Chapter 15
because for ting across on t exist.
I asked imes ;ty.
quot; to her.
S at tting -- to see where her voice came from.
As far as s seated on the sofa.
Once again I asked o close old in tting across from he sofa.
to open the room.
Sed ten.
I asked, quot;You y; no; S;t empty, fatting on it.
quot; ually sitting on t exist for her.
But even in ted him.
otally accepted my word.
A resolute mind ies.
For ts in to accept defeat is far more responsible tances.
ttle to do by people -- ninety percent of ty lies hemselves.
y percent ready to encounter failure, it tle too muc cooperate even ten percent -- ten percent contribution.
to ttaining success as it does to t h failures.
tly sick, tinuously restless -- all are subject to the same principle.
Deep do to be ts w you become.
ts become objects, ts become s create your personality.
Essentially, which we live.
e alone lay tion of the life we live.
Once trutood, o you will become clear.
I ioned to you t as long as one entered deatarily, be free from th.
Someday deat t be entering into it voluntarily -- you o face it.
It be surprising if you closed your eyes and became unconscious wo go somewhere.
You cant be forced into something if you are fully conscious.
But to be under such compulsion.
Dying voluntarily, one can see death even while b