And the potential for delusion doesn't stop post awakening! Someone with a sense of authority can easily get stuck in their own bullshit, as is evident by the plethora of ego trips / abuse stories among gurus.
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Replying to @euvieivanova
If anything, if you were an abusive prick before you got enlightened you'll probably be a *worse* abusive prick after, as your last sense of attachment to propriety fades away...
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Replying to @Triquetrea
Yeah, that seems to be exactly the case. Personality defects (and also harmless quirks and eccentricities) seem to become more pronounced post awakening.
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Replying to @euvieivanova
Yup. Turns out I have a big, unresolved anger problem, for example. I used to be good at suppressing it, which was its own kind of bad, but now I can't really do it anymore - and I'm not even finished yet!
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Replying to @Triquetrea
Have you tried finding healthier outlets for it? Videogames, for example. Letting the angry monkey be an angry monkey and tire itself out.
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Replying to @euvieivanova
Your conception of my anger is a few degrees too soft, I think. I play a lot of games. Competitive ones. It's a thrill to compete, but it is nowhere close to depleting my anger on bad days.
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Replying to @Triquetrea @euvieivanova
Strongly considered something like MMA, except all the practitioners I know are emotinoal trainwrecks and the culture seems *really* toxic. Maybe I should learn to shoot? I don't know.
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Replying to @Triquetrea @euvieivanova
I would recommend BJJ over MMA for your purposes. It’s a considerably different culture - much less toxic in my experience. I’ve seen many angry men soften up after getting choked repeatedly by women half their size. Plus getting hit/kicked in the head is really silly.
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Replying to @misen__ @Triquetrea
Thanks for the suggestion. I'm actually looking for a practical martial art to get into that has a good culture for women. Karate was good in Russia back when I was a teen, but not super practical sometimes.
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Replying to @euvieivanova @Triquetrea
Like anything, it depends on your goals/intentions - but if I had to recommend one, it’d be BJJ. A significant proportion of the most badass women I’ve ever met were grapplers &/or BJJ players. May I ask what your motivations are?
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If I had to isolate one variable that makes the BJJ culture quite different, it would be the lack of room for bullshit. Even in good striking gyms, there is room for interpretation. In BJJ, you can spar pretty close to 100% without brain damage, which really reduces bullshit!
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