Archive for February, 2009

Who Is My Target Audience?

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

I have a good time poking fun at certain aspects of our society.  The idea that money will buy happiness is one I have fervently fought against.  I encourage people to live a minimalist lifestyle.  It is best for the planet.  Well, technically the extinction of all humans would be best for the planet, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves.  The less you own, the less damage you do to our Mother Earth.  I try to say these things to people who obviously don’t want change and love their new cars and plasma screen televisions.  I could say, “Live and let live,” but it is a destructive form of bevhavior to keep wanting more and more.  That’s what we are in America.  Consumption is the new national passtime.  Forget baseball.  How many malls will we have before someone says, “Enough!”?

To be honest, I never cared for shopping.  Never did and I predict never will.  What’s the point in getting things you don’t need just for the sake of doing it?  Are people really that bored?  Is there nothing else that brings joy to their life?  Honestly.  Where did all the self-esteem go?  We used to be proud of our condfidence and sportsmanship.  Now we’re proud of our Prada bags and iPones.  I guess it’s not that bad.  But when it comes to obsession, there can be major trouble.  I think consumerism is a drug in a big way.  At the root of it is the rich and elites, who don’t have time to care for their children, so give them love in the form of possessions.  Why are people more concerned with what Paris Hilton is wearing than the genocide in Darfur?

So who is my target audience anyway?  I’m not about to dumb down my content for some mass audience.  I have more repsect for myself than that.  I’m not going to rant and rave about stupid shit that doesn’t even matter.  I’m going to talk about things that I feel are pressing and need intervention.  Imagine if they really did have interventions for the drug of consumerism?  “It all started with a falt-screen TV.  Before I knew it, I had twelve of them.  Oh, God!  I need help.”  It’s all about our supposed privelege.  Where we believe we are above those who cannot afford the luxuries we can and flaunt them wherever we go.  And it feels good.  “I’ve got a new iPod!  Look at me!  Check out my new ringtone!”  That’s okay.  I’d rather be alone.  I’d rather not partake in the corporate-industrial complex.  It’s just not for me.  Sorry.  And if it’s not for you as well, welcome to the club!

It’s all turning to dust anyway.  Why become attached to something that is not permanent?  Isn’t that a recipe for suffering?  Why not hang on to things that will be around forever, like ideas and spirituality?  Why can’t that bring you happiness?  Why is it always the surrogate love in plastic wrapping that gets so much attention?  What about people?  Most people today would rather watch a movie than actually socialize.  And when people do socialize, what is it about?  Their favorite TV show or the newest action flick.  Those people are not welcome on my blog unless they are willing to change.

I like people who think for themselves and don’t just accept what society tells them is right or wrong.  Those are just terms we invented to polarize people one way or anonther.  Why do we need moral guidance in the first place?  For 3 million years, we lived without central authority.  We just lived our lives.  And we enjoyed them.  Now, everything has gotten so complicated that it’s almost pointless to rant about it anymore.  Life is simple, but humans insist on making it more and more complicated every day.  Why?  Is it a lust for power or is it just that we feel that life would be boring if we didn’t have all this stuff floating around?  Life used to be simple.  We used to spend a few hours a day surviving and the rest of our time slacking off and playing.  How fun would that be?  Wouldn’t it be more fun than working 40, 50, 70 hours at a high-stress job, coming home barely alive?  I mean, it’s common sense.  We need to relearn those ways.  Back to the land and away from the cubicles.  A cubicle is nothing more than a modern prison.   Let us be free, not tied down by society.

So, I think the people I target when I write are those who want to free themselves as much as possible.  And it will be worth it.

I’ve Got New Plugins!

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

I just installed a couple of plugins on this site.  One is called Stumble Upon and the other is Share This.  I also installed Related Posts, but I can’t seem to get it to work yet.  It’s activated and everything, but it’s just not working.  Any help?  It will allow more people and more traffic to come to this blog.  When I activated the plugin for related posts, it messed up all my archives.  It’s not a necessity, but it would be nice to have to keep people reading and gaining value and insights from my weblog.  Someday I’ll know what to do.

What this has opened me up to is the technical side of blogging.  I’m learning quite a bit when it comes to sprucing up my blog.  These are preliminary changes and I’m hoping to start figuring out how to make this blog very attainable and also to have a nicer layout and better structure.  Wish me luck.  And since I don’t have any real post to make today, here’s one from the past:

The Sandwich Theory

Happy readings.

