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The Path of the Razor: Shedding the Superfluous

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Snail on a Razor
Snail on a Razor

“In an atonal world one must oppose it in such a way that one compels it to tonalize itself.” –Slavoj Zizec

“Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily. When you have two competing theories that make exactly the same predictions, the simpler one tends to be the better one.” Most of us are familiar with this principle attributed to the 14th century logician William of Occam, known as Occam’s Razor, or The Law of Parsimony.

It is a principal typically used in scientific circles to distinguish elegant theories from inelegant ones. But what happens if we apply the same principle to our lives? What if we are caught between two competing lifestyles, does it follow that the simpler one tends to be the better one? How might we be multiplying things unnecessarily? And what if we used the razor as a means toward the end of aggressive progressive change?

This article uses the principle of Occam’s Razor as a meta-symbol for acquiring elegance in the face of excess. We can call it Bob’s Razor or Sam’s Razor, or even Martha Stuart’s Razor. It doesn’t matter. As long as we’re using it to “shave away” what is unnecessary from our lives, then it will be most efficacious. The razor represents our need for striving toward simplicity and consistency despite complexity and inconsistency. So far as it applies to our culture, the razor represents the need to shave away unhealthiness; to thrive in a healthy way despite stagnation and decadence. It takes courage to wield the Razor, but most things worth doing do.

In order to maintain equilibrium in an excessively senseless culture, we need to be able to shave the heaviness from our heart.

Devolution
Devolution

We must be able to seek out that which is excessive in our lives and then shed it. This is easier said than done and requires a particular flavor of courage. Shedding the superfluous is a very difficult process. It first needs to be done on an individual level, so that it can eventually be done on a cultural level. Shedding the superfluous from our lives helps us focus on making sense out of human senselessness. Eventually simplicity can lead to elegance. Once excess has been shaved away then we are free to live more elegantly.

Just as brevity is the soul of wit, elegance is the soul of acumen. Faced with the tragedy of a dying world, the simplest lifestyle tends to be the best one. And considering the condition of our natural resources, the more people living simply the better. Gandhi said it best, “Live simply so that others may simply live.”

But in order to live simply we must be able to change our center of gravity from that of inert consumption to that of active adaptation. We need to become local world-movers as opposed to mere global world-watchers. The hardest part will be using the razor to unburden ourselves of material, political, and spiritual excess. Using the razor causes our cultural ideas, hypotheses and theories to become more elegant in regard to healthy, ecological order.

La Guillotine by Oscar Dominguez
La Guillotine by Oscar Dominguez

Finesse and precision of thought are the goal here. Like Lewis Carroll said in his 1884 lecture, “Avoid having a FAT MIND.” We avoid having a fat mind by using the razor. By relinquishing ourselves to the razor we allow ourselves to be refined and polished. We allow ourselves to become vulnerable so that we might become numinous. We become numinous after trimming the fat of hyper-reality from actual reality, after shaving the opacity from the luminous.

The more we “trim the fat” the sharper we become, refining our innocence into focused courage, which leads to mindfulness and holistic thinking. But we must apply our new-found sharpness with responsibility. By showing respect and compassion to others, as well as to our environment, we indirectly become teachers who help others to shave the heaviness from their hearts.

Once we’ve shaved enough excess from our lives, we eventually reach a kind of existential liberation where we go beyond shedding superfluity and move to outright decollation. What I call McGee’s Guillotine. My Occam’s Razor answer to cognitive dissonance, which, paraphrasing Occam, states: Worldviews should not be aggrandized unnecessarily.

When you have two competing worldviews that disagree with each other, the healthier one tends to be the better one and the unhealthier one should be discarded. McGee’s Guillotine strips away the ignorance of human opinion and replaces it with natural dictation. It goes beyond shedding superfluity and cuts the human head out of the equation so that a “new head” can grow: open-minded, non-dogmatic and fluid in its self-actualization of the original equation: reality as it is, divorced from the hyper-reality and abstraction of the unhealthy worldview.

