A Separate Reality
http://panworld.net/~rmace/castaneda/donjuan2.html
You think about yourself too much and that gives you a strange fatigue
that makes you shut off the world around you and cling to your arguments.
A light and amenable disposition is needed in order to withstand
the impact and the strangeness of the knowledge I am teaching you.
Feeling important makes one heavy, clumsy, and vain. To be a man
of knowledge one needs to be light and fluid.
One has to reduce to a minimum all that is unnecessary in one's
life.
Once you decide something put all your petty fears away. Your decision
should vanquish them. I will tell you time and time again, the most
effective way to live is as a warrior. Worry and think before you
make any decision, but once you make it, be on your way free from
worries or thoughts; there will be a million other decisions still
awaiting you. That's the warrior's way.
A warrior thinks of his death when things become unclear. The idea
of death is the only thing that tempers our spirit.
To be a warrior you have to be crystal clear.
My acts are sincere but they are only the acts of an actor because
everything I do is controlled folly. Everything I do in regard to
myself and my fellow men is folly, because nothing matters.
Certain things in your life matter to you because they're important;
your acts are certainly important to you, but for me, not a single
thing is important any longer, neither my acts nor the acts of any
of my fellow men. I go on living though, because I have my will
. Because I have tempered my will throughout my life until it's
neat and wholesome and now it doesn't matter to me that nothing
matters. My will controls the folly of my life.
Once a man learns to see he finds himself alone in the world with
nothing but folly. Your acts, as well as the acts of your fellow
men in general, appear to be important to you because you have learned
to think they are important.
We learn to think about everything, and then we train our eyes to
look as we think about the things we look at. We look at ourselves
already thinking that we are important. And therefore we've got
to feel important! But then when a man learns to see , he realizes
that he can no longer think about the things he looks at, and if
he cannot think about what he looks at everything becomes unimportant.
Everything is equal and therefore unimportant.
We need to look with our eyes to laugh. When our eyes see , everything
is so equal that nothing is funny. My laughter, as well as everything
I do is real but it also is controlled folly because it is useless;
it changes nothing and yet I still do it.
One must always choose the path with heart in order to be at one's
best, perhaps so one can always laugh.
You don't understand me now because of your habit of thinking as
you look and thinking as you think. By "thinking" I mean
the constant idea that we have of everything in the world. Seeing
dispels that habit and until you learn to see you will not really
understand what I mean.
Our lot as men is to learn. I have learned to see and I tell you
that nothing really matters. A man of knowledge lives by acting,
not by thinking about acting, nor by thinking about what he will
think when he has finished acting. A man of knowledge chooses a
path with heart and follows it; and then he looks and rejoices and
laughs; and then he sees and knows. He knows that his life will
be over altogether too soon; he knows that he, as well as everybody
else, is not going anywhere; he knows, because he sees , that nothing
is more important than anything else. In other words, a man of knowledge
has no honor, no dignity, no family, no name, no country, but only
life to be lived, and under these circumstances his only tie to
his fellow men is his controlled folly. Thus a man of knowledge
endeavors, and sweats, and puffs, and if one looks at him he is
just like any ordinary man, except that the folly of his life is
under control. Nothing being more important than anything else,
a man of knowledge chooses any act, and acts it out as if it matters
to him. His controlled folly makes him say that what he does matters
and makes him act as if it did, and yet he knows that it doesn't;
so when he fulfills his acts he retreats in peace, and whether his
acts were good or bad, or worked or didn't, is in no way part of
his concern.
You think about your acts, therefore you have to believe your acts
are as important as you think they are, when in reality nothing
of what one does is important. Nothing! But then if nothing really
matters, as you ask me, how can I go on living? It would be simple
to die; that's what you say and believe, because you're thinking
about life, just as you're thinking now what seeing would be like.
You want me to describe it to you so you can begin to think about
it, the way you do with everything else. In the case of seeing ,
however, thinking is not the issue at all, so I cannot tell you
what it is like to see . Now you want me to describe the reasons
for my controlled folly and I can only tell you that controlled
folly is very much like seeing ; it is something you cannot think
about.
Our lot as men is to learn and, as I've said, one goes to knowledge
as one goes to war; with fear, with respect, aware that one is going
to war, and with absolute confidence in oneself. Put your trust
in yourself. There's no emptiness in the life of a man of knowledge,
everything is filled to the brim and everything is equal. For me
there is no victory, or defeat, or emptiness. Everything is filled
to the brim and everything is equal and my struggle is worth my
while.
