Psychic Energy
Posted on Mar 26th, 2007
by
Doctor Jones
So I'm wearing my "Laugh All You Want" shirt today and I was thinking about how much thought and care went into these shirts (maybe not this one, but all the others and it's guilty by association). I thought: this shirt must have some real psychic energy in it. That seemed like a natural thought. It's gotta have a lot of psychic energy; that would explain why I'm having such interesting thoughts and insights today.
Then I realized: of course it would have some psychic energy if I assign it such power. Then I continued to think: what's with feeling the need to explain it? That's hilarious! It's the most natural thing in the world, so why would I need to justify the source of these thoughts?
It's like trying to justify a like or a dislike. Sure, everyone clings on to these reasons to like or dislike something. "I don't like American Cheese because it's not really cheese!" Is the justification of any importance? No! It's just a fact. What if I like American cheese because it's a cheese-food product? Does the equally factual reason truly justify the preference? No! The justification is irrelevent. It's a like or dislike. Simple as that.
So why do I feel the need to explain or justify how such thoughts come to me? Why do I feel the need to label the source of such thoughts? Intuition. Psychic energy (attributed to an object or place). Because most of us are taught that this is abnormal? unusual? special? weird? When, truly, the only thing that makes it special is the denial of it's existence and omnipresence in the first place.
Then I realized: of course it would have some psychic energy if I assign it such power. Then I continued to think: what's with feeling the need to explain it? That's hilarious! It's the most natural thing in the world, so why would I need to justify the source of these thoughts?
It's like trying to justify a like or a dislike. Sure, everyone clings on to these reasons to like or dislike something. "I don't like American Cheese because it's not really cheese!" Is the justification of any importance? No! It's just a fact. What if I like American cheese because it's a cheese-food product? Does the equally factual reason truly justify the preference? No! The justification is irrelevent. It's a like or dislike. Simple as that.
So why do I feel the need to explain or justify how such thoughts come to me? Why do I feel the need to label the source of such thoughts? Intuition. Psychic energy (attributed to an object or place). Because most of us are taught that this is abnormal? unusual? special? weird? When, truly, the only thing that makes it special is the denial of it's existence and omnipresence in the first place.
Tagged with: inspiration

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