Being Truly Woke

A wonderful article about the real meaning of being woke.  The brain does not produce consciousness … consciousness produces the brain.  Chew on that while reading the article.  Great observations about fear in the closing paragraphs.

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How Does Anesthesia Work? We Still Don’t Know: What Happens When Someone Goes “Under”?

When patients ask anesthesiologists what we charge for putting them to sleep, we often say we do it for free. We only bill them for the waking up part.

This isn’t just a way of deflecting a question, it also serves as a gentle reminder to both parties regarding the importance of “coming to.” If we couldn’t regain consciousness, what would be the point in having the surgery in the first place? Nobody wants to experience pain and fear if it can be avoided. If the only way to avoid the pain of an operation is to temporarily be rendered unconscious, most people will readily and willingly consent to that, as long as we can return to our natural state of being alert and interactive with the world around us. We are awake and aware and that–rather than any particular conception of health–is our most precious gift.

How does Anesthesia work ?

From an Anesthesiologist’s point of view, we really shouldn’t charge for putting someone to sleep. It’s too easy. With today’s medications, putting someone to sleep, or in more correct terms, inducing general anesthesia, is straightforward. Two hundred milligrams of this and fifty milligrams of that and voilà: you have a completely unconscious patient who is incapable of even breathing independently. The medications we administer at induction are similar to the lethal injections executioners use. Unlike executioners, we then intervene to reestablish their breathing and compensate for any large changes in blood pressure and the patient thereby survives until consciousness miraculously returns sometime later.

In addition, those in my field have to contend with the reality that we really don’t know what we are doing. More precisely, we have very little if any understanding of how anesthetic gases render a person unconscious. After 17 years of practicing Anesthesiology, I still find the whole process nothing short of pure magic. You see, the exact mechanism of how these agents work is, at present, unknown. Once you understand how a trick works, the magic disappears. With regard to inhaled anesthetic agents, magic abounds.

Take ether, for example. In 1846 a dentist named William T.G. Morton used ether to allow Dr. Henry J. Bigelow to partially remove a tumor from the neck of a 24-year-old patient safely with no outward signs of pain. The surgery took place at Massachusetts General Hospital in front of dozens of physicians. When the patient regained consciousness with no recollection of the event it is said that many of the surgeons in attendance, their careers spent hardening themselves to the agonizing screams of their patients while operating without modern anesthesia, wept openly after witnessing this feat. At the time, no one knew how ether worked. We still don’t. Over the last 173 years, dozens of different anesthetic gases have been developed and they all have three basic things in common: they are inhaled, they are all very, very tiny molecules by biological standards, and we don’t know how any of them work.

Why we still don’t know…

If you have never closely considered how our bodies do what they do (move, breathe, grow, pee, reproduce, etc.), the answers may be astounding. It is obvious that the energy required to power biological systems comes from food and air. But how do they use them to do everything? How does it all get coordinated?

These are the fundamental questions that have been asked for millennia, by ancient shamans and modern pharmaceutical companies alike. It turns out that the answers are different depending on what sort of perspective and tools we begin with.

In the West, our predecessors in medicine were anatomists. Armed with scalpels, the human form was first subdivided into organ systems. Our knives and eyes improved with the development of microtomes and microscopes giving rise to the field of Histology (the study of tissue). Our path of relentless deconstruction eventually gave rise to Molecular Biology and Biochemistry. This is where Western medicine stands today. We define “understanding” as a complete description of how the very molecules that comprise our bodies interact with one another. This method and model has served us well. We have designed powerful antibiotics, identified neurotransmitters, and mapped our own genome. Why then have we not been able to figure out how a gas like ether works? The answer is two-fold.

First, although we have been able to demonstrate some of the biological processes and structures that are altered by an inhaled anesthetic gas, we cannot pinpoint which ones are responsible for altering levels of awareness because inhaled anesthetic agents affect so many seemingly unrelated things at the same time. It is impossible to identify which are directly related to the “awake” state. It is also entirely possible that all of them are, and if that were the case consciousness would be the single most complex function attributed to a living organism by a very large margin.

