►
From YouTube: W22 Gravity WG: Gravity Decolonization w/Durgadas
Description
🙏 Thank you for watching! Hit 👍 and subscribe 🚩 to support this work
🌱Join the Community🌱
on Discord https://discord.gg/uM4ZWDjNfK
or say hello on Telegram https://t.me/tecommons
Join the conversation https://forum.tecommons.org/
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tecmns
Learn more http://tecommons.org/
A
So
so
the
this
work
has
come
out
of
some
personal
things
for
me,
so
I
basically
wanted
to
talk
about
how
I
came
to
look
at
this
kind
of
thing
and
it's
it's
a
little
hard
for
sort
of
a
privileged
white
guy
to
talk
about
decolonization,
but
the
the
the
thing
that
sort
of
occurred
to
me
in
that
sense
was.
A
I
work
at
a
native
band
and
I
I
work
with
people
who
dealt
with
sort
of
the
legacy
of
colonization
and
my
wife
suffered
through
a
lot
of
this
kind
of
thing,
even
even
as
accomplished
as
she
is.
She
has.
A
She
has
two
degrees
and
and
a
gold
medal
in
the
commonwealth
games,
the
silver
medal
in
the
panning
games
in
a
bronze
medallion
olympic
games,
and
yet
that
has
not
protected
her
from
many
of
the
forces
of
colonization,
and
so
myself,
I'm
on
the
autism
spectrum
and
I've
suffered
for
a
long
time
at
the
hands
of
this
very
narrow
approach
to
things
and
and
my
mind
always
wanted
to
find
some
underlying
like
an
accurate
diagnosis
that
would
connect
all
of
these
things
together,
while
not
disavowing
my
own
culpability.
A
In
that,
in
my
own,
you
know
need
to
to
to
be
both
responsible
and
and
free.
So
because
of
the
late
start,
I'm
I
was
gonna.
Do
a
20-minute
exercise
at
the
beginning
of
this
thing,
but
because
of
the
late
start,
I'm
just
going
to
kind
of
get
started,
so
so
the
the
basic
idea
of
calling
it
I
am.
A
The
problem
is
to
to
recognize
your
own
agency
in
in
terms
of
that,
and
then
you
know,
I'm
regis
and
then
a
huge
amount
of
this
comes
from
the
time
that
I
spent
living
in
the
in
the
hindu
monastery
and
learning
about
the
mind
and
how
it
operated
and
some
of
the
older
mental
models
which
we'll
get
into
a
little
bit
later
in
the
presentation.
A
But
what
I
what
I
came
to
realize
watching
joel
volte,
taylor's
stroke
of
insight,
video
and
the
divided
brain
and
the
making
of
the
western
world
how
these
things
actually
kind
of
worked
and
and
like
if
you
look
at
hatha
yoga
has,
is
the
you
know,
the
the
sun
and
the
ta
is
the
moon
right.
So
this
this
unified
and
the
and
the
divided
together.
A
So
when
I
was
at
the
ashram
learning
about
yoga,
I
recognized
that
there
was
these
two
parts
of
the
of
the
brain
that
were
actually
connected
and
if
you
watch
these
videos,
which
I
highly
recommend
just
like
jill
bolte,
taylor's
original
video
I'll
actually
put
some
links
in
the
gravity
that
are
related
to
this.
There's
an
awful
lot
of
resources
in
this
presentation,
which
you
know
I
can't
fully
watch
during
it.
A
But
hopefully
you
can
see
from
the
divided
mind,
it
starts
to
become
obvious
that
the
way
that
our
culture,
the
way
that
our
culture
is
validating
the
nature
of
what
we're
doing
with
respect
to
everything
with
respect
to
money.
So
if
you've
ever
heard,
can
somebody
ygg?
Can
you
thank
you?
A
If
you
take
a
look
at
the
way
we
handle
money,
it's
done
in
this
very
sort
of
divided
way,
we'll
get
into
that
a
little
bit,
but
the
way
that
we
sort
of
handle
our
social
forms
is
done
also
in
this
very
divided
way.
So
it
used
to
be
that
the
entire
world
was
set
up
in
a
unified
worldview,
and
you
can
see
this
here,
so
you
could
have
like
the
occasional
genghis
khan
with
his
divided
colonizer
mindset
show
up
and
then
eventually
when
he
was
done.
A
You
know,
then,
that
then,
that
sort
of
subsided
back
into
this
generally
unified
approach.
But
what
calling
it
what
colonization
has
done
is
is
taken.
This
divided
world
view
and
spread
it
around
such
that
that
now
every
place
that
we
live
in
is
divided
in
a
lot
of
the
people
who
used
to
know
things
about
how
to
behave
and
contextualize
and
in
in
unified
ways
are
not
here
anymore
because
of
the
the
colonized
part
of
this
thing,
and
it
goes
so
far
as
to
affect
our
visual
perception.
A
So
I've
got
some
links
around
colonized
societies.
A
There's
this
one
gentleman
jonathan
hate
who
talks
about
how
it
affects
our
visual
perception
and
the
reason
why
I'm
talking
to
you
guys
about
it
is
because
this
divided
versus
unified
mindset
is
so
pervasive
that
oftentimes,
even
when
we
attempt
to
create
unified
approaches
to
things
like
new
versions
of
money
and
cryptocurrency
and
griff's
whole
idea
about
you
know,
the
story
of
money
is
broken.
