ASTROLOGY AND THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
by
Augusta Foss Heindel
With an Introduction by
MANLY P. HALL
THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
MT. ECCLESIA
P.O. BOX 713
OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA, 92054, USA
Astrology was one of the seven
sacred sciences cultivated by the initiates of the ancient world. It was studied
and practiced by all the great nations of antiquity. The origins of astrological
speculation are entirely obscured by the night of time which preceded the dawn
of history. There are traditions to the effect that the astrological science was
perfected by magician- philosophers of the Atlantean Period. One thing is
evident, Astrology descends to this late day adorned with the discoveries and
embellishments of a thousand cultures. The history of Astrology is indeed a
history of human thought and aspiration. The readings for the planets as given
in the cuneiform tablets of Sargon are still used by the astrologers of this
generation. Only such modifications and changes have been made as the shifting
foundations of cultural standards necessitated.
Two distinctive schools of Astrology have
been recognized from the beginning of the historical period. With the decline of
the late Atlantean and early Aryan priesthoods and the profaning of their
mysteries, what are now called the sciences were separated from the parent body
of religious tradition. Astrology and medicine were the first to establish
independent institutions. The priests of the state religions no longer exercised
a monopoly over the prophetic and medicinal arts. Beginning with Hippocrates new
orders of soothsayers and healers arose who were entirely ignorant of the
fundamental unity, yes, identity of the spiritual and physical sciences.
The division of essential learning into
competitive, or at least non- cooperative, fragments destroyed the synthesis of
knowledge. Frustrated by division and discord, the whole structure of education
broke into innumerable discordant parts. The science of medicine divided from
its spiritual source deteriorated into the quackery and leechcraft of the Dark
Ages, a condition of affairs so sorry that the Hermetic physician Paracelsus was
moved to say, "Fortunate is the man whose physician does not kill
him." Astrology was likewise corrupted into horoscope mongering. Divorced
from its divine purpose it drifted along, performing a halfhearted and pointless
work which consisted for the most part of the bleating forth of dire predictions
and the compounding of planetary salves against the itch.
A small group of enlightened and educated men
preserved the esoteric secrets of medicine and astrology through those
superstition ridden centuries we now call the Middle Ages. Of such mental
stature were the Rosicrucians who honored Paracelsus as one of the chief of
their "mind." Through Paracelsus and the Rosie Cross the spiritual
secrets of nature were restored to the chief place among the ends of learning.
Knowledge was interpreted mystically and the profane sciences were reflected as
merely the outward forms of inward mysteries. The secrets of mystical
interpretation were concealed from the vulgar and given only to those who
yearned after things which are of the spirit. THE MYSTICAL DIVINITY of Dionysius
the Arepagite became the textbook of an ever increasing number of devout and
God-loving men and women who saw in all outer forms and institutions the shadows
and semblances of inner truth.
The modern world which sacrificed so much for
the right to think has grown wise in its own conceit. Educators have ignored
those spiritual values which constitute the priceless ingredients in the
chemical compound we call civilization. Material science has become a proud
institution--an assemblage of pedagogues and demagogues. There is no place for
mysticism in the canons of the over-schooled. Hypnotized by the strange
fascination which matter exercised over the materialist, modern savants ignored
the soul, that invisible reality upon which the illusions of the whole world
hang.
It was Lord Bacon who said, "A little
knowledge inclineth men's minds towards atheism, but greatness of knowledge
bringeth men's minds back again to God." This wonderful quotation expresses
the tempo of the modern age. A disillusioned world saddened over the failure of
material things is crying out again for those mystical truths which alone
explain and satisfy. The return of mysticism brings with it a new interest in
astrology and healing.
Mysticism brings with it a new standard of
interpretation. To live up to the exacting demands of a mystical interpretation
all branches of learning must be purified and restated. To the mystic, astrology
is not merely prediction or even giving of advice, it is a key to spiritual
truths to be approached philosophically, to be studied for its own sake.
Although science has classified, tabulated,
and named all the parts and functions of the body, it cannot describe or explain
what man is, where he came from, why he is here, or where he is going. In the
presence of ignorance concerning these vital subjects, it is difficult to
appreciate an elaborate learning in secondary matters.
The initiates of antiquity were concerned
primarily with man in his universal or cosmic aspect. Before a person can live
well he must orient himself, he must know in part at least the plan of living.
