34

The Sexual Passion of Winston Smith

Edward Curtin

John Hurt and Suzanna Hamilton as Winston and Julia, 1984

Christianity gave Eros poison to drink; he did not die of it, certainly, but degenerated to Vice.” Frederick Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil

Ours is essentially a tragic age, so we refuse to take it tragically. The cataclysm has happened, we are among the ruins, we start to build up new little habitats, to have new little hopes. It is rather hard work: there is now no smooth road into the future: but we go round, or scramble over the obstacles. We’ve got to live, no matter how many skies have fallen.” D. H. Lawrence, Lady Chatterley’s Lover

The so-called consumer society and the politics of corporate capitalism have created a second nature of man which ties him libidinally and aggressively to the commodity form. The need for possessing, consuming, handling and constantly renewing gadgets, devices, instruments, engines, offered to and imposed upon the people, for using these wares even at the danger of one’s own destruction, has become a ‘biological’ need.” Herbert Marcuse, One Dimensional Man

There is a vast literature analyzing the political prophecy of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. Big Brother, double-speak, telescreens, crimestop, etc. – all applied to our current political situation. The language has become part of our popular lexicon, and as such, has become clichéd through overuse. Blithe, habitual use of language robs it of its power to crack open the safe that hides the realities of life.

There is no doubt that Orwell wrote a brilliant political warning about the methods of totalitarian control. But hidden at the heart of the book is another lesson lost on most readers and commentators. Rats, torture, and Newspeak resonate with people fixated on political repression, which is a major concern, of course. But so too is privacy and sexual passion in a country of group-think and group-do, where “Big Brother” poisons you in the crib and the entertainment culture then takes over to desexualize intimacy by selling it as another public commodity.

The United States is a pornographic society. By pornographic I do not just mean the omnipresent selling of exploitative sex through all media to titillate a voyeuristic public living in the unreality of screen “life” and screen sex through television, movies, and online obsessions. I mean a commodified consciousness, where everyone and everything is part of a prostitution ring in the deepest sense of pornography’s meaning – for sale, bought. And consumed by getting, spending, and selling. Flicked into the net of Big Brother, whose job is to make sure everything fundamentally human and physical is debased and mediated, people become consumers of the unreal and direct experience is discouraged. The natural world becomes an object to be conquered and used. Animals are produced in chemical factories to be slaughtered by the billions only to appear bloodless under plastic wrap in supermarket coolers. The human body disappears into hypnotic spectral images.

One’s sex becomes one’s gender as the words are transmogrified and as one looks in the mirror of the looking-glass self and wonders how to identify the one looking back. Streaming life from Netflix or Facebook becomes life the movie. The brilliant perverseness of the mediated reality of a screen society – what Guy Debord calls The Society of the Spectacle – is that as it distances people from fundamental reality, it promotes that reality through its screen fantasies. “Get away from it all and restore yourself at our spa in the rugged mountains where you can hike in pristine woods after yoga and a breakfast of locally sourced eggs and artisanally crafted bread.” Such garbage would be funny if it weren’t so effective. Debord writes,

The spectacle is not a collection of images, but a social relation among people, mediated by images….Where the real world changes into simple images, the simple images become real beings and effective motivations of hypnotic behavior.

Thus sex with robots and marrying yourself are not aberrations but logical extensions of a society where solipsism meets machine in the America dream.

As this happens, words and language become corrupted by the same forces that Orwell called Big Brother, whose job is total propaganda and social control. Just as physical reality now mimics screen reality and thus becomes chimerical, language, through which human beings uncover and articulate the truth of being, becomes more and more abstract. People don’t die; they “pass on” or “pass away.” Dying, like real sex, is too physical. Wars of aggression don’t exist; they are “overseas contingency operations.” Killing people with drones isn’t killing; it’s “neutralizing them.” There are a “ton” of examples, but I am sure “you guys” don’t need me to list any more.

