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Mental Training - The New World Psyche PDF Print E-mail

ACTION:  You can train yourself mentally as a Citizen Soldier. In Silence

The world is on a 24/7 news and information cycle.   You have to control the information input, otherwise it's like opium and crack combined.  Your entire life will be chewed up trying to keep up on information.  In his day, Sir Isaac Newton reportedly read every book in the Western world printed in English, Latin or French.   That's now impossible.  Align your world, interests and goals with your information.  Don't become myopic.  Human beings needs to branch out into new worlds because they are curious.   They make connections between Old and New Knowledge to develop new ideas, behaviors, pathways, inventions and more.

But still, you can't eat all the food in the world.  No reason that you should digest all the Information in the world.   Be particular.  And once in a while, just shut everything off and go sit in your backyard.  Be Still.  Soon the birds will return around you.  Find a Stillness there and think.

Call it what you want.  Zen. Inner Peace.  Prayer.  Silence. Quiet.

 

In this article in the Financial Times, "I have fallen into recession’s web of fear" author Lucy Kellaway discuss the emergence of a global psyche in regard to the recession and economic malaise.   Her point is fascinating insofar as the psychological state i.e., confidence can change the course of an economic path.

What strategies can we draw from this observation that can change the course from Radical Islam and loss of Western freedom toward Democracy and Freedom.  If you read her statement, it is the daily onslaught of messages - all negative about the economy - that are bombarding her consciousness.

This is our first experience of recession in the internet age, and so far I don’t like it one little bit. You could say that the internet makes the recession more bearable as there are all those networks to help people get jobs and there is Ebay for buying things second-hand.

 

Yet such things are trivial compared to what the internet is doing to our confidence. The internet has created a global psyche. The web has mentally joined us at the hip, so we can no longer put our heads in the sand. If that sounds painfully contorted, it is because it is. Just as no country can decouple itself from the ailing global economy, none of us as individuals can decouple ourselves from the ailing global psyche.

Through blogs, websites and e-mails the world’s economic ills are fed to us on a drip all day long. It is not just that we hear about bad things faster, we hear about more of them and in a more immediate way. My worries become yours, and yours become mine. On the internet, a trouble shared online is not a trouble halved. It is a trouble needlessly multiplied all over the world. After reading this article, people in Australia will surely start worrying about my paint colours, too.

This would not matter so much if it were not for the fact that confidence is the medicine that cures a recession; and all this sharing of bad news leaves one with no confidence at all.

 

But how can we make people realize that this emotive element of economic fear can be translated into a societal acknowledgement of Radical Islam's influence?   Fear is one of the most powerful human emotions.   We can utilize fear to make people aware but then require courage (a tougher emotional state to find) to compel people to act for their own benefit toward Human Rights, Democracy and Freedom.

 

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