Mind Quest
How the mind works with different human beings.
Free, creative PEOPLE often report feelings of inner well being. Harmony and health. The see their world as changeable and transient, and freely adjust their attitude and realities to fit the changing situation. The acceptance of change and the exercise of the freedom to choose among the multitude of suitable possibilities are the goals and work of the serious minded beings. Attaining these goals bring mastery of self, harmony tranquility and inner confidence.
Nevertheless, most of us see stress and illness in our worldly environment and often experience them within ourselves as well.
What hinders the sincere beings from achieving their goals? Fixation, energy stagnation, and attachment are often primary sources and this stress and illness. These situation signals that we are no longer exercising are creative abilities. We have forgotten creative, imaginative living as we fall in to the limited reality of a determined, fixed, and mechanical world. Some factors contributing to this dilemma may be our thinking of the body as only a vehicle for the mind and of the mind as the brain, and of the brain as the master computer enter center that collects information and react to that world. Aside from minor discrepancies, however all brains and body are essentially the same. How, then, are we to account to our differences?
Some scientist and scholars say our differences arise from the unique combination of a genetic heritage, social, cultural, and physical experiences, and instant that form individual live. Such a mechanical system since to include everything except the most important quality of being human-that aspect which makes each of us unique-the ability to create envision, give new form to the world and capacity to the enthused, appreciate, know. Actually, we create every time we experience the joyful flash of sudden understanding or find a new way to do something or make something beautiful. In fact, almost everything we do draws upon our creative imaginative capacity to some degree. If we no longer feel creative, we should look for the mental block which is formed when we equate the mind with brain function only.
A machine tends to react in predestinated designed ways. If we accept the idea or the visualization of our bodies and minds as machines whose functions are determined by external circumstances, the creative, knowing, human quality in us soon becomes a stranger. As our bodies becomes separate from us-the creators-they become alien, and potentially threatening. Is it any wonder that we begin to block the creative forces from parts of the body? Is it any wonder that we become attached to any situation that gives temporary shelter from the awareness of our alienation? When attached to a situation or to the perpetuation of emotional moods or attitudes of alienation, we are dominated by that attachment; our lives are controlled by a desire for more and stronger attachments and by a fear of losing attachments we already have. Where, then, is our ability to freely create? Where, then, is our ability to direct the forces that shape and form our lives?
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