With this knowledge he can then cooperate with "the plan," and the
philosophic life recommended by Pythagoras is merely to know the truth and to
live it.
Scientists looking for the cause of those
energies which motivate and sustain the world have decided by a process of
elimination that these causes must lie in a subjective structure of the
universe, the invisible sphere of vibrations. So the modern fancy is to ascribe
to vibration all that cannot be explained in any other way. The moment we
acknowledge the universe to be sustained by an invisible energy which manifests
through the law of vibration, physics becomes super-physics, physiology becomes
psychology, and astronomy becomes astrology. Astrology is nothing more nor less
than the study of the heavenly bodies in the terms of the energies which radiate
from them rather than merely an examination of their appearance and
construction.
The original Rosicrucians held to a theory
generally discarded by men of science and now known as the microcosmic theory.
Paracelsus was the most prominent exponent of this concept of universal order
and relationship. He said, "As there are stars in the heavens, so there are
stars within man, for there is nothing in the universe which has not its
equivalent in the microcosm." (the human body). In another place Paracelsus
says, "Man derives his spirit from the constellations (fixed stars), his
soul from the planets, and his body from the elements."
It is quite impossible for the most highly
trained scientist to examine with any adequate appreciation of values the whole
infinite diffusion of the cosmos with its island galaxies and incomprehensible
vistas of immeasurable space. Yet the whole of the pageantry of worlds is
evidently dominated by all- sufficient laws. Man himself is more compact though
possibly in other ways hardly less difficult to analyze. The cells in the body
of man are as countless as the stars of heaven. Countless races of living
things, species, types, and genera are evolving in the flesh, muscle, bone and
sinew of man's corporeal constitution. The dignity of the microcosm gives the
scientist some sense of the sublimity of the macrocosm. By the use of astrology
it is possible to discover the interplay of celestial forces between the
macrocosm and the microcosm. The centers in the physical body through which the
sidereal energies enter were discovered and classified by the ancient Greeks,
Egyptians, Hindus, and Chinese. There is great opportunity for work in examining
not only the physical body itself but the auras which extend from the body
forming a splendid garment of cosmic light.
The last few years have witnessed
exceptional progress in that branch of medical science which is called
endocrinology or the study of the structure and function of the ductless glands
with research into therapeutic methods of treating derangements thereof. These
glands are now accepted as the regulators of the physical function, the
governors and directors of bodily structure, profoundly significant not only in
their physical reactions, but also their effect upon mentality, emotion, sensory
reflexes, and the so-called spiritual or metaphysical functions. Nearly all
endocrinologists admit that the pineal gland is the most difficult to understand
and the most difficult to treat. It can now generally be reached only by
treating the other glands over which it acts in the capacity of generalissimo.
The physical functions of the glands are now fairly well classified but there
will unquestionably be much revision of the present opinions. Physicians are
willing to admit that the function of the glands does not end merely with their
effect upon the body but scientists are not prepared to make any pronouncements
beyond the field of material reaction.
It is especially significant therefore that
through a combination of clairvoyance and astrology it is possible to examine
the ductless glands and discover the metaphysical elements in their functioning.
The modern clairvoyant uses the same method for his work as was used by the
initiate priests of the ancient world, and like those older adepts he makes
contributions to the sum of knowledge which are only discoverable to the
materialist after centuries of ponderous experimentation.
The work which follows is a spiritual record
of the function of the pituitary body and pineal gland. I feel that the
researches carried on by Mrs. Max Heindel are a definite contribution to the
subject of endocrinology that should be preserved for the use of all students of
medicine and the occult sciences.
--Manly P. Hall
Diagram: The Ductless Glands and their
Rulers
ASTROLOGY AND THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
CHAPTER I
POLARIAN EPOCH
So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male
and female created he them.--Genesis 1:27.
In the study of the origin of man and his
prehistoric state we are constantly stumbling against unexplained mysteries and
especially when we read from the materialistic viewpoint in the Old Testament,
which is the most wonderful history of man. We are then forced to scale the most
formidable rocks of doubt. When we read between the lines, however, or view the
past with an open mind then this book of Genesis is a mine filled with gems of
the rarest kind.
In THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION we are
taught that the world is divided into seven different states of consciousness.
