“You go back into the most primitive societies; they had their way of creating dramas, organized dramas, whether they were pretending to be some kind of animal.
We need drama.
Why do you think there is so much hyperbole in history, so much puffery, so much this and that, so many lies? But we need the drama.
And of course, for me there are two ways of looking at this. I see the drama as it emerges in the homogenized world through the not-self.
It's not exactly delicious, but it is something to understand about us.
And when I say that we are here to dramatize our lives, what I mean by that is that our very existence is the stuff of our Outer Authority.
We‘re not here to take on the cloak of someone else, to be dressed up like everybody else, bowing down to the same concepts. It is not what we‘re here for.
There is nothing in individuality that says I am a ―yes man or a ―yes woman; that is not what individuality is about. It's not what uniqueness is about.
It‘s not about seeing that life is boring, dark, difficult, all those things.
Certainly that‘s what at least half of all humans experience most of the time.
If you don't get to live correctly, you never get to see how beautiful it is, how interesting your character is, and how deep, how rich the resource of that potential Outer Authority.
We are not here alone. Individuality is not alone in the BodyGraph. We are not here alone. We are here to be with the other, we cannot avoid it.
And yet, at the same time, we have to see that if we are not correct, if we do not live out our drama, if we do not live out our story, if we cannot live out our purpose and find our spirit, then it doesn't matter.
Your relationship with the other is all just lost in the homogenized movie and you'll be pigeonholed like everybody else into ‘that‘s who you are’, you‘re ‘that kind of the person’ thinking ‘those kinds of thoughts’.
The madness of the homogenized world. It‘s really mad.”
-Ra