The Moment of Farewell Is Always Remarkable…

The moment of farewell is always remarkable and significant, as it marks not only a change, but the point of no return, after which the past circumstance, whether very important or not, will live on only in the memory. The usual tears show the awareness of the irreversible, as well as the appreciation of what has been lived. It is beautiful and it is relevant, and it seems that, without such an experience, one never really assimilates the importance of what there was and, perhaps fortunately, will never be again.

It Is Amazing How Much Can Be Learned…

It is amazing how much can be learned from symbols, how much more powerful the imagination becomes with their study, even though one does not, or simply cannot, lock them down into definitive practical knowledge. There will always be an open door, always possibilities to be noticed, which perhaps contrast with what one thought one had learned. So study, no matter how deep, is always inconclusive, since a symbol can never be exhausted. But it pays off, and with it the imagination reaches a new level.

It Is Great Luck When Fate Takes Care…

It is great luck when fate takes care to relieve us of burdens we did not choose or did not wish to take on. Often, such moves go unnoticed, even though they save us from immense suffering. We can endure more suffering than we realize, as long as it is justified; when we suffer for nothing, even if this is only what it seems to us, we can endure very little. We should never take on the other person’s cross, or everyone’s cross, just because that is what they do. We must carefully choose the justification for future tears, and thank fate when it makes us free to assume our reason for suffering.

We Have Reached a Point Where It Is…

Today, we have reached a point where it is impossible to produce a scholar like the old ones, who kept more or less up to date with everything new in many areas of knowledge. The specialist himself finds it humanly impossible to keep up with advances in his specialty. And so the question arises: how many today are capable of making the great syntheses that are so necessary for orientation? Hard to say… But it is fortunate to note that the major themes have not changed, and that it does not take much to achieve an incomplete but fruitful orientation.