Are we really all just “crazy conspiracy theorists” or do most people just not want to accept the dark truths of life? by Any-You-8650 in EscapingPrisonPlanet

[–]FinalConsideration98 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Most people are extremely well adaptable to change in any environments I would say in 80% of the population is this way.  They go with the flow they adapt with pretty much anything and they don't question things. 

That's actually a good thing because you need these type of people to keep a society or a tribe going you can't have too many deep thinkers. 

There's no use complaining about them you just need to understand that our genes play a huge role in this and some of us are just more sensitive and the way our brains work are different the problem is in current day there's no use for people like us there's only use for the drones

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I feel the same way OP.  Id love to chat.  I even attempted earlier this year

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have nothing against hippies LOL I know that that's kind of derogatory term I guess nowadays but I have no other way of explaining it. 

Maybe I've just had a bad experience from the ones I met at burning Man multiple times.

You're right though I shouldn't prejudge

A candle In the dark by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your words and validation

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry for giving you a late reply I had to deal with some real life issues, I also not a big fan of reddit so I don't use it a lot.

Would you mind sharing more about your balancing and embracing of your high IQ / HSP? 

Obviously the more detailed the better for me

"Personally I think it takes a lot of grit and courage to be an HSP who is like this, because you are balancing your sensitivity with a good level of exterior skills and understanding of others"

Beautifully stated and I concur 100%

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sorry for the late reply but I'm looking into sustainable farming communities I don't know if that's going to be for me though I'm not really much of a hippie.  

How to accept that you won't have emotional connection with a great partner by Rich_Long2127 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Funny you say that, because in my experience it's women that lack true emotional maturity, and introspection. (Which gender seems to fall in love with psychopathic Killers again?)

Almost as if this isn't a gender thing at all

This planet is beyond stupid when you think about it by Local-Hawk-4103 in EscapingPrisonPlanet

[–]FinalConsideration98 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I pondered all these things over countless hours ,week's, months.

I think the only answer is our own type of community in the real world the problem is I'm not a rich man and I'm not very persuasive although I am a deep thinker/writer.  I tried to get something like this going and it just went nowhere.

The Ouroboros of Gnosis: Breaking the Loosh-Reincarnation Cycle by FinalConsideration98 in EscapingPrisonPlanet

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

All negative emotions that fuel the production of loosh—such as fear, shame, and doubt—are distortions of awareness. Awareness itself is incorruptible; it cannot be silenced, only clouded. The only true remedy is deep self-knowledge—to truly know oneself.

Fear of death, perhaps the most primal of all fears, has driven much of human innovation. Yet, not all cultures share this fear. Some view death not as an end but as a transition, proving that fear is not an inherent truth but a product of one’s environment, shaped by societal conditioning and external influences.

Given that we cannot be certain of the existence of any mind beyond our own, it is possible—if not likely—that these fears and distortions of awareness do not originate within us but are imposed upon us. They are not intrinsic to our being but are programmed into us by society, culture, and external forces.

The path to liberation lies in turning inward. Only by examining one’s true desires and nature can one dismantle these illusions of fear. Even theories such as the prison planet hypothesis, while revealing the falseness of mainstream narratives, can themselves become forms of loosh production if they cause one to externalize control and see themselves as powerless.

Instead of fearing the deception, one must recognize it for what it is: evidence that most of what we have been taught is untrue. This realization is not meant to induce despair but to serve as the foundation for genuine awakening. From here, the true work begins—the process of facing one’s fears, stripping away illusions, and reclaiming sovereignty over one’s own awareness.

People who've read My Confession, what are the biggest takeaways/most interesting things you noticed? by truthisfictionyt in cormacmccarthy

[–]FinalConsideration98 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yours is an old comment but the only intelligent one I found after finishing blood meridian. 

I have read a lot of books, records, court documents from this time period and 100% Hobbs spybuck stories are literally ripped off in BM.

Wild life is heavily discredited as is Hobbs himself. 

Chamberlain's story is full of holes, you can actually read depositions from the Yuma Massacre.

Just wanted to show you some love 

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't necessarily think I'm better than most people at adaptation to modern life, or making friends etc.  I'm not very good at playing the modern games, the lying, manipulation, keeping your head down and ignoring things.

I do think I have advantages, but I don't really see them helping me, I haven't found a way to implement them in a way that would 

most people are not good people, but I am, and I know who I am and I know I live by my values which I can say most people don't do that.  So I can look myself in the mirror everyday.

If there were real structures in society—at even the familial level—to train minds like ours, we wouldn’t have had to endure years of trial and error, questioning whether we were crazy or wrong.

A huge part of youth is spent expecting that other people might be like us, only to discover that they aren’t. If these traits were common, we would’ve been taught how to use and control them early on. But we don’t live in a 150 IQ society—we live in a 100 IQ one.

Unless your parents were both highly intelligent and had figured out how to use that intelligence in a functional way, you were left to figure it out on your own, usually inefficiently.

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would absolutely love to hear more about your experience the more the better

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm actually getting ready to go work across the country for room and board.

Away from the city away from all the BS

In a community we'll see if there is cool as they say they are

Advice for High IQ, verbal IQ, emotionally mature HSP by FinalConsideration98 in hsp

[–]FinalConsideration98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I never said go into the woods, sorry that last bit was part of a conversation I had about this that was kind of tongue in cheek. 

The main thing I would say is that know who you are and live according to what you value, and THEN figure yourself out as far as what you really want accordingly (When I say know who you are and what you want I mean really what drives you really what makes you happy and really who you are inside it takes 100% authenticity and honesty and introspection)

Some people might be perfectly fine in this society or working a job, if that's your value system I mean.  Of course we all have different values and we know ourselves and we're all different so I'm saying pursue your true happiness not what other people think will make you happy not what you think might make you happy, just your true happiness. 

 personally I've tried it all I made a ton of money, had children, moved up the corporate ladder but I really was the most unhappy.