new resolution
in his face, a new courage and determination in his heart.
He
is now a prosperous man, and he says, I attribute
a large part of my success to the stimulus imparted at a
critical moment by that unfortunate fellow who had given
way to discouragement and sacrificed everything that life
held dear to the thing which had enslaved him.
Victims
of discouragement little realize the tremendous damage they
are doing to themselves when they allow this fatal enemy
of their happiness, and their efficiency, to get lodgment
in their mind. Nobody does good work when discouraged. There
is no spontaneity in it, no resourcefulness, no inventiveness,
no originality, and no enthusiasm. It is mechanical, life-less.
The
moment you yield to discouragement all your mental faculties
become depressed. You lose power. Your initiative is paralyzed,
your executive ability strangled. You are in no condition
to do anything effectively. Your whole mentality is placed
at a tremendous disadvantage, and until this enemy is driven
out of your mind, neutralized by the affirmation and the
contemplation of its oppositesof courage, cheer, hope,
and a vigorous expectation of splendid things to comeyou
are in no condition to do good work.
Every
suggestion of discouragement, of fear of failure, is a destructive
force, and in the degree that we allow ourselves to be influenced
by it will it tear down and retard our life processes, our
life work. It will darken the mind and cause one to make
fatally wrong decisions, to take steps which may ruin ones
happiness, ones whole life.
Many
divorces are the result of unfortunate decisions to marry
when girls were discouraged, when they could not see any
other way out of their difficulties. I have known of many
girls, after some great sorrow had come to them, marrying
men whom they could never have been induced to marry in
happier days. They had lost a mother, or a father, or some
calamity had overtaken the family, and the girls consented
to marry men they did not love in order to relieve the suffering
of those dear to them, or because there seemed to be no
other resource for themselves in a difficult situation.
They were willing to do anything to get rid of the thing
that was perplexing and troubling them at the time. Like
sufferers from sea sickness they felt their troubles never
would pass away.
It
is characteristic of seasickness that the victim cannot
see any end to his misery. Try as he will to imagine himself
well in so many days or hours, he cannot do it. This hopelessness
is in some degree characteristic of sick people generally.
They cannot seem to picture themselves as strong and well
again. When suffering extreme pain of any sort, such as
a severe toothache, for instance, it is difficult to believe
that it will ever cease.
Still
more difficult is it to try to picture an end to mental
suffering. When trials and troubles come to us, when overwhelmed
with sorrow, when death comes into our home and snatches
away some dear one, it is very difficult to see through
the storm, to pierce the black clouds and see the healing
sun behind them. Struggling with the sorrow of that great
loss in our life, it doesnt seem as though we could
ever be happy again. When so suffering we wonder in a sort
of dumb resentment how other people can possibly be laughing,
having a good time, going to theaters, dances, enjoying
life as usual. It seems cruel, almost, for others to enjoy
when we feel as though we could never even smile again.
But
we know that time heals the deepest sorrows, that physical
and mental ills pass away, and that the brave soul is the
one that adapts itself to the storms and sunshine of life.
Just
as on a tropical summer day when the sun is suddenly blotted
out of the heavens and the whole sky is so blackened by
a sudden storm that we are obliged to light our homes and
offices, and presently the clouds pass as quickly as they
came and the sun blazes forth in all its glory just as though
nothing had happened, so there come times in our lives when
everything appears black and threatening, and then, suddenly,
just as in nature, all becomes serene again.
The
great thing for us to keep in mind when a life storm breaks
is that, no matter how violent, it is only temporary and
that behind the clouds the sun is always shining.
The
new philosophy helps us to conquer discouragement by putting
the emphasis on the right things, the things that are worthwhile.
This is why we generally do not go to pieces when we happen
to fail in out vocation. We have learned that material things
are not the first essentials. We know that the great emphasis
should be placed upon the life, the reality of man, which
is divine. We know that a person can be a tremendous success
although he has not a dollar in the world, though he has
no home, no abiding place, no money, and dies in the poorhouse.
In other words, the new philosophy teaches that real success
does not consist in accumulating mere things.
It
is a matter of personality and character. The accumulation
of money is a side issue; the making of a living is a mere
incidental to making a life. Time and again I have known
people to go through what in the old thought would have
been the most humiliating failures, failures which would
probably have wrecked their lives and entirely destroyed
their confidence in themselves. But in the new philosophy
these things do not touch the soul. They are not realities
in the highest sense.
None
of Mr. Rockefellers money touches the real Rockefeller.
The reality of him is spiritual, is mental. It is mind,
it is soul, it is God, and it is this reality of us that
the new philosophy emphasizes.
God
never intended that his children should go to pieces mentally
and physically, be miserable and unhappy, that they should
suffer mortification and chagrin when they have been honest
and have done the best they could do, just because they
have failed in their particular undertakings.
We
were made to hold up our heads, to look the world in the
face without flinching, as princes of the Most High. No
matter what happens to our material possessions, if we have
made good as men, as women, if we have been dead-in-earnest
in delivering to the world the message we were sent here
to deliver, there is no reason why we should feel humiliated
or discouraged about anything.
