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INTRODUCTION
There
are as many rules in the world as there are men. Each
genetic code is in fact a book of rules subtly
managing the differences and oneness at the same
time
of being for all existing. Things go right, things go
wrong, always one goes for the rules that by evolution
are always 'the other rules'. Time
and again the genetic codes are changed by the
pressure of adaptation. Always the rules are upgraded
for better management so that in fact the rules change
in outlook and seem to be different. Despite of always
having other rules, loving to adapt to the changing
world, there are themes that recur. These themes
concern the nature of time,
space and matter;
God,
man and woman; politics, religion and science;
fathers, sons and the purity of spirit;
differences, oneness and the cultures abridging.
Things seem to go in three having a soul
aware of the tri-polarity of superego,
ego
and the dominance of the lower drive. As the world to
that seems to consist of four basic cultural options
that tend to be in opposition and conflict, the
recurrence of the other rules maintains the complete
of the reality:
North America, Europe, and Australia seem to run on
the scientific method, the Middle-East and India on
the religious approaches of Lordship, the
japanese/asian continent runs on the supreme of
politics and Africa and South America on the rhythm of
natural living. Not being able to live square to the
complete of reality
as one is proud of one's own and negligent to the
other culture, still the world runs on the triangular
pyramid of these four basics of mankind
(pict.).
We always see reality
in three living four alternatives. Therefore the plea
of the other rules is to become aware of oneself: to
the soul
of one's own conscientious contribution to the
complete whole of our worldculture balancing
political, religious, scientific and natural values.
We cannot live without the spark of consciousness we
individually are ourselves in the midst of
this
pyramid of
worldculture.
Each has his own unique nature and contribution in
this full cultural complexity. The Other Rules,
stressing the importance of soul
and the order of time,
are dedicated to the civilian population of the whole
world longing for unity and peace at the one hand and
respect for the differences of culture at the other
hand. With a world living in peace and harmony the
rules of the other person, other culture and other
time
need to be respected. This book is an attempt to
sketch a concept of worldorder that can change and
still stay the same. Many may recognize their own
religion, politics, scientific theory or natural drive
in it. To the writer it has been a pleasure to serve
the ongoing spiritual soul
minding its adaptation to time
and place in the light of euro-american scientific
ideals, middle-east/indian lordship, asian politics,
and the latin/african ecstasies of natural
rhythm.*

Warning:
study these rules one by one. To consider this book as
a running narrative is a mistake. To study more than a
couple of rules at a time is certainly ill
advice.

a)
As an adult try not to sleep for more than six
hours.
b)
Always relax as much as you
can.
c)
Always keep your mind
busy.
d)
Always think for the sake of the
soul.
e)
Lead a regulated
life.
f)
Do your own duty and not that of
others.
g)
In case of conflict over ruler ship always resort to
the impersonal order.
h)
Always try to adapt to the
environment.
i)
Take care of the basic
needs.
j)
Always set work before the
profit.
k)
In case of anger seek
isolation.
l)
In rage never attack
people.
m)
Always take responsibility for your
actions.
n)
Try to avoid collecting and
keeping.
o)
Be loyal to your
teachers.
p)
Graduate and be your own
boss.
q)
Respect the authorities and laws of your
country.
r)
Always dress,shave and clean
appropriately.
s)
Try to be expert from
intuition.
t)
Try to cooperate as much as you
can.
u)
Guard your personal privacy as your
life.
v)
Stand up for your rights
assertively.
w)
Always try to be friendly and
polite.
x)
Stick to your decisions and keep your promisers as
much as possible.
y)Do
the necessary and do not cause
grief.
z)
Make a rule and break a rule in guard of your
integrity.
a)
As an adult try not to sleep for more than six
hours.
An
adult should not sleep for more than six hours.
Children sleep considerably more. They lack experience
and personal order and get quickly exhausted. Sleeping
for more than six hours dulls the nervous system and
gives rise to depression and other mental disorder
(pict.).
