Pre-Dawn...

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OK, I'm in this world...
So, what's happening here?
Whatever it might be, all I know is that, within it, I want to feel secure and safe.
And, once that's established, I want to feel happy and content.

Now, security and happiness are met by providing food, shelter, and recreation; implying also that the wealthier the lifestyle, the safer and happier I will be.
In order to accomplish these things, I have no choice but to diligently strive and even dedicate my life's effort to them.

...However, I can already imagine that when that coveted day arrives [when I'll finally feel safe and happy], I'll also realize that disease or even death can take it all away in an instant! And I'll further realize that one day it inevitably will!
...All that I've worked for, gone in the blink of an eye!
So, why am I striving to achieve something so transient? So ephemeral?
Or, is there something I've overlooked in my strategy to fulfill Life's two basic needs (security and happiness)?
Is there something/ some quality inherent in, or perhaps causal to, Life, that I've failed to take stock of along the way of my learning/development?
Is there perhaps something wrong with the way I'm defining security and happiness? Is it possible that, for example, security has very little to do with the condition of the body? That it maybe has far more to do with the condition of the mind--or even moreso with the condition of whatever it may be that is the source or cause of the mind (call it the soul)?

It's difficult to deny that the approach regarding the welfare of the soul and its state of being is the real issue in life--and NOT the welfare of the body, which is, afterall, subject to not only disease, but death.
The implications of this are far reaching.
Obviously, it would be wise of me to follow it up.

The problem we're all dealing with is the fact that we so readily take things at face value. For example, we have a sense of self that has manifested itself within the confines of the body. This, however, is only apparent, only face value.
If we investigate the depths of the consciousness of the Self, we would begin to discover the subtler aspects of, for example, the nature of our mind--that it encompasses dimensions that shatter our ordinary levels of awareness.
That our senses stubbornly report to us the notion that we're encased within the limits of a finite body is based on the fact that we've hypnotized ourselves thusly ever since the advent of our birth. And, within the greater scheme of things, such a notion was necessary, even vital, to the mechanistic organization of the "World Program."
So that, this matrix of multitudes of apparent egos--separated/individualized from the rest--was evidently subconsciously agreed upon by all concerned.
And therefore the notion of ego (or the I AM consciousness limited to a particular body), by all logical inferences, must be arbitrary and false in the face of Absolute Reality.

Clearly, further study is warranted.

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Contact: f maiello

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