In the end, the razor and the guillotine are tools that teach us healthy circumspection. With them we are ready to flip the switch on all unhealthy worldviews and unsustainable cultures. We are prepared to oppose the atonal world in such a way that it is compelled to tonalize itself.

Image Source:
Snail on a Razor
Devolution
La Guillotine by Oscar Dominguez

Yellow, the Colour of Hope and Luminosity

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Some painters transform the sun into a yellow spot; others transform a yellow spot into the sun. ~ Pablo Picasso

Yellow glows the most as compared to all the colors of the spectrum. The color catches sight faster in comparison to other colors. The color finds itself in interesting objects gifted to us by nature – lemon is a symbol of freshness, whereas a sunflower stands for cheerfulness.

The color has an aura of happiness, positivity, sunshine, success and confidence. It uplifts one’s mood and allows us to focus on the brighter side of life.

Yellow is a significant color in many cultures, like in Japan, it means courage and nobility, in Islam it means wisdom, in China yellow stands for humour and royalty. For Native Americans, yellow is the symbol for unconditional love. Yellow is the color most often associated with deities in many cultures, hence considered auspicious and pure.

Yellow is also the color of the Solar Plexus Chakra. Located just above the navel, this Chakra controls our ability to communicate with the unconscious world, keeping our ego-mind in check, and develops our intuitive power or ‘gut feeling’.

When this chakra’s energy is in flow, it boosts self-esteem, respect for others, calmness and initiative. You feel friendly, joyful and confident. People with balanced yellow energy display a sense of intellect and an eye for detail.

yellow-autumn-forest-fall-leaves-naturePeople with unbalanced yellow energy suffer from difficulty in concentrating, decision-making and getting in touch with their inner self. The soul goes through layers of dilemma, leading to a good deal of health problem, insomnia being one of them. Chaos in the mind, being one of the leading cause, keeps them in a world full of confusion. This friction in mind creates a lot of negativity, leading to low self-esteem.

In a situation where everything seems like a scattered piece of cake, one can get great benefits by introducing the color yellow. According to Chroma therapy, the color gives you the happiness that takes your mind away from the lethargic world of confusion, giving you perspectives to cope with obstacles.

Practically speaking, most of us refrain from the usage of the color, but you don’t need to spot a yellow shirt to derive the color’s benefits. One can paint one side of the wall yellow and balance it out with white for the required energy and peace.

One can introduce fruits like Papaya, Mango etc in your diet. Using the color takes away the sense of powerlessness, and you will start to realise the strength of your soul and mind. Bring the color in your life and seek that vitality and energy associated with it.

Righting the Plane 101

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“We’re in a giant car heading towards a brick wall and everyone is arguing over where they’re going to sit” ~ David Suzuki

Imagine Western culture is a crashing airplane. We are all on this plane, and the oxygen masks have just been released. What do you do first? Do you put the mask on your daughter, your son, your husband or wife, the autistic kid in seat 888F?

No! You put the mask on yourself. Why? Because only you can know if you have the courage it takes to right the plane. You cannot know if the guy in seat 2,998A, who claims he’s a cop, has the courage or not. Just like you cannot know if the girl in seat 199B is actually a qualified pilot, or the guy in seat 3,856E really is a Navy SEAL.

And even if you did know, you shouldn’t rely on them alone. You, and only you, are the one who must make a critical decision. It will be a decision that may or may not sit right with your fellow passengers, but it is a decision that you MUST make in order to right the “plane.”

Some people will tell you the plane is just fine, that it’s not crashing. Some people will tell you the oxygen masks are just scare-tactics used by conspiracy theorists and will slough it off as paranoia, while ordering another drink from the stewardess.

That’s just fine, let them talk, let them get drunk, let them ignore the masks. When they pass out, at least they’ll be out of your way so you can save them, despite themselves. And if you should fail, at least they’ll have a peaceful ending to their lives.

This is not a typical plane crash. This is a cultural “plane crash.” It could take years to finally fall. The tactic for righting the plane is one that hasn’t been thought up yet. So you will have to be the type of person who can think up new tactics on the fly (See the video).