The second difficulty we have is even more unwieldy and requires some contemplation. As explained above, western medicine has not been able to isolate which molecular interaction is responsible for anesthetics’ effect on our awareness. It is therefore reasonable to approach the puzzle from the opposite side and ask instead, “Where is the source of our awareness in our bodies?” and go from there.

We do know that certain neurological pathways in the brain are active in awake patients, but if we attribute consciousness to those pathways then we are necessarily identifying them as the “things” that are awake.

To find the source of their “awakeness” we must then examine them more closely. With the tools we have and the paradigm we have chosen we will inevitably find more molecules interacting with other molecules. When you go looking for molecules that is all you will find.

Our paradigm has dictated what the answer would be like if we ever found one. Does it seem plausible to think we will find an “awareness molecule” and attribute our vivid, multisensorial experience to the presence of it? If such a molecule existed, how would our deconstructive approach ever explain why that molecule was the source of our awareness?  Can consciousness ever be represented materially?

A more sensible model would be to consider the activity of these structures in the brains of conscious individuals as evidence of consciousness, not the cause of it.  To me it is apparent that, unless we expand our search beyond the material plane, we are not going to find consciousness or be able to understand how anesthetic gases work. Until then I know I am nothing more than a wand-waver in the operating room. And that is being generous. The magician is the anesthetic gas itself, which has, up to this point, never let us in on the secret.

What happens when someone goes “under”?

The mechanistic nature of our model is well suited to most biological processes. However, with regard to consciousness, the model not only lends little understanding of what is happening, it also gives rise to a paradigm that is widely and tightly held, but in actuality cannot be applied to the full breadth of human experience.

We commonly believe that a properly functioning physical body is required for us to be aware. Although this may seem initially incontrovertible, upon closer examination it becomes quite clear that this belief is actually an assumption that has massive implications. To be more precise, how do we know that consciousness does not continue uninterrupted and only animate our physical bodies intermittently rather than the other way around, where the body intermittently gives rise to the awake state? At first, this hypothesis may seem absurd, irrelevant and unprovable. I assure you that if you spent a day in an operating room, this idea is not only possible, it is far more likely to be true than the converse.

Let us first consider how we measure anesthetic depth in the operating room. We continually measure the amount of agent that is circulating in a patient’s system, but as described earlier, there is no measurable “conscious” molecule that can be found. We must assess the behavior of our patients to make that determination. Do they reply to verbal commands? Do they require a tap on the shoulder or a painful stimulus to respond? Do they respond verbally or do they merely shudder or fling an arm into the air? Perhaps they do not even move when the very fibers of their body are literally being dissected

There are many situations when a person will interact normally for a period of time while under the influence of a sedative with amnestic properties, and then have absolutely no recollection of that period of time. As far as they know, that period of time never existed. They had no idea that they were lying on an operating room table for 45 minutes talking about their recent vacation while their surgeon performed a minor procedure on their wrist, for example. Sometime later, they found themselves in the recovery room when, to their profound disbelief, they noticed a neatly placed surgical dressing on their hand. More than once I have been told that a patient had asked that the dressing be removed so that they could see the stitches with their own eyes.

How should we characterize their level of consciousness during the operation? By our own standards they were completely awake. However, because they have no memory of being awake during the experience, they would recount it more or less the same way a patient who was rendered completely unresponsive would. This phenomenon is common and easily reproducible. Moreover, it invites us to consider the possibility that awareness continually exists without interruption, but we are not always able to access our experiences retrospectively.

During some procedures where a surgeon is operating very close to the spinal cord, we often infuse a combination of anesthetic drugs that render the patient unconscious but allow all of the neural pathways between the brain and the body to continue to function normally so that they can be monitored for their integrity. In other words, the physiology required to feel or move remains intact, yet the patient apparently has no experience of any stimuli, surgical or otherwise during the operation. How are we to reconcile the fact that we have a patient with a functioning body and no ability to experience it? Who exactly is the patient in this situation?

What can Near Death Experiences (NDEs) tell us?

