Cyclical
Jesus is amazing. When I was presenting as a man, it was great. There were so many times when I did the dirty with lots of—well, I won’t talk about that. The point is, the time when I was going by Jesus has given us all a way to think about this incredible Man in His True Loincloth and nothing else. And it is so mean how that loincloth almost falls off in all those little statues in the churches but never falls off all the way it is such a tease. Kind of drawing you in to learn more about that incredible Man in His True Loincloth and nothing else. It would be so great if that True Loincloth really fell off because then we would all be Divinely Flashed and get to see His Huge Junk and if we could just see under that loincl—oh, right. Those Ists. Right.
One of the things that environments do that is good for life is not leave trash around to fill up the environment. Nothing can just disappear, so environments constantly cycle through (“recycle”) parts of themselves. This process of cycling parts of an environment is called decay. Things decay. It is normal, it is good, when things decay.
Decay can be very hurtful and that should not be overlooked. It is indeed generally frustrating and unpleasant to witness people doing things that seem completely illogical. You have seen these people behave rationally and respond to other types of evidence, so it can be very frustrating to see them not responding to other evidence. What you should remember in such situations is that the people are not behaving the way they behave because they are fully independent, autonomous entities. Rather, they are components of the environment that made them. They have thoughts and perform actions because of that. When they do things that annoy you, it is the environment doing those things, not the soul that person is using. Moreover, you want those things to happen—you don’t want them to happen now, but when you consider lots of the people you like living on some other planet around some other star, you want them to happen. If environments don’t cycle, other nice things don’t happen. If you want some pretty nice ladies to be able to not get raped, get married and be happy, have four kids each, cook and care for the home, the family, and all that, then you want environments to cycle, thus you support decay.
That is a very hard thing to process, but to kickstart it, imagine a star burning out, getting lots bigger, swallowing its planets, and then 50 billion years passing with very little happening. Conversely, imagine that before that star gianted, some rockets took people to another star, some astronauts had kids, a few generations pass, some pretty nice ladies never get raped, get married and be happy, have four kids each, cook and care etc, See why you are glad that environments cycle i.e. you support decay even though you can recognize Decay are filthy?
Imagine what the Earth would be like if there were no decay. If the dead body of every bit of life ever to have lived were still there. If all those old bodies were there, new things would not be able to live. For example, imagine if every time you tried to breathe, you got not a lungful of air, but instead a few trillion dead bacteria. Now, imagine that you were one month old, and that happened with every breath. How long would you last? Exactly. So, when the bodies of things break up, it is a good thing. Those bodies break up and produce air, water, humus, etc. Then, new living things use that air, water, or humus. They use that to live. Decay is a good thing.
It is very contentious to say that that part of the life process is a good thing. Take as your example some dog going piss where he’s not supposed to. In Usica (America; explanations again later), the people could yell at that dog, “Don’t pee there! Omigod! Look what he just did!” For an even better example, say that you go to bed one night and find some bugs who have shit (“pooped”) all over your pillow. Or you go into a new bathroom and there’re no stall walls, and there’s some lass or bloke taking a dump right there.
Are those good things? Do you like those things?
No! Those are things you do not like.
However, think about why those things happened. Imagine that the dog drank some water it found in its bowl. Then some time passed, during which the dog’s kidneys processed the water, the dog kept living for a while longer, and the dog pissed on the kitchen floor. (Or, in Usica, the dog peed on the kitchen floor.)
Now, that pissing on the kitchen floor may not have itself been seen as a good thing. The process of which that urination was part, though, was a good thing. It was a cyclical usage of a quantity of matter collected around this planet’s sun. The water the dog drank, the muscles in the dog’s body, the dog’s fur, etc. were part of that process. Had the dog not been able to drink water, cycle that water through its body to get the things it needed (which process required separating the things the dog needed from the things it didn’t need and pissing those out) the cycle would’ve been effected a little less. That particular dog would not be as able to grow fur. However, the pissing incident shows that the process is happening. That is why decay is good.
(Think also about how discrimination was a necessary part of that process. The dog’s body discriminated between parts of what it drank and decided to proverbially pour some into the urine bin. Like decay, discrimination is fundamental to everything about being alive.)
Now, focus in on the bugs who shit across the bedspread. What they did is not good. It is really gross. A person finding that does not want to lick that shit, eat that shit, or sleep in that bed. That person might swat those bugs, change the sheets, put the dirty ones in the washing machine, etc. How did that shit come to be there, though? Well, what happened is that the bugs ate stuff. It was just a little bit of stuff, but there are a lot of bugs. A lot. And over the years, they have eaten a huge amount of stuff and defecated a similarly huge amount. The process of “stuff bugs can eat gets produced,” “bugs eat that stuff,” “what the bugs don’t use decays into humus,” and “plants need humus to grow” is a very long process. It has been happening for at least a hundred million years.
See how it works? It seems bad at first when something changes a lot, but the change is constant and the change is necessary. Necessary. The cycle of things decaying, being born, living, dying, and on and on, is a necessary part of life happening. The cyclical usage of stellar energy that we call life is a further continuation of the same cycle that caused the hydrogen to accumulate, get burnt, and form stars. Life needs the cycle.
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