Raise Your Consciousness Today

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

The best way to raise your consciousness is to do things that stimulate and open your mind. We live most of our lives in a box, hardly ever going out of it. It’s the box that our belief system fits in. We’ll easily discount anything that lies outside the box and blindly accept anything that’s inside this box. If I were to ask you how you can prove that something exists independent of your awareness, maybe you’d say yes and maybe you’d say no. It has nothing to do with proof because saying yes is an unprovable assumption. Saying no is also an unprovable assumption. How do you know this world doesn’t work like a dream? Where only what you experience is real? I challenge you to prove that something exists independent of your awareness. When you are away from your family members, can you prove they don’t exist if you’re not currently aware of them?

Our reality is up for question all the time. Most people deny things that don’t fit. If they see a psychic on television, it has to be scripted. If they hear about a haunted house, those people have schizophrenia. It doesn’t matter the perspective. Most people will spend their entire lives in a box filled with unprovable assumptions. Why? I guess because it’s too much work to question what is around you and think for yourself. It’s easier to just accept what other people tell you. Let them do the thinking for you. That way you can relax and watch an episode of your favorite TV show, where all the characters share the same perspective as you.

If you think about most major religions, much of their teachings were good, but the reality they lived in was so very different than the one we live in today. I’m not going to condemn them for thinking the Earth was the center of the universe and that it was flat. And if you did dare question that “fact,” you were thrown in jail. Imagine what “facts” we’ll know tomorrow. The fact of the matter is that the only thing you can be completely sure of existing is your own awareness. You know you have a consciousness. You don’t know anything for sure except what your consciousness feeds to you. Everything else is a big question mark.

Just open your mind to this perspective and see where it takes you. That you’re basically living in a dream world where the only thing that exists is what you are consciously perceiving at this moment. See where it takes you. I guess you could call it the most basic belief system and the most sound. Everything in it is provable. Your experience of it proves it. If there is anything out there other than your awareness, you can’t say it is there or not because you are not currently experiencing it. You can choose to believe what you want about the rest, but know that you could be wrong. But you really don’t know that because in order to prove something exists, you must become aware of it. I’ll say that I challenge you to prove that I exist independent of your awareness. You can’t do it. Even if you came down to Myrtle Beach and saw me, you would then be aware of me and therefore could prove I exist.

It’s hard to break out of your box. It’s hard to say to yourself that many of your beliefs unrprovable. When you start opening this box, it makes things very complicated. You’ll be more unsure than you’ve ever been in your entire life. But then you’ll start to notice things that actually happen through first-hand experience that will add to your belief system. I say don’t believe something unless you’ve experienced it yourself. Otherwise, you could be buying a lie. Firsthand knowledge of your reality will make you confident in your belief system. Unless you’ve experienced talking to dead relatives or other spirits, how can you possibly believe in life after death? Because some authority figure told you so? But you are free to choose your own beliefs.

I’m just saying it is stupid to take someone else’s word on the nature of reality. Think about it. Those people could be completely full of shit. You’re the only one who knows what you’ve experienced. So choose based on your experiences. You can use the morals from other belief systems if you feel intuitively that they’re right, but never take any religious text literally. How do you know Jesus walked on water? How do you know he didn’t? You don’t.

I think our beliefs do shape our reality, so it makes sense to keep beliefs that empower you. It does not make sense to keep beliefs that make you powerless. If you choose to believe something, make sure it is congruent with the reality you currently experience. Otherwise, it will be nothing but delusion. If you believe you’re a multi-millionaire, but have $200 in the bank, wouldn’t people consider you to be crazy? They would bring you back to reality by saying, “You’re broke!” You can intend for your money to increase, but saying you are a millionaire is just deluding yourself. You have to look at your beliefs and see if they accurately match the reality you experience. Otherwise, why do you believe what you believe? Because of some old book?

If you found this post helpful or whatever, please feel free to donate to my website. Perhaps you could start tithing to the Church I’m building…The Church of Consciousness.