If we broadened our examination of the human experience to consider more extreme situations, another wrinkle appears in the paradigm. There are numerous accounts of people who have experienced periods of awareness whilst their bodies have been rendered insentient by anesthetics and/or severe trauma. Near Death Experiences (NDEs) are all characterized by lucid awareness that remains continuous during a period of time while outside observers assume the person is unconscious or dead. Very often patients who have experienced an NDE in the operating room can accurately recount what was said and done by people attending to them during their period of lifelessness. They are also able to describe the event from the perspective as an observer to their own body, often viewing it from above.

Interestingly, people describe their NDEs in a universally positive way. “Survival” was an option that they were free to choose. Death of their body could be clearly seen as a transcending event in their continuing awareness and not as the termination of their existence.

Very often the rest of their lives are profoundly transformed by the experience. No longer living with the fear of mortality, life subsequently opens up into a more vibrant and meaningful experience that can be cherished far more deeply than was possible prior to their brush with death. Those who have had an NDE would have no problem adopting the idea that their awareness exists independently of their body, functioning or not. Fear and anxiety would still probably arise in their life from time to time, but it is the rest of us who carry the seemingly inescapable load of a belief system that ties our existence to a body that will perish.

What happens when we wake up from Anesthesia?

The waking up part is no less magical. When the anesthetic gas is eliminated from the body, consciousness returns on its own. Waking someone up simply requires enough space and time for it to occur spontaneously.

There is no reversal agent available to speed the return of consciousness. I can only wait. In fact, the waiting period is directly related to the amount of time the patient has been exposed to the anesthetic. At some point the patient will open their eyes when a threshold has been crossed. Depending on how long the patient has been “asleep,” complete elimination of the agent from the body may not happen until a long while after the patient has “woke.”

By the time I leave a patient in the care of our recovery room nurses, I am confident that they are safely on a path to their baseline state of awareness. Getting back to a normal state of awareness may take hours or even days. In some cases, patients may never get their wits back completely. Neurocognitive testing has demonstrated that repeated exposure to general anesthesia can sometimes have long-lasting or even irreversible effects on the awake state. It may occur for everyone. Perhaps it is a matter of how closely we look.

Interestingly, it is well known that the long-term effects of anesthetic exposure are more profound in individuals who have already demonstrated elements of cognitive decline in their daily life. Indeed, this population of patients requires significantly less anesthetic to reach the same depth of unconsciousness during an operation. This poses an intriguing question: Is our understanding of being awake also too simplistic? Is there a continuum of “awakeness” in everyday life just as there is one of unconsciousness when anesthetized? If so, how would we measure it?

Does our limited understanding of awareness keep us “asleep”?

Modern psychiatry has been rigorous in defining and categorizing dysfunction. Although there has been recent interest in pushing our understanding of what may be interpreted as a “super-functioning” psyche, western systems are still in their infancy with regard to this idea. In eastern schools of thought, however, this concept has been central for centuries.

In some schools of Eastern philosophy, the idea of attaining a super-functioning awake state is seen as something that also occurs spontaneously when intention and practice are oriented correctly. Ancient yogic teachings specifically describe super abilities, or Siddhis, that are attained through dedicated practice. These Siddhis include fantastical abilities like levitation, telekinesis, dematerialization, remote-viewing and others.

The most advanced abilities, interestingly, are those that allow an individual to remain continuously in a state of joy and fearlessness. If such a state were attainable it would clearly be incompatible with the kind of absolute psychological identification most of us have with our mortal bodies. It may be of no surprise that Eastern medicine also subscribes to an entirely different perspective of the body and uses different tools to examine it.

Certainly fear has served our ancestors well, helping us to avoid snakes and lions, but how much fear is necessary these days? Could fear be the barrier that separates us from our highest potential in the awake state just as an anesthetic gas prevents us from waking in the operating room?

It is not possible to remain fearless while continuing to identify with a body that is prone to disease and death. Even if one were to drop the assumption that the source of our existence is a finite body, how long would it take to be free from the effects of a lifetime of fearful thinking before any changes that reflect a shift in this paradigm manifest? As long as we leave this model unchallenged we may be missing what it means to be truly awake.

 

Source:  Collective-evolution.com

THE END

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Author: Stucky

I'm right, you're wrong. Deal with it.

