Metaprogramming



This is the last post I’ll be writing for this blog. Our creativity is verbing and I am working on creating a new website with room for this year’s growth. I sincerely thank all of you who have kept up with my writing. For my last post it’s fitting that it be a trip report. Trip reports have been some of my most sincere posts, and my favorite because of the sincerity. I love you. Thank you.

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This last week has been a good one. It’s Sunday night. The Broncos just beat the Patriots and I’m gliding down from a very enjoyable and elucidating mushroom trip. A friend is moving out and into a new verse of his life and a roommate is falling deeper in love with his girlfriend before my eyes. I’m sitting at my keyboard still softly grinning, ready to share a story.

This morning, like every morning, I went to Barns and Noble and read. I’ve been reading Freud’s Civilization and It’s Discontent. Freud is a genius but he’s a pessimistic fellow. The lingering idea I absorbed from the reading that would carry into the mushroom trip is his perspective on love. He does not think one should love thy neighbor. He is certain that this kind of uncritical love of a stranger will leave him exposed to all kinds of slights, physical and psychological.

I wrote in the margins “he confuses libido love with loving compassion.” I don’t think we have to love everyone like our family. This would demand too much of us. We would look the robber in the eye and let him take what he wants if that were the case. But what we can do is have loving compassion for everyone. If someone breaks into my house, I can look him in the eye and have compassion for the life he was born into that molded him into the man before me, but I can have compassion for him and kill him if my family and friends were in danger.

After I finished reading, I went home and cleaned. Cleaning before a trip feels symbolic. I feel like I am tidying up my psyche for the adventure. After cleaning for a couple of hours, I ate some mushies, dawned a goofy farming hat I love, and drove to Dana’s peak. I love that little protrusion of rock. From the top I have a beautiful view of the Texas landscape. There I sat for an hour or so while the mushrooms metabolized.

While hiking up the hill, I saw my roommate and his girlfriend. They had ate mushrooms a couple of hours ago and it was a glorious coincidence to meet them along the way, but our group of friends have become so drenched in synchronicity we almost take her for granted. Almost. We laughed our laughs and nodded or nods.

A lot of ideas ebbed and flowed through my frontal cortex on that peak. The big one, one that almost cracked my sanity a few years ago, and that I’m still handling now, is how imbedded the human being is in games. Language is a game. Culture is a game. Politics is a game. How I greet you is a game.

Language is the game that messes with me the most. I have a very hard time stepping out of the game of language. I can with meditation and good sex, but my creativity flows through language. As human’s we are animals. Instincts coarse through us. Language, and I don’t know how or why, is a computer like program that sits on top of our animal bodies, filtering our impulses.

I was looking at a butterfly and felt my mind innocently offer how it looked robotic. This is what it is to be an animal without language. Most life on this planet is dancing to the song of evolution. Language has allowed human apes to step off the dance floor and our curiosity as led us to start messing with the music. Language is to evolution what Skrillex is to music. Naw, I’m playing. But what I’m trying to convey is that language is an amazingly mysterious and powerful tool.

There is a term I learned from John C. Lilly called “The MetaProgrammer.” Our physical body is like the hardware of a computer. Our Instincts are the electricity and circuitry. Language is our operating system. The first moment you “wake up,” is when you reach a level of consciousness where you can see your operating system, and you can see all the programs you’ve been running on. These programs have been installed by your parents, culture, schooling, and genetics. The Metaprogrammer is the type of consciousness that starts to reprogram the computer.

I don’t really know how to do this, but I am going to play with it.

There was a visual I had during the trip that continues to resonate. I was watching the sun set, and I kept feeling my attention pulled to a specific tree to the lower left of my field of vision. The tree was tall and healthy, stretching out towards the sun. The unsettling aspect was the three trees around it which were dead looking, coiled around the living tree, like organic shackles.

Mushrooms amplify my urge to see symbolic meaning in things. My mind quickly offered up the image of a successful or happy person being clung too by dying, stagnant people. I thought of myself, Freud, and the nature of using psychology to help people.

I felt like I should have felt fear or disgust towards the kinds of people that cling. But I heard myself speak from a place that wasn’t my ego and it asked what good is a healthy tree if it doesn’t help those around it. This might not make sense on a scientific level (which is just another game we play), but it resonated with me. I realized I was still debating with Freud’s perspective on love. I know my answer though.

For reasons maybe too personal for this post, one of my deepest programs is to help people. Our culture is a conglomeration of games and I was born with an unbalanced advantage. The only sense I can make of my disproportionate fortune is to leverage it to help people as much as I can. I'm rambling. To sum, I am grateful, and I don't mind if a few branches need some support. 

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The goal this year is to make enough money from my blog so I don’t have to work a conventional job. I’ve got a book in me waiting to come but the conscious frequency I live at in order to work 40 hours a week for a corporate job is not the frequency that will create a book I know I’m capable of. We shall see how this unfolds.


I love you. Thank you for reading and vibing with me. I love you. Namaste. 

Deep Sea Fishing



I’m trying to figure myself out. I’m human. So, my consciousness comes prepackaged with a body. A body is an instrument forged in the fires of evolutionary pressure. The furnace is earth, and we have been smoldering for millions of years.

My body comes with instincts. I have impulses. To fuck, to defend, to run, to protect, to be powerful – and these impulses that guided our dumber ancestors through the jungles and savannas have been redirected by culture.

In our culture, most people most of the time are unsatisfied. And it is because we lack meaning. We lack meaning because we live artificial lives. We don’t hunt our own food. We don’t tend to the earth and her fruits. We don’t build our shelters. We don’t have a sense of community.

Instead, we have been molded by a cultural story.

We are born into an artificial “community”. Unlike our ancestors who had 20 or 30 elders to learn from, we are lucky to have two elders, Mom and Dad. Our infancy unfolds within cubes. We are fed fake food. We look into screens animating artificial reality.

We aren’t taught to watch the stars and her cycles, or how to identify and gather herbs, or how to wield a weapon. We are taught how to sit in more artificial cubes, to memorize and regurgitate semantic information.

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I imagine our cultural conditioning like a stained glass corridor we walk through, unconscious. The glass is a translucent blue, and the corridor is under water. Beyond the glass is the pulsating biotechnological ocean that is the incomprehensible-ness of reality. We only see the ineffable as it is refracted through our stained glass.

Epiphanies, radical philosophical insight, trauma, and crisis are all ways the indiscernible breaks through our safe, 90 degreed perspective. The unfathomable will not be denied.

Having a philosophical orientation to life is like scuba gear. Instead of waiting for life to strike me with a crisis, I systematically exposed myself to chemicals that crack the glass. Once I tasted a little bit of what we were working with, I did my best to use psychology and philosophy to build a functional enough piece of scuba gear.

I want to share the schematic with anyone interested in building their own. I think it’s important you do build your own. But I’ve got work on sharing the information in an enjoyable way. You’ve seen the directions that came with your dresser, and you threw that shit out.


I want to share my blueprint without you throwing it away. And I think it’s important. Because all of our corridors are going to shatter eventually. And the freedom a reliable set of gear can give you in infinitely more enjoyable than walking through the artificial prison we are conditioned into.