In Western civilization the interior life of the individual, with all its 
richness, finds itself relegated to a minor role in existence. Man is so 
caught up in the toils of mechanical life that he has neither time to stop nor 
the power of attention needed to turn his mental vision upon himself. Man 
thus passes his days absorbed by external circumstances. The great machine 
that drags him along turns without stopping, and forbids him to stop 
under penalty of being crushed. Today like yesterday, and tomorrow like 
today, he quickly exhausts himself in the frantic race, impelled in a direction 
which in the end leads nowhere. Life passes away from him almost unseen, 
swift as a ray of light, and man falls engulfed and still absent from himself. 
When we ask someone who lives under this constant pressure of 
contemporary life to turn his mental vision towards himself, he 
generally answers that he has not enough time left to undertake such 
practices. If we insist and he acquiesces, he will in most cases say that 
he sees nothing: Fog; Obscurity. In less common cases, the observer 
reports that he perceives something which he cannot define because it 
changes all the time. 
This last observation is correct. Everything is in fact continually 
changing within us. A minor external shock, agreeable or disagreeable, 
happy or unhappy, is sufficient to give our inner content a quite different 
appearance. If we follow up this interior observation, this introspection, without 
prejudice, we will soon constate, not without surprise, that our I, of 
which we are so consistently proud, is not always the same self: the I 
changes. As this impression becomes more defined we begin to become 
more aware that it is not a single man who lives within us but several, each 
having his own tastes, his own aspirations, and each trying to attain his own 
ends. Suddenly we discover within us a whole world full of life and colours 
which until now we had almost entirely ignored. 
If we still proceed with this experience, we will soon be able to distinguish 
three currents within that perpetually moving life: that of the vegetative life 
of the instincts, so to speak; that of the animal life of the feelings; and lastly 
that of human life in the proper sense of the term, characterized by thought 
and speech. It is almost as if there were three men within us, all entangled 
together in an extraordinary way. 
So we come to appreciate the value of introspection as a method of 
practical work which permits us to know ourselves and enter into ourselves. 
As we gradually progress, we become more clearly aware of the real 
situation in which we find ourselves. The inner content of man is analogous 
to a vase full of iron filings in a state of mixture as a result of mechanical 
action. Every shock received by the vase causes displacement of the particles 
of iron filings. Thus real life remains hidden from the human being 
due to the constant changes occurring in his inner life. 
Even so, as we shall see later, this senseless and dangerous situation can 
be modified in a beneficial way. But this requires work; conscientious and 
sustained effort. Introspection carried out relentlessly results in enhanced 
internal sensibility. This improved sensibility in its turn intensifies the 
implitude and frequency of movement whenever the iron filings are disrurbed. 
As a result, shocks that previously were not noticed will now 
provoke vivid reactions. These movements, because of their continuous 
implification, can create a friction between the particles of iron so intense 
that we may one day feel the interior fire igniting within us. 
This fire must not remain a harmless flare-up. Nor is it enough that the 
fire smoulders dormant under the ashes. A live and ardent fire once lit must 
be carefully kept alight by the will to refine and cultivate sensitiveness. 
If it continues in this way, our state can change: the heat of the flame will 
start a process of fusion within us. 
From this point on the inner content will no longer behave like a heap of 
iron filings: it will form a block. Then further shocks will no longer 
provoke interior change in man as they did previously. Having reached 
this point he will have acquired a firmness; he will remain himself in the 
midst of the tempests to which life may expose him. 
This is the perspective before those who study esoteric science. But to 
reach the state which has already been described, we must from the beginning 
rid ourselves of all illusion about ourselves, no matter how dearly 
held; an illusion of this kind, if it is tolerated at the start, will grow en route, 
so that suffering and additional effort will be necessary in order to rid 
ourselves of it at a later date. 
As long as man has not reached the point of fusion, his life will be in 
effect a factitious existence, as he himself will change from moment to moment. 
Since these changes will occur as a result of external shocks which he can 
almost never foresee, it will also be impossible for him to predict in 
advance the exact way he will change internally. Thus he will live subject 
to events as they occur, always preoccupied by constantly 'patching up' 
('replastering'). He will in fact progress toward the unknown, at the 
mercy of chance. This state of things, named in the Tradition The Law 
of Chance, or The Law of Accident, is — for man as he is—the principal law 
under whose authority he leads his illusory existence. 
Esoteric science indicates the possibilities and the means of freeing 
oneself from this law. It helps us to begin a new and purposeful life; first 
to become logical with ourselves, and finally, to become our own master. 
But to begin effectively on this way, one must first clearly see the situation 
as it is. A parable found in the most ancient sources permits us to get a 
clear picture of this, and so keep this condition in mind. 
It is the parable of the Coach: 
This image represents the characteristics of man by a coach. The physical 
body is represented by the coach itself; the horses represent sensations, 
feelings and passions; the coachman is the ensemble of the intellectual 
faculties including reason; the person sitting in the coach is the master. 
In its normal state, the whole system is in a perfect state of operation: the 
coachman holds the reins firmly in his hands and drives the horses in the 
direction indicated by the master. This, however, is not how things happen 
in the immense majority of cases. First of all, the master is absent. The 
coach must go and find him, and must then await his pleasure. All is in a 
bad state: the axles are not greased and they grate; the wheels are badly 
fixed; the shaft dangles dangerously; the horses, although of noble race, are 
dirty and ill-fed; the harness is worn and the reins are not strong. 
The coachman is asleep: his hands have slipped to his knees and hardly hold the 
reins, which can fall from them at any moment. 
The coach nevertheless continues to move forward, but does so in a way 
which presages no happiness. Abandoning the road, it is rolling down the 
slope in such a way that the coach is now pushing the horses, which are 
unable to hold it back. The coachman, fallen into a deep sleep, is swaying 
in his seat at risk of falling off. Obviously a sad fate awaits such a coach. 
This image provides a highly appropriate analogy for the condition of 
most men, and it is worth taking as an object of meditation. 
Salvation may however present itself. Another coachman, this one quite 
awake, may pass by the same route and observe the coach in its sad 
situation. If he is not much in a hurry, he may perhaps stop to help 
the coach that is in distress. He will first help the horses hold back the 
coach from slipping down the slope. Then he will awaken the sleeping 
driver and together with him will try to bring the coach back to the road. 
He will lend fodder and money. He might also give advice on the care of 
the horses, the address of an inn and a coach repairer, and indicate the 
proper route to follow. 
It will be up to the assisted coachman afterward to profit, by his own efforts, 
from the help and the information received. It will be incumbent on him 
from this point on to put all things in order and, open eyed, to follow the 
path he had abandoned. 
He will above all fight against sleep, for if he falls asleep again, and if the 
coach leaves the road again and again finds itself in the same danger, he 
cannot hope that chance will smile upon him a second time; that another 
coachman will pass at that moment and at that place and come to his aid.