I am not sure who I am addressing here due to the dual authorship. I read Julie's Forward. She intrigued me with her approach, but hooked me with her accompanying Jung quotes. “Thinking is difficult, that’s why most people judge.” I had not heard that one, but I love it.
The Forward opens doors for the reader to view many of the negative behavior patterns I have been writing about for the last 30 years. I have a feeling we are going to be friends. I will drop a URL below that links to my first Stack article which covers some of what you all are talking about. If you find yourself treading on all but too familiar ground while reading it, please feel free to disregard it.
Our political, economic, and religious (PER) systems are extremely predatory. The USA's continued colonial expansion is unnecessarily destroying our young physically and mentally. We can stop it and maybe save the world in the process. Obviously you all are completely aware of the work that is necessary to make that happen.
Sean replied to my latest article and left a URL which led me here. Apparently there is some information on Zionist Israel in the article/chapter "Praying for Slaughter" so I am headed there next. Peace, G
The section at the end marked "The Human Cost" covers US Veterans an PTSD. -
Thanks, I'll go read that now. Julie is Rubicon's wife of 40 years (the Forward is all her writing). Because of the pain involved, it was necessary to interview Rubicon over several months, then have him read how I put his sentiments into prose acceptable to his feelings. He's very intense when he's talking about these things, and I wanted desperately for his feelings to shine through with a voice that sounds like him. Julie is an amazing person and Rubicon realizes how fortunate he is.
Thanks for providing more context. Julie is an incredible person. I thank all three of you for being willing to walk through all of it. I can only imagine that you all had a support network that helped you to get through it, however few in number that may have been.
I had a friend who was army special ops in Nicaragua in 1981. He was training contra recruits. Mike Bray was his name. He tried telling people what had happened without releasing classified info. but people blew him off. PTSD wasn't really talked about that much then. He died in a work related accident while working for a contractor that was building a bridge across the Mississippi River (fell of a bridge post from 150ft in the air). This happened in 1985. I thought a lot about him after doing the vast research on US Foreign Policy some 20 years later. Peace, G
I am not sure who I am addressing here due to the dual authorship. I read Julie's Forward. She intrigued me with her approach, but hooked me with her accompanying Jung quotes. “Thinking is difficult, that’s why most people judge.” I had not heard that one, but I love it.
The Forward opens doors for the reader to view many of the negative behavior patterns I have been writing about for the last 30 years. I have a feeling we are going to be friends. I will drop a URL below that links to my first Stack article which covers some of what you all are talking about. If you find yourself treading on all but too familiar ground while reading it, please feel free to disregard it.
Our political, economic, and religious (PER) systems are extremely predatory. The USA's continued colonial expansion is unnecessarily destroying our young physically and mentally. We can stop it and maybe save the world in the process. Obviously you all are completely aware of the work that is necessary to make that happen.
Sean replied to my latest article and left a URL which led me here. Apparently there is some information on Zionist Israel in the article/chapter "Praying for Slaughter" so I am headed there next. Peace, G
The section at the end marked "The Human Cost" covers US Veterans an PTSD. -
https://guyschell.substack.com/p/the-meditative-mind-and-identifying
Thanks, I'll go read that now. Julie is Rubicon's wife of 40 years (the Forward is all her writing). Because of the pain involved, it was necessary to interview Rubicon over several months, then have him read how I put his sentiments into prose acceptable to his feelings. He's very intense when he's talking about these things, and I wanted desperately for his feelings to shine through with a voice that sounds like him. Julie is an amazing person and Rubicon realizes how fortunate he is.
Thanks for providing more context. Julie is an incredible person. I thank all three of you for being willing to walk through all of it. I can only imagine that you all had a support network that helped you to get through it, however few in number that may have been.
I had a friend who was army special ops in Nicaragua in 1981. He was training contra recruits. Mike Bray was his name. He tried telling people what had happened without releasing classified info. but people blew him off. PTSD wasn't really talked about that much then. He died in a work related accident while working for a contractor that was building a bridge across the Mississippi River (fell of a bridge post from 150ft in the air). This happened in 1985. I thought a lot about him after doing the vast research on US Foreign Policy some 20 years later. Peace, G