TECHNOLOGY CARRIES A CURSE
August 7th, 2009It seems that manmade inventions which make our lives a little easier always carry with them a curse. If that curse is not acknowledged by the user of the invention, then that person stands to suffer from it. Examined closely, it looks as though that curse is the possibility that with extended use of the manmade invention, the user will suffer the loss of his/her own inner power, their inner ability, even their very memory of ever being able to do for themselves that which the invention was created to do.
Seemingly positive inventions also carry with them a negative side, specifically that in the process of gaining some ‘convenience’, the user may at some point become so accustomed to that device/contrivance, etc., that they become dependant on it, and the negative side/curse of the invention arises in that the user completely forgets that they once lived without this invention and managed to get along without it, having accomplishing themselves what the invention replaces.
Take phones (both land-lines and cell) for example. The invention of the phone replaced (or rather duplicated) an ancient human ability (some call it magic power) that we today call Mental Telepathy. If you ask anyone you see using a cell phone why they don’t just use their own ancient telepathic ability instead, you will most certainly get a response in the form of a question born out of ignorance (“What’s that?”) or disbelief (“That’s nonsense.”) or both.
Another example. There are some yogis who can live amidst the snows of the Himalayans naked as they were born. They practice a secret technique of body temperature control similar (or identical) to the Tibetan practice called Tumo, which can keep them warm in even the most severe cold. Perhaps the rest of us began to wear clothing because at some point in the distant past our ancestors simply forgot how to keep warm as soon as someone wrapped an animal skin around their naked body and noticed its effects—hence the ‘invention’ of clothing. By this logic, it means that ancient humanity who walked around like ‘savages’ or ‘cavemen’ were in fact more spiritually tuned in to their Source than we are today in that they did not need to resort to clothing as we do in order to keep warm. Maybe they were not so dumb as we think—after all, they possessed an inner technology, an inner knowledge that we have lost, forgotten in this modern day. There are many mysteries of the ancient world that modern science cannot answer, mostly due to the currently limited scope of ‘accepted facts’ found within the field of science which always limit the thinking of otherwise intelligent scientists.
Maybe cavemen knew without a doubt they were connected to what we call GOD, and therefore had access to all of the powers of GOD, including how to keep warm, how to procure food with the slightest effort, how to communicate with each other over vast distances. Perhaps clothing, hunting, telephones and even written language are all deviations from the Divine in that they have caused us to forget our own ability to do such things on our own.
Perhaps in some sense technology itself is meant only for those who have forgotten their Divine origin, i.e., for the spiritually ignorant.
Think about that next time you want to buy some piece of technology which advertisements would have you believe “you just can’t live without”.