JackRiddler » Mon Jul 07, 2014 11:44 am wrote:Get in line. I've been around a while too (though I wouldn't say too long!), I've been subjective and objective, balanced and whacked, comatose and euphoric, meditative and blind, and on and off a decent variety of drugs, and yet I've stuck with my youthful observation that being old doesn't necessarily lead to greater wisdom, and in fact many people get even dumber and meaner as they age. Surprise, surprise. The old often hate and destroy the young, and in justifying it invoke some supposed special insight they acquired while getting old. It also works the other way around; the young destroy the best of the old. Life's complicated. One of the easiest coping strategies is to condescendingly claim special yet vague, uncommunicable knowledge on the basis of a personal intuition that others can just accept.
Uncommunicable knowledge is not a coping strategy, the argument you present against the greater imperceptible reality is in fact the coping strategy of modern-day humanity, a strategy to cope with an unpleasant truth. This unpleasant truth is that modern day man has abandoned his ideals and succumbed to the influence of our culture - to cope with his shame we have concocted a story that those who hold fast to the greater reality are in fact the "stupid" ones who are in denial.
What I am describing above is precisely why old people today tend to get dumber and meaner.
I remember Gurdjieff once said that man's original sin is not pride or lust, but suggestibility. I am inclined to agree. As a general rule, children tend to be much more idealistic than adults. Our modern culture would say it is because children are stupid, adults become "smart" and abandon these ideals. But it is culture that seeps in and poisons us.
Our youthful idealism is perhaps our only armor against the vile influence of modern culture, which erodes our perception of anything beyond the cultural fairy tale. When we abandon our ideals then we are dropping our defenses and standing stark naked in front of a raging behemoth. The more one is swallowed up by the fairy tale of modern culture, the less one is able (or willing?) to perceive the greater reality.
Then again, as I've described on here, I've had a great number of paranormal experiences so I would not expect a person who's not had my experiences to share my point of view.
At the same time, in my opinion it is a mistake to think that paranormal experiences create the impression of a greater observing and manipulating reality. Those sort of experiences actually help to facilitate the recognition that this greater reality is actually self-evident to all of us at this moment.
This probably all sounds like gibberish, ah well. Maybe I could compare it to a fish in water. He is pulled out by the fisherman, and when he's dropped back in all of a sudden he says "Holy sh*t, every one of us are actually
totally surrounded by water." - The realization of this brings the instant recognition of what "no water" is, as well.
I hope that this did not come across as condescending. There is something crazy going on, and on a grand scale. I personally would like everyone to be aware of this, I don't want to be the condescending guy who says he knows something you don't.