steve Posted March 7 9 hours ago, old3bob said: And when does silence on matters of violence act to contribute to violence? And when does violence cause silence? Another head hangs lowly Child is slowly takenAnd the violence caused such silence Who are we mistaken Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
old3bob Posted March 7 "You know the prayer 'Holy God, Holy the Firm, Holy the Immortal'? This prayer comes from ancient knowledge. Holy God means the Absolute or All. Holy the Firm also means the Absolute or Nothing. Holy the Immortal signifies that which is between them, that is, the six notes of the ray of creation, with organic life. All three taken together make one. This is the coexistent and indivisible Trinity. "We must now dwell on the idea of the 'additional shocks' which make it possible..." My take is that the silence of the, "Holy the Firm" is an absolute crushing to nothingness, while the silence of "Holy God" is an absolute pure source.... From the book, "In Search of the Miraculous". Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haribol Posted Monday at 11:57 AM On 5.3.2026 at 12:50 AM, steve said: addiction treatment programs are completely inaccessible for most who need them in the US Also, how effective are rehabs? In Norway, not effective at all. I assume this is the case in the US as well? Sorry for going slightly off topic, but this is food for thought if true: Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
zerostao Posted Monday at 02:57 PM Strange never goes away, I don't think. Back in the 1960s, Dr. Strangelove, songs Strange Brew, People Are Strange. Nowadays, some feel like strangers in their homeland. Probably nothing strange at all, said the stranger, who rode off into the sunset. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haribol Posted Monday at 03:08 PM 1 minute ago, zerostao said: Nowadays, some feel like strangers in their homeland. Probably nothing strange at all, said the stranger, who rode off into the sunset. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx's_theory_of_alienation Seems to me that something happened around the 1800s and has only gotten worse since then. If I am no mistaken, the concept of existential angst was pretty much non existent until that time. At least we don’t have writings to attest to it. If you still considering learning the language of the north, here is a poem for you: Jeg ser (1893, Obstfelder) Spoiler Jeg ser Jeg ser på den hvite himmel, jeg ser på de gråblå skyer, jeg ser på den blodige sol. Dette er altså verden. Dette er altså klodenes hjem. En regndråpe! Jeg ser på de høye huse, jeg ser på de tusende vinduer, jeg ser på det fjerne kirketårn. Dette er altså jorden. Dette er altså menneskenes hjem. De gråblå skyer samler seg. Solen ble borte. Jeg ser på de velkledte herrer, jeg ser på de smilende damer, jeg ser på de lutende hester. Hvor de gråblå skyer blir tunge. Jeg ser, jeg ser… Jeg er visst kommet på en feil klode! Her er så underlig… Skrik, Munch, 1893 (same year) 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted Monday at 03:47 PM 33 minutes ago, zerostao said: Strange never goes away, I don't think. Back in the 1960s, Dr. Strangelove, songs Strange Brew, People Are Strange. Nowadays, some feel like strangers in their homeland. Probably nothing strange at all, said the stranger, who rode off into the sunset. And don't forget Deep Purple's Strangeways. Early in the morning in the early 1990s I had it in my ears, coming from my Sony Walkman player, en route to my job in New York. The stranger who rode off into the sunset on the New Jersey Transit bus is that version of me. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
steve Posted Monday at 04:19 PM 4 hours ago, Haribol said: Also, how effective are rehabs? In Norway, not effective at all. I assume this is the case in the US as well? I can’t quote any data but there are a wide range of programs. I suspect the efficacy is related to the price here but that’s not necessarily the case Recidivism with addiction is certainly very high. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted Monday at 05:22 PM On 3/4/2026 at 3:50 PM, steve said: addiction treatment programs are completely inaccessible for most who need them in the US Had a conversation with someone's lawyer once, about a person who was to stand trial where they would decide whether to send that person to jail or, alternatively, to a mental health facility. A drug addiction wasn't involved, it was textbook schizophrenia, and the person wound up serving time. The lawyer told me that it was a pity drugs weren't involved, because otherwise a treatment program would be available instead of jail, but if someone's just crazy without being an addict, they're shit out of luck. Doesn't mean a treatment program would be efficient for drugs, but just imagine the irony... "it's a pity they're not on drugs, that would at least give them a chance someone would try to do something to help." 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
