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Life's a Role-Playing Game

Each of Us Has a Unique Perspective on a Universal Experience

Applying creativity to one’s sense of self to transform oneself, which is also known as vertical development, is not a linear process but rather an emergent one.

You cannot think your way through this as a problem in a tradition sense because your current way of thinking and perceiving is in itself the problem.

In other words, your problem isn’t the problem that you perceive as impeding your way and making you feel stuck. Your perception of your problem (aka your mindset) is what’s actually impeding you.

This mirrors how Alfonso Montuori describes creativity as “getting out of your own way.”

This also mirrors how Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey is effectively about “slaying” your old sense of self that stands in your way, so that your newer, larger sense of Self can emerge (i.e. Luke Skywalker slaying Darth Vader in the swamp, only to see his own face behind Darth Vader’s mask).

So to progress one has to instead feel their way through the process, perhaps going around in circles numerous times like within a maze, before something clicks and makes sense from multiple lived experience that are felt and embodied rather than something just explained as knowledge.

If you watch YouTube videos by non-duality teachers like Rupert Spira (who actually doesn’t like to be called a teacher), you will see that that he often uses metaphors to try to help explain things (i.e. actor on a stage). Yet you also see the confusion of his students faces because they are trying to think their way through a process that has to be lived, felt, and experienced, not just thought about, to be understood.

In effect, you can’t fully relate to something you haven’t fully experienced yet.

The way I’ve described this process in the past is like you are exploring newer, unknown terrain within yourself, beyond the edge of your current sense of self, as this newer terrain represents an expanded sense of Self.

And this exploration is usually done through a portal which represents the ontological dissonance within your life.

So it’s not just a process of stepping through this portal into an unknown space and mapping it grid by grid in a linear, rational way because it feels more like you’re manually mapping it within very dense fog that makes it difficult see the relationship between everything to make sense of the terrain as a whole via triangulation.

To put this another way, this isn’t simply a process of just doing something. It’s more a process of enduring something.

So the question that is the quest before you is this.

Can you hold space for yourself over an extended period of time for enough newer experiences to be collected, so that they can cluster and crystallize, finally making sense of your Self as a larger whole?

And the reason you have to hold space for yourself is because you are continually fighting with your “self” in being within an uncertain, unknown space that initially feels wrong and unnatural on every level, even though this transformation is a natural process of change within life.

This is the experience of what ontological dissonance feels like, as it’s like cognitive dissonance but applied to your entire life and entire sense of being as a whole.

This is why I use Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey as a lens for this but I’ve extended it into perceiving life as a role-playing game because the language of the Hero’s Journey already mirrors the language of role-playing games (i.e. adventure, heroes, quests, monsters, treasure, etc).

And this touches upon something else that’s important.

When a person goes through such a transformative life experience, they may feel like their experience is completely unique and thus no one has ever experienced it before.

Thus they may give a unique “name” to this experience and process because they believe it is something “new” that no one else has experienced before.

But it isn’t.

These transformational life experiences have been going on for multiple millennia, described by different cultures and civilizations in different ways and that’s what Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey as a monomyth is an embodiment of.

It is a fictional story, an allegory, that relays truths about life.

And the main truth about life that it is trying to communicate is what transformational growth feels like.

In effect, Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey embodies creativity applied to one’s sense of self as psychological development (aka vertical development).

This is why previously I would describe the framework of perceiving “life as a role-playing game” as “my” own framework.

But it’s not really “my” framework.

All I’m really doing is giving a new perspective to something old, known, and practiced as a scaffolding framework that many others have used different names to describe the experience of traversing and transforming oneself through an uncertain unknown.

But this is what I believe is actually unique about this universal experience.

Each person, through their own transformational growth process, can effectively helping humanity to perceive this old, timeless, universal experience in a new way.

In effect, the articulation of each person’s unique experience of this universal experience is each of our Hero’s Journey itself.

It is giving time and space for oneself for the creative process to emerge at its own pace, rather than trying to force it, which only collapses the emergent flow of the experience.

So again, there is no shortcut or bypass to this transformational process to speed it up, as forcing it only slows it down and stops it completely.

Rather it is a process that one has to immerse oneself within and sit within it for the creative emergence to occur.

And yet, the very act of most people will be to do the exact opposite, as I have experienced with others in the past.

Most people will not want to go through a process that does not have a certain outcome because they will not want to waste their time on something that doesn’t have a certain outcome.

Yet note how this mirrors with how many people approach life.

Most people want to figure out life before they live it.

“I need to figure out my passion and purpose first, so that I can live my life in the right way.”

Yet the paradox that leads to the breakthrough paradigm is that one figures out one’s life by actually living it, not thinking about it.

This effectively embodies what I mean when I say, “the adventure of your life.”

You will only make sense of your life by stepping into the uncertain unknown of it first and then reflecting back upon it (which mirrors Steve Job’s quote about “connecting the dots”).

This as a whole embodies the three primary perspectives of “change” as an adult which one can transition through by transforming oneself as an adult.

The first perspective sees change as threat to be avoided.

The second perspective see change as an opportunity.

The third perspective sees change as the creative ground of life itself.

This third perspective is effectively perceiving life as a playful, never-ending adventure.

But again, it can’t be explained.

It can only be felt, lived, and experienced to be understood.

