theMuzzl3 |
10-05-2014 02:25 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by UnbornBuddha
(Post 413743)
I wholeheartedly agree, the mind of a child has none of the social conditioning and habituation that constraint who one really is. This latency of our innate constitutional personality leads to unhappiness as we forget the bliss of the state of child like wonder. It is no secret that the human body is at its peak when youthful. Children for example jump out of bed, and are riveted and exited for life. Adults on the other hand have a hard time dragging themselves out of bed, and finding the richness and blessedness of being alive. Kids also don't have the psycho sclerotic hardening/ concretions that form the rigidity and hardheadedness the aged vehemently use to defend their views.
The heart likes to be lighthearted, and the burden of the world becomes much more so when we grow up into this archetypal constructs society breeds. Inquisitiveness on one's own being is more accessible when one simplifies their mind, and then one can ironically summon up the space to absorb more information. It is no secret that kids are like sponges soaking up new languages due to their keen non judgmental observation. Their honest as well. Part of the anti aging process is returning back the clock not just through nutritional, or medical intervention. But a worry free state in which the heart becomes lighter like a child at play. A baby's mind is even more mysterious and peers into unseen reality even morose. And before a baby that is the mind of the uncreated. Evolution sometimes involves a simultaneous regression and progression. A shedding of traits that no longer serves humanity.
Thank you.
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Thank you for elaborating. I hear in France (and other countries), children pick what they want to be at an early at, say 9-11. Then they study for that career (and can switch), giving them a huge advantage at performing their duties within their career. Also, I think there should be a series of tests for 11 year olds to determine their strengths. From there, they can pick the one they'd like to pursue. We wouldn't want the next Einstein majoring in English, nor the next MC Escher majoring in something other than art and math. sticking everyone in the same bottle only allows them to say "well fuck, I'm an adult now... what do I do? Take out a loan and go to school, or go to work at Home Depot."
My major went from art to math... I dreaded math but was good at it. Luckily, both of those help me in my musical creation.
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