Well, "putting" one's mind into silence sounds a bit contrived, to me.
Someone in CC doesn't necessarily have a quiet mind. In fact, someone in CC might have a very noisy mind -- conceivably even noisier than before they "attained" CC -- though the trend should be towards more silence over time, or such is my understanding. L --- In [email protected], doctordumbass@... <no_reply@...> wrote: > > David needs to speak for himself. There is not necessarily a "we", in his > comment. > > Thought is the *only* reason Mr. Frawley, and you, John, are able to share > this piece of spinach with us. The engineers that developed this technology > of communication, needed to think deeply, and continuously, to put this > together. > > If I may hazard a guess, David F. has just discovered that 90% of his > thoughts are useless energy and momentum, spent maintaining a story. It is a > common, though by no means, universal malady. > > Once he sees this, perhaps Dave can put his mind into silence, and simply > recognize the Divine utility of thought - the other 10%. In the meantime, his > projecting isn't helping. > > --- In [email protected], "John" <jr_esq@> wrote: > > > > "Thought, if we learn to observe it, is a reaction-mechanism devoid of true > > consciousness. It is the inertia of our conditioning that we fail to truly > > question." > > > > David Frawley > > >
