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May 25, 2010

You will not be punished for your anger, you will be punished by your anger

The mind is everything, what you think you become


Three things can not be long hidden; the sun the moon and the truth


~Buddah~



Friendships:


I searched all my life for a true friend
One whose soul fits so well with my own
I neglected to sew the seeds of giv­ing
So no true, last­ing friend­ships were grown

by me

People

When I say "people" I do mean me too.

A friend told me that her theory is that people are a virus upon the earth. I wont go on...I expect you can guess why she believes this.

Personally, I have several theories as to why we are here. I switch around although some of my theories could probably be squeezed into one big idea, but as yet I am unable to marry them up.

The best exposition I have read in relation to time is Julian Barbour's - "The End of Time". This is a must read for anyone searching for an answer that combines science/physics and divinity. Unlike other scientific books about time, the big bang etc, Julian Barbour's book does not dismiss a soul, or a consciousness that may go beyond the physical.

He suggests (I think) that we are in fact a conciousness moving through tiny moments of time. His idea is that time is made up of moments. To imagine these, we could think of a reel of movie film. Each frame has captured a moment of time. If you run the film, everything appears to be moving. So, the short version of what Julian proposes is that we are conciousness, moving through a series of still moments.

Anyone whoever saw or read Stephen King's: "The Langoliers" will have some concept of this idea, although Julian B does not suggest that langoliers eat past moments as with the film.

Julian B seems to be saying that we are moving across/through some kind of time line, or at least our conciousness is. I am unsure if between the lines he suggests a collective conciousness, however that idea could fit very well too. He does not appear to dismiss a divine intervention, or a maker of sorts either, which is unusual for a scientist.

I certainly felt that what the book told me, I already knew on some level. It hit and moved something deep inside. It was a nice feeling.