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Mental
Education
Of
all lines of education, mental education is the most widely
known and practised, yet except in a few rare cases there are
gaps which make it something very incomplete and in the end
quite insufficient.
Generally
speaking, schooling is considered to be all the mental education
that is necessary. And when a child has been made to undergo,
for a number of years, a methodical training which is more like
cramming than true schooling, it is considered that whatever
is necessary for his mental development has been done. Nothing
of the kind. Even conceding that the training is given with
due measure and discrimination and does not permanently damage
the brain, it cannot impart to the human mind the faculties
it needs to become a good and useful instrument. The schooling
that is usually given can, at the most, serve as a system of
gymnastics to increase the suppleness of the brain. From this
standpoint, each branch of human learning represents a special
kind of mental gymnastics, and the verbal formulations given
to these various branches each constitute a special and well-defined
language.
A
true mental education, which will prepare man for a higher life,
has five principal phases. Normally these phases follow one
after another, but in exceptional individuals they may alternate
or even proceed simultaneously. These five phases, in brief,
are:
(1)
Development of the power of concentration, the capacity of attention.
(2)
Development of the capacities of expansion, widening, complexity
and richness.
(3)
Organisation of one’s ideas around a central idea, a higher
ideal or a supremely luminous idea that will serve as a guide
in life.
(4)
Thought-control, rejection of undesirable thoughts, to become
able to think only what one wants and when one wants.
(5)
Development of mental silence, perfect calm and a more and more
total receptivity to inspirations coming from the higher regions
of the being.
It
is not possible to give here all the details concerning the
methods to be employed in the application of these five phases
of education to different individuals. Still, a few explanations
on points of detail can be given.
Undeniably,
what most impedes mental progress in children is the constant
dispersion of their thoughts. Their thoughts flutter hither
and thither like butterflies and they have to make a great effort
to fix them. Yet this capacity is latent in them, for when you
succeed in arousing their interest, they are capable of a good
deal of attention. By his ingenuity, therefore, the educator
will gradually help the child to become capable of a sustained
effort of attention and a faculty of more and more complete
absorption in the work in hand. All methods that can develop
this faculty of attention from games to rewards are good and
can all be utilised according to the need and the circumstances.
But it is the psychological action that is most important and
the sovereign method is to arouse in the child an interest in
what you want to teach him, a liking for work, a will to progress.
To love to learn is the most precious gift that one can give
to a child: to love to learn always and everywhere, so that
all circumstances, all happenings in life may be constantly
renewed opportunities for learning more and always more.
For
that, to attention and concentration should be added observation,
precise recording and faithfulness of memory. This faculty of
observation can be developed by varied and spontaneous exercises,
making use of every opportunity that presents itself to keep
the child’s thought wakeful, alert and prompt. The growth of
the understanding should be stressed much more than that of
memory. One knows well only what one has understood. Things
learnt by heart, mechanically, fade away little by little and
finally disappear; what is understood is never forgotten. Moreover,
you must never refuse to explain to a child the how and the
why of things. If you cannot do it yourself, you must direct
the child to those who are qualified to answer or point out
to him some books that deal with the question. In this way you
will progressively awaken in the child the taste for true study
and the habit of making a persistent effort to know.
This
will bring us quite naturally to the second phase of development
in which the mind should be widened and enriched.
You
will gradually show the child that everything can become an
interesting subject for study if it is approached in the right
way. The life of every day, of every moment, is the best school
of all, varied, complex, full of unexpected experiences, problems
to be solved, clear and striking examples and obvious consequences.
It is so easy to arouse healthy curiosity in children, if you
answer with intelligence and clarity the numerous questions
they ask. An interesting reply to one readily brings others
in its train and so the attentive child learns without effort
much more than he usually does in the classroom. By a choice
made with care and insight, you should also teach him to enjoy
good reading-matter which is both instructive and attractive.
Do not be afraid of anything that awakens and pleases his imagination;
imagination develops the creative mental faculty and through
it study becomes living and the mind develops in joy.
In
order to increase the suppleness and comprehensiveness of his
mind, one should see not only that he studies many varied topics,
but above all that a single subject is approached in various
ways, so that the child understands in a practical manner that
there are many ways of facing the same intellectual problem,
of considering it and solving it. This will remove all rigidity
from his brain and at the same time it will make his thinking
richer and more supple and prepare it for a more complex and
comprehensive synthesis. In this way also the child will be
imbued with the sense of the extreme relativity of mental learning
and, little by little, an aspiration for a truer source of knowledge
will awaken in him.