This is why what I’ve explained here is just a waypoint in my own ongoing never-ending journey of understanding and making sense of this all, as I will have to continue to immerse myself within more lived experiences to widen my understanding of it as a whole some more.

Categories
Life's a Role-Playing Game

Perceiving The Future of Work Through the Lens of a Roleplaying Game

The future of work belongs to people and organizations that understand the following.

The deepest competitive advantage is not intelligence.

It is developmental capacity.

Who can adapt fastest?

Who can transform identity fastest?

Who can hold complexity without collapse?

Who can turn crisis into initiation?

That is the real game.

AI will automate tasks.

But consciousness cannot be outsourced.

The future belongs to those who can level up their level of consciousness.

Categories
Life's a Role-Playing Game

My Journey of Integration

Showing how my life has come full circle, from playing within imaginary worlds to imagining a world of play.

The following is a infographic that I created with the newer version of ChatGPT Images 2.0.

It is my first attempt at trying to articulate how I am a multipotentialite whose life’s work is transdisciplinary in nature.

This is shown by the different domains of knowledge I’ve acquired over my lifetime, starting with (1) gaming at the top and ending with (8) vertical development.

From each of these domains is contributed a different aspect that are collectively integrated together in a newer framework for life which perceives it as a roleplaying game.

This infographic is not perfect by any means but it does give a rough “big picture” of my life’s work, as well as the complexity in trying to integrate all of the different aspects of it into a cohesive, coherent, meaningful framework.

Categories
Vertical Development

No More Working Out Loud

No more working out loud…to get validation and permission from others.

Time for creating silently…to fully trust the experience happening through me.

Categories
Vertical Development

How to Stop Stepping Away?

There’s a space of groundlessness in front of me. In fact, I can see myself standing within it.

Yet I don’t know how to get from here to there. I don’t know how to step into something seemingly right in front of me that I already seem to be within.

Perhaps it’s because I’m already within this space and it’s not a question of how do I step forwards into it but about how do I stop stepping away from it.

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Life's a Role-Playing Game

Letting Our Armour Fall Apart

As we become more conscious of our thoughts and emotions and look at them with kindhearted interest and curiosity, we begin to see how we armor ourselves against pain. And we see how that armor also cuts us off from the pain—and the beauty—of other people. But as we let go of our repetitive stories and fixed ideas about ourselves—particularly deep-seated feelings of “I’m not okay”—the armor starts to fall apart, and we open into the spaciousness of our true nature, into who we really are beyond our transitory thoughts and emotions. We see that our armor is made up of nothing more than habits and fears, and we begin to feel that we can let those go.

Pema Chödrön, Living Beautifully: With Uncertainty and Change
Categories
Vertical Development

Celebrating Your Crumbling Identity

In Buddhism we call the notion of a fixed identity “ego clinging.” It’s how we try to put solid ground under our feet in an ever-shifting world. Meditation practice starts to erode that fixed identity. As you sit, you begin to see yourself with more clarity, and you notice how attached you are to your opinions about yourself. Often the first blow to the fixed identity is precipitated by a crisis. When things start to fall apart in your life, as they did in mine when I came to Gampo Abbey, you feel as if your whole world is crumbling. But actually it’s your fixed identity that’s crumbling. And as Chögyam Trungpa used to tell us, that’s cause for celebration.

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Vertical Development

Actively “Feeling Your Way” Towards Knowing

If there is no such map, then what is wayfinding? Instead of what he calls a “complex-structure metaphor” (the mental map), Ingold proposes a “complex-process metaphor” which he calls wayfinding. On page 220, he writes: “With a complex-process metaphor, little or no pre-structured content is imputed to the mind. Instead, wayfinding is understood as a skilled performance in which travelers, whose powers of perception and action have been fine-tuned through previous experience, ‘feel their way’ towards their goal, continually adjusting their movements in response to an ongoing perceptual monitoring of their surroundings.”

In this model, “we know as we go, from place to place” (229). “People’s knowledge of the environment undergoes continuous formation in the very course of their moving about in it” (230). This is not knowledge stored and then applied—it’s knowledge emerging through practice, through movement, through ongoing engagement with dynamic environments. This extends the dwelling perspective: we don’t design then act, we act and knowledge emerges from that immersion.

Wayfinding is more like storytelling, artistic performance, or musical improvisation. Just as a musical score isn’t the music itself—the music only exists in the actual performance—a map isn’t the same as the journey. The doing is what matters. And just as you can’t understand music by analyzing the score alone, you can’t understand wayfinding by studying mental representations. There is no such map to study because the process itself is what generates knowing.

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Vertical Development

Wayfinding Our Way Through Life

Every living being, accordingly, grows and reaches out into the environment along the sum of its paths. To find one’s way is to advance along a line of growth, in a world which is never quite the same from one moment to the next, and whose future configuration can never be fully known. Ways of life are not therefore determined in advance, as routes to be followed, but have continually to be worked out anew. And these ways, far from being inscribed upon the surface of an inanimate world, are the very threads from which the living world is woven.

Tim Ingold, The Perception of the Environment
Categories
Computers

A Localized Siri AI Could Reduce Environmental Costs

BTW another apparent benefit to Apple’s newer chips being AI powerhouses which we can use locally on our desktop for our own AI assistant needs is that if Apple can make Siri a powerful localized AI in turn in the future then this could dramatically reduce the need for Cloud AI centres and the dramatic environmental cost required to run them.