Orwell called Big Brother’s language Newspeak, and Hemingway preceded him when he so famously wrote in disgust In a Farewell to Arms,

I was always embarrassed by the words sacred, glorious, and sacrifice, and the expression in vain….Abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were obscene…”

This destruction of language has been going on for a long time, but it’s worth noting that from Hemingway’s WW I through Orwell’s WW II up until today’s endless U.S. wars against Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Libya, etc., there has been the parallel development of screen and media culture, beginning with silent movies through television and onto the total electronic media environment we now inhabit – the surround sound and image bubble of literal abstractions that inhabit us, mentally and physically. In such a society, to feel what you really feel and not what, in Hemingway’s words, “you were supposed to feel, and had been taught to feel” has become extremely difficult.

Language, as the Greeks told us, should open up a clearing for the truth (Greek aleitheia, unhiddenness) to emerge so we can grasp the essence of life. And so it is ironically appropriate that Orwell’s Winston Smith discovers such essence, not in analyzing Crimestop, his tormenter O’Brien, or Doublethink, but “in a natural clearing, a tiny grass knoll surrounded by tall saplings that shut it in completely” where he secretly meets a young woman who had passed him a note saying she loved him. Away from the prying eyes of Big Brother and his spies, amidst bluebells and a torrent of song from a thrush, they come together almost wordlessly. “Winston and Julia clung together, fascinated” as the thrush sang madly.

“The music went on and on, minute after minute, with astonishing variations, never once repeating itself, almost as if the bird were deliberately showing off its virtuosity…He stopped thinking and merely felt.”
Here the secret lovers affirm their humanity, the truth of sexual intimacy that is the enemy of all abstractions used by the powerful to control and manipulate normal people and to convince them to participate in killing others. “Almost as swiftly as he had imagined it, she had torn her clothes off, and when she flung them aside it was with that same magnificent gesture by which a whole civilization seemed to be annihilated.” Reveling in love-making in a free space outside the Party’s control, they felt they had triumphed.

But as we learn in 1984 and should learn in the U.S.A. today, “seemed” is the key word. Their triumph was temporary. For sexual passion reveals truths that need to be confirmed in the mind. In itself, sexual liberation can be easily manipulated, as it has been so effectively in the United States. “Repressive de-sublimation” Herbert Marcuse called it fifty years ago. You allow people to act out their sexual fantasies in commodified ways that can be controlled by the rulers, all the while ruling their minds and potential political rebelliousness. Sex becomes part of the service economy where people service each other while serving their masters. Use pseudo-sex to sell them a way of life that traps them in an increasingly totalitarian social order that only seems free.

This has been accomplished primarily through screen culture and the concomitant confusion of sexual identity. Perhaps you have noticed that over the past twenty-five years of growing social and political confusion, we have witnessed an exponential growth in “the electronic life,” the use of psychotropic drugs, and sexual disorientation. This is no accident. Wars have become as constant as Eros – the god of love, life, joy, and motion – has been divorced from sex as a stimulus and response release of tension in a “stressed” society. Rollo May, the great American psychologist, grasped this:

Indeed, we have set sex over against eros, used sex precisely to avoid the anxiety-creating involvements of eros…We are in flight from eros and use sex as the vehicle for the flight…Eros [which includes, but is not limited to, passionate sex] is the center of vitality of a culture – its heart and soul. And when release of tension takes the place of creative eros, the downfall of the civilization is assured.

Because Julia and Winston cannot permanently escape Oceania, but can only tryst, they succumb to Big Brother’s mind control and betray each other. Their sexual affair can’t save them. It is a moment of beauty and freedom in an impossible situation. Of course the hermetically sealed world of 1984 is not the United States. Orwell created a society in which escape was impossible. It is, after all, an admonitory novel – not the real world.

