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Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

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  • #41
    Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

    D3n1z - I wouldn't even think of going near literal crack. That *hit was introduced to inner cities (and I think of it as another tool of genocide) and is pure evil.

    Anonymouse - My "LDS" posting style is a spiritual "acid test to see the grateful dead." If you pay attention you'll start to use much more than the 5% of your brain that most people know how to use. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grateful_Dead

    I'm working on preventing cancer, too.
    Last edited by Anahita; 05-10-2006, 12:11 PM.

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    • #42
      Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

      np. And yeah, there's nothing wrong with having thoughts that extend beyond they everyday mundane lives we have. It's healthy to use your imagination and dream a little, even if it doesn't follow coherent guidelines. Anonymouse said himself that when man is creative, he is not busy acting "rational".

      I was a dreamer once, but everyone pressured me to think realistically, to set goals that will let me prosper and reach "success". They pressured me to speak in a rational way, and so the result? Well, I conformed to their desires and not my own, and I did a damn good job of it. I feel ashamed of myself, I'm not living life for myself.

      It bothers me that our society beats up anyone who wants to go off on a tangent or thinks of something that takes some imagination to communicate. There are things that cannot be communicated by our standard talk, just as there are connotations in one language cannot be reflected in another. I am doing a poor job of communicating my actual feelings right now, because I am resorting to this style of writing, but in exchange, you get to read all this and come to your personal understanding fairly easily.
      Last edited by jgk3; 05-10-2006, 01:06 PM.

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      • #43
        Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

        Originally posted by jgk3
        np. And yeah, there's nothing wrong with having thoughts that extend beyond they everyday mundane lives we have. It's healthy to use your imagination and dream a little, even if it doesn't follow coherent guidelines. Anonymouse said himself that when man is creative, he is not busy acting "rational".

        I was a dreamer once, but everyone pressured me to think realistically, to set goals that will let me prosper and reach "success". They pressured me to speak in a rational way, and so the result? Well, I conformed to their desires and not my own, and I did a damn good job of it. I feel ashamed of myself, I'm not living life for myself.

        It bothers me that our society beats up anyone who wants to go off on a tangent or thinks of something that takes some imagination to communicate. There are things that cannot be communicated by our standard talk, just as there are connotations in one language cannot be reflected in another. I am doing a poor job of communicating my actual feelings right now, because I am resorting to this style of writing, but in exchange, you get to read all this and come to your personal understanding fairly easily.
        I think those are great points.

        "Man's mind, once stretched by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions.”--Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

        "When you make a film you usually make a film about an idea."--
        Sydney Pollack

        "There is no force so powerful as an idea whose time has come."--Everett Dirksen

        “Every really new idea looks crazy at first.”--Alfred North Whitehead

        "There's no good idea that can't be improved on."--Michael Eisner

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        • #44
          Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

          Originally posted by Anahita
          Just an idea. I posed a question to Anonymouse about how he would feel about me bringing many non-Armenians to join here. He replied to me in a very respectful way. I knew I could ask him because I know he does care. He isn't quite sure. (Correct me if I misunderstand, Anon.)

          I asked him if he thought it is good if I get MANY (maybe like millions) of people to join this site.
          Why on earth would anyone want to?

          Originally posted by Anahita
          If MY messages don't get through, there is always that tactile (soul) learning, though... Please tell me if you don't understand, and what your questions are.
          Anahita, so few of your messages have got through that maybe it is about time you changed your delivery system.
          I'm not going to be nasty to you like some of the other posters, but I've got to say that I am like them in that I also ignore most of your posts because I really can't be bothered to tease from them whatever obscure message they might contain. If you have important things to say, then say them up front and say them clear. And say them in your own words: please, please, please quit with all the song lyrics. Not one more, pleeeeeze.
          Plenipotentiary meow!

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          • #45
            Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

            Didn't the worshippers of the original Anahita get their Goddess's messages by listening to the leaves of willow trees blowing in the wind? Yours, Anahita, are even more cryptic!
            Plenipotentiary meow!

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            • #46
              Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

              Originally posted by bell-the-cat
              Didn't the worshippers of the original Anahita get their Goddess's messages by listening to the leaves of willow trees blowing in the wind? Yours, Anahita, are even more cryptic!
              BEAUTIFUL. Sadly, too few people pay much attention to the wind...

              "The wisdom's in the trees, not the glass windows." --Jack Johnson

              Also, I wanted to remind people that I tend to 'pick on' (or single out) people because I like them and feel they have something important to contribute.

              Some of what I say doesn't seem to make sense (and is intentionally cryptic), but later on people will think, "Oh, now I 'see' what she meant (or didn't mean)."

              Koan: What is the sound of one hand clapping?

              (A wrong answer, to me, would be a slap in the face.)
              Last edited by Anahita; 05-10-2006, 03:34 PM.

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              • #47
                Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

                yeah, it makes people think. Just because most people don't wanna be bothered to use this type of thinking doesn't mean she should give up. This perseverance is part of the message, because she uses her soul as part of her message. Not all of us do such a thing, instead, our message merely exposes the functioning of our minds... This isn't enough, not to me.

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                • #48
                  Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

                  Originally posted by Anahita
                  Some of what I say doesn't seem to make sense (and is intentionally cryptic), but later on people will think, "Oh, now I 'see' what she meant (or didn't mean)."
                  I don't think they will. Posts on message boards don't work that way. If it doesn't make an immediate impact it is lost and might as well have never been said.
                  Plenipotentiary meow!

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                  • #49
                    Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

                    If I had first arrived and simply said, "Hello. I am a literal Goddess. I am sending messages (coded/mused) in music in order to save the planet and humanity. Tune in."

                    The reaction (from closed minds) would have mostly been: she's crazy.

                    Now, most here realize that 'sanity' is often culturally defined.

                    Today, on MMM, on the 5'oclock funnies: the good Armenian Doctor 'diagnosed'... LOL

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                    • #50
                      Re: Bring in many of non-Armenians to learn?

                      Originally posted by Anahita
                      "The wisdom's in the trees, not the glass windows." --Jack Johnson
                      Inside the trees.

                      "Here I was born, and there I died. It was only a moment for you; you took no notice." -- Line from the movie "Vertigo".
                      Plenipotentiary meow!

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