11-25-2017, 12:00 AM
watergaze wrote:
serloco wrote:The child is taught that, lets say, 1 out of 7 people get cancer int heir lifetime. Now the child believes this, and knows he is a human subject to the same fate. The child learns over time to not only intend his death, but to not intend his death as well. The child intends that he is a common human, intends that he could get cancer and intends not to as well. The child's intent gets split. Same with catching a cold. When people say a cold is going around the average man intends the possibility that he catch one. He subjects himself to the same blueprint of his fellow man. Never intending his choice in the matter. Never examining the other possibilities to intend.
It seems to me that belief not all too powerful though. It is not the same thing to believe that one can fly - deranged individuals have in the past believed they can fly and jumped to their deaths. What is the difference between fully believing in something and actually it being so... that is an interesting question imo.
Do some people just try to blindly believe something (is that the same thing as erasing opposing beliefs that we were spoon-fed so there is no more contradiction?) and would actually jump to their death if they tried? or would they fly?
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There you go doing as the child did, and placing yourself in the same boat as the drug addict. We need not share every perception and every experience. Just because the druggie had no power in his belief does not mean you can not hunt and store the personal power needed to claim victory. Power must be hunted, staked, claimed and stored. Of course a normal, average, junkie, with a severely dusty link cannot fly.
There are many books written about the power of belief. Many resources to hunt and stalk as well as your own experiences. Belief is an extention of our will. You mention hopes and dreams and intentions, but belief is right in that list as well.
serloco wrote:The child is taught that, lets say, 1 out of 7 people get cancer int heir lifetime. Now the child believes this, and knows he is a human subject to the same fate. The child learns over time to not only intend his death, but to not intend his death as well. The child intends that he is a common human, intends that he could get cancer and intends not to as well. The child's intent gets split. Same with catching a cold. When people say a cold is going around the average man intends the possibility that he catch one. He subjects himself to the same blueprint of his fellow man. Never intending his choice in the matter. Never examining the other possibilities to intend.
It seems to me that belief not all too powerful though. It is not the same thing to believe that one can fly - deranged individuals have in the past believed they can fly and jumped to their deaths. What is the difference between fully believing in something and actually it being so... that is an interesting question imo.
Do some people just try to blindly believe something (is that the same thing as erasing opposing beliefs that we were spoon-fed so there is no more contradiction?) and would actually jump to their death if they tried? or would they fly?
.There you go doing as the child did, and placing yourself in the same boat as the drug addict. We need not share every perception and every experience. Just because the druggie had no power in his belief does not mean you can not hunt and store the personal power needed to claim victory. Power must be hunted, staked, claimed and stored. Of course a normal, average, junkie, with a severely dusty link cannot fly.
There are many books written about the power of belief. Many resources to hunt and stalk as well as your own experiences. Belief is an extention of our will. You mention hopes and dreams and intentions, but belief is right in that list as well.

