dave_a_mbs
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central california
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Good question, Hawkeye- When I was a teen I used to be a hunter, living in the Midwest, and popping off pheasants in the backyard. I got so tired of pheasant that I preferred chicken any old day. However, I was honest about killing. What we have today is more like the hamburger mentality - obviously Big Macs must grow on trees, because we certainly wouldn't want to terminate Old Bossie.
Later on I decided that I liked critters, and stopped eating them. That produced a quandry, as a vegetarian diet is difficult in the US, the beefeaters don't plan for it. No prob, I also eat fish, because often that's the only option - and very interestingly, being a good Buddhist (well, maybe not so good after all, but I pass) I offer to take their pain. So it's Halibut steak tonight, and something bites me back tomorrow. And it does! - Or perhaps they bite me back just for the "halibut" (Do I go to hell for too many puns?)
When I was 12 and learning how to hold a .22 I encountered the NRA. All they seemed to talk about was safety. I think that this is the bottom line to anything that proposes to be a protective measure. But safety means protection of everyone, not just one or two misguided kids, or a couple unlucky college students who know a nutter whose major claim to fame is that he can express his lack of love.
Nowadays, as an adult, I shoot a lot more. I have some of the world's most powerful handguns and enjoy letting off steam after a tough therapy session by going to the range and blowing away the center of a target. At home, however, we have a herd of about 20 deer who come through the yard in the morning and trim my wife's plants. She fusses, but not too much - and then there are the 40 turkeys that live nearby and often visit us. They're pretty clever birds. One pecked at the door and stared at me, and when I waved it away it look really annoyed. No like the domestics at all - and by repute they're so tough you need a chain saw to cut them up. Not interesting any more. There's also this week's paw print from a mountain lion who lay in the flower bed about the same time as we heard some major turkey squabbling.
So actually, I still enjoy wildlife. Even more, in fact.
The big issue with firearms is that in all the major nations inwhich they have been severely restricted or outlawed, violent crime has increased, including murders etc. And somehow the seriously bad guys always seem to have a black market line on things like Uzis. On the other side, the price of ownership is to learn and practice safety - and that stance comes not from violence, but from humility, the tremendous obligation that is attached to anything lethal, including that greatest of all killers, the automobile.
Back to the point of the matter - whether it's in the area of drugs that cause people to see and learn wonderful things - or drive people crazy - depending on their spiritual preparation, or the more infrequent abuse of meditation as an escape from reality - or the willingness to allow our revered ancestors to return to us - and the attendent risk of picking up a few entities hitch hiking their way through life - or ... All these cases require proper understanding and preparation. The first step of the Eightfold Path is Right Understanding. It isn't until all the intermediate steps have been handled that we go after Right Samadhi.
Just because a person is mentally unstable under certain circumstances is no reason to view them as dangerous, or even inferior. The cyclothymias, such as bipolar disorder, have also been the motivators of great depths of insight. The work of Georg Cantor in transfinite cardinals ended in suicide. But it is in use today, by me among others. We have schizophrenics who are in extreme states of confusion and suffering, but some of the less confused ones have also given us major works - like Vincent Van Gogh, and I'd guess Nietsche (but he might have just been narcissistic).
Personally, I've lived 70 years with fibromyalgia, a syndrome of five major bothersome states incuding catecholamine dysregulation which causes me to become emotionally unstable under prolonged stress. (Causes depression, if you're curious.) After Basic and Air Traffic Control training in the Air Force I withdrew for fear of becoming upset and killing someone. That's damn costly! - As a tower operator I would have had a great career - but I might have crashed your brother in law's plane. - This is the type of regulation we really need. Know yourself, and set useful limits.
So we have a trade off here. To take a palliative, or to pursue potentially dangerous paths, like deep meditation and kundalini yoga, both of which have a record of wrecking lives when people are unprepared. (I occasionally treat them in my practice.) Who is ready to go where gentle Juditha goes, into a world where we surrender our mind to be used by another spirit that needs to express itself? She's pretty ballsy, in my estimation.
If you look at Bruce's writings you'll notice that he doesn't tell us to immediately go out and rescue stuck spooks. What he says is that this requires preparation, and may not be suitable for everyone at this time. You'll find the same from Swami Sivananda, and all the Tibetan teachers, and doubtless other places as well.
In all honesty, I have no solution. (Boy, that's a change!) But at least I feel that we're beginning to understand the nature of the problem. Reminds me of Shakespeare, "The fault, dear Cassius, lies not in our stars but in ourselves, that we are underlings." - And there's nobody else to blame for that. - Like it or not, we have to be responsible.
PUL dave
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