Hmm...
-Basically, I hold the view that human beings end up attaining greater and greater levels of fulfillment when they strive to achieve things in line with their own goals. (I honestly have never spoken with anyone who doesn't feel fulfillment is the result of this).
-Your perceptions of things around you - and thus, those things themselves (your perception make up the only way you may ever understand the enviornment around you) are constantly shifting.
-Nothing will ever exist past what exists in each individual moment (the sum total of your perception of something will never be the same between two distinct moments).
-The one thing you can truly "bring with you" into the future is your being. Basically, you mind and body. This doesn't mean that it is pointless to produce things outside of your mind and body, only that you should accept the transient nature of other "objects" (this includes other people, even).
-Basically, you can find one string of continuity in your life if you try constantly to progress as a human being and elevate yourself in line with post-humanistic beliefs. Constantly striving to better yourself and seek lasting fulfillment of your being that cannot be "taken away from you" is something to seek.
-To do this, you must also use everything you can. Thus, you cannot accept anything as absolute truth - only
relative truth (whatever works best in practice and is based on the knowledge you have at any given moment). Upon realization of a "better path", "truth" should be immediately discarded in favor of a better "truth". In this way, progress is never-ending.
When judging something that will improve your being, you have to ask yourself some questions. The concept of improving your being takes an assumption of basic continuity in most cases, and is reactive to breaks in continuity. Thus, it requires
time to work, and works for you over time.
Spending one's entire life eating the exact right foods and forgoing social interaction to do so, for example, is profoundly unfulfilling as a whole. It's cost (in time and energy)/benefit ratio is far too high.
Liver Flushing takes very little time, energy, and money (a product of time, energy, the abilities of oneself, and one's enviornment) and has both breadth and depth with regard to potential benefits.
SO - even though I don't percieve myself as having any problems, I'm still looking to better myself and make my body more functional. I don't believe in trying to just do what evolution would predict (that would include, most likely, dying young of disease or violence) - I believe in exploiting fully the nature of the human body and human consciousness to try to constantly transcend my current state of being.
Yep.