How to Increase your Mental Efficiency
How to Increase your Mental EfficiencyI MENTAL EFFICIENCYII EXPRESSING ONE'S INDIVIDUALITYIII BREAKING WITH THE PASTIV SETTLING DOWN IN LIFEV MARRIAGEVI BOOKSVII SUCCESSVIII THE PETTY ARTIFICIALITIESIX THE SECRET OF CONTENTCopyright
How to Increase your Mental Efficiency
Arnold Bennett
I MENTAL EFFICIENCY
THE APPEAL
If there is any virtue in advertisements—and a journalist should be
the last person to say that there is not—the American nation is
rapidly reaching a state of physical efficiency of which the world
has probably not seen the like since Sparta. In all the American
newspapers and all the American monthlies are innumerable
illustrated announcements of "physical-culture specialists," who
guarantee to make all the organs of the body perform their duties
with the mighty precision of a 60 h.p. motor-car that never breaks
down. I saw a book the other day written by one of these
specialists, to show how perfect health could be attained by
devoting a quarter of an hour a day to certain exercises. The
advertisements multiply and increase in size. They cost a great
deal of money. Therefore they must bring in a great deal of
business.
Therefore vast numbers of people must be worried about the
non-efficiency of their bodies, and on the way to achieve
efficiency. In our more modest British fashion, we have the same
phenomenon in England. And it is growing. Our muscles are growing
also. Surprise a man in his bedroom of a morning, and you will find
him lying on his back on the floor, or standing on his head, or
whirling clubs, in pursuit of physical efficiency. I remember that
once I "went in" for physical efficiency myself. I, too, lay on the
floor, my delicate epidermis separated from the carpet by only the
thinnest of garments, and I contorted myself according to the
fifteen diagrams of a large chart (believed to be the magna charta
of physical efficiency) daily after shaving. In three weeks my
collars would not meet round my prize-fighter's neck; my hosier
reaped immense profits, and I came to the conclusion that I had
carried physical efficiency quite far enough.
A strange thing—was it not?—that I never had the idea of devoting a
quarter of an hour a day after shaving to the pursuit of mental
efficiency. The average body is a pretty complicated affair, sadly
out of order, but happily susceptible to culture. The average mind
is vastly more complicated, not less sadly out of order, but
perhaps even more susceptible to culture. We compare our arms to
the arms of the gentleman illustrated in the physical efficiency
advertisement, and we murmur to ourselves the classic phrase: "This
will never do." And we set about developing the muscles of our arms
until we can show them off (through a frock coat) to women at
afternoon tea. But it does not, perhaps, occur to us that the mind
has its muscles, and a lot of apparatus besides, and that these
invisible, yet paramount, mental organs are far less efficient than
they ought to be; that some of them are atrophied, others starved,
others out of shape, etc. A man of sedentary occupation goes for a
very long walk on Easter Monday, and in the evening is so exhausted
that he can scarcely eat. He wakes up to the inefficiency of his
body, caused by his neglect of it, and he is so shocked that he
determines on remedial measures. Either he will walk to the office,
or he will play golf, or he will execute the post-shaving
exercises. But let the same man after a prolonged sedentary course
of newspapers, magazines, and novels, take his mind out for a stiff
climb among the rocks of a scientific, philosophic, or artistic
subject. What will he do? Will he stay out all day, and return in
the evening too tired even to read his paper? Not he. It is ten to
one that, finding himself puffing for breath after a quarter of an
hour, he won't even persist till he gets his second wind, but will
come back at once. Will he remark with genuine concern that his
mind is sadly out of condition and that he really must do something
to get it into order? Not he. It is a hundred to one that he will
tranquilly accept the status quo, without shame and without very
poignant regret. Do I make my meaning clear?
I say, without a very poignant regret, because a certain vague
regret is indubitably caused by realizing that one is handicapped
by a mental inefficiency which might, without too much difficulty,
be cured. That vague regret exudes like a vapour from the more
cultivated section of the public. It is to be detected everywhere,
and especially among people who are near the half-way house of
life. They perceive the existence of immense quantities of
knowledge, not the smallest particle of which will they ever make
their own.
They stroll forth from their orderly dwellings on a starlit night,
and feel dimly the wonder of the heavens. But the still small voice
is telling them that, though they have read in a newspaper that
there are fifty thousand stars in the Pleiades, they cannot even
point to the Pleiades in the sky. How they would like to grasp the
significance of the nebular theory, the most overwhelming of all
theories! And the years are passing; and there are twenty-four
hours in every day, out of which they work only six or seven; and
it needs only an impulse, an effort, a system, in order gradually
to cure the mind of its slackness, to give "tone" to its muscles,
and to enable it to grapple with the splendours of knowledge and
sensation that await it! But the regret is not poignant enough.
