Thursday, March 3, 2011

Boredom - the Radar is too narrow

People!  We're bored.

We may not know we're bored, but when we can pacify ourselves by watching hours of television, drinking 8 beers, having sex without love, eating more than we need, that's a pretty good indication that we Are BORED.

Quantum physicists have all but proved that parallel universes, time travel, accessing all the information ever, telepathy, reincarnation, quantum jumping, and instant healing are all possible.  Why, with all that out there, would we turn on the television?

Because we're bored and exhausted by our boredom.  

If we were willing to be with an infinite radar, where anything is possible, we would never get bored.

Ah, if it were only that easy.

A few months ago, when my daughter was 11 years old, I was telling her about Abraham.  Abraham, as some of you know, is an entity channeled by Esther Hicks.  They (Abraham is plural) show up for Esther because Esther has relaxed her ego and opened up to the unity of consciousness, at least that is what I told my daughter.  I went on to say that is possible for any of us to be available to hearing the truths of the Universe, if we are willing to let go of our close identification and attachment to who we are.

"Mom," my daughter said, "That sounds like an adult fairy tale.  Come on!"

Precisely.

When we are offered a miraculous possibility, like channeling wisdom, we may not be able to believe it.  We've been told that truth is verified through Newtonian Scientific testing.  If we cannot "prove" something in an objective, double blind study, it is not "true."  In fact, it's wishful thinking, thinking for the weak who can't handle the hard truth, it's being naive, it's focusing on something "out there" that will distract us from the real work of daily living.

Plus, opening to an infinite radar could be scary because it's the unknown.  If we experienced a parallel universe, for example, maybe we'd turn into a freak that our neighbors would judge, or that we ourselves would judge.  Maybe in accessing the vast potential of creation we will become serious, moralistic, and lose rapport with our family and friends?  If we begin a telepathic conversation with a Hmong emperor from 500 years ago, we might stop taking care of our children, or forget how to drive!

In an effort to be secure, to be safe, to make sense out of the limitless potential, we've created a tiny radar.  When I refer to "we," I mean our society.  You, specifically, did not create this propensity to think and imagine small on your own.  Neither did I.  This is a social phenomena that we can reverse right now.

I'm asking myself:  Is security and familiarity worth being bored and sedated?

I don't think so.

 

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