Game Over
We all play games. That’s how we entertain ourselves.
Games are great for having fun. Yet somehow many of us have adopted a whole array of games that serve to dampen and limit direct experience, rather than the more logical service of accentuating it.
We chose the parameters of our games and those parameters govern how we act within our games. Our world has become overly focused on the parameters, the rules, the systems of our games and we(the ones who the rules are supposed to serve) are expected to change ourselves in light of these rules – rather than having the rules change in light of our actual circumstances . Due to the repetition of this attitude for thousands of years, it seems that many of us have lost sight of what is truly important; our relationships to the things that sustain our being (which is the foundation of all our games).
You could look at it this way:
We have focused our efforts maintaining these ellaborate water containers
made of increasingly scarce materials, when the water that
sustains us is FREE and SAFE to drink from the river.
We need to redefine our parameters. It is important now that we transform
our games into games that take our place in nature into account.
Our governmental, social, economic, temporal and other such games MUST reflect
the demands of our relationship to nature and each other in their rules.
If we do not honor our relationship to nature and each other, we will die
and there will be no more games.



is the water in the Thames drinkable? you try it first!
p.s. i think drinking water is now also a scarce resource… go figure.