In order to become a man of knowledge one must be a warrior. One
must strive without giving up, without a complaint, without flinching,
until one sees , only to realize then that nothing matters. You're
too concerned with liking people or with being liked yourself. A
man of knowledge likes, that's all. He likes whatever or whoever
he wants, but he uses his controlled folly to be unconcerned about
it.
My controlled folly applies only to myself and to the acts I perform
while in the company of my fellow men.
You must talk to the plants you're going to pick before you pick
them. In order to see the plants you must talk to them personally,
you must get to know them individually; then the plants can tell
you anything you care to know about them.
You fail to understand that I am not joking. When a sorcerer attempts
to see , he attempts to gain power.
You think everything in the world is simple to understand because
everything you do is a routine that is simple to understand.
You have to have an unbending intent in order to become a man of
knowledge.
* *
A warrior takes responsibility for his acts; for the most trivial
of his acts. He waits patiently, knowing that he is waiting, and
knowing what he is waiting for. That is the warrior's way.
What makes us unhappy is to want. Yet if we would learn to cut our
wants to nothing, the smallest thing we'd get would be a true gift.
To be poor or wanting is only a thought; and so is to hate, or to
be hungry, or to be in pain. They are only thoughts for me now,
I have accomplished that feat. The power to do that is all we have,
mind you, to oppose the forces of our lives; without that power
we are dregs, dust in the wind.
It is up to us as single individuals to oppose the forces of our
lives. Only a warrior can survive. A warrior knows that he is waiting
and what he is waiting for; and while he waits he wants nothing
and thus whatever little thing he gets is more than he can take.
If he needs to eat he finds a way, because he is not hungry; if
something hurts his body he finds a way to stop it, because he is
not in pain. To be hungry or to be in pain means that the man has
abandoned himself and is no longer a warrior; and the forces of
his hunger and pain will destroy him.
* * *
The countless paths one traverses in one's life are all equal. Oppressors
and oppressed meet at the end, and the only thing that prevails
is that life was altogether too short for both.
You must act like a warrior. One learns to act like a warrior by
acting, not by talking. A warrior has only his will and his patience
and with them he builds anything he wants. You have no more time
for retreats or for regrets. You only have time to live like a warrior
and work for patience and will .
Will is something very special. It happens mysteriously. There is
no real way of telling how one uses it, except that the results
of using the will are astounding. Perhaps the first thing that one
should do is to know that one can develop the will . A warrior knows
that and proceeds to wait for it.
A warrior knows that he is waiting and knows what he is waiting
for. It is very difficult, if not impossible, for the average man
to know what he is waiting for. A warrior, however, has no problems;
he knows that he is waiting for his will .
Will is something very clear and powerful which can direct our acts.
Will is something a man uses, for instance, to win a battle which
he, by all calculations, should lose. It is not what we call courage.
Courage is something else. Men of courage are dependable men, noble
men perennially surrounded by people who flock around them and admire
them; yet very few men of courage have will . Usually they are fearless
men who are given to performing daring common-sense acts; most of
the time a courageous man is also fearsome and feared. Will , on
the other hand, has to do with astonishing feats that defy our common
sense. You may say that it is a kind of control.
Will is not what one calls "will power." Denying oneself
certain things with "will power," is an indulgence and
I don't recommend anything of the kind. The indulgence of denying
is by far the worst; it forces us to believe we are doing great
things, when in effect we are only fixed within ourselves.
Will is a power. And since it is a power it has to be controlled
and tuned and that takes time. When I was your age I was as impulsive
as you. Yet I have changed. Our will operates in spite of our indulgence.
For example your will is already opening your gap, little by little.
There is a gap in us; like the soft spot on the head of a child
which closes with age, this gap opens as one develops one's will
. It's an opening. It allows a space for the will to shoot out,
like an arrow. What a sorcerer calls will is a power within ourselves.
It is not a thought, or an object, or a wish. An act of "will
power" is not will because such an act needs thinking and wishing.
Will is what can make you succeed when your thoughts tell you that
you're defeated. Will is a force which is the true link between
men and the world.
The world is whatever we perceive, in any manner we may choose to
perceive. Perceiving the world entails a process of apprehending
whatever presents itself to us. This particular perceiving is done
with our senses and with our will . Will is a relation between ourselves
and the perceived world.
