Keeping it Real. The subjectivity dilemma.

1 post / 0 new
Meadow Moss
Meadow Moss's picture
Keeping it Real. The subjectivity dilemma.

I'm not one to have mystical or supernatural experiences. I enjoy the scientific method. The founding principals of science seem to be a genuine attempt at offering a means to give people a way to trust in the authenticity of something.
Along those lines; I have some perceptions of the dimensional shift, as has been described in a number of messages, which just don't seem to resonate with my need for realness.

Call me base, but I guess I really want reality to be physical. In my experience thought and emotion are way necessary, but it is through physicalness that I really Know what is real. Sure I know the experience of physicalness is technically subjective too, but, in the moment of the experience, physicalness is always known as real. I can't seem to see a reason why physicalness should be thrown out the window. My idea for having more power over the 'laws' of physical reality, is to be undergoing the action along with another person, and together having some supernatural power which is agreed upon between the two or more of us. The other person's involvement in it might help maintain the experience of realness.
Here's another little thing.
I watched a vid from a 'lightworker' who was hurting in her heart. Her boyfriend had just betrayed her trust.
She was crying and going on about all she had done for him. It seemed like a brazen display of ego gone out of control. I still liked it. She was being sincere. My response to her didn't make it to her. I think I said something like...
"Thank you for being so real. Life is way painful sometimes, and I think it's appropriate and honoring of life to allow the experience of the pain. If we block the experience than maybe the result is that we start acting like 'what we think we should act like' instead of being who we are and allowing ourselves to become what is inspiring. One thing about pain and suffering that I've experienced is that when I'm suffering and I express it, there is a very strong feeling that what I'm expressing is genuine. I would not ever want to give away life's sense of realness, in order to reduce the suffering. That would seem like a really pore tradeoff. "

I offer these thoughts with a sense of modesty, but also ernest. It seems vitally important, as we forge our new reality, that we do not compromise on the things that matter most. If we can't trust that our experience of reality is really and truly reality, than that seems like a very isolating form of existence.
Thanks for reading.
Much love to you. Big hug.
Meadow