Beginning with the densest we have the physical matter of which man's physical
body is made. Although it may not be visible to the physical senses yet we know
and have positive proof that there is something within and about us of a subtle
nature, finer than our physical yet interpenetrating it, which we cannot see
even though we feel it. Electricity is a force which man can feel but cannot
see. He knows that the atmosphere exists yet he cannot see it. And so we may
sense and know that this subtle rarified life exists. We view the storm and we
feel its force. We can see the raindrops as they descend to earth, and we are
told by the scientists that this rain is drawn up by evaporation, causing the
moisture in the clouds. We know that the wind blows; we feel its refreshing
influence. Science has a reason for all these changes and explains these
atmospheric phenomena from materialistic investigations.
The occultist explains these phenomena from
the higher or spiritual viewpoint by telling the scientists that the great
invisible regions from which the winds come are peopled with higher
intelligences and that great spirits control the elements; that they have beings
who carry out their orders; for instance, the spirit of water has its workers,
the undines; the spirit controlling the winds works through the sylphs. So we
have the elements which man must recognize as existing, all with their invisible
leaders and workers who exist in God's great universe, as well as poor
materialistic man who denies everything which he cannot see with his physical
eyes, and who when he is asked to explain these great mysteries cannot do so.
Now, as stated before, THE ROSICRUCIAN
COSMO-CONCEPTION recognizes seven different worlds. What shall we call them? Not
matter, for we can only recognize as matter what man can see with his physical
sight. But there are six higher states of consciousness; let us call them by the
names which were given to Max Heindel by the great beings who saw fit to entrust
him with this knowledge: the physical world, the desire world, the world of
thought, the world of life spirit, the world of virgin spirits, and the world of
God. Now, these are only names and they do not explain the conditions of these
different states. Let us take for illustration a teakettle filled with water. if
we place this kettle of water upon a cake of ice the water will become hardened
and in a little while we hall have ice. But let us place this same teakettle of
ice on a hot stove and in a short time the ice melts and we have steam which
disappears into the atmosphere and is lost to the visible sight. Where has it
gone? Some place where the incredulous eyes of the materialist cannot follow,
but the occultist can trace it. He knows that nothing in God's universe is lost.
Man, who is God's most perfected work, is
composed of every element found in these seven great worlds. Man as we find him
today with his wonderfully developed and complex mind and body was not made, as
many misread the first chapter of Genesis, out of clay and in one day, but his
present stage is the outcome of ages and ages of growth. We follow him as he
enters the arena of life as a virgin spirit, a thought, a spark from the divine
Father, hurled into space with a force such as God alone can send. This
thought-form has its birth in a world of virgin spirits where the divine flame
commences its long pilgrimage through matter, gathering the material from each
world, denser and denser, working its way through the mineral, the vegetable,
the animal, and then into the human stage. Within this divine spark are enfolded
all the potentialities of the divine Father. As a thought of a building which is
generated by a man gradually takes form within his mind, and as he puts his
plans upon paper and straightway procures material wherewith the building is to
be erected, so was God's thought, the spark which was to become man, also made
manifest, and we find it today expressing in a body for which David praised God
in the 139th Psalm, saying, "I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and
wonderfully made." Paracelsus says, "The physical body itself is the
greatest of mysteries because in it are contained in a condensed, solidified,
and corporeal state the very essences which go to make up the substance of the
spiritual man, and this is the secret of the Philosopher's Stone."
There are mysteries within this human temple
which man is unable to solve (which have baffled material science), and for the
solution of which many lives have been sacrificed, both of the human and the
animal kingdom. The vivisectors have jeopardized their very souls in their
effort to solve these mysteries. Animals have been put through the most
excruciating suffering by science in its endeavor to wrest these secrets from
God. But material science can go just so far when it finds itself against a wall
which its instruments and its scientific minds cannot penetrate and it is
helpless. There is but one tool, which it cannot or will not recognize, and
which alone will penetrate or break through, and that is THE HUMAN SPIRIT. The
trained seer alone has access to the higher regions which, unfortunately, the
materialist, because he cannot be given material proof, will not recognize. We
must, however, give him credit for having accomplished wonders in his struggle
to master and understand human ills. Materia medica has accomplished wonderful
things.
There are two forces in nature which man
recognizes and which he acknowledges as existing in every atom--the positive
force (male), and the negative force (female). We find them in the metals which
man is utilizing to generate his electricity, the copper, zinc, etc. In the
plant we also find the same elements. The very tiniest atom in man's body is
charged with these two forces. They are playing through his body, without the
blending of which he could not hold the particles together. Although man, with a
male body, may express the positive physical, yet his negative vital body helps
to hold the positive physical particles together. Likewise, the woman expressing
in the negative female body is balanced by a positive vital body.
