just to prove you wrong

Mar 09, 2006 14:03

Rob Brezsny's Free Will Astrology took over my life for a while when i was living in northampton. when it came out on wednesdays in the advocate we would gather 'round at p&e's reading it aloud. on days i didn't work, i got stoned, grabbed a copy, and read it on the porch sipping coffee and eating soy yogurt. life was good. here in korea, i've taken to reading his website whenever i feel totaly cut off from everything that's important to me and i've also become a subscriber to his newsletter. the man is fabulous, even if he looks like a loser. i'm just biased against those round john lennon-y glasses, i think. anyways, this was part of the newsleter today. it's an excerpt from his book and it hit home in a big way. (see previous entry, christ)

"Your imagination is a treasure when it spins out scenarios that are aligned
with your deepest desires. Indeed, it's an indispensable tool in creating
the life you want; it's what you use to form images of the conditions
you'd like to inhabit and the objects you hope to wield. Nothing manifests
on the material plane unless it first exists as a mental picture.

But for most of us, the imagination is as much a curse as a blessing.
You're just as likely to use it to conjure up premonitions that are at odds
with your conscious values. Fearful fantasies regularly pop up, many
disguising themselves as rational thoughts and genuine intuitions. They
may hijack your psychic energy, directing it to exhaust itself in dead-end
meditations.

Meanwhile, ill-suited longings are also lurking in your unconscious mind,
impelling you to want things that aren't good for you and that you don't
really need. Anytime you surrender to their allure, your imagination is
practicing a form of black magic.

These are the imagination's unsavory aspects, which Zen Buddhists
describe as the chatter of the "monkey mind." If you can stop locating
your sense of self in the endless surge of its slapdash fantasies, only then
might you be able to be here now and want what you actually have.

But whether your imagination is in service to your noble desires or in the
thrall of compulsive fears and inappropriate yearnings, there is one
commonality: Its prophecies can be pretty accurate. Many of your visions
of the future do come to pass. The situations you expect to occur and
the experiences you rehearse and dwell on are often reflected back to you
as events that confirm your expectations.

Does that mean our mental projections create the future? Let's consider
that possibility. What if it's at least partially true that what we expect will
happen does tend to materialize? Here's the logical conclusion: It's
downright stupid and self-destructive to keep infecting our imaginations
with pictures of loss and failure, doom and gloom, fear and loathing. The
far more sensible approach is to expect blessings."

sonGs
band of horses is in charge of my CD player. please report to them.
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