Doc Sandoz
Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2020
- Messages
- 821
Where is this? Tesco is British store, yes? Wonder if this guy is in a city or smaller town out in the country.
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Yes he is the UK. I can confirm that non of the supermarkets in London are challenging nonmasked customers. Some independent stores are but you simply say you are exempt. Most people are wearing masksWhere is this? Tesco is British store, yes? Wonder if this guy is in a city or smaller town out in the country.
That's normal.
Take a breath (in a paper bag) & shake yourself out, eat something yummy.Stay strong! That goes for everyone reading this far.
And ingest a significant amount of progest-e alongside some serotonergic antagonists.Take a breath (in a paper bag) & shake yourself out, eat something yummy.
Yes, I want to thank everyone on here for their comments, thanks to them and of course, Ultimate Reality/God, I can keep on going no matter how unremittingly bleak life is constantly devolving into as a result of this scam.Things are starting to happen faster.
You don’t know how much your support has meant to me. Stay strong. Pass it on.
Sweet. We must all fight for Life (thus it follows also for freedom):
-Ray PeatBlake’s idea of the “intellectual fountain” was very different from the attitude of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche (where “Will” or assertion was the fundamental reality). Blake saw it as always flowing into new territory, discovering new things, enlivening the world that’s being discovered-created. When the organism is traumatized, it hardens, and stops developing, and wants to impose its moral hardness everywhere; assertiveness is the antithesis of perceptive life, and devises ways to negate it.
For Reich Christ endured these pains and humiliations even though he did not believe in the personal and conscious survival of bodily death. Christ’s agony on the cross, in which he felt abandoned by his father (and he used very personal language in talking to his father), was not Reich’s focus, as it would be for, say, a Lutheran theologian. There was almost a Gnostic reading of Christ as a being who did not really suffer in this world and who was an exemplar of a type rather than a struggling and anxiety-ridden individual. It was not the cross but the life of orgonotic pulsation that fascinated Reich.
In some highly poetic language (and the reader must remember that The Murder of Christ was written entirely in English), Reich linked Christ’s life to that of all other things in the universe, producing what I would call a cosmic Christology. His point of transition from Jesus to the great orgone sea was through the concept of the “glowing silent force” within the suffering servant of humankind:
The silent, calm glow of living Life cannot ever be destroyed by any means. It is a basic manifestation of the very energy that makes the universe run its course. This glow is in the dark night’s sky. It is in the silent quiver in the sunlit sky that makes you forget bad jokes. It is the calm glow of the love organs of the glowworms. It hovers over the treetops at dawn and dusk, and it is in the eyes of a trusting child. You can see it in an air tight, evacuated glass tube charged from the air with life energy, and you can see it in the expression of gratitude in the face when you relieve sorrow in a man ill with the emotional plague. It is the same glow which you see at night on the surface of the ocean or at the tops of high masts [Saint Elmo’s fire] … It is this glow which, in the feeling of mankind, unites Christ during his last agony with the great universe.
Reich, Murder of Christ, Pgs. 146-147.
May the luminiferous aether(Zero-Point Energy)/Orgone/The flow of negentropy/Gibbs Free Energy be with you, and all of us.
Trauma and Civilization.Trauma & Civilization
Yes! This was it! A lone wildflower growing through barbed wire (although this can
also be seen as a crown of thorns). This image was perfect, because indeed, the
oppression leads to isolation, and the wildflower has to manage to grow on its own,
and will do so, in whatever way it can. But the wildflower is leaning over, reaching out
towards life and to others, calling out to a greater hope.
Ray: The only mistake that I think Hans Selye made in all of his work on stress, he, in some places talks about a limited ability to adapt to stress, because we are born with a certain amount of ‘adaptive energy’ or stress resistant energy, but I don’t think there is such a thing as ‘adaptive energy’. I think of such things as sugar, sucrose and fructose, which let us deal with these menacing things such as serotonin, starches, indigestible fibers, various plant irritants. The sugars are directly oxidized to energy, and inhibit the interfering substances, such as oxidized unsaturated fats. I think what the equivalent of a lack adaptive energy that Selye proposed, I think what it is, is that we have such a bad environment to adapt to that we get worse as we adapt to bad things, such as polyunsaturated fats and chronic excess of serotonin defending us against those irritants. So I think these immediate adaptive substances that in the short range protect us when we have to keep adapting with these short range measure, for example, serotonin increases collagen production, leads progressively to fibrosis of blood vessels, liver, kidneys, even the brain develops collagen under excessive stress and serotonin. So, too much adaptation to a bad environment I think is what causes ageing and degeneration, rather than the lack of this hypothetical ‘adaptive energy’.
Pharmaceutical misrepresentations regarding the estrogens rank, in terms of human consequences, with the radiation damage from fall-out from bomb tests and reactor-leaks, with industrial pollution, with degradation of the food supply--with genocide, in fact.
