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T H E M Y S T E R Y
O F T H E
D U C T L E S S G L A N
D S
BY
A S T U D E N T
--------------------------------------
THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
MOUNT ECCLESIA
P.O. BOX 713
OCEANSIDE,
CALIFORNIA, 92054, USA
[PAGE 3]
THE
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
FOREWARD
The subject matter of this booklet was sent out by The
Rosicrucian
Fellowship in the form of monthly lessons. After the supply was
exhausted so
many requests came in for copies of them that The Board of Trustees
decided to
reprint the lessons in one volume in order that they would be
available to all
who are interested in the structure, function, and spiritual
significance of
the sevcen ductless glands herein discussed. The spiritual function
of the
glands as discussed in this work is based on extraordinary information
given
out by Max Heindel. The psychological structure and function
is based on
valuable information gleaned from the textbook on the ductless
glands written
by Dr. Louis Berman, to whom the author wishes to extend most
grateful thanks.
Mt. Ecclesia
June 1940
[PAGE 4]
THE MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
CONTENTS
Dedication.................................................................2
Foreward...................................................................3
I. MAN'S DEVELOPMENT.......................................................5
Individual Work of the Spirit...........................................7
The Adrenals............................................................9
II. TYPES PRODUCED BY THE DUCTLESS GLANDS.................................18
Adrenal Type of Personality............................................19
III. THE SPLEEN...........................................................23
Personality Type.......................................................28
IV. THE THYMUS GLAND......................................................29
The Gland of Child Development.........................................29
Thymus Type of Personality.............................................35
V. THE THYROID GLAND......................................................37
The Gland of Energy....................................................37
Comparison of Thyroid and Pituitary....................................50
Thyroid Type of Personality............................................51
VI. THE PITUITARY BODY....................................................54
Pituitary Types of Personality.........................................63
VII. THE PINEAL GLAND.....................................................66
Pineal Type of Personality.............................................68
VIII. SPIRITUAL CORRESPONDENCES...........................................70
Ductless Glands and Their Rulers.......................................71
Adrenal Glands--Physical World--Jupiter................................72
Spleen--Etheric Region--Sun............................................75
Thymus--Desire World--Venus............................................77
Thyroid--World of Thought--Mercury.....................................79
Pituitary--World of Life Spirit--Uranus................................81
Pineal--World of Divine Spirit--Neptune................................82
ILLUSTRATIONS
Adrenal Type..............................................................20
Thymus Type...............................................................35
Thyroid Type..............................................................52
Pituitary Type............................................................63
Pineal Type...............................................................68
Ductless Glands and Their Rulers..........................................71
[PAGE 5]
THE MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
THE MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
CHAPTER I
MAN'S DEVELOPMENT
When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers,
the moon and the
stars, which thou hast ordained;
What is man, that thou art mindfull of him? and the son
of man, that thou
visitest him?---Psalm 8:3,5.
Before beginning these lessons on the ductless glands
it would be well for
us to briefly review the origin and constitution of man.
There is nothing in the universe other than pure spirit,
and there never
has been; but there are two forms or poles of spirit. One is
positive, acting,
directing, and the other is negative, passive, receiving, assimilating.
This
positive-negative spirit substance, its two poles working together,
is all
inclusive and has produced all that there is from the clod to
God. All
creation is in a state of ever becoming and perfection is the
goal. The
positive pole of spirit manifests as energy. The negative pole
acts as its
receptacle, and the two produce both life and form. Form, which
is a lower
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MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
vibration of spirit, is brought into being for the use of the
spirit, and form
and spirit evolve side by side.
God, the Creator of our solar system, has within Himself
three great
dynamic forces, which for want of better names we designate as
will, wisdom-
love, and activity; and by putting these forces into directed
orderly action
He created our solar system and all therein. The ultimate goal
to be attained
by each of His creations is Godhood. Each individual brought
into existence by
this mighty Being has within Himself in POTENTIALITY all of the
powers of his
Creator, including epigenesis, the spirit's power to inaugurate
something
entirely new; and the work of each is to develop these potentialities
into
dynamic forces like unto those of our great Progenitor. In man
we speak of
these potentialities as the divine, life, and human spirits.
It means that
man, who is pure spirit, has within himself three great spirit-force
potentialities.
Man's latent potentialities are developed in two ways,
namely, through his
own efforts, and by the help of others, chief among which are
great Beings who
are far beyond him on the path of evolution.
Just as it is necessary to take food in order to develop
the physical body,
so is it necessary to give food to the vital and desire bodies.
The vital body
gets its food directly from the sun; the etheric spleen of each
individual
attracts as much of the solar life forces as it requires. In
the Desire World
there is an essence corresponding to the vital fluid which sustains
the vital
body, and in this elixir of life the desire body steeps itself
while the dense
body sleeps.
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MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
THE INDIVIDUAL WORK OF THE SPIRIT
It was impossible for the spirit to develop its potentialities
until it had
built its three lower vehicles, the dense, vital, and desire
bodies; for it is
from them that it obtains the food on which to nourish and develop
its
potential powers. This food essence is called soul.
By right action in relation to external impacts, experiences,
and
observations the spirit automatically extracts the conscious
soul essence from
the dense body, and this pabulum or food develops the latent
potentialities of
the divine spirit into dynamic forces which manifest as will,
intellect,
knowledge, the positive force of its being, the father principle,
the power to
DO.
By discrimination in relation to the important, the essential,
and the real
things of life, and the unimportant, the unessential, and the
unreal, the
spirit automatically extracts the intellectual soul food essence
from the
vital body and this in turn feeds and develops into dynamic power
and
potentialities of the life spirit which are imagination, intuition,
receiving
power, power to assimilate, the mother principle, the love nature.
