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Trickster's lair
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<blockquote data-quote="Trickster" data-source="post: 12007" data-attributes="member: 164"><p><strong>Trickster's lair</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I thought that was visible as I pinned it to a map. I am Finnish, and been living here in Finland my life so far. More than that, I feel being a cosmopolitan and rootless in a sense that I am not your average Finn, other than regular Finn eccentrism. But I am not shy about success. Since I have very close friends in US, through music and business, and most my fans are from US, I intend to move there permanently in the following years and apply for a citizenship. But it's not something to be obsessed about.</p><p></p><p>I've travelled mostly in Europe and have friends and acquaintances around the globe. I would say that cultural differences are not that big. We just emphasize those differences the more we are proud of our home nation. Mostly people do that to stand out in multicultural surroundings they are not comfortable. </p><p></p><p>I have been in US a couple times, spent a whole summer, travelled along in</p><p>a totally ex tempore trip. Though stayed with my friends and via coincidences some unknown people whom I became good friends afterwards. Coincidences fascinate me. One fella I hadn't kept in touch for two years, across the sea - I called him and he told that he intended to email me the following day to inform about some things. I have experienced a lot of synchronicity events like that. </p><p></p><p>I do find observing individuals interesting, but only rare pique my curiosity. Rest I ignore cold handed. Still, rather than just enjoy findings I seek progression in everything. Ie. a lot of people are fascinated about anomalies, supernatural etc. Or here people want to travel in time or have astral projections. Mostly because it is something different, which hasn't been done before, or is no common knowledge. Most here are motivated by the sheer curiosity. I am too, but I like to see beyond that. If time travel, or quantum tunneling of messages to another realities or anything similar is possible - what next? Sure it's gonna be very exhilarating like the first years after aeroplane was invented, electricity spread, we went to a moon.</p><p> </p><p>A discovery of something new and phenomenal - and I see and ask, what next?"Yeah, great, we can time travel, cool!". But it is not going to solve your personal problems. In a long run such findings, physics or technology would become a 'normal' part of our lives. Something to take granted like electricity. The exciting part is over, and leaves people wondering, where did all the 'truth' of time and space went? There is no master plan. We just keep on peeling reality after reality like an onion, because that is all we know to do as aware beings. Replacing our beliefs and goals and perceptions alongside with science and evolution.</p><p></p><p>What places I have seen then, particularly in US? With people fixed into those places - I have travelled East Coast with Greyhound, all the way from NY to PA to Indiana. I have experienced LA through suburbs to Santa Monica, Las Vegas, Death Valley, and New York where I spent a month doing some work, meeting some friends and also walking and travelling around a lot by myself. I have felt those metropolitan areas with faceless and nameless crowds. I love big cities. But I have also seen and felt the atmosphere in small mid-west redneck town with population of 2000. Good to have some comparison.</p><p></p><p>When people become curious about something or someone, usually an out of place character or phenomenom, they lower their shields as personalities. They might be wary of something new, but they way you react to anything new or challenging is a passing window to one angle of our psyche. That makes my travels interesting, because places, people or experiences in itself need to found by a right person. A location with its fixed habitants has found its secure loops and ways of life. When a new radical factor is introduced to that secure system it needs to re-evaluate, re-create and re-arrange itself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Trickster, post: 12007, member: 164"] [b]Trickster's lair[/b] I thought that was visible as I pinned it to a map. I am Finnish, and been living here in Finland my life so far. More than that, I feel being a cosmopolitan and rootless in a sense that I am not your average Finn, other than regular Finn eccentrism. But I am not shy about success. Since I have very close friends in US, through music and business, and most my fans are from US, I intend to move there permanently in the following years and apply for a citizenship. But it's not something to be obsessed about. I've travelled mostly in Europe and have friends and acquaintances around the globe. I would say that cultural differences are not that big. We just emphasize those differences the more we are proud of our home nation. Mostly people do that to stand out in multicultural surroundings they are not comfortable. I have been in US a couple times, spent a whole summer, travelled along in a totally ex tempore trip. Though stayed with my friends and via coincidences some unknown people whom I became good friends afterwards. Coincidences fascinate me. One fella I hadn't kept in touch for two years, across the sea - I called him and he told that he intended to email me the following day to inform about some things. I have experienced a lot of synchronicity events like that. I do find observing individuals interesting, but only rare pique my curiosity. Rest I ignore cold handed. Still, rather than just enjoy findings I seek progression in everything. Ie. a lot of people are fascinated about anomalies, supernatural etc. Or here people want to travel in time or have astral projections. Mostly because it is something different, which hasn't been done before, or is no common knowledge. Most here are motivated by the sheer curiosity. I am too, but I like to see beyond that. If time travel, or quantum tunneling of messages to another realities or anything similar is possible - what next? Sure it's gonna be very exhilarating like the first years after aeroplane was invented, electricity spread, we went to a moon. A discovery of something new and phenomenal - and I see and ask, what next?"Yeah, great, we can time travel, cool!". But it is not going to solve your personal problems. In a long run such findings, physics or technology would become a 'normal' part of our lives. Something to take granted like electricity. The exciting part is over, and leaves people wondering, where did all the 'truth' of time and space went? There is no master plan. We just keep on peeling reality after reality like an onion, because that is all we know to do as aware beings. Replacing our beliefs and goals and perceptions alongside with science and evolution. What places I have seen then, particularly in US? With people fixed into those places - I have travelled East Coast with Greyhound, all the way from NY to PA to Indiana. I have experienced LA through suburbs to Santa Monica, Las Vegas, Death Valley, and New York where I spent a month doing some work, meeting some friends and also walking and travelling around a lot by myself. I have felt those metropolitan areas with faceless and nameless crowds. I love big cities. But I have also seen and felt the atmosphere in small mid-west redneck town with population of 2000. Good to have some comparison. When people become curious about something or someone, usually an out of place character or phenomenom, they lower their shields as personalities. They might be wary of something new, but they way you react to anything new or challenging is a passing window to one angle of our psyche. That makes my travels interesting, because places, people or experiences in itself need to found by a right person. A location with its fixed habitants has found its secure loops and ways of life. When a new radical factor is introduced to that secure system it needs to re-evaluate, re-create and re-arrange itself. [/QUOTE]
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