The courage it will take to right the plane will be a particular flavor of courage that will redefine the concept of courage itself.
It will shatter all notions of courageousness conceptualized hitherto. It will take perseverance, audacity and a kind of self-confidence that others might confuse as arrogance or conceit. That’s okay, let them be confused.

Sometimes, like Clive Barker said, “you just have to trust your own madness.”

This is critical, and there is no time for balking or kowtowing to other people’s outdated notions of what it means to be courageous. This is the time to step up, to be the one who transforms fear into courage, to be the one who will right the goddamn plane! Only you can know if you care enough to save your family, or not.

Only you can know if you care enough to save the scared shitless, fumbling, mumbling many. What if everyone else is too scared? What if everyone else is in denial that the plane is crashing? What if you’re the only one who can see that the plane is indeed in its final decent, and the masks are not an illusion?

Here’s the thing: The Oxygen Mask is a metaphor that represents health: healthy mind, healthy body and healthy soul. The crashing plane is a metaphor that represents an unhealthy, unsustainable culture. You must be healthy of mind body and soul if you are going to be the type of person who can help others become healthy in mind body and soul.
superman
That’s why you put the mask on first. It takes a person willing to redefine courage itself to right this type of crashing plane. If that person is you, then you know it, and we should all wish you luck and Godspeed.

If that person is not you, then you also know it, and you should stay out of the way of those who know they have the capacity to save your life.

Once you have the mask secure, and your health established, you can then help others to become healthy. But you cannot help others become healthy if you don’t put the mask on yourself first, because you risk not being there for people who are less capable.

Those who are capable will already be putting the masks on themselves first. And if you can find enough people wearing “oxygen masks” then you can form a team; a healthy, sustainable force to be reckoned with; a courageous team that has the potential to right the plane despite the lazy majority of naysayers still stuck in the very paradigm that caused the plane to crash in the first place.

They, the unsustainable sycophants living fear-based lifestyles, will be your greatest obstacle. But you cannot allow their unreasonable doubt to dissuade your reasonable courage. Stay strong. Keep the oxygen mask on yourself.

Help others secure their own oxygen mask and teach them how to keep it on. And maybe, just maybe, there will be a future for us all.

The Wisdom of Uncertainty

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“Humans may crave absolute certainty; they may aspire to it; they may pretend, as partisans of certain religions do, to have attained it.

But the history of science- by far the most successful claim to knowledge accessible to humans – teaches that the most we can hope for is successive improvement in our understanding, learning from our mistakes, an asymptotic approach to the universe, but with the proviso that absolute certainty will always elude us.” ~ Carl Sagan

The ability to question things can be an art form. Healthy skepticism is a boon in a world that bombards us with so much information. It teaches us self-astonishment, where instead of trying to possess Truth we are possessed by it.

“Asking the proper question is the central action of transformation,” writes Clarissa Pinkola Estes. “The key question causes germination of consciousness. Questions are the keys that cause the secret doors of the psyche to swing open.”

When we think we have all the answers, we become stuck in our “knowledge,” which is a safe and comfortable place for our egos, but a lousy place for individuation. Let us instead take the road less traveled by digging up the road most traveled and planting seeds there.

Let yourself doubt. Let yourself break. Become a prism where all the shattered places can shine light onto the shadow, transforming it into a resurrected beacon of hope. There is insecurity there, but there is also wisdom.

Like Thomas Merton wrote, “In a world of tension and breakdown, it is necessary for there to be those who seek to integrate their inner lives not by avoiding anguish and running away from problems, but by facing them in their naked reality and in their ordinariness.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjJhVvd7aps

We must ask ourselves, are the walls of my comfort zone elastic and pliant or rigid and dogmatic. Are the lines I’ve drawn in the sand of my soul flexible and open-minded or inflexible and close-minded? Are the “answers” I’ve found open to questioning, or are they closed to myopic regurgitation?

Those who live “examined lives” understand that humans fail, and failing means that sometimes we need to change.

If we need someone else to guide us through that change, like a therapist, a coach, or a spiritual adviser, that’s fine. But being mindful of our insecurities and doubts helps remind us to embrace change and to discover the courage it takes to adapt and overcome.

