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LESSON 13
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A meaningless world engenders fear.
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Today's idea is really another form of the preceding one,
except that it is more specific as to the emotion aroused. Actually, a
meaningless world is impossible. Nothing without meaning exists.
However, it does not follow that you will not think you perceive
something that has no meaning. On the contrary, you will be particularly
likely to think you do perceive it. |
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Recognition of meaninglessness arouses intense anxiety in
all the separated ones. It represents a situation in which God and the
ego "challenge" each other as to whose meaning is to be
written in the empty space that meaninglessness provides. The ego rushes
in frantically to establish its own ideas there, fearful that the void
may otherwise be used to demonstrate its own impotence and unreality.
And on this alone it is correct. |
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It is essential, therefore, that you learn to
recognize the meaningless, and accept it without fear. If you are
fearful, it is certain that you will endow the world with attributes
that it does not possess, and crowd it with images that do not exist. To
the ego illusions are safety devices, as they must also be to you who
equate yourself with the ego. |
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The exercises for today, which should be done about three
or four times for not more than a minute or so at most each time, are to
be practiced in a somewhat different way from the preceding ones. With
eyes closed, repeat today's idea to yourself. Then open your eyes, and
look about you slowly, saying: |
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I am looking at a meaningless world. |
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Repeat this statement to yourself as you look about. Then close your
eyes, and conclude with:
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A meaningless world engenders fear because I think I
am in competition with God. |
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You may find it difficult to avoid resistance, in one form
or another, to this concluding statement. Whatever form such resistance
may take, remind yourself that you are really afraid of such a thought
because of the "vengeance" of the "enemy." You are
not expected to believe the statement at this point, and will probably
dismiss it as preposterous. Note carefully, however, any signs of overt
or covert fear which it may arouse. |
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This is our first attempt at stating an explicit cause and
effect relationship of a kind which you are very inexperienced in
recognizing. Do not dwell on the concluding statement, and try not even
to think of it except during the practice periods. That will suffice at
present.
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