We have now, under various chapter headings, discussed the first three formula points:
- Gather your ingredients
- Classify your ingredients
- Preparation of your ingredients
- We shall now take up Inspiration, and in this, the subconscious plays a major part
Romantically, perhaps, you picture Inspiration as a benevolent goddess, suddenly appearing from nowhere, filling your dreams with visions of delight and presenting you with a ready-made masterpiece. Unfortunately, it just isn’t like that. Inspiration is real, but when it comes to you it will be in a less romantic form. It may appear as just one word which strikes your ear. It may be a vague tenuous thought: which you feel, if it will only hold still a second, perhaps you can grasp it. But whatever it is, you feel instinctively that it holds the seed of a literary composition or a work of art or a scientific formula or some other idea. But that little seed must germinate and grow before develops into a plant and finally comes into bloom. Inspiration will supply you with the seed only. It will not offer the full-grown plant. It is for you to capture, cultivate it, and nurture that seed so that it does not perish.
You realize, of course, that at any particular moment you are aware or conscious of only an infinitesimal portion of the entire contents of your mind. You have much knowledge, many feelings, beliefs, likes and dislikes, memories, and so on, of which you are not thinking at this moment, no matter how mentally active and alert you may be. Your past experiences include ideas, plans, longings, aspirations, purposes, and the like. Even though your present thoughts are not directed to them, you know that if you do put your attention upon them, they rise to the plane of ordinary consciousness and you become aware of them, if you so desire. That is what occurs when you “think” about things. You start into motion the stream of recollection and memory.
In other words, you have two kinds of knowing—one, that which results from your present awareness of things, and two, that which you have in reserve, stored away and on call, in your subconscious. These contents are just as real when submerged as when raised to consciousness. In fact the mind has often been compared to an iceberg of which seven eighths is submerged. To restrict your mind to your conscious states and ignore the far greater powers below is a great loss and waste of personal resources.