The various forms and developments of man's
body during antenatal life are recapitulations of his development during
involution. In the Polarian Epoch his body was globular similar to the ovum, and
also of a gelatinous substance. There was at the beginning but one organ which
protruded from the top of his bag-like form. This organ was eyes, ears, in fact
it was the nucleus through which the rest of the body was built, also the medium
through which man received his life from the Father. This organ is today called
the pineal gland--epiphysis. Man's energies at that time were, like those of the
fetus, directed inward to build future organs, and as the prenatal life of the
physical body of today is directed and helped by the mother, so was man assisted
during his involutionary period by the Divine Hierarchies. He was in direct
touch with the higher realms and not yet conscious of his physical environment.
In the meantime, eyes, ears, and various organs were taking shape within this
ovoid body, while the pineal gland, which is at present such a mystery to
medical science, was its only means of communication with the outer world. This
organ was much larger than it is today, and from its cone-shaped top there
protruded a long, transparent, flexible tentacle which aided in locomotion and
in feeling, and this appendage may yet be seen on the small end of the pineal
gland. It has the appearance of a small piece of skin, the function of which
will be taken up in another chapter.
THE GARDEN OF EDEN
Man's evolution and development up to the
present time is divided into five periods or epochs by the Rosicrucian
teachings. We have described his bodily development during the Polarian Epoch,
and we will now make a study of it during the next period, the Hyperborean
Epoch. In the former man was mineral- like, in the latter he developed a vital
body and was plant-like. In the third period, the Lemurian Epoch, he developed a
desire body and became animal-like. The earth had already become encrusted and
hardened in some places, and the atmosphere was dense and fog-like. Man then
lived in the densest vegetation to protect himself from the intense heat, while
his body had grown to a giant- like size--long arms and hands, massive jaws, but
no forehead, the top of the head being very close to where the eyebrows are
today. The skeleton had partially formed but was yet of a soft cartilaginous
nature; man was not yet able to walk upright. The blood, which had heretofore
been cold, now received iron and developed red corpuscles, which in turn
hardened the bodily structure, making it possible for man to walk upright.
We have now reached the period of man's
development recorded in the second chapter of Genesis where the Lord gave Adam
an helpmate, at the separation of the sexes. Heretofore man was hermaphrodite;
but now we have arrived at the time mentioned in the story in the Bible of Adam
and Eve when they were turned out of the Garden of Eden for their sins. The
change in sex was not accomplished in a day as some may read from the Book of
Genesis, but was accomplished slowly and be degrees. As the earth became more
crystallized, man's evolution kept up with this change, and it became necessary
that the Ego draw within the body in order to control it. To accomplish this it
was necessary that a brain and larynx be added, and for this purpose man was
required to sacrifice one-half of his creative force. He then became an
individualized, thinking entity, a creator, and he was then able to begin his
work with the minerals.
Man was at that time unconscious of the
change in sex and was also unconscious of his outer surroundings, for his eyes
had not yet been opened. Similar to the deep-water fish or the mole, he had no
need of these organs, for the atmosphere was too dense and foggy. However, after
the earth was thrown off from the central sun, the light which had theretofore
been from within came from without; nature always supplies every need, hence
man's eyes began slowly to develop. As the brain was growing by stages, likewise
other organs which connected with the brain were built as man's development
demanded.
As the sexes separated and man outwardly
expressed one of the sexes only, the pineal gland, which in the Polarian,
Hyperborean, and the early part of the Lemurian Epochs, protruded from the top
of the head, now drew within the skull.
There is another tiny organ within the brain
of man, the pituitary body, which has had much to do with his development, both
mentally and physically, and which is as important as the epiphysis, the pineal
gland. The pituitary body or hypophysis is very necessary to man's life and
development; it appears in the fetus in the fourth week.
