Monday, 14 October 2013

 They call this the information age. It was intense enough when we just had all those books and libraries. Now we've got endless web pages and social network platforms to plough through. There is a limit to how much any of us can take on board. Should we worry about this? What if the stuff that we don't have time to look at, is the very stuff we most need to see? Perhaps we should learn to speed-read. Or then again, perhaps we should just relax. Your instincts are strong. Don't water them down by thinking too hard Imagine being shouted at through a loud hailer  The horn of this instrument is uncomfortably close to your ear. Even if you could make the noise stop, it might be some while before you recover from the residual sense of deafness.
 Intense experiences often affect us more once they are over. Only then, do we have a chance to reflect on how powerful they have been. Might you now be reacting to a process that actually reached its peak some while ago? if you deserve the best? You do. More pointedly, you deserve the ability to distinguish between the 'alleged' best and the 'actual' best. We live in a world where brand names rule supreme. Status is acquired by advertisers.                                      
 Merit is perceived to have a direct relationship with price. You, though, are not looking now for some solution or situation that some foolish fashion follower might consider desirable. Your opportunity involves finding what's really best, at the deepest level, for you.Think of a fairground ride involving chairs that spin and swivel wildly, whilst rotating past a central pivot. Now, think of Planet Earth. It never stops turning as it orbits the Sun. And even the Sun is rotating slowly around a distant part of the Milky Way, which we call The Galactic Centre. No wonder so many of us feel light-headed, even dizzy at times. And, with all that endless revolving, why are we so surprised when our lives keep going round in circles? 

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