“Blessed is he who has a soul, blessed is he who has none, but woe and grief to him who has it in embryo.” – G.I. Gurdjieff
Tim Boucher – The United States Declaration of Independence proudly proclaims the mystical truth that “all men are created equal.”
What happens after that, though, is anybody’s guess. Once we’ve been created equally, does that mean all our lives are the same?
Do the essential differences between us come from genetics, environment, free will, the soul? Do we all end up in the same place again when we die?
These questions have excited the myth-making faculties of humankind from antiquity down through to the present day.
Working for a Soul
The esoteric teachings of G.I. Gurdjieff, in many ways, fly in the face of traditional Western religious thought. Whereas it is accepted as a given within Judeo-Christian tradition that each human is born with a soul, Gurdjieff does not let us off so easy.
Active in the early part of the 20th century, this Greek-Armenian mystic travelled the world, synthesising spiritual disciplines into a unique path called The Fourth Way. He taught that human existence is a kind of waking sleep, in which we live more or less automatically, unconscious and unaware of ourselves.
He even went to the extreme of suggesting that humans are not born with souls at all, and that we can only create one while alive through intense personal suffering and what he called “work.”