By a curb on animal instincts, devotion to high and lofty
feelings, and
emotions generated by right action and purifying experiences
the spirit
automatically extracts the emotional soul food essence from the
desire body
and it in turn nourishes and develops the human spirit potentialities
which
are creative power--both physical and mental, fecundation, expansion,
germination, and growth, and develops them into dynamic forces
under the
domination of the will.
Much help is given to the individual by Great Beings through
the ductless
[PAGE 8]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
glands of which we will now make a study. A gland is composed
of a mass of
cells, and cells are composed of a thick, colorless, jellylike
substance
called protoplasm. Every gland might be likened to a chemical
factory in which
all cells are workers, and the product of the factory is its
secretions.
The ductless glands have no openings, tubes, or ducts
carrying their
secretions away, but empty them directly into the blood and the
lymphatics
which permeate them. The ductless glands are often spoken of
as the endocrine
glands or the hormone producing glands. Endocrine is really a
most convenient
term as it stands for both the secretion and the gland, but the
word hormone
is applied specifically to the internal secretion and not to
the gland. The
hormone is a substance formed in one organ of the body and carried
through the
circulation of the blood to another organ on which it exerts
a stimulating
effect. The word is derived from a Greek verb meaning to arouse
or set in
motion. Without the endocrine substance suited to them no muscle
nor cell
would act. Without a supply of the endocrine phosphorus furnished
by the
thyroid gland no brain could function. The beat of the heart
would not
continue for a moment were it not supplied with adrenal secretion;
and cases
are on record of hearts that were pronounced "dead,"
but after being supplied
with adrenal secretion beat again with regular rhythm.
It is less than fifty years since the scientists began
a real study of the
ductless glands, and most of the information that we have regarding
them has
been acquired during the last two and a half decades. What the
scientists do
not know yet is that the ductless glands primarily do not belong
to the
physical body at all, but are adjuncts to the vital body, set
apart and
[PAGE 9]
MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
crystallized to the necessary density in order that they may
perform certain
special kinds of work. The glands and the blood are the special
manifestations
of the vital body. Although each of these galnds has a specific
work to
perform, when normal and in good health they all work together
in perfect
harmony. The ductless glands are of more than particular interest
to the
students of the occult for they may be termed in a certain sense
"the seven
roses" upon the cross of the body, and are intimately connected
with the
occult development of humanity.
The principal ductless glands are the pineal, pituitary,
thyroid, thymus,
spleen, and the two adrenals. The adrenals, spleen, and thymus
gland belong to
the personality. The pituitary and pineal are correlated with
the spiritual
side of the nature, and the thyroid froms a link between the
two.
THE ADRENALS
We will begin our study of the glands with the adrenals.
They are a pair of
cocked-hat chaped glands capping the upper end of the kidneys.
They are easilt
recognized because of their yellowish fatty color. For centuries
these
important glands were not given a separate status as organs but
were passed up
as a part of the fat ensheathing the kidneys. In childhood and
youth they are
relatively larger and more prominent than in the adult. At all
ages the amount
of blood passing through the adrenals is very great in comparison
with their
size. Their tremendous importance in the body economy cannot
be overestimated.
The great value of these glands is better understood when it
is known that
death occurs very quickly after their removal.
[PAGE 10]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
Each adrenal is a double gland composed of a cortex or
outer layer and a
medulla or inner layer. The cortex is of the same kind of tissue
that builds
the male and female organs of reproduction. How closely the adrenals
and the
organs of reproduction are related is neatly pointed out by the
fact of their
common ancestor, the mesoderm, which forms the middle layer of
the embryonic
cell. All vertebrates have adrenal galnds. The inner portion
of the adrenals,
the medulla, is developed from the ectoderm, or outer layer of
cells which
form the embryo. This is the same tissue that produces the sympathetic
nervous
system. The size of the adrenals is somewhat variable, but generally
speaking
they are about three inches long, an inch and a half wide, and
weigh about a
fourth of an ounce. Human beings have a larger adrenal cortex
(outer layer)
than any of the animals.
The adrenal cortex contains more of the phosphorous-bearing
substances of
the general nature of those found in the cerebrospinal nervous
system than any
other gland or non-nerve tissue in the physical body. During
intra-uterine
life the adrenals are large and conspicuous, in the first half
of the second
month being twice as large as the kidneys. Most of this relatively
large size,
which is in the human foetus only and not in other animals, is
due to the
enlargement of the cortex. Should this predominance of the cortex
over the
medullary portion not occur in the human foetus, that is, if
the proportion
should remain like those of the animals, the brain would fail
to develop
properly, and an entirely mindless monster would be generated.
The secretion of the cortex or outer layer of the adrenals
is calledf
interrenalin. This secretion stimulates a healthy growth of the
brain and sex
[PAGE 11]
MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
cells, develops great mental concentration and physical endurance,
and
generates a vigorous nervous and muscular constitution. It acts
on the pigment
cells of the skin, blunting their sensitiveness to light. In
certain diseases
of the cortex of the adrenals the skin becomes dark, pigmented,
or bronzed.
This condition is known as Addison's disease. Interrenalin neutralizes
the
acid formed in the body during digestion. Were this acid not
neutralized it
would quickly snuff out the life of the tissues.
The removal of the adrenal cortex influences profoundly
the chemistry of
the blood, notably the content of chloride, acid soluble phosphorous,
and acid
ions (an ion consists of one or more atoms and carries a unit
charge of
electricity or life force).
