The more fine grained your balancing, the more you see those who are "near" you in resonance. You can convert slight-enemies into friends and overtime convert even the most hateful into a friend.
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E.g. I see someone stabbed a spear at me but it seemed halfhearted and was purposely aiming for my shield. I too don't want to kill the guy. We recognize our similarity because we were both sensitive enough to feel this. Vs blindly following 'kill the enemy!'.
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It's what makes japanese culture so interesting as well. The tendency to go so deep into small niche subjects and discover so much more about them than we thought possible. In a world where we squeeze out all the magic (to sell) they find divinity in the mundane.
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Specialization is necessary to the point where you understand what high balance is and the amount of work it takes to have it. If you've never 'mastered' something, it's probably because you've never pushed through difficulty. Instead flitting from novel hobby to novel hobby.
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You get frustrated whenever the small subtle details start appearing, when your motivation is strained. Getting a perfect body & math are two common scenarios where you decide *not* to push through the difficulty.
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The experience of having pushed through a seemingly impossible barrier is a rite of passage to demonstrate knowledge of the subtle. It's why olympic athletes and war heroes and great CEOs and politicians often have a similar 'feel' to them. They're all doing the same 'job'.
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Power lies in seeing the subtle differences between everything. To recognize each moment as unique rather than fall into "power saving mode" and lump your life into a blob.
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Imagine yourself balanced on a boulder balanced on a pyramid. Imagine the high accuracy and rate of micro adjustments you'd need to do to balance. If that's not a situation you can imagine yourself in. You need to get better.
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e.g. you have to know what your personal max of 'rate of consciousness' is and be striving to improve it. You can say that deadlifting 10 times your body weight is a stupid goal b/c people don't need that much strength but the same can't be said for consciousness.
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The reason strength isn't as valued anymore is because it no longer protects. Someone who can use a gun is valued more b/c of the stronger ability to protect. Same for financial skills. Or friendliness.
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You have to get so good at something through such a long and arduous path that you see that EVERYTHING around you has similar depth. There'd no way to master everything. Knowing your knowledge will never amount to anything is what gives existence mystery and depth.
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The human body has a limit on its strength. It can't ever lift a million times its body weight. Does consciousness? High levels of consciousness seem to feel like slow motion in the moment, but on reflection seem like a blur. Can one moment strength into infinity?
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