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Hi Martin
  My purpose for posting the article was that it clearly expressed that 
psychology has an agenda of hooking everyone on life long prescription drug use.
  Likewise TROM has Dennis Stephens goal of Nirvana which he states was a 
condition of no mind and no games.  He states that if things get to polluted on 
Earth like from a nuclear war he could simply stop playing any games for a few 
hundred years and then come back to resume games play when the environment had 
detoxified.

Lester Levenson has the best definition of Nirvana that i have come across so 
far, "Be, joy filled and harmless to everyone"

  given all the above i don't want accept anyone else's goal for what i will be 
do or haver or not.  I hope everyone on the list will examine the goals and 
games that others are forever trying to hand them and consciously pick the ones 
they want to participate in and decline the rest.


Keep on TROMing
but only if you really want to

Pete

Sent from my iPad

On Apr 22, 2012, at 8:07 AM, Martin Foster <[email protected]> wrote:

> *************
> The following message is relayed to you by  [email protected]
> ************
> On 20/04/2012 17:35, Pete McLaughlin wrote:
>> Nirvana's nice but what could you do if you chose to play a really big game?
> 
> 
> Pete - Thanks for the interesting article and an especial thanks for 
> expanding the TROM library.
> 
> My thoughts on Nirvana:
> 
> I think Nirvana and any and all states of being are relative to other states.
> 
> Some believe that wealth is Nirnana. Others an endless holiday. Still others 
> a challenge or adventure.  Some want absolute peace. Others want adventure 
> and excitement.
> 
> Most want to change their current status and condition and strive to do so.
> 
> This physical universe is a subset of a superset non-physical universe and 
> the beings who occupy the physical also partially occupy the non physical and 
> vice versa. Every now and again we have a taste of something different and 
> then want more of that state.
> 
> As long as we're here in the physical - I think we should enjoy what we have. 
> Otherwise why are we here?
> 
> If one accepts that both the physical and the non physical universe's 
> integrity  is protected by all of us, then to continue attempting some 
> Nirvana is in fact violating our own agreement.
> 
> Our intentions sometimes have unintended consequences but fortunately the 
> protective mechanisms emplaced prevent us from interfering too greatly in 
> each others self determinism.
> 
> Martin
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> <msfoster.vcf>
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