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Title: Carlos Castaneda - The Wheel of Time: Quotations from "The Fire from Within"  •  Size: 7471  •  Last Modified: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 11:14:07 GMT
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"The Wheel of Time: The Shamans of Ancient Mexico, Their Thoughts about Life, Death and the Universe" - ©1998 by Carlos Castaneda

Quotations from "The Fire from Within"


There is no completeness without sadness and longing, for without them there is no sobriety, no kindness. Wisdom without kindness and knowledge without sobriety are useless.



Self-importance is man's greatest enemy. What weakens him is feeling offended by the deeds and misdeeds of his fellow men. Self-importance requires that one spend most of one's life offended by something or someone.



In order to follow the path of knowledge, one has to be very imaginative. On the path of knowledge, nothing is as clear as we'd like it to be.



If seers can hold their own in facing petty tyrants, they can certainly face the unknown with impunity, and then they can even withstand the presence of the unknowable.



What seems natural is to think that a warrior who can hold his own in the face of the unknown can certainly face petty tyrants with impunity. But that's not necessarily so. What destroyed the superb warriors of ancient times was to rely on that assumption.

Nothing can temper the spirit of a warrior as much as the challenge of dealing with impossible people in positions of power. Only under those conditions can warriors acquire the sobriety and serenity to withstand the pressure of the unknowable.



The unknown is something that is veiled from man, shrouded perhaps by a terrifying context, but which, nonetheless, is within man's reach. The unknown becomes the known at a given time. The unknowable, on the other hand, is the indescribable; the unthinkable; the unrealizable. It is something that will never be known to us, and yet it is there; dazzling and at the same time horrifying in its vastness.



We perceive. This is a hard fact. But what we perceive is not a fact of the same kind because we learn what to perceive.



Warriors say that we think there is a world of objects out there only because of our awareness. But what's really out there are the Eagle's emanations; fluid, forever in motion, and yet unchanged; eternal.



The deepest flaw of unseasoned warriors is that they are willing to forget the wonder of what they see. They become overwhelmed by the fact that they see and believe that it's their genius that counts. A seasoned warrior must be a paragon of discipline in order to override the nearly invincible laxness of our human condition. More important than seeing itself is what warriors do with what they see.



One of the greatest forces in the lives of warriors is fear, because it spurs them to learn.



For a seer, the truth is that all living beings are struggling to die. What stops death is awareness.



The unknown is forever present, but it is outside the possibility of our normal awareness. The unknown is the superfluous part of the average man. And it is superfluous because the average man doesn't have enough free energy to grasp it.



The greatest flaw of human beings is to remain glued to the inventory of reason. Reason doesn't deal with man as energy. Reason deals with instruments that create energy, but it has never seriously occurred to reason that we are better than instruments: We are organisms that create energy. We are bubbles of energy.



Warriors who deliberately attain total awareness are a sight to behold. That is the moment when they burn from within. The fire from within consumes them. In full awareness they fuse themselves to the emanations of the Eagle at large, and glide into eternity.



Once inner silence is attained, everything is possible. The way to stop talking to ourselves is to use exactly the same method used to teach us to talk to ourselves. We were taught compulsively and unwaveringly, and this is the way we must stop it: compulsively and unwaveringly.



Impeccability begins with a single act that has to be deliberate, precise, and sustained. If that act is repeated long enough, one acquires a sense of unbending intent which can be applied to anything else. If that is accomplished the road is clear. One thing will lead to another until the warrior realizes his full potential.



The mystery of awareness is darkness. Human beings reek of that mystery; of things which are inexplicable. To regard ourselves in any other terms is madness. So a warrior doesn't demean the mystery of man by trying to rationalize it.



Realizations are of two kinds. One is just pep talk; great outbursts of emotion and nothing more. The other is the product of a shift of the assemblage point: It is not coupled with an emotional outburst, but with action. The emotional realizations come years later after warriors have solidified, by usage, the new position of their assemblage points.



The worst that could happen to us is that we have to die, and since that is already our unalterable fate, we are free. Those who have lost everything no longer have anything to fear.



Warriors don't venture into the unknown out of greed. Greed works only in the world of ordinary affairs. To venture into the terrifying loneliness of the unknown, one must have something other than greed: love. One needs love for life; for intrigue; for mystery. One needs unquenchable curiosity and guts galore.



A warrior thinks only of the mysteries of awareness: Mystery is all that matters. We are living beings. We have to die and relinquish our awareness. But if we could change just a tinge of that, what mysteries must await us? What mysteries!