Musings

If you can reserve judgment of worth (whether someone is โ€œgoodโ€ or โ€œbadโ€) and simply assess each action instance by instance and grasp how to frame them as inspirational anecdotes or cautionary tales, you can cast aside the veil of love and hate, of heroism and villainy, of damnation and worship, and surf a river of useful information.ย  I believe this is the most harmoniousโ€”and in the long term, stress-freeโ€”mode of being.


Comments

48 responses to “Musings”

  1. Nice to see you rafting the canals, Huckleberry Finn. You might remember my name from fairy tales such as Puck. P is for my father, and the rest is because I don’t give a fuck ๐Ÿ˜‰

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    1. Ha! Innuendo requires me to ask if you’d give ME one, LOL! ๐Ÿ˜†

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      1. You after a raft or a boat? I’m shore Loki could craft you one. Or probably not. He’s a cat, now. Or do you need an oar? I could use an oarsman. They don’t call me the whore of babylon for nuthin’. But just a reminder that certain words hold certain trigger responses from me… watch out if you don’t want me to blast off on your face. I retort, in your end – oh! Hey-oh! We can totes be MoredKAI and KENTGY! A written version of the regular shit show. I love that show.

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      2. Which show are you referring to? (By the names I’m kinda thinking it’s an anime)

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      3. The Regular Show – it’s got Mordecai, Rigby, Skips, Benson, Gramps, Muscle Man. Not as insane as adventure time, weirder than archer. I’m pretty sure there’s another cartoon called 3 bears, too.
        I was just shoving our initials in there. Back to the regular show, obviously I’m Skips and Mordecai, and you’re Muscle Man and Rigby. Because I said so.

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      4. Huh! I’ll have to check it out for sure. I love adventure time, and i thought archer was good for a casual laugh. Hope it’s on Netflix…

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      5. I like adventure time but that’s just normal shit in my head anyway. Thats the thing when you’re a metatrope – I could be any and all of the characters. And everyone seems to have a different view of which princess I’d be. But I do love singing and making bacon pancakes so Jake. I’m most like Jake the dog. And Fiona the human. Mouthafuckit see what I mean? Uuuugggh. Ok. Outside of my brain. Let’s turn the mute button on that crazy tirade before it gives everyone a headache. Ok. Yes. I quite like the regular show. But I also don’t watch much tv or anything anymore. I’ve enjoyed Rick and Morty, but I haven’t watched a heap of it.

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      6. Ooh! Rick and Mortyโ€”NOW you’re talking! That episode where they play a virtual reality game called Roy…MAN that is genius! ๐Ÿ˜Š

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      7. I haven’t seen it, but my hubby has just told me about it. So.. yeah, I guess I am trying to sell magic carpet rides. Makes sense. Normally I’m Rick (when I’m teaching shit), but when I’m off the clock, I’m evil Morty.

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      8. You’re a teacher? Holy crapโ€”you have WAY more tolerance for people than I have. ๐Ÿ˜†

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      9. Haha, high school teacher. So yeah, I am tolerant. How can I tolerate annoying teenagers? Easy, “don’t make it my problem.”
        And they friggen love me, it’s sweet. They skip class to come to my classes, for some reason. Maybe because I don’t care what they say, more what they do.

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      10. Well you’re a good teacher then. I always had a thing for high school teachers…๐Ÿ˜‚

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      11. You might get a kick out of this then. I’m trained in English, text and writing. And I fucking hate teaching the English curriculum. It sucks all the fun out of reading and writing. So I much prefer learning support, and last year I taught industrial technology. My sub-majors were in art history, cinema studies and education. I’m a bona-fide super-over-qualified bullshit artist. Feck yehaw.

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      12. Wow! Yeah, it must suck having to hammer kids over the heads about not using sentence fragments and knowing they’llโ€”in all likelihoodโ€”never know or care about the reasoning behind James Joyce’s epiphanies. I’d go NUTS! ๐Ÿ˜…

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  2. …..and really once you have crossed the internal threshold of ‘us and them’ isn’t that where you end up? We recognise all those things in ourselves whether we want to acknowledge them or not. “We need to sit on the rim of the well of darkness and fish for fallen light with patience” Pablo Neruda

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    1. Indeed. It’s like the old days of jiu-jitsu, when they ignored leg locks, and eventually new people came along and asked, “why would you ignore one half of the body?” Both are useful, and given the circumstance, both light and dark become necessary in order to push into new territory and bring harmony to the collective.

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  3. And where do you intend this information take you to? Why donโ€™t we just skip to the end already? Whatโ€™s the purpose of all these words?

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    1. Why skip to the end? Why not enjoy what’s in front of you, given a specific ending becomes increasingly hard to guarantee in increasing levels of complexity/ambiguity, where the reward is greatest? In my opinion, as cliche as it may be, the reward is in the journey.

      As far as the purpose, consistently articulating and embodying age-old knowledgeโ€”so that it is practicalized for context and resonates with othersโ€”is the way to make sure that it stays alive, and doesn’t become relegated to the unthinking realms of dogma and slogans.

