Man, Know Thy Function

(audio included for paid subscribers)

The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.

Our dreamstate matrix is only as convincing as it needs to be. It only has to keep us fooled, which isn’t that hard given the slow-and-steady IV drip of mind-altering emotional inebriant coursing through our veins. We’ve all been blue-pilled since birth, so we accept the reality with which we’re presented, and never think to question it. I flew over the cuckoo’s nest decades ago, and now I sit outside the fence calling instructions to anyone who wants to escape their dark asylum. Right now, you’re thinking about making a break, and I’m trying to provide information that might help you. I make an effort to transmit, and you make an effort to receive. I’m not trying to talk you into anything, I’m just offering you a lift if you’re going my way. That’s my function. That’s how I’m wired. 

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"We must let go of the life we have planned,
so as to accept the one that is waiting for us."

Joseph Campbell (1904–1987) was an American professor of literature at Sarah Lawrence College, mythologist, and writer best known for his comparative work on world mythology and religion. His influential theory of the “monomyth,” or the hero’s journey—a universal narrative pattern found across cultures—was laid out in his landmark work The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949). Campbell’s later multi-volume series The Masks of God explored the evolution of myth, while The Power of Myth, a celebrated 1988 television interview with Bill Moyers, brought his ideas to a mass audience just after his death. His work has profoundly impacted storytelling in literature and film, notably inspiring George Lucas for Star Wars.

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