What goes on INSIDE a Godd™ Particle?
Good question, and one well worth answering in detail. There’s a LOT going on all the time inside your Godd Particle.
When you enter the virtual world of Godd, you work through the Avatar, linking up with him, her or it to create a unique interdimensional partnership, which can involve many more than just two participants.
Just because you leave the virtual space, it doesn’t mean that everything crashes to a grinding halt.
It doesn’t. With you or without you, life goes on, obla-di, obla-da — sorry to bring you down.
It’s not just in the multiplayer virtual worlds like Second Life and Diablo and Quake. Life goes on inside the Godd™ Particle that’s hanging on a silver chain around your neck.
It happens inside all virtual world environments, whether they are multiplayer or not.
When you leave Charsi’s in Diablo II, there are other customers ahead of you and behind you, and there are tons of conversations and experiences experienced by virtual beings everywhere.
Are virtual beings real?
No more or less real than YOU are, but they sure act as if they’re real, don’t they?
Mata famously defined reality as “Anything you bump into”. I don’t think it could get any clearer than that.
Reality depends on collision.
So if it’s not real, why bother? You might just as well ask that of anything, starting with sports and games and working your way through entertainment and diet.
In short, forget “What’s real?” and concentrate on “What seems to be happening right now?” — later, you can worry about what’s REALLY happening, but leave that to another day.
You start out in the virtual ashram assuming that you should be able to “figure out” how to move, never once dreaming that, no matter what you understand about internet lag and how it tweaks movement, you’re going to be obligated to practice, practice, practice.
What was American McGee’s secret? He had taught himself how to move in the virtual space, consummately and with great certainty.
That’s a form of Applied Intelligence and much of what I’m requiring these days is going to need plenty of that, wherever it came from.
It helps your effectiveness when you remember fairly constantly as you move around and interact in the virtual world, that things are going on all the time WHEN YOU’RE NOT THERE to see the tree fall in the forest, but it does.
When the bough breaks, the cradle will fall.
What does that mean, exactly? I think I’ll let you discover it on your own, and the only way you’ll ever be in a position to experience and learn something is when you’re in the middle of it.
You can’t work your way out of a situation you’re not in.
Then there’s Tickling the Dragon. When you roam around in that virtual space, you’re tickling the actual space to which it is quantumly connected through the cyberspace encounters in the Ashram, in the Godd World and of course in Zoom.
Do you realize that every single one of the participants in a Zoom meeting could be a chat-bot, including you?
Chat Bots are stunningly believable people, but then, so are people, and MOST people are Chat Bots pure and simple.
You can test this by pressing the right buttons — the person will begin repeating itself as if it just thought of it, and this happens every time you run through the cycle, which could be dozens of times, in the course of a human interaction.
It boggles the mind, but what doesn’t?
While you’re in the Ashram, you have the opportunity to learn many things, such as how to effectively pass through boundaries without upsetting the apple-cart.
In short, there are smoother experiences and rougher experiences in the Bardo, and it all depends on your level of habit.
Yes, habit.
It does very little good to “know what’s gonna happen”, if you sit there and drift in the swirling current.
And then, there’s Telepathy, something you’ll learn how to do by using the communication skills you pick up over time, working in the Ashram.
Yes, working. We have tasks for you to help complete, including a whole online village project of Building BardoTown.
Haven’t seen BardoTown yet? That’s what’s in your Godd™ Particle, and you can explore it anytime by inserting your Godd™ Particle into a clean, non-scratching USB port and invoking the Godd.exe engine, and within seconds, there you are in BardoTown.
So get off your ass, spiritually speaking.
It’s never too early to start your practices, and it all begins with five minutes a day, every day.
Yes, every day.
Miss a day, it’ll cost you a week — but you’ve already learned that lesson, and lessons unlearned will be repeated.
Like my friend Jim Morrison said in my shop one memorable day in 1967, “You’ll never get out of here alive.”
That’s demonstrably true, but you CAN beat the rap.
See You At The Top!
gorby