Hello everyone

>From: Heather Perella <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: [MD] Oui and Pirsig
>Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2007 08:09:30 -0700 (PDT)
>
>      [SA previously]
> > >There is no opening to dash out from behind these
>habits
> > that hide us.  You can at times, but it might be
>weird,
> > the comedian still gets some laughs, I'm talking
>about
> > all the informal behaviors.  When do you see them?
>How
> > >often?  With who?
>
>      [Marsha]
> > It's not so hard to see them, if you're watching and
> > not in a hurry.
>
>     You have time?  Isn't this U.S. culture - time is
>$?

Dan:

HI SA, Marsha

I think a person has to be flexible with their time, at least that's what 
experience has taught me. Whether it's the US or somewhere else doesn't 
matter. A person can waste a get deal of time on inconsequential matters 
wherever they happen to find themselves.

>
>      [Marsha]
> > To be both comedian and audience is not difficult,
>and
> > laughter is a blessing worth sharing.
> > 'With who?'  Are you asking who's habits get
> > exposed?
>
>      With what people have you been able to share your
>time and really get to know them?

Dan:
Every one I come into contact with shares my time. As far as really getting 
to know someone else, I don't even know myself. How on earth am I supposed 
to know someone else?


>SA:
>I've heard animals
>have different personalities.  I know the pets I've
>been with through my life definitely have different
>personalities.  I've watched fawns earlier this summer
>that between the two of them, their characters, their
>personalities were definitely different.  I've seen
>birds that were individuals, within the same species,
>but that was years ago.  Each tree grows differently,
>even within the same species, etc..., but trees are
>easier to notice.  Some people have the time to name
>all their cattle or reindeer.  These people notice
>their individuality.  This is what I'm getting to.
>How often, and in what situations are we able to see
>passed the usual, common, cultural habits/norms, and
>see who that person really is?

Dan:
I don't think you realize what you're saying. The "person" doesn't exist in 
the sense that you seem to be using the word. The "person" is a collection 
of patterns of value plus undefined Dynamic Quality.

Customs and cultural habits are easy to see past once a person learns to see 
that they too are patterns of value. Granted, most of us probably never wake 
up to that fact, which is why the MOQ seems of such value. It gives us a 
roadmap that is more expansive than the old SOM roadmap we're used to using.

>
>woods,

Asphalt,

Dan


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