People who sleep too much are more susceptible to
illusion,
need to compensate more as a consequence and have thus
less resistance against stress. Compensation goes at
the cost of synergy; the energy meant for cooperation
and coordination. Adults who sleep for seven, eight
hours or more should train themselves in social skills
and learn to cling to an orderly
life.
b)
Always relax as much as you can.
In
a relaxed state one is more aware to the environment
and to oneself. Action concentrates the
mind
within a certain focus of attention. This is needed to
do work. Even during work though, one should, so to
say, regularly step back to become aware of the
greater context of one's activity. Also important is
to minimize the use of energy for optimal efficiency.
Another expression of this rule is: don't overdo, keep
cool, stick to the necessity.
This
rule implies the greater importance of reflection.
Being less focused to the body and more to the
spirit
puts a greater stress on the ability to organize one's
thought. Only a conscientious person is really capable
of a 'cool' style of life. For neglect there is no
positive and quiet spirit. A negative and restless
spirit
means dissatisfaction and disorientation. When e.g.
one is hungry and does not know what to do, first
proper action should be taken as to alleviate the
primary needs of the body and the person in his status
(pict.)
and orientation (pict.)
in life. All healthy reflection is based on this basic
security. War for instance is to be recognized as a
vicious circle: because of lacking security there is
conflict, and because of conflict there is a lack of
security. 
c)
Always keep your mind
busy.
De
mind
should always be focused on the goal of action which
can be defined as service to the underlying order. A
wandering mind
may discover extraneous influences and affairs, but
such speculation open for intuitive suggestion should
be submitted to the order of one's life. The
hierarchical principle should work internally in
awareness of the importance of one's independence and
personal choice. Dependence on outside authority will
lead to conflict with the mature option. One might not
be completely mature in all walks of life, but the
option is always there. To break the rules can be
considered as an appeal for outside authority as any
citizen might remember e.g. with police-intervention.
But adolescents biologically lacking maturity, will
have to submit to parental authority. The parent is
responsible for youth up to the age of 21. Uprooted
youth should receive proper guidance from a guardian
service or be put under legal
custody.
d)
Always think for the sake of the soul.
The
underlying order pertains to the reality
of the soul
which can be defined as the conscientious remembering
true spiritual self. One should accept the fact that
the body or false, say temporal self, is governed by
the spirit
and the spirit
is governed by the soul
(pict.).
The order of the soul
is defined as God to which there are many names and
definitions. As far as the impersonal is concerned one
can say that all of the realigning about the
soul
is stemming from a concept of celibate order
representing the wisdom of ancestral holiness. For
this purpose one can study holy scriptures of
preferably different kinds to ascertain one 's mature
option. With one-sided study to this one is caught
within one school of thought while the healthy
psyche
demands a freedom of choice. It is not bad to have
chosen, it is bad to be denied freedom of opinion as
laid down by democratic law. What is considered good
and bad is simply defined linguistically and fixed by
legislation. One has to answer to the demands of ones
culture. Disagreement about this necessitates
political action. This might eventually lead to social
conflict and international war. Thus can be concluded
that the basic security of proper law and order is of
prime importance for a successful life and
world-order. Success can be defined as general public
contentment with existing law and order containing a
low interest in further political action. Since normal
non-political individuals cannot make the law
themselves, only the concept of personal order is of
further relevance.
Rules
for personal order are thus considered as service to
the soul
and God irrespective of one's religious preference.
Personal order amounting to compulsive disorder
implies an alienation from the soul:
in that case the rules pertaining to the
soul
should be checked. 
e)
Lead a regulated life.
There
are a few important points to remember here. One
should balance; that is to say, rest and activity,
social and personal interests, work and leisure should
not repress one another. Repression is the prime cause
of unconscious action and cultural fall-down. There
are always at least two sides to the material truth
and mental health demands respect for both. So in
general one can say that twelve hours of rest and
twelve hours of activity form a good basis for the
division of the day. This gives us 6 hours of rest in
total to be spent in intervals throughout the day.