liminal_luke Posted Monday at 06:33 PM (edited) 1 hour ago, Taomeow said: Had a conversation with someone's lawyer once, about a person who was to stand trial where they would decide whether to send that person to jail or, alternatively, to a mental health facility. A drug addiction wasn't involved, it was textbook schizophrenia, and the person wound up serving time. The lawyer told me that it was a pity drugs weren't involved, because otherwise a treatment program would be available instead of jail, but if someone's just crazy without being an addict, they're shit out of luck. Doesn't mean a treatment program would be efficient for drugs, but just imagine the irony... "it's a pity they're not on drugs, that would at least give them a chance someone would try to do something to help." My partner Jose is a sweet and gentle person and also someone who suffers with psychosis. Several years back he was considering carrying a knife around with him because he was convinced that strangers wanted to hurt him. I told him: no knives. It´s easy to imagine him attacking someone if he was convinced he was about to be kidnapped or killed -- in his mind it would of been self-defence. People like Jose need compassion and treatment, not punishment. Edited Monday at 06:34 PM by liminal_luke 2 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
steve Posted Monday at 08:04 PM Another irony with these situations is that psychosis is arguably more responsive to treatment than addiction. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haribol Posted Monday at 08:41 PM I belive that the issue with most sorts of treatments, is that they attempt to remove the symptoms rather than the underlying cause or disease. No wonder people go crazy as the world works today. There needs to be taken a more holistic approach, I belive. Quote Alexander’s experiments, in the 1970s, have come to be called the “Rat Park.1 Researchers had already proved that when rats were placed in a cage, all alone, with no other community of rats, and offered two water bottles-one filled with water and the other with heroin or cocaine-the rats would repetitively drink from the drug-laced bottles until they all overdosed and died. Like pigeons pressing a pleasure lever, they were relentless, until their bodies and brains were overcome, and they died. But Alexander wondered: is this about the drug or might it be related to the setting they were in? To test his hypothesis, he put rats in “rat parks,” where they were among others and free to roam and play, to socialize and to have sex. And they were given the same access to the same two types of drug laced bottles. When inhabiting a “rat park,” they remarkably preferred the plain water. Even when they did imbibe from the drug-filled bottle, they did so intermittently, not obsessively, and never overdosed. A social community beat the power of drugs. https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/what-does-rat-park-teach-us-about-addiction I like to listen to Gabor Mate quite a lot. Strikes me as incredibly warm, wise and thoughtful. He specializes in addiction, I belive. There are plenty of talks off him out there, and if you give him five minutes, I think a lot of you will like him: 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cobie Posted Tuesday at 11:33 AM 16 hours ago, liminal_luke said: My partner Jose is a sweet and gentle person ... I did get that impression already from the little drawing of the (banner} horse. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark Foote Posted Tuesday at 04:54 PM 22 hours ago, liminal_luke said: My partner Jose is a sweet and gentle person and also someone who suffers with psychosis. Several years back he was considering carrying a knife around with him because he was convinced that strangers wanted to hurt him. I told him: no knives. It´s easy to imagine him attacking someone if he was convinced he was about to be kidnapped or killed -- in his mind it would of been self-defence. People like Jose need compassion and treatment, not punishment. There's also this: Quote Delusional disorder is a type of psychotic disorder. Its main symptom is the presence of one or more delusions. ... People with delusional disorder often experience non-bizarre delusions. Non-bizarre delusions involve situations that could possibly occur in real life, such as being followed, deceived or loved from a distance. ... There are different types of delusional disorder... Persecutory: People with this type of delusional disorder believe someone or something is mistreating, spying on or attempting to harm them (or someone close to them). People with this type of delusional disorder may make repeated complaints to legal authorities. ... Delusional disorder is different from schizophrenia because there aren’t any other psychotic symptoms other than delusions. In addition, in contrast to schizophrenia, delusional disorder is relatively rare, and daily functioning isn’t as impaired as