“We learn by analyzing and reflecting upon the consequences of our actions. If we are forced to take all of our actions, our ability to learn about the process of decision making becomes nullified.
When you remove your own choices, you are committing suicide. Why? Because you are killing choice. You are choice, therefore, you are killing your own identity. So when you make a choice that closes off other choices, such as becoming an addict, or getting yourself placed in prison, you are committing a crime upon yourself.
When the actor becomes acted upon, there is a loss of choice.
for example, you begin at an amusement park. There are 22 rides. You first begin by choosing one of them. You enjoy the ride, because it brings you an experience. You then say "I liked that!"... you have stepped forward with a judgment. "Let's do it again!". You have then stepped forward with an addiction.
By generating the experience, you are the actor, you created the action, you are the master of the situation. BY repeating the experience because of Desire,
Desire generates the experience, you become a subject of the object.
The servant becomes the master.
When you repeat an experience, it is valued at a fraction to the occasion of its repetition. For example, when you eat a chocolate bar, the second one of the same variety is not as good as the first, the 4th is not as good as the first two, the 8th is more unpleasant, and the 16th may get you sick.
Acting upon Others
The first great deception is that you are somehow separate from the rest of the universe. The universe is separated in degrees of Choice; the authority of Choice is predicated by Intelligence, Sentience, and Wisdom. These three forces combine to form a measure of Judgment, or "Reason". In the Hebrew, the Word for judges was "Elohim" or "gods".
So when the serpent told Adam and Eve that they would become as God by eating the fruit of knowledge, it meant that they would become capable of being judges between choices, bitter and sweet, creating polarity. Once two options exist, choices can be made, judgment can take place.
A good choice is one which creates more choices.
A bad choice is one which removes choices you already have.”
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Why do people get addicted?
The body and mind have a fading rate of exposure, based upon environment and background. This can be seen as a sort of "evaporation level" such as how long it takes a damp table surface to become dry.
the core of an individual is driven to have experiences, to present itself with learning opportunities. The more intense the experience, the greater the opportunity to learn. Literally, the Higher Self chooses to exist as mortal to have experiences, and the choice to have experiences is made so that Wisdom can be attained.
Wisdom governs the relationship between Truth and Choice, which takes us back to the primordial levels of existence.
So, when you are on earth, or even in space, making choices, your goal is to gather as much experience as quickly as possible, so that greater wisdom can be learned.
Bland foods, for example, have a rapid "fading rate" and a very low "peak" intensity. Stronger flavors leave a deeper impression because of their contrast, after taste remains and generates a second experience. The same applies to adrenaline, to opium, to speed, to sex, to Heroine.
The "high" that people experience, whether from nymphomania, or masochism, is the compressed intensity of experience. When a person fails to properly digest the experience the first time, they wish to repeat the experience. By digesting the experience, we mean "learning all of the wisdom from it".
For example, many people are fools. A Fool is a person who lacks wisdom. When a fool experiences something that should teach a lesson, they exit the experience having learned little or nothing. Addiction is therefore a subconscious attempt at exploring the missed opportunities of the previous experience.
This is the problem of addictive substances and intense experiences: the more intense the experience, the more wisdom potential it possesses, and problematically, the more difficult it is to sort out all the lessons.
You will find that if an addict of a substance were some how kept alive and forced through endless heights of that experience, eventually, they would grow tired of it. The problem with toxic experiences: the tend to kill people before they acquire all that they need to know.
When a person surrenders themselves to an experience in a quest for wisdom (such as pleasure or pain) they lose free will. Part of losing their choices comes with the consequence of failing to accomplish other experiences through other choices and opportunities.
So when you wake up, wishing to go back to the dream, possibly quite emotionally disturbed, it represents an extremely intense experience and opportunity for wisdom, possibly through pleasure or pain - BUT, you have woken up, and have to move on with your life.
Herein, a person has to "Let Go"
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