Normally after sleep and before breakfast one has an
hour to get started. During work in the morning as
well as in the afternoon it's wise to have a break of
half an hour. This leaves one and a half hours around
lunch- and diner-time
, with one hour to get at ease for sleeping completing
the six in total. Work can be done for maximally
twelve hours which necessitates further balancing.
There is work for the maintenance of the body and
mind
and work in the care for others (pict.).
Provided a fully emancipated society where the
autonomy of each mature individual is accepted, one
ideally spends 6 hours for the personal body and
mind
(shopping, cooking, cleaning, reading) and six hours
for the others (duty of labor, socializing,
appreciating the media together). Besides such a daily
routine there should be days of rest to secure
contentment, days of study to secure education and
days of celebration to secure the need for festivity.
Lacking this one will find oneself dropping out of
work and society, losing one's education and ability
to learn and losing control in breaking out of order
lacking festivity (see tables).
In regard of repression about time
it should also be taken into account that politically
fixed standard time
,'work-time',
constitutes another consciousness as the awareness to
the regularity relative to the position of the sun
(pict.).
f)
Do your own duty and not that of others.
This
is a tricky point. Nothing as destructive as jealousy
and confusion about this. A good division of labor
demands clearly defined social roles and according
duties (pict.).
A housewife or house-man has to work for the
maintenance of the children and the home. An outdoors
working individual has to maintain the social position
of professional
orientation
and status.
But these things are dynamic. They come in phases and
also intermingle. Attachment
gives rise to a lot of trouble during the inevitable
transitions. One cannot always be a student-bachelor,
a married spouse, a reorienting withdrawing person or
a detached upholder of tradition and old-age wisdom.
Also professionally one can change orientation from
the intellectual studious, to the governing, to the
enterprising and finally toiling vocation. Still one
needs to be clear as well as for oneself as for the
other, about what one is doing. Without this there
will be unwanted confusion and conflict. One has to do
one's own thing and one needs to be clear about it.
That is the meaning of this rule.
For an example one
may think of the order typical for a planet: the month
on this planet takes 30.5 days as part of a year that
counts four seasons to the sun. Thus we do respect our
nature and earth and do we have duties with it. But if
we speak of a commercial labor-week of seven days
which not by leaping are linked to that solar month,
nor to the lunar month, to what to we belong then with
that regularity? Thus is one with an other rhythm
oriented on a planet one doesn't even know. Thus is
one estranged, if not engaging cosmically disturbed,
with something which might a be natural rhythm but
which is strange to one's own planet, and waging wars
with blaming one another that backward attitude won't
be of any avail, thus anyone may
know. 
g)
In case of conflict over rulership always resort to the
impersonal order.
Things
need to be settled, one has to cooperate. Because of
this one is confronted with the expertise and
authority of others. Not understanding the why and how
of each others position and duty, troubles ensue. As a
consequence lots of people get disappointed and
estranged. Without consent and agreement people take
to unqualified action and the general quality of life
diminishes in a more and more chaotic society. In this
situation people, out of frustration develop
resentment against authority, especially across
generations, and autocratic rulership begins to reign
with injustice and rebellion against the
others.
For
the sake of order one cannot say that one rule is
better than the other. There is conflict over
rulership, and one cannot choose between fighting
against and fighting against. Either side gives the
same problem. So there is no other solution but to
resort to the impersonal. No person will do but the
mature person to himself having internalized the
diverse authorities. He cannot propose himself as the
solution but he can propose the conclusion of the
teachings. Putting oneself up leads inevitably to the
proof of one's imperfection and limitations. Resorting
to the impersonal is then the only practice left over,
in fact consisting of positive identifications with
the personal. What is important is not to wage against
other people, not to become an heretic of whatever
kind, but to be convinced of one's order. One can be
critical about other forms of order but with the
constructive proposition of one's own this is
amenable. 
h)
Always try to adapt to the environment.
