(05-18-2021, 11:22 PM)Steppingfeet Wrote: But whereas the tree-people were very much a product of their past, finding it impossible even to fight, the exercise of free will on this planet (?) can completely obviate the biases of their past evolution. I don't fully understand this.
Biological/physical evolution and genetic coding go only so far - accompanying are the society that is constructed by these evolving entities, its tendencies, traits, behavior patterns, and especially the resulting racial (eventually societal) mind.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/artic...after-all/
Just like how we are genetically coded and on top of that evolved our racial/societal mind to be cooperative and helpful, but how today we live in a negative, competition and selfishness oriented societal construct, and this causing psychological disorders and all kinds of incompatibilities for us. This kind of self-centered, individualistic societal format is just ~250 years old, since invention of Capitalism. And apparently social/racial mind cannot be changed that fast.
Genetic programming may be overridden, Ra says. But racial/social mind seems more difficult to change. Because, its literally 'the mind' of this experience nexus, how the entire society sees existence, interprets it and how it behaves through it. Forcing such a change is as difficult as seeing the world through a wrongly prescribed glasses.
To such entities which evolved such cooperatively as described in your earlier post, the very act of such destructive behaviors would be destructive to themselves - Destroy part of the forest network? But that would reduce their own security and well being - they are dependent on the network directly. So much that such perception would be ingrained in their mind complex, automatically finding this a revulsive act which cannot even be interpreted.
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On a sidenote, Ra notes that these entities' activities heavily (almost exclusively) involve meditation. This means that they would be in a closer contact with those around them. And even with those who are afar.
Quote:Personally I would love for a tree to talk to me as distinctly as you perceived it.
Practicing listening to more silence may help.