Indeed,
as the child grows older and progresses in his studies, his
mind too ripens and becomes more and more capable of forming
general ideas, and with them almost always comes a need for
certitude, for a knowledge that is stable enough to form the
basis of a mental construction which will permit all the diverse
and scattered and often contradictory ideas accumulated in his
brain to be organised and put in order. This ordering is indeed
very necessary if one is to avoid chaos in one’s thoughts. All
contradictions can be transformed into complements, but for
that one must discover the higher idea that will have the power
to bring them harmoniously together. It is always good to consider
every problem from all possible standpoints so as to avoid partiality
and exclusiveness; but if the thought is to be active and creative,
it must, in every case, be the natural and logical synthesis
of all the points of view adopted. And if you want to make the
totality of your thoughts into a dynamic and constructive force,
you must also take great care as to the choice of the central
idea of your mental synthesis; for upon that will depend the
value of this synthesis. The higher and larger the central idea
and the more universal it is, rising above time and space, the
more numerous and the more complex will be the ideas, notions
and thoughts which it will be able to organise and harmonise.
It
goes without saying that this work of organisation cannot be
done once and for all. The mind, if it is to keep its vigour
and youth, must progress constantly, revise its notions in the
light of new knowledge, enlarge its framework to include fresh
notions and constantly reclassify and reorganise its thoughts,
so that each of them may find its true place in relation to
the others and the whole remains harmonious and orderly.
All
that has just been said concerns the speculative mind, the mind
that learns. But learning is only one aspect of mental activity;
the other, which is at least equally important, is the constructive
faculty, the capacity to form and thus prepare action. This
very important part of mental activity has rarely been subject
of any special study or discipline. Only those who want, for
some reason, to exercise a strict control over their mental
activities think of observing and disciplining
this faculty of formation; and as soon as they try it, they
have to face difficulties so great that they appear almost insurmountable.
And
yet control over this formative activity of the mind is one
of the most important aspects of self-education; one can say
that without it no mental mastery is possible. As far as study
is concerned, all ideas are acceptable and should be included
in the synthesis, whose very function is to become more and
more rich and complex; but where action is concerned, it is
just the opposite. The ideas that are accepted for translation
into action should be strictly controlled and only those that
agree with the general trend of the central idea forming the
basis of the mental synthesis should be permitted to express
themselves in action. This means that every thought entering
the mental consciousness should be set before the central idea;
if it finds a logical place among the thoughts already grouped,
it will be admitted into the synthesis; if not, it will be rejected
so that it can have no influence on the action. This work of
mental purification should be done very regularly in order to
secure a complete control over one’s actions.
For
this purpose, it is good to set apart time every day when one
can quietly go over one’s thoughts and put one’s synthesis in
order. Once the habit is acquired, you can maintain control
over your thoughts even during work and action, allowing only
those which are useful for what you are doing to come to the
surface. Particularly, if you have continued to cultivate the
power of concentration and attention, only the thoughts that
are needed will be allowed to enter the active external consciousness
and they then become all the more dynamic and effective. And
if, in the intensity of concentration, it becomes necessary
not to think at all, all mental vibration can be stilled and
an almost total silence secured. In this silence one can gradually
open to the higher regions of the mind and learn to record the
inspirations that come from there.
But
even before reaching this point, silence in itself is supremely
useful, because in most people who have a somewhat developed
and active mind, the mind is never at rest. During the day,
its activity is kept under a certain control, but at night,
during the sleep of the body, the control of the waking state
is almost completely removed and the mind indulges in activities
which are sometimes excessive and often incoherent. This creates
a great stress which leads to fatigue and the diminution of
the intellectual faculties.
The
fact is that like all the other parts of the human being, the
mind too needs rest and it will not have this rest unless we
know how to provide it. The art of resting one’s mind is something
to be acquired. Changing one’s mental activity is certainly
the way of resting; but the greatest possible rest is silence.
And as far as the mental faculties are concerned a few minutes
passed in the calm of silence are a more effective rest than
hours of sleep.
When
one has learned to silence the mind at will and to concentrate
it in receptive silence, then there will be no problem that
cannot be solved, no mental difficulty whose soultion cannot
be found. When it is agitated, thought becomes confused and
impotent; in an attentive tranquillity, the light can manifest
itself and open up new horizons to man’s capacity.
Mother
Bulletin, November 1951
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