The Teaching of Hazrat Inayat Khan

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All this shows that there is a constant desire of the soul to find its own nature; and until it finds it, it is always looking for something, though what, it does not know. Is it not true of every individual in this world that, whatever may be his desire, as long as he has not attained it he is unhappy, and eager and anxious to achieve it? He is longing and suffering and doing all he can to attain it; but when he has succeeded, he does not feel happy. At once a new desire arises; if he has a thousand he wants a million; if he has done one duty there is another, and after that another. So it is with love affairs; so it is with paradise. He will never feel contented and satisfied, became fundamentally it is not the desire that he is really concerned with. Though he crosses the boundary wall of the desire he funds himself again with a new desire. And this itself proves the fact that there is only one fundamental desire underlying all others: the desire for spiritual perfection.


 
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