In this, it is similar to computer protocol, that relies on a language and set of commands to respond to its functions. It brings a touch of the mechanical to the human experience but in comparison to the convolution of sensations, sometimes experienced, it is a rare opportunity to make clear issues that would otherwise be blurred.
In primitive and underdeveloped societies, the profile fits closely the experiences of proto man. Without the burden of too much experiences, the proto individual is able to gain easy access to the domain/epistemology experience that allows him to see things simply in terms of right and wrong and respond accordingly.
Living as they do next to the rest of the world, it sometimes leads to a curious mix of cultures and inter-dimensional relations. Strangely, the mind of the proto may most resemble the workings of a computer and if we allow the opportunity, the proto may surprise many with his understanding.
To the urban individual, self discovery comes together with hefty bags of our perceived sense of progress. There's more to do and the rewards are more, but the quantity of information processed, in an environment based on social decorum, far exceeds the volume managed by protoman.
List of Issues
The steps in the process may resemble something like this " open review of the architecture of the consciousness, affirmation of existing phenomenon, links and relations, universal / global and individual self identities, male and female, children, youth, fathers, mothers and grandparents, good and evil, passion vs knowledge, duties in life, nature of the will, individual vs group volition, motivation, the world and its divisions, the stars and the constellations, the nature of matter, self integration in society and relations, nature of matter, god and Charles Darwin etc.
At the risk of being proverbial in such an environment, it ought to be said that it's all within our capability to do so.
Add to that a reading list and you're okay for 30 summers. Mixed with the daily routine of life, it becomes ordinary, and is identified with the normal course of a lifetime.
High Risk Areas
It wouldn't be untrue to say that a person takes their life in their own hands when they begin such an inquiry into the meaning of life. The risks can be very real.
For a start, the practitioner is disengaged from contact with his ego. This releases the functioning of the mind to play with its untethered images, much like a theater. From here, it learns to apply itself and be creative. It's purposes are defined and aim at fulfilling its own sense of void in the ego.
The experience of loss of contact with the ego, unhinges the mind from its usual concerns. This introduces a frivolity in matters and the practitioner is forced to seek contact with the jiva or reproductive function to substitute for the ego. The world of the jiva however is not populated by real people. It is instead populated by memories of past lives and experiences in the cittas. The mind experiences loss of contact with the routine of social reality. Beyond the usual experiences of alienation, the individual learns to stand on their own two feet and speak for themselves, representing issues that may be of unique self importance.
In some ways the experience of theater brings the individual to an area of its strongest and fondest recollections. It engages them but hungers for something solid. The experiences of anxiety and paranoia are encountered but the practitioner learns to direct it to his search. These are powerful forces, no longer bound to society and the world, but expressing themselves as the nature and will of the individual. They seek the permanent, the one that will resolve the many. Its force pushes open doors and makes the memories of yesteryear respond eagerly to the individual's pointed needs.
As the individual places these experiences in context, he realizes that he is recapitulating his experiences for a summary or description of its purpose. The mind observes and learns and goes with the flow until it is able to put together short schemes of experiences that may tie to a whole and explain the causes for an attitude or quality trait found in the individual today. As joy accompanies discovery, the individual realizes that he is coming to know some things for sure. This stabilizes the sense of alienation.
The certainty that these small discoveries foster, raises the dormant TP factor. He has to apply himself now to understand its workings, the trigger for his impulses and find a way to moderate the experience. He sources his needs from the physical world around him and adapts it for his purpose. Soon he is cultivating an application, testing and evaluation of results and will be able to remedy the diminishing parts of his experience. He grows and looks forward to more growth.
The experimentation continues to draw risks, especially in a work environment, financial commitments, relations and other steadfast social conditions. A social glitch experienced would threaten the fragile nature of the experience to-date. The individual must learn to endure.
His own grand expectations can take a heavy toll. The individual must keep his expectations measured and assess their impact on his confidence. Learning to bite off only what one can chew is a good measure.
The Celt
A coat or a gown, when worn on a person, expresses a whole sense of the one individual. It is a convenient way of viewing the growing reconstruction of oneself and bring it to common parlance. It is also convenient as a fabric of identity that draws many fine threads from the experiences of the cittas.
The term Celt is drawn from a historical community of Europeans in Western Europe and parts of Great Britain. Their traditions and druid ways still attract a great deal of interests. Their history and efforts at the cultivation of a community, has a remarkable place in history and is the basis of much of the world's social experience.
Their experience forms a remarkable role model for the individual today, and a study of English history is a useful effort for understanding our beginnings of the experience of society in the world.
In the individual, a similar phenomenon is taking place for the re-consolidation of lost experiences and the rediscovery of new ones. The cultivation of acceptance for these new views and the eventual institutionalization of these beliefs are an important part of the achievement.
Even while the individual is working at substituting for previous beliefs, he is at the same time working to preserve the previous concepts as a basis of comparison for his new perceptions. He hopes to transform the original and bring into experience a sense of common aim, love and the relation of the common self to its new perceptions.
In the individual, this implies a return to the relationship he had with his dream of innocence and put it in perspective. In addition, he needs to fine tune his reformist attitude. This is to alter its experience as a pathfinder to that of a surfer riding the wave. While the reforming role relates to the achievement as ego, the human moderates the experience by relating to and participating in the needs of the world and society.
The cream of the achievement lies in the encounter with the source of nature. One comes to view that as that in us that seeks to fulfill its enthusiasm for its own continuity of evolutionary zeal. The human engages such a personality in him and comes to terms with his own contribution. It may be the beginning of a new friendship. Such a friendship, where it is experienced, would be viewed as a phenomenon in the 21st century. The sensation is that, the human experience may well be coming to express itself clearly in the annals of creation for the first time.
In this, we may be coming to a greater conscious experience in the way that we relate to the physical world and universe.