recoverer wrote on Oct 21st, 2011 at 1:49pm:Intentionally developing a self-impossed dissociative disorder only delays dealing with what will eventually have to be dealt with.
I agree with this, and here's my simple way of stating this concept...
I still believe that intention is everything. And we are not always aware of our intentions, even if we think we are consciously aware of all that we intend. The truth is, intention creates energy, and that energy is created in everything we think, feel, and do. So, even if we are thinking, feeling, or doing something and in the back of our mind we aren't consciously, intentionally intending to create or not create...the fact remains that the energy of intentions is sometimes created even without our awareness of it.
That's the whole point in leading a good life, following beliefs and practices that we believe have a good purpose. It's the whole point in knowing, trusting, and having faith in one's own truth.
So to say one thing but then do another doesn't change the process of some energy being created. And it is within that energy that an intention exists, thus having a chain reaction. In other words, once created, it can't be uncreated. I believe it can be over-ridden, but then again that requires intention to do so....through thought, feeling, or action, whether consciously or unconsciously.
No matter how you slice it, no matter how you word it, we are beings in constant creation of energy of intentions, even when we don't have a clue what we're causing. It is only by being able to completely open oneself up to facing his own truth that we ever get to the real, raw "stuff" of our own existence, meaning, and purpose.
In my opinion, no need to quibble about separating the physical from the spiritual, or the body from the mind. That's nonsense. We are always, constantly, conscious beings. We are only fooled by what we allow ourselves to be fooled by. There's not even a need to say "this is what being enlightened means to me, and this is what I think it will feel like, and this is what I have to lose or gain in order to have it."
There don't have to be rules other than the only rule being truly loving and opening oneself up to your own truth. And I think that at any point you think "Now I really know my real self, now I know how I need to be and what I need to do" watch out, because you're beginning to limit your own growth right there. It's ok to feel that you're on the right path and doing great, but don't forget that you still have a long way to go. The more we learn, the more we realize that there's still a lot more to learn. We are always growing as conscious beings. I don't think there's a final answer that we're seeking. I think while on the path of our own seeking, we're still continually creating and growing. So if that's true, why try to put definitions as to what it is we're actually seeking to find?