Posting to third eye bloglet - Page 52 - Intensity : 20th July, 2007.
The date-wise archives of third eye bloglet about eyes, mind, sex, science, and society turned into web pages. Page 52 makes a real interesting reading:
The totality of action depends upon the intensity of perception.
The more acute the perception, the more impeccable the action!
The acuity of perception and the impeccability of action are what the clearest and the most obvious signs of mental health are.
Now, what does the acuity of perception depend upon?
First, upon the sensitivity of the person, and second, upon the intensity of the stimulus!
If a person is not healthy, her/his sensitivity goes considerably down including the acuity of her/his vision.
Can the sensitivity be increased by any means?
Again, mental hurry kills the sensitivity by reducing the intensity of perception.
So, the opposite of mental hurry should increase it somehow.
Now, what is the opposite of mental hurry?
It certainly is not the mental lethargy.
Mental hurry and mental lethargy are the two extremities of the same pendulum-swing, between which the insensitive mind keeps swinging depending upon the intensity of the stimulus.
If the stimulus is high, the insensitive mind reacts excitedly in haste; and the action goes crude as well as either indulgent or repulsive.
Speed of action goes very fast in this case.
But if the stimulus is low, the insensitive mind reacts in a dull way with lethargy; and the action goes insufficient as well as boring.
Speed of action goes very slow here.
What will happen if the intensity of stimulus is kept high - increasing it in phases at will - and not letting the action be done excitedly in haste?
Perception will go on getting more and more acute since it is being stopped from getting diluted through hastily crude action being done upon the stimulus in an indulgent or repulsive way.
The perceptive faculty of the mind goes on getting the more and more acute perception of the stimulus without performing any physical action upon it.
The sensitivity starts increasing with the strength of the stimulus and with the time it has been there since.
The mind must turn sensitive enough to perceive that much of acuteness for that long a duration of time.
The extended acuity of perception stretches the mind to its limits of sensitivity.
The moment it crosses its first threshold, it settles firm over there; and will never come back to its insensitive state again even when the stimulus is withdrawn.
Certainly, there are many more thresholds of sensitivity to cross with a higher intensity and a longer duration; but the mind has, at least, started on its journey to the permanence of health.
Now, what kind of stimulus can there be, of which the intensity has a therapeutic effect on the sensitivity of perception; and which can also be kept increasing at will, without falling prey to act upon its impulses at the same time - whether indulgent or repulsive?
It can either be an instinctive, or sensual, or a psychological stimulus that can do the job.
Next week, we shall examine them all in detail as to which can best serve our purpose of treating the acuity of perception.
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