The adrenal cortex has an intimate relationship with the
gray matter of the
brain, and it also has a relation to sex and the chemical content
of the
blood. A defective adrenal cortex means an insufficiently developed
brain and
nervous system. So closely are the brain and adrenal cortex related
that a
normal human brain never develops without a normal adrenal cortex.
Note that
the adrenal cortex is also correlated to the voluntary nervous
system.
The medulla, or inner portion of the adrenal glands, contains
numerouys
nerve cells belonging to the sympathetic or involuntary nervous
system. The
secretion of the medulla is a nitrogenous substance called adrenalin.
This
secretion acts as a powerful stimulant on the heart, and has
a reinforcing
effect upon the entire body.
The amount of adrenalin present in the medulla in the
blood issuing from
the adrenals, and in the circulation in general is about one
part to twenty
[PAGE 12]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
millions while there is about a hundred thousand times as much
stored in the
glands as reserve. Profound emotions result in a decrease of
it in the glands
and an increase in the blood. Pain and excitement, especially
fear and rage,
cause a discharge from the glands. The entry of adrenalin into
the blood
causes a tremendous heightening of vigor, and a tensing of the
nervous system.
The nerve cells become more sensitive to stimuli, more sugar
is sent into the
blood from the liver, and more red blood corpuscles are forced
into the
circulation from the blood lakes of the liver and spleen. A redistribution
of
the entire blood mass takes place, a great deal of it being withdrawn
from the
internal viscera and dispatched to the brain and to the muscles
attached to
the skeleton. The heart beats more strongly, the eyes are enabled
to see more
clearly, the hearing becomes intensified, and the breathing more
rapid; the
temperature rises, and the skin gets moist and greasy. In case
of fear the
hair of the head and body often becomes erect.
This extra adrenalin in the blood produces a reinforcing
action on the
nutritive properties of the blood, the tone of the muscles, and
the activity
of the brain and sympathetic nervous system.
While the adrenals are thus stimulating the external muscles,
they are
having the opposite effect on the digestive organs; for the time
being
digestion is inhibited, for the Ego's whole attention is being
centered
entirely along another line of action, and everything nonessential
or
detrimental to the matter of the moment is inhibited, arrested,
and
suppressed.
In certain types of the middle-ages, a high blood pressure
accompanied by a
great capacity for work has been found to be caused by an overdeveloped
[PAGE 13]
MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
adrenal cortex. The adrenal glands are often called the glands
of combat and
are masculine in their manifestation. In women where excess in
development of
adrenal cortex occurs there is a degree of masculinity which
more or less
neutralizes the specifically feminine influence of the internal
secretion of
the ovaries. Such women have a vigor and energy above the normal,
and command
responsible positions in society, not only among their own sex,
but also among
men. They are the ones who are likely to become professional
politicians,
lawyers, bankers, captains of industry, and directors of affairs.
In facing a crisis the adrenals function as the glands
of combat. The more
combative and pugnacious the animal or individual, the more adrenal
activity
it or he has. The adrenals are the glands of energy, the glands
of emergency,
and the glands of preparedness. Adrenalin, the secretion of the
medulla, is
the substance used for body mobilization at a moment's notice.
It has a
reinforcing action on the entire physical organization, adding
strength,
alertness, and both physical and mental activity. It gives force
in combat and
swiftness in flight.
Adrenalin is so powerful in its action that in solution
of one part to a
million, it produces physiological reaction. its effect on the
small blood
vessels is so tremendous that quite a weak solution will stop
a hemorrhage
when applied locally, and it is frequently used in minor surgical
operations
to prevent excessive bleeding; but owing to the fact that its
effect lasts
only a few minutes, the injections have to be repeated frequently.
As the
activity of adrenalin is regulated by the sympathetic or involuntary
nervous
system the secretion of it can be increased by the stimulation
of these nerves
along the spinal column.
[PAGE 14]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
Through repeated excitement, anger, rage, et cetera, the
adrenal glands may
be exhausted of their reserve supply of adrenal secretion; the
amount secreted
being insufficient if enough time is not allowed, between demands,
for the
glands to recuperate, the result being temporary or chronic adrenal
deficiency. In a person so affected there appears a weariness,
a sensitiveness
to cold, cold hands and feet which are sometimes mottled bluish-red;
a loss of
appetite and zest of life, and a tendency to worry; also an inclination
to
weep on the slightest provocation.
A nervous breakdown may sometimes be traced to a lack
of normal response to
the needs of everyday life by the adrenals. In some cases mental
and physical
elasticity is totally lost, and even the slightest exertion along
either line
often causes so much worry and exhaustion as to be prohibitive.
Sometimes such
sufferers are obsessed by the thought that they have lost their
nerve
completely, and accordingly dread to commit themselves on even
the most
trivial subject. This vacillating frame of mind is so distressing
that at
times it arouses thoughts of suicide.
In certain disturbances of the adrenal glands, especially
where there are
tumors which supply a massive does of the secretion to the blood,
peculiar sex
phenomena and general developmental anomalies and irregularities
are produced.
If the disease is present in the foetus, manifesting before birth,
there
evolves the condition of pseudo-hermaphroditism. (The person
is apparently but
not actually hermaphrodite, as when in animals the sexual glands
are of one
sex while the other genitals are present, mixed or intermediate.)
The
individual, if a female, presents to a greater or lesser extent
the external
[PAGE 15]
MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
habits and character of the other sex so that she is actually
taken for a man,
although the primary sex organs are ovaries, often not discovered
to be such
except when examined during an operation or after death.