A
The
reason
why
it's
broken
is
more
specifically:
it's
divided,
it's
divided
by
default
and
it
creates
these
kinds
of
hierarchies
and
there
are
a
lot
of
after
effects
of
that.
So
there
are
two
different
monetary
systems.
There
are
extractive
and
exploited
of
monetary
systems.
There
is
a
line
in
generative
monetary
systems.
We
have
very
centralized
things
but
they're
also
very
imbalanced,
so
there's
a
much
smaller
selectorate,
less
distributed
agency
and
power,
whereas
you
can
everyone
here
knows
that
we're
working
toward
decentralization
and
disintermediated
stuff.
So
basically,
what
happens?
A
Is
you
know
in
these
divided
systems
that
the
being
the
middleman
is
the
approach
and
it
actually
creates
the
more
middlemen
there
are?
It
creates
this
gap
between
the
signal
and
the
signified
and
then
incentivizes
people
to
continue
doing
so,
and
so
that's,
it's
kind
of
that's
where
this
stuff
shows
up
inside
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
so.
The
moment
you
get
into
these
decentralized
systems.
A
You
know
a
lot
of
the
the
colonization
versus
anti-colonization
stuff
can
exist
because
you
know
we've
got,
we've
got
tools
that
are
set
up
for
that
and
what
I'm
trying
to
do
is
sort
of
show
the
general
population
in
the
token
engineering
commons.
How
is
it
that
we
have
been
influenced
by
this
sort
of
cultural,
the
legacy
cultural
code
base?
I
call
it
of
divided
thinking
that
we've
been
taught
in
schools.
We've
been
taught
by
our
parents,
we've
been
taught
by
our
friends,
we've
been
taught
by
everything.
A
We've
ever
done,
our
entire
education
system,
the
more
educated
you
are
in
western
things,
often
the
more
divided
you're
thinking
about
things,
and
even
if
you're
aware
of
it,
you
know,
there's
a
it's
still
very
insidious.
I'll
give
you
an
example:
I
used
to
live
in
the
united
states
for
most
of
my
life
and
when
I
moved
to
canada,
I
just
couldn't
really
believe
how
bad
all
of
the
indoctrination
was
over
there.
It
was
really
disturbing
to
me.
A
It
took
me
a
really
long
time
to
kind
of
get
over
that,
so,
even
if
you
you're
aware
of
it,
it
still
works
on
you
in
these
these
subtextual
subconscious
ways,
and
so
I'm
trying
to
work
with
token
engineers
and
in
with
gravity
and
other
things
to
shine
a
light
on
some
of
these
things.
A
It's
also
true
that
you
could
say
that
from
a
developmental
standpoint,
which
we'll
talk
about
a
little
bit
later
from
spiral,
dynamics
and
integral
theory
and
things
the
the
unified
approaches
as
like
that
positive
thing
that
you're
trying
to
do
so
here,
we
are
all
trying
to
advance
token
engineering,
but
there
is
a
shadow
side
of
this
cultural
legacy
code
base
which
exists,
and
we
need
to
shine
a
light
upon
those
things
so
that
we
can
avoid
possible
problems
down
the
line.
A
I'll
give
you
an
example
right
now:
you
still
to
this
day,
have
working
on
behalf
of
native
populations
and
other
exploited
populations
where
the
legacy
cultural
code
base
still
exists,
codified
in
law
from
150
to
200
years
ago.
A
That
has
ongoing
after
effects
that
no
one
could
ever
have
imagined
back
in
that
time,
and
so
it's
my
purpose
to
try
to
help
us
figure
out
ways
to
sort
of
decolonize
our
own
thinking.
So
we
don't
create
systems
that
later
on,
because
we
we
didn't,
have
the
foresight
to
think
about
it.
You
know
we
create
those
systems
underneath
ourselves
and
that's
actually.
A
The
reason
why
I
began
participating
here
is
because
this
this
cultural
build
seems
to
me
to
be
the
the
very
best
opportunity
to
try
to
affect
that
kind
of
outlook.
A
So
there's
an
awful
lot
of
things
on
this
page,
but
there
are
philosophical
and
educational
differences.
You
know,
I
won't
go
too
much
into
these
right
now,
but
it's
basically
about
hierarchies
and
and
materialism
and
speaks
a
little
bit
more
to
the
sort
of
the
indoctrination
portion.
How
far
this
has
gone.
This
has
got
gone
down
to
even
talking
about
things
from
the
philosophical
level.
A
One
big
difference
is:
is
that
the
divided
mind
tends
to
think
in
terms
of
beliefs
and
ideologies,
whereas
the
unified
mind
is
about
subverting
those
kinds
of
beliefs,
and
this
is
the
the
primary
difference
between
these
two
intellectual
approaches
yeah,
so
we
even
go
out
and
enjoy
ourselves
in
these
really
weird
ways
like
I
don't
know
if
you're
aware
about
the
sort
of
the
sort
of
fight
for
your
your
your
mind,
but
it
seems
to
me
that
we
should
have
the
ability
to
think
about
things
in
terms
of
having
a
harmonious
inner
and
outer
truth.