We may trace the development of man's body
through all its stages from the very beginning up to that of its present
wonderful mechanism in the life of the fetus; we first see it as a tiny speck of
gelatinous matter, attracted to another speck of the opposite vibration. These
are positive and negative. We follow the embryo through its development as it
assumes the bag-like shape which is its first attempt at form as described in
the preceding chapter, the globular, gelatinous form of the Polarian Epoch. This
small embryonic sac has within it all the potentialities of the present
perfected body with the two polarities, the positive and negative, the male and
female, the pineal gland and the pituitary body. We follow this human embryo
through its growth and changes, which, as in the case of prehistoric man, passes
through the mineral- like stage, the plant stage, then the reptile stage with
its well marked tail which at the ninth week disappears. Following this is the
animal stage with its doglike face, with only a spot which later will become the
eyes, ears, et cetera. At one stage of its development the pineal gland
protrudes through the bag-like sac, and then the little form passes through the
stage of the hermaphrodite as in the Hyperborean Epoch when no distinction of
sex is shown outwardly. And so we may follow the evolution of man's body by the
changes in the prenatal growth of the child in its mother's womb.
TWO DUCTLESS GLANDS
The pineal gland and pituitary body are two
organs which have not had to undergo extensive changes to bring them up to their
present stage. These organs were both present in the bag-shaped body during the
Polarian Epoch. Similar to the bud which contains both the stamen and pistil
within its ovoid shape, the pineal gland and the pituitary body are the nuclei
of the positive and negative forces by means of which our physical growth has
developed.
These tiny organs were larger in primitive
man than at present, and through them the creative hierarchies termed in the
Rosicrucian Philosophy the Lords of Form, have been able to assist the Ego to
build its body and bring it up to its present state of perfection.
THE PITUITARY BODY
The pituitary body was so named by medical
science because it was formerly thought that the pituite or mucus of the nose
came from this body. This idea, however, has been discarded, and although
medical science affirms that the real functions of the pituitary body are
speculative, still in the past few years it has gained much knowledge which is
no longer speculative. This gland is situated in a saddle shaped depression of
the sphenoid bone, between the eyes and directly back of the root of the nose,
and at the junction of the two optic nerves. It is impossible to give its size,
as it changes with age, temperament, and the morals of the person. Gray
describes it as a meeting place in the life of the primitive embryo of the
hypoblast, which is the innermost layer; the epiblast, the outermost layer,
which later develops into the nervous system and the skin; and the mesoblast,
which is the middle layer. Within these three layers are contained all the
germinal organs of the body which are in formation. Consequently the pituitary
body is directly associated with man's past, present, and future growth and
development, for from these three primitive layers within the embryo, the body
with its senses, brain, nervous system, and vital organs is developed, and the
pituitary body is the central station through which all growth is directed. But
the pineal gland is the real power behind it all, the formation of which we will
take up later.
The pituitary is a small oval body,
consisting of two lobes, the anterior or glandular portion, and the posterior or
nerve portion, each having its separate function, also varying in color. The
anterior lobe is of a yellowish gray substance intermingled with pink, while the
posterior lobe is darker. Medical science has in the past few years made some
noteworthy investigations; it claims that the pituitary body is smaller in man
than in woman and that its size increases rapidly between birth and puberty;
that the anterior lobe has control over the bony structure of the skeleton,
while the posterior lobe has rule over the circulation and the fluids of the
body. The latter regulates the assimilation of carbohydrates and other foods;
renal secretions, body temperature, et cetera.
One of our students who is a doctor stated
in a letter to the writer that that he would not think of leaving his office to
attend an obstetrical case without having pituitary extract in his case, which
when used at the proper time reduces labor pain from one to four hours. This
extract, however, in improper hands is a two-edged sword.
The pituitary gland is connected directly
with and has rule over the outer sheath of the brain and spinal column, the dura
mater. This sheath embodies the great protective mother principle. It covers the
brain and spinal cord, protecting them from outer impacts and also feeding the
blood vessels and nerves.
THE PINEAL GLAND
The pineal gland is a tiny cone-shaped body
varying in size according to the mental and spiritual status of the person. It
is named after the pine cone, which it resembles in appearance. It is larger in
a child than in an adult and larger in females than in males. Its functions are
almost unknown to science. Some claim that it has direct rule over the
generative organs and the brain. Extracts of it when injected into the
circulation produce a slight dilation of the blood vessels. It is large at birth
and is fully developed at puberty. Its structural evolution begins at the age of
seven years. Dana and Berkeley in their investigations found this organ small
and lacking in substance in children who were backward mentally. Science has
also been able to connect this gland with the functions of the interstitial
gland and of the brain, but these conclusions are only speculative.
