Re: Loosh
What was missing though, up until now, was why there is so much suffering as part of this reality. The answer is in knowing how this polarity circuit works.
When you use the term 'this polarity circuit', I would take it to mean this life as it appears to be made up of polar opposites. For example, if we really looked deeply into this life, we would know what death is. Because death doesn't only happen at the end of one's life, it is happening continously all the way through life. In birth, the first breath of a newborn is an in-breath, and the last breath a dying man has is an out-breath. Breathing in and out is occuring continuously. The breathing-in is bringing in new life and the breathing-out is clearing away of that which is not needed any more - old, unused and decayed, it needs to be discarded, otherwise, it will accumulate and be an interference to the process. And this goes on continously.
Life and death, although they appear as opposites, they are really not. Because they are dependent on each other. But we tend to form a division by focusing on only the one aspect... the positive... the life part. The aspect that is considered the 'good' part. This division creates an imbalance. We focus on life and look at death as something that is against life, opposite to life. But without death, life would not be possible. They are part of the same package, they come together. If one really wants to celebrate life, then one has to be capable of celebrating death also. Instead, the science up to now, in all the societies, seems to be geared toward one end of the life-death spectrum - the life end. It is focused on extending life, with all the cures, vaccines, medicines and remedies to repel death. It is like a tug-of-war. Medical science makes every attempt to keep one's torso alive. As if the number of years one lives is the most important thing. It feeds the view of quantity over quality of life.
This inability to accept both ends of the spectrum creates much suffering and misery.
A gay man about town; long on charm, but short on cash, surprised his friends with his sudden marriage to an extremely ugly woman whose only virtue was her well padded bankroll. After his marriage his friends were doubly mystified by his insistence on taking his wife everywhere with him.
"I can understand you marrying that painfully ugly woman for her money," one of his friends remarked frankly, "but why do you have to bring her with you every time you go out?"
"It is simple," the husband explained, "it is easier than kissing her good-bye."