There
is only one thing that should make a man hang his head and
feel humiliated, discouraged, only one thing that should
make him wince when the world looks him in the face and
that is his own wrong doing, his own sin.
There
is a vast amount of splendid unused success material in
the down and outs, in the people who have lost
their grip upon themselves because they have lost their
courage. Some of them while out of work, suffering from
discouragement, did something which caused them to lose
their self-respect and now discouragement has become a disease
with them. It has become chronic and no one can succeed
with a discouraged mental attitude.
Courage
is the leader in the mental realm, and when that is down
all the other faculties drop in sympathy. Until courage
says the word, neither initiative nor any of the other faculties
will take a step forward. They refuse to work under discouragement.
But when courage leads the way, all the others brace up
and come to the rescue in team work.
What
most people in the great failure army need is to have their
courage restored, renewed. The discouraged have their backs
turned toward the light, so that all the black shadows fall
across their path. They are walking in their own shadows
instead of in the glorious sun of Gods light and love.
Their disease has made them morbid. They need mental treatment,
treatment that will let the light into their souls and show
them what they still can do.
Emerson
says, What I need is somebody who will make me do
what I can. What these discouraged ones need is somebody
who can make them do what they can. They need to be turned
around mentally. They need to be shown that they are not
failures, but that they are mentally ill, sufferers from
chronic discouragement.
There
is one who can do this for you who are discouraged better
than anyone elseyour own higher self.
No
matter how old you may be, or how depressing your present
condition, if you take this other, higher self for your
guide, you can recover your footing. And when you once get
a glimpse of your real self, your real possibilities and
assets, when you once get a glimpse of your divinity, and
realize that you are a god in the making, that you are intended
to be a glorious success instead of a miserable failure,
you will jump back a quarter of a century or more and start
life anew. Your courage will be restored and you will see
life in a new light. You will see yourself as you never
saw yourself before, you will get hold of yourself and your
mental and physical resources as you never did before, you
will make tremendous leaps forward. You will have a new
motive for redeeming your past, you will have a new outlook
on life, new hope; in other words, you will be a new creature.
You will put off the old man, and never again will be content
to grovel, never again be content with your second best.
Then only your highest and best will satisfy you, and you
will strive to make your highest moments permanent. The
very consciousness of having lost so many years will be
an additional prod to your endeavor.
You
can begin now to make good. Lift up your head and face toward
the light. Quit fretting and complaining of your ill luck
and be the poised, harmonious soul, the brave, successful,
happy being the Creator planned. Cure yourself of your disease
by conquering your mental enemies. You can drive out fear,
worry, the blues and all discouragement, all
the enemies of your success and happiness, by claiming your
inheritance and asserting your kinship with God. Say to
yourself:
The
truth of my being, the reality of me, is God. Why then should
I be discouraged about anything? The Creator never intended
me to express pessimism, doubt, discouragement or despondency,
and I will have nothing more to do with them. I was intended
to express joy and success, not gloom and failure. I am
victory organized. I was planned to win out in life, not
to be defeated. I was born for happiness, not for misery,
for peace and serenity, not for perpetual anxiety and discouragement.
There is something inside of me which tells me that I am
bigger than circumstances, that nothing but my own consent
can keep me in poverty and wretchedness, that there is no
destiny which can keep me down, for I am my own destiny.
I
am a son of God, and I was never made to cower, to slink,
to be discouraged, afraid of anything. I am one with my
Father, and co-heir with Christ of all that He has. I do
not fear want or failure. Fear is not an attribute of divinity,
and has no place in my life. I am brave, courageous, a conqueror,
and not a slave of circumstances. I am free and not bond.
I will not allow my efficiency to be strangled, my hopes
for the future blighted, my life to be spoiled by any form
of discouragement or cowardice. I am courage, strength,
confidence, masterfulness. Discouragement has no power over
me, because it is not a reality. It is a mere bogey of the
mind, a ghost of the imagination. This discouraged, yellow
streak in my nature is really a reflection upon my Creator,
an indication that I lack confidence in Him, that I am not
sure that He can protect me. It is an intimation that I
believe there is a greater power than His and that an evil
one.
No
matter how many troubles or difficulties threaten, it is
my business to trust, and not to fear, and from now on I
shall do so. I shall hold a poised, serene mind, and shall
lie down at night with confidence and assurance that my
life, my welfare and my destiny are all in the hands of
Him who controls everything and who doeth all things well.
Remember
that whatever you dread, fear, you are attracting, because
the mind always relates with whatever dominates the thought.
That which we think most about we tend to get, and it is
the easiest thing in the world to kill the possibility of
realizing our ambitions and drawing to us the thing we fear
by holding it in mind, by allowing doubt thoughts, anxious,
discouraged thoughts to get possession of us and strangle
our efficiency.
When
in danger of giving way to discouragement, you will find
a wonderful help in eliminating everything which stands
between you and your Maker, and to allow free access to
the flow of divine power. When one is thoroughly alive to
the consciousness that he is supported by this divine power,
in so far as he trusts it, and that it will rush to his
assistance in any emergency or trouble, he is neither afraid
nor discouraged.
