09-18-2016, 12:31 PM
(09-18-2016, 09:56 AM)Patrick Wrote:(09-18-2016, 03:40 AM)YinYang Wrote:Chandlersdad Wrote:Ra was stating the ideal situation. But what I find is that a lot of humans don't want to go through the work to get there. Instead, they simply jump there by repressing their reactions that do not fit the Ra ideal. We are meant to acknowledge our reactions and then work with them.
Exactly! There's a bit of overlap between this and what I tried to convey in the meat thread.
It happens from the inside out, which is why I mentioned people acting righteous and pious. Inauthenticity is a dead end, there is no spiritual evolution in imitating say Jesus or Buddha... that's how we're taught from childhood...
P.S. I'm the Creator playing hide and seek with itself! (stole that from Alan Watts). Jesus by the way was the rebel of rebels! Buddha as well! Those "saintly" and "holier-than-thou" portrayals of them isn't helping anyone.
Would you say that lashing out at another self when angry is ok ? Yes since all is ok, but for someone polarizing positively, there are more skillful choices.
We can work with our anger without repressing and without lashing out. Not an easy skill I know.
All I am saying is that while we are acquiring this skill, not lashing out (and not replying angrily to posts), is going to polarize one positively since it would have been at the expanse of another self.
My life is so much better and easier since I have started applying this. I am not repressing anger, I am choosing to work with it in other ways other than transferring some to others.
P.S.: Loved your post in the meat thread by the way.
Acknowledging an emotion does not require that it be externalized by lashing out at anyone. However, some of our greatest spiritual guides had episodes of anger, including Jesus driving the money changers out of the temple. We sure could use him today to flush out our banking system, since the government won't do anything. Can I be terribly blunt? RA may claim that no reaction is better than a negative reaction. That is peachy keeno. But I am not there yet. And I will not pretend to be there yet. But I do have the self-awareness to step back and detach from my reaction. I can witness it and choose not to express it. I can look at it the way a scientist looks at a new species of hedge hog. I've been through many spiritual practices in my life time. Some say there is a righteous anger. Others say anger is always wrong. Frankly, I would rather feel the anger and work with it internally. We even have quaint little social bromides for such occasions, e.g., "When you feel angry, count slowly to 10". That allows the necessary pause for a person to detach and observe the anger without acting it out.