Conditioning

1. Conditioning
There is no „objectivity“ in human experience. But there are subjective truths as many as there are people.
This world is subjugated („ruled“) by beings who want to capture our minds. Their government (rather: your regiment) is subtle and intervenes in the most diverse forms of human experience. In order to understand the way in which all of our consciousness is controlled, coerced and made compliant, it is necessary to understand the nature of the human mind.
Buddha Gautama Siddharta Shakyamuni teaches that a correct view is formed through the voice of another and one’s own reflection. Such a process also leads to the acceptance of a „wrong“ opinion. Human consciousness lives from being supplied with information that is received through the sensory organs. The classification („evaluation“) of the incoming information is done by comparisons which the brain makes with already known information.
If the information processing organ, vulgo: the brain, is continuously nourished with information of a certain kind, this results in a habituation („conditioning“) of the respective organ and thus of the psyche of the living being.
This conditioning in turn requires that similar information that is subsequently introduced to the individual is accepted and stored as „known“, „used“ and „trustworthy“.
It is necessary to recognise this cycle of information reception (perception), information processing and information storage (for the purpose of recourse and comparison), to become aware of it and to question it.
The most urgent task of the consciousness is to question and reflect on the information that is brought up. The mere acceptance of information without reflecting on its truth content or meaning leads every living being that practices this into dependence and external control – in other words, slavery.
The „terror of public opinion“ leads to a mass of living beings being forced into obedience by beings who are far removed from following God’s will.
Be free, human being, and strengthen in your efforts to find peace within yourself.

2. Being and becoming
Light and shadow exist in interplay in space, just as on earth. Just as man nourishes and changes his body through the cyclic-rhythmic breath, all life is subject to change. This single sequence of individual states – which are incomparable but self-similar – characterizes what we commonly call life.
Just as the universe as a whole is part of Brahma’s breath, our breath is an expression of our physicality. The change to which everything that comes into being and passes away is subject, characterizes being. Becoming and being are one and do not depend on each other. Both are merely expressions of the perspective of the philosophical observer – Being marks the macro-perspective view and Becoming marks the mobility of the micro-perspective view.
Awareness is conditioned by becoming. Superconsciousness arises in the individual when the changing self recognizes its true, „higher“ nature of permanence.
