Without communication we are nothing
“The homogenized world can never afford to be honest.
There is no true honesty in all that. They can’t. They can’t because they are never secure within themselves.
You can never be honest with another person if you’re not secure within yourself, you can’t.
And our communication with the other is one of the essential roles that we have. It’s why we have this magic of jumping across. It’s not the same, we know that. It’s not. But it’s that jumping across that means everything.
This movement of consciousness from one to the other, and not repeated exactly because the faces, the facets are not the same, but a progression.
A progression in the movement of the communication so that communication doesn’t go in flat and as propaganda, but it goes in with the possibility of being transformed.
And the simpler it is, the more it stays to its true nature as it moves down the fractal line.
Without this communication we are nothing.
We can see that even within the context of the homogenized movement that communication is the bedrock of human achievement.
We communicate in so many ways now it is incredible. I can remember when it was something to have a telephone. I remember party lines, for God’s sake.
Now you can Skype and swipe and you can do this and that, and you’ve got mobiles.
You have so many ways to communicate it is unbelievable.
And what’s being communicated?
And homogenization is not dumb. The most powerful homogenized themes have been simplified, left/right, I mean that politically.
We just simplify things so that it can go all the way down the fractal line.
Enemy, friend, go right down the fractal line.
God, yes, right down the fractal line.
And you can’t pick them out of a crowd.
This is about our life process. Each one of us is the center of a vast fractal structure.
And it means that we have to begin to look at who is there in our life, and we have to begin to reassess the way in which we communicate; it’s this communication.
The biggest change that I have noticed in my life about me as a person is that when I was living my not-self, because I was dominated by my open emotional system, I rarely said what I really wanted to say.
I’d bite the bullet to avoid the confrontation; to avoid the truth.
It is one of the things that I notice about me as a being through all of these years now is that I just say what I say. I don’t think about the consequences, whether somebody is going to like it or not.”