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Glamor - A World Problem - The Causes of Glamor |
SECTION TWO The Causes of Glamor 1. The Racial and Individual Growth of Glamor We shall now employ the word "glamor" to cover all the aspects of those deceptions, illusions, misunderstandings and misinterpretations which confront the aspirant at every step of his way until he achieves unity. I would have you note that word "unity," for it holds the secret of disillusionment, as this process of release from glamor has been occultly called. It will be apparent to you (if you have studied these instructions with care) that the cause of glamor is primarily based upon the sense of duality. If such a duality did not exist, there would be no glamor, and this perception of the dual nature of all manifestation lies at the very root of the trouble or troubles with which humanity is - in time and space - faced. This perception passes through various stages and constitutes the great problem of the conscious entity. This condition is a difficulty in the realm of consciousness itself and is not really inherent in the substance or matter. The dweller in the body perceives wrongly: he interprets incorrectly that which is perceived; he proceeds to identify himself with that which is not himself; he shifts his consciousness into a realm of phenomena which engulfs him, deludes him and imprisons him until such time as he becomes restless and unhappy under the sense that something is wrong. Then he comes finally to the recognition that he is not what he seems to be and that the phenomenal world of appearances is not identical with [95] reality as he had hitherto supposed it to be. From that moment on he comes to the sense of duality, to the recognition of "otherness" and to the perception that his sense of dualism should be ended and that a process of unification and an attempt to achieve at-one-ment should be undertaken. From that moment, the troubles of the evolving man begin to be observed by him and consciously encountered, and he faces a long period of "extrication from glamor and the entering into that world wherein only unity is known." The stages from then on might be enumerated as follows: First: The stage wherein the material world is recognized and valued. Temporarily it is made the goal of all activity and the man, refusing to recognize the difference existing between him and the material and natural world, seeks to identify himself with it and to find satisfaction in purely physical pleasures and pursuits. This stage divides itself into two parts:
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