Things are more subtle here; we still have some wiggle room – some – although the underlying truth is the same: the U.S. oligarchy, like “The Party,” “seeks power entirely for its own sake” and “are not interested in the good of others,” all rhetoric to the contrary. Our problem is that too many believe the rhetoric, and those who say they don’t really do at the deepest level. Fly the flag and play the national anthem and their hearts are aflutter with hope. Recycle old bromides about the next election when your political enemies will be swept out of office and excitement builds as though you had met the love of your life and all was well with the world.

But understanding the history of public relations, advertising, propaganda, the CIA, the national security apparatus, technology, etc., makes it clear that such hope is baseless. For the propaganda in this country has penetrated far deeper than anyone can imagine, and it has primarily done this through advanced technology and the religion of technique – machines as pure abstractions – that has poisoned not just our minds, but the deepest wellsprings of the body’s truths and the erotic imagination that links us in love to all life on earth.

In “Defence of Poetry,” Percy Bysshe Shelley writes:

The great secret of morals is love; or a going out of our nature, and an identification of ourselves with the beautiful which exists in thought, action, or person, not our own. A man, to be greatly good, must imagine intensely and comprehensively; he must put himself in the place of another and of many others; the pains and pleasure of his species must become his own. The great instrument of moral good is the imagination.

We are now faced with the question: Can we escape the forces of propaganda and mind control that run so very deep into American life? If so, how? Let’s imagine a way out.
Orwell makes it very clear that language is the key to mind control, as he delineates how Newspeak works. I think he is right. And mind control also means the control of our bodies, Eros, our sex, our physical connections to all living beings and nature. Today the U.S. is reaching the point where “Oldspeak” – Standard English – has been replaced by Newspeak, and just “fragments of the literature of the past” survive here and there. This is true for the schooled and unschooled.

In fact, those more trapped by the instrumental logic, disembodied data, and word games of the power elite are those who have gone through the most schooling, the indoctrination offered by the so-called “elite” universities.

I suspect that more working-class and poor people still retain some sense of the old language and the fundamental meaning of words, since it is with their sweat and blood that they “earn their living.” Many of the highly schooled are children of the power elite or those groomed to serve them, who are invited to join in living the life of power and privilege if they swallow their consciences and deaden their imaginations to the suffering their “life-styles” and ideological choices inflict on the rest of the world. In this world of The New York Times, Harvard, The New Yorker, Martha’s Vineyard, The Washington Post, Wall St., Goldman Sachs, the boardrooms of the ruling corporations, all the corporate media, etc., language has become debased beyond recognition.

Here, as Orwell said of Newspeak,

a heretical thought…should be literally unthinkable, at least as far as thought is dependent on words. Its vocabulary was so constructed as to give exact and often very subtle expression to every meaning that a Party member could properly wish to express.”

The intelligently orthodox, he adds, must master the art of “doublethink” wherein they hold two contradictory ideas in their minds simultaneously, while accepting both of them. This is the key trick of logic and language that allows the power elites and their lackeys in the U.S. today to master the art of self-deception and feel good about themselves as they plunder the world. In this “Party” world, the demonization, degradation, and killing of others is an abstraction; their lives are spectral. Orwell describes doublethink this way:

To tell deliberate lies while genuinely believing in them, to forget any fact that has become inconvenient, and then, when it becomes necessary again, to draw it back from oblivion for just so long as it is needed, to deny the existence of objective reality and all the while to take account of the reality one denies – all this is indispensably necessary. Even in using the word doublethink it is necessary to exercise doublethink. For by using the word one admits one is tampering with reality; by a fresh act of doublethink one erases this knowledge; and so on indefinitely, with the lie always one leap ahead of the truth.

It may sound silly to say, but language, as its etymology tells us, begins with the tongue (Latin, lingua). And the tongue is a bell, tolling out its meaning. Indeed, all language springs from the body – is body language. And when language becomes abstract and devoid of blood, it becomes etiolated and unable to convey the truth that is the mystical body of the world. It becomes a viper’s tongue, dividing the “good” people from the “bad” so the good can eliminate the bad who have become abstractions.

