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“If you take any fixation a person has, you are looking at a funeral ceremony for his own creative power. Suppose he’s fixated on money. Dig far enough into that, and you’ll find a brilliant artist who has innovative ideas about making money. It seems impossible, but it’s there. I’ve seen it many times. But you have to open up the whole area, not just a little bit. What you end up with is the blueprint for the formation of a problem. Where does a problem come from? It comes from deciding that your own creative approach to something is too radical. Then you try ‘the normal way’, and that doesn’t work for you. So it’s a problem now. You try to solve the problem and wrestle it to the ground. You can’t. You become fixated on the problem. That’s what happens to people. And to put the cherry on the cake, these people tell you they’re not creative. You can meditate for a thousand years and you won’t solve that. So we come to the question: why do people give up on their own creative power?”
This is a quote taken from a quote that researcher John Rappoport took from a conversation over dinner with a hypnotherapist named Jack True.
Rappoport posted to his website an article, entitled, “The Matrix Revealed: revelations of a hypnotherapist,” which is some commentary on research he conducted during the writing of his behemoth research novel, The Matrix Revealed(which obviously has nothing to do with the film series, and coins the name for the unhealthy and entrapping social conventions that we are all caught in).
The article as well poignantly elaborates:
“Jack was determined to find ways to show people how their own approach to reality was merging with the Matrix. He never tired of explaining his insights based on clinical experience. Jack once told me a person had to be stimulated to pry open his own passive inclinations, in order to discover hidden energies and power. He was all about providing that stimulation, in the form of innovative and sometimes shocking ideas about reality and perception.”
While Rappoport’s article, in no uncertain terms, also serves as a sort of detailed and well-deserved info-mercial of his book and loads of researched material(which is highly recommended by The Last American Vagabond), it more importantly begs the question that too many people are not prepared to ask, let alone answer. The question is pretty simply, “What am I lying to myself about?”
Everyone does it a little bit. On a certain level, it is an entirely healthy coping mechanism, like becoming immune to a poison over time by building a tolerance to it through a hormetic reaction. This level of “lying” on a fundamental level is dictated by the “lag” or “buffering” (to use internet colloquialism) that is required to process the communication between different states of consciousness—i.e. Conscious/Waking; Unconscious/ Dreaming; Subconscious/ Deep Sleep; and Consciousness, which is the Absolute that transcends and stems to all three levels, or the soul. While some people give them slightly different terms, or tag on an extra stage or two (as there are many varying states of consciousness within all these) all traditional esoteric philosophy settles on these four modular states of the self or “Microcosm.”
When there are miscommunications, blockages, or neuroses(whatever term one may choose) between these channels of interaction of the different levels of consciousness, the “buffering” increases and can increase exponentially if unchecked. This “buffering” is the act of psychological fixation, something thatPTSD can be defined with, which occurs when information from the ambient environment has presented itself to an individual that is entirely incapable of processing the information, due to their original predispositions of poor communication within themselves.
Philosophers stone – selected views from the boat http://philosophers-stone.co.uk