by Gary 'Z' McGee
May 10, 2024
from
Self-InflictedPhilosophy Website
Gary Z McGee,
a former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned
philosopher, is the author of Birthday Suit of God and The Looking
Glass Man. His works are inspired by the great philosophers of the
ages and his wide-awake view of the modern world. |
Disconnected
by Stupidgiant
Pinterest
"Being unconquerable
lies within yourself."
Sun Tzu
1.) The secret to happiness is freedom
"To win true freedom
you must be a slave to philosophy."
Seneca
You want to be happy? Be free...!
Free yourself from your false self,
your culture, your expectations.
As Rumi advised,
"Be melting snow. Wash yourself of yourself."
Surrender yourself to inquiry.
Forfeit certainty.
Sacrifice answers
to questions.
Allow fate to drag you kicking and screaming into awe.
Give up all hope for a "meaning to it all" and instead create a
deeper meaning of your own.
Gain mastery over what you think you know by not allowing your mind
to settle.
Keep the open-ended question mark ahead of the
dead-in-the-water period point.
Keep freedom of "I don't know" ahead
of the fetters of "I know," lest "knowing" become the prison of a
comfort zone.
2.) The secret to freedom is
courage
"The secret to happiness is freedom.
And the secret to freedom is
courage."
Thucydides
You want to free yourself from your tiny comfort zone?
Keep courage
ahead of comfort...!
A hero must face the dragon of cultural
conditioning with the courage to recondition it.
Otherwise, he
remains a pawn on the chessboard of life. Be a hero over culture
rather than a victim to it. Act with courage lest comfort make you
complacent.
Self-discipline creates competence.
Competence creates confidence.
Confidence creates courage.
With enough courage you can conquer
anything.
You can flip any script, turn any table, push any
envelope, checkmate any king.
You can gain an unconquerable
imagination and count coup on the gods.
3.) The secret to courage is curiosity
"Be a free thinker
and don't accept everything you hear as truth.
Be
critical
and evaluate what you believe in."
Aristotle
You want to keep courage foremost in your arsenal? Keep curiosity
ahead of certainty.
You are not only fighting your pride, your ego, and your
self-importance; you are fighting their symptoms:
certainty, blind
faith, and dogmatic thinking.
To prevent certainty from bringing you
to ruin, you must ruin your certainty. You do that with the blurring
ninja punch of curiosity.
The ability to observe without believing is the highest form of
wisdom. Curiosity about thinking is the cure for believing what you
think.
As Einstein advised,
"The important thing is not to stop
questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing."
And that
reason is the suspension of belief.
4.) The secret to curiosity is the
suspension of belief
"The root of suffering
is
attachment".
The Buddha
If the root of suffering is attachment, then the root of attachment
is belief. Suspend belief.
When you suspend your beliefs, you
suspend your religious-political-scientific sycophancy long enough
to see the big picture. You get power over the power that your
beliefs have over you.
In short:
you get out of your own way long enough to realize that
the propaganda machine of your brain and the political claptrap
clapping back and forth is nothing more than a culturally
conditioned song and dance.
When you suspend belief, you transcend attachment.
You attain a
fearless state of nonattachment, where you finally see how
everything is attached to everything else.
5.) The secret to the suspension
of belief is getting ahead of fear
"Elevate yourself
above the battlefield."
Robert Greene
The root of belief is fear...
Become curious about your fear.
Transform it into a whetstone. Use it to sharpen your mettle. Use it
to test your soul. Use it to forge a character so anti-fragile that
your fragility shatters against it.
Take the lasso of your comfort zone and toss it around the horizon
of your fear. Pull it toward you. Get it behind you where it can
push you further rather than ahead of you where it will only hold
you back.
Fear is not an obstacle but a doorway. Tear the doors off the Ivory
Tower and tell the oracles that they have failed. Ride like
lightning, crash like thunder.
Live dangerously. Live on purpose,
with purpose.
As Courage Wolf said,
"Climb the highest mountain and punch the
face of God."
6.) The secret of getting ahead of
fear is conquering death
"Set your life on fire.
Seek those who fan your flames."
Rumi
The root of fear is death.
Rebel against despair and nihilism.
Become the paradox flashing across the stage, "full of sound and
fury, signifying nothing," but becoming something through the
blood-and-bone knowledge of your existential fury, your unblinking
ability to "rage, rage against the dying of the light."
Such rebellion unburies God.
It reignites the Phoenix.
It lights up
the dark.
It shines a blacklight into the blinding light of culture.
It reveals the primordial truth:
energy cannot be destroyed only
transformed...
Your spirituality becomes a firebrand so red-hot that the
outflanking universe has no choice but to take it right on the
flank - seared and sealed, and put on notice that you're not just a
speck in the universe, you are the entire universe in a speck.
7.) The secret to conquering death
is a good sense of humor
"If you can laugh in the face of adversity,
you're bulletproof."
Ricky Gervais
You are going to die.
Rescue isn't coming.
No God is coming to save
you from your sins.
No so-called authority is coming to bail you
out.
No hero is coming to liberate you from taking responsibility
for your own freedom.
The only rescue is a good sense of humor.
The only God is laughter.
The only hero is wit.
When humor is God, all false gods die.
When
humor is the only authority, all seriousness dies. Boundaries
dissolve. Placation and sentimentality are laid to rest. Horizons
manifest. You are finally free to laugh, to play, to be fully alive.
In the throes of good humor, death shrinks into a null set, a
nothingness, a moot point.
It becomes merely something to weigh your
lightheartedness against.
A laughable inevitability.
A pitiful
parenthesis.
A petty destination that the "journey being the thing"
scoffs and finally conquers.
As
Marcus Aurelius said,
"Death smiles at us all; all we can do is
smile back."
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