What the average man calls will is character and strong disposition.
What a sorcerer calls will is a force that comes from within and
attaches itself to the world out there. One can perceive the world
with the senses as well as with the will .
An average man can "grab" the things of the world only
with his hands, or his senses, but a sorcerer can grab them also
with his will . I cannot really describe how it is done, but you
yourself, for instance, cannot describe to me how you hear. It happens
that I am also capable of hearing, so we can talk about what we
hear, but not about how we hear. A sorcerer uses his will to perceive
the world. That perceiving, however, is not like hearing. When we
look at the world or when we hear it, we have the impression that
it is out there and that it is real. When we perceive the world
with our will we know that the world is not as "out there"
or as "real" as we think.
Will is a force, a power. Seeing is not a force, but rather a way
of getting through things. A sorcerer may have a very strong will
and yet he may not see ; which means that only a man of knowledge
perceives the world with his senses and with his will and also with
his seeing .
Now you know you are waiting for your will . You still don't know
what it is, or how it could happen to you. So watch carefully everything
you do. The very thing that could help you develop your will is
amidst all the little things you do.
* * *
When a man embarks on the paths of sorcery he becomes aware, in
a gradual manner, that ordinary life has been forever left behind;
that knowledge is indeed a frightening affair; that the means of
the ordinary world are no longer a buffer for him; and that he must
adopt a new way of life if he is going to survive. The first thing
he ought to do, at that point, is to want to become a warrior. The
frightening nature of knowledge leaves one no alternative but to
become a warrior.
By the time knowledge becomes a frightening affair the man also
realizes that death is the irreplaceable partner that sits next
to him on the mat. Every bit of knowledge that becomes power has
death as its central force. Death lends the ultimate touch and whatever
is touched by death indeed becomes power.
A man who follows the paths of sorcery is confronted with imminent
annihilation every turn of the way, and unavoidably he becomes keenly
aware of his death. Without the awareness of death he would be only
an ordinary man involved in ordinary acts. He would lack the necessary
potency, the necessary concentration that transforms one's ordinary
time on earth into magical power.
Thus to be a warrior a man has to be, first of all, and rightfully
so, keenly aware of his own death. But to be concerned with death
would force any one of us to focus on the self and that would be
debilitating. So the next thing one needs to be a warrior is detachment.
The idea of imminent death, instead of becoming an obsession, becomes
an indifference.
Now you must detach yourself; detach yourself from everything. Only
the idea of death makes a man sufficiently detached so he is incapable
of abandoning himself to anything. Only the idea of death makes
a man sufficiently detached so he can't deny himself anything. A
man of that sort, however, does not crave, for he has acquired a
silent lust for life and for all things of life. He knows his death
is stalking him and won't give him time to cling to anything, so
he tries, without craving, all of everything.
A detached man, who knows he has no possibility of fencing off his
death, has only one thing to back himself with: the power of his
decisions. He has to be, so to speak, the master of his choices.
He must fully understand that his choice is his responsibility and
once he makes it there is no longer time for regrets or recriminations.
His decisions are final, simply because his death does not permit
him time to cling to anything.
And thus with an awareness of his death, with his detachment, and
with the power of his decisions a warrior sets his life in a strategical
manner. The knowledge of his death guides him and makes him detached
and silently lusty; the power of his final decisions makes him able
to choose without regrets and what he chooses is always strategically
the best; and so he performs everything he has to with gusto and
lusty efficiency.
When a man behaves in such a manner one may rightfully say that
he is a warrior and has acquired patience. When a warrior has acquired
patience he is on his way to will . He knows how to wait. His death
sits with him on his mat, they are friends. His death advises him,
in mysterious ways, how to choose, how to live strategically. And
the warrior waits! I would say that the warrior learns without any
hurry because he knows he is waiting for his will ; and one day
he succeeds in performing something ordinarily quite impossible
to accomplish. He may not even notice his extraordinary deed. But
as he keeps on performing impossible acts, or as impossible things
keep on happening to him, he becomes aware that a sort of power
is emerging. A power that comes out of his body as he progresses
on the path of knowledge. He notices that he can actually touch
anything he wants with a feeling that comes out of his body from
a spot right below or right above his navel. That feeling is the
will , and when he is capable of grabbing with it, one can rightfully
say that the warrior is a sorcerer, and that he has acquired will
.