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36 Comments
Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut
March 3, 2021 11:31 am

Being truly fully awake, aware and without fear or our spiritual eyes wide open is when our individual soul is fully submitted to and in continual fellowship with our Creator’s Spirit which has breathed life into our mortal bodies.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
March 3, 2021 11:39 am

When a Dr calls a treatment magic and admits they really don’t understand what they are doing, that should be an eye opener. However, if it’s a choice between a surgery that is necessary and being awake or knocked out, people will go for knocked out.

There are consequences. After several surgeries due to breast cancer, each time I went under I noticed the cognitive decline that I’m not sure ever really went away entirely. They say that for every hour you are under, you will need a week to recover. Most of the time, I was never under for more than an hour except during a mastectomy. Additionally, I’m a puker. Doesn’t matter what they tried I always threw up. Many people have this response to anesthesia, which tells me the body wants to reject it as a poison. I always had to be loaded up with sterioids to control the nausea.

Ether, which they had almost stopped using by the mid 60’s was the worst. I had to have baby teeth cut out when I was 6 and I can still remember how sick it made me.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Mary Christine
March 3, 2021 11:49 am

I had a tonsillectomy at age four and they used ether to put me under. My memory of that is quite vivid, especially considering my young age. They held the mask over my face and asked me to count backwards from 100. I remember telling them that I didn’t know how to count that far and the smell of the ether and the shape of the mask as it hovered over my face. I also remember waking up with sponges attached to my nose and puking grape juice all over the nice white sheets.
The End

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Mygirl....maybe
March 3, 2021 11:59 am

I bet they never got that grape juice out of the sheets.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Mary Christine
March 3, 2021 12:20 pm

This was in Germany…they boiled their white linens. I hope they came clean, I do remember the vivid purple against the white background and a lot of tsking going on.

As to cognitive decline post surgery, my father fell and broke the end cap of his femur and was in surgery for several hours. He was 87 at the time and it took him quite awhile (many months) to get back to normal. He’s now 93 and swears his mind still suffers from great gaps post surgery. I actually have to agree because he’s sharp as a tack for his age. There’s a large section of information on how anesthesia negatively affects the older folk.

https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/anesthesia-surgery-linked-to-subtle-decline-in-memory-and-thinking-in-older-adults-mayo-study-finds/

Tabernac
Tabernac
  Mygirl....maybe
March 3, 2021 8:15 pm

I was 5 and still remember it. Ether . The snarky doctor came in and said” do you want vanilla or chocolate?” -well chocolate obviously! When I woke up I had the worst hangover of my life.
They must have used that car starter Ether. That guy was such an asshole. AND I want my tonsils back!

Auntie K.
Auntie K.
  Mary Christine
March 3, 2021 12:24 pm

Don’t dare everb get a colonoscopy without anesthesia. It will ruin your entire day. That first turn of the colon is a lulu and it only gets more, much more intense from there.

The B3rg* could benefit from non-anesthesia procedures.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Auntie K.
March 3, 2021 1:22 pm

I won’t watch that clip. It’s worse than any horror movie I ever saw.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
March 3, 2021 11:44 am

Sounds like he’s channeling Gurdjieff….

Gurdjieff taught that most humans do not possess a unified consciousness and thus live their lives in a state of hypnotic “waking sleep”, but that it is possible to awaken to a higher state of consciousness and achieve full human potential. Gurdjieff described a method attempting to do so, calling the discipline “The Work”[5] (connoting “work on oneself”) or “the System”.[6] According to his principles and instructions,[7] Gurdjieff’s method for awakening one’s consciousness unites the methods of the fakir, monk and yogi, and thus he referred to it as the “Fourth Way”.[8]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Gurdjieff

Tabernac
Tabernac
  Mygirl....maybe
March 3, 2021 8:21 pm

There was a story in New Mexico from Emil Pfiefer (sp?) about Ouspensky bugging Gurdjieff all the time so They went for a walk one day and Gurdj beat Ouspensky up.

Steve
Steve
March 3, 2021 12:22 pm

For a couple of years in my 40s I experienced “sleep paralysis”. Somewhere in that twilight zone between sleep and being awake I was conscious but had no motor function. I would try to move but couldn’t no matter how hard I tried. I remember thinking if the house is on fire I’m really f***ed. It would last what seemed about 10-15 minutes.