it is in schizophrenia. ... Delusional disorder most often occurs in middle to late life, with the average age of onset being 40 years. The persecutory and jealous types of delusional disorder are more common in men. ...Approximately 0.05% to 0.1% of the adult population has delusional disorder. ... Delusional disorder doesn’t usually significantly affect a person’s daily functioning, but the severity of the delusion may gradually get worse. Most people with delusional disorder can remain employed as long as their work doesn’t involve things related to their delusions.Cleveland Clinic, Delusional Disorder And this: Quote Alcoholic hallucinosis is a neuropsychiatric disorder characterized primarily by auditory hallucinations, typically experienced as third-person voices that are derogatory or commanding in nature. These hallucinations occur in the context of chronic alcohol use or during withdrawal and are accompanied by paranoid symptoms and intense fear, all presenting in clear consciousness without clouding of sensorium. ...The hallucinations may manifest as fragments of conversation or music and can be associated with secondary delusions or perseveration; visual hallucinations, although less common, may also occur. ScienceDirect, Alcoholic Hallucinosis I guess the difference is bizarre vs non-bizarre hallucinations. From the Cleveland Clinic article: Non-bizarre delusions are different from bizarre delusions, which include beliefs that are impossible in our reality, such as believing someone has removed an organ from your body without any physical evidence of the procedure. I sympathize. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nungali Posted yesterday at 06:48 AM I joined a new 'magic' (and related subjects ) forum ... of course I am in trouble there already It is a strange place and although has some worthwhile gems , it has, of course a lot of modern people that think they are learning valid stuff from crappy youtubes and people who claim a lot but also want a lot of money for any 'teachings ' So I try to offer an historical and somewhat academic view on things ..... Oooooooo ... 'unpop ' ! Here is the strange thing ; its full of crap like Vampireism , which is considered a real and valid 'path'. Nowadays it's any magic you use to suck off other people ! Its valid form of 'path' apparently . There is also a post about some crap 'Order' that claims ancient descent from the Welsh Marshes , they use pain and suffering .. or cause it ... to feed it to their demonic entities ... which now days realtes to , apparently , a neo-Nazi consciousness that 'gets off ' on suffering, violence, racism, child pornography ..... and another set of cults in Sth America that the cartels follow , that use the pain and agony of their tortures ... they use for intimidation' , again to offer to their 'Gods' in return for 'services and favors ' . Also they not only seem to turn a bliond eye to outright insults and ad-hominim attacks , they laugh at at it and seem to enjoy it , and dont mod people for that . Then a Christian guy turns up , unrelated to all this and in another subject and first excuses his presence there ; ' I am just curious and I actually like a lot of you guys ' and hits me with some simplistic and ignorance based challenges about the Bible . I responded ... as I do and ... wait for it . I get modded for 'Christian bashing ' and a banner put over my post that I did so .. Obviously ... I am a 'stranger ' there ; 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mark Foote Posted 13 hours ago 13 hours ago, Nungali said: Obviously ... I am a 'stranger ' there ; (That's what you get for) Waking Up in Vegas: 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
old3bob Posted 11 hours ago well Katy does have nice teeth... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nungali Posted 11 hours ago 34 minutes ago, old3bob said: well Katy does have nice teeth... We could extract them , offer them to demons , in return for luck in betting on horse races . .... but we should not make judgement on her appearance ... that would not be 'nice behavior ' . Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
old3bob Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 57 minutes ago, Nungali said: We could extract them , offer them to demons , in return for luck in betting on horse races . .... but we should not make judgement on her appearance ... that would not be 'nice behavior ' . I hope prices for dental work down under are not nearly as high as in the states, like $1200 for a crown or root canal ! Btw, with all the genetic stuff going on when will we see transplantable lab grown teeth? (not the vampire type) Edited 10 hours ago by old3bob 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted 9 hours ago 18 minutes ago, old3bob said: I hope prices for dental work down under are not nearly as high as in the states, like $1200 for a crown or root canal ! Btw, with all the genetic stuff going on when will we see transplantable lab grown teeth? (not the vampire type) The first time I heard about the scientific breakthrough growing them, whether in the lab or even in one's own mouth, was at the turn of this century. Since then they announced that breakthrough at least a dozen times. The last time it was Japanese scientists, a couple of months ago. My guess is, before they bankrupt a $600 billion global dental industry the breakthrough will keep happening and the natural replacement teeth will always be just around the corner. Just as the cancer industry, projected to globally reach a number that is way too pretty to mess with -- $25 trillion by 2050 -- is guaranteed to produce every breakthrough under the sun. Man, I love scientific breakthroughs. