I�ve been a lurker on the MD side for approximately a 
month and here on MF for a week.  I am glad to have 
found this site when I did, when the close reading of 
Lila was just beginning.  This is my first post.  I 
feel I need to make it because of a theme that I see 
running through Chapters 1-3.  I apologize if my observation is still somewhat 
inchoate.

     It all started with the PROGRAM slip that Phaedrus 
wrote at the end of chapter 2 saying, � Hang up 
everything until Lila gone�. I think what this 
represents is central to the beginning of the book. 
>From the MF posts I have read this month, I think we 
can agree that the slips and their organization 
represent an entirely intellectual exercise.  The slips 
may represent thoughts that have come to Phaedrus 
Dynamically, during the Peyote ceremony or, as he says 
on page 25 of my edition, on the �spur of the moment� 
while he is concentrating on other tasks.  The 
organization and reorganization of the slips and the PROGRAM slips look to me like the 
imposition of static
 patterns onto the individual ideas or thoughts 
represented on the other slips. The patterning process 
is a second level intellectualization.  It is thinking
 about the thoughts.  Phaedrus says that the PROGRAM 
slips are �instructions for what to do with the rest of 
the slips�. Now, we have a PROGRAM slip, an instruction
 for what to do with the other slips, for what to do while Lila is on board; �Hang up 
everything until Lila 
gone�! The intellectual pattern making process, the 
organization of the slips of recorded experience, has
 been derailed, stopped. 

        Is this because of the immediacy of the 
biologic and social concerns that Phaedrus is faced 
with? Has the need to resolve these issues trumped the
 intellectual?  I don�t think so.    I think this is an
 instruction on perception, on how to perceive to 
attain Dynamic insight.  

    Look at what happened to Dusenberry�s objective 
anthros.  They didn�t get very far. They approached the 
anthropology of the Indians with objectivity and 
intellect at the forefront.  For Dusenberry, 
experiencing the Indians was paramount and 
intellectualizing was secondary.  To experience the 
Dynamic, the intellectual patterns must be Hung Up. 
 Does this suggest a problem with the nature 
of �objective observation� to anyone else? 
Can objective observation occur without the subjectivity 
of the observer creeping in? Or, should 
the question be so what if the nature of the subjective
 observer participates in the observation? Aren�t we 
heading down a path where the differentiation between 
observer and observed will be eliminated anyway?  I 
know that my language is loaded with SOM terminology 
and concepts.  I think it is allowed because we are only in 
the beginning of the book. We haven�t yet reached the point 
where these differentiations are rendered obsolete by the MOQ. 
    Again, at the Peyote ceremony, the Peyote 
allows Phaedrus to participate and experience.  Otherwise, 
he says, �he would have sat 
there �observing� all this �objectively�� (p. 37) It 
has removed his filtering pattern-making intellectual 
facility. To achieve the type of Dynamic experience he had 
at the ceremony, the experience had to be primary 
and any interpretation / pattern making put on hold � 
Hung up. Does this mean that we should experience the 
book Lila by hanging up our static intellectual 
patterns, our program slips? 
But, we are saved the paradox of intellectually 
discussing MOQ through the example of the Peyote ceremony.   
Phaedrus had the impression of being two 
people; the �wild� person who finally felt at home and 
the �good� �analytic� person who was able to spin the 
web of connections and insights.  What is important is 
that, at this moment, the �analytic� intellectual 
person was unencumbered by the pre-existing static 
patterns of thought.   

    To experience the Dynamic, the static 
intellectual patterns must be Hung up. 




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