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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

There Is No Such Thing As Stability.

There is no such thing as stability. Our minds are born when we're young, externally developed, and torn for non-reasons too complex to grasp. As human beings we feel compelled to solve, compelled to increase our current situations' positives, however negative they may be to others.

The hunger to rationalize life is not developed in the body; it is taught to the child. Step two and speak once—you’re done, because you are no longer a child—you are cognizant. Soon, like everyone else, you will convert to unconsciousness. You will have no choice but to walk with blind-guidance, talk with informed-ignorance, and live with exaggerated sentience.

There is no such thing as stability, because what one sees is not always what one receives. The energy devoted to neutralizing your lives will continue to drain you and in the last moment of your breath, when you think you've surpassed your inability to grasp the circumstances of your turmoil, you will find the death of reason and survival of acceptance.

As people of intricate minds, we plague ourselves with the questions of existence and reason, when reason is only a figment of our imagination. Reason is a creation dedicated to the maintenance of the failure to accept. Reasonably, how could someone survive after being diagnosed to die? Reasonably, how could a child run, when predicted to live in a chair? Unreasonably, how could people be the victims of a new virus every decade?

There is no such thing as stability, because we are born to live and die. Your mind is your foundation, your mind is your resource, but your mind is not a crutch.


In the dawn of day, you will not look ahead to walk. Instead, you will look within yourself. Since self is the abiding being, your understanding and tool, your responsibility--self is your only means of assurance. When struggle begins to clamber to your heals-self increases your resistance and propels you forward. Dependency on man's weak terms of endearment will not suffice.