12-16-2019, 07:55 PM
(12-16-2019, 05:16 PM)Kaaron Wrote: If you are part of the deer memory complex, on some level, you made the choice to exist as food for the 3D beings living within the illusion of hard survival.
2D has elements of hive mind.
This is important to realize.
They sacrifice themselves for the good of another. This is pure love from the creator.
They are reincarnated...perhaps as a member of the tribe.
How do you know the deer made that choice? How do you know an animal would sacrifice itself for the good of another? That is not what I see in nature at all. It may be true, but it is still an assumption, in my opinion, to rationalize taking animal life—that it helps them or they help us.
The statement, "If you are part of the deer memory complex, on some level, you made the choice to exist as food for the 3D beings living within the illusion of hard survival," is skewed from what I can observe. Animals only take what they need to survive. Humans take more than they need and that is an understatement. Why would 2D entities agree to be food for 3D entities who don't need the food? Doesn't it sound egocentric/humancentric to think animals on the whole have agreed to help us learn by allowing their lives to be tortured, enslaved, or just cut short because a hunter wanted to kill something (hopefully to eat, but a lot of hunters kill for the sport). What kind of system would allow for such sacrifice?
(12-16-2019, 05:16 PM)Kaaron Wrote: The same philosophy exists in Maori culture.
There is no past or future...only now.
The warriors do not fear death...as we understand the reincarnation process and when we die...it is not the end.
We put our lives on the line and die...knowing we did so, protecting the family we will return to.
I feel like alot of the western thinking, places far too much importance on the act of living and not enough on the lessons learned, doing so.
Life is just a canvas.
We are the paint and artist.
How one enters and exits is of little significance. How we respond to catalyst and lifes circumstances, is where the lessons lie.
Just like the animal who gives up its hive mind...to be reborn.
You can say all you want about humans, but let's not pretend to know what the animal kingdom has chosen, especially if that choice serves humans, who are not in a very evolved place in regard to respect for all life.