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THEOSOPHY AND PHYSICAL CULTURE BY JOHN SCHOFIELD




(Theosophy also mentions the importance of living a healthy life, but it is not something that it addressed in its teachings because the Theosophical Masters preferred to focus on the reappearance of occult knowledge; besides people can study the subject of health in the other teachings that had already very well addressed this topic.)



And on this subject the researcher John Schofield wrote the following:

« During my early studies of Theosophy I was impressed, and somewhat puzzled by the lack of any reference to the body and its care and culture.

On my way to Theosophy I had examined "New Thought," and found that most of these cults advocated physical culture and emphasized systematic breathing and other exercises for physical development and health. Some of these also believed that certain bodily postures and movements were necessary for mental and psychic development.

Among the first Theosophists that I became acquainted with were some who almost seemed to ignore the body. One for whom I had great reverence and affection did not seem to care when he got his meals, nor what they consisted of, so long as they did not contain animal food. He was a strict vegetarian. About all the exercise he got was to walk from his office (where he slept) to the courthouse and back, or to the meeting of the Theosophical Society.

My physical health was never robust until I was over twenty years of age, and I had always attributed my gradually increasing strength and endurance to the study and practice of the laws of health.

From the time I was ten years of age I devoted myself to the study of physiology and hygiene, and carefully followed the simpler rules of health— cleanliness, simple diet, using neither alcohol nor tobacco, and using my best judgment in the matter of exercise and rest. The results of this method of life seemed to me quite satisfactory.

I have met some extremists among the new thought people who declare that breathing and other exercises were of no value, but true thought was everything and all-sufficient to keep the body in perfect health.

I did not change my manner of living either for the strong affirmations of the New Thoughters, or the carelessness of Theosophists. I took notice of both, kept on observing, and studying the subject, until at last it was clear to me that the teaching I had followed found confirmation in the lives of my Theosophical friends, as well as in that of my New Thought acquaintances.

I noticed, further, that some Spiritualists and New Thoughters who joined the Theosophical Society were greatly disappointed that there was no instruction in healing and psychic development generally.

Some of them thought Theosophy was inferior in this respect to the cults they had formerly been connected with, and all were puzzled by this, and by the fact that healing by drugs was not condemned but practiced by the leaders of Society.

Among all classes to-day physical culture is popular, and most parents are anxious to have their boys and girls well trained in this respect.

Are they wrong?

Does Theosophy discountenance the care of health and the culture of the physical organs?


Perhaps there are some who have recently begun the study of Theosophy and who are not quite clear on these points, and it may be that what I have to say on this may be helpful to them. While they may not reach the same conclusions, my experience may help them nearer to the reality than I have reached myself.

Theosophy informs us what our bodies are, and what they are for, and a careful study of this teaching should lead us to right ways of living so far as the physical life is concerned.

The real man is entirely out of touch with the physical plane and with molecular consciousness, and in order that it may reach this it must have a body composed of molecules capable of receiving impressions from other molecules and molecular forces. Only in this way could the real man assimilate molecular consciousness. The office of the body, then, is to relate the soul to matter as at present constituted on this earth, through which it may gain experience from molecular states.

The body is built up on countless hosts of the molecules synthesized into cells by units of consciousness which receive their energy and vitality from what the Secret Doctrine calls "fiery lives."

These cells are synthesized into other centers of consciousness that we call organs, such as the heart, stomach, liver, etc., and the more perfect these organs are the more clearly does the soul see, and express its purposes, and learn its lessons.

For example, if the physical organ of sight be imperfect the soul does not see clearly. If the brain, which is the instrument of thinking, feeling, and imagining, be impaired, these functions are not perfectly performed and all life is changed for the soul. It therefore becomes a very important question how we shall keep this physical body in the best possible condition for doing its work.

There is a passage in the Bhagavad Gita, Book VI, 16, that is very interesting. Perhaps some of the older students may say that it has a much deeper meaning, which may be true, but I think it also applies to the physical life:

-       "Union is not for him who eats too much, nor for him who eats not at all: it is not for him who is dreamy, nor for him who is too full of waking life."

Here we have one key to health and the highest development of the body, and our everyday experience will confirm its truth. We see that men suffer from too much air and from too little: from over feeding and under feeding: from excessive sleep and from too little sleep: from too violent exercise and from too little exercise. So we must not only know what our bodies need but also how much.

This does not mean that one rule of life is as good for one man as for another. No. The old proverb, "What is one man's meat is another man's poison," has some truth in it, for each body has its own peculiar conditions of health, and we must know ourselves.

If we suffer from over eating or from eating too little, our first duty is to find out just how much is necessary, and then take care not to go beyond or fall short of that quantity.  If we find that certain kinds of food overtax our digestive power and yet yield little energy, we should in a measure, at least, discard these foods and select others that we can digest with little outlay of vital force and that at the same time impart to the body a great deal of energy.

In other words select a diet that will economize digestive energy and at the same time supply the body with the largest amount of nutriment. This is one of the most important points to be noted in making the body an efficient servant of the soul.

Perhaps there are few of us who realize the importance of the function of respiration, through which the body is supplied with oxygen and freed from one poisonous product — carbon dioxide. A little observation will convince us that the large and active chest, with the straight spine and the erect carriage are unfailing signs of great vitality.

