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The amazing lives of Timothy Leary and Ram Dass
Your articulate statement of your perspective suggests a strangely evocative phenomenology of the ideas expressed in this video. Well done.
>> ^registering4:
Scumbags worshiped by morons.
When no one's looking: the lives of runaway teens
I watched the documentary on money as debt.
Meanwhile there is argument about healthcare.
You cannot support any means of life for long with a banking industry that is for profit and based on debt.
I've known few of these types. More power to them if they can survive. Make your own way and fuck the rest.
Look around next time you walk out of the house quiet the mind and you will see things not seen before. It's called noticing.
Ram Dass, on "Experience"
>> ^johnald128:
erm, thing is he's absolutely wrong, he could have at least reworded it so it made some philosophical and scientific sense.
you see, we really are in the same universe, if two people start running and don't look where they're going, if there's a brick wall in the way in 'this' universe, regardless of their attention - they'd both still slam into it.
and before anyone comes back with a counter-point, nope, i know what he's 'trying' say but he doesn't say that.
Yeah, he pretty much did.
We are in "this" universe, you and I, but I can never truly know your universe, nor can you ever truly know mine. That's what he's saying. That our world is subjective. My center is different from your center. Our needs shape our points of view.
Richard Alpert (Ram Dass) on LSD
I'm with ya, Benjee and I don't think Ram Dass is an advocate, now, either. He went to India to explore the spiritual experience that LSD opened him up to, within a spiritual setting, afterall, and that has been his life's work ever since.