Sky wrote:
But then, all of that is dependent upon a belief that we choose to be here in the first place. It will naturally not be compatible with a belief that we are not here of our own free will.
That's why I said initially that it's a faith-based premise.
Glory Jean is preaching it with the
proselytizing certainty of the Christians.
But it's a faith-based belief that cannot be verified. That's my main point.
We don't know what we may or may not have agreed to before we got here. So any belief along those lines is pure speculation.
Jeanniebean is speaking with a tone of authority like this is the way things are like it or not.
She's as bad as the Christians.
My argument is based on the following:
Empowerment = Responsibility.
No Empowerment = No Responsibility.
We can only be responsible for what we have the power to chose.
If we are stuck with limited choices, then our power to chose is limited.
If our power to chose is limited, then clearly our responsibility is also limited.
To me, that is the reasoning behind the "responsible for you own condition" belief.
In it's simplest form, "you didn't choose to get hit by the drunk driver, but you did choose to be in the location where you got hit."
Based on my assertion that
Empowerment = Responsibility, then I would hold that, YES, you were responsible for being in that place. But NO, you weren't responsible for being hit by the drunk driver, because that information was not known to you, and therefore you were not empowered to chose or not chose that event.
No Empowerment = No Responsibility.
I mean, the idea that everyone is responsible for everything that happens to them is actually a dangerous idea.
If you see a homeless person on the street and you believe in this philosophy, then you have to think to yourself, "That person is only homeless because they chose to be homeless".
It's their choice. They are totally responsible for being homeless.
Some thing with the little children who were born in starving countries.
If we agreed to things before we came here, then those little children must have agreed to be born into starving poverty.
It's their choice. It's their responsibility.
I just don't believe that life is that simple.
Gloria Jean preaches this like as if it's the gospel truth.
Let's face it Jeannie baby. It's YOUR BELIEF and it could be WRONG.
We just don't know, and neither do you.
You choose to believe it.
More power to you.
But why preach it like Christianity?
Jeanniebean the "Law of Attraction" Evangelist.
I say that
Empowerment = Responsibility.
No Empowerment = No Responsibility.
If you want to claim that I'm responsible for everything, then you are also claiming that I have the power to do everything.
But I don't.
And even if the "Law of Attraction" is true, I don't know how to wield it's power purposefully.
Therefore I am powerless to use it methodically.
No Empowerment = No Responsibility.
If people have a power, but don't know they possess it nor now how to wield it, then they have no empowerment, even if on some technical level it is somehow available to them.
Ignorance of a power that you might possess is the same as not possessing it.
If you're going to preach "The Law of Attraction" then preach that people
can take control of their lives.
Don't preach that they are already responsible for having that control, if they don't yet know how to wield it.
That'd be like the Christians who tell everyone that they are sinners whether they did anything wrong or not.
Penczak covers this issue nicely in his books.
He talks about the concept of
Empowerment = Responsibility.
He states that as we learn to wield the power of "The Magic of Witchcraft" our responsibility increases with that
Empowerment.
Now that's something I can sink my teeth into.
Responsibility comes with Empowerment, and is directly proportional to it.
Now that I can agree with.
Edited by
Abracadabra
on Mon 12/08/08 12:02 PM