Denial vs. Dissolution

Denial keeps us involved.
Dissolution is release.


To deny something and to dissolve the experience of something are two categorically different things.

To deny is to contradict, an effirt. To maintain denial is to maintain an effort, if only to put it out of ones own mind. 

To deny leaves a residue of ongoing effort, which goes "on automatic" as a remembered state. That effort remains as an attitude toward what is being denied that must be maintained to prevent the thing being denied.

To dissolve something involves the recognition of an ongoing stress-condition (or "an on-automatic remembered state") as an effort that one is making from seeming "time-immemorial" (or, perhaps, some event in memory) -- and to allow its attractive or binding force to dissolve, leaving you free.

You don't get to the "allow it to dissolve" stage until you have a full perception of that "something" and of your own attitude toward it. Only then are you in touch with the sense of effort, as it is.

In other words, the stress of a stressful situation has to do with not knowing how to respond toward it or with making off-target responses because you don't have a clear or sufficiently complete perception of the situation.

To dissolve involves ceasing to make that ongoing effort, as a movement out of effort into decreasing effort based on recognizing effort as effort.

Upon recognizing effort as effort, it's easy to let go.  It's an easing, relaxing ..... the effort ..... of contradicting ..... the stress pattern ..... forgetfulness of it .....

It's the opposite to denying. It's dissolution.

"Denial" denies while seeking for a solution, an answer, a way.

"Dissolution" has forgotten the need for a solution because the need is no longer felt to exist. 

DENIAL is BASED UPON the NOTION of a PHYSICAL UNIVERSE

The notion of a physical universe holds that things continue to exist (and continue to be able to bite us) whether we have a sense of them, or not. This view is upheld by humans' tendency to deny and to become oblivious of things, so that, when they "bite" us, we go, "See?"

But as I have written, denial is different from dissolution.

DISSOLUTION is BASED UPON the NOTION that the UNIVERSE is PSYCHO-PHYSICAL

In a psycho-physical universe, the dissolution of any trace of an experience from memory (or imagination) removes the substantiality of that experience. It no longer shows up in our experience at all unless we make an effort to call it back (and even then, it's difficult to recover).

Dissolution is not denial.  Though it no longer seeks a solution, it no longer feels it needs a solution. The intelligence that remains after dissolution remains intelligently present to experience and can still operate creatively, with intelligence. You perceive something, you function.

Dissolution isn't a "maybe" thing or a hopeful thing. When something is dissolved from your experience (as with The Gold Key Release or other means), there is no doubt; there is a distinct sensation of the loss of density, the loss of form (a sensation that doesn't lend itself to word-description). You know it when you feel it.

The Gold Key Release gives that experience. This must be tested for the assertion of this section to be recognized as valid.

THE SUPERIORITY of DISSOLUTION over DENIAL

Denial introduces stupidity into our intelligence, introduces drag into our responsiveness. 

Dissolution removes drag and opens the mind for intelligent perception and creative inspiration.

When the density of denial (and of the thing denied) has been dissolved,  there is minimal internal friction between creative inspiration and action, there is the timely participation, flow.

One can synchronize with events and thereby participate in them (whether in a personal conversation or in a large-scale geophysical event) -- or -- to de-synchronize from them to eliminate (or bypass, or at the very least, reduce) their effects. 

A natural creative flow emanates out of spontaneity and into existence -- a kind of creative, "in-the-groove" "grooving with the moment" responsiveness (rather than automatic, pre-formed responses dictated by knowledge and memory).

Dissolution allows easy stability in the midst of the tumult of change because it flows better and releases the accumulated effects (memories) of experience

Denial immobilizes.

Dissolution moves and then rests.



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