There
are two options: the expression of one's own
identity
and the necessity to conform to the others. In society
this generally gives rise to the culture of the formal
uniform at the one hand and the culture of
individualism at the other characterized by free
association and free expression. The dictum of the
latter is: thou shall differ, no greater sin than the
uniform. Even in the highest circles it is absolutely
forbidden to wear the same neck-tie or the same dress.
Each grey suit of e.g. the politician is from another
tailor and another cloth. Informal dress dominates
formal society which in itself is an inconsistency.
Individualism can be recognized as a fear of formal
identification or a cultural identity-crisis. The fear
of the uniform evidently arises from warfare where the
military show nothing but the horror of the formal
uniform. But It is still the uniform ending the war
too. The uniform we absolutely need at least for
police and other agents of control. So irrationality
and the psychology of trauma seems to reign in this
society. It is nice to have your own dress and be
informal most of the time,
but it is not nice not to be recognized and have no
formal relationship confirmed (pict.).
Then what to adapt to if we no longer delve in the
informal but sincerely express our need for formal
identity? To distinguish between what is becoming or
not is not enough to answer this question. One cannot
escape from defining formal order. This is the true
meaning of adaptation. Without it, what to adapt
to?
i)
Take care of the basic needs.
Basis
needs are food, shelter, clothes, law and order. There
are secondary needs as security, love, happiness,
contentment, excitement, diversion, exploration and
innovation. All these are forms of selfrealization,
the common denominator of all human activity. God
won't grow houses, clothes and books on trees. For God
we may be naked apes in a fools paradise. For the Lord
and His representatives, whatever be His name, we
would endeavor to be somewhat like Him: detached but
cultured, self-aware, but not egoistic. Thus
religiously there seems to be a command of humanity in
short defined as soulful non-possesiveness. This seems
to be the denominator of the religious need.
Politically we are in need of our freedom of
expression, organization and participation. This
secondary need is in one word called democratic,
independent of the form of state being republic or
monarchic.
For
the arts and the sciences the need is doubtful. To be
recognized is also psychologically understood.
Scientific progress costing billions gives no
guarantee of happiness and even offers a risk of war
shifting the balance of power. Art and science are
more realistic though but belong to the secondary
needs of selfrealization which only in case of
emergency and service in the interest of the primary
needs can be called basic. From this the
intellectuals, clergy and enterprising artists have
big drawers with secret solutions in case ... we do
not know. 
j)
Always set work before the profit.
One
of the most important rules is to work for the work
and not the outcome. Success or failure may not be of
any influence on the factual work that has to be done
as a duty. There are times of trouble, and times of
elation. Whether it is summer or winter, important is
that one continues to work. Because we tend to depend
upon the stimulation and reinforcement of others, we
also tend to refrain from work when the other no
longer personally cares about us. Since each and
everyone has to follow his and her own way sooner or
later we have to continue on our own course. Therefore
it is more important to find ones duty than to have
this or that outcome as a condition. Another point of
interest here is the definition of work. Unemployment
is a relative notion. Everyone not doing the job I do
is not employed as such. I have my own values about
what and how to work. Work done in regard of the
soul
seems futile for the one running after the profit. On
the other hand is going for the profit exactly the way
to have no effect in the eyes of the one living for
the soul. If one defines success as contentment with
one's preferred activity, profitable or not, then the
world is liberated from the slavery of its opposing
compulsions.
k)
In case of anger: seek isolation.
Sooner
or later everyone gets angry upon frustration. No one
is without desire, and thus no one is free from
disappointment. To withdraw is the ideal strategy for
mourning. For the other one has to keep front and
integrity. One mustn't let oneself down. Loyalty to
the soul
is number one. It is the material thing of winning or
losing that tempts into the trap of the
ego
saying I want this and I want that. A possessive
attitude does more harm than swallowing some
pride.
Isolation
is a thing not to be feared. It is the ultimate
solution for all problems. Once accepting one's
fundamental aloneness in life there is no loneliness
anymore: the other is found in one's heart. Being
angry clouds this vision of reality.