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nungali Posted 6 hours ago 3 hours ago, old3bob said: I hope prices for dental work down under are not nearly as high as in the states, like $1200 for a crown or root canal ! Its bad enough ! When I went to get dentures the dentist seemed rather shocked that I had so many teeth missing and he asked me ; '' Did a dentist remove all those teeth ? '' Me; '' No ... prostitutes did that . '' Him; '' Is that some sort of SM thing ? !! '' Me; ''' Oh no ! Not for me it isn't . It's just that charge a LOT less ! '' 3 hours ago, old3bob said: Btw, with all the genetic stuff going on when will we see transplantable lab grown teeth? (not the vampire type) I mentioned that to a dentist years back and he seemed to think things were heading that way . . . oh wait , no .... I suggested implants into the gums of dental stem cells so the teeth grow back into the sockets insitu ' . Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nungali Posted 6 hours ago 2 hours ago, Taomeow said: The first time I heard about the scientific breakthrough growing them, whether in the lab or even in one's own mouth, was at the turn of this century. Since then they announced that breakthrough at least a dozen times. The last time it was Japanese scientists, a couple of months ago. My guess is, before they bankrupt a $600 billion global dental industry the breakthrough will keep happening and the natural replacement teeth will always be just around the corner. Just as the cancer industry, projected to globally reach a number that is way too pretty to mess with -- $25 trillion by 2050 -- is guaranteed to produce every breakthrough under the sun. Man, I love scientific breakthroughs. India would be the go ! My most recent dentist ( that wants to do implants ... no worries .... ) is Indian . he has a toy Porsche on a shelf, I asked if he likes model cars and he said not really, that was the car he was saving up to buy . Dude ! Dont tell your customers that ! Especially those that had to walk there ! - no shame ! I called him 'Doctor' and he corrected me , but then I said ' No , you are a Doctor of Dentistry ' . he liked that and said YES and puffed up a bit .... I guess I read him right because I offered to tell him an Indian dentist joke and at the end he cracked up . ' An Indian guy wants to be a dentist , he doesnt care what people think , what his family thinks , its what he wants to do ! His parents complain to him , but he says to them ; '' Look ! Its my dream and my passion , its what I want to do , besides, I am your youngest son and surely , already four doctors in one family is enough ! '' 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taomeow Posted 5 hours ago 55 minutes ago, Nungali said: India would be the go ! My most recent dentist ( that wants to do implants ... no worries .... ) is Indian . he has a toy Porsche on a shelf, I asked if he likes model cars and he said not really, that was the car he was saving up to buy . Dude ! Dont tell your customers that ! Especially those that had to walk there ! - no shame ! I called him 'Doctor' and he corrected me , but then I said ' No , you are a Doctor of Dentistry ' . he liked that and said YES and puffed up a bit .... I guess I read him right because I offered to tell him an Indian dentist joke and at the end he cracked up . ' An Indian guy wants to be a dentist , he doesnt care what people think , what his family thinks , its what he wants to do ! His parents complain to him , but he says to them ; '' Look ! Its my dream and my passion , its what I want to do , besides, I am your youngest son and surely , already four doctors in one family is enough ! '' I had an Indian dentist at one point, and he did talk about his mother. According to him, in order to prove to her that his wasn't a useless profession (she wanted a plastic surgeon for a son), he reshaped all her teeth with crowns and veneers, and gave her Hollywood style shiny white porcelain china cups strike that toilet bowls strike that -- well, a brand new Hollywood (Bollywood?) set. And she was impressed. "She used to never smile, just not the type of woman who smiles in public. But now she does, all the time! To show off her son's work!" Share this post Link to post Share on other sites