They do nothing. They go on doing nothing. It is as though they
passed for ever along the length of an endless table filled with
delicacies, and could not stretch out a hand to seize. Do I
exaggerate? Is there not deep in the consciousness of most of us a
mournful feeling that our minds are like the liver of the
advertisement—sluggish, and that for the sluggishness of our minds
there is the excuse neither of incompetence, nor of lack of time,
nor of lack of opportunity, nor of lack of means?
Why does not some mental efficiency specialist come forward and
show us how to make our minds do the work which our minds are
certainly capable of doing? I do not mean a quack. All the physical
efficiency specialists who advertise largely are not quacks. Some
of them achieve very genuine results. If a course of treatment can
be devised for the body, a course of treatment can be devised for
the mind. Thus we might realize some of the ambitions which all of
us cherish in regard to the utilization in our spare time of that
magnificent machine which we allow to rust within our craniums. We
have the desire to perfect ourselves, to round off our careers with
the graces of knowledge and taste. How many people would not gladly
undertake some branch of serious study, so that they might not die
under the reproach of having lived and died without ever really
having known anything about anything! It is not the absence of
desire that prevents them. It is, first, the absence of
will-power—not the will to begin, but the will to continue; and,
second, a mental apparatus which is out of condition, "puffy,"
"weedy," through sheer neglect. The remedy, then, divides itself
into two parts, the cultivation of will-power, and the getting into
condition of the mental apparatus. And these two branches of the
cure must be worked concurrently.
I am sure that the considerations which I have presented to you
must have already presented themselves to tens of thousands of my
readers, and that thousands must have attempted the cure. I doubt
not that many have succeeded. I shall deem it a favour if those
readers who have interested themselves in the question will
communicate to me at once the result of their experience, whatever
its outcome. I will make such use as I can of the letters I
receive, and afterwards I will give my own experience.
THE REPLIES
The correspondence which I have received in answer to my appeal
shows that at any rate I did not overstate the case. There is,
among a vast mass of reflecting people in this country, a clear
consciousness of being mentally less than efficient, and a strong
(though ineffective) desire that such mental inefficiency should
cease to be. The desire is stronger than I had imagined, but it
does not seem to have led to much hitherto. And that "course
of treatment for the mind," by means of which we are to "realize
some of the ambitions which all of us cherish in regard to the
utilization in our spare time of the magnificent machine which we
allow to rust within our craniums"—that desiderated course of
treatment has not apparently been devised by anybody. The Sandow of
the brain has not yet loomed up above the horizon. On the other
hand, there appears to be a general expectancy that I personally am
going to play the rôle of the Sandow of the brain. Vain
thought!
I have been very much interested in the letters, some of which, as
a statement of the matter in question, are admirable. It is perhaps
not surprising that the best of them come from women—for (genius
apart) woman is usually more touchingly lyrical than man in the
yearning for the ideal. The most enthusiastic of all the letters I
have received, however, is from a gentleman whose notion is that we
should be hypnotised into mental efficiency. After advocating the
establishment of "an institution of practical psychology from
whence there can be graduated fit and proper people whose efforts
would be in the direction of the subconscious mental mechanism of
the child or even the adult," this hypnotist proceeds: "Between the
academician, whose specialty is an inconsequential cobweb, the
medical man who has got it into his head that he is the logical
foster-father for psychonomical matters, and the blatant
'professor' who deals with monkey tricks on a few somnambules on
the music-hall stage, you are allowing to go unrecognized one of
the most potent factors of mental development." Am I? I have not
the least idea what this gentleman means, but I can assure him that
he is wrong. I can make more sense out of the remarks of another
correspondent who, utterly despising the things of the mind,
compares a certain class of young men to "a halfpenny bloater with
the roe out," and asserts that he himself "got out of the groove"
by dint of having to unload ten tons of coal in three hours and a
half every day during several years. This is interesting and it is
constructive, but it is just a little beside the point.
A lady, whose optimism is indicated by her pseudonym, "Espérance,"
puts her finger on the spot, or, rather, on one of the spots, in a
very sensible letter. "It appears to me," she says, "that the great
cause of mental inefficiency is lack of concentration, perhaps
especially in the case of women. I can trace my chief failures to
this cause. Concentration, is a talent. It may be in a measure
cultivated, but it needs to be inborn.... The greater number of us
are in a state of semi-slumber, with minds which are only exerted
to one-half of their capability." I thoroughly agree that inability
to concentrate is one of the chief symptoms of the mental machine
being out of condition. "Espérance's" suggested cure is rather
drastic. She says: "Perhaps one of the best cures for mental
sedentariness is arithmetic, for there is nothing else which
requires greater power of concentration." Perhaps arithmetic might
be an effective cure, but it is not a practical cure, because no
one, or scarcely any one, would practise it. I cannot imagine the
plain man who, having a couple of hours to spare of a night, and
having also the sincere desire but not the will-power to improve
his taste and knowledge, would deliberately sit down and work sums
by way of preliminary mental calisthenics. As Ibsen's puppet said:
"People don't do these things." Why do they not? The answer is:
Simply because they won't; simply because human nature will not run
to it. "Espérance's" suggestion of learning poetry is slightly
better.