One cannot and must not drive the other from one's
heart. There one has to learn to forgive and forget.
Remember the good things of the others and fight
against the delusion of the eternal negative missing
the other physically. It is the biological drive of
the body that may not lead astray. As stated above:
satisfaction is found in the dutiful, not in the
material effect itself. 
l)
In rage never attack people.
Once
the train of anger is running it is difficult to stop.
It is not so easy to let go instantly and have no
clouds in the sky anymore. They disappear slowly. When
thunder and lightning are storming, people should be
on guard against destruction. Then let the storm bring
down a tree or a shed. As long as the house is on
solid ground and properly founded, the walls won't
tumble so easily. Likewise one's personality is to be
solid and properly founded in the decision not to harm
anyone. It is o.k. to fight with people and show some
emotion. But it is bad to give in to attack and
destruction. Violence can be a necessity of
selfdefence, so: don't attack. Fight with people and
not against people.
Practically
this means that trust is not lost on the expression of
anger in a rage as long as there is no factual attack.
Therefore it is words that do the fighting. Physical
fighting is the end of reason and can also end the
relationship. Even a hopeless attempt to deal with
words is in the service of reason. One doesn't have to
be reasonable to serve reason. Delirious gibberish is
also for the spirit.
Nobody believes everything that is said or thought,
but everybody believes in physical pain and the
necessity to escape from it. Thus, as long as anger
turns into words one can stay, when anger turns into
physical attack, the game is lost when the previous
rule (1k) is neglected. War is the result of the
inability to withdraw. 
m)
Always take responsibility for your
actions.
One
can do a lot of stupid things. To get experienced this
is even inevitable. The question is who would be to
pay for the error. The basic principle is that each is
responsible for his own actions. Also non-action is
action. Doing nothing can also cause a lot of misery.
The profit motive always wants to blame the other
which is a disease of material life. Without the rules
we cannot solve this problem. Engaged in material
action only God
is the final creditor and all people are guilty. We
owe to the order and not so much to one another.
Things always go wrong, since material form is not
eternal. Each rule is in demand of the other. Rule 1g
implies the impersonal as an outcome in conflict over
questions of guilt. When something is not in order,
the cause might be that our idea of order itself is
not in line with the dictates of the soul.
To the concept of order decisions can be taken for the
benefit of everyone. Such conclusions can be worked
at. Simply to condemn each other won't lead to any
other outcome but grief and alienation. It is
important to come to conclusions that lead to work for
the sake of general progress. Without it one victim
creates the other and in such smoldering discontent
problems are never really solved with the continual
result of recurring warfare.
n)
Try to avoid collecting and keeping.
Possesiveness
is a great stumbling block. It is the disease called
desire. From possessions one becomes possessed: there
is never enough. But you can't get the whole world
under control and call it your own. The more you
acquire the more you realize this. To have your house
as a furniture showroom annex museum for modern
technology, annex library and collection of art etc.
is a hopeless endeavor. Materialism is a mental
illness in the category of the schizoid. Everyone
knows that happiness cannot be bought. All you may
hope for is a world that is accessible so that,
although not the owner, one can be a visitor. The more
we want to own, the less accessible our culture
becomes. Thus the real question is: how to get rid of
this hindrance (pict.)
and have an open culture. End of the twentiest century
this is still science fiction. There is an internet
connecting everyone to everyone approaching the ideal
of an open culture. But still everything has to be
bought and saved. Then we are still like the
Neanderthaler who knew nothing but hunting and
gathering. Homo Sapiens is really a different kind. We
are to know each other and not to hunt and posses. So
by means of state or private enterprise information
banks have to be maintained and made accessible to
all. It is not possible nor satisfactory to continue
on the line of acquiring and keeping. Ultimately
television, telephone, radio, stereo etc, books and
assorted computer programming, must be handled with
one window on the world available to all
people.
o)
Be loyal to your teachers.
