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AdvaitaZen
Guest
I know what a person did and said in my presence, in promotion and response, with a little interaction.
When do you take responsibility for what you say?
What is said is not our responsibility, what we do with what has been said is our responsibility.
Lunitik said opposing things about religion, himself, God, love, truth, spirit, etc... all part of his nature. In the heat of a moment he said something about religion that was more to his liking. If you admit to being Lunitik and the person that stayed at my place for a bit, then I will point to the varying things you said about religion. If you deny it, then I won't waste everyone's time.
All that I have ever said has been towards a particular purpose, whether what has been said is true or false, it is to bring the audience to Truth.
When do you take responsibility for what you spend time thinking about?
You are quite obsessive about responsibility, strange.
I try to never allow the mind to wander, it is rarely beneficial.
When do you take responsibility for your work?
Again, why take responsibility for what has already been completed? It only means you are stuck in the past, unwilling to let go.
Necessary for what, to be perfectly evil? If you see yourself as being non-physical, then I recommend dropping your duality and take responsibility for what you do. Meditate on do-ing unto others as you would have others do unto you... and do it.
More about responsibility.
As love in action, I know all that I do will benefit whosoever it has been done for. With this utter trust, I feel no need to cling to what has already passed. Believing ourselves to be anything in particular, we will try to prove this to all we encounter. We become as robots, programmed rather than spontaneous living beings.
Interesting statement about your religion.
It is, considering how few religious people seem to remotely resemble something like mental health. It is because so often religion is pursued to mask our insecurities and fears, we will believe anything that causes us to not need to look at them.
What I am speaking about is simply looking from a new perspective, understanding we are that for which fears and faith arise, that all mental activity is merely something arising now and should not be given particular attention to. What we are cannot be hidden or changed by our thoughts about it, neither can our actions effect what we are in any way, eventually we must all come to terms with our nature.
Admitting what we actually are is the first step towards sanity.