The inside of your body is like a guitar.

Let’s say on one string there is sadness. If you block that sadness, the sound (your feelings) of the other strings changes too.

So when you block something bad (I’ve been there), you also change the good: good feelings won’t feel as good as they should. This is what causes that depressive “grey” layer over all your emotions.


You can’t take a single observation and stretch it across time

Darwin’s Origin of Species is beautiful, but it’s a unique and local observation. You can’t just take one observation and multiply it over many years.

If you extrapolate something over time, you have to account for additional factors that eventually make the original observation useless.

If you say, for instance, that something descends from something else, then you’re also implying that humans descend from clouds—because everything ultimately comes from everything. You can’t have one without the other.

It’s like taking a generic rule such as “I have to work out every day,” without adding the nuance that some days you shouldn’t go. Some days are different—that’s actually the hard part.

It’s the same with religion. You can’t just take religious rules from scripture without interpreting them in the context of the time you’re in. Many of the general principles still hold, but you lose the why. For example:
Why was there a rest day on Sunday? Because having one day without cars is good for the environment.
Why is it smart to take a moment of silence before dinner? It shows respect for the person who made the meal, and it helps prevent overstimulation.

There is a sound hidden in ancient religious cultures that tells us about the origin of everything. Sounds familiar?

Hint 1: It’s not a book.
Hint 2: There are many references to the body.
Hint 3: They are sounds.
Hint 4: The inside of the body makes sounds.
Hint 5: A major scientific theory is hidden there.