~~~ Evolution of Observation ~~~

Bill Wiltrack • Sep 24, 2013 8:09 pm
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Painting with a wide brush, let us perceive, for a moment, that the average individual enjoys a lifespan of roughly 90 years.


The first 30 years of our lives
are spent developing and educating our complete ego; mentally, physically, and emotionally.

The next thirty years, roughly from the ages 30 to 60 we spend implementing the ego that we have developed and educated. Us against the world. We work to expand our ego within the multidimensional world that we find ourselves in. We work to provide for our family, which is an extension of our ego. Economically, intellectually and emotionally we establish ourselves. Harden the egg which we are able to more clearly define as the years pass. The pinnacle of the expansion of our ego.

The third trimester
of our individual evolution should be spent in observing ourselves. During our elder years are able to better understand that the egg; the ego, which we have educated and worked so hard to establish during the first 60 years of our life will inevitably, break. Just as an egg that is dropped, we will cease to exist and we are better able to understand that all that we consider to be ourselves will soon cease to exist. The outside world will continue, without skipping a beat or even taking notice of our absence. In this time, in this period in our lives, roughly between 60 and 90 years old are we then only able to have the capacity to truly observe our overall being.



It is within this last third of our lives that we face our most difficult and yet our most important struggle.



There are so many things that I love of the writings of Ouspensky. I will attempt to paraphrase a tiny segment of his philosophy here as I believe it pertains:

As human beings, as nature has originally made us, we have have five functions
or sometimes called centers. There also can be two other functions available to us if we are able to have our first five functions working, relatively normal.

The five functions that make-up a human being are:

The instinctive function

The moving function

The emotional function

The intellectual function

The sexual functioning






Our biggest challenge in the last third of our lives is to observe ourselves.




More specifically to observe and estrange ourselves from our intellectual function.



Our intellectual function is a double edged sword.


It wields our power yet ties us to the ever continuing parring between us and the universe around us.




We must stop thinking.



More specifically, stop all unnecessary thinking.


Stop the continuing narration that we actually find ourselves to be.


Stop all things unnecessary within ourselves. For those are the things that we call sin.





That process can only happen on a more consistent basis when we begin to observe ourselves.








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lumberjim • Sep 25, 2013 2:00 am
So why wait until you are 60?

If you are aware that you are not your ego, that you are the Id. Stop the internal narration. empty your head. surrender to the moment every moment. Live in the now.

Meditate.

There are no problems. There are only situations. Accept the reality, act accordingly. sounds easy.

It is NOT easy.
Bill Wiltrack • Sep 25, 2013 12:16 pm
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We certainly don't have to wait until we're 60.



Matter of fact, I think it is almost always appropriate to look within; to be reflective.


In general, it seems to me that either in the first part of our lives or the latter part we have more time to be reflective.

During the middle we are raising our families and focusing more on work.


Thank you for your comments.






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limegreenc • Sep 25, 2013 12:24 pm
“No one is to be called an enemy. All are your benefactors, and no one does you harm. You have no enemy except yourselves.”
-St Francis of Assisi
Beest • Sep 25, 2013 12:50 pm
Bill Wiltrack;876985 wrote:
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We certainly don't have to wait until we're 60.


Matter of fact, I think it is almost always appropriate to look within; to be reflective.


In general, it seems to me that either in the first part of our lives or the latter part we have more time to be reflective.

During the middle we are raising our families and focusing more on work.


Thank you for your comments.






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I believe mental, physical and emotional development is constant, not limited to a first trimester, chnages may certainly be faster and by greater degrees , but we are not set in stone.
The last trimester may be the greatest opportunity to influence the world, many statesmen, politicians, powerful business leaders have world wide influence at this life stage, that could not be achieved by a younger person.

I guess basically I'm not being swept up by your broad brush.

In your evolution animation it appears humans evolve from dinosaurs, I beleive this is not currently ( or ever has been) part of evolutionary theory. :eyebrow:
Bill Wiltrack • Sep 25, 2013 4:07 pm
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[SIZE="4"]I agree with you and I ingrained those thoughts into the VERY wide brush that I used for this thread.[/SIZE]




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[SIZE="4"]I respect your beliefs of evolution.[/SIZE]





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Pete Zicato • Sep 26, 2013 5:10 pm
@Bill Willtrack

FYI

Some of us check in to the cellar from our cell phones. The extra periods and tildes in your thread titles and posts make them hard to read on the small screen.
Bill Wiltrack • Sep 26, 2013 5:29 pm
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[SIZE="4"]Thank you for your response and insights.



Relax. We're all crazy. It's not a competition. [/SIZE]







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I'm sorry but I have to cater to my target audience, which is, desktop users.





I will always use smaller GIFs whenever possible.
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