Sunday, February 6, 2011

You Have the Right to Remain Silent

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Under Arrest




For a long time I studied Gurdjieff, Ouespenski, and Nicholl, a study called the Fourth Way. I took it to heart. A process they promote is reading a book three times. On the second read you notice you missed a lot on the first one. On the third read, you comprehend what the author is talking about. You will want to read my book at least three times. I did. It’s a classic. I have interspersed tricky phrases and techniques and made them so complicated that you will want to keep at least three other copies in sacred places and always have one ready so you can begin to read it again and again just to understand how simple, direct, and mind changing it really is.

Anyhow, the Fourth Way is about remembering your self. It’s a big de vice you put your head into a twist every time you’re awake but have allowed the world to hypnotize you into believing you’re awake when really you’re hypnotized. Here’s how you remember yourself. Remember when you woke up this morning. No, that’s not it. Remember when you ate breakfast. That’s not it. Remember, your last good sex. That’s certainly not it. Remember that time as a child when you noticed everything was new. Well, that’s closer, but that’s not it. You can’t remember yourself.

You have the right to remain silent

Or can you? Waking up is a process that you do on your own. Books, gurus and masters can point the way, but their map’s not the territory. I’ll tell you this. You can compare yourself to the great herd that is the world, and you’ll immediately forget yourself and react to day to day incidents as you always do. Moo, moo. Or, maybe you are starting to wake up. Self remembering is looking out at the world and at the same time looking at how you respond to what is happening right now. You begin to wake up when you see you are a reactive mechanical person. Waking up continues when you notice a small opening in your reactive self, and you stop reactions. You arrest reaction.



You have the right to remain silent.


Franz Bardon is the judge: Click here

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