Diversity: Degrees, variations and bridges
Part III
Reaching level 4 is no different than the early settlers reaching the West side of the Appalachian Mountains. In order to experience level 4 one must personally go to level 4. One can journey to level 4 with or without the aid of individuals that have been there just as in the 1500’s the settlers of the East Coast of North America could journey to the West side of the Appalachian Mountains without the knowledge others had regarding how to get to the West.
"Long used by Native Americans, the Cumberland Gap was brought to the attention of settlers in 1750 by Dr. Thomas Walker, a Virginia physician and explorer. The path was widened by a team of loggers led by Daniel Boone, making it accessible to pioneers who used it to journey into the western frontiers of Kentucky and Tennessee."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumberland_Gap
The settlers who listened to and heeded the knowledge of those who had traveled the Cumberland Gap were much more likely to be successful accomplishing their goal of reaching the West side of the Appalachian Range than were those settlers who ignored the information passed on to them by those who had taken the journey before them.
So it is with level 4.
While there is no denying one can experience level 4 by entering level 4 without the help of others who have been there, it is also true one can shorten the time needed to complete the journey of stepping into region 4, one can increase the probability of successfully completing the journey, if one heeds the descriptions of the journey taken by successful travelers who have gone before them.
In spite of the potential to be the target of ridicule, scorn, mockery and potential ostracism, it is now time at this point in human history to openly examine, in detail, the process of finding one’s true essence.
But why is it ‘now’ time?
Part III
Reaching level 4 is no different than the early settlers reaching the West side of the Appalachian Mountains. In order to experience level 4 one must personally go to level 4. One can journey to level 4 with or without the aid of individuals that have been there just as in the 1500’s the settlers of the East Coast of North America could journey to the West side of the Appalachian Mountains without the knowledge others had regarding how to get to the West.
"Long used by Native Americans, the Cumberland Gap was brought to the attention of settlers in 1750 by Dr. Thomas Walker, a Virginia physician and explorer. The path was widened by a team of loggers led by Daniel Boone, making it accessible to pioneers who used it to journey into the western frontiers of Kentucky and Tennessee."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumberland_Gap
The settlers who listened to and heeded the knowledge of those who had traveled the Cumberland Gap were much more likely to be successful accomplishing their goal of reaching the West side of the Appalachian Range than were those settlers who ignored the information passed on to them by those who had taken the journey before them.
So it is with level 4.
While there is no denying one can experience level 4 by entering level 4 without the help of others who have been there, it is also true one can shorten the time needed to complete the journey of stepping into region 4, one can increase the probability of successfully completing the journey, if one heeds the descriptions of the journey taken by successful travelers who have gone before them.
In spite of the potential to be the target of ridicule, scorn, mockery and potential ostracism, it is now time at this point in human history to openly examine, in detail, the process of finding one’s true essence.
But why is it ‘now’ time?