Butterflies Are Free To Fly
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Chapter 31 begins with the question: "You’ve been pretty hard on the ego throughout this book. Isn’t that a judgment in itself?" The author explains that "we have assigned the ego a lot of power during the first half of the Human Game, and we have rewarded it time and time again for the good job it has done, to the point that it seems to have taken on a life of its own. But we should not make the mistake of judging or blaming the ego, or view the transformation into a butterfly as an all-out war with the ego. After all, the ego is simply another piece of the hologram that...
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Part Three is a section with Questions and Answers....
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In Chapter 21, the author talks about what it's like to become a butterfly......
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"After more hours upon hours of spiritual autolysis, I wrote something else that is true: What you resist persists."
In Chapter 18, the author examines the question of resistance and how the idea has been perverted inside the movie theater.
"The truth is that all resistance is based on a judgment; or put the other way, resistance would not exist without a prior judgment. If you judge something to be “negative,” you resist it. So the solution is not to try to deny or ignore the “negative” thoughts and focus on the “positive ones,” but to eliminate the judgment altogether that is the source of the resistance."