Back in the 70s I was a dental assistant in the Army. Nitrous oxide brings about a state of altered consciousness to all and dysinhibition to several ladies. Some would start talking about about weird topics to themselves, some would moan and a few (I swear) began to digitally satisfy some “basic urges”. All of them totally unaware and with no memory of what happened. We had more than a few chuckles with that but never spoke of what happened directly with the patients. Too awkward…

DirtpersonSteve
DirtpersonSteve
  Steve
March 3, 2021 2:50 pm

My stepfather has that as well. He regularly gets caught between awake and asleep. He sees the dream as real and reacts to it.

Fortunately in that sleep state he is paralyzed but he is still able to cry out with the most blood curdling shrieks during a nightmare. When he does fully wake up he has zero recollection of the dream.

realestatepup
realestatepup
  Steve
March 3, 2021 3:05 pm

Steve, I too experience sleep paralysis and hypnogogia. It’s less common the older I get, but when younger, I also was a fairly prolific sleepwalker.

My memories of sleepwalking were vague and dream-like, but I did remember them. I would ask my parents about it the next day, and they would just laugh about me wandering around the house insistent someone was in my room (the most common theme of my sleepwalking).
I also have recurrent dreams, have since I was about 5. These are not just “flying” or “falling” dreams, but very specific dreams of certain things. They are vivid and always evoke the same feelings in me. One is of me being chased through a jungle by what I know is a T-Rex type creature. The other is much more bizarre and involves a dark room with a spotlight on a table on a pedestal. On the pedestal is a sand-table, and inside the sand is a black ball, about the size of a golf ball. I am aware in my dream that this black ball is alive and sentient, and it rolls about through the white sand. I have a driving need to actually eat the black ball, knowing this is wrong as this ball is alive, but needing to do it anyway. Sometimes I do grab the ball and take a bite out of it. I wake up so sad and angry at myself. Crazy, right? The third recurring dream is I am a Lion with a broken leg. The cast is odd, and has a spring-like mechanism on it, that makes me kind of hop when I walk. I am walking out onto a cliff head overlooking a valley. There is a human boy next to me, I never see his face, but I know he has brown hair.

I took 5HTP for a time for severe PMS symptoms, and let me tell you, the night terrors and sleep walking it induced were pretty severe. So yeah, no PMS but my husband at the time could not share a bed with me due to waking up screaming about giant spiders on the ceiling and my getting up in the middle of the night to fight with some ninja-like intruders.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  realestatepup
March 3, 2021 3:22 pm

Damn, and all I ever did was some hinky shrooms….

Steve
Steve
  realestatepup
March 5, 2021 12:10 am

Pup,
Thanks for the giggles. Yeah, dream etc. are some wild shit alright. When I was real young I had a consistent dream I was flying around the bedroom.

White Rationalist
White Rationalist
March 3, 2021 12:37 pm

And how do TPTB control the masses? Fear. So much so that people cannot think straight, like this plandemic, all by design, producing fearful mask wearing zombies and depressing self isolation. The last thing TPTB want is for the masses to be fully awake, joyful and fearless. Then TPTB would have no power.

Roger V Tranfaglia
Roger V Tranfaglia
  White Rationalist
March 5, 2021 7:44 pm

You mean….TBP?

subwo
subwo
March 3, 2021 12:48 pm

I sent the article to a friend who is a PA and catholic deacon. His response:

You may find information on near death experience at magiscenter.com.

Current thought in psychiatry and sociology is pushing that we are spirits trapped in a body and that an individual’s sexual orientation is a social construct, thus gender dysphoria.

Besides XX and XY genes, there are no biological markers that can define us as anything other than dimorphic beings.

Yes, there are those born with genetic defects (rarity percentage wise) and that is where plastic/reconstructive surgery comes in. Even then they look at what are the most developed reproductive parts and what is possible with the least amount of donor defects.

Gender dysphoria is a modern iteration of the Arian Heresy that denies the existence of the unitive nature Spirit and Body and that we are free to do with our bodies as we wish, even to the point of mutilation. You may want look at Body dysmorphic Disorder.

