Mastering Your Hidden Self: A Guide to the Huna Way (Quest Book) by Serge Kahili King

Mastering Your Hidden Self: A Guide to the Huna Way (Quest Book) by Serge Kahili King

Author:Serge Kahili King [King, Serge Kahili]
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Tags: General Fiction
ISBN: 9780835605915
Publisher: Quest Books
Published: 2012-12-16T00:00:00+00:00


FEAR AND GUILT COMPLEXES

Perhaps the most destructive and inhibiting kind of complex is known generically as the guilt complex. This is a fixed belief that you are guilty of something and that you deserve to be punished. In its worst form it includes the idea that what you did was so bad that you are unworthy of forgiveness.

The guilt complex is a reaction of the ku to the individual's noncompliance with some other complex. Most often it is connected with religious beliefs about sin. In other cases there may be guilt over a breach of ethics, as when someone has ruined another person financially, even though the operation was strictly legal.

When the guilt is shared by the conscious mind, the guilt will generally take an outward form. A person who knowingly feels guilty about being extremely selfish in one area of life may try to punish himself or compensate by being over generous in another area. Sharp business practices often lead to generous donations to charities, and parents who are selfish with time may be generous with cash, gifts, and privileges.

When guilt feelings are not conscious, they can give rise to neurotic behavior and psychosomatic illness. Since psychosomatic ailments comprise a very high percentage of all illnesses, we can determine that hidden guilt feelings must be very prevalent, even if we assume that not all of the illnesses are caused by guilt per se. The neuroses or illnesses caused by guilt are most often a form of self-punishment inflicted by the ku in order to ward off some worse punishment by Mommy or Daddy or God.

On the same order of seriousness as guilt complexes, and sometimes intertwined with them, are fear complexes which prevent a person from engaging in certain activities or following certain lines of study. These, too, often have their roots in early childhood training. Because Huna includes knowledge that was once, and in some circles still is, considered taboo, it is not uncommon for someone to begin a study of Huna and then drop it at the urging of the subconscious. The information presented or the experiences had come in conflict with complexed beliefs. Such a person will be stunted in his spiritual and psychic growth and subject to the dictates of other people's beliefs unless he can train his ku to be open minded enough to study, compare, exercise, and then make a judgment based on fact. No knowledge, even that of Huna, should ever be accepted on blind faith, nor should it ever be rejected without consideration.

An unhealthy complex can be recognized by the effects it produces when threatened. All sudden illnesses should be examined to see whether they prevent you from doing something which may be against the principles or beliefs you hold or may have held at one time. Of course, the effects of some complexes may be so displaced (i.e., their source is so disguised) that the reason behind them cannot be recognized, at least not by superficial analysis. Others have their effect over such a long period of time that their recognition is also extremely difficult.



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