The Automobile and Sustainability

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

I’ve been writing every day on this blog.  Maybe it’s because I have something to say.  I should probably go on another rant today, but what can I rant about next?  How about the automobile and it’s destruction?  How it turns everything around us into a blur?  How they make cities in such a way that it is nearly impossible to get where you need to go without owning one of these behemoths.  A two-thousand pound machine going 60 miles an hour is just insane if you really think about it.  How many deaths have been caused because people had no real choice but to drive their car?

Most people don’t question the invention of the automobile because it would be against their interest to do so.  It’s turned our forests into pavement and moved all our stores further and further apart.  It’s the whole reason we’re at war with Iraq.  We need the oil or else we won’t be able to get around anymore.  It’s kind of funny how one aspect of society breaking down can ruin the whole system.  If we completely ran out of oil and had no fuel to replace it, can you imagine the world we would see before us?  People walking everywhere or biking towards their destinations.  I bet that people would be much healthier.  We would be more resilient.  There would be much less carbon monoxide in the air.  There would be no concern about global warming.  And I bet things would start moving closer together.

Travelling is something that hasn’t been done in automobiles except in the last century, give or take a few years.  Before, all our needs could be met in a small radius of space, maybe one mile.  How many people today live near a supermarket or a doctor’s office that they could just walk to?  The only way to bypass owning a car is to move to a city like NYC where you merely use other people’s automobiles to get where you need to go.  There really is no choice in the matter.  And because of this, we keep hurting the world’s atmosphere and paving more and more roads until the whole world, viewed from space, will be nothing more than a big gravel rock.

I just feel like we could be doing better as a steward of our planet.  We are supposed to be the most intelligent beings on this planet, and we’re the ones that are doing the most harm.  There are some people who realize that, but there are others who never even take one second to think about it, except maybe on Earth Day, one day out of 365 where we pretend to care about the planet and maybe recycle a couple of plastic bottles.  The problem with most Americans is they want to preserve the lifestyle they have now at any cost.  That comes first.  Saving the planet comes second, third, or fiftieth.  Better not change their way of life or you may be considered a terrorist.

I remember Jimmy Carter giving some speech about how Americans are overconsuming and need to limit what they buy when he was president.  He talked about sustainability and how we can’t keep living like this forever.  What happened to him?  He lost the next election and was shunned by the American people for enciting such ideas into the American way of life.  I believe it was Ronald Reagan who succeeded him and he said, “We can keep progressing in the manufacturing of goods indefinitely!”  He was elected by a landslide.  By telling what is an irresponsible lie.  Anyone with half a brain knows our way of life is not sustainable.  But most of these people put it out of their mind because it’s easier to go along with the crowd and buy, buy, buy.  If you don’t do what everyone else is doing, you have to constantly explain yourself to those who don’t understand.  Most people would rather just become what the world says they should be.  It takes a lot of courage to get out of that box.

But how far back to we have to go to become sustainable or even better again?  I hate how people think in the terms of back and forward.  They act like if we were to start building straw houses, we would be going backward.  Time only goes in one direction.  Forward.  We can go “back” to a less destructive way of life, but with our current consciousness.  We can live like every other creature on Earth, even though we are much smarter than them.  We can explore the depths of our mind without extracting more resources.  We can create abundance to meet our needs, all our needs without having to feel like we’re missing out on the newest gadget.  We can shift to becoming more self-sufficient.  We can create small villages again.  It will take time because who’s to say that another village won’t develop weapons and overtake us again, causing us to go along with their way of life?  We need to guard against that.

What we need to do is go back to living like “primitive” people, but with the mind to never go back to the world we have today.  We can’t be like the Native Americans, who said, “We don’t understand why you don’t hear the Earth screaming.”  We have to say, “We understand why you’ve detached yourself so much from nature that you could never survive in it.  We know how dependent you are on civilization, but if you come and live with us, we can show you the way to become self-sufficient.”  It’s a dream for humanity and the rest of the creatures who inhabit this planet.  We try and serve the greatest good that we can perceive and move in a constructive direction instead of a destructive one.

Where are the other people who write about this sort of thing?  I know of a couple of blogs like this.  One is by Dave Pollard, called How to Save the World .  Another is by Ran Prieur.  I don’t really read Pollard’s blog anymore because I find the language he uses is too complex and the diagrams he makes could take hours to fully understand.  Every now and then I go back to it to see what’s going on with him.  Ran Prieur writes eloquently as well, but isn’t afraid to hold back.  He doesn’t hide  his feelings about civilization and is a mastermind at writing what everyone is secretly thinking.  Check out his essays and zines.  He is very intelligent and also very sane.  He reminds me of an older me.