All
our discouragement and anxieties come from a feeling of
separateness from our Creator and the consequent consciousness
of weakness, of not being sufficiently protected, the feeling
that we are standing alone. One who lives in conscious union
with his Maker rises above disappointments and discouragements,
and develops a hopeful, optimistic philosophy. Such a one
sees in all his experiences, no matter how trying, growth
and enlargement. He sees in the overcoming of lifes
problems an opportunity to become a full, complete man.
He rises above circumstances, while those who do not see
any saving, stimulating influences in their trials and disappointments
are simply crushed by them.
What
a superb sight is a soul who has ridden triumphantly through
the storms of life, who has developed a beautiful, cheerful
philosophy, who instead of being crushed by his trials and
hardships has built them into a tower of hope and strength!
Compare
such a man, who bears his burdens uncomplainingly, who laughs
at difficulties and keeps pushing ahead as best he can,
trying to make each day a real victory in his life, performing
as nearly as possible a human beings ideal duty, to
the one who curses his fate, rails at his ill luck, and
grumbles at the burdens which are crushing him!
When
things have gone wrong with you; when you are ready to give
way to discouragement, think of these two pictures, and
turn about face and vigorously assert your manhood or your
womanhood. Declare your power to conquer your difficulty,
whatever it may be. Say to yourself:
Now
it is right up to me to make good. I cant give way
to discouragement, show the white feather, and yet keep
my self-respect. I am able to overcome this thing; it has
no power to keep me down. No matter whether I can see the
way out or not I shall trust in God, keep going, and forge
ahead. No matter what opposes, I shall keep the rudder of
my ship headed toward the port.
I
will quit this everlasting self-depreciation, for it is
a crime against my Maker as well as myself, and I will believe
that what the Creator has made and pronounced good is so.
I am done with this putting myself on a bargain counter.
I am no longer going about the earth making the impression
that I have a skim-milk opinion of myself. No more of the
poorhouse attitude for me. There are better things waiting
for me than that. I am a prince, and I have inherited princely
things. I have a princely inheritance.
I
know that every time I say I cant do this,
or I cant do that, I cant
afford this, or I cant afford that,
I undermine my power. Hereafter I am going to deal in positives,
in affirmations of powerI can, I
will, I am able. Henceforth I will have
nothing to do with negatives that tear down, destroy.
If
I am part of Reality; if I have existed millions of years,
and will continue to exist for untold ages to come; if my
existence is from everlasting to everlasting, why should
I be anxious, alarmed? Why should I be perturbed about temporary
happenings, the mere accidents of everyday life? They have
no power over me. I am a part of the divine Entity. My being
is beyond the possibility of destruction or change. There
is something in me that is absolutely indestructible, and
I shall not get into a flurry of uneasiness. become discouraged
by what I can really control. I know I am anchored eternally.
Therefore, I will allow nothing to trouble or disturb me.
Henceforth nothing will. I stand firm in this resolve.
Multitudes
of people find great help and comfort in repeating such
Bible promises as these: He that dwelleth in the secret
place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the
Almighty. He shall cover thee with his feathers,
and under his wings shalt thou trust; his truth shall be
thy shield and buckler. There shall no evil
befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling.
What
a solvent for discouragement and the blues,
what a healing for all heart hurts are found in these wonderful
promises!
The
habit of driving out of our consciousness every suggestion
of failure, of disappointment, of discouragement or evil
by substituting its opposite is of inestimable value. The
ability to do this, to clarify the mind of everything which
can possibly injure it, is the secret of all success and
happiness.
The
scientific fact that the mind can not contain at the same
moment opposite thoughts or emotions makes us absolute masters
of our fate. To live upward or downward, to be a success
or a failure is simply a matter of choice. It all depends
on the suggestions we assimilate, the kind of thought we
prefer.
We
can allow ourselves to be overwhelmed by discouragement,
or we can rise above it, just as we decide. It is natural
for all of us to think of the wonderful things we would
do if we could only get rid of the things that block our
way and defeat our possible successes. If we did not have
to struggle with disappointments, with heartaches, with
trials and troubles of all sorts, what a triumphant journey
life would be! Yet the real test of your bigness is whether
or not you will fulfill your ambition to the letter, whether
you will carry out your great life plan grandly and superbly
regardless of things that are apparently trying to down
you.
Nothing
will help more to overcome discouragement than the suggestion
of courage or success. The constructive force of the positive
thought will not only drive out the negative thought, but
it will up build and strengthen all the faculties.
Every
human being can increase his courage and multiply his strength
by frequently saying to himself: I am a child of the
King of Kings, and have nothing to fear. If I always do
the best I can in all circumstances, there is no reason
why I should ever be anxious about the results. I shall
not. I am courage, I am success. Nothing can harm me because
I am one with the One, I cannot want, I cannot fail, because
I am in touch with the Infinite Source of all life.