Prelaskom iz jednog ciklusa u drugi, iz povlačenja u jesen koju smo imali zajedno sa zimom, ponovo rastući sa prolećem, kretajući se dalje ka letu , iskoristimo silu prirode i zakone koji podstiču naše prikrivene impulse za budjenjem i istinskim životom. Podsetimo se važne poruke koju nam je ostavio G.I. Gurdjijev :
Da bi raspolagao pravom da se nazove čovekom, on mora da bude. A da bi bio, on pre svega mora da, sa neumornom istrajnošću i neugasivim impulsom želje, koja proističe iz svih zasebnih samostalnih delova koji predstavljaju njegovu čitavu prisutnost, to jest sa željom koja istovremeno potiče iz mišljenja, osećanja i organskog instinkta, izgradi sveobuhvatno znanje o sebi i da se istovremeno NEPREKIDNO BORI sa sopstvenim subjektivnim slabostima, i da nakon toga, zauzimajući svoj stav na osnovu rezultata koje je stekao sam uz pomoć svoje svesnosti, uočavajući pri tome nedostatke sopstvene uspostavljene subjektivnosti, rasvetli sredstva koja će mu omogućiti da se bori sa njima, nastojeći da ih ISTREBI, NE ŠTEDEĆI sebe.
"Belzebubovi razgovori sa unukom"
To possess the right to the name of “man,” one must be one. And to be such, one must first of all, with an indefatigable persistence and an unquenchable impulse of desire, issuing from all the separate independent parts constituting one’s entire common presence, that is to say, with a desire issuing
simultaneously from thought, feeling, and organic instinct, work on an all-round knowledge of oneself—at the same time struggling unceasingly with one’s subjective weaknesses—and then afterwards, taking one’s stand upon the results thus obtained by one’s consciousness alone, concerning the defects in one’s established subjectivity as well as the elucidated means for the possibility of combatting them, strive for their eradication without mercy towards oneself.
"Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson"
To possess the right to the name of “man,” one must be one. And to be such, one must first of all, with an indefatigable persistence and an unquenchable impulse of desire, issuing from all the separate independent parts constituting one’s entire common presence, that is to say, with a desire issuing
simultaneously from thought, feeling, and organic instinct, work on an all-round knowledge of oneself—at the same time struggling unceasingly with one’s subjective weaknesses—and then afterwards, taking one’s stand upon the results thus obtained by one’s consciousness alone, concerning the defects in one’s established subjectivity as well as the elucidated means for the possibility of combatting them, strive for their eradication without mercy towards oneself.
"Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson"