12-09-2006, 12:00 AM
Yes, the ever-present 'awareness' of the prospect of death can have some useful purposes! It can motivate one to endure, focus, recognize insincerity, strike out into the unknown with courage, and so on.
Here, we can only speak, but I might suggest that the real value of what we call death is in the 'awareness of its presence'! As one sees the fibers of the web bulge and burst forth every few seconds and lovingly opens themselves to this force, one gains strength and sustenance.
In truth, what we call 'death' is actually the source of life. As one culturally accumulates sludge and untold blockages (at the flyer's request, by the way...), one actually 'resists' the efforts of the Source to sustain us! We become the anvil for God's Hammer.
It is only through recapitulation and the 'healing' of our cocoon that we can keep from being eaten. To embrace death is to embrace the Source of life. One can expel that foreign energy in the cortex. Ultimately, one can slip past the Great Dragon that eats all that fail to survive!For the Standing Mother,
DG
Here, we can only speak, but I might suggest that the real value of what we call death is in the 'awareness of its presence'! As one sees the fibers of the web bulge and burst forth every few seconds and lovingly opens themselves to this force, one gains strength and sustenance.
In truth, what we call 'death' is actually the source of life. As one culturally accumulates sludge and untold blockages (at the flyer's request, by the way...), one actually 'resists' the efforts of the Source to sustain us! We become the anvil for God's Hammer.
It is only through recapitulation and the 'healing' of our cocoon that we can keep from being eaten. To embrace death is to embrace the Source of life. One can expel that foreign energy in the cortex. Ultimately, one can slip past the Great Dragon that eats all that fail to survive!For the Standing Mother,
DG

