"The artist must leave the world to understand it, and return to it to be understood."
— Manifesto of the Abyssal Mind (2025)
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"The artist must leave the world to understand it, and return to it to be understood."
— Manifesto of the Abyssal Mind (2025)
Mysticism - Philosophy & Process 8 - Self-Overcoming
http://mysticism.guide/self-overcoming
"In order to progress during the process of inner mystical transformation one has to practice self-overcoming ..."
Balance
self-overcoming + self-realization
When I find myself at that point, in the position of someone who would change something — at that point I don’t change it, I change myself. It’s for that reason that I have said that instead of self-expression, I’m involved in self-alteration.
John Cage
This is the mistake that I perpetually make: that I imagine the suffering of others to be much greater that it is. From my childhood on, the proposition ‘my greatest dangers lie in pitying’ has confirmed itself again and again…It will be enough if, through the bad experiences I have had with pitying, I am stimulated to make a theoretically interesting alteration in the esteem that pitying enjoys.
Nietzsche, Letter to Overbeck 1884
Pitying: my weakness, which I am learning to overcome. It is good if the most detestable abuse of my sympathy and indulgence eventually teaches me that I have nothing to do in this area.
Nietzsche, Notes
Faith in Oneself. - Few people have faith in themselves - and of these few, some posses it as a useful blindness or partial eclipse of the mind (what they would behold if they could see to the bottom of themselves!), while the rest have to acquire it. Everything good, fine, or great they do is first of all an argument against the skeptic inside them. They have to convince or persuade him, and that almost requires genius. These are the great self-dissatisfied people.
Nietzsche, The Gay Science 284
I don’t feel that it is necessary to know exactly what I am. The main interest in life and work is to become someone else that you were not in the beginning. If you knew when you began a book what you would say at the end, do you think that you would have the courage to write it? What is true for writing and for love relationships is true also for life. The game is worthwhile insofar as we don’t know where it will end.
Foucault, interview, 25 October 1982.