There is a strong hint regarding the possibility of the separation of Spirit and Body in this article because of the lack of scientific explanation, at least from my point of view.

I believe that it points out relatively well the limitations of science and our understanding of God and the cosmos. Our answers always seem to point us to more questions, like a bread crumb trail, that leads back to God.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
March 3, 2021 1:57 pm

“Interestingly, people describe their NDEs in a universally positive way. “Survival” was an option that they were free to choose. Death of their body could be clearly seen as a transcending event in their continuing awareness and not as the termination of their existence.”

We are immortal beings. Our bodies simply vessels, made perfect, destroyed by sin. Thank God for physical death lest we be trapped in this existence forever.

Regarding the above quote: many report seeing a light, most find the light to be very good and peaceful. Many describe the light as God. I had a friend (now deceased) in MA who swore to it. As tactfully as I could, I sent him these verses.

2 Corinthians 11:14 KJB… “And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.”

1 Timothy 6:13-16 KJB… “I give thee charge in the sight of God, who quickeneth all things, and before Christ Jesus, who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession; That thou keep this commandment without spot, unrebukeable, until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ: Which in his times he shall shew, who is the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords; Who only hath immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto; whom no man hath seen, nor can see: to whom be honour and power everlasting. Amen.”

My friend had more faith in his experience than in the word of God. Even at deaths door does satan still attempt to deceive. Peter, with the keys to the earthly kingdom, has some advice…

2 Peter 1:16-21 KJB… “For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty. For he received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. And this voice which came from heaven we heard, when we were with him in the holy mount. We have also a more sure word of prophecy; whereunto ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn, and the day star arise in your hearts: Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.

He saw Christ transfigured. He heard Gods voice from heaven. Still, he gives deference to Gods written word over his own remarkable experience. That’s faith!

brian
brian
  grace country pastor
March 3, 2021 3:47 pm

A co-workers wife died from cancer and she had an entirely different ending. I also knew one of the ambulance attendants who verified the account. She fainted in the kitchen and her husband, my co-worker, couldn’t revive her right away and called 911. She came to several times then passed out but in between when she came to she screamed, “Don’t let them get me”

So not all the deaths are long tunnels of light or pleasant experiences. Nobody wants to hear the other side of the death experience . What if there really is a hell awaiting?!?!?

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  brian
March 3, 2021 4:12 pm

Horrifying and hope she got saved before she passed… but hell was created for a purpose. Eternal beings can’t be killed. They just need to be contained.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  grace country pastor
March 3, 2021 8:37 pm

GCP,

Serious suggestion: Maybe you could post a weekly sermon of yours?

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Glock-N-Load
March 3, 2021 10:43 pm

Appreciate you Glock… 😊 We could certainly do a Sunday morning teaching! Those who have the inclination can tune in at their leisure. I’d very much enjoy answering questions resulting from anything posted.

The gentleman I learn most from is Justin Johnson (he’s brilliant and far more organized than me) but there are several expositors truly worth the time in the mid-Acts community. Here’s a sample; please let me know what you think!

Chart Lesson: Mystery Made Clear

Me, I’ll just chime in when the spirit moves me. Don’t want to trigger a Stucky hemorrhage on schedule every week… 😉

Grace and peace to you and yours!

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Stucky
March 4, 2021 11:41 am

Alrighty! How does one go about posting such a thing?

Roger V Tranfaglia
Roger V Tranfaglia
  Stucky
March 5, 2021 7:49 pm

THANK YOU!!!!!

Shotgun Trooper
Shotgun Trooper
March 3, 2021 2:36 pm

Ether. Yeah, I’ll never forget that. What’s your natural in-built protection from nightmares? You wake yourself up. Not when you’re trapped in there and can’t get out. Yeah, I’ll never forget that…

One Enchanted Evening
One Enchanted Evening
March 3, 2021 3:07 pm

Wow Outstanding article. Way deep thinking. I got knocked out several times. One second talking to them. The next, getting a sponge bath from a large African American woman. Damn that was terrifying. I was knocked out for 8 hours and when I came two, I could not move or speak, being told, “It’s time for your sponge bath Mr. @##$$$”. Fuck me.