A man can go still further than that; a man can learn to see . Upon
learning to see he no longer needs to live like a warrior, nor be
a sorcerer. Upon learning to see a man becomes everything by becoming
nothing. He, so to speak, vanishes and yet he's there. I would say
that this is the time when a man can be or can get anything he desires.
But he desires nothing, and instead of playing with his fellow men
like they were toys, he meets them in the midst of their folly.
The only difference between them is that a man who sees controls
his folly, while his fellow men can't. A man who sees has no longer
an active interest in his fellow men. Seeing has already detached
him from absolutely everything he knew before.
Don't let the idea of being detached from everything you know give
you the chills. The thing which should give you the chills is not
to have anything to look forward to but a lifetime of doing that
which you have always done. Think of the man who plants corn year
after year until he's too old and tired to get up, so he lies around
like an old dog. His thoughts and feelings, the best of him, ramble
aimlessly to the only things he has ever done, to plant corn. For
me that is the most frightening waste there is.
We are men and our lot is to learn and to be hurled into inconceivable
new worlds. Seeing is for impeccable men. Temper your spirit now,
become a warrior, learn to see , and then you'll know that there
is no end to the new worlds for our vision.
When you see there are no longer familiar features in the world.
Everything is new. Everything has never happened before. The world
is incredible! Everything you gaze at becomes nothing!
Things don't disappear they don't vanish, they simply became nothing
and yet they are still there. Seeing makes one realize the unimportance
of everything.
Seeing is learned by seeing.
* * *
A warrior treats everything with respect and does not trample on
anything unless he has to. He does not abandon himself to anything,
not even to his death. He is not a willing partner and not available,
and if he involves himself with something, you can be sure that
he is aware of what he is doing. For a warrior there is nothing
out of control. Life for a warrior is an exercise in strategy. But
you want to find the meaning of life. A warrior doesn't care about
meanings. He would set his life strategically. Thus if he couldn't
avoid an accident he would find means to offset his handicap, or
avoid its consequences, or battle against them. He would be battling
to the end.
A warrior is never available; never is he standing on the road waiting
to be clobbered. Thus he cuts to a minimum his chances of the unforeseen.
A warrior is never idle and never in a hurry.
* * *
When a man learns to see , not a single thing he knows prevails.
Not a single one. Nothing is known; nothing remains as we used to
know it when we didn't see .
A warrior lives strategically and never carries loads he cannot
handle.
* * *
Nothing is pending in the world, nothing is finished, yet nothing
is unresolved.
* * *
The path of knowledge is a forced one. In order to learn we must
be spurred. In the path of knowledge we are always fighting something,
avoiding something, prepared for something; and that something is
always inexplicable, greater, more powerful than us. The inexplicable
forces will come to you. Later on it'll be your own ally, so there
is nothing you can do now but to prepare yourself for the struggle.
The world is indeed full of frightening things and we are helpless
creatures surrounded by forces that are inexplicable and unbending.
The average man, in ignorance, believes that those forces can be
explained or changed; he doesn't really know how to do that, but
he expects that the actions of mankind will explain them or change
them sooner or later. A sorcerer, on the other hand, does not think
of explaining or changing them; instead, he learns to use such forces
by redirecting himself and adapting to their direction. That's his
trick. There is very little to sorcery once you find out its trick.
A sorcerer, by opening himself to knowledge, falls prey to those
forces and has only one means of balancing himself, his will ; thus
he must feel and act like a warrior. I will repeat this once more:
Only as a warrior can one survive the path of knowledge. What helps
a sorcerer live a better life is the strength of being a warrior.
It is my commitment to teach you to see . I am compelled, therefore,
to teach you to feel and act like a warrior. To see without first
being a warrior would make you weak; it would give you a false meekness,
a desire to retreat; your body would decay because you would become
indifferent. It is my personal commitment to make you a warrior
so you won't crumble.
A warrior should be prepared only to battle. His spirit is not geared
to indulging and complaining, nor is it geared to winning or losing.
The spirit of a warrior is geared only to struggle, and every struggle
is a warrior's last battle on earth. Thus the outcome matters very
little to him. In his last battle on earth a warrior lets his spirit
flow free and clear. And as he wages his battle, knowing that his
will is impeccable, a warrior laughs and laughs.
A warrior selects the items that make his world. He selects deliberately,
for every item he chooses is a shield that protects him from the
onslaughts of the forces he is striving to use. The average man
who is equally surrounded by those inexplicable forces is oblivious
to them because he has other kinds of special shields to protect
himself.