If the process involving the adrenal cortex attacks it
after birth, the
symmetrical correspondence and harmony of the primary sex organs
and the
secondary sex characteristics are not affected, but there follows
a curious
hastening of the maturity of the body and mind--a precocious
puberty, with the
most startling effects. A little girl two, three, or four years
of age will
within a few months after the appearance of the disease begin
to exhibit the
growth and likeness of a girl of fourteen or fifteen, developing
the physical
and mental qualities and attributes of an adolescent--a tot bewitched
into
puberty, so to speak. Again, a boy of six or seven years may
suddenly in the
course of a few weeks or months become a little man, robust,
rather short and
stocky, but mustached, with the muscular strength and sexual
powers of a man
and thinking a man's thoughts.
A case in point is that of little four-year-old Clarence
Kehr of Toledo,
Ohio, whose adrenal and thyroid glands got busy overnight and
transformed him
from an ordinary little boy into a juvenile Samson. Clarence
was born in
September 1924, and up to the age of three was apparently normal.
Then almost
overnight his voice changed from a childish treble to a husky
baritone, and
his small body began to take on a matured appearance. Very soon
he began to
look upon his brother of seven and sister of eight as small children,
and
sought the company of the fourteen and fifteen year old boys
of his
neighborhood. Clarence takes a keen deligjht in the fact that
he is grown up,
[PAGE 16]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
has to shave, is abnormally strong and can lift some two hundred
pounds.
Psychiatrists of the University of Michigan have made a special
study of this
boy's case. After making more than a dozen X-ray pictures of
his head and
subjecting him to very close observation for several days the
scientists
finally arrived at the conclusion that the lad's condition was
due to "some
disfunction of the ductless glands." The following is an
extract from a report
made by Dr. Gordon Manac:
"Clarence Kehr, aged four years, has been observed
in our clinic, and we
have found that the child is a rare anomaly....X-ray studies
of his bones
reveal his frame to be that of a boy well beyond his chronological
age. His
physical condition apparently is excellent. According to our
psychiatrists he
is above the avergae in intelligence....We believe that the child's
condition
is due to some disfunction of the ductless glands."
Clarence was on the Academy of Medicine stage during the
meeting of the
doctors to demonstrate his strength. He lifted heavy weights
easily, and while
the discussion was going on amused himself by pushing a grand
piano about the
stage.
Dr. Louis Berman in discussin like cases says:
"It is all as if into some fermentable medium or
solution a little yeast
were dropped that changed the quiet calm of its surface into
a bubbling,
effervescing revolution. It suggests at once that the transformation
of the
child into a man or woman must be due to the pouring into the
blood and the
body fluids of some substance which acts like yeast in the fermentable
solution. The adrenal cortex is one source of the 'maturity producing'
internal secretions. If trouble in the adrenals starts after
puberty,
[PAGE 17]
MAN'S
DEVELOPMENT
phenomena of the same type as that of the girls and boys mentioned,
but of a
different order, exhibit themselves. Suppose a woman in the thirties,
for
instance, becomes affected. Slowly or quickly her body will be
covered with an
abundant growth of hair, more or less of a beard or mustache
will appear on
the face, the voice will become deep and penetrating, the muscles
hardened,
and she will show a capacity for hard physical labor. Menstruation
ceases.
Sexually she appears to be made over. Masculinity now predominates
in her
make-up. She will have to shave regularly, and is not bothered
in the least by
the lack of feminine charms, for the change in her physical organization
makes
her immune to feminine desires. The cause of such a transformation
in one
previously normal woman was found to be due to a tumor on the
adrenal cortex."
[PAGE 18]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
CHAPTER
II
TYPES
PRODUCED BY THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
In the case of the pure type, one particular gland, either
by its excessive
action or its subnormal activity exercises a dominating influence
upon the
traits of the individual; and either as the strongest link in
the chain of
glands or the weakest, it becomes the ruler and all of the others
must
accommodate themselves to its dominancy. Among all the others
as the chief
commander of growth, development, and normal function, it holds
the balance of
power. It dominates every emergency by its strength or weakeness,
and in this
way it creates its own type of individual with characteristics
and attributes
peculiar to itself. The pure types are the adrenal, the thyroid,
the
pituitary, the pineal, and the thymus.
With a little practice each person representing a pure
type can be readily
identified as one passes him or her on the street, for each is
stamped with
identifying characteristics of figure, height, hair, skin, and
temperament,
with the corresponding ambitions, social inclinations, and even
a
predisposition to particular diseases. The various types differ
in appearance
as greatly as do different animals of the same genus. For instance,
no one
ever mistakes a mastiff for a bulldog or a fox terrier for a
dachshund. Each
has a distinctive size and shape, each has certain traits and
characteristics,
and each is built and organized in the most efficient manner
to work out its
[PAGE 19]
DUCTLESS GLAND
TYPES
own specific destiny in a particular way, all of which is true
of glandular-
typed people.
The distinctions are less marked among the mixed types
and consequently
they are more difficult to classify. In them there is a conflict
as to which
ductless gland shall dominate, and of course the combined action
of the
different glands results in a consdierable modification of the
primary
characteristics. In some cases not only two but even three of
the ductless
glands strive for supremacy, and their combined action causes
a modification
in the primary glandular appearance. A compromise effect is then
necessitated.
Also it is possible for an individual to be under the domination
of one gland
during one period of his life, and under another at a later time.
In such
instances the gland ruling the early life will leave its impress
on the
earliest developing features while other signs will indicate
the more recent
influence. Such combinations are classified as the adrenal-thyroid
type, the
pituitary-adrenal type, et cetera.
