Thursday, December 17, 2009

Globalization, The Conclusion

Globalization
is an idea.


An idea can be good or bad,
constructive or destructive.


There's a wide gap
between the two poles.


As the gap
between beauty and ugliness,
love and hate,
truth and falsehood.


As the gap between
round and flat worlds.


Where in one mountain peaks
reach the heavens,
while in the other
a levelling process ends
in oblivion.


Globalization
in and of itself
is not the curse.


The curse resides
in what makes the gap
where one end expands
into greater spheres of existence
and the other end contracts
into the "only one".


The former is Truth.
The latter is a lie.


And the lie is
the Reactive Mind.
~~


Chad went on to enroll in the Anatomy of Human Mind Course at the Dianetics Foundation.
The first lecture-"The Reactive Mind"-resolved remaining doubts he'd found the map.


What struck him most? Well, it goes back to those Psych courses he'd taken in school
and never believed their weight in paper and was left to wonder what the mind really was.
It seemed far fetched to Chad how thought and ability were controlled by chemical reactions. And how it was all chalked up to heredity and Pavlov's dogs and conditioning.


Mr. Hubbard's research proved the mathematical impossibility the "brain" could store the vast quantity of perceptic memory accumulated over one's lifetime, and in fact could only store about a single month's worth of data.


The truth was the brain is not the mind at all. The mind is something much, much more.


The Reactive Mind became real to Chad as he observed it in himself and others in doing the demonstrations and drills on the course. Armed with this true data, Chad realized the fields of Psychology and Psychiatry were mere dramatizations of the stimulus-response mechanism of the Reactive Mind. The same mechanism which called up the hidden voices Chad could not quiet, held in place the pain and sorrow of his life and exacted upon him the same ferocity of a wild predator attacking its prey. To wield unbridled power without his control and forcing unreasoned acts that he'd forever regret.


The same mechanism that was flattening a round world.


Chad realized at last it was the Reactive Mind's bidding behind all the turbulence and upheavel in the world.


But with the Map, Chad had regained not only control of his thoughts, but his self-determinism to act and play to the beat of his own drum. He remained in his hometown of Buffalo, pursuing the lost dream to live as the artist he was. And to help others in his town whose hopes had been dashed by the virus of Gobalization to find their way back to a round world as Pier Angelo had helped him set foot on the Road to Truth.


As far as regrets for Wall Street, Chad wrote in his diary:


"When I embarked on the road of self-discovery, I admit I was still out for myself. Wall Street was the "King of the Mountain" and that's what I had come to believe life was all about. It was material in all its aspects."


"Losing that quest to the vagaries of a flat world, I was devastated without a Map to lead me from danger. I had to suffer through the very darkness which I had allowed to obscure my vision, to face my fears and uncertainties and wrest away from the Reactive Mind that part of me it had enslaved."


"Before I knew of such a demon running my life, I had groped through darkness with a mere spark of me to light the way. But once on the road and sure-footed by the Map, that spark became a flame and then a fire. That tiny spark had been enough to lead me to a single man and his books, and to others who offered their hands to pull me up from the edge of the abyss."


"Who's to say what the outcome might have been had I not made the trip to the library that day."


"But what I do know is that I found myself again, the person who I am, and realized the beauty of life comes from living a complete life which includes all the Dynamics or Circles or Spheres or Urges of existence. And that is what fuels the fire to make it rage ever brighter, ever larger, to make the world we live in more true, more round."


"I was asked by a friend if I ever regretted not pursuing Wall Street, regretted missing out on the billions made during the "BIG BUBBLE"?


"Pausing in contemplation and looking very stoic, I replied, But didn't you here, the bubble burst?"


THE END
~~


Copyright 2009 Francis Don Daniels.
All Rights Reserved.

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