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      1. Well what I mean is you cannot go to the next room unless you open the door in front of you. And you donโ€™t open a door consciously. Opening a door is no fun. It has become just something that has to be done.

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      2. I actually believe the oppositeโ€”that it is possible to evolve and open the door through conscious intent. I believe it is a distinct strength of being humanโ€”we don’t have to be nearly as reactive as other animals, and we can actually take pleasure in venturing into ambiguity and pushing our actualization. I believe this is the basis of the hero’s journey.

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      3. Umm.. well just that words beget words, more words, more and more and more words and in the end silence fails to be appreciated. If you speak much, you donโ€™t listen much.

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      4. Perhaps in some cases, but I don’t think it’s a mutually exclusive thing. I don’t believe speaking at length precludes meaningful listening, and certainly not meaningful dialogue. That’s a logical fallacy called a “false dichotomy,” I believe.

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      5. Words within, not the ones said. Listen.

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      6. Definitely in certain instances, but I think it demonstrates humility to articulate an inner conviction as best as possible, and embody it through action. Plenty of folks lie to themselves (well-known premise in psychology) about their true intentions, so it is extremely usefulโ€”I’d say essentialโ€”to quality-check beliefs and philosophies through interaction with the external world.

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      7. And also the words within donโ€™t have form. They are just pulses if energy.

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      8. Perhaps. I prefer to simply tackle the problems within my sphere of influence, and leave the rest up to the theorists. Not only is this practical, but it is also “spiritual,” (in a mystical sense, everything is “spiritual” by default) as your ego gets reduced because you must maintain a malleable identity which conforms to a problem, and then changes to fit the next. It also honors the mystical premise of humility, of Mystery, of leaving the transcendent beyond the prison of words and duality, because it doesn’t presume to know any definitive truth. It simply addresses the riddle that has been placed in front of you. As far as words being pulses of energy…I could take it or leave it. If that’s the paradigm that assists me with the immediate problem, I’ll take it.

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      9. When the words fail to satisfy you, remember to look beyond. ๐Ÿ˜€

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      10. I agree. That’s the meaning behind poetryโ€”words can only point toward a transcendent truth; they can’t contain it. ๐Ÿ˜Š

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  4. SelfmadeBlog Avatar
    SelfmadeBlog

    Very insightful, this writing taught me a lot.

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  5. Reblogged on Dragins Rule OK

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    1. Thanks a bunch, V.M!๐Ÿ˜Š

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    1. Thanks much, Dragons!๐Ÿ˜Š

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  6. Observation and reflection have simple advantages. Separation invites judgment and interpretation without complications. Interaction and relationship involve much more, and requires us to choose our responses and establish exchanges and communications that extend and exponentially expand the possibilities of knowing one another, including the other learning more from and about you. People are so complex given all the roles and contexts they serve, that I have given up trying to decide “who” a person is. I question who I am more every day and every situation.

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    1. Good attitude, I’d say. Interacting with all aspects of existence is a way to reduce preconceptions and biases, as well as consistently keeping one’s self in check, because it requires someone to venture beyond their own insular echo chamber. Long story short, it is a way of reducing/killing the ego, in eastern spiritual parlance.

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  7. This is profound wisdom.

    I’d like to use it as a jumping off point to write a little something.

    How best to do it? A reblog? A link to this in a new post?

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    1. I’m flattered that you think so! Thanks, man!

      Whatever you choose is fineโ€”like I said, I’m just flattered you like my stuff! ๐Ÿค˜

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  8. Thank you for your thoughts. So little thinking today, mainly because the “factories” pump out perverted words that were deep thoughts years ago in such saccharine, often mis-attributed clichรฉs. I appreciate your musings and the responses you invite your readers to submit. We do not need to be snobs to think. It seems that anything not rote is “toxic” depending on your identity today;) I hope some young students get a chance to sample your Greco (Socratic)/Roman/Zen style. We could do with more questions and fewer assertions, especially among the thoughtless rabble fomenting hatred and neo-racism. Hasn’t anyone read Orwell, Huxley, or Rand in the past few decades? I have to admit I have not read your books, but I hope the idea that the individual can be valuable without being a slave is embedded.

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    1. Hey, thanks man! I’m just paraphrasing what seems to work across eons and cultures as best as I can. Echo is specifically about how salvation lies in being able to see nuance and transcend tribal entrenchments. In the end it gets into some pretty crazy existential philosophy.

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  9. […] Link to original post. Text below. […]

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    1. Woot woot! Thanks for the share, Luminous Beings!!! ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ˜€

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  10. I love the caveman picture and good post.

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    1. Thanks Mandy! Sorry to hear about your injury, but it seems like you didn’t let it slow you down. I just got my B.S. in accounting as well, and recently just paid off my first investment property, which is also a condo. Keep kicking ass! ๐Ÿ˜Š

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      1. Thanks for your kind words! Best of luck to you. Keep kicking ass yourself.

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  11. Fascinating perspective! Thank you for your thoughts! ๐Ÿ˜Š

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    1. No problem! Thank you for the kind words!
      ๐Ÿ˜Š

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      1. You are most welcome! ๐Ÿ™‚

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