Two if by sea. Three if from within thee.
Two if by sea. Three if from within thee.
  One Enchanted Evening
March 4, 2021 12:00 am

Happy to know she didn’t slug you repeatedly.

flash
flash
March 3, 2021 3:31 pm

We are spirits experiencing a human existence.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
March 3, 2021 10:05 pm

Great article on a deep topic. It really makes you think. There’s still so much humans don’t know about the world or even about themselves.

Uncola
Uncola
March 4, 2021 12:03 am

I gotta tell ya, Stuck… I can’t decide if that article was more fascinating or thought-provoking. Thanks for posting

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 4, 2021 6:04 am

this is the kind of stuff that we have barely begun to explore. the whole technological nightmare of the past few hundred years has been a distraction, a potentially deadly trap, that we stepped into. if we survive the collapse of industrial civilization going on all around us right now, the future direction for human progress lies in the spiritual and in the mind. it may very well be that ‘ancient’ efforts in various cultures, many philosophical traditions , religious traditions, and so on, were already making the first steps towards understanding some of these things. . the empire of machines is busy destroying anything that has anything to do with the natural world, including humans.
much of the wisdom already accumulated over long centuries has been lost again.

El Kabong
El Kabong
March 4, 2021 7:26 am

Being Truly Woke

woke
/wōk/
Learn to pronounce
verb
past of wake
adjectiveINFORMAL•US
alert to injustice in society, especially racism.
“we need to stay angry, and stay woke”

Let’s get one thing straight, so called ‘woke’ culture is not an awakening to a higher level of consciousness. It is the formalization of a deep seated anger and hatred toward civil society particularly any aspect of culture associated with the white race. We know that ‘systemic’ racism is a false bugaboo that is being used by the left wing of the establishment to destroy civil society. If systemic racism existed in America then Barack Obama could never have been elected President. Yes, vestiges of the old racism remain but they are small compared to what they used to be. What ‘systemic racism’ really means is the weaponization of victimhood as a way to achieve political, social and economic ends. Most of my friends of African-American descent have not bought into the ‘Woke’ movement. Interestingly a good chunk of the ‘woke’ movement is comprised of white kids. ‘Higher education’ has managed to instill in them a sense of guilt and self loathing.

“Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark in the hopeless swamps of the not-quite, the not-yet, and the not-at-all. Do not let the hero in your soul perish in lonely frustration for the life you deserved and have never been able to reach. The world you desire can be won. It exists.. it is real.. it is possible.. it’s yours.”
― Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

Let me tell you what being ‘Woke’ is all about. A whole generation of Americans woke up to injustice following the events of November 22, 1963 when our beloved President was Assassinated in Dallas Texas. That tragic blow awakened my generation and led us to question the hand me down assumptions of the establishment. We have been questioning those assumptions ever since for the Assassination of the President awakened within us the ability to think for ourselves and question the official narrative of the establishment and the corporate media. The failed and ridiculously flawed ‘Warren’ report only threw gas on the deception and ignited a raging fire of distrust for authority within our souls. From 9-11-2001 to 1-6, 2021 we can smell a rotten egg from a mile away. We now know that the ghost of democracy sleeps with the fishes. This distrust for authority is well founded when we now look back on the Assassinations of Dr. King and RFK as well as the loss of our treasure in an unnecessary war in Southeast Asia. These state sponsored events only reinforced our distrust. President Kennedy’s commencement address at American University in June of 1963 should be read by every American and highlights not only why he was killed but also the hope and promise that we lost on that beautiful November day in Dallas.

“I have, therefore, chosen this time and this place to discuss a topic on which ignorance too often abounds and the truth is too rarely perceived–yet it is the most important topic on earth: world peace. What kind of peace do I mean? What kind of peace do we seek? Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American weapons of war. Not the peace of the grave or the security of the slave. I am talking about genuine peace, the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth living, the kind that enables men and nations to grow and to hope and to build a better life for their children–not merely peace for Americans but peace for all men and women–not merely peace in our time but peace for all time.”
-JFK Commencement Address at American University, June of 1963
What we lost on that day is beyond words. A piece of us died with President Kennedy. We have never been the same. You want ‘woke’ culture? Well then, wake up for real as we did that sad November day.