A
So
you'll
notice
that
the
the
legal
drugs,
especially
alcohol,
are
really
destructive
and
addictive,
and
we
tend
to
actually
legalize
things
which
are
destructive
and
addictive,
and
then
work
to
make
those
things
socially
acceptable
in
the
same
kind
of
way
that
we
would
make
exploitative
monetary
systems.
A
We
we
just
do
it
everywhere,
once
you
start
to
see
how
the
the
the
unified
and
the
divided,
and,
by
the
way
the
unified,
is
always
sort
of
bigger
and
greater
than
the
divided
and
in
in
my
mind,
it's
actually
kind
of
a
good
and
evil
thing
like
divided
thinking
is
the
evil
side
of
the
picture
and
unified
as
sort
of
the
good
side
of
the
picture,
and
as
long
as
you're
contextualizing
your
divided
mind
inside
of
your
unified
thinking,
then
you're
generally
going
to
be
okay,
and
many
of
the
things
that
we
have
had
as
illegal
drugs
for
decades
are
things
that
actually
create
a
greater
knowledge
of
both
yourself
and
and
allow
you
to
escape
these
different
socialization
systems
that
are
extractive
and
destructive
and
addictive
in
general.
A
So
my
basic
assertion
with
this
is
that
colonization
is
a
worldwide
financial
governance
level,
expression
of
narcissistic
abuse,
and
if
you
don't
know
what
narcissistic
abuse
is,
I
basically
try
to
give
you
some
some
ideas
of.
Why
is
it,
for
example,
that
cryptocurrencies
are
called
scams
all
the
time,
and
why
are
people
who
care
about
animals
considered
terrorists?
A
It's
it's
all.
This
divided
way
of
looking
at
everything
just
because
narcissistic
abuse
has
to
continue
thinking
about
its
divided
approach
to
everything
so
divided
thinking
just
naturally
lends
itself
toward
narcissism
right
and
then
the
the
primary
problem
that
happens
in
the
when
you
go
too
far
with
the
the
divided
side
of
the
picture
is
where
and
where
it
gets
into
narcissism
is
when
you
start
externalizing
all
of
your
costs.
A
So
just
from
just
from
a
corporate
standpoint,
you
can
see.
Companies
like
walmart
are
beloved
by
the
finance
sector
because
they
literally
externalize
their
costs.
It's
it's
the
literal
corporate
manifestos
to
to
externalize
it
onto
their
employees,
externalize
it
onto
their
suppliers
and
their
shippers.
A
But
yeah
you
can
see
that
a
person
who's
escaping
from
an
abusive
partner,
an
intimate
relationship
or
a
person
who's
recovering.
Like
me,
from
being
raised
by
a
narcissist,
a
person
who's,
you
know
being
indoctrinated
like
I
know
I
work
in
a
native
band
and
I've
heard
a
story
of
a
woman
who
was
a
native.
She
spoke
with
a
british
accent
because
she
she
was
indoctrinated
in
this
british
system,
and
it's
just
you
know,
had
no
idea
about
her
own
culture,
social
justice
movements,
the
pejorative
social
justice
warrior.
A
I
mean
all
these
environmentalist
movements
on
and
on.
All
of
these
things
are,
all
you
know,
use
there's
kind
of
a
war
on
our
sense
making
in
terms
of
how
is
it
that
becoming
a
vegan
is
suddenly
a
a
you,
take
a
person,
who's
compassionate
trying
to
not
eat
animals,
and
that's
turned
into
a
violent
judgmental
somebody
you
know.
So
this
is
just
what
we
do.
A
This
is
how
colonization
works
and
and
it's
gaslighting,
and
all
these
things,
and
and
so
we
go
into
that
a
little
bit
more
and
and
that's
why
our
our
information,
ecology
is
so
broken
and-
and
I
highly
recommend
that
you
take
a
look
at
the
war
on
sense
making
by
daniel
schmackenberger
in
on
youtube.
A
There
is
no
such
thing
as
a
post-truth.
There
is
no
such
thing
as
post-race
and
there's
no
such
thing
as
post-colonization
I
use
race
in
terms
of
the
race
is
really
just
like
the
pretext
upon
which
a
narcissistic
abuser
will
divide
and
say
so.
Oftentimes
it'll,
be
people
like
me
who
are
neurodiverse.
People
who
are
short
people
who
are
tall.
People
are
women.
People
are
fat
people
just
we
just
divide.
A
We
think
of
all
these
things.
Just
think.
If
you
stop
for
a
second
and
think
about
how
reflexively
divided,
we
are
all
the
time
with
everything
it's
you
start
to
realize
that
there
is
no
such
thing
as
post
any
of
this
stuff,
and
a
lot
of
this
comes
from
because
of
these.
A
These
colonization
things
started
with
european
families.
It
would
already
been
placed
into
situations
like
this
kings
and
queens
and
and
so
on,
and
so
what
what
we
basically
did
was
that
group
of
people
who
had
already
succumbed
to
narcissism
and
and
and
by
the
way
you
know
so
many
of
the
kings
and
queens
of
europe
are
all
intermarried
and
related.
So
this
protect
the
image
of
the
family
and,
frankly,
my
narcissistic
family
does
the
same
exact
thing
and
and
yet
somehow
they're
incredibly
successful.
