Peter Crone
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And then the hoarding mentality that it is to be human, the holding onto things as though anything exogenous to us has any value at all. It just doesn't. So when you really start to see that, it's like, holy shit, no wonder people are just sick and tired. They're playing this quintessential hamster wheel game of really trying to overcome their own blind spots of lies.
When you really see it, there's so much compassion. That's why, again, I love what I get to do, because as I tell people, I can't give you something you don't already have. I'm just helping you see what's in the way of you realizing that. And it's a dissolution process, right? And we live in a very solved world. a solution-oriented society.
When you really see it, there's so much compassion. That's why, again, I love what I get to do, because as I tell people, I can't give you something you don't already have. I'm just helping you see what's in the way of you realizing that. And it's a dissolution process, right? And we live in a very solved world. a solution-oriented society.
When you really see it, there's so much compassion. That's why, again, I love what I get to do, because as I tell people, I can't give you something you don't already have. I'm just helping you see what's in the way of you realizing that. And it's a dissolution process, right? And we live in a very solved world. a solution-oriented society.
Which is why I love Ayurveda. And when I became a practitioner of that, there were so many correlates between what I already intuitively understood in my own work and what the science of 5,000, 6,000 years old was pointing to physiologically. And there's something called Samprapti, which is the six stages of disease. And it really talks about the physiology and the doshas, right?
Which is why I love Ayurveda. And when I became a practitioner of that, there were so many correlates between what I already intuitively understood in my own work and what the science of 5,000, 6,000 years old was pointing to physiologically. And there's something called Samprapti, which is the six stages of disease. And it really talks about the physiology and the doshas, right?
Which is why I love Ayurveda. And when I became a practitioner of that, there were so many correlates between what I already intuitively understood in my own work and what the science of 5,000, 6,000 years old was pointing to physiologically. And there's something called Samprapti, which is the six stages of disease. And it really talks about the physiology and the doshas, right?
If you have too much pitta or vata or kapha, these different energies, then you eventually get sickness. And the first stage of disease is accumulation. And yet here we live psychologically in a world of scarcity, and so the impulse is to accumulate.
If you have too much pitta or vata or kapha, these different energies, then you eventually get sickness. And the first stage of disease is accumulation. And yet here we live psychologically in a world of scarcity, and so the impulse is to accumulate.
If you have too much pitta or vata or kapha, these different energies, then you eventually get sickness. And the first stage of disease is accumulation. And yet here we live psychologically in a world of scarcity, and so the impulse is to accumulate.
So it's just so ironic that the very thing that's driving us to try and find some sense of solace from the deprogramming that there's not enough is itself the first stage to sickness. And so it's this vicious cycle where until you realize that you are what you're looking for, like the seeker is the sort, the place we're looking from is the place we're looking for, right?
So it's just so ironic that the very thing that's driving us to try and find some sense of solace from the deprogramming that there's not enough is itself the first stage to sickness. And so it's this vicious cycle where until you realize that you are what you're looking for, like the seeker is the sort, the place we're looking from is the place we're looking for, right?
So it's just so ironic that the very thing that's driving us to try and find some sense of solace from the deprogramming that there's not enough is itself the first stage to sickness. And so it's this vicious cycle where until you realize that you are what you're looking for, like the seeker is the sort, the place we're looking from is the place we're looking for, right?
It's just so stunning when you get it because we're playing this game of illusion, right? That there's something missing, something wrong. And now I'm going to play this compensatory role where actually the means by which I'm trying to find that which I am is creating the obstacle and the sickness that then I have to deal with. Yeah. It's nuts. Yeah, I know.
It's just so stunning when you get it because we're playing this game of illusion, right? That there's something missing, something wrong. And now I'm going to play this compensatory role where actually the means by which I'm trying to find that which I am is creating the obstacle and the sickness that then I have to deal with. Yeah. It's nuts. Yeah, I know.
It's just so stunning when you get it because we're playing this game of illusion, right? That there's something missing, something wrong. And now I'm going to play this compensatory role where actually the means by which I'm trying to find that which I am is creating the obstacle and the sickness that then I have to deal with. Yeah. It's nuts. Yeah, I know.
Why do white people fucking drink so much?
Why do white people fucking drink so much?
Why do white people fucking drink so much?
Yeah, it's a lot. I know it's a lot to process. It's so obvious to me, and I just spit it out. People are like, wait, I think he said something profound, but I don't know what the fuck he said.