You need to trust your gut. If something feels off don't discard your feeling just because it doesn't conform to a narrative someone shamed you into believing. Slow down, take out a piece of paper, and write down what you feel. First write down that you feel a certain way, then explore possibilities as to why you feel that way. You need to be honest with yourself.
How does one see outside this box? Or maybe even leave it behind?
I guess I just understood one more (maybe even the most important?) meaning for the halo in religious art. Thanks lad!
The usual patterns in narratives in every aspect of knowledge are:
- An overhyped standard (((narrative))) repeated until exhaustion by most people and usually involving many jews or their prostitutes.
- Many easily verifiable, obvious or extremely plausible fragments of narratives that nobody talks too much about and jews try to ridicule, discard, ignore or shame into submission.
The idea is chasing the second part and getting used to see things from a non-kosher perspective.
(this is for the lurkers, kike)
Makes sense actually. Usually I find the best knowledge when I simply get this inner urge to search for something special, like stuff just appears into my conscious mind and says "You should probably go into this thread, and ask that user for some book recomendations". And yes, so far it has worked quite well. Thank you!
Actually some jewish guy gave me some good advice on may way to look for truth.
Meditation is good. My only suggestion is you approach it without expectations otherwise you may corrupt the process as clouding your consciousness with "goals" will make it difficult to extend your perception beyond its normal confinement because you'll still be stuck within that box.
>The box is Platos cave you know?
interesting
So practically I should just stay still and focus on my breathing? To the phase between breathing in and out, I assume?
If you are a diligent seeker of truth. I offer this guide.
youtube.com
is this the fabled no-no square?