A
According
to
you
know
our
society,
my
dad
was
a
very
successful
executive
and
all
the
rest
of
my
family
lives
in
this
bubble
with
them.
So,
okay.
A
So
this
the
sort
of
final
part
about
this
legacy
of
narcissism
thing
is
it's
my
assertion
that
colonization
is
essentially
a
normalized
expression
and
it's
so
normal
that
we
almost
can't
even
detect
that
it
exists,
and
I
have
to
do
a
presentation
on
the
fact
that
everyone
lives
in
a
situation
where
we
all
exists
inside
of
this
mirrored
fun
house,
and
our
attempt
to
break
that
mirrored
funhouse
in
in
terms
of
money
is
only
one
way
in
which
the
implications
of
that
really
matter.
A
It's
not
the
only
solution,
it's
my
basic
pretext
here,
my
involvement
in
cryptocurrency
that
that,
unless
we
marry
the
psychology
of
of
this
development
and
understanding
the
fun
house
that
we're
living
in
here
in
the
divided
mindset,
if
we
don't,
if
we
don't
understand
the
where
the
decentralized
autonomous
organization
comes
from
in
terms
of
that
unified
way
of
thinking,
we're
gonna
tend
to
turn
it
into
colonized.
A
A
All
of
this
stuff
occurs,
and-
and
this
is
where
it
comes
from-
I'm
I'm
trying
to
show
you
guys
what
the
the
the
underbelly
of
all
this
is,
so
that
then
you
can
be
aware
of
what's
going
on.
I
also
include
the
cycle
of
abuse
here,
but
we
won't
go
into
that
for
now
and
basically,
the
the
inevitable
result
of
of
all
of
this
is
you
basically,
nurses
have
to
kind
of
group
up
to
with
each
other
to
reinforce
their
their
their
idea
of
belonging.
A
So,
like
I
said,
I've
got,
you
know.
Family
members
are
trapped
in
this
sort
of
this
sort
of
wall
of
that,
and
and
all
of
our
money
is
trapped
in
a
similar
kind
of
cult
and
look
at
how
marketing
and
everything
works
like
successful
people
who
are
successfully
marketing
things
like
apple
computers.
There's
a
cult
like
even
the
idea
of
success
that
we
have
now
in
many
ways
is
defined
by
this
sort
of
cult-like.
A
You
know
idea,
and
so,
but
you'll
also
notice
that
the
all
this
appropriation
also
comes
with
it,
and
so
we
we
have
to
do
that
to
continue
reinforcing
and
getting
fresh
fresh
things
going
on
inside
of
the
narcissistic
bubble
as
well,
and
this
is
what
eventuates
into
cults.
A
Now.
I'd
also
like
to
point
out
that
one
of
the
things
that
I
speak
about
in
terms
of
privileges
is
privilege.
Also
harms
the
person
who
is
privileged
so
so
in
this
video
that
I
link
to
here,
tim
wise's,
youtube
video.
A
He
actually
talks
about
how,
even
though
privilege
tells
you
that
that
a
certain
narrative
is
going
on
at
some
point,
you
realize
that
the
reality
is
outside
of
that
narrative,
and
you
see
this,
for
example
like
the
atrocities
in
columbine,
where
they're
they're,
these
are
race,
focused
ideas
and
the
parents
had
no
idea
that
their
kids
were
dealing
with
that
the
same
thing
with
various
colonizing
things
in
the
middle
east
and
so
on.
A
But
at
the
same
time
it's
really
interesting
because
you
see,
nigeria
is
a
very
war-torn
oppressed
country
with
terrible
infrastructure
and
everything
else.
So
why
is
it?
Americans
have
you
know
five
times
the
amount
of
anxiety
and
and
and
stuff,
then
a
company
that
or
a
country-
that's
war-torn
it.
It's
basically
that
this
privilege
that
blinds
us
blinds
us.
So
it
creates
all
this
anxiety
that
we
aren't
aware
of,
and
it
kind
of
creates
a
shadow
version
of
our
efforts
so
that
we
can't
really
identify
properly.
A
What's
going
on
and
I'm
going
to
skip
over
this
a
little
bit,
but
basically
the
the
the
main
issue
is
that
people
don't
really
know
how
to
manage
properly
versus
the
large
and
the
small,
that
is
to
say
the
centralized.
Folks
will
say.
Oh
you
know,
there
needs
to
be
small
government,
for
example
this
trope.
A
What
they're
really
doing
is
saying
you
should
you
should
outsource
all
of
your
all
of
your
stuff
to
us,
which
is
more
of
that
same
narcissistic
bs,
and
the
the
big
enemy
of
the
of
the
of
the
narcissist
is
a
person
who
knows
themselves
and
so
oftentimes
we
feel
like
you
know.
We
need
to
figure
out
a
way
to
know
ourselves,
but
it's
extremely
difficult
to
do
this
inside
of
the
fear,
uncertainty
and
doubt
mechanism
that
exists.
A
Eric
weinstein
calls
it
the
distributed.
Information
suppression
complex.
These
are
all
just
the
same
kind
of
you
know,
industrialized
gaslighting
mechanisms.
So
it's
my
belief
that
we
all
have
a
desire
to
actually
know
ourselves
and
as
part
of
a
decentralized
community.
