iceburg1
hypocrite
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2007
- Posts
- 13,465
Me too. I thought it was such a great idea.
Turns out that being inclusive as a principle of faith instead of reason...is messed up in practice. Nice idea, but it reminded me of some of my other spiritual experiments:
I'd try to make peace with roaches in my apartment. I'd meditate on it, welcome them to my space, but ask them to leave me and my food alone. First night I woke up with one of them on my face, I poisoned the lot. Ungrateful wretches. Not listening, either. Not interested in inclusion. At least not inclusion that left me with anything of my own.
When I was younger I remembered reading that only the female mosquito fed on humans. I felt humbled, compassionate...mosquitos would light on me and I'd let them feed, thinking I was contributing to the circle of life.
Then one day I thought "Who the hell wants more mosquitos?" and I started slapping and poisoning them again.
Being entirely inclusive is not often in the best interest of the individual. Particularly when you're placing yourself at risk of accepting parasitic thoughts, parasitic individuals, as partners somehow.
Again, nice thought, but entirely stupid to apply across the board as an article of faith.
It's okay for roaches and mosquitos to exist - out there. Not on my stuff.
the only practical religion
the religion of ME & MY Stuff