************************************************************************ The following first appeared in the private email list IVy-subscribers, which is available to all those who subscribe to the printed magazine, International Viewpoints. ************************************************************************ New/old black magic, Part 27 by Phil Spickler 9 Mar 2001 So much to cover, and so little time!/ so little to cover, so much time! Anyhow, hello and goodbye from someone to anyone. Here's a giant thank-you to Bob (AKA Fat Bob) for sharing his amazing adventure with body, with cancer, with Scientology, with modern medicine, and most of all his powerful postulate. A definite WOW! Bob had mentioned that Ron had had something to say regarding the second dynamic and cancer. In zipping along with my failing data-retrieval device, the one located in the forebrain, this is what popped up: in discussing the sperm-ovum sequence (how 2D can you get?), it was pointed out that once the aforementioned entities combine, the process of mitosis or cellular division begins, and it's a tremendous explosion of cell division and growth, proceeding, thank goodness, at a very high rate of speed; and it seemed, if I recall correctly, that Ron had mentioned that this was one of the characteristics of many cancers -- an explosion of cellular division and growth, and that one might find the cure for, or the key to stopping what might be considered the abnormal growth of cancers by Dianetic auditing that successfully penetrated this period in the life of each human body. Anyway, 'way back when, circa 1950, when Ron cheerfully announced that cancer was a psychosomatic, he was of course striking a terrific blow at the biggest and best-paying big-ticket item in the worldwide medical establishment's array of diseases that it owns, and it does everything that it can to protect its turf and the billions of dollars that go with it from any of the inroads that alternative therapies may have to offer. On the other hand, in spite of the monopoly, it also turns out that there are a number of things that the medicos *can* do in the direction of cancer that are sometimes extremely helpful, and even result in either remission or cure. Especially of late, more doors are opening to other possibilities for helping folks with cancer, and a small but definite window of insight into the psychic possibilities for both creating and curing cancer is today with us and growing. There are certainly even some doctors, even groups of physicians, who take that possibility seriously. Unfortunately and in the past, re Scientology, Ron had been in such a terrific games condition with the medical establishment for so many years that folks that kind of grew up or came to agree strongly with Ron, when they needed to use the services of the medicos along with auditing to help their physical problems, in some cases did not take advantage of such possibilities until it was too late. That's a story I'd like to see told in full some day, but not right now. A theory that has been bandied about for quite some time now (as he changes subjects without very much of a comm bridge) had to do with the idea that everyone was natively stably exterior with full perception, and that the real countereffort to be found in each person's case was the effort to get as far away from that state as possible, in order to have the full range of experiences and adventures that become possible when you're NOT stably exterior with full perception. The person who is typing these awful words, my partner Julie, and I, have recently spent some enjoyable moments imagining what life would be like for someone who WAS stably exterior with full perception and who chose to be involved in human affairs. This could definitely be made into a good Hollywood movie, but I don't know if it would be half as interesting as H.G. Wells' story of the Invisible Man, although somewhat on the same story line. I think it's an exercise that anyone might enjoy doing, that is, imagining that state, but my favorite is imagining a situation in which there's a whole bunch of folks who are stably exterior with full perception and the lengths they might go to to avoid any contact with each other, or how ridiculously funny it might get if they decided to play a game. In my own perverse way, I prefer to think that immortals pushing around mortal bodies in the violent games of chance that are to be found here on Earth and I'm sure in other places in the physical universe are living examples of thetans operational, and having selected the identity of mortals (nothing new in the history of the gods) are once again illustrating how thrilling and how much fun and how much courage it takes to be that way. Anybody who's floating around being an immortal nothing, who knows everything (full perception), in my opinion, if nothing else would die of boredom and end up begging for the opportunity to not know and not perceive so damn much. I currently offer the course in how to run out the earliest effort not to be an immortal nothingness with full perception, but I have to wear a special shield when the result occurs to keep the outraged immortal from beating the thetan pants off me for completely screwing up the game. You know, it's like a great theater piece, and when everboydy takes off their costumes and makeup, instead of having kings and queens and villains and all the characters that make up the great play, you've just got a bunch of ordinary and fairly uninteresting folk who can't wait to find a new identity in order to be something interesting. OK. Jumping to the next subject without benefit of a comm bridge -- or maybe just a very little one -- I had promised to tell everyone why the Buddha smiled, and what he told me when I asked him about that smile. Well, at first I thought he wasn't going to answer me, or he might say something like "Seek to find the reason for your own smile," and I was kind of holding my breath, 'cause a few of his steely-eyed chelas were eyeing me like "Is this guy bugging our Buddha?" But to my amazement, he, with a wave of his hand, dismissed his retainers, poured us each a cup of green tea (my favorite), and transmitted as follows: He said, "Once upon a time, I was Prince Siddhartha, a royal Brahmin, and I had a beautiful wife who I loved dearly and a gorgeous child, wonderful parents, and a kingdom that would one day be mine to rule. But," he said, "I'd been leading a pretty sheltered life, and eventually I saw a bunch of things that I found rather disquieting, and I started asking questions of others and myself about what these things meant and how they related to human suffering. Well, back then I didn't have anybody named Phil Spickler to suggest that I find out who was asking those questions and handle their difficulties in their regard. Instead, I identified with the beings or valences or identities that were troubled by these questions, and decided, at their urging, to go off on the quest for their answers." "Well, you know the rest of the story -- we finally got all the answers, but you know what?" said the Buddha Looking straight at me with those beautiful eyes of his, he said, "If I knew, way back then when I was Siddhartha what I know now, or if Phil Spickler had been around at that time, I never would have left home and my wife, my child, my kingdom. I would have just continued happily being just exactly what I was." And he said, looking at me again, "Whenever something reminds me of that, I smile." As ever, Phil