Being Free : Get Out of the Box - The Method with 99 Exercises
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About this ebook
You are controlled by countless programs. They create most of your behavior and thinking. They make the box that is a prison for your mind. This workbook contains 99 exercises and detailed instructions on how to get free from your programs and thus leave the box.
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You are controlled by countless programs. They create most of your behavior and thinking. The core of these programs is the idea, developed over tens of thousands of years, of what a human is, what the human potential is, and how to live as a human. Cultural, religious, national, regional, familial, and individual peculiarities augment this idea. These programs make the box that is a prison for your mind.
This box has an exit. Since 2011, I explore this box, and how to leave it, with the meticulousness of a trained scientist. This workbook results from my personal years of experience. It contains 99 exercises and detailed instructions on how to free yourself from your programs and thus leave the box.
What do you get out of leaving the box? You find your true nature and gain access to your full potential. This opens up the limitlessness of your existence and leads to the greatest possible experience of fulfillment. Another benefit is your health.
Bernhard Kutzler
I am a scientist with a doctorate in mathematics and trainings in fields ranging from psychology to nutrition to Ayurveda. I explore the mind with scientific meticulousness and write and speak about my findings. As part of this research, I lived without social interaction and media consumption for 3.5 years. In the process, I developed a Theory of Mind (ToM) and expanded it into a Theory of Everything (ToE). Both theories are described in my book on consciousness. One of my research focuses is on the programs that control us and how we can free ourselves from them so that we can develop our full potential and fulfill our purpose as part of the whole. Another focus is a scientific basis for spiritual phenomena and thus the connection between science and spirituality.
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Being Free - Bernhard Kutzler
The OTHER Story of the Eagle in the Chicken Coop
One day an eagle laid an egg in a chicken coop. The egg hatched and the newborn eagle learned from its peers how to live like a chicken. Life was OK – except for a yearning that made it seek. But none of what it found truly satisfied its yearning.
Would it help if someone told the eagle that it is not a chicken, but an eagle?
No, this would not help. The eagle has learned to be
a chicken; it carries a chicken program
that tells it how to behave under which circumstances. It feels safe and comfortable being
a chicken – except for the yearning.
Would it help if the eagle attended an eagle seminar in order to learn to be an eagle?
No, this would not help either. Learning to be an eagle would install an eagle program that would overlay the chicken program. Then it would be an eagle who believes it is a chicken who has learned to behave like an eagle. This would be even more confusing than continuing to live as a chicken.
The only way for the eagle to be what it truly is, is to free itself from the chicken program.
Why did the eagle’s mother lay her egg in a chicken coop in the first place?
Because she also lives in the chicken coop and believes that she is a chicken. In fact, ALL birds in the chicken coop are eagles who believe that they are chickens – and this has been so for thousands upon thousands of years.
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This story is not about a valuation between eagles and chickens. Eagles are no better than chickens. They are different. This story is about ending up in the wrong life because you grow up among those who have ended up in the wrong life in the same way. And the story is about how to find your true life, your true nature.
I call this story The OTHER Story of the Eagle in the Chicken Coop
because it differs from the one you may know.
In a common version of the story of the eagle in the chicken coop, it is enough if someone tells the eagle that it is an eagle.
But this is an illusion. If the eagle has lived its entire life as a chicken, it knows that it is a chicken. If someone tells it something else, how can the eagle believe it more than its lifelong experience? How would you feel if someone told you that you are something completely different from what you are living today? Would you give up your old life and start a new one based on this information? Maybe you would have to leave family and friends, quit your job, and live somewhere else. Would you have the confidence and courage to do that?
In another version of the story of the eagle in the chicken coop, someone leads the eagle on top of a mountain and gives it a kick so that as the eagle falls down, it remembers how to fly.
But this is also an illusion. A living being doesn’t remember its potential. It develops its potential. For this it needs an environment that demands and thus promotes its potential. Let us consider a cheetah. A cheetah born in the wild develops its potential as a hunter, thus becoming the fastest mammal on this planet. The cheetah must develop its full potential to survive. Until it is skilled enough to prey on its own, its mother feeds it. A cheetah born in captivity learns that food comes from an animal keeper. It need not run fast and prey. And because it doesn’t have to run fast, it doesn’t develop this potential. It could not survive in the wild. No matter how hungry the cheetah was, it could not suddenly run fast enough and kill a prey animal.