When Winston Smith and Julia hid in the arbor and for once felt free and alive as they fucked – despite its transitoriness – Orwell was suggesting something that his dystopian novel denies is possible: that we can escape our own 1984 in 2018 by returning to fundamentals. Whitman told us that if anything is sacred it is the human body, and he sung “the body electric.” This is the task of artists: to sing the words that tell the truth the propagandists try to deny.

James Joyce writes in The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:

Welcome, oh life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.

Perhaps we should add: in the smithy of our souls and bodies. His fellow Irishman, William Butler Yeats, brings us down to earth with the words:

Now that my ladder’s gone
I must lie down where all the ladders start
In the foul rag and bone shop of the heart.

“Yes I said yes I will Yes.”


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bekkos
bekkos
Aug 7, 2018 5:10 PM

Within the empire of the mind, rebellion
is not so much prohibited, as inconceivable,
in part because the empire has no name,
in part because our minds are taught
no language in which to name and question,
and any naming, any questioning, produces
only the fruit of indifference or indignation
within the hollow echo-chamber
of our communications.

I wrote that a week ago, not thinking at all of Orwell’s 1984. This essay helps me put those thoughts into a deeper context. Thank you for writing it.

binra
binra
Aug 7, 2018 11:14 PM
Reply to  bekkos

My first response disappeared before I sent it – perhaps it was too abstract. Rebellion within the mind – wished and believed is what sets up division. An oppositional will. A self differentiating thought given priority. A what if – taken as a want to be and given power. Within the dream of a separate mind In a separate body, in a world of separate things, seen outside in ‘otherness’ is the emperor in his domain. Ruled out from naked truth by fig leaf finery over a fear of self-invalidation, that must seek what it lacks in possession, dominion of the forms and semblance of power Does one rebel in a madhouse? Or locate the nature of the insanity and walk out of its definitions By good housekeeping! Mind is not a physical entity even though it can run in emulation of a physically embodied experience. The subjecting mind did… Read more »

binra
binra
Jul 25, 2018 10:09 AM

“Away from the prying eyes of Big Brother and his spies, amidst bluebells and a torrent of song from a thrush, they come together almost wordlessly. “Winston and Julia clung together, fascinated” as the thrush sang madly. The music went on and on, minute after minute, with astonishing variations, never once repeating itself, almost as if the bird were deliberately showing off its virtuosity…He stopped thinking and merely felt.” To frame the epiphany as sexual passion or ‘eros’ is to focus on the forms of the event from an outside ‘thinking perspective’ (sic) and run along socially conditioned associations. “Behold I make all things new!” is the act of Creation – of a CreatING Universe – in place of a dead letter society running on rule-bound checks and tick-boxes to the ‘forms’ or ‘set meanings’ of a narrative control. I wrote further on this in https://off-guardian.org/2018/07/24/to-make-a-sailor-blush/#comment-127130 in a thread of… Read more »

binra
binra
Jul 24, 2018 7:49 PM

A lot of good witness and some confusion too – in my reading the above. Language does not extend the tongue but the word or definition from which it goes forth to bless or damn. The ancients used Soul for what later became psyche and later became mind that thus becomes a robotic set of manipulatable conditioned reflexes to be reverse engineered by systems of control in place of true relationship. Mind is a verb – do you mind? The construct of ideas given ‘object permanence’ is the model of its own world. Attempts to communicate with a rule-bound filtered defence do not find resonance. Only like communicates with like and that is to say love shares itself in its freedom of being where fear seeks reinforcement against exposure to a lack of substance over past experience set to be evaded at all cost. A course in grievances has been… Read more »

