These days, the Sun is activating codon 35, a place of secret gates, miracles, adventure, and easy progress, as described by the Chinese in the I Ching (the Book of Changes) and Richard Rudd in the Gene Keys system.
Is there really easy progress, shortcuts, and miracles?
Or is it wise to look beyond immediate and hurried understanding?
The genetic program cannot be fooled with suggestive, plastic names, with fantasies and illusions; enlightenment cannot be forced, healing or human evolution does not know shortcuts, cannot be hastened in any way, regardless of the tone of supportive voices.
In the chemical context of the genetics of 35, we have the chance to temper adolescent HUNGER (which eternally points outward with the aim of a separate SELF) with the FASTING of maturity, in which the human spirit comes to an understanding with the mind.
Rudd says that here "the spirit is freed from the mind," I dare to say that they will become allies, will look in the same direction, will listen to each other, and we as humanity will have integrated duality, overcome dilemmas, and transcended the enigmas of existence.
The Great Adventure, described in the chemistry of gene 35, involves nothing more than an inner transformation that automatically leads us to another level of consciousness, to collaborative interconnection in the brain, allowing things to be exactly as they are.
And it is not related to the heart as an organ, as is widely circulated in spiritual circles, but it is a palpable and at the same time intangible tissue construct that words still cannot describe but only speculate.
Only then will the mystery of life, which cannot be solved solely by the mind, be discovered and integrated with the all-encompassing spirit.
Existence itself has no problem, but consciousness is crying out for help.
Let us not worry, though, if we do not study the gene keys, if we do not run to courses, therapists, or training.
Every day, life challenges our consciousness, with notions of Attitude.
I believe the True "Adventure" begins with a Mature Attitude.
Attitude is refined in Life, and life is learned from life...
In the phenomenological approach system described by Wilfried Nelles, attitude stands on the 4th level of human evolution and consciousness.
However, it is impossible to rush there.
Running should remain a physical activity and not a mental one.
Perhaps it is no coincidence that level 4 is a culmination, an inclusion, an integration of the previous 3 levels: fetus, child, and adolescent.
The adult can inwardly celebrate what Orthodox Christians celebrate today: the Holy Trinity.
Each entity of the Holy Trinity, the Father, the Son, the Spirit, possesses the same divine unity entirely and in its own way.
But this revelation begins to become evident in maturity.
The modern world is still at the 3rd level of consciousness, the adolescent one... it runs frantically, wants muscles and rapid progress, speeds up natural rhythms, falls from the state of organic trust in life, seeks comfort at any cost, the elixir of eternal youth and life without death, opposes the natural transformation of the body, celebrates the triumph of liberalism, establishes technical or informational monopolies, and many other things that proudly illustrate the shadows of the genetic battery 35-5 from the DNA chain.
And yet, it is not the DNA that has a problem, but its access.
Recent discoveries in the field of genetics reveal to us that genomes are not merely passive victims of random, accidental mutations as believed since Darwin.
Barbara McClintock, a biologist and Nobel Prize laureate, says:
"A goal for the future would be to determine how much knowledge the cell has about itself and how it uses this knowledge in a measured way when confronted with a challenge, monitoring genomic activities and correcting usual errors, sensing unusual, unexpected events, and reacting to them, often by restructuring the genome.
We know about the components of genomes that could be made available for such restructuring.
However, we know nothing yet about how the cell senses danger and how it triggers reactions that are often remarkable."
If a single structural unit of the organism is self-aware, repairs or annihilates itself through genetic programs still unknown to the scientist, we have a duty to ourselves to be able to answer, with patience and discernment, the question: who am I?
The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit...
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