01-03-2017, 11:48 PM
(11-22-2016, 08:12 PM)Bring4th_GLB Wrote: Consider a random daydream that crosses your mind but doesn’t compel or grip your attention; let's say you are imagining having a casual conversation with someone that's not of great interest, or you're adding up some receipts in your head.
Now consider the more intense daydream of winning the lottery, or having a sexual fantasy, or imagining the revenge you will dish out upon your enemies. (I hope the last one isn't you, just making sure I cover the bases.) How much more vivid, gripping, alive, and powerful is this fantasy relative to the first? This fantasy sucks you in, makes you forget your surroundings, fully immerses you into its world, even causes physiological changes and emotions to spike in proportion to the intensity of the fantasy.
Now imagine the greatest daydream of all: Third Density. In this density we are so thoroughly, so completely mesmerized by this experience that we (seem to) lose touch with the Creator, to the point that materialistic atheism becomes a completely justifiable perspective. We experience profound pain, trauma, and tears. We sink into agony over loss and limitation. We shout with joy in triumph, success, or realization. We bounce with elation when something is gained, or suffering is alleviated. We sacrifice everything to help an other, or work hard to realize an ambition, or destroy ourselves in desire to escape, avoid, and run away.
What passion there is to the experience of this fictional world that does not, ultimately, exist. Through the veil and the limitations upon awareness, we convince ourselves that all is not one, all is not well; we believe without question that we are these human identities, that there are a great many things to fear, that we must do something to change our present circumstance in order to find satisfaction, meaning, purpose, joy, and so forth.
To me, this is what Ra means by "vivid."
Were third density less vivid it would have less command over our attention and identity. We wouldn't be so pulled, pushed, and compelled. We wouldn't suffer as greatly, but we wouldn't have the impetus to develop will and faith as strongly.
We would be like those pre-veil third-density entities who blissed out day and night on the happy bus, a situation where "no love is terribly important; no pain terribly frightening; no effort, therefore, is made to serve for love or to benefit from fear."
It is a dream so vivid that it, for all intents and purposes, becomes REALITY.
Absolutely love this post