Perception of Worth
Values are ambiguous the way words are. We never know what people value or what they don't value. Some people value worth, but how do they value worth? These perspectives would then lie in their heuristics and schemas, which take some time to understand. Wall Street brokers would see the value of worth as a greater increase in the economy. To artists, the value of worth would be to share their works and have it inspire someone someday. However, even though many of us want to experience that complete perceptual experience of others, it's humanly impossible. The closest experience to that perceptual experience is along the lines of empathy and life experiences. Without them, there would be a reduction in connectivity even with the energies. Whether or not the energies can even merge with one another is also highly dependent on other circumstances and variables.
The value of variations is ambiguous to everyone, but it is not as ambiguous to us. Most of the time, we search for it unintentionally. Some of us look for them purposely. Once we gather enough information, they become our heuristics and schemas. Our perspectives. These perspectives than translate into the value of variations. For what it's worth, the element we most value is where we will not hesitate to give up another valuable variation from our perceptual life experience in order to have that. This means that if we were handed a free ticket to a billionaire lifestyle, yet we value family more, but we are lacking it, we will not hesitate to trade away all our money for family life. This distinction and difference in the values of variations are what increases our empathy as well drives us to foster compassion. But, it can play out differently. The value of variations means that from the outsider's perspective, we can see other's variations just as statistically significant as the one we have. The value of wonder is equal to the value of family. The value of money is equal to the value of love. Vice versa. This not only helps us remember our humanity, but it also tells us a lot about duality...where this variation can grant us these life experiences, but that other variation can be a completely different perceptual experience than we know. Once we figure out the value of our variation, we start to wonder: what is it about their variation that makes us desire some form of that even when we say we have the best perceptual life experience ever? Each perceptual life experience has so many variations that have always been valuable. However, when we get so used to the variations that are handed to us on a plate, we take them for granted or we don't even know how valuable they are anymore. We see them as grainy and lackluster, but that isn't the case. When we actually see them for what they are, they conspire to contribute to our cosmic blueprints immensely. We do not need to think about our variations, but we do attach and associate greater negativity and polarization towards it. At times, we forget the wonder in that variation, thinking about how others have a specific variation that we would love to have. But, we must remember that every variation is just as valuable as the other. The billionaire who doesn't have a family to the family who is poor. Both are equally valuable. It is only the other attachments and associations that we have fed into that make them construct itself as weak or better.
There is absolutely no way to completely experience every variation. A greater sense of compassion and empathy can only foster so much, yet every variation reminds us that the perceptual life experience is one to submerge into. Maybe, this is also what makes the reincarnation cycle applicable and plausible...our fifth-dimensional selves might just want more circumstantial differences in each lifetime...
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May 16, 2019
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