It
should
be
part
of
our
mandate
to
develop
the
individuals
inside
of
that
group.
Toward
that
end,
so
let's
talk
about
now.
A
What
do
we
do
to
to
become
free
and
the
whole
idea
is
that
we
need
to
wake
up
to
what's
going
on
and
a
lot
of
times
when
we
wake
up
to
what's
going
on
we'll
begin
participating
in
dows
and
then
we'll
start
moving
from
geez
I've
been
at
the
effect
of
these
broken
monetary
systems
and
things
for
a
long
time.
What
is
it
that
I
need
to
actually
do,
and
then
you
get
into
this
grow,
grow
up
mindset
right
and
then
from
there.
A
You
know
which
is
kind
of
in
this
cleanup
area,
which
is
where
I
would
say,
we're
really
doing
a
great
job
as
a
as
a
dao
is
this.
You
know
authentic
communication
negotiating
well
so
much
of
what
we
do
around
voting
and
all
of
this
stuff
is
just
you
know.
If
you
take
a
look,
this
number
three
is
really
in
our
in
our
wheelhouse
here.
You
know
it
is
a
huge
emphasis
of
dows.
A
It's
my
suggestion
that
we
probably
could
do
better
at
working
on
some
of
the
the
other
aspects
too,
and
so
then
you
know,
then
the
showing
up
part
is
really
where
we,
where
we
get
impact
hours,
where
we
do
all
these
things.
People
are
really
sustainably
successful.
In
this.
This
thing
I'm
suggesting
that
we
take
a
lot
of
the
things
that
we
learn
here
and
sort
of
apply
it
to
other
areas
of
our
lives.
So
I've
broken
up
the
rest
of
the
slides
in
terms
of
the
this.
A
This
set
of
things-
and
this
is
my
basic
approach
to
working
on
these
things
so
yeah
in
order
to
wake
up,
there's
another
great
tim,
wise
video
on
just
making
sure
we
interrogate
the
lens
through
which
we
view
the
social
reality
and
interrogating
the
lens
through
which
we
view
the
reality
is
in
fact
the
way
in
which
one
can
go
about
figuring
out
some
of
the
shadow
elements
behind
the
positive
things
that
we're
doing
those
things
always
travel
together
in
pairs
and
so
by
interrogating.
A
That
lens,
you
make
sure
you're
constantly
taking
a
look
at
that
stuff,
because
the
the
shadow
stuff
is
the
stuff
without
which
the
positive
stuff
can't
happen,
and
so
by
understanding
what
you're
sort
of
dragging
along
with
you
just
in
terms
of
a
legacy
cultural
code
base
or
a
personal
or
familial
cultural
code
base.
You
can
make
the
work
that
you're
producing
better,
so
waking
up
to
the
fact
that
these
things
exist,
I
think,
is
what
we're
all
involved
in
here.
A
A
You
know
he's
the
thing
that
I
really
appreciate
about
everybody
who's
working
here
is
that
we're
all
in
one
way
or
another
working
toward
this
type
of
thing,
and
it's
really
nice
that
we
have
such
a
large
group
of
people
who
are
in
in
leadership
positions
in
in
the
token
engineering
commons
that
actually
do
the
right
side
stuff,
and
I
think
you
can
kind
of
see
that
all
this
stuff
is
the
stuff
we're
running
away
from.
A
Same
thing,
in
terms
of,
if
we
switch
it
over
now
to
the
to
feelings
and
needs
of
people
who
are
abused,
you'll
see
and
probably
identify
with
some
things
on
the
left
side,
because
this
is
where
we.
A
This
is
where
this
is,
how
we're
taught
this
is
our
our
whole
methodology
of
working
and
the
idea
is
to
to
begin
shift
over
to
these
other,
these
other
more
unified
strategies.
A
So
this
is
a
basic.
This
is
a
yogic
approach
to
the
way
the
mind
works
so
there
it's.
It's
positive
that
there's
this
temasek
thing,
which
is
the
the
hiding
power
of
the
mind
and
then
there's
this
rajasthic
thing,
which
is
the
projecting
power
of
the
mind
and,
as
you
sort
of
get
out
of
the
tossing
of
the
mind
and
you
make
progress
up
the
up
toward
this
revealing
power
of
the
mind.
A
You
know
this
is
what
can
shine
a
light
on
what
it
is
that
we're
dealing
with,
and
that's
why
it's
nice
that
we
have
people
who
have
been
through
many
things
like
you
know
the
ethereum
stuff,
and
I
keep
referring
to
griff
here,
but
because
he
has
this
awareness
and
and
can
see
beyond
just
the
the
the
stuff
that's
hidden
from
us
and
and
the
stuff
that
we've
projected
as
a
result
of
not
fully
understanding
yeah,
so
cleaning
up
is,
is
also
we
have
to
do
all
these
things.
A
We
need
to
take
a
look
at
all
of
it
in
terms
of
nonviolent
communication
and
other
stuff,
which
we
also
need
to
assert
our
rights
to
our
consciousness
in
the
sense
of
looking
at
our
shadow
selves.
Grant
hancock's
war
on
consciousness
is
really
a
great
thing
to
talk
about
in
terms
of
how
to
wake
up
from
some
of
these
things,
and
the
321
shadow
process
is
a
very
beautiful
approach
to
this.
