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  • Subjective Reality Revisited

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    Posted on November 28th, 2007Lyman ReedThoughts

    A belief is only a thought that we’ve had over and over and over again. They become our models of the world and how it works, and therefore affect the way we act, react, and interact with what’s around us.

    Sometimes we take those repetitive thoughts, invest in them, repeat them to ourselves even more - and they become a rock solid fortress which we will defend to the death, even if we are faced with evidence that they may not be as absolute as we once thought.

    One of the models of our world that I’ve taken on in the past is the idea of Subjective Reality - the belief that everything that happens to us on the outside comes from our insides. The most recent place that I heard it was in the James Ray video that I posted a couple of days ago.

    At times in my life, this model of reality really worked well for me. It gave me a sense of power, a sense that I can do something - I’m not a victim in a random world.

    Rick at Shards of Consciousness has a great episode of his weekly podcast that brought some new light to the subject for me, called Subjective Reality, False Reality

    In it, Rick talks about how our maps are not the territory - just because we perceive something to be true, doesn’t make it so.

    A podcast that has a great exploration of Subjective Reality from the other side of the fence comes from Steve Pavlina, which he calls The True Nature of Reality, in which Steve argues for the idea that there is only one consciousness - and it’s yours.

    So who’s right?

    They both are - depending on your current perspective.

    In his podcast, Rick does say that if you are looking at things from the perspective of Source - then yes, everything comes from one consciousness.

    But in the physical, 3 dimensional world that we spend most, if not all, of our time in, our consciousness is not that of Source. It’s of ego - the wave that appears on the ocean of that Source.

    Maybe if you are Jesus or Buddha, all of your experience can be subjective.

    But I’m neither. I’m Lyman.

    So what’s a poor soul striving for enlightenment to do?

    Enter Mark Joyer’s “Utilitarian Model Flexibility”, from his Simpleology book - the idea that we can adopt various models of reality much like we use the software that runs our computers.

    Use whatever model works best for you - where you are - right now.

    And to not get so caught up in one particular model that you become unable to let in any new information, especially when that model becomes useless (at best), or dangerous (at worst).

    We may be spiritual beings having a human experience… but we are having a human experience.

    It’s time we stopped fighting that.

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