It
is not about names, but about content. Of course, a
name is a code that gives access to a certain field of
knowledge. But a name is also falsehood: it directs to
the material body, and no Lordship keeps the same
body. It is no use to cling to this or that bodily
concept. Each body of knowledge refers to a way of
learning, a school. They form pyramids of hierarchy
and access becomes increasingly difficult at the
bottom of the hierarchy. Pyramids collapse as belief
is exhausted and more needs to be invested than there
will be returned. This bodily aspect of teachers and
schools belongs to the battlefield of the
ego.
Ego
wages war in the delusion of the power to control and
enjoy. Solution to this problem must be and can be the
superposition of the impersonal order. It is not to
deny the person or the authority, it is to have all
subjected to the reality
man can't change. If we burn down the whole planet,
the earth will still revolve. It is the one revolution
that defeats all others. To recognize its order and
respect it in its full relativity is a mission of
reform, as for the twentiest century man still clings
to an ancient Roman calendar and a contorted concept
of clock time
being a far cry from the natural situation. Loyalty to
teachers means to be loyal to the source
(pict.)
of teaching in the first place: the cosmic
reality
and soul
of all the worlds finding peace with order in the form
of time
(pict.).
p)
Graduate and be your own boss.
It
is good to go to school and subject. It is bad to make
it an eternal duty. It is good to change from school
to school, it is bad not to have learned to manage
your own. So each man and woman want baby's by nature
to form their own school of education, although it is
not always clear who the teacher is. The great misery
of religion and politics is the inability of
internalizing the school and integrate that learning
with other options of management. This is the real
problem: the constant necessity to adopt new
information and integrate it. First there is the
problem that advanced learners tend to learn less in
the practice of their own conclusions, second there is
the problem of evolution. How can a school progress
without getting uprooted all together. Things go wrong
with the transference of knowledge: books become
unreadable because of specialization and teachers
refuse to accept newcomers with another adaptation but
their own. So repeatedly the same phenomenon recurs:
people form their own school and authority. This is
natural and must be tolerated. This rule implies live
and let live: an ill school won't survive the test of
time;
it normally doesn't need much fighting against.
Remember: all attempt to reason can be recognized as
service to the soul
(1l);as long as a school is there for teaching and not
for ruling, each graduate may decide for himself if he
learned anything more than to be
patient.
q)
Respect the authorities and the laws of your
country.
Actually
there should be no comment on this rule. It is exactly
the desire to constantly amend on the rules why we get
into trouble. But the times are changing, not just
this century but for ever. Rules need to be adapted
and we need to adapt to the rules. This is inevitable.
We cannot fix everything and expect it to stay so.
After each painting there will be a new one, after
each bible a new story of divinity etc. Life goes on
and the disease mankind suffers seems to consist of
resistance against change more than of suffering the
dynamic of material form.
Important
here is to have some loyalty to the inheritance of law
and order. It is cheap to be a rebel and go against
all of 'the system'. To say no is easy, to say yes a
bit more difficult. In nature expansion and
differentiation is normal. The art is not to lose the
soul,
the remembrance of what was added to. To stay
connected is the mission, whatever novelty we embark
upon. Twentiest century television e.g. is like a fast
dream. What do we remember, standing up to our
own? 
r)
Always dress, shave and clean
appropriately.
By
means of dress, people express their identity. To
settle for order in this one has to distinguish
between formal and informal dress being not liberated
and liberated in service to the order of the rules of
some soul
saving tradition. Thus there are four kinds of dress:
F(ormally) L(iberated), F(ormally N(ot liberated),
I(nformally L (iberated) and I(nformally) N(ot
liberated) (pict.).
IN-group dressing is fashionable and casual clothing.