THE ADRENAL TYPE OF PERSONALITY
The adrenal face is often dark or freckled, and tends
to be broad and
irregular, the head square-shaped. The low hairline makes the
brow appear low,
and there is considerable hair over the cheek bones. The skin
is one of the
chief clues to the adrenal personality; the epidermis is always
more or less
pigmented. Pigmentation is due to a deposit of dark-brown coloring
matter of
varying intensity in the skin. It is a well-known fact that sking
pigment
bears a direct relation to the reaction of the organism to light,
especially
[PAGE 20]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
the ultraviolet rays, to heat radiation, and therefore to the
fundamental
productions and consumptions of energy by the cells. The hair
of the adrenal
type is profuse, thick, dry, and coarse. It is most prominent
over the chest,
abdomen, and back, and it has a kinky tendency. it often has
an unexpected
color: an Italian's may be yellow or a Norwegian's jet black.
Adrenal people
have well-marked canine teeth. With a properly cooperating thyroid
and
pituitary the adrenal person is in possession of striking vigor,
energy, and
persistence. Such a one may easily become a progressive personality
and a
winning fighter who seldom loses his objective.
[PAGE 21]
DUCTLESS GLAND
TYPES
Among women the adrenal type is always masculine. If such
a one is
physically feminine, due to adequate feminine reactions on the
part of the
other glands, she will at least show masterful virile qualities.
A few decades
ago such women had to repress their inherent desires to fill
positions that
placed them before the public; but now they are striding forward
and
commanding responsible positions which carry high salaries. Dr.
Berman
suggests that the first woman president will probably be an adrenal
type.
Certain it is that individuals of this type are the good workers,
the
efficient directors; they are successful for the reason that
they have a
driving force within themselves that is ever urging them onward
toward the
acquirement of that which they desire. President Harding was
a typical
masculine adrenal-centered type, and Carrie Nation an excellent
example of a
feminine one.
The insufficient adrenal type is built along the same
lines as the adrenal
adequate, and may easily be taken for him; but he differs and
contrasts
strikingly beneath the surface. He is one, and perhaps the most
frequent,
variety of the neurasthenic. He is weak, lazy, irritable; has
a poor appetite,
and lacks response to stimuli of all kinds. Chronic indecision
is one of his
most prominent traits. Among his chief troubles are a fatigableness
that goes
with low blood pressure, lowered body temperature, and a subnormal
ability to
utilize sugar for fuel purposes. Children who have an insufficient
adrenal
supply cannot learn easily; their growth is slow, and they cannot
be driven or
hurried. Often those lacking adrenal secretion before puberty
awaken to good
energy when the rest of the endocrines develop, especially the
sex glands.
Therefore the outlook for such unfortunates is not hopeless.
[PAGE 22]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
Fear and anger arouse the endocrine glands into needlessly
strenuous
action, and frequent indulgence in either of these emotions will
in time
impair the efficiency of these glands. Then if an effort is not
made to give
them an opportunity to recuperate, this impaired condition will
eventually
develop into a state of permanent adrenal insufficiency, and
the individual
will find himself in a most distressing physical and mental predicament.
Optimism, good humor, and faith in God vivify and strengthen
the adrenal
glands, imbuing them with power and adequacy.
Relative to the activities of the ductless glands, Max
Heindel has stated:
"Science is gradually learning the truths previously
taught by the occult
science and their attention is being more and more directed to
the ductless
glands which will give them the solution to many mysteries, but
they do not
seem to be aware as yet that there is a physical connection between
the
pituitary body, the principal organ of assimilation and therefore
of growth,
and the adrenals which eliminate the waste and assimilate the
proteins. These
are also physically connected both with the spleen and the thymus
and thyroid
glands. It is significant in this connection, from the astrological
point of
view, that the pituitary body is ruled by Urnaus which is the
octave of Venus,
the ruler of the solr plexus where the seed atom of the vital
body is located.
Thus venus keeps the gate of the vital fluid coming direct from
the Sun
through the spleen, and Urnaus is warder of the gate where enters
the physical
food, and it is the blending of these two streams which produces
the latent
power stored up in our vital body until converted to dynamic
energy by the
martial desire nature."
[PAGE 23]
THE SPLEEN
CHAPTER III
THE SPLEEN
The spleen is the largest ductless gland. It is located
at the left end of
the stomach, between it and the diaphragm. It is bean-shaped
and has a deep
bluish-red color. It weighs from five to six ounces, is about
five inches in
length and three inches in breadth. It is soft, spongy, and fragile.
Normally,
the spleen is movable within certain limits. It moves with respiration
or
breathing. it may become greatly enlarged during disease, such
as typhoid or
malarial fever, or during a disease of the organ itself, such
as leukemia, an
affection in which the white corpuscles of the blood are greatly
increased in
number, accompanied by enlargement of the spleen itself. The
spleen
permanently enlarges during prolonged ague, and then becomes
the so-called
"ague cake." Enlargement of the spleen of infants is
often due to syphilis,
and if it occurs at the age of two or three months it is usually
due to that
cause. The spleen always enlarges during digestion. This gland
is fed by the
splenic artery, and its veins empty into the portal vein which
discharges its
contents into the liver.
The spleen appears in the embryo about the fifth week,
as a localized
thickening of the mesoderm, or middle layer of the embryonic
cell. It is
almost entirely surrounded by peritoneum membrane, and is held
in position by
two folds of this tissue. It is invested by two coats--an external
moist,
[PAGE 24]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
fibrous membrane, and an internal fibro-elastic one. The external
coat is thin
and smooth. The secretion of the spleen is called hemolytin and
is the
controller of the blood destruction. It also has a striking effect
in
stimulating the normal movement of the intestines. Cases of chronic
constipation have been cured by the use of it. On the inner side
of the spleen
at a depression called the hilus the blood vessels, nerves, and
lymphatics
enter or leave.
