Felt Yet Unseen
© David Moorhead — March 2008
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It’s one thing to think about the wonders we humans have accomplished over millenniums, but quite another to ponder a great work we humans will have thrust upon us in the early 21st Century.
The great work is not small; it includes all humans. The work appears while regarding what is felt yet unseen. All humans feel all the time. Some humans have words to talk about feelings while others don’t until they must, but out of feelings come what we Earthlings are totally good at—gawking.
A close second to gawking is measuring stuff. We measure vibrations, all of which Nature is elegantly and stunningly composed. We measure stuff we gawk at like the Earth, Moon, Sun, and distances from objects to other objects within the Universe.
We measure our waists for belts, feet for shoes, heads for hats, legs for pants. We measure floors for rugs, windows for glass, walls for paint, properties for houses. We measure budgets so we can buy all that stuff.
Staring very quietly in our faces is the felt yet unseen, and the unseen isn’t easily measured. However, during recent five decades, groups of men, without empathic or altruistic notions, have accumulated measured information. Without our consent, measuring and controlling the collective psychical being—all intentions, possibilities, tendencies—of large populaces of citizenries has become experimentally automated via computer. ¹
After percentages are added to mathematical formulas for, say, propaganda, then paranoia begins binding the psyché of many female and male public servants and scientists for compliance with computer devised possibilities. National leaders, pitted against each other, are negated by hierarchy if leaders (even our favorite ones) don’t play by rules in a manufactured meme of ‘freedom for humanity’ as a façade for personal gain. ²
We taxpaying hirelings are doing our best to exist in confused worlds designed for felt yet unseen explorations in comprehension. Within our personal cosmologies, our great work is to stay awake; to feel, to read, and become savvy to vibrational intricacies of the physical heart and brain and body. We’ve already begun intuiting vexations that could become rapidly paramount within global citizenries.
¹ Refer RAND Corporation.
² Refer synopses from The Trap: What Happened to Our Dreams of Freedom, a BBC documentary, 2007; 165 minutes.
Our constant curiosity
is key
to watching what’s being created.
~ David Moorhead |