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Spirituality and Psychology
If you are in a place of knowing in which you know Mind is dreaming this fantasy called "reality," then what you live with is the truth that mind is what 'right now' is. Mind manifests as 'everything' to the degree manifestation includes the appearance of everything that appears, including
'storms,' and similar "acts of nature," as well as dreamers who live with the truth there are no people, only dreamers revealing levels of commitment to impersonate people.
Some dreamers remain flat with the fact they are Dreamers in a mind-generated dream, and they show no inclination to use time to play the personhood game that is so famous in this dream. Statistically, the game is highly skewed in favor of using time in the dream to promote the hoax called
personhood. Wherever you are in the dream, you are surrounded by kindred souls, dreamers, who use time, sometimes desperately, to defend "The Master Lie," that 'this' is real and not a dream and that all 'the people' are the people they work so hard to portray.
The personhood game is exhausting because no dreamer can morph into a person in a dream no matter what kind of tricks they use to advance that outcome. The dream precludes the possibility there is anyone to be any kind of a person, let alone, for example, a "good person," or more likely, in the
name of reality, a "bad person." If a dreamer is going to do personhood convincingly, working to portray a "bad person" seems to carry a higher degree of believability. What makes "reality" seem less dreamlike is the high level of drama that comes out of playing the part of less than okay
'people' who are having a perfectly terrible time in this dream (life). The apparently real often turns into the surreal if the dreamer overplays his or her hand.
In the absence of people, this being a mind-generated dream, featuring dreamers whose level of knowing the truth ranges from totally unaware, or so it would seem, to those who are totally aware, and everything in between. This captures "The Spectrum of Consciousness," and it is always on display
because it is always transparent. What you see reflects where any dreamer is 'right now' in the dream with the truth it is a dreamer in this dream. Since no dreamer can be a person, only an impersonator, they all know the truth because truth is what they are. Truth is not the problem. The
problem is what does it take to dismiss and resist truth in order to believe, or so it would seem that you are the person you work so hard to portray in this dream? It takes a lot work to use time exclusively to play the part of a real person who is "bad." The commitment to this impersonation
demands full time participation in the parody. Once you successfully acquire this reputation in the dream, you have no choice but to keep the game in play, possibly for the duration of you appearance, or unless you opt out via the sudden religious conversion that takes place in prison.
The truth is Psychology can't be about people if this is a mind-generated dream. The dreamer seeks professional help because the tricks it uses to impersonate a less than okay person includes high levels of suffering to achieve a high level of credibility. Let's face it, how can a dreamer do
personhood believably in the absence of suffering? That's a contradiction in terms. Well meaning Psychotherapists, re: dreamers doing 'doctor' in the dream, pull their thinning hair out trying to assist the client/dreamer to let go of some of its ways to suffer, without knowing, apparently, that
the client depends on suffering to approximate a person convincingly. What the well meaning doctor doesn't want to know, among other things, is that playing the personhood game successfully, in a dream no less, takes precedence over everything, including love, success, happiness and a genuine
quality life, what ever that means. The dream is the context for the game and the dreamers show up in the dream to play the game. They know nothing has anything to do with people, but you can't play the game successfully and know the truth consciously simultaneously. The game depends on feigned
ignorance, called "resistance," for its longevity. Only the dreamers 'exist' to resist truth, and only as an event in the dream.
The therapeutic hour is a study in misunderstanding. Squabbling dreamers enter marriage counseling to hire a witness to their addiction to the fiction that conflict, in all of its apparent nastiness, will turn a dream into a real reality, and the conflict-ridden dreamer into a person with a real
problem. In this dream, fighting works to off-set the fact that the dream is the context for everything, including "conflict." Dreamers depend on conflict to maintain a level of upset necessary to relegate truth to the back of the mental bus. If the dreamer's goal in the dream is to maintain the
lie this is real and not a dream, why would anyone expect anyone to relinquish their grip on what they do to keep the dream awful in order to keep it really real. The dreams' sense of realness thrives on a regular diet of awfulization, including our secret love affair with war.
If there is a saving grace, it is, of course, that nothing 'going on' has ever had anything to do with people. The dream is on; it is what 'right now' is, and most of the dreamers in this dream are very busy pretending they don't know there are no people so they can fill time with this game. It
is the secret we all know and agree to never divulge. I know, I was there when we took our vow of silence. I was the kid in the corner with his fingers crossed.
The Recovery Process - provides reminders to expand consciousness. This process assists you to shift from who you aren't, often someone who suffers, to who you are; a spiritual being ---free at last to enjoy the agenda - free life.
Watch the video of The Recovery Process www.therecoveryprocess.com Greg Tucker is a Clinical Psychologist who gave it all up to switch to a very different way of working with clients. He calls what he does "The Recovery Process." He got his
Masters Degree in Child Psychology and a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Case-Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
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