The spleen manufactures white blood corpuscles, stores
up iron, has a
strong influence on the nervous system (controls intake of vital
sugar fluid
which traverses the nerves), and aids in digestion by taking
in more vital
essence from the sun during this process. Removal of the spleen
is not fatal.
After its removal there is an overgrowth of the lymphatic galnds
which take
over its physical work. The etheric spleen does not decay simultaneously
with
the amputated physical member, but continues its existence and
carries on its
vital functions the same as before. The spleen is the entraqnce
gate for the
solar force which vitalizes the dense body. Without this vital
elixir no being
can live.
From the spleen this sun force is sent to the solar plexus,
where it meets
the ether which has been extracted from the blood in the heart,
and which, as
soon as it is extracted, flows along the silver cord to the solar
plexus where
the seed atom of the vital body is located. This seed atom seems
to have the
same effect upon the ether as a prism has upon light, for the
ether stream is
refracted by it into the three primary colors: red, yellow, and
blue. In
people living the purely physical life, red overwhelmingly predominates;
but
as the individual advances spiritually, yellow becomes noticeable,
and later,
[PAGE 25]
THE SPLEEN
blue. The red stream coalesces with the colorless solar stream
which
constantly rushes to the solar plexus by way of the spleen, and
it is the
agent that changes this colorless solar fluid to a pale rose,
and gives the
entire vital body its tinge of delicate peach-blossom hue. From
the solar
plexus this fluidlike energy flows along the filaments composing
the nervous
system, and in this way it permeates every part of the physical
body,
energizing each and every cell with its life force.
When a person is in health this life energy is specialized
by the spleen
and extracted from the blood in such large quantities that it
cannot all be
used in the body, and therefore it radiates outward through the
pores of the
skin in straight lines or streams. It is the outpouring of this
excessive
vital force, radiating from the body, that drives our poisonous
gases,
inimical microbes, and effete matter, and in this way assists
in preserving a
healthy condition of the physical organism. It also prevents
armies of disease
germs which swarm about in the atmosphere from entering the dense
vehicle. In
this way it serves a most beneficial purpose even after it has
been used by
the body and is returning to a free state.
The trained clairvoyant often observes a curious and astounding
sight when
gazing at the exposed parts of the body such as the face and
hands, when
suddenly there commences to flow from them a stream of stars,
cubes, pyramids,
and a variety of other geometrical figures. These forms are atoms
belonging to
the chemical ether that have served their purpose in the body
and are being
expelled through the skin. Each figure floats away from the individual
a short
distance and then disappears. Their color is an amethystine blue.
[PAGE 26]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
After eating, the vital solar forces attracted by the
spleen is consumed by
the body in great quantities. The two lower ethers contain the
cement which
the nature forces (nature spirits, so-called dead, Lucifer spirits,
and
Teachers from the higher creative Hierarchies) use in building
food into the
physical body.
When the meal is heavy, the outflow of the vital fluid
from the body is
perceptibly diminished and does not then cleanse the dense vehicle
as
thoroughly as it does when the food has been digested, nor is
it as potent in
keeping out inimical germs. Therefore overeating renders a person
more likely
to catch cold or take disease. During ill health the spleen furnishes
the
vital body with very little solar energy, and at this time the
dense body
seems to feed on the vital body in consequence of which the latter
becomes
more transparent and attenuated in proportion as the physical
vehicle exhibits
a state of emaciation. As the cleansing vital radiations are
almost entirely
absent during sickness, complications then set in very easily.
Ordinarily if any part of the body or any organ is removed
and there is no
longer any use for the etheric counterpart, that part of the
vital body
gradually wastes away; but in the case of the spleen no such
disintegration
takes place for, as stated before, the etheric spleen has a great
work to
perform, and if the physical body is to live the former must
of necessity
remain intact and continue with its work, viz., the attracting
of solar energy
or force to the dense vehicle.
The glands are an adjunct to the vital body, but the desire
body has gained
a hold in the spleen and makes the white corpuscles there. The
white blood
corpuscles are destroyers. The desire body uses the blood to
carry these tiny
destroyers all over the physical body. They pass through the
walls of the
[PAGE 27]
THE SPLEEN
arteries and veins whenever annoyance is felt, and especially
in times of
great anger; for then the rush of forces in the desire body causes
the
arteries and veins to swell, and that opens up the way for the
white blood
corpuscles to pass out through the thin walls of these distended
blood vessels
into the surrounding tissue of the body, where they form bases
for the earthy
matter which kills the dense vehicle.
The desire body is constantly destroying and breaking
down physical tissue,
which the vital body is constantly building up; and it is the
war between the
two that results in consciousness in the physical world. The
etheric forces in
the vital body act in such a way as to convert as much of the
food as possible
into blood; and blood is the highest product of the vital body.
Red blood
corpuscles are circular discs, concave on both sides, and have
no nuclei. They
distribute oxygen through the body. The white corpuscles are
irregular in
shape, have nuclei, and are possessed of the power of amoeboid
movement.
The way the desire body works in forming white blood corpuscles
in the
spleen is as follows: Evil thoughts, fear, and anger interfere
with the power
of evaporation in the spleen. The desire body seizes the opportunity
and forms
a speck of plasm, the sticky material of an animal cell, which
becomes the
foundation of the white corpuscle. This is at once seized by
a thought
elemental, which forms a nucleus and embodies itself therein.