In one way, nature has been generous to us, for of all the functions of the body, breathing is the one most easily developed. If the lungs are small and feeble and the chest contracted the vitality will be low, but a few weeks of breathing exercises wisely directed will make a wonderful difference in the size and activity of the lungs, and also in the general vitality. It is through the breath that we draw from the inexhaustible ocean of Prana the vital force we need.

Sleep and rest are helpers in this, for they seem to open up all parts of the organism so that vitality can flow in and pervade every organ and every cell. Some people seem to think that the more you sleep the more rested you are, but this is not the case. We can have too much sleep, and we can have the wrong kind, too. If we sleep with muscles tensed we do not awake rested but tired, and sometimes exhausted.

As in the matter of food, so it is with sleep, some people require more than others, but if after eight hour's sleep we awake unrefreshed we have not slept well, and we should find out what is the matter. Before we can have really restful sleep we must learn to relax all voluntary muscles, and the involuntary ones, so far that they work without haste and without friction. To know how to sleep is an art, but we may all learn it, and it is our duty to do so.

Exercise is also necessary if we are to keep the body in a healthy, vigorous condition and develop its powers. But here again, wisdom and moderation are necessary. An immense amount of attention is given to physical culture. Some of this time is wasted, and some worse than wasted, for there are few who have an adequate idea of what it really means.

There are some who desire to be strong and seek to develop large muscles, not knowing that size is not always strength, nor that an over-development of the muscular system is destructive of health. What we should do is to train our muscles so that all their movements are made with the least possible outlay of energy. If the movements are made in a jerky way, or if they be awkward and angular we are wasting strength. If we do this in fifty acts a day an amount of vital force is wasted which would if conserved make all the difference between weakness and strength, and sometimes, between sickness and health.

It is worth while to practice the "dead-still" exercises of the physical culturists, and it is also worth an effort to make all movements in curves instead of angles. It is worth while for the sake of the health of the body, and also because this is the secret of endurance, of grace, and precision of movement. Children are generally graceful in their movements and also manifest remarkable endurance, so that parents often express their surprise, as a mother did the other day by saying:

-       "Well! I don't know how that child can stand on his feet for he has been a “perpetual motion” machine all day."

The secret is, that he instinctively uses for each movement as much force as is necessary, but no more. We need to learn this lesson from the child, not only for the sake of our physical health, but also for other reasons. From the beginning we have been told to meditate, and also that meditation is the key to spiritual development. But how can we meditate if we are unable to sit still, but are fidgety and fail to control the muscular system?

Control must begin with the body, and for this physical culture is required. In all this, care is required, for there is great danger of going to excess, and so producing mental and physical overstrain.

This explains in a large measure why athletes die early, and why they are considered bad risks by insurance companies. It is also a well known fact that the development of muscular tissue beyond a certain point will be a source of weakness instead of strength, by depleting the vitality which is the source of all mental and physical power.

The Theosophist knows something of the power of mind over body but, so far as I know, there is no school of healing connected with the Theosophical Society. On the other hand all the teaching seems to be opposed to all the methods of mental and spiritual healing, now so much in vogue. The student of Theosophy who is in touch with modern life will regret that with alarming frequency the leaders of great business interests are collapsing from overstrain.

There is a feverish strife for business and social supremacy, and tens of thousands of men and women are living a life of physical and mental strain that is suicidal. This ceaseless anxiety, worry, and needless hurry, bring a brood of symptoms that are familiar to us in these days under the name of neurasthenia, psychasthenia, and hysteria — pitiable specimens of human wreckage.

Such men and women soon discover the uselessness of drugs, and if not too despondent they turn to Christian Science, or to mental healers of some kind and expect the miracle of a speedy cure.

Have Theosophists no compassion on these, and does Theosophy provide no cure?


It has something to say. The mental faculties are tangled in worry that is the product of indecision and fear. They must be set free by cultivating the positive faculties of hope and cheerfulness. As light drives out darkness, so the cultivation of Love, Faith, Patience, Sympathy, Obedience, will bring in a flood of rest and peace that will banish the darkness of fear, anxiety, indecision, and worry, and the mind will be stilled and purified.

Of course, the patients must be willing to carry over to the next day any work which can not be finished in a reasonable number of hours out of the twenty-four. There must be an alternation of rest and activity; congenial exercises of any kind will be an immense advantage in restoring the equilibrium of the nervous system.

Let us bear in mind that the consciousness of the body is below the plane of self-consciousness, which is the reason we are not conscious of the functions of digestion, of waste and repair and other such things, all of which are done under the supervision of the elementals in our bodies. It is possible for man to transfer his consciousness to these cells and to control them as Indian Yogis do who pierce themselves with knives, the wounds immediately healing.

It is said that Christian Scientists sometimes cure by centering the higher, divine consciousness into the performance of purely physical functions, which are the normal duties of entities far below the human plane. Disease can thus be cured if the will is sufficiently developed to transfer the divine, creative consciousness to the physical plane, but the process is abnormal and degrading to the higher consciousness, and must react injuriously in this or succeeding incarnations.

Let us treat our bodies as we would treat a favorite horse, for instance, with kindness and firmness, supplying it with all that is needful for health and well-being, and training it to be the most perfect expression possible of the soul. So will our bodies become fit and efficient instruments for bringing the real man into contact with the molecular plane and the highest interests of both body and soul will be served, for we want to live through it rather than in it. »

(The Theosophical Quarterly, October 1909, vol. 7, p.177-181)




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