I Had a Pleasant Time With My Mind…
October 19, 1969
There is a thoughtful line from Louisa May Alcott: “I had a pleasant time with my mind, for it was happy.” The mind, of course, can go anywhere, even when the body is confined. Consciously or subconsciously the mind is always in motion. And it is still true that as a man thinketh, so is he.
“If you keep your mind sufficiently open, people will throw a lot of rubbish into it,” said one observer. They will, and they do, if we let them. But it is for us to select for ourselves what we are willing to accept, what we read and see and hear, and what is taught our children by all means by which impressions are made upon their minds—for what dominates our minds is the pattern of what we will become unless something turns us in a different direction.
It is in the mind that music and poetry are first fashioned. It is in the mind that envy and evil are incubated; it is in the mind that crime is first committed, that morality and immorality are made. In the mind beauty and good are born. In the mind our future is fashioned and we are responsible for the thoughts we thing and for the purposes we pursue.
There is nothing we know of more marvelous than the human mind, except the infinite mind of God who gave it. And one cannot conceive of anyone’s using any drug or dope or mind-dulling substance that would impair the senses, or interfere with judgement or self-control, or in any way mar the mind of man – this great and sensitive instrument that God has given.
If we are clean in mind, we are clean and happy in life. If we are evil in mind, we are not happy anywhere. “Clean up your thought,” said Dr. Frank Crane. “Don’t have a waste-basket mind.” God give us the wisdom to respect our minds, and not clutter them with trash or trivia or unwholesome content of any kind – for the mind in large measure is where we live our lives.
“If you keep you mind sufficiently open, people will throw a lot of rubbish into it.”