All right, so this is, uh, another testament to the power of the subconscious rapport, having rapport with your subconscious crew and healthy stuff. So recently I saw Hundreds of Beavers. Great movie. Really funny. Excellent work. There's one part that just kind of crept up on me where it's just like these two little adorable baby bunnies.
And if you saw the movie, you know what I'm talking about, these two adorable baby bunnies, they're like the sole survivors after having to endure all this kind of harsh land and walking through the snow. And then they just can't go any further. And of course, this is me just filling in all these details because as humans with empathy, that's kind of what you do.
So the hunter, the protagonist gets to these baby bunnies and they're just wide-eyed and they're scared and they're just like, oh, help us please. And the hunter's like at, at first seems like, oh yes, I will help you. But then he ends up eating them and killing them, which is funny. But also. Fucking heartbreaking and so sad, and it really stuck with me. I was just like, oh my God, that is the fucking saddest thing. And so I'm kind of like there left with these emotions of just like, fuck, that's really sad. And just thinking about like how sad that is. What a sad life, and just feeling gratitude for not being in that situation and just fuck.
And so I went back to that thinking about the learning from NLP about seeing the subconscious as a crew who's like running the ship and you know, they're collecting all these stories and all this information and in this case, this one thing triggered. Something in me because there was a lot there. And so now in the past I would've seen this come up as me just being bummed out the rest of the day, just being like, wow, that's the saddest thing.
And just not knowing what to do with these emotions, but instead with this, you know, perspective. Um, all of a sudden I see it more like, oh, crew, subconscious crew. Thank you so much for bringing this to my attention. Thank you. Yes, let's release this. We don't need this anymore. This is not helping us, you know, to feel, sit, and feel sad.
About this imaginary circumstance. Like it's not what's here, let's just get rid of that. And it's tied to all these other little things of feeling like a lost child and just feeling really vulnerable and you know, thinking about all these other things and think about how lucky it is that any of us are alive right now.
And all the petty things. I mean, in the movie, Hundreds of Beavers is great. It's like. It plays like, I mean it's just kind of so funny 'cause like what happens to those baby bunnies? Like at first it's just like, there's the male and female bunny and they get married and then they hook up a lot and everybody hooks up. It's kind of, you gotta watch it. Um, but then he like takes off and goes find someone else and it's the mom by herself with the two babies and then the mom dies and it's just two babies. And it's like, these are like really, really heavy things that the movie brought lightness to. Being like, you know, the ridiculousness of not life.
And this is like the other important thing that ties into all this is just like the uh, walk signal. Wait. Um. This is kind of going to Bashar stuff, if you know what that is. Bashar. Uh, but this concept that, I mean, we only see such a tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny portion of the story. We are actors on a need to know basis performing this play.
Um, and so, and that's out of, you know, on purpose so that we can. Play our part to the best of our ability because otherwise, if we had everything else, kind of all of our awareness of the whole play. You know, like we can't play the ending as an acting term. You know, you can't telegraph where the story's going. You have to be in it. You have to be immersed in the moment. And so that's why our scope is so little. And then we have all these things along the way that guide us these emotions, these feelings of excitement, this, this, and that.
So, all right, so all that to say, having that in mind too, of just understanding, it's like, okay, this is, um, you know, that really, really sad thing is just a tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny thing of the bunnies. The people, the people, the, the, the. Souls playing the bunnies in this role. It's just a small video game in comparison to the vastness and infinite bliss and joy that is. The all right. Like, I mean, this is very limited, tiny painting on a wall of a moment, um, which is our existence. And, um, that is the experience of being here in this corporal form.
Right? So, um, okay, so going, so this is, this is important, um, to have. And the other tool that comes in mind is, um, I'm walking around as people, I'm getting distracted. Which is good. Which is funny because that's kind of what happens, right? You get distracted, you go in life and all that.
Right. Uh, seeing the world as like, uh, um, just doing the small part and playing your part, right. Uh, the emotions. So emotions are temporary. And thoughts aren't real, but you know, if you see it all as a guide to guide you along the way, then all of a sudden you have that perspective on it, you know, you get a little distance from it, so you're not.
You know, um, you're not, um, obligated to follow through with what comes up. It's more just like you're given that information. And sometimes that information is just a crew trying to jettison, trying to offload all this collected data along the way.
Yeah, because there's a lot there. I mean, it's just feeling so lucky to be alive and stuff.
All right. So that's all of it. But that was pretty amazing of just like the being triggered as a hint of being like, oh, okay, there's something there. And um. And it's all part of it. And honestly, this is what it's done. It's made me feel like having processed this, I'm out getting coffee right now. Having processed this has made my heart so much kinder in this moment because like all of a sudden I'm like flooded with this empathy and just thinking about the whole situation and seeing, and just all that stuff, all that, all that comes with it.
And so it's made me in person like be much more like. Hey, it's gonna be okay just, um, with everybody or that I make eye contact with or come in vicinity of, and that, that's wonderful. Um, kindness wins. It always does. Like, um, and, uh, yeah, gosh, it's just like. I, I, I don't hunt. I don't know what that shit is.
And it's like I have, I, I'm grateful to live in a time where that is not necessary. Um, and so I, I don't know what that relationship is like. It sounds really terrifying. We're all just, you know, here exploring what it's like to be humans and ah, gosh. I, I just feel like everything is better with kindness and with empathy.