Loose from tradition these people are considered
non-liberated. IL-clothing is non-uniform clothing
according to the tradition with hats, neck-ties,
suits, frocks etc. These people want to be traditional
and neat and are all considered to be informally
liberated in their traditional love for the
individual. FN-people are dressed in uniform: the
military, the police, classical musicians, priests etc
are considered non-liberated carrying the cross of the
old roman-political uniform of time
defying the individual. Those who are dressed up
formally in service to the order of the rules can
express their identity of professional orientation and
civil status
e.g. by means of color and a band around their neck
showing the degree of commitment (pict.)
to the order. This latter
dress-code
is a proposition given as an option here, being
science fiction to the twentiest century. The division
to professional
orientation
(pict.)
and civilstatus
(pict.)is
traditional while the uniform is then subjected to the
diversity of the individual and the alternate order of
time
in service of the soul.
Thus the consideration as being liberated to classical
formality. One may express one's commitment to one's
profession in color: dark grey/black suits for
academics and priests in the role of advisor/counselor
to the interest of the soul,
dark-red for the one's in civil service: politicians,
officials representing the government in service to
intelligence.
Light-grey suits for the people in trade and commerce
in service to the mind
of the order and beige suits for the laboring people
in service to the interest of the physicality of the
order. The individual
status of
being student/bachelor, married, withdrawn and
detached can dress up with shirts in respectively
green for the students, white for the married, blue
for the withdrawn and orange for the detached. The
level of commitment can be expressed by honorary signs
hanging from a band around the neck or collar of the
shirt showing the color of one's professional
orientation.
By the head of the (state)order, or by rule of
time,
people can be rewarded with honorary signs in the form
of e.g. a six-pointed star (pict.)
in silver or gold for participants in the order with
respectively primal and enduring merit. Of course this
is all optional and cannot be laid down by law: no one
can be forced to belong to the order nor be forbidden
to act as if belonging to. Social control will work
its way to distinguish between actors and
originals.
The
symbol
of the order
as a six pointed star refers to the fact that dividing
the day and the year in twenty four (one
time,
one division) gives six star days to mark six
two-month-seasons of sixty star days (see
table).
The whole of time
(the celestial sky) divided by six is thus shown as a
star (in contrast with the known David-star the
indication of the two triangles can be left out
keeping the open structure). As to shaving and
cleanliness, the positive attitude towards sex (also
from the withdrawn and detached) is expressed by being
clean-shaven and having the hair short-cut (except for
the ladies who have long hair to enhance their sexual
attraction). Abstinence can be shown by cultivation of
beards and mustaches or short hair for ladies.
Cleanliness is mandatory as the most ancient tradition
of godliness and civilization. 
s)
Try to be expert from intuition.
Of
course almost everything can be found in books. Hardly
any rule or statement in this collection is new. It
is, although, impossible to name the source of each
idea. It is not practical, not wanted and against the
rule of being one's own boss to play hide and seek
behind the back of outside authority. I can err, I can
change. Rules change, expressions change, symbols
change. From the proposition laid down in the previous
rule the final practice may widely differ. Man
proposes, God disposes. It is just the game one is
playing; the way one tries to do one's best, to be an
expert, to be loyal etc. It is and stays just a game
that people like to play or not. Intuition is of prime
importance to the concept of freedom. Doubting
everything by the tradition of natural science is done
in service to the soul
which is then given free reign by means of intuition
(pict.).
The rules are known by experience and one doesn't
follow much better by mechanically learning them. The
rules shown here merely form a checklist to refer to
or meditate upon; they are not meant to be taught in
school. There are enough schools breaking one's
intuition in their plea for the dependency of the
pupil. Computers make fine tutors and schools may be
reformed by learning from love. Clouding personal
intuition is a right out danger to the maintenance and
development of intelligence.
t)
Try to cooperate as much as you can.
This
is the most ancient rule for civilized manhood and
human sanity. The insane do not cooperate just as the
uncivilized. Wild nature can be attractive and to go
crazy can be a relief. To play the animal though is
not the definition of society. Unfortunately we must
check our envy with king lion and follow the rules
assuring proper cooperation and coordination. Nothing
can be accomplished without it but war and
destruction. In case of being occupied by foreign
forces one might regress to the animal state of using
animalistic violence for selfdefence and survival. But
forming a normal civil threat to individual freedom
one has to agree and cooperate to the definition of
defense. To the liberty in the formal order of
recognized societal membership ('to have a star')
there are 32 possible groups of identification (the
immature aspirant 'not having a star' not counted)
(pict.).
