M
MagnetMan
Guest
I had the priveiledge of visiting with the Stone Age Bushmen of the Kalahari and via that association, re-experiencing our original psyche, before social and religious dogma distorted it. I discovered a wonderful sense of family values, in which meticulous sharing was the central ethic. The visit also renewed my faith in spiritual values, when I witnessed animimism in practice. Bushman have an innate reverence for Mother Nature and the invisible forces that protect ethical trespass. When a disobedient child transgresses and Nature nips back in one of Her inimitable ways, the whole family joins in the chuckle at the quick adminstration of poetic justice. The beauty of animistic superstition, is that the child grows up to be self-policed. When we consider the vast sums we spend on artficial law-making and policing our modern societies, I would advocate the reintroduction of superstition, during the first seven years of a child's growth and let Nature do it Herself in hger own inimatible way. I have had eight children of my own since that visit and applied animism on them. Every one of them has ended up as self-policed individuals. The fact that every culture on the planet can be traced back via DNA evidince to the Bushmen, and that we all invested some 99,000 generations in this friendly family based milieu, and are therefore all deeply imprinted with those fundamental behavioral ethics, bodes well for our survival beyond this current superficial teen Age of ours.