- Joined
- Sep 23, 2014
- Messages
- 189
I have heard people both on the forum and on the website talk about them "not playing the social game"; about being above that, yet I have some doubts about the validity of such claims.
I was walking around a university campus yesterday people-watching, and I was amazed by all the ways people dressed; all the costumes people wore, and all the things they were trying to say with the way they moved, talked, dressed, etc.
While watching them, I started looking inward at myself, questioning my conviction that I'm not playing the same game. I don't usually think about it, but the way I dress, talk, and overall act, is interpreted and usually categorized (mostly inaccurately, it seems to me) by the people I meet, the same way I do with everyone I meet. My goals are my own yes, but on a macro level, I'm largely bound by roles in a social system.
In that moment it seemed ludicrous to even consider that I don't play the social game, which in our current system is largely hierarchical.
It seemed obvious to me that "not playing the game" is a strategy for playing the game. You convince yourself that you're not playing, but really, you still are. You just play it in some ways better because you believe you aren't.
It's a verbal spell you "cast" on yourself. You say you don't play the game, which thus makes you think you don't.
But in reality, you've just chased your ego up to a higher floor, and now it's identified with the higher self.
It's like beating a drum to catch a fugitive, to use the old Buddhist analogy.
You say "I'm going to get rid of my ego" (social construct), but by so doing your ego is forewarned and just goes one floor up. Your actions are still motivated by the narrow scope of your social reality, it's still just a matter of how you conceptually organize that reality. It's the equivalent of organizing your folders on your computer. It doesn't change the content of the folders though.
It's the same with religious groups. People climb up the hierarchy, trying to liberate themselves from the seemingly mundane social reality, but most practitioners just end up deluding themselves, becoming membots, and living entirely in an us vs. them paradigm.
It's inauthentic, as your identity is based in an ideology.
Can one live outside ideology?
I think so. There are a number of ways to do so, actually, and many occur without active intention of doing so. But I don't want to get into that right now -- I'd rather keep this more focused on the topic at hand.
What do y'all think? Is the concept of "not playing the game" in the GC framework just a verbal spell, or is it a sufficient concept for authentic living? And if you think you've successfully entered a domain of consciousness where you are "not playing the game", what actions did you do to get there, and what were your underlying motivations?
-Howell
I was walking around a university campus yesterday people-watching, and I was amazed by all the ways people dressed; all the costumes people wore, and all the things they were trying to say with the way they moved, talked, dressed, etc.
While watching them, I started looking inward at myself, questioning my conviction that I'm not playing the same game. I don't usually think about it, but the way I dress, talk, and overall act, is interpreted and usually categorized (mostly inaccurately, it seems to me) by the people I meet, the same way I do with everyone I meet. My goals are my own yes, but on a macro level, I'm largely bound by roles in a social system.
In that moment it seemed ludicrous to even consider that I don't play the social game, which in our current system is largely hierarchical.
It seemed obvious to me that "not playing the game" is a strategy for playing the game. You convince yourself that you're not playing, but really, you still are. You just play it in some ways better because you believe you aren't.
It's a verbal spell you "cast" on yourself. You say you don't play the game, which thus makes you think you don't.
But in reality, you've just chased your ego up to a higher floor, and now it's identified with the higher self.
It's like beating a drum to catch a fugitive, to use the old Buddhist analogy.
You say "I'm going to get rid of my ego" (social construct), but by so doing your ego is forewarned and just goes one floor up. Your actions are still motivated by the narrow scope of your social reality, it's still just a matter of how you conceptually organize that reality. It's the equivalent of organizing your folders on your computer. It doesn't change the content of the folders though.
It's the same with religious groups. People climb up the hierarchy, trying to liberate themselves from the seemingly mundane social reality, but most practitioners just end up deluding themselves, becoming membots, and living entirely in an us vs. them paradigm.
It's inauthentic, as your identity is based in an ideology.
Can one live outside ideology?
I think so. There are a number of ways to do so, actually, and many occur without active intention of doing so. But I don't want to get into that right now -- I'd rather keep this more focused on the topic at hand.
What do y'all think? Is the concept of "not playing the game" in the GC framework just a verbal spell, or is it a sufficient concept for authentic living? And if you think you've successfully entered a domain of consciousness where you are "not playing the game", what actions did you do to get there, and what were your underlying motivations?
-Howell