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CHAPTER VIII
Why I Took
Up the
Study of Mental Science
I HAVE frequently been questioned about
my reasons for taking up the study of Mental
Science, and as to the results of my search,
not only in the knowledge of principles,
but also in the application of that knowledge
for the development of my own life.
Such inquiries are justifiable, because
one who essays the role of a messenger of
psychological truths can only be convincing
as he or she has tested them in the laboratory
of personal mental experience. This is particularly
true in my case, as the only personal pupil
of Judge Troward, the great Master in Mental
Science, whose teaching is based upon the
relation borne by the Individual Mind toward
the Universal Creative Mind, which is the
Giver of Life, and the manner in which that
relation may be invoked to secure expansion
and fuller expression in the individual
life.
My initial impulse toward the study of
Mental Science was an overwhelming sense
of loneliness. In every life there must
come some such experience of spiritual isolation
as
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