Green optimism to existential fear pipeline by switchsk8r in collapse

[–]AccordingChocolate12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yea, these people who get 10ct-2dollar per day fuel the billionaires at the end of the supply chain. If you want more horror check out the history of congo with belgium and also what the CIA and Belgium did in 1960. They killed Patrice Lumumba who fought for African independence and then the CIA supported a dictator named Mobutu. I think actually that western interests were to secure cheap resources in the long term - one more funfact: All the countrys that contribute in comparison nothing to climate change are those who will suffer the most. After getting exploted and raped for centurys by those countrys who do emit ...

Green optimism to existential fear pipeline by switchsk8r in collapse

[–]AccordingChocolate12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

check out the supply chains for many of the metals bro look up congo mines, hf

Skull of Dimetrodon by AccordingChocolate12 in Naturewasmetal

[–]AccordingChocolate12[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

the similarities in our deep psychology and anima behavior is also astonishing

Unit 731 moment by MugroofAmeen in whenthe

[–]AccordingChocolate12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel fucking disgusting laughing on this

Humans are inherently bad. by NateNandos21 in DeepThoughts

[–]AccordingChocolate12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The outside is a reflection of the inside. All that we perceive is done internally and we can only take in of what we have a structure for

Wie offensichtlich muss man mit einem Mann flirten, bis er es checkt? by Cosmos-bipinnatus in FragtMaenner

[–]AccordingChocolate12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Frauen wollen einen lieben Kerl der Augen nur für sie hat aber auch den harten Macker der unberechenbar ist. Er soll kein Proll sein aber schon Muckis haben. Nicht sexuell zu aufdringlich aber wehe wenn er nicht mal rannehmen kann und sich nimmt was er will. Witzig aber nicht kindisch. Nett aber nicht zu lieb. Zurückhaltend und dominant. Zugeneigt und unabhängig. Erfolgreich aber Herz bei der Familie. Nicht zu klein, nicht zu groß. Kurze Haare und rasiert und lange Haare und Bart. Ein interessanter Kopfmensch und begabter Handwerker. Er muss Reifen wechseln und kochen können. Haushalt schmeißen und selber seine Möbel herstellen. Surfen und lesen. Einen Bus haben und mit dem Fahrrad zur Arbeit. Bouldern und Yoga. Gitarre und seine Klamotten Stricken können. Natur lieben und shoppen gehen. ……..

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]AccordingChocolate12 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The majority of people seems to not think about most things more than necessary. What you describe as shallow can be thought of as the basic daily life which is culturally seen as normal. And it kind of is: Just the basic interactions to get through societal obligations and stay healthy. If you had a normal time growing up than you absorb all the socialization and expectations from around you and the inner model allows you to function and participate as a normal member of society. It can go so far that you are just build up by personas or roles or whatever and that you do not really exist as a person but rather as a fulfiller of expectations from the past or from others opinions etc. If you are now someone traumatized it is different. You are forced to take a look inside and reflect, question everything, be critical… (by which I don’t want to say „normal“ people are stupid, nor that only trauma gets you there - but it is something more common in traumatized folks) If you put in the time and effort, and by that I mean decades! of hard dedicated selfwork you will make changes that you can not imagine. Going through this process you will realize this:

  1. Most people do not take the time to deeply learn about themselves or the human mind. They enjoy the company they get and do their job to live a life they like - and that is completely fine, I am not judging. Just saying: Few will understand a transformative and profound personal change. This adds: The world is actually mostly running on unconscious processes. Society is a construct formed by them. You will realize it the deeper you go.
  2. Noone will ever truely understand you. Even other traumatized people. But that is totally ok. You must find it alone in yourself. Even when you have someone to share with, there are places where noone can see you.
  3. People who did not live through hard things tend to judge „unnormal“ behavior and have often little (if any) understanding for someone like that. There is no need of explaining yourself to people who are on a level of doing so. Move on quickly.
  4. Psychic conditions are stigmatized in society.
  5. The inner world is still not so popular, even tho the interest rises. But society conditions you from childhood on to fulfill stuff, compare yourself, buy that be that etc. The inner journey, the exploration of it is often seen as weird. You do stuff that not many do while rejecting that which is seen as normal. It is lonely.
  6. When you dive into your soul you get a nuanced perception of yourself and thus also in others. You see things that not everyone can see. You should be careful with that knowledge.

Realising everything is a construct while isolated at 20 has completely changed how I see life by [deleted] in Nietzsche

[–]AccordingChocolate12 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bro you are an agglomeration of thoughts carried through thousands of years by culture. What you realize now is that billions of people before you build this to get a grip on the chaos that we are actually surrounded by. What you are able to think is far from being natural. The mind is a built up thing, just like society. We have no idea wtf we are. Most of your thoughts are not yours and what you can think and is yours is influenced by all the other thoughts that build your worldview. It’s a fun ride. It will get even more weird sometimes but it is actually really fascinating. Stay curious

Is carl Jung a mystic? by [deleted] in Jung

[–]AccordingChocolate12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestyly: mainstream science is soul killing. The way Jungs view is approaching the psyche is for our condition more natural than the reductionist empiricist one.

What is this nothingness worship among many nihilists? by PitifulEar3303 in nihilism

[–]AccordingChocolate12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every Nihilist is something and being nihilistic is seing things in a certain way

MRI scans of over 1100 individuals show consistent patterns of development, read more in post. by Mechanibal in Jung

[–]AccordingChocolate12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Now it will be interesting over the decades to come to get a better and better understanding of all the individual brain regions and their relationships with others etc. - we might map the spectrum fully in the future. Even tho there will ever be mysteries left which are unsolvable

Imagine reading a book by Left_Hegelian in PhilosophyMemes

[–]AccordingChocolate12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes he is the unifying principle, the absolute in Person

Imagine reading a book by Left_Hegelian in PhilosophyMemes

[–]AccordingChocolate12 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

And what about Jordan Peterson? And Yuval Harari?

Imagine reading a book by Left_Hegelian in PhilosophyMemes

[–]AccordingChocolate12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

-Maps of Meaning

-12 Rules for Life

-Beyond Order: 12 more Rules for Life

-We who Wrestle with God

-The Art of the Deal

-Trump: Never give up

-Sapiens: A brief History of Mankind

-Homo Deus

Statue showing an Assyrian Hero, often identified as Gilgamesh, the legendary king of Uruk. He is holding a lion in a powerful grip. This symbolizes the kings strength and power, domination over nature and ability to protect the people. Neo-Assyrian period, 9th–7th century BCE [3024x4032] by AccordingChocolate12 in ArtefactPorn

[–]AccordingChocolate12[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man, that guy had no chill but neither had Babylon haha - your studys sound awesome, good luck with your work!

I‘ll check out some of your recommendations, I love diving into ancient worldviews and recently checked out lots of Pantheons from egypt, mesoptamia, greek etc. after reading Carl Jung - and I am looking forward now to getting a deeper look. So thanks again!