notheonly1
notheonly1
Jul 24, 2018 5:00 PM

Thank You very much – for kicking open the door that reveals the door that just got kicked open. It may not immediately be apparent, but what You wrote has created a bigger picture than the sum of its pieces. Orwell is without doubt on of the greatest writers humanity has ever produced. And I used the word ‘produced’, because the man George Orwell was as much the product of his own times, as we are of the time we are living in right now. His keen observations about ‘Love’ in the face of totalitarianism that chokes everything to death that does not provide interest of profit or return of investment, are now more to the point than when he wrote his master piece. But one should also not forget that whatever is described in ‘1984’ has been said in the times long preceding the 21st century. The ‘I Ching’,… Read more »

mog
mog
Jul 24, 2018 11:14 AM

We are the rear guard of the real,
Pulling on your shirt tail,
Stepping on your heel.
We’re here to the last,
And we’re here to ask,
“What do you feel?……What do you feel ?”

BigB
BigB
Jul 24, 2018 10:19 AM

Excellent Essay! Ah, language: if only it could be destroyed …but where would that leave us? The common conception is that language is descriptive of experience and real world referential: words and their constructions (built on foundational metaphors and metonyms) faithfully represent phenomena. The relation of the signifier and the signified is rational and objective: words create meaning and express reality. Experience, reality, cognition and consciousness are basically synecdochic – a simultaneous understanding of the same thing. The primal signification of psycholinguistically constructed knowledge is self. The self conditionality is the ground and horizon of language. Or is it? Is self a constructor of meaning; or is its meaning a construction of language? Imagine our direct perceptual experience as a cleat disc: and language as an opaque or semi-opaque disc. If one disc is placed on the other: it follows that if the opaque (selfview) disc is on top –… Read more »

Baron
Baron
Jul 23, 2018 11:26 PM

Up to not that distant past, humans had a number of natural enemies, mainly viruses, were also a frequent enemy to themselves i.e. wars. This kept the number of humans down.

After WW2, technological & medical progress, travelling, and globalisation took over, which have reduce the range of threats to our survival, hence the change, amongst other behavioural traits, in the frequency of bonking, any time, anywhere, and more often than not on a whim. Not for reproduction, merely for pleasure.

This is not what sex was designed for either by Him or Nature (you take your pick), and it may well be the next conduit for the cut in our numbers will come not from nukes that everyone fears, but via sex, the Aids epidemic may have been merely the foretaste of things to hit us big.

bevin
bevin
Jul 24, 2018 2:18 AM
Reply to  Baron

You are entitled to an opinion but your history is simply made up. This, for example is nonsense:
“…After WW2, technological & medical progress, travelling, and globalisation took over, which have reduce the range of threats to our survival, hence the change, amongst other behavioural traits, in the frequency of bonking, any time, anywhere, and more often than not on a whim. …”

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jul 24, 2018 11:37 PM
Reply to  bevin

Or this, “the Aids epidemic may have been merely the foretaste of things to hit us big”. Probably referring to the manufactured AIDS crisis, like the manufactured Mad Cow, Ebola, Avian fear crises. Nothing to do with sex, though a case may be made that fascists tend to hew to sex control policies.

Thom Prentice
Thom Prentice
Jul 23, 2018 10:04 PM

This a damned good.

maatheru
maatheru
Jul 23, 2018 10:56 PM
Reply to  Thom Prentice

I agree…

George Cornell
George Cornell
Jul 23, 2018 7:56 PM

Thoughtful essay, and so well written!

MichaelK
MichaelK
Jul 23, 2018 7:43 PM

‘It’s a truly glorious Summer we’ll all remember for years to come!’ Or, uncontrolled ‘global warming’ is kicking in with a vengeance and we’re all gonna fry. The speed and the consequences have been drastically undervalued and society won’t be able to adapt in time to the challenges we face. What language can we employ to reveal the Truth when modern language used in the public sphere is about communicating the opposite… Lies?