So
you
can
interrogate
your
work.
You
can
target
your
personal
life.
A
You
can
interrogate
all
these
things
by
taking
a
look
at
what
you're
carrying
around
unconsciously,
and
you
can
see
this
kind
of
thing
too
in
terms
of
oftentimes
the
monetary
system,
what
we
value
is
typically
just
the
very
tip
of
the
iceberg
and
all
the
stuff
that
actually
creates
all
this
value
is
like
this
hidden
thing,
underneath
that
it's
the
thing
supporting
the
the
stuff
that
we
value
on
top
and
by
understanding
that
full
stack,
then
we
can
become
much
more
aligned,
and
so
it
can
be
incredibly
important
to
have
decision
making
frameworks
around
some
of
these
things,
because
all
of
it's
very
confusing
and
often
overwhelming
so
there's
a
beautiful
thing.
A
That's
called
the
connection
framework.
I
know
the
the
word
doesn't
seem
like
it
should
be
said
that
way,
but
it's,
I
think,
welsh
so
and
there's
a
beautiful
link
to
if
you
look
up
complexity,
canefen
and
agile
on
youtube.
That's
a
very
nice
way
to
approach
dealing
with
the
stuff
that
we're
doing
every
day
in
software
and
and
with
respect
to
connection,
and
this
kind
of
should
give
you
a
sense
of
what
connection
is
all
about.
A
In
many
ways
the
management
side
of
the
picture
and
what
we're
doing
in
the
dao
is
taking
a
chaotic
situation
right
and
then
jumping
across
it
here
to
to
start
doing
experiments
on
it.
This
is
where
our
dow
lives,
I
mean
the
cultural
build,
and
everything
we're
doing
right
now
is
all
based
in
trying
to
respect
the
fact
that
there
is
complexity
there
and
then
we're
putting
some
energy
into
carrying
something
back
with
us.
This
little
guy
going
up
into
the
complicated
right.
A
So
it's
so
we're
doing
experiments
and
then
bringing
the
results
back
across
into
the
realm
of
the
expert
so
and
then
we're
even
going
so
far
as
to
try
to
climb
a
very
large
thing
and
bring
more
stuff
back
with
us,
so
that
we
can
present
people
with
clear
known
and
familiar.
A
You
know
clockwise
around
this
thing
to
to
make
clear
aspects
from
this
chaotic,
complex
and
complicated
aspect.
What
this
cliff
kind
of
represents
is
what
what
happens
in
the
extractive
world
of
money,
where,
if
things
aren't
clear,
you
either
have
an
expert
that
knows,
or
no
one
knows
so
in
in
the
current
culture.
A
What
you
can
see
here
is
that
there's
almost
a
demand
for
simple
or
clear
things,
and
then
we
rely
on
experts
in
the
complicated
and
we
basically
disavow
any
knowledge
of
the
complex
and
the
chaotic
going
back
to
my
divided
and
unified
model.
Here
you
can
see
that
the
complex
and
the
chaotic
is
is
the
right
brain
and
the
complicated
and
the
clear
is
the
the
left
brain
of
the
divided
brain.
A
So
here's
kind
of
a
another
approach
to
this.
You
can
see
the
the
left.
I
know
this
looks
really
messy,
but
the
the
the
point
of
this
slide
really
is
getting
down
to
an
action
mode
right.
So
you
can
see
that,
if
you're
managing
out
of
the
complex
and
the
complicated
you're,
basically
working
this
center
piece
here,
that's
why
it
wiggles
a
little
bit
is
because
the
the
action
mode
for
the
complicated
is
analyze
sense
and
respond,
and
the
action
mode
for
the
complex
is
the
probe
sense
and
respond.
A
And
so
you
can
see
that
in
the
token
engineering
commons
we
actually
operate
primarily
out
of
the
complex
and
the
complicated
right,
whereas
in
when,
if
you're
in
chaos,
all
you
really
have
is
sense,
act
and
respond,
and
then
in
the
simple
you've
got
sense,
categorize
and
response.
So
and-
and
it's
it's
important
to
keep
in
mind
that,
if
you
believe
all
is
simple,
everything
is
ordered.
Past
success
makes
you
invulnerable
the
future
failure.
Then
you
know
before
you
know
it.
A
The
chaotic
domain
is
going
to
grab
you
by
the
throat
and
drag
you
down
into
chaos
and
so
and
and
crisis.
So
so,
to
avoid
some
of
those
things
we
actually
use
frameworks.
Like
nonviolent
communication,
I
would
really
suggest
that
you
have
a
look
at
the
cup
of
empathy,
youtube
channel,
which
is
very
beautiful,
and
then
there
are
eight
hours
of
training
courses.
A
So
this
is
five
hours
or
this
is,
I
think,
eight
hours,
and
then
this
is
five
hours
of
youtube
for
marsha
rosenberg,
and
this
actually
is
summarized
if
those
of
you
have
been
through.
The
gravity
group
before
is
making
observations
arriving
at
what
your
underlying
needs
are
and
strategies
to
meet.
Those
needs
feelings
that
arise
when
the
needs
are
met
or
not
met,
and
then
how
to
make
skull
for
requests,
and
I
think
we're
doing
a
really
good
job
with
this.