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We humans are like the eagle in the chicken coop. We also copy the way of life of our parents and the people around us. We carry a human chicken program that tells us how to behave in which situation. As a result, we lead a limited life and develop only a fraction of our potential.
What is our eagleness? What is our true nature?
We can see this in those who are closest to the true nature of humans: children.
Children live by their true nature. They are authentic. They permanently ask ‘Why?’ and ‘Why not?’ with all their senses in countless ways and listen for answers. As a result, they grow physically and mentally at an enormous speed. This gives rise to their joy in and deep satisfaction with life.
There is nothing more beautiful than watching a child explore the world.
It may seem paradoxical at first, but ...
... true satisfaction with life arises when you are never satisfied with what you have achieved.
Children are like that. They are not satisfied with being able to crawl; they want to stand, walk, and run. They are not satisfied with someone holding their hand while they walk; they want to walk on their own. They are not satisfied with being fed; they want to hold the spoon themselves. They are not satisfied with grunts and groans; they want to speak all the languages they hear. They are not satisfied with what they know about something; they want to find out more about it. They are not satisfied with what they can reach; they want to reach what is out of reach. Children always want to know more, do more, reach more, achieve more. They want to grow without stopping. The power behind this is their ravenous curiosity.
Growing from curiously exploring the world
is our true nature. It is our eagleness.
But this deeply fulfilling life stops when children grow older. It stops because they copy their parents’ way of life. It stops because they hear they should be satisfied with what is. This is a stupid request, which is not only against the nature of humans, but against the nature of life. The same thing happens with the children as with the young eagle in the chicken coop. As the life of adults comprises programs and limitations, children learn to live a life comprising programs and limitations.
The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.
(Proverb)
This limited life is called the seriousness of life.
Have you ever questioned this phrase? Why should life be joyful and deeply fulfilling only during childhood? Why should life be serious and limited as an adult?
There is something wrong – and the OTHER Story of the Eagle in the Chicken Coop shows what is wrong.
The eagle in the chicken coop lives like a chicken. 99% of its behavior comes from its chicken program. The chicken program is its prison. The seriousness of the eagle’s life is to live like a chicken.
It is the same with us. We, too, are controlled almost exclusively by a human chicken program. This program is our prison. We live the lives of our parents – with slight changes. Our parents live (or lived) the lives of their parents – with slight changes. And so on. This goes back to the beginnings of humans.
What happened then?
Biologically we are apes. But we are more than apes, otherwise we would still live in forests and climb trees. We can behave differently than an ape.
A long time ago we started to use this ability. We behaved slightly differently than apes. Each new generation copied the behavior of the previous generation and behaved slightly differently again. Thus, we edged away from the life of an ape. After thousands upon thousands of years, the way of life we have today resulted.
You might argue that there are many ways of life on this planet. A Japanese lives differently from a US-American. You live differently from your neighbor. But these differences are superficial. Common to all human ways of life is an idea, developed over tens of thousands of years, of what a human is, what the human potential is, and how to live as a human. Cultural, religious, national, regional, familial, and individual peculiarities augment this idea. This makes the box that mentally imprisons a person. We call it the human box. It consists of countless programs.
The human box is neither right nor wrong. The OTHER Story of the Eagle in the Chicken Coop shows that it limits us individually and collectively, so that we develop and live only a fraction of our potential.
*
What does this insight do to you?
Maybe you say: I am content with my life. I know how to behave in which situation. This gives me security, and this is more important to me than anything else.
Being content with what is is one of your programs. If you hold on to this program, you make a choice. This choice is neither right nor wrong.
You may as well say: "It is remarkable (or whatever word you want to use here) what I have achieved in my life, although I have only developed a fraction of my potential. But I have always felt that there is more to me; I want to know what this is."
In this case, the OTHER Story of the Eagle in the Chicken Coop shows how to find your true nature. It also shows how not to find it.
It is of no use if someone tells you what your true nature is. You cannot know if what you are told is true. And even if it is true, the human box is in your way of implementing it.
It is also of no use if you attend seminars to learn something that you believe or hope is your true nature. What you learn would be a program that is superimposed on your programs. Your behavior would not be genuine. You could not be authentic because the human box would stand