Then the
elemental commences to live a life of destruction, coalescing
with waste
products and decaying elements wherever obtainable, making the
physical body a
charnel house instead of the temple of an indwelling spirit.
Every white
[PAGE 28]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
corpuscle which has thus been formed and taken possession of
by an outside
entity is to the spirit a lost opportunity; and the more of the
lost
opportunities there are in the physical body the less that vehicle
is under
the control of the Ego. White blood corpuscles are always present
in large
numbers in all diseases.
PERSONALITY TYPE
The spleen has no personality type; but owing to the fact
that it attracts
an excessive amount of solar force during mealtime and digestion
in order that
the food eaten may be taken care of, the gourmand with his excess
of fat and
his unwieldy body might possibly be considered as the representative
of a type
which may develop if the appetite is not controlled; however,
if control is
used, a high type, forceful and strong will be developed.
[PAGE 29]
THE THYMUS GLAND
CHAPTER IV
THE THYMUS GLAND
THE GLAND OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT
The thymus gland is situated in the chest between the
two lungs and behind
the upper part of the sternum or breastbone. It descends and
covers the upper
portion of the heart, overlapping the great vesels at the top
of the latter.
It is a brownish mass, which when cut, has the appearance of
a sweetbread. It
is placed over the treachea or windpipe. It rises as a growth
from the wall of
the third pouch of the pharynx (a funnel-shaped cavity in the
alimentary canal
beginning behind the mouth); it reaches its greatest at the beginning
of
puberty. At birth it weighs about half an ounce. At puberty it
weighs a little
over an ounce. It is about two inches in length, an inch and
a half broad, and
a fourth of an inch thick. It is readily found in dissection
until the
twentieth year. Its gradual disappearance thereafter is marked
by a loss of
glandular structure, which is replaced by fibrous and adipose
tissue. Vestiges
of the characteristic thymus tissue, however, persist and some
of the
secreting cells remain throughout life.
In the past it was believed that at puberty the thymus
atrophied, but now
it is known that some of its secreting cells persist throughout
life. When too
mahy of these cells persist, the gland becomes from five to ten
times as alrge
as normal and a number of other features become prominent which
make the
[PAGE 30]
THE THYMUS GLAND
individual extraordinary, the victim of the "status thymicus,"
who amid the
hazards of life will react in a most amazing way. This will be
further
discussed in this series of lessons under thymus personality.
certain it is
that the thymus is the gland that keeps children childish, and
sometimes makes
children out of adults. The arteries that supply the thymus with
blood are
chiefly from the internal mammaries, an indication of the close
relation
existing between the mother and child. The nerves, which are
small, come from
the sympathetic or involuntary nervous system and the tenth cranial
or
pneumogastric nerve.
During childhood the thymus is the organ that promotes
growth of bones, but
at puberty a decreased functioning begins. It is believed that
the sex glands
arising to functioning level at that time exert a restraining
influence upon
it.
The secretion of the thymus is called thymovidin, and
is believed to be the
controller of the growth of children. When an enlarged thymus
is present in a
newborn baby, the starting of the process of breathing, that
is, the
introduction of the infant to the oxygen in the air, may be an
exceedingly
prolonged difficult matter. Such a baby is said to be born blue;
the breathing
for days produces a harsh, whistling sound, becoming normal for
a time, to be
followed by spells when there is trouble in breathing, breathlessness,
accompanied by blueness of the skin and threatened death. There
are cases in
which these spells have occurred after the child had appeared
to be perfectly
healthy. That an oversize thymus is responsible for such a condition
has been
shown by the relief obtainable by X-ray shrinkage of the gland
or the surgical
removal of a part of it.
[PAGE 31]
THE
THYMUS GLAND
When the body of a child is suffering from under-nutrition,
there is a
rapid decline in weight of the thymus. This proves that the size
and condition
of a child's thymus are an index of the state of nutrition of
its body. it has
been proved that underfeeding for four weeks will reduce the
thymus to one-
third its normal size. This gland appears to act as a storage
and reserve
organ, affording some protection against the limitation of growth
on account
of lack of food. It is an interesting fact that in exhausting
or wasting
diseases the weight of this gland sinks much more quickly than
does that of
the other glands. There are reported instances where developing
children grew
inches in height and expanded mentally when thymovidin was fed
to them, when
every other measure had failed. In France a study was made of
over four
hundred idiotic children with normal thyroids. The report on
the investigation
stated that over three-fourths of these unfortunates had no thymus
gland at
all.
The secretion of the thymus gland controls normal bone
growth and muscular
metabolism in some definite way during the period of childhood.
This gland
particularly influences the development of the adrenal cortex
(outer part of
it), the pineal gland, the thyroid gland, and the prostate gland.
Thymovidin
injection has a specific effect in relieving the fatigue of the
voluntary
muscles.
Removing the thymus gland of a young and growing animal
produces an
interference with its normal growth--a dwarfing, with changes
in the skeleton
resembling rickets. The bones become soft and bendable, and fractures
occur
easily. However, with the regenration of small bits of the thymus
that may
[PAGE 32]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
have been left behind during the operation these symptoms disappear,
and the
animal becomes normal again.
The thymus gland grows rapidly during the first two years
of a child's
life. The reson for this is that the child is then nursed, and
the vital ether
contained in the mother's milk especially furthers the growth
of this organ.
