The Lie and Rectification | an Act of Courage, Made Easier

definition of, 'a lie':





remembering one thing

and

intending to imagine another
(imagining in opposition to remembering)


You might be someone who has trouble with remembering.


One thing about remembering:  Ya gotta wanna imagine it.

Otherwise, memories get more and more diffuse, fuzzier and fuzzier.


Remembering one thing and intending another produces the stress we name, guilt.

Guilt has about it, fear -- fear of being discovered having done something wrong
(even discovery by oneself).


Fear of Remembering.


Intending one thing and remembering another produces the frustration we name, self-limitation.


You might be someone who has trouble with imagining.


One thing about imagining:  Ya gotta wanna remember it.

Otherwise, imaginings evaporate fruitlessly.


Failing to remember what you have imagined produces the stress we name, stagnation.

Stagnation has about it, resignation -- resignation to unattainability.


Resignation from the Unattainable.


The solution to both is the same process:

Bring to bear the complementary TetraSeed aspects.

These procedures reveal what is in the way of remembering and imagining.  These are incantations -- after the Italian root word, "cantare":  song, or chant.

They have a rhythm. Find it.

FORMULATIONS:

for REMEMBERING

INTENDING INTENDING IMAGINING
IMAGINING
IMAGINING INTENDING INTENDING
INTENDING
INTENDING IMAGINING IMAGINING
IMAGINING
IMAGINING INTENDING INTENDING
INTENDING

ATTENDING TO ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
IMAGINING
IMAGINING IMAGINING ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO IMAGINING IMAGINING
IMAGINING
IMAGINING ATTENDING TO ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO

ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
INTENDING IMAGINING
INTENDING IMAGINING
ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
IMAGINING

ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING
INTENDING REMEMBERING
INTENDING REMEMBERING
ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING
ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING
REMEMBERING

for IMAGINING

INTENDING INTENDING REMEMBERING
REMEMBERING
REMEMBERING INTENDING INTENDING
INTENDING
INTENDING REMEMBERING REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING INTENDING INTENDING
INTENDING

ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING ATTENDING TO ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING ATTENDING TO ATTENDING TO
ATTENDING TO

ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING 
INTENDING REMEMBERING 
INTENDING REMEMBERING 
ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING 
ATTENDING TO REMEMBERING 
REMEMBERING 

ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
INTENDING ATTENDING TO IMAGINING 
INTENDING IMAGINING
ATTENDING TO INTENDING IMAGINING
ATTENDING TO IMAGINING
IMAGINING
o


At first, speak it aloud at least once. Then, you may read it. Intone it within yourself
with the voice-of-mind.


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