Monday, February 27, 2006

Day166-ResusCitateHumanity (SoundingGay)

SoundingGay ...

Every now and then, a word comes out in that way. You know, sounding 'gay.' At least, maybe you think so. What difference does it make? I don't care what's in your crotch. I don't want to know what you do with it. The sound of your words didn't remind me to sniff it. I do not share in that perversion. If your words are understood, you have brilliantly and artfully conducted language. Very few living entities are capable of doing that. And nobody has ever done it perfectly.

If you are worried that other people might examine your crotch over the sound of one of your words, then you have been taken hostage by a ThoughtVirus. You are sick, but it's curable. I am here to heal you.

We all do it. Every now and then, a word comes out sluggish, or with a lisp, which is relaxed muscles due to fatigue. This can distort the rehearsed tongue-manipulation exercises you learned as a child in order to speak. It's fatigue, that's all. And all fatigue is caused by gravity. When your body is craving for nutrients of any variety, including sleep, this 'muscle spasm' occurs while trying to overcome gravity. It's not a real 'muscle spasm.' Because that isn't what is happening. Those are caused from sporadic impulses. Fatigued tongue is caused from depleted nutrition, when it's exhausted, and your metabolism needs suplementing, nourishment.

Of course, there are some that speak 'that way.' It has nothing to do with their crotch. And if you immediately think so, then you are expressing your inner-most fantasies, and voodoo-projecting them onto someone else. This is a symptom of the ThoughtVirus. It's easily curable. Because those thoughts -- relating spoken sounds to sex -- is brainwashing. You were trained to think that way. You see, when people speak, they do so with all kinds of strange 'slips of the tongue,' and assorted 'fatigues.' It's not abnormal at all, in fact, it's completely normal. We use different voice fluctuations in different settings, expressiveness our most beautiful trait, and we know this through music. We will never all sound the same in regular conversation, nor pronounce words exactly the same. We are not robots. We are not Scheople. All of us treasure new discoveries, exploration, and uniqueness, even in others' speach and appearance. That is who we are as a species, to the core of our beings.

And the way someone else sounds, or looks, has nothing to do with you -- feelings of 'guilt by association' is an symptom of that from which you have just been healed.

Treasure it.

Kind Regards,
3Ons - HFA
UniversalTheorem -- OnTime, RU?
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I typed it in here, originally: http://www.politicalcrossfire.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1202143#1202143

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