Like Chuang Tzu wrote: “The perfect man employs his mind as a mirror; it grasps nothing; it refuses nothing; it receives, but does not keep.”

Doubt by Misha Gordon
Doubt

The highest wisdom lies in this type of counter-intuitive detachment, in accepting that there is no permanence, and then being proactive about what it means to be an impermanent entity adapting to an impermanent reality.

Understand: Most things exist along a roller-coaster ride of degrees. Human definitions are not as black and white as we’d like them to be. They’re ambiguously gray and often imprecise. The borders around an idea are mostly an illusion, permeable and ever-changing; more like horizons than boundaries.

Demanding that the universe adhere to our definitions is one of our greatest human fallacies. It’s as if we’re asking the universe to stand still so that we can be certain about our ideas in order to justify our definitions.

But the universe is not designed to match our expectations.

Like David McRaney wrote, “You can’t improve the things you love if you never allow them to be imperfect.”

On a long enough timeline of questioning reality, the attachment we feel toward the groups to which we belong, the ideas to which we cling, and the institutions to which we pledge ourselves, drops to zero. But it is in this zero-point, this singularity of self, where wisdom and acumen are most abundant.

Do. Or do not. There is no try.

Ultimately, by embracing the vicissitudes of life, we leave ourselves open to further realizing our potential for obtaining truth. The wisdom of uncertainty is precisely the openness to further question certainty itself, thereby coming up with ever-new, ever-evolving “Truth.”

Like the great Rollo May said, “We must be fully committed, but we must also be aware at the same time that we might possibly be wrong. Our commitment to an idea is healthiest when it is not without doubt, but in spite of doubt.”

The Tranquil Effect of Green

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“Green how I want you green. Green wind. Green branches.” ~ Federico Garcia Lorca

Have you ever wondered why we feel rejuvenated and nurtured after spending time in the lap of nature? Lush greenery or endless meadows always has a soothing effect on the human mind. It’s the colour green doing the trick.

Known to be the colour for poise, stability and harmony, Green creates equilibrium between the head and the heart. In many cultures around the world green color is the symbol of paradise, eternal life, virtue and beauty.

Nature.
Nature.

It was the color of heaven in Ming Dynasty, and in several religions green is associated with revival and renewal. Green is the color of love associated with Venus – the Roman goddess, Aphrodite – the Greek goddess, and in Celtic myths, the God of fertility.

Green is also the color of the heart chakra that is responsible for deep sense of self and a firm belief in one’s existence. Heart chakra bridges the gap between the physical and spiritual world. Balanced heart chakra helps one to be a compassionate and a loving human being.

People with good green energy are enthusiastic and possess generosity of the spirit. It gives them stability and endurance. The soul breathes clearly anywhere it goes and attempts to maintain that vibe.

Rochie Rana, a colour therapist says, “Green that lies in the middle of the colour spectrum is the colour of balance and also acts like a healing tonic for the mind, body and soul. It can turn stagnant energy around on its feet and infuse the unhappiest of people with a deep sense of enthusiasm. The colour to begin when one is on a mission to bring some ‘Joie de vivre’ to one’s life.”

People who suffer from low green energy are dealing with blockage of the Heart Chakra. An unbalanced heart chakra is the cause for chaos in the mind. The person dwells in negative emotions like greed, anger, fear, jealousy, has difficulty in concentrating or focusing in one area, and their desire to expand as a larger being diminishes.

One should introduce the color green to balance the chakra that promotes unconditional love, which gives you immense happiness and compassion. A soul filled with love doesn’t face any form of physical/health problems because of the energy that flows in the body.

Green happens to be the color of medicinal plants and raw vegetables that are filled with health benefits. It’s in the nature of green to cure and heal. Plant more trees or just a tiny plant in a pot, or introduce raw green vegetables in one’s diet to derive more green energy. Keep objects that are deep green in color inside your room for example empty wine bottles.

Be a master of your soul. Let the color of nature fill you up with compassion, joy and happiness.