I just feel like many people just don’t think of the world the way it is, but the way they’re told it is.  And we’ve all heard the old adage, “If we don’t stop now, it will be too late.”  I have the feeling it is already too late.  They said it would be too late 30 years ago.  The acid rain and pollution we get today is from 30 years ago.  Just imagine what the pollution will be like 30 years from now.  It takes time for the greenhouse gases to swirl around in our gigantic atmosphere.  Even if it is too late, we can at least slow down the bleeding.  We can eventually stop it.  But it is going to take the wills of everyone.  And I don’t see it happening anytime soon.  Call me a cynic, but it is going to take a massive shift in consciousness for us to heal the Earth.  This can’t be a grass roots movement.  It has to be a collaborative, multi-faceted movement that encompasses everyone in the world.  I’ll keep writing until it happens.  I’ve got a good 70 to 80 years left to get this message out.  I hope I can reach some people and then they reach more people and it starts a chain of events that makes this world a better place to live.

If you enjoyed this article, please feel free to donate to my cause(s).  I feel that giving is so absent from our society today.   What we need is a gift economy.  Or even the barter system, but even that will lead to the printing of more money.  I say, “Give because it feels good.  Those who give get back tenfold.”

What Ever Happened to Community?

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

We used to live in self-sufficient communities before the extended familly and eventually the nuclear family.  We’ve been isolating ourselves more and more as time goes on.  Pretty soon two people living in a two-bedroom apartment will be considered disease-causing overcrowding.  But our population continues to increase and we’re not only building more houses, but bigger houses, too.  The only thing that doesn’t make sense is there are less people living in these homes than 50 years ago when houses were half as big.  It very strange how we buy our isolation.  We pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to be in our own home, where we have so much extra space we feel compelled to fill it all up with things we’ll hardly ever use.  There are laws stopping more than a certain number of people living in a certain space.  Why?  Because if we could put 10 or 20 people in one home, we wouldn’t have to work as much or make as much money and could spend time living instead of sitting in cubicles rearranging abstractions.

Look what they did to the Native Americans.  They used to live in those longhouses, where multiple families from the same tribe inhabited the same space, possibly hundreds of humans living in the same space.  When we came to America, and saw their lifestyle, we were so repulsed that we had to break their spirits by kidnapping their children and having the authorities reprogram them that the way they were living was an abomination.  We couldn’t just leave them alone.  And now more than half their adult population are alcoholics.  They’re forced to live on the worst land in our entire nation on those reservations.  They had a nice community going and the Europeans came in and just took it away from them.  “Live like us or you’ll die.”  Kind of like the Crusades in respect to religion, except it was the whole lifestyle they took away from the former inhabitants of this land.

What’s so bad about living in the same space as other people?  How big does our personal space have to get before we feel comfortable?  This is a rhetorical question of course.  The answer is different for everyone.  In other cultures like Asian cultures, the whole family lives in the same house.  I used to have a friend who lived with his grandparents, parents, siblings, sibling’s spouses, and so on and so forth.  What’s so bad about that?  Seriously.  Why do people feel they need to have laws against that sort of environment?  I’m sure the people who live in homes like that have stronger immune systems and a better sense of themselves due to the in-depth support system.  I’m also thinking in terms of a Fight Cllub scenario, where all your friends sleep in bunk beds in the basement and you alternate shifts in making meals and whatnot.  Why can’t we all just live together?  Why does society say you can only live with your significant other and your children or maybe a roommate who you are close to?

I remember watching an episode of Family Guy where they had the Mexican Superheroes.  The landlord is in their apartment and there are like 50 people in the apartment.  The Mexican Superman is telling the landlord that they are just visitors, until the Mexican Batman comes back and says, “Hey, I just went to the locksmith and got like 50 keys, man!”  The landlord looks at the Mexican Batman and then the Superman says, “Shhh.  Don’t say that right now.”  This was all because there were only two names on the lease.  Myself, I would say that 50 people in a cramped apartment is too much, but the minute you put limits on that sort of thing, you alienate people.  Let these people choose for themselves who they want to live in space they are paying to occupy.  Has anyone ever heard the term, “Judge not?”