This right here is the key. Perhaps the reason you and I, and many other people are not getting much progress after applying many of Ray's ideas is because we're like differentiated cells surrounded by cancerous ones. So perhaps, at the end, even if we barely manage to get something resembling a quality of life due to circumstances outside our control then... we should simply internalize this maxim: "Resignation should not be thought of as stoic gymnastics but as abdication in Divine hands"."I think what it is, is that we have such a bad environment to adapt to that we get worse as we adapt to bad things..."
Cancer is basically what life looked like 1 billion years ago. Primitive, fast, and shapeless and doing nothing but GROWTH!
Georgy Dinkov: Do you see power as a concept, as something akin to glycolysis, and intelligence something akin to oxidative phosphorylation? So power is a very effective but very brutal way to do things but at the cost of basically completely destroying intelligence.
RP: Yeah, energetically it's like cancer. It runs very fast but very stupidly.
GD: So in a very inhospitable environment it's indispensable to survival but that's about it. It doesn't really have any other evolutionary usage?
RP: Yeah. Have you seen the article about Klaus Schwab, starting with his being born in 1938 in Germany, and having assimilated in his formative first seven years the ethos of Nazism? All of his talking points are a continuation of Hitlerism; same way that Conrad Lorentz with his genetic determinism was amplified with the defeat of Germany rather than suppressed. So all of the eugenics people came into a world that was designed around all of the principles of gene determinism or eugenics.
And ingest a significant amount of progest-e alongside some serotonergic antagonists.
Yes, I want to thank everyone on here for their comments, thanks to them and of course, Ultimate Reality/God, I can keep on going no matter how unremittingly bleak life is constantly devolving into as a result of this scam.
Netherlands COVID "RIOTS"
Good twitter thread on the ongoing resistance to COVID authoritarianism in the Netherlands, the media are calling it riots, the government have been caught off guard by how aggressive it is, we need more of this, "minority groups" could do what they want during lockdowns and not a peep from the...raypeatforum.com
I also want to post this private message I sent some months ago:
Does RP Think Effort Is A Waste Of Energy?
@pauljacob actually I didn't know about him before, I saw his older articles in Danny's notes and found them interesting, he covers lots of Peaty topics. I wouldn't call him Peatarian, but he knows about Peat and his ideas and adresses and deals with them. The link above is a backup of his old...raypeatforum.com
So in here Ray says that Selye's thought that a "lack of adaptive energy" was intrinsic most of the times, but he failed to recognize how the "medical" establishment and food industry et al poisoned (caused the problem in the first place, on a global scale) most of the population and turned a blind eye on exceedingly noxious pollutants such as nuclear fallout, and then fluoride, estrogen contraceptives, second generation quinolone antibiotics (ciprofloxacin) and SSRI's and heavy metals on the water supply... etc.
This right here is the key. Perhaps the reason you and I, and many other people are not getting much progress after applying many of Ray's ideas is because we're like differentiated cells surrounded by cancerous ones. So perhaps, at the end, even if we barely manage to get something resembling a quality of life due to circumstances outside our control then... we should simply internalize this maxim: "Resignation should not be thought of as stoic gymnastics but as abdication in Divine hands".
Retro Review: Top Ten #8 (June 2000) — Major Spoilers — Comic Book Reviews, News, Previews, and Podcasts
Major Spoilers - Daily Comic Book Reviews, News, Previews, and Podcastsmajorspoilers.com
Warbug Effect Revisited - Glycolysis Is "cheaper" For Dividing Cells
This study shed some light on why the fast dividing cells like bacteria and cancer prefer to use glycolysis even in the presence of oxygen - i.e. the well-known Warburg effect. The study says this is due to the fact that after factoring the energetic cost of synthesizing the mechanisms that...raypeatforum.com
01:02:00 Evil is like glycolysis
Yes, it is always a matter of doing a proper cost/benefit analysis. And as long as you recognize you are taking subpar foods because you can't afford the proper ones at the moment and always keep in mind that in the future if you were able to afford them you would obviously choose them, then it's not that harmful. Same thing goes for social relationships, workplace environments, etc...This stuck out to me...
"So, too much adaptation to a bad environment I think is what causes ageing and degeneration, rather than the lack of this hypothetical ‘adaptive energy’."
I remember reading somebody on this forum being worried that they wouldn't be acclimated to eating things that aren't healthy if they stayed away from them for too long. It would be a bad situation if you didn't have access to healthy food, but also a bad thing to keep eating bad food if you don't want your health to degenerate.
???Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who is against mandates, Wins TIME’s 2021 Person of the Year Reader Poll
Here's Who Won TIME's 2021 Person of the Year Reader Poll
With over 9 million votes cast, find out who claimed the top five spots in this year's reader polltime.com
TIME's staff hated it