The thymus gland of children nursed by a human mother is always
larger than
that of children brought up on the milk of animals, and such
children are
always more amenable to the control of anyone else. From the
time when nursing
is discontinued the disintegrating atoms of the thymus gland
circulate in the
bloo dstream, and since they are impregnated with the vital ether
of the
mother obtained during the time of nursing the close physical
tie between them
remains until the gland has become greatly decreased. Children
nursed on human
milk have greater vitality than those brought up on the milk
of anmials,
because animal ether is not permanently absorbed by the thymus
gland as the
human ether is.
The child does not manufacture its own red blood corpuscles
in the same way
that the adult does. The reason for this is that the positive
pole or energy
of the desire body of the child is comparatively inactive; in
consequence of
which this vehicle does not act as an avenue for the forces (Martian)
which
take the iron from the blood and change it into haemoglobin (the
red coloring
matter of the blood corpuscles). To compensate for this inaction
there is
stored in the thymus gland of the child a spiritual essence which
is drawn
from the parents at the time of conception; and this substance
accomplishes
the alchemistry of the blood temporarily for the child until
the desire body
[PAGE 33]
THE
THYMUS GLAND
becomes dynamically active which is about te age of fourteen.
The thymus gland controls the physical growth of children,
the greater part
of which takes place approximately before the fourteenth year
of age. During
this time it holds the other glands in check, delays puberty,
and further
normal brain development. There are cases, however, where, owing
to a disease
of the adrenal glands, the brain and generative organs mature
in a few weeks
or months before the body has time to properly develop; the stoppage
of its
growth at this time leaves it undersized although it may be symmetrically
formed. These are exceptional cases, however. Ordinarily the
thymus gland
prevents any such phenomenon taking place.
When the persistence of the thymus after puberty is TOO
GREAT, the gland
being from five to ten times as large as normal, the individual
develops a
case of STATUS THYMICUS which is weirdly interesting. This condition
tends
towards producing the feminine expression of the male, and the
masculine
expression of the female. In other words it causes an arrest
of
masculinization or feminization, as the case may be, sometimes
resulting in
the peculiar complex that the man will desire the society of
men more than
that of women, and that women will prefer the society of women
to that of men.
Carried to the extreme this may result in Narcissim which is
a love of
oneself. Such people continually use the pronoun I; they love
to preen
themselves before mirrors, they delight in admiring themselves
before mirrors,
they delight in admiring their own hands, feet, in fact their
entire bodies,
and may often be seen patting themselves tenderly and smiling
sweetly at their
own mirrored images.
[PAGE 34]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
Sometimes this class of people have an irresistible urge
to wear the
clothes of the opposite sex. Some of them are satisfied with
half-way
compromises; but others are not content with half-way compromises;
but others
are not content unless they change their attire completely and
pass as members
of the opposite sex. This class of people are not pseudo-hermaphrodites;
their
sex development is perfectly normal. There is a case on record
where one man
lived 48 years dressed in male attire; then he changed to that
of a female
which he continued to wear until his death thrity-five years
later. During all
of his later life he was universally accepted as a woman, and
it was an
autopsy which disclosed the fact that he-she was really, so far
as sex was
concerned, a normal man.
This type of individual is misunderstood and misjudged;
and usually a
hopeless misfit in society; the result of which is that such
persons ofttimes
become disheartened and discouraged, take to alcohol or drugs,
and eventually
resort to suicide. However, there are those of this type who
after a stormy
life through the twenties, become adapted to their surroundings
in the
thirties, because the pituitary and the thyroid become more dominant
in their
activities, giving greater mental poise and stability. Thymo-centrics
who
combine brilliancy with instability, sometimes become famous
adventurers and
restless experimentalists.
The heart of the thymo-centric is small and the blood
vessels remarkably
fragile. This prevents the flow of blood from responding to an
emergency and
these people sometimes die suddenly owing to ruptures in their
vessels caused
by the attempt to force an excessive flow of blood through them.
Any sudden
shcok, fright, or the administration of an anaesthetic is likely
to produce a
collapse, in many instances resulting in death.
[PAGE 35]
THE THYMUS
GLAND
THYMUS TYPE OF PERSONALITY
Up to the time the permanent teeth make their appearance
the thymus is the
dominant gland, and it is noticeable that the child's form in
both sexes is
very much alike. After this a gradual differentiation takes place
although the
change does not become marked until the time of puberty. Ordinarily
from this
time on the thymus functions less and less, and the other glands
increase in
their activity. But many times the thymus gland does not cease
in its action,
in which cases we have individuals whose whole life is dominated
by this
gland. Such people belong to the thymus centered type. The features
of these
[PAGE 36]
MYSTERY OF THE DUCTLESS GLANDS
individuals remain rounded and childlike; the children belonging
to it are
well proportioned and perfectly formed, with delicately chiseled
features. The
skin is transparent and flushes readily; the hair is long and
silky. Such
children are the embodiment of beauty. They are the "angel
children" who are
admired for the coarse conflicts of life and usually die young.
The thymus type is essentially feminine. The figure, sometimes
medium
height, and sometimes tall, is slender, the limbs are rounded,
and the entire
body is gracefully formed. The skin is fine, delicate, and velvety,
a dead
white or peaches and cream, the hair soft and silky, with little
or none on
the face; the finely molded features are beautifully proportioned,
the eyes
blue or brown, with long lashes, the lips thin and the chin oval.
Sometimes in
the adult the chin is receding, and the mouth is not well formed.
The teeth
are milky-white, thin and translucent, scalloped or crescetiric
at the
grinding edge.
We wish to reiterate that this type of individual does
not have great
endurance; and therefore the best of care should be given to
the physical
body.
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