Why do you think we don’t want other cultures coming into our country?  Because we are so without any real culture that we’re afraid of any real one.  We’re said to be a melting pot, but the melting pot has become uniform after 225 or so years of melting.  You won’t find much difference between Americanized people.  Even second or third generation Americans are so entrenched in the “American way of life” that their original culture is nothing but a distant memory.  They want what the average American wants because they’re told that’s what they want.  The only thing they seem to keep is their food and sometimes their holidays.  Otherwise, they’re your ordinary white bread American citizen.

We seek fulfillment in material goods because we don’t feel a connection with other people anywhere near as much as we used to.  It starts at birth where we are taken from our mothers and put in a sterile room with other babies who are just as terrified as you are.  We are put in sterile bedrooms when we get home and discouraged from putting anything in our mouths.  Everything is kept clean and neat, so therefore we must get immunizations against different diseases that would most likely not be a problem if we were raised in an environment where there was at least some exposure.  Sure, maybe a few super plagues would wipe out part of the population once and awhile, but it would be far less than the ordinary diseases some people die of today because of a weak immune system.  Your immune system needs practice.  It needs germs to practice on.  The only time I wash my hands is when I take a shower or if they’re really dirty.  Otherwise, I feel that building my immune system is worth the slight uncleanliness of my body.

Antibacterial soap and other antibiotics have spawned superbugs that don’t respond to antibiotics at all.  It’s all because we are so afraid of germs that  we’ll kill them at any cost.  Even the good germs.  This is why I think we’re afraid of community.  Do you think people living in Mexico have stronger or weaker immune systems than us?  Just look at the average American going down there and drinking the water and getting sick.  The watch the Mexican drink the water with no problem.  The more we shelter ourselves from the world as it is, the worse we’ll fall when this civilization crashes.  And the more we shelter ourselves from other people and their terrible germs, the more likely we are to get sick and have no one to go to and live with if necessary.

Instead of having loyalty to community, we now have loyalty to corporations and banks that own our homes.  How many empty homes do you think are just sitting there with no one in them with a big “Bank Owned” sign on the lawn?  What are homes for anyway?  Are they there for banks to sit there and own them while thousands go homeless, or are they places for people to live?  If 20 people want to collaborate and buy a home, why shouldn’t they be able to?  They can get 10 bunk bed sets and just live there.  I know this isn’t for everyone, but when times get tougher, and we all know they will, what’s so bad about working together with an entire network of people?  It’s not only versatile, but also supportive in more ways than you can imagine.  It’s how we used to live.  We know it in our bones.

The Idea of “Property”

What is rent and mortgage anyway?  It is a river of wealth flowing from the poor or middle class to the rich.  And the bank or the landlord doesn’t really own the land.  The land is up for grabs.  I know some people value the  idea of property, but it has a fundamental flaw.  How can you own physical space?  Every inch of this world is now owned.  You can’t just go live somewhere and make your own shelter.  You have to own that land.  If the people that own that land don’t even use it, why should they care who is living on it?  You can be thrown in jail for trying to live in the woods.  Why aren’t the putting the animals in jail, too?  They’re occupying space on that land as well.  The only reason this land is able to be owned in the first place was through conquest and force.  We forced animals and other indigenous humans off this “property” and then sold it or said, “I own it.”  It was almost something for nothing.  All you had to do is spend time forcing whatever you didn’t like off that land and then claim it.  This is the root of all property.  So, if the root of all property is fundamentally flawed, why should anyone have to pay to occupy it?

I’m just trying to make a point here.  All these people that defaulted on their mortgages shouldn’t have to walk the streets homeless because the bank said so.  Find a place to build a shelter or live in a tent if you have to.  If you know someone you can move in with, do so.  Our idea that owning our own piece of land is outlandish, a domination mindspace.  “This is MY property.  I can do whatever I want with it.”  Ultimate freedom would be to say, “I’m going to live in this area.  I choose to live here.  No one can say anything to stop me as long as I don’t destroy it.  If I can maintain or enrich the land where I currently live, then I am allowed to stay there.  I am also allowed to invite as many people as I see fit to also live on this land with me, but they also must not destroy it.”  Is that so hard to accomplish?  Right now, I’d have to say yes, but I hope we can live like that someday.