I see the point of both of your posts. With regards to the subjectivity of gain or loss, I believe that's more or less what I was trying to riddle out with the last statement. There is no real gain and loss, only the effort to realize self already present.
With regards to the study twice as hard, I have recently been reading Merging with Siva by Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami. In it he says (paraphrased) that after seeking and acquiring awareness, will and absolute dedication is the next requirement to the true realization of self, and states that one must work hard, very hard, at this pursuit 24 hours per day. One of his pupils asked him a similar question, could he realize self in ten years? The guru answered that he did not think the pupil could do it in twenty years because he had the wrong attitude. He said that if the student intended to realize self and was ready to do so, that the student would be telling him "I will reach this goal" and that the guru would believe him because he would see that the pupil was dedicated to the goal and was confident in his attainment, being willing to do whatever was necessary to reach it.
I am curious how what you are saying about work seemingly contradicts what I've been reading, however I lack sufficient knowledge of eastern teachings to reconcile the apparent difference, save the I suspect the two conflicting ideas result from differing points of view, or that I am misinterpreting Sivaya Subramuniyaswami's teachings regarding this idea of will and work.
I am an old western practitioner, but have suddenly been struck by a profound interest in buddhism, most particularly the freedom from the cycle of birth and death. In her book on the Qabalah, Dion Fortune states that the occultism of the east is unsuitable for most western minds, in that westerners seek for "Life, More Life!" rather than freedom from the cycle of birth and death, but what sent me east was my feeling on reading that statement of "Not me! Freedom sounds just as desirable."
Thank you both for your contributions to my understanding,
Ex
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