People are busy doing that which people do. Those are their shields.
Whenever a sorcerer has an encounter with any of those inexplicable
and unbending forces we will talk about, his gap opens, making him
more susceptible to his death than he ordinarily is. We die through
that gap, therefore if it is open one should have his will ready
to fill it; that is, if one is a warrior. If one is not a warrior,
like yourself, then one has no other recourse but to use the activities
of daily life to take one's mind away from the fright of the encounter
and thus to allow one's gap to close.
Act like a warrior and select the items of your world. You cannot
surround yourself with things helter-skelter any longer. I tell
you this in a most serious vein. A warrior encounters those inexplicable
and unbending forces because he is deliberately seeking them, thus
he is always prepared for the encounter. The first thing you must
do, then, is be prepared. A warrior takes the responsibility of
protecting his life. Then if any of those forces tap him and open
his gap, he must deliberately strive to close it by himself. For
that purpose he must have a selected number of things that give
him great peace and pleasure, things which he can deliberately use
to take his thoughts from his fright and close his gap and make
him solid.
In his day-to-day life a warrior chooses to follow the path with
heart. It is the consistent choice of the path with heart which
makes a warrior different from the average man. He knows that a
path has heart when he is one with it, when he experiences a great
peace and pleasure traversing its length. The things a warrior selects
to make his shields are the items of a path with heart. You must
surround yourself with the items of a path with heart and you must
refuse the rest.
* * *
You must stop talking to yourself. Every one of us does that. We
carry on an internal talk. We talk about our world. In fact we maintain
our world with our internal talk. Whenever we finish talking to
ourselves the world is always as it should be. We renew it, we kindle
it with life, we uphold it with our internal talk. Not only that,
but we also choose our paths as we talk to ourselves. Thus we repeat
the same choices over and over until the day we die, because we
keep on repeating the same internal talk over and over until the
day we die.
A warrior is aware of this and strives to stop his talking. This
is the last point you have to know if you want to live like a warrior.
First of all you must use your ears to take some of the burden from
your eyes. We have been using our eyes to judge the world since
the time we were born. We talk to others and to ourselves mainly
about what we see. A warrior is aware of that and listens to the
world; he listens to the sounds of the world. He is aware that the
world will change as soon as he stops talking to himself and he
must be prepared for that monumental jolt.
The world is such-and-such or so-and-so only because we tell ourselves
that that is the way it is. If we stop telling ourselves that the
world is so-and-so, the world will stop being so-and-so. You must
start slowly to undo the world.
Your problem is that you confuse the world with what people do.
The things people do are the shields against the forces that surround
us; what we do as people gives us comfort and makes us feel safe;
what people do is rightfully very important, but only as a shield.
We never learn that the things we do as people are only shields
and we let them dominate and topple our lives. In fact I could say
that for mankind, what people do is greater and more important than
the world itself.
The world is all that is encased here; life, death, people, the
allies, and everything else that surrounds us. The world is incomprehensible.
We won't ever understand it; we won't ever unravel its secrets.
Thus we must treat it as it is, a sheer mystery!
An average man doesn't do this, though. The world is never a mystery
for him, and when he arrives at old age he is convinced he has nothing
more to live for. An old man has not exhausted the world. He has
exhausted only what people do. But in his stupid confusion he believes
that the world has no more mysteries for him. What a wretched price
to pay for our shields!
A warrior is aware of this confusion and learns to treat things
properly. The things that people do cannot under any conditions
be more important than the world. And thus a warrior treats the
world as an endless mystery and what people do as an endless folly.
Focus all your attention on listening to sounds and do your best
to find the holes between the sounds. Stay in complete alertness.
Everything is meaningful for a sorcerer. The sounds have holes in
them and so does everything around you. Ordinarily a man does not
have the speed to catch the holes, and thus he goes through life
without protection. The worms, the birds, the trees, all of them
can tell us unimaginable things if only one could have the speed
to grasp their message.
Fright is something one can never get over. A warrior cannot indulge,
thus he cannot die of fright. Your difficulty is that you want to
understand everything, and that is not possible. If you insist on
understanding you're not considering your entire lot as a human
being. Your stumbling block is intact.
Understanding is only a very small affair, so very small--yet sober
understanding is vital.
* * *
Only by acting can one become a sorcerer.
You now have the need to live like a warrior.
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