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Timothy Hayes

Building New Brain Cells - An Example/Analogy

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    So, we have discussed the idea of needing to question whatever it is we think we know, in order to be open to learning new things. We discussed how the lecture on A Course In Miracles makes a major point about how it is our limited perception which causes most of the pain, suffering and misunderstanding in our world. An example in the lecture is how limiting and destructive it is to look at another person and believe you know them. How limiting and incorrect it is to look at someone and believe that they are just a body. The act of looking at someone and making the decision that you know them, without even being able to see, hear, feel, or perceive in any way all the energies which emanate from them, is truly silly.
     
    Our scientists are just now developing scans which can begin to map the processes of the human brain. Within the past twenty years the physical sciences have been making discoveries which bring into question or downright disprove things which I was taught as "hard science" when I was in high school and college. So the fact that we are still discovering new levels of understanding about our physical bodies and the world we live in, should give us all the evidence we need to understand that we do not know enough to say we, "know" a person. We have barely begun to understand the true nature of our physical world and the energies which comprise our physical experience.
     
    During our last group one of the members commented that the act of looking at someone and labeling them a person, or believing you "know" them, or thinking that they are just a body, is like taking a cup of water from the ocean and studying it and then saying you "know" the ocean. It is ludicrous to think that by looking at a cup of water from the ocean we can understand the experience of the ocean, with all of its life forms, its depths, waves, tides, and power. Yet we do something similar each time we look at a person and label them based on what we perceive as their body. The limited perception allowed by our senses does not allow us to see much more of who a person is by looking at their body, than we can see of the ocean by looking at a cup of ocean water.
     
    I challenge us all to question our perception and our conclusions each time we look at another person, and open to the possibility that what we see in the person's body and their actions is no more the total of what they are, than the cup of water is the total of what the ocean is.
     
    We come from Love, we are made of Love, we are Love. Everything else is false.
1 comment
  • Charles Lee, Jr
    Charles Lee, Jr That's a great challenge, Timothy.
    As a matter of fact, if the person is just a cup of the ocean's water, then they and the ocean are one, and the same mystery to us, another mere cup of water.

    Which speaks volumes about us all, for those who ha...  more
    January 5, 2010