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This discussion explores the radical premise that the human drive for self-improvement is actually an obstacle to genuine fulfillment. According to the text, the act of seeking presumes absence, creating a psychological gap where individuals view themselves as broken projects rather than whole beings. By perpetually chasing a future version of themselves, people engage in refined avoidance, using spiritual or personal growth strategies as a defense mechanism to stay on a "hamster wheel" and avoid the intensity of the present moment. The source argues that true clarity is not an acquisition but a correction of vision, requiring a shift from adding new virtues to relinquishing the illusion of incompleteness. Ultimately, the text suggests that when the search ends, one does not become stagnant; instead, energy is freed from self-obsession to allow for deeper responsibility and a more direct encounter with reality.
By Joseph Michael GarrityThis discussion explores the radical premise that the human drive for self-improvement is actually an obstacle to genuine fulfillment. According to the text, the act of seeking presumes absence, creating a psychological gap where individuals view themselves as broken projects rather than whole beings. By perpetually chasing a future version of themselves, people engage in refined avoidance, using spiritual or personal growth strategies as a defense mechanism to stay on a "hamster wheel" and avoid the intensity of the present moment. The source argues that true clarity is not an acquisition but a correction of vision, requiring a shift from adding new virtues to relinquishing the illusion of incompleteness. Ultimately, the text suggests that when the search ends, one does not become stagnant; instead, energy is freed from self-obsession to allow for deeper responsibility and a more direct encounter with reality.