Precisely. People usually don't see this veil. But achieving this state is more than just making the choice to do so.
You're right. Some people have an easy go of it. They swim easily. To be aware of it, one is faced with the decision to "buy in to it" or "turn their back on it". Often times, that decision is made half a dozen times a day. Does it make you uncomfortable? Do you feel pressure?
I don't have a brand of reality to offer. Reality may be nothing; reality may be whatever we choose to believe. Reality is subjective, as we've established, but the trick is to convince oneself of one or the other. Limbo is what I offer; an inability to pull the veil over one's eyes to convince oneself that there's nothing or that the world is full of meaning.
I don't see this as a bad thing. Limbo. It would allow an individual to subscribe to whatever they want. The ability to see it, anlyze it, determine if internal or external factors sway your decision, this appears to be a great vantage point. If you truly want to know yourself.
Yes, technically, she's the one who gave birth to me. But this isn't a "thread"; it's a definition, much like "I have a fourth cousin that lives in Iceland, whom I've never met." We would share a set of great-great-great grandparents, but the "thread" between us will once again need to be created out of nothing. Same for "mother"-the "thread," right?
A definition fleshed out thousands of years ago. Try shitting out a watermellon. Tell me you won't feel anything. Pain is real, even anhedoniacs feel it.
And what happens when we introduce anhedonia into the mix?
Even though that individual doesn't feel like most others, they still have the ability to know that is not how others bodies work. With this, they can then choose to mimic society and take comfort that their actions will appear to be appropriate. It may not be fulfilling as one would hope. But life goes on.
...To allow oneself to feel those ripples only when one is sure that these ripples and one's feelings are really real. Not possible, right? Reality is dependent on one's own perceptions, thus one can never be sure if this is truly real (ie...how do you know that you're not dreaming right now?) It seems like some sort of veil needs to be pulled down to get anywhere. Pulling one down leads to meaning and life. Pulling another down leads to nothingness and suicide. Again, the inability to do this, always aware that there may be a veil in front of our faces, it's stifling.
Or liberating. Just depends on the individual.Yes, we can all make a "choice" to pull down one or the other, but lacking the ability to actually pull it down and believe in the brand of reality that the veil offers, we can't go any further.
Optimism/pessimism. If neither one appeals, what would a person do? We never lose the ability to do what we want for whatever reason we want, with no one to judge us for our actions but ourselves. Why bother with that? Why judge yourself?
...I've seen parodies of it.
Family Guy? He thinks that books are not a source of external ripples?
Not really. Tainted by something foreign, not necessarily dirty. In the quest to find one's true self, you subtract away the parts that are reflections of other people. Are you persistent because that's your true self or is it because your parents raised you to be persistent. Are you helpful because you helped an old lady across the street or did you only do that because society expects it of you? As the products of conditioning, I was asking if there really is a "true self," as I understand what "true self" to be.
Honestly, I tend to not question myself and if I exist. The fact that my body exists is enough for me.
It's just an attempt to discover our true selves. Besides, it should come as no surprise that people are selfish. Even altruistic acts are simply things we do so that we ourselves can feel warm and fuzzy inside.
I thought an altruistic act was only altruistic if those feelings of warm and fuzzy weren't the motivating factor. Have you never done anything just because it was the "right" thing to do? It seems like true selflessness can only be achieved when you no longer care about other people.
No. True selflessness would be to care more about others than yourself. Putting yourself into a position of disadvantage for the benefit of another. You volunteer with kids diagnosed with cancer not because you care about them and feel good about yourself by helping them; that's benefiting yourself. The truly selfless person couldn't give a damn about those kids and simply helps them because society expects it.
No. A truly selfless person only cares about those cancer kids. And the actions are done entirely for the kids.The only ones who benefit are the kids. And don't worry. I don't value selflessness.
Please don't confuse selfless and selfish. They are two distinctly different things.
The mirror exists. Okay...You see, I know your intention was to show me that I exist. And yet I start thinking that once again, it is a reflection that's asking about the problem.
A reflection of what exactly?
And once again, we need the power to create that extra material out of nothing.
No, we don't. This material is being generated constantly, through interaction, the passage of time, and the gaining of knowledge and experience. You choose what to do with it. Regardless of whether or not you know yourself completely or not, you still choose what to do with it all.
You can be whoever you believe me to be.
Whut were we talking about again?
So why tell me this if you knew it wouldn't work?
Well, it worked for me.
I don't get it.
If you truly do not, I am the one who is at a loss.
Did I? I'm sorry. What's "care what others think" supposed to feel like again?
Don't apologize. You are entitled to your thoughts and feelings.
Correct as in "what society usually expects of people in exchanges such as that one." Indifference is easier than respect, isn't it?
Yes. I believe so.
Again, I don't doubt that you don't see a veil.
So here it is. Do you accept my invitation of friendship?
So the fear of death is necessary to live, right? To realize that "our time here is short." After acquiring the fear of death, one needs to master it and so forth. So, step one, learning to fear death... So are near-death experiences supposed to teach this or not?
It may, or may not. Just depends on the individual and how much they value their own life. How many must one experience? How does one go about experiencing them? Instead of waiting for a freak accident, would the right way simply be to attempt suicide?
The easiest way is to leave town for 2 days. Disappear. Leave no trace. Sever all communication with your connections. Come back, and reflect on how you are recieved upon your homecoming. The absence of your physical being would be the same. And just for the record, I will not condone suicide. Nor will I take any responsibility for your actions.
Yes. What can be funnier than this... ...I need alcohol.
I'll drink with ya, but I'll have some coffee instead.
Of course not. I've externalized it as well.
I was gonna laugh. But then I asked myself if you are hurting yourself as a result of all this. I wouldn't want that for you. We have never met. I don't know you. You remind me of a guy I met about 4 years ago. He was 19, he constantly questioned everything and the motivation behind things. He thought he had an answer for everything. We'd debate. He is not a happy person. He uses illegal drugs. I worry about him, but know that until he decides to change, there is nothing I can really do to help him. Many of the things I could do would only enable him to continue in his destructive behaviour. I did enjoy our interactions. I wish him well. I wish you nothing but the best.
If this is expected of me, sure. But then again, you know that I couldn't care less and there's a whole forum full of people to pander to your needs. They will actually feel happy for you (as far as you can tell), and you in turn will genuinely feel happy that they're ostensibly happy for you.
Nope, I'm not that naive. And yet you asked me for congratulations. Are you simply testing how tightly that veil can be pulled down? Or to toy with me like an inanimate object?
Congratulations.
Thank you!
See? Yet another selfless act. As long as I feed into other people's illusions to make them happy, nothing else matters.