These titles are really becoming bigger and bigger mouthfuls, aren't they? Well, so is life and the world, so let's chew. It's probably happened a thousand times before; there were probably humans in contact with ETs via interplanetary multidimensional systems, possibly based on 2001: A Space Odyssey -like energetic relics in constant communication with trans-dimensional space life; technologies on earth that far surpass what we see around us; knowledge, wisdom and understanding that our present process only seems to scratch the surface of. God knows (and She surely does). But nonetheless, how the fuck are we dealing with the madness of the Kali Yuga? The Great Birth we're in, that appears to be infiltrating our collective and individual experiences, gnawing away at us and giving us so much grief as we try, try, try - so hard, as hard as a million rocks flying through space - to remain purely rational in a world that is slowly eating us up as a cute little les
I can barley chew, the title is such a mouthful. Which serves as a metaphor for the topic, actually. Why is happiness so daunting? Not only when we long for it, but when we experience it too. Here I'll share some reflections, based particularly on a feeling of dread I've experienced in the past, when things actually do seem wonderful, perfect even. The nonsensical, non-rational experience of two elements that seem poles apart. For a long time, when riding the peak of a happy period of life - be it a day, a week, even months - I've founded a backdrop of anxiety. What if I lose this? Am I not bound to lose it? Well, I suppose it's easy to see that nothing is ever "had" in that sense. Of course you cannot hold on to happiness. Just like the more negatively experienced emotions and vibrations, happiness is passing; it is a feature of experience, albeit one which we strive to experience more of. And it's very abstract, too, which I think i