Probably. Except...I'm sure we agree about all of this? — frank
When does anyone ignore the messenger of pain? — unenlightened
Because I didn't know how to deal with the deaths of those people, I shut down altogether like the Pawnbroker. — frank
poem about the cover-up, as a cover-up.
I mean what else can you do? — csalisbury
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2017/09/and-the-occassion-changed-a-tribute-to-john-ashberyHe was forever interrogating what it is to be in a moment with these facts and things and culture and feelings all existing at once, BUT in this interrogation was the enlightened recognition that we are not simply co-existing but are in relation to and, therefore, like a wave, affecting everyone and everything—and vice versa. He shows us how to be more fully, to inhabit each moment intentionally and consciously, to expand it, and he makes it look as easy as breathing, as if the air itself is alchemy, and we just need to relax, breathe it in and speak past the societal overlay of what is true towards otherwise:
the shut down person is shut into the trauma and forever reliving it as flashback and recreating it out of the materials and characters of the presen — unenlightened
If there is no emotion, then what is shut down? I think you should watch the film again.Shut down means there's no emotion at all. It's bliss, btw. — frank
Bliss? I think not.New York Times critic Bosley Crowther called it a "remarkable picture" that was "a dark and haunting drama of a man who has reasonably eschewed a role of involvement and compassion in a brutal and bitter world and has found his life barren and rootless as a consequence. — your link
I'm sure you know more about it than I do. — frank
...forever reliving it as flashback and recreating it out of the materials and characters of the present. — unenlightened
One is allowed and expected to feel sadness, loss, confusion, but one might well also feel relief, anger, indifference, even pleasure. — unenlightened
I remember as a child watching my mother's casket lowered into the ground thinking thank God it was finally over, but it never really is. We carry such things to our graves. — Hanover
Do you know if he ever wrote or spoke about being gay? — unenlightened
There is the moment, and the trauma one brings to it; at each moment there is the possibility of seeing the fragmentation, and seeing it, not from another fragment as observer, but fragmentation seeing itself - a whole seeing.
That stuff is an unconscious attempt to resolve a problem. But it also generates persona, so it's like the work of a doctor: if she was successful in ending all disease, she would simultaneously destroy her own identity as a doctor. — frank
I have often felt that the feeling of losing a loved one falls somewhere on a spectrum, at one end devastation and the other end emancipation and then a million points in between. — Hanover
There is the moment, and the trauma one brings to it; at each moment there is the possibility of seeing the fragmentation, and seeing it, not from another fragment as observer, but fragmentation seeing itself - a whole seeing.
Well i am sitting here on my porch trying to think of what to say to that. — csalisbury
I can't imagine how you can see the fragments as they are (as one is) - as fragmented, as the wave, not as one fragment observing - without some visitation of grace. — csalisbury
I've probably mentioned this before on here, but I've thought of this for a long time as both Hal in 2001 + the hero trying to shut him down. The greatest threat to hal is his not being in control of threat-handling. Once the threat is gone, he's the threat and the threat to him becomes the people he was supposed to protect but can no longer , and so threaten him. — csalisbury
When my father died, (I was 20) I wasn't much bothered, which is of course the most inappropriate of all. As if there is a feeling debt that ought to be paid. He was brought up a Wee Free, no toys on Sunday, Christian Miserablist, and became a Communist and then a good socialist. I guess he did well enough to live a peaceable life with wife and children through the war and pass on less trauma than he inherited. — unenlightened
Maybe HAL and Dave are aspects of consciousness. The fuel of consciousness is problems: unanswered questions for the mind, unredeemed sins for emotion, wounds for flesh.
Dave relies on HAL to bring these problems to his attention. It seems like Dave is in charge. He thinks is. But HAL can move Dave like a puppet.
But if HAL is taken off line, doesn't Dave become blind and deaf? — frank
Dave does have free will, but not to choose something different. It's the free will to choose not to listen to Hal. — csalisbury
Let's just say that there is that possibility, and that it is not something willed or performed or achieved, but a visitation of grace, as you say, or if that is difficult, a natural phenomenon like the coalescing of drops of water, or the seeing of one scene with two eyes. Let's say there is no 'how' any more than there is an action to relaxation. One can prepare a little by doing whatever is necessary, and dropping whatever is not... make some space, get some rest, sow a little kindness...
Or if the poet insists on science, http://ift-malta.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/The-cybernetics-of-self-A-theory-of-alcoholism.pdf — unenlightened
But still there's something about the post of yours I've quoted above which seems different than that.
As Bateson says the cycle will continue until a deeper nonwilled change happens. The idea of preparation seems to both admit the powerlesness of oneself to stop a cycle by force, but leaves room for a different kind of thing, an attentiveness maybe while it goes on and on, to maybe change things in little ways just enough to leave a little space for something outside to come through? — csalisbury
Reminds me of a Tibetan thing:
May I be free of fear
May I be free of anger
May I be free of craving and aversion.
May I be free of suffering and the root of suffering.
May you be free of fear
May you be free of anger
May you be free of craving and aversion.
May you be free of suffering and the root of suffering.
In the real, there is no distinction between me and you, so the two paragraphs sort of say the same thing. Fear is the emotion of the victim and anger is the emotion of the sinner. Together they make up a type or "general problem" that generates identities small to huge.
I think of it as briefly peeking out of my own identity and I'm nameless in a cocoon in the real.
Kind of like turning down the volume on Hal. — frank
...if one is depressed when one's experience is uplifting, then one is in some sense absent - not present with the trees and sunshine... — unenlightened
Cognitive behavioral therapy doesn’t seem to be helping anyone here. — Noah Te Stroete
Learning how to come to acceptable terms with the same events is crucial to looking at the world differently. Looking at the world differently is crucial for feeling different about what you're looking at. — creativesoul
Well, I have a marked distain for modern day therapy. — creativesoul
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