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We have spent billions studying teenagers in captivity and building treatments for behaviors caused by the captivity itself.
Consider the orca at SeaWorld.
In captivity, orcas display aggression and dysfunction. A naive researcher studying only captive orcas might conclude that these behaviors are inherent to the species.
We know better. Wild orcas are intelligent, social creatures who suffer profoundly from confinement. The pathological behaviors we observe in captivity tell us nothing about the orca's nature and everything about the harm of captivity.
The same logic applies to studying adolescents.
When researchers study teenagers exclusively in school settings, they observe anxiety, depression, defiance, disengagement, and peer cruelty. They might conclude these are inherent features of adolescence. Hormonal inevitabilities. Modern cultural problems.
This conclusion mistakes the cage for the creature.
Imagine if, for the past hundred years, we had spent tens of billions of dollars studying orcas exclusively at SeaWorld.
Elaborate medications and treatments would be designed to reduce the extent to which those orcas bit the walls of their cages.
We would never think to question whether the cage itself was the problem.
That is what we have done with children.
People today do not even know what children are actually like. They only know what children are like in schools.
When you put young people in environments with agency, meaningful work, and genuine community, the dysfunction disappears.
The problem is not the teenager.
It is the tank.
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This is how you should treat all of gods creatures btw
Enezator@Enezator
A pangolin happily reacts as a man cleans the spots it can’t reach, showing how helping hands can mean everything. 🐾
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Culture is what we make, not what we buy




Shelby Ruth Ellis@shelbyruthellis
Culture is what we make, not what we buy
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@spacepunk That's why you start metta by loving yourself, right?
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Indras net strikes again
andy@1a1n1d1y
fuckkkkk we all adopt the behavioral patterns of the people we interact with fuckkkkkk
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@spacepunk Right? My mind was fucking blown when I realized Bereshit => In the head.
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Few (unless you're Jewish ofc) know this but the Hasidic Jewish creation myth is very different from the mainstream understanding of Genesis and it's the main framework that gave Religious Zionism theological legitimacy
It's based on the Lurianic Kabbalah: Before anything existed, there was only Ein Sof (Hebrew for Without End). God as pure, infinite, boundless light filling everything. No space, no emptiness, no room for anything else to exist.
How can God create a universe if God already fills all of space? The answer is an idea called Tzimtzum (צִמְצוּם), which means contraction/withdrawal. God deliberately pulled back, contracted inward, creating a kind of empty bubble of space, like a vacuum, within which a universe could form. God's first act was not creation but self-exile. God withdrew from a portion of infinity and made a void.
God then sent beams of divine light into this empty space. To give this light structure and form, to make actual things rather than just undifferentiated radiance, the light was poured into vessels (kelim). But the vessels shattered: this is called Shevirat Ha-Kelim (the Breaking of the Vessels). The divine light was too powerful, too intense for the vessels to contain. They cracked and exploded and as a result the light scattered everywhere.
Most of the light flew back upward to its source. But some sparks, nitzotzot, holy sparks of divine light, fell downward, tumbling into the lowest levels of existence, trapped inside the Kelipot (קְלִיפּוֹת), the "shells" or "husks", which is Luria's term for the forces of impurity, darkness, and evil.
The result: nothing in creation is in its right place. Everything is dislocated, fractured, in exile. Even God is, in a sense, in exile, the divine presence (Shekhinah) is fragmented and scattered throughout a broken world.
The Kabbalists had a word for this state of cosmic dislocation: Galut, interestingly, the same word used for the Jewish exile. The whole universe is in exile, not just the Jewish people. Jewish suffering is the visible, concentrated expression of a brokenness that goes all the way up to the divine level.
God began repairing the damage through reorganizing the shattered world into workable structures. The first human, Adam, was supposed to complete this repair. He was described as a soul containing all souls, a being of pure divine light inhabiting a spiritual body.
Instead, Adam sinned. And the cosmic catastrophe happened again, this time on the human level. Adam's soul, which contained all human souls within it, shattered, just as the vessels had shattered. The sparks of every human soul became scattered throughout creation, just as the divine sparks had been scattered.
Tikkun (תִקוּן) means repair, restoration, rectification. And the Lurianic system says that every single religious act performed by every single Jew, as in every prayer, every commandment, every ethical deed, every act of learning, etc. has the power to lift a holy spark out of the husks it's trapped in and restore it to its proper place.
This framework is also absolutely essential to understand Religious Zionism and its most important theologian: Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook.
Most Orthodox rabbis of the early 20th century looked at the secular Zionist pioneers (atheists, socialists/communists, Sabbath-desecrators draining swamps in Palestine) and saw heretics and rebels. Kook looked at the same people and saw something completely different: divine sparks trapped inside impure husks. Kook essentially took the Lurianic Kabbalah myth and applied it.
The secular Zionists, he argued, were unwitting agents of tikkun. What he considered was their fierce love of the Land of Israel was holy energy, even if it was wrapped in an irreligious shell.
To him, just as the nitzotzot fell into the kelipot and had to be retrieved from within impurity, the divine sparks animating Zionism had temporarily fallen into the husk of atheism. It was the job of religious Jews to recognize the spark inside and help it rise. Kook added one element to this framework though: evolution.
He believed history itself moved in an upward spiral. Every new burst of divine energy appears first in a broken, impure form, and is only gradually refined and elevated. To him, (secular) Zionism was not a mistake to be undone. It was the first rough shattered form of something sacred still taking shape. This is what made Religious Jews later able to incorporate Zionism into their religiosity.
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@AccountForHacks Ive done work for all sentient beings. God would have to kill literally all of them
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Because having money relaxes the nervous system. Satisfying the lower chakras with safety and material security balances the nervous system.
I keep saying over and over- if you want homeless people to be less mentally ill, GIVE THEM MONEY
sophia@sodofi_
the ultimate signal of wealth is having a relaxed nervous system
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@spacepunk I just heard that someone who should've paid me died in a car crash a year ago: be careful of the payoff you wish for!
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Most people would try to convince you that your suffering wasn't real. A few would try to take you partying to get you distracted. And the most compassionate might try to get together to beat the crap out of those who wronged you. And they're all ignorance
Adrian ‧₊ ᵎᵎ 🍒 ⋅ ˚✮@GarbageHomos
one thing i have learned after having something terrible happen to you is that people have no idea how to speak to you anymore
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@spacepunk @Aella_Girl I remember having a dream of my grandfather where I told him he was dead. He was very offended.
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@Aella_Girl Its been 3 years since my dad died and I still have dreams trying to convince him hes dead. Just today I dreamt about him dying. These things can take time, you can only keep doing your best to be gentle with yourself
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