A
Prior
solution,
who's
working
in
this
way,
you.
A
And
not
have
to
address
the
different
aspects
we
have.
You
have
to
do
it
within
the
outside
world
and
showing
up
it's
really.
What
we're
all
doing
now
we're
all
in
this
meeting
where
we
all
show
up
for
trent
mcconaughey's
thing
before
this
we're,
and
by
doing
that,
we
end
up
taking
a
look
at
things
in
terms
of
developmental
thinking,
and
there
are
a
couple
of
different
ways
that
I
I
prefer
to
deal
with
that.
But
this
for
me,
is
my
favorite
chart
because
it
actually
kind
of
talks
about
this.
A
Well,
if
you're
somebody
who
is
in
this
or
interacting
with
the
green
culture
in
world
view,
you're
going
to
have
certain
amount
of
spirit
and
there's
going
to
be.
A
And
when
we're
talking
about
things
in
terms
of
gravity
understand
their
narrative
here,
because
I
am
choosing
to
interact
with
the
culture
and
worldview
of
the
token
engineering
commons,
which
then
creates
societal
structures
which
then
extrudes
products
and
and
mental
frameworks
and
other
things
that
the
individuals
who
are
then
participating
will
need
to
deal
with
so
because
this
has
a
story
involved
with
it.
There's
a
narrative
structure
to
the
eye
connecting
with
the
wii
connecting
with
the
it's
connecting
with
the
it.
A
Then
each
one
of
these
things,
developmentally
altitudinally
and
from
from
from
top
left
to
bottom
left
and
from
bottom
left
to
bottom
right
and
from
bottom
right
to
top
right.
All
of
those
have
potential
sources
of
conflict
and
potential
places
in
which
we
could
anticipate
conflict
could
be
there
and
instead
replace
that
proactively
with
a
kind
of
trust
creation.
A
So,
and
then
you
know,
I
go
further
into
this
with
you
know,
spirituality
and
so
on,
but
I
wanted
to
kind
of
wrap
it
up.
I
know
we're
getting
near
we're
almost
exactly
at
the
end
of
the
top
of
the
hour,
but
I
would
like
to
give
about
10
or
15
minutes
to
have
you
guys
ask
questions.
B
More
than
a
question,
durgas
is
a
comment
that
I
love
your
approach
around
colonization
because,
like
coming
from
the
caribbean,
like
we
have
a
story
of
colonization
and
like
the
way
I
had
studied
it
before
it
has
been
like
if,
from
a
divided
point
of
view
where,
where
you
see
that
there
are
like
colonizators
and
people
who
is
colonized.
B
But
here
in
this
approach,
you
say
that
we
are
our
own
colonizators
and
at
the
same
time
we
are
our
own
ways
of
of
free,
freeing
ourselves
because
exactly
right,
like
yeah,
maybe
colonization
now
is
more
suitable
hotel
than
it
was.
C
B
Yeah
and
and
and
this
colonized
mindset
is
something
that
we
have
like,
hard-coded
and
and
and
like
before.
Somehow
I
felt
like
we
were
victims
like
yeah,
we
we
were
exploited,
we
were
victims,
we
were
forced,
but
right
now
I
see
that
that.
Well,
if,
if
we
are
the
the
builders
of
our
destiny,
we
are
also
the
ones
that
can
stop
that
kind
of
colonization
that
has
changed.
A
Yeah
and
and
if
the
world
mode,
if
everyone
woke
up
to
the
fact
that
this
was
true,
then
we
could
go
back
to
to.
We
could
decolonize
ourselves
out
of
the
divided
way
of
thinking
so
that
the
world
mode
would
be
out
outnumbered
instead
of
being
outnumbered
by
colonizers
or
victims,
or
people
who
are
abusers.
Who
themselves
were
previously
abused,
then
we
can.
We
can.
A
We
can
rebalance
the
way
the
world
works
and
crypto
is
a
tool
for
that.
But
it's
not
the
the
real
solution.
You,
you
have
to
marry
the
the
tool
with
the
the
the
person
who's
wielding
the
tool,
because
you
can
use
a
hammer
to
build
a
house
or
you
can
use
it
to
bash
someone's
head
in
it's
just
a
tool,
and
you
have
to
make
sure
that
you're
connecting
the
expertise
and
the
understanding
and
the
underlying
sort
of
ethics
and
all
that
stuff
that
we
concern
ourselves
with
here.
A
In
terms
of
the
token
engineering,
commons
and
so
yeah,
thanks
for
saying
that
any
questions
or
comments.
D
I
just
feel
that
it's
really
really
sad
that
we
didn't
get
the
chance
to
do
the
exercise
at
the
beginning,
but
yeah
regardless,
like
I'm
I'm.
I
would
really
like
be
looking
forward
to
that.
So,
if
there's
like
any
chance
during
any
other
like
gravity
available
spaces
or
something
like
that,
I'd
be
happy
to
join
in
and
yeah
thanks
for
sharing
this,
I
I
I
found
this.
This
topic
really
really
interesting
and
didn't
know
a
bunch
of
it
before
so.
Thank
you
very
much
for
sharing
yeah.
A
It's
also,
you
know
the
approach
that
I'm
trying
to
take
with
this
is
just
to
understand
it
in
terms
of
the
the
basic
psychology
and
even
the
physiology
of
the
the
bicameral
mind
you're
right,
it's
just
a
matter.
