2) Nope. I've seen people procrastinate their heads off about divinations! If you want to stop procrastinating, it's simple. First, use journaling to figure out why you like to play that game with yourself -- because it is a game, of course; it's something you choose to do, and can choose to stop doing. Second, stop doing it. When you need to decide something, decide it -- using a coin toss if you have to -- and go ahead with it. As a rule, that you decide is more important than what you decide: any decision is better than no decision at all.
Very oftem people take up procrastination because one or both of their parents routinely put them in double-binds where no matter what they did, it was wrong. If that's what's going on here, bringing those double-binds back up into consciousness is a good way to shake off the habit, because as an adult you can realize what you couldn't realize as a child: you didn't do anything wrong. It was the parent in question who was being a jerk.
Re: Sacred Geometry, Divination and Meditation
Date: 2022-11-28 06:46 pm (UTC)https://archive.org/details/aprimerhighersp00braggoog
https://archive.org/details/fourdimensional00braggoog
2) Nope. I've seen people procrastinate their heads off about divinations! If you want to stop procrastinating, it's simple. First, use journaling to figure out why you like to play that game with yourself -- because it is a game, of course; it's something you choose to do, and can choose to stop doing. Second, stop doing it. When you need to decide something, decide it -- using a coin toss if you have to -- and go ahead with it. As a rule, that you decide is more important than what you decide: any decision is better than no decision at all.
Very oftem people take up procrastination because one or both of their parents routinely put them in double-binds where no matter what they did, it was wrong. If that's what's going on here, bringing those double-binds back up into consciousness is a good way to shake off the habit, because as an adult you can realize what you couldn't realize as a child: you didn't do anything wrong. It was the parent in question who was being a jerk.