Buddha_Mind
Master Don Juan
How does a person truly internalize some of the lessons here? I'm not talking about reading and re-reading; I'm talking about lessons so deeply engrained in the psyche that they are reactionary ... like walking ... like gasping for breath when it is held too long ...
How does a person make the DJ part of themselves nearly involuntary?
This is what I am struggling to understand. And I believe field experience is going to be the only way to get there. Practice.
I find myself becoming "unplugged" at various times...and as Rollo has pointed out in some recent posts, there is some sort of recursive habit of an AFC to fall back into his habits...it's as though the shroud that was lifted is brought right back down -- and maybe even voluntarily. There might be even some self-satisfaction in the AFC bringing the shroud back over his eyes...
Maybe it is reassuring. A sort of "Yes I believe in Hollywood Love Again" as the oxycotin is released into the synaptic gap...and aha...yes she is my "dream girl"..she is "the one"....
There is a tendency it seems for the unplugged AFC mind to revert and run back towards the comfort that he once knew...
How do those unplugged keep themselves unplugged [from the matrix of hollywood love and the land of pedestals]?
Can a man stay unplugged without becoming heartless or darkened [this talk of the Darkened Triad of sexual lust in other threads]?
Can AFC-Relapse be correlated to Personal Neurochemistry?
Is it possible, some people, based upon their unique neurochemistries, are more prone to AFCism than others? Could a habitual AFC-relapse sufferer have some neurochemical disposition to such behavior, due to the various presences of dopamine, vasopressin, oxytocin, testosterone...etc? (the chemicals responsible according to science for pair-bonding, "closeness", and so forth)...
As some people are pre-disposed to alcohol problems, tobacco addiction, etc, is it possible some people are more affected by "love"-based chemicals also? Do AFC-relapse suffers also have issues with other "addictions"?
Perhaps the "jerk" is really a brain that is less receptive to those same neurotransmitters ; or a brain that produces less of them by volume or frequency ... their cold detached character we relate to some social perception when perhaps it really is their "wiring"...
These are thought explorations I've been having here in regards to current themes in some of the ongoing threads. Perhaps the best combination for an AFC addict is a mixture of social conditioning and acculturation + neurochemical makeup...
What do you guys think? Could there be any validity to this?
Upon reflecting back on my ENTIRE female life -- I'm talking all the way back to Kindergarten -- I remember feeling "head over heels" for a girl when I was 7 years old in some ways the same that I do now at age 26 if that makes sense to anyone. Clearly the life context, everything including the maturity of such emotions change...but in some ways they are not so different...that "crush" feeling at age 13 isn't so different at age 33 at the deepest level.
I suppose if the following is true it means a few things: The first is some of us are more chemically inclined towards AFC-oneitis behavior than others -- this could be biological and environmental in causation. The second is that, if you've ever felt "love" before, or "oneitis", that same emotion you can rest assured you will experience again. That is something for those with crushed hearts to keep in mind -- they WILL feel that "love" again at some point.
How does a person make the DJ part of themselves nearly involuntary?
This is what I am struggling to understand. And I believe field experience is going to be the only way to get there. Practice.
I find myself becoming "unplugged" at various times...and as Rollo has pointed out in some recent posts, there is some sort of recursive habit of an AFC to fall back into his habits...it's as though the shroud that was lifted is brought right back down -- and maybe even voluntarily. There might be even some self-satisfaction in the AFC bringing the shroud back over his eyes...
Maybe it is reassuring. A sort of "Yes I believe in Hollywood Love Again" as the oxycotin is released into the synaptic gap...and aha...yes she is my "dream girl"..she is "the one"....
There is a tendency it seems for the unplugged AFC mind to revert and run back towards the comfort that he once knew...
How do those unplugged keep themselves unplugged [from the matrix of hollywood love and the land of pedestals]?
Can a man stay unplugged without becoming heartless or darkened [this talk of the Darkened Triad of sexual lust in other threads]?
Can AFC-Relapse be correlated to Personal Neurochemistry?
Is it possible, some people, based upon their unique neurochemistries, are more prone to AFCism than others? Could a habitual AFC-relapse sufferer have some neurochemical disposition to such behavior, due to the various presences of dopamine, vasopressin, oxytocin, testosterone...etc? (the chemicals responsible according to science for pair-bonding, "closeness", and so forth)...
As some people are pre-disposed to alcohol problems, tobacco addiction, etc, is it possible some people are more affected by "love"-based chemicals also? Do AFC-relapse suffers also have issues with other "addictions"?
Perhaps the "jerk" is really a brain that is less receptive to those same neurotransmitters ; or a brain that produces less of them by volume or frequency ... their cold detached character we relate to some social perception when perhaps it really is their "wiring"...
These are thought explorations I've been having here in regards to current themes in some of the ongoing threads. Perhaps the best combination for an AFC addict is a mixture of social conditioning and acculturation + neurochemical makeup...
What do you guys think? Could there be any validity to this?
Upon reflecting back on my ENTIRE female life -- I'm talking all the way back to Kindergarten -- I remember feeling "head over heels" for a girl when I was 7 years old in some ways the same that I do now at age 26 if that makes sense to anyone. Clearly the life context, everything including the maturity of such emotions change...but in some ways they are not so different...that "crush" feeling at age 13 isn't so different at age 33 at the deepest level.
I suppose if the following is true it means a few things: The first is some of us are more chemically inclined towards AFC-oneitis behavior than others -- this could be biological and environmental in causation. The second is that, if you've ever felt "love" before, or "oneitis", that same emotion you can rest assured you will experience again. That is something for those with crushed hearts to keep in mind -- they WILL feel that "love" again at some point.