The pineal gland is held in place by the pia
mater, a thin membrane or sheath surrounding the brain and spinal column, from
which the entire central nervous system is fed, and from which many little nerve
roots branch off between the spinal vertebrae. The dura mater is the outermost
sheath while the pia mater is the innermost. The pineal gland has the appearance
of a small male organ and rests upon what is termed by science the
quadrigeminae, four rounded eminences placed in two pairs. The two lower ones
are called the buttocks, the two upper the testes, and the tiny pineal gland
rests in the center of them. The pituitary body is connected with the dura
mater, the mother principle, on the anterior side of the third ventricle. The
pineal gland, the male or positive organ, is connected with the pia mater and is
located at the posterior end of the third ventricle; consequently this tiny
cavity or ventricle is of great importance to man as we shall see later.
THE SPINAL GAS
According to the Rosicrucian teachings the
blood is a gas and not a liquid as affirmed by science. When the spinal column
is observed by one with the spiritual sight developed, the spinal gas appears
like a thin stream of light, the color of which differs according to the
temperament and morals of the man. In the sensual man this spinal fire is a dull
brick red, intermingled with a slight coloring of blue. As his aspirations rise
and his love for others is awakened, this color becomes clearer, and the blue
light with a slight coloring of pink is drawn upward. When one observes the
spinal gas of the spiritually awakened man, who has purified his mind and body
by high ideals and by a life of service, especially if observed while he is in
meditation or prayer, there is seen a most wonderful sight. The spinal fire is
of a most ethereal blue which is difficult to describe; the nearest color to it
would be that of a blue gas flame with the softest tint of pink and yellow
playing through it. From the lower part of the sacral to the upper part of the
lumbar region the colors are still slightly clouded with red, but as the spinal
gas rises upward, it becomes purer and more transparent. This spinal fire during
meditation and prayer becomes more active, coursing more swiftly through the
spine, and as it touches the spinal nerves, it emits a tiny spark at the
beginning of each until it reaches the medulla oblongata, which seems to act as
a transformer or separating station, where the color makes a change, the darker
or murky colors again descending while the lighter and purified gas is drawn
upward.
There is a sieve-like enclosure at the lower
end of the fourth ventricle, which is connected with the medulla oblongata. In
the latter this gas seemingly goes through a purifying process; thence it passes
through the fourth ventricle into the third, where it passes through a golden
furnace-like glow. It is then absorbed by the pineal gland.
The color of this flame, however, is
different in an adult who is earthly, filled with passions and desires, whose
body is fed on the flesh of slaughtered animals, and which is steeped in
tobacco, liquor, et cetera. This man's spinal gas is of a murky rose color and
has a tendency to cling to the lower part of the spinal column. It is with
considerable effort that such a man may draw some of this gas to the brain for
use in mental work; and its color is not the clear blue of that of the man with
high aspirations.
The pineal gland of the sensual man who
dissipates his vital fluids is very small, while in the child and the adult who
lives a chaste life this organ is large.
Water when brought to a certain heat is
turned into steam and may evaporate into the air, leaving a tiny residue of
crystallized sediment in the kettle. Conversely, the blood while in the body is
a gas, but when it comes in contact with the air, it condenses and becomes a
liquid. Now how is it possible under similar conditions for science to
investigate with its material instruments and clearly understand the functions
of two such vital organs as the pineal gland and the pituitary body, whose
inaccessibility makes it almost impossible to remove them without changing their
shape?
When the man with the developed faculty of
spiritual sight, however, investigates their physiological functions, he does
not need to remove the organs but turns his X-ray sight upon them and observes
their action.
SPIRITUAL OBSERVATION
The writer has been privileged while under
the direction of the Teacher to watch these two higher ductless glands in
action. The time and opportunity were ideally prepared, and a living person was
the subject. Both organs were much enlarged which gave marvelous clearness to
our observations.
Let us observe this subject, a woman in
spiritual meditation, one who has been living a pure and chaste life with high
aspirations, and whose food for years has consisted of fruit, vegetables, and
cereals. The pituitary body, through which these aspirations are first
registered, is much enlarged. The posterior lobe is turned backward with its
funnel shaped neck enlarged with a mouth opening at the end. From this open
mouth exudes gas of a soft rose color, slightly intermingled with yellow and
blue of the pale shades. The spinal column is filled with a pale blue ether,
intermingled with soft pink and yellow. After this gas leaves the medulla
oblongata and enters the pineal gland, it is of a wonderful blue color such as
one sees clinging to the mountains after sundown. The pineal gland is enlarged
with the point of the cone leaning forward toward the pituitary body. The tiny
appendage of skin at the end of the former, which was mentioned in a previous
chapter, is elongated and emits a small flame similar to the blue flame of a gas
jet. These two organs vibrate at a most rapid rate and lean toward each other
over the third ventricle. This ventricle is an oblong cavity lying between the
optic thalami. When the life of the aspirant has been pure, the ventricle
appears to the occultist like a tiny furnace with a golden glow. From this the
vitality of the body is drawn.
