I respectfully disagree.
I felt more alive after letting go of my life. It wasn't until I stopped being afraid that I truly began to live. Before that I was controlled by all manner of mechanisms (family, friends, society). If I don't play by their rules they will withdraw support, that is the fear. But this isn't entirely true, because what people truly value is love. If you love the world and the people in it, they love you back.
This is an on going process, but meditation has provided me with a glimpse of what I now consider reality. A peace and tranquility live within me. And a side benefit to meditation was loud noises no longer made me jump. I would hear them, assess what it was.. but not jump.
I believed in our limitless potential and began to exercise it. I played with a cat and got faster than it.
I realize now, this should be my blog post. I have so much to say.
I would like to mention, in relation to your post, that after meditating for a while I had a surprising benefit... loud noises no longer made me jump. I would hear them, assess what it was.. but not jump. These seem to me to be in direct opposition to the idea that surviving by instinct is the best method. Clearly being able to think is the benefit of being a man, and to live by instincts alone returns you to the realm of reptiles.
So I do not feel that survival instincts and preservation of data are the meaning of life.
I think we should be searching for 'the loving of life'
Blessing to you, may peace shine thru you.
Namaste
Fully agree with your observation, sir. Perhaps life should not be viewed from prevailing technology. What was life during the time of the caveman when data was not even there, as we know it today. What would life be in a thousand years from now when data might not have relevance or importance that it has today. Moreover, technology is a throw up from life and not the other way around?
i think discernment is important. not all data is created equal.
i think that is something steem is helping with.