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[–]leculdesac 12 insightful - 1 fun12 insightful - 0 fun13 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

Oh, sure. So, to me, lots of terms used in a variety of spiritual traditions as well as science correspond to the same universal truth, which is that there is some part of us that can connect with something a lot larger than ourselves when we radically quiet our minds and connect with our "unborn nature," our "unconditioned nature." This is consistent with Buddhism, mystical Christianity (Christ within), and the science of neuroplasticity.

So, when Paul said, in Christ there is no male and female, or enlightenment teachers refer to some deep part of yourself that is beyond the polarities and conditioning of this word, or 12 step programs talk about a "higher power" and how trusting in that can change a lifetime of destructive behavior, or neuroscientists talk about adult neuroplasticity and how sustained meditation can lead to radical changes in attitude/opportunity, they're talking about connecting with some part of ourselves much greater than worldly identity. It's much greater than our privileged status and even more importantly it's greater than our traumas and victimization.

This is part of what liberation theology is about--when you're radically able to connect to a sense of something larger, you're much more at peace and paradoxically a lot more effective in addressing oppression, because you have a source of strength, open-mindedness, and capacity to not take the messages of your oppressors personally.

To me, gender identity obsession is the opposite of mindfulness. Instead of stopping to connect with something much deeper in yourself, you're running around obsessing about some false "self" you are and how much you want to control other flawed humans' perceptions of you. It's the antithesis of spirituality. All spiritual teachings encourage us to find an inner space away from our worldly identities, and this movement not only is obsessed with creating a social identity through endless attempts at manipulation, but they actually have conditioned their orgasms to it.

Probably not what you expected. I was an atheist when I was very young, but I realized that identifying a peaceful place of connectedness where you live in the "I don't know" paradoxically opens you up to "miracles," meaning, seeing possibilities that were impossible in your prior conditioned world view. So you can call it neuroplasticity if you want and simply commit to meditation--our words are just vocalisms from a bunch of hairless primates, and they point to the same thing.

Good luck.

[–]-thedarkhorse-[S] 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

I'm not sure I followed all of that but I agree that meditation centred therapy's have been very helpful to people. Anything that does not stand up to real world facts falls under belief to me though.