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 23, 2018 10:46 PM
Reply to  MichaelK

Capitalism is the Mother of All Lies. Not only do capitalists in tobacco, BigPharma, fossil fuels etc, lie ceaselessly to protect their ‘Precious’, their wealth, profits and power, but they also buy politicians who lie, incessantly and, these days, almost exclusively (any contact with ‘the Truth’, being accidental or calculated for effective, or for some longer-term deception)and they fund liars to lie for them in ‘think-tanks’ and the Free Press. Indeed the Western kakistocracies do little but lie anymore, and with growing arrogance, and vicious opposition to any remaining truth-tellers, or even dissenting opinion We have, I believe, reached a phase change in global climate, thanks to centuries of greenhouse gas emissions, .and the kicking in of positive feed-backs like the albedo flip in the Arctic north and the warming oceans and dying tropical forests becoming carbon sources, no longer sinks. Atmospheric greenhouse gas levels are increasing at an increasing… Read more »

Father Oute
Father Oute
Jul 24, 2018 12:03 AM

You will be lucky to see tomorrow

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 24, 2018 12:06 PM
Reply to  Father Oute

Not if I see you first.

Tim Groves
Tim Groves
Jul 24, 2018 3:31 AM

To re-quote part of the D.H. Lawrence quote quoted above by the author of this essay, “We’ve got to live, no matter how many skies have fallen.”

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 24, 2018 12:08 PM
Reply to  Tim Groves

Best not to live willfully blind, deaf and in denial of reality.

mog
mog
Jul 24, 2018 11:16 AM

Mulga,

Been searching for a term to describe politicians.

For me, ‘celebrity liars’.

theroyalsecretinfo
theroyalsecretinfo
Jul 24, 2018 11:24 AM
Reply to  mog

Hollywood for ugly people describes a few I know.

Gary Weglarz
Gary Weglarz
Jul 25, 2018 12:10 AM

2050 would be a really optimistic prediction for our demise – though I’d take it in a heartbeat for my grandkids sake:

https://guymcpherson.com/climate-chaos/climate-change-summary-and-update/

binra
binra
Jul 25, 2018 12:50 PM
Reply to  Gary Weglarz

That which is untrue has never truly existed.
That which truly is – always is.

However – don’t let truth get in the way of a good story!

Francis Lee
Francis Lee
Jul 23, 2018 6:28 PM

For all his forebodings Orwell was not totally pessimistic about the future of mankind. The totalitarian ethic and mindset was restricted mostly to the outer party – today’s Guardian-reading classes – the fanatics who imbibed its precepts most enthusiastically. The proles remained largely unaffected, as do some elements of the traditional intelligentsia, and lead a traditional ancestral way of life. In one scene where Winston and Julia met for their usual erotic rendezvous above an antique shop, Winston noted a prole woman in the courtyard having out the washing and singing ‘It was only an April fancy’ In one of his best piece of writing he goes on: ‘Tirelessly the woman marched to and fro, corking and uncorking herself, singing and falling silent, and pegging out more diapers… As he looked at the woman in her characteristic attitude, her thick arms reaching up to the line, her powerful mare-like buttocks… Read more »

Jams O'Donnell
Jams O'Donnell
Jul 23, 2018 5:22 PM

Yes, all very well put and true. But what’s the answer? Artists will never change the world in a large enough way to defeat the establishment. As far as I can see, only the inevitable downfall of civil society, in maybe the next 50 years or so can get rid of this “civilisation”. Global warming, the decimation of arable land, food and water shortages will mean mass movements of people and mass civil unrest. But we can also be sure that the system will be aware of this danger. Will their countermeasures work, or will they be overwhelmed and a new society be born from the ruins of the old? Will it be any different from the old? Only time will tell.

jniece
jniece
Jul 23, 2018 10:49 PM
Reply to  Jams O'Donnell

‘artists will never change the world in large enough way to defeat the establishment’ I disagree. Hasn’t art fueled every significant change in history?

Jams O'Donnell
Jams O'Donnell
Jul 24, 2018 11:47 AM
Reply to  jniece

Such as – the French and Russian Revolutions? The Industrial Revolution? The advent of farming? The discovery of Bronze or Steel (first used for weapons and tools)? Please name your “art fuelled significant changes”

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 24, 2018 12:10 PM
Reply to  jniece

Art never changed anything-it just hitches a ride.