What
do
we
validate
with
respect
to
how
we
choose
and
how
we
make
decisions,
and
that's
why
the
connection
framework
is
nice
because
you
can
show
like
okay.
A
Then
you
can
start
getting
this
meta
understanding
of
your
own
decision,
making
your
own
thought
processes
and
that
by
itself
is
going
to
to
pull
you
kind
of
up
and
out
of
that
colonized
mindset
and
you
can
have
some
more
autonomy
and
agency
to
make
critical
choices
about
that.
Just
like
we
do
about
parameters
just
like
like
I
wish
we
had
like
a
parameters
thing
for
how
unified
or
divided
our
approach
to
this
stuff
was
right.
A
So
I
mean
so,
there
are
just
so
many
parallels
in
terms
of
the
positive
things
that
we're
trying
to
do
and
the
the
the
ways
in
which
we're
attempting
to
subvert
all
these
divided
ways
of
thinking.
With
respect
to
money
that
I
hoped
that
it
could
provide
a
sort
of
unified
framework
for
understanding
the
context
of
our
efforts
in
terms
of
this
crypto
space,
griff
or
anyone
else
have
any
comments.
C
This
is
very
insightful
thanks
for
sharing
this
can.
Can
you
link
the
slideshare?
I
would
like
to
dive
down
more.
A
Information
yeah,
it's
got,
there
are
so
many
resources
in
here
in
terms
of
that,
and
so
I
think
I
might
have
a
I
might
have
it
uploaded
as
far
as
a
google
doc,
but
I
will
get
that
done.
B
B
Yeah
we
can
keep
in
touch
and
yeah.
I
I
for
sure
want
this
to
be
one
of
the
topics
of
the
next
graviton
training,
so
yeah.
I
think.
A
It's
amazing
yeah
thanks
yeah.
I
I
do
feel
like
just
this
meta.
Awareness
of
our
own
minds
is
super
important
with
respect
to
how
we
go
about
making
decisions,
so
so,
for
example,
recently,
I
think
I
got
a
graphic
from
from
sub
nem
with
doing
her
ecosystem
value
flows.
I'm
like,
where
are
the
places
where
we
talk
about
shadow
here?
Where
are
the
places
where
we
talk
about
the
you
know:
legacy
cultural
code
base?
Where
is
it
we
talk
about?
You
know
the.
A
A
What
mechanism
is
it
that
we
have
to
actually
turn
ourselves
around
and
shine
the
light
on
that
additional
assumption
right,
and
this
is
what
one
of
the
things
I
keep
sort
of
asking
about
is
so
much
of
what
you
might
have
heard
me
ask
in
other
contexts
and
other
meetings,
and
so
on
is,
and
it
is
often
an
attempt
to
do
that
kind
of
thing.
You
know
what
I
mean
is
is
to
interrogate
the
lens
through
which
we're
viewing
this
thing
right
and
oftentimes.
A
It
might
seem
counterproductive
to
do
that
or
like
an
interruption
in
the
regular
flow
of
things,
and
I
can
feel
that
sometimes
that
it's
true,
but
it
is,
I
think,
incredibly
important
to
interrogate
that
lens,
and
I
I
find
it
to
be
far
from
being
a
a
negative.
In
fact,
just
accounting
for
the
fact
that
that
there
are
these
denied
things
that
we
haven't
handled
gives
us
a
better
chance
of
success.
It
seems
to
me.
A
So
yeah
I'll
upload,
the
latest
version
of
this-
and
there
are
a
bunch
of
hidden
slides
in
here
that
I
didn't
include
because
it's
like
50
slides
now,
it's
getting
the
point
where
I
need
to
really
need
to
write
a
book.
You
know,
but
there's
just
so
much
to
to
talk
about
in
with
respect
to
this,
but
yeah
and
even
back
into
spirituality.
You
can
see
that
all
the
stuff
I
didn't
learn
about
the
unified
and
divided
mind
stuff.
A
Until
I
came
out
of
the
ashram
and
and
the
moment
I
heard
jill
balti
taylor's
thing,
it
was
like
a
light
bulb
went
off
my
head,
it
was
like,
oh
the
whole
time
I
was
living
in
the
modest
area.
Talking
about
spirituality.
It
was
all
verifying
and
ratifying
the
stuff.
That's
going
on
in
my
right,
my
right
brain.
You
know
that
jill
bolte
taylor
talked
about
that's
where
all
this
insight
and
enlightenment
and
all
these
things
all
come
from
this.
A
This
side
of
the
thing
that
the
start
of
your
brain,
which
literally
cannot
tell
differences
so
yeah,
it's
it's
very
beautiful
and
I
hope
you
guys
have
a
deep
dive
on
all
the
links
and
stuff
in
here.
There's
a
ton
of
information
in
here.
Almost
every
bullet
point:
that's
in
this
has
so
much
research
behind
it
and
so
many
aspects
to
it.
So
I
look
forward
to
hearing
your
feedback
and
questions
so
going
forward.
D
You
school
thank
you
very,
very
much
durgados
for
sharing
and
and
thanks
juan
for
yeah
for
vegan
vacation
and
allowing
this.