I can honestly say that I spent a lot of my life trying to figure LIFE out.Find answers to the the BIG questions.. is their a GOD? , what happens when I die? etc. Then one day I realized you really can't figure LIFE out and then my mind went silent or maybe it was my mind went silent and then I realized you can't figure life out.Right now I'm not sure which came first but I do know that I can't know what the ANSWERS are and that not knowing feels very peaceful.Kevin
--- In [email protected], Duveyoung <no_reply@...> wrote: > > Curtis,- except that that would seem as if I'm claiming enlightenment. But, > intellectually speaking, I have conceptualized about the Absolute in my > writings about Advaita so much that, well, I've sorta mood made myself into a > hard-wired nervous system prone to a belief in it. > > The personal God, maybe, only maybe, I believe. I like the Sefirot in that > it portrays a divine personality that, yep, if I were to author up God, that > would do as a start. > > I believe in scientific facts too. > > I like your key distinction in this debate, but I ask this additional > question: > > "Does the quantum foam has any causal relationship with materiality?" > > If it does, then everything that ever happened is echoing still in the subtle > precincts....or as I would frame it: omniscience. > > Maybe the quantum foam is the akashic records. But I don't think anyone can > tap into that database easily unless they're right there at the ritam level > of quiescence. Probably one person out of a billion can -- a theory. > > But the Absolute, by definition, must be transcendental to even the quantum > foam, so my money's on the quantum foam being the body of, say, Vishnu. > > These days, to me, silence is really there, and I'm not defining it as > "where some thing audible isn't." It may just be a conceit of my intellect, > but I see a vast distinction in this regard. > > And, sorry to come off goofy here, but I swear I can "know silence" all the > time if I but, well, stop what I'm doing/thinking and even breathing, but for > a nonce, just a nonce, just a glance, and there it is. See? It's not that > I'm in an all time reality of basking in silence, but man-o-man, it sure is > easy to "hear" it as if it were a soundtrack of an open mike in a perfectly > quiet and huge room. > > Oh, that's coming off as better than I mean to portray myself, but I'm > something like this description. > > It's as if reality is sheet music in which the spaces between the inked notes > are easily, but seldom, noticed. > > Sorry to bother you with this. If I had more I.Q. heft, I'd come atcha raw > and all evangelical just to see if I could make you sweat. > > Edg > > > >