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 23, 2018 11:00 PM
Reply to  Jams O'Donnell

The ecological Holocaust is vastly worse than just the most rapid climate destabilisation in at least 55 million, but probably hundreds of millions of, years. Bio-diversity loss in the sixth mass extinction, ubiquitous pollution of every kind, deforestation, resource depletion etc, all intractable because the political will is absent, and all synergistic with the others in various ways, all spell doom. However, bad as these are, the factor that ensures catastrophe is the nature of the monsters empowered by capitalism, the global ‘elites’ with their insatiable greed, hatred of others, gigantic egomania, utter unscrupulousness etc. The kakistocrats that capitalism empowers, and who are armed with thermo-nuclear weapons and genetically engineered bio-weapons.

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jul 24, 2018 12:21 AM

Last week, RT had a feature on butterfly counting with David Attenborough. Many of the commentators were not British, and probably failed to understand the British thing about counting butterflies, and seemed to assume that David was enunciating a profound philosophical truth about letting go of the problems of the world and simply watching butterflies. The effect that he had on people who usually spend their time criticising, the US, Israel etc, etc, was remarkable. An old Zen story tells of a monk who trips and falls off a cliff but grabs hold of a sapling with one hand, checking his descent. Gradually, he feels the sapling giving way but as it is about to, he sees a wild raspberry and picks it with his free hand and puts it in his mouth. The story ends, ‘and it tasted beautiful’. There is very little that any of us can change… Read more »

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jul 24, 2018 12:14 PM
Reply to  kevin morris

It’s a real pity to throw it all away, and take 99% of Life on Earth with us, just because we never learned how to control the psychopaths among us.

binra
binra
Jul 25, 2018 10:34 AM

You are responsible for your learning. If you open relationship in shared learning with others then you are responsible for what you give and receive in your relations. Framing yourself as the speaker and judge to a miscreant world is neglecting the very pattern you ascribe and assign or give to your world – and of course the 99% of you that is the More of Who you are. Judging may not seem heartless when framed in terms of ‘waking the unworthy’ – but it is unworthy of you and of those who are packaged up and discarded by it. The living moment is the only life there is – but by its ever changing forms and perspectives does the one seem the many. The ‘wild strawberry moment’ is a true recognition and appreciation and not a passing fad. But only the willingness to let life in provides such a… Read more »

Tim Groves
Tim Groves
Jul 24, 2018 3:57 AM

As bad as all these things you complain about may well be—or not as the case may be—it gets worse. Lots of people are routinely mean, selfish, greedy and nasty to each other. And they are like this regardless of whether they are rich or poor or just getting by, and regardless of whether they live under capitalism, communism, socialism, fascism, feudalism or anarchism. Also, a lot of our fellow animals are just bad. Crows will peck the eyes out of new born kittens. Snakes will swallow frogs, newts and baby birds out of the nest. Male chimps will bash the brains of their new mates’ previous offspring. And what wolves in the taiga and lions on the savannah get up to, I am going to leave to your imagination. But there is not a lot of scruple in any of that. Moreover, there are over seven billion people alive… Read more »

binra
binra
Jul 25, 2018 11:05 AM
Reply to  Tim Groves

I hold that there is no salvaging of a false start – but only its release to the true. Judgement is the killer – and the world made by it is a world of pain and death. But such a world is not really ‘Out There’. But is imaged and experienced within consciousness – and has all the meaning you give it. Consensus reality is a working model through which to experience – but it is also the giving of power to externalised forms and meanings. Let us make example of a dream in which most despicable and terrible actions and events occur – that you then awake from and recognize as a ‘making of your own mind’ which of course is far more than what you think your mind to be. The experience in its moment was real. But awakening to reality releases it from having any further power… Read more »