Night Owl Wrote:I do think the sun is aware of the experience we go through on earth but I do not think the sun can know us personally and emotionally like we could not do the same with ants.
Our sun, which is a sub-logos of a larger, quite powerful logos (according to Ra), is not in a veiled environment, like we are. Consider that Ra knew everything about our 3rd density, and they weren't even on logos level. Don could ask about any entity, past or present, and they knew it all about that entity, along with all other happenings on the planet, seen and unseen. I think our logos knows us intimately, all our thoughts, distortions, struggles, hopes, polarisation, blockages, past incarnations, etc. It's not veiled, we are. Only in 3rd density do this sensation or perception of separation and "impersonalness", hold sway.
As for the earthly concept of marriage, I'm not a fan. The way I read Ra's "mating were not indiscriminate", for me, has nothing to do with the concept of marriage as we have it on earth. For me it has to do with love, friendship, affection and familiarity, rather than having sex with someone you just met. I have a vague remembrance, you can't even call it a remembrance, more of a sensation, that in higher densities it was more of a community affair, and not a "mated for life" situation. I'm cognisant of the fact that this bias of mine could very easily have been influenced by my exposure to unhappy marriages all my life, but I think I lean towards Alan Watts' view on this: "The more a thing tends to be permanent, the more it tends to be lifeless.” The institution of marriage removes spontaneity.
On a slightly unrelated note, Night Owl, your "ant colony" comment reminded me of one of our most famous past poets, Eugene Marais, who was quite a psychic, and unfortunately also addicted to morphine, who wrote a book "Die siel van die mier" (the soul of the ant). He was also a medical doctor, which gave him unrestricted access to morphine, but he had a very strong bond with nature, where he spend most of his time in "mesmerisation", as he called it. He also loved hypnotising people and animals, mostly baboons. He once hypnotised a paralysed woman, and afterwards she could walk. There's a movie about his life, "Die Wonderwerker" (The miracle worker). He said "the bible teaches us to go to the ant and become wise" (Proverbs 6:6), and from observing ants he spoke of unity, and how humans can also function as a "single unit", which would be what Ra calls a social memory complex "becoming able to grasp the needle and point the compass in one direction". He must have been a wanderer, in the end he couldn't get access to morphine and killed himself with a shotgun...off topic...