What is harmony? Well here's a clue...it isn't some vain, shallow mincer sliding his throbbing, meaty, vacuum-pumped truncheon up some other fags smelly bottom, before his polished, pampered nuts yield their fruity licquer to the sound of flamboyant, effeminate moans. Or a pair of 'lesbian rangers' brutishly slapping their oversized mons pubises together! No. Each one of us represents either one or the other forces (negative/positive, feminine/masculine, or in ancient Chinese wisdom - yin/yang) that create universal harmony. That is, harmony in the Universe, be it the opposing forces which create suns, galaxies and supernovas or atoms, plants, animals and humans. Visual beauty is harmony, but where rebellious humans are concerned, the surface harmony which meets the eye, can be at extreme odds with what is emanating from within. So in this instance, surface harmony can be misleading. When i was a gullible young twat, i was completely taken in by superficial appearances. When i think back now, quite a few of the people who i thought had the greatest looks, were actually pretty smug, arseholish or idiotic looking, something i'd be able to spot a mile off now. And people who i once would have thought looked unattractive can be glowing with positivity or inner beauty, just not so much of it on the initially observable level. Of course, there are those who are as beautiful inwardly as on the surface, and likewise, ugly people who really are ugly. The wisdom i've acquired from my experiences has enabled me to see things more clearly or realistically. Perfect symmetry is not beauty. Perfect symmetry is manmade, controlled and limitive. Life is 'perfectly flawed'. If it was 'perfectly perfect', nothing would ever happen. The flaw keeps it in flux and ever changing, the forces of heat and cold, expansion and contraction, masculine and feminine constantly balancing each other, until perhaps, the beginning (state) and the end (state) meet up and become One? That's when i would imagine it dawns on you, if you are an anti-harmony entity that you have been a self-negating force and, if the anti outweighs the pro...TOSSED INTO THE SEA OF FIRE, uncreating yourself from the next cosmic round! Sorry, i should probably go to bed now.
Why do you think the elites are dividing the sexes, they know the power of family, love and harmony and it is a threat to them.
Taoism - Ageless Wisdom for a Modern World Taoism’s central organizing principle is the interconnectedness of all life with its flow of continuous change. Nowhere is this idea expressed in such a unique and exquisite manner as in the concept of yin-yang, which describes the underlying unity of life through the interplay of opposites. Taoist writings state that all things and all processes contain two primal energies or forces. These two basic aspects of manifestation often are described as masculine and feminine, light and dark, negative and positive, creative and receptive. The original meaning of the term signified the light and dark sides of a mountain. Our common English-language expression, "there are two sides to everything," expresses this concept quite succinctly. From a Taoist point of view, however, these two polar opposites are not seen as distinctly separate or in conflict, but rather as interdependent and complementary. In actuality, one creates the other. "Is there a difference between yes and no?", Lao Tzu, one of Taoism’s immortal sages, asks. "Is there a difference between good and evil?" His reply is that "Under heaven all can see beauty only because there is ugliness. All can know good as good only because there is evil." These two sages are telling us is that the seeming opposites of life - the "yes" and "no," the "good" and "bad," are merely expressions of a deeper underlying unity, the connectedness that characterizes life in all its forms and processes. They advise us to not get caught in these apparent contradictions, rigidly choosing one side against the other. We are urged, rather, to perceive them in their relatedness, to experience how one grows out of the other. In so doing we can partake in the reconciling of opposites, "in blunting the sharpness and untangling the knot," as Lao Tzu states. Nature’s tendency is to constantly move to a state of harmony and balance. The idea of change leading to harmonious balance underlines another aspect of yin-yang. These two polar forces are not static or rigidly locked in battle with one another. "That which shrinks must first expand. That which fails must first be strong. That which is cast down must first be raised." Lao Tzu is telling us that life is a process. There is constant change, one thing flowing into another, one thing becoming another. Furthermore, within this constant change is a recognizable cyclical pattern, like the alternating of day and night or the turning of the seasons. For all things there is a natural expansion and contraction, on both the most minute and grandest levels. It is the breathing pattern of life itself. What implications does this have for us on a personal level? How can we apply the concept of yin-yang in our daily lives? For the past two thousand years traditional Western thinking has been dominated by a dualistic, either-or approach: either something is good, or it is bad; desirable or undesirable; someone is an ally or an enemy. We perceive experiences to be either positive or negative and we expend much energy in trying to eradicate what we consider to be negative. From a Taoist point of view, this is like trying to erase the negative current from electricity because it is not "positive." Because we perceive ourselves as separate from others, we often find ourselves in opposition to them, locked into "this" and "that," merely because of skin color, language, or beliefs. Taking these "differences" for the way things "really are" leads to breakdowns in relating, arguing, fighting, and even killing. All because of "this" and "that." We do the same with ourselves. We dislike or disown parts of ourselves and struggle to change, not trusting that our own inner nature, as an expression of the Tao, will of its own accord move towards a harmonious balance. Continued...
This is what i mean: The Cosmic Laws THE LAW OF ETERNAL UNFULFILLMENT The Law of Eternal Unfulfillment states that there never can be completion or fulfillment in any moment. For if there were, there would be no further movement; and as each moment contains within itself all that is essential for that moment, so also each moment contains within itself an emptiness, an unfulfillment that is essential and necessary to lead into the next moment. The Law of Eternal Unfulfillment states that every moment has something missing and is incomplete, and every moment has something that is present, total and complete; and when one accept this Law of Eternal Unfulfillment, the greed-creating obsession to be fulfilled will ceased to be.