The pineal gland as already stated, has the
appearance of a tiny male organ, while the pituitary body with its open mouth is
similar to the female organ. So we may see that science, which is trying to
prove that these organs are directly connected with the functions of the brain
and the generative organs, is right. They have direct influence upon man from
the two ends of the spinal cord, for does not the sex pervert in time become a
degenerate?
Conservation of the vital fluids and a
chaste life strengthen the brain, and these two ductless glands become enlarged,
but in the sensualist they atrophy. Science is correct in its assertion that
these organs are larger in children and women than in men, even men who live a
pure life.
ASTROLOGICALLY DISCERNED
In an endeavor to further prove the above
assertions astrologically, the writer has compared the horoscopes of patients
who have been in touch with the Healing Department at Headquarters. She found
ten horoscopes of young men and women who were afflicted with epilepsy. Four of
these patients were found with the Moon in conjunction with Neptune in the sign
of Taurus. This sign has rule over the throat and also indirectly over the
generative organs. Here again we find, as Max Heindel has said, that Neptune is
the higher octave of Mercury and not of Venus as some astrologers claim, for
this planet, which has rule over the pineal gland, also has rule over the brain
and the spiritual faculties. Two patients out of these ten have Neptune square
to the Moon, while one has Neptune in conjunction with Mars and another Neptune
in opposition to Saturn. In all of these cases we found that they had formed the
secret habit of sex abuse during childhood, which had wasted the vital fluids
necessary in building the brain, and there was a mental deficiency bordering
upon idiocy. If the doctors could have opened the brains of these patients to
examine the glands, they would have found them diseased according to the
planetary afflictions, which might have taken the form of atrophy, tumor, or in
the case of the pineal gland, inflammation.
Astrologers in the past have made the claim
that Uranus was the higher octave of Mercury, and had rule over the higher
mental qualities, and that Neptune was the higher octave of Venus. At the same
time they have admitted that an afflicted Uranus in the angles caused
separations in marriage, and that a square or conjunction of Uranus and Venus in
a woman's horoscope would attract undue attention from the opposite sex, thereby
endangering her morality. Uranus has always been associated with licentiousness
and laxity in morals, and illicit love affairs, while Neptune has been connected
with secret orders, deceptions, and frauds. The writer has wondered why these
two higher spiritual planets were reversed by the astrologers when they
represent opposite characteristics. Spiritual investigation shows the higher
octaves to be as follows: Neptune, ruler of the pineal gland, is the higher
octave of Mercury; Uranus, ruler of the pituitary body, is the higher octave of
Venus.
The drunkard when under the influence of
liquor has an over-stimulation of the pituitary body which causes reeling,
hilarious conditions. This gland regulates the emotional nature and the
circulation of the blood. Being ruled by Uranus, the higher octave of Venus, the
ruler of music, the pituitary body is influenced by music and harmony which set
it into vibration. The morphine or cocaine inebriate receives his stimulus
through the pineal gland.
REJUVENATION
We have read much in the papers about
rejuvenation through the grafting of animal glands into man to restore his
youth. Should this be carried to any great extent, the next generation would be
liable to have many degenerate children and the institutions would be filled
with mental perverts. The animals from which these glands are taken, the goat
and monkey, multiply very rapidly, and naturally there would be a degenerating
effect upon the man who is foolish enough to permit this grafting to be done
upon his body. Furthermore, this rejuvenation is for a short time only. If the
man continues to live the life of the senses, he will soon dissipate this new
energy, which will have to be replenished from time to time.
There is but one fountain of youth, one
elixir of life, and that is our food and our thoughts. If we live a pure and
simple life of unselfishness, eating lightly of vegetables and fruit, keeping
close watch over our desires, then we need not sacrifice the life of the animal
to replenish our wasted energy. Ponce de Leon sought the fountain of perpetual
youth in far-off lands, while he had two tiny cups within his own brain which,
if he had only paid the price of making an exchange of the worldly life of the
senses for a spiritual life of purity, would have given him the elixir of life.
End of
Astrology and the Ductless Glands
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