tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1141886981250185175.post7030986994305653046..comments2024-03-27T07:01:38.648-05:00Comments on The OBE Outlook On Life: Review: Apprenticeship to a GhostBob Petersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01201868518650641260noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1141886981250185175.post-83659328274637579422021-09-27T17:20:33.645-05:002021-09-27T17:20:33.645-05:00Hey Bob,
I've finished Monroe's books...Hey Bob,<br /> I've finished Monroe's books and almost done with all yours (Need to buy Gospel According to Mike next) and Buhlman's, and I think one of the lessons is that there really isn't any conflict worth having, in the end. <br /> Monroe, at the end of the 3rd book, found that reality "aperture/emitter" that he wanted to go past but needed more "gifts" to pass the threshold, and Buhlman found a membrane that similarly separated one big density-chunk of the universe from another...<br /> But in the end, being immortal and having all the 'time' in the world to do what we all came to do, kinda (to me) flattens the Hero's Journey arc, doesn't it? If everyone will end up perfecting themselves and returning to the source, in the end, what's the rush?<br /> I concur though, I don't enjoy fiction the same way since learning of this way of being. So much falls flat when you take in the big picture. <br /> I'm glad I read What Dreams May Come when I was younger though, hah.<br /> Dipper Actualhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01676899665471748102noreply@blogger.com