08-31-2011, 02:36 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-31-2011, 02:47 PM by Tenet Nosce.)
(08-31-2011, 02:17 PM)unity100 Wrote: but its not as good when it is actually imminent, with discomforts.
Exactly.
unity100 Wrote:the biggest elephant in that room would be the concept of 'transaction' through a 'business' in between entities which dwelt in a dimension of free giving.
Right. I am now bumping up against the point where, in fact, words really start to lose their meaning. I imagine there will be something analagous to a "business" in 4D, meaning some general form which a particular service takes. But beyond that, in terms of receiving pieces of paper for service rendered and using them do go buy a banana (or apple) to eat for lunch... it really doesn't make sense.
Which further underscores the idea that fourth density life is so utterly different from anything we are currently now experiencing, that it boggles the mind to imagine that the whole of 3D life will gradually be transformed into 4D life, whether it is over a course of six years, or six hundred years. I really don't see how any interpretation, literal, metaphorical, analytical, or intuitive, can so easily overlook the necessity of such an obvious discontinuity of experience which accepting a concept like "harvest" requires.
Again, if the word "harvest" was chosen to describe the experience, then it was chosen with good reason and intention, with full knowledge of what the word "harvest" means to an English speaker here on the 3D world. When the fruits are ripe for picking, they are harvested. They are not left on the tree to rot, so as to not cause discomfort or jealousy among its neighbor fruits. They are not harvested, yet placed in a bushel in the garden waiting until every last fruit has reached harvestability, meanwhile being left out in the elements and being devoured by insects.
They are harvested, taken away from the garden, and put to a higher purpose. There is nothing, anywhere in the concept of "harvest" as commonly used in the English, which implies a "gradualness" to the event. One minute the fruit is there on the tree, not yet harvested, and the next minute the fruit is separated from the tree, having now been harvested.