Each group will define its own defense and act to that
as far as the law-books permit.
Even
the withdrawn have to cooperate in order to have their
own place, their food and their adaptation secured.
Problems arise when cooperation cannot be found. These
people drop out of society and form an insult on the
one hand and a challenge for formal order at the other
hand. Each man is valuable and because of economy or
justice this may not be denied. It doesn't have to
cost money or to happen outside penal institutes. In
fact formal liberation means to have the capital at
your service because of the dominating logic of the
order. Once there is cooperation in formal order money
is not the problem. To formal liberation even
ownership loses its meaning since service to the order
is the philosophy. Of course every identification
group has its own material management system of credit
and provision of goods. It is to the government to
settle everything to justice and order to protect
private interests of groups and
individuals. 
u)
Guard your personal privacy as your life.
Society
can be an animal devouring the freedom of the
individual. Leaders become the slave of their own
system and spouses become the victim of their own
commitment. This is a basic problem which can be
solved by respecting and caring for personal privacy.
To have a place of one's own is a blessing. Not to be
disturbed by noise, stench or unwanted commerce etc.
has become an ideal to work for. In the old days there
was lots of land uncultivated open for retreat in the
freedom of nature. This type of escape is less and
less possible in an overcrowded world where every
suitable stretch of land is used for agriculture and
cattle. To share a front-door in an apartment-building
e.g. is a less private solution, having one's guests
mingled with strangers ringing the same door. To share
a few square meters of land with hundreds of people in
a sky-scraper is certainly an unprecedented concept of
vertical space-time-awareness
to which there might be more disease than private
sanity. How far can one go going private?
What
is sure is that personal privacy and the mature
position need one another. How to manage your own if
you don't get your own? A society failing in this
might not get over its mental condition called
neurosis and collapse in unwanted psychopathology.
Therefore privacy must be safeguarded as one's life.
The more people on top of each other the more urgent
the urge for going private. Crime in big city's can be
fought remembering this rule. Why attack the other if
each can have his own?. 
v)
Stand up for your rights assertively.
Assertion
means to declare, to exert influence. It is a hot
debated issue: what are we serving in our assertion.
Religion worries about heresy and science about
untruth. Politics are worried about cooperation.
Together it means that everyone is anxious about
truthful cooperation for the sake of the
soul.
Soul
is the word fighting the concept of
ego about
selfhood defying other self interest and thereby
falling into the rage and storm of heresy. It is about
unity in diversity; it is about the soul.
The ego
is a consequence of material identification because of
which people tend to oppose and shift the question of
quilt in projection. The classical teaching of
assertion is therefore to hearten one's own conscience
for the sake of one's soul
and to beware of egoism which hearten's one's material
position.
The
concept of ego
is inevitable, as heartening one's material position
is inevitable. It is by subduing the ego
to the interest of the soul
that the heretic -ism of the schizoid opposition is
overcome. Thus a proper concept of assertion implies
not to harm the interest of others. What we call
others is then in need of
further
consideration. 
w)
Always try to be friendly and polite.
This
is a common sense rule settling all human interaction
to the norm of goodness. Animals bark and roar, human
beings are supposed to stay reasonable, that is to
say: stay friendly and polite asserting themselves
verbally and physically. To the other sex this
attention is known as courteousness. By no means this
obliging was meant to be exclusively kept in the
private sphere of sexual courting or as a gentlemen's
agreement among men solely.
Suffering
the burden of the ego
this rule is often violated. One can feel a neurotic
fear for obligations or derange making fuss in self
conceit. Cramping on the ego
people forget to be nice and lose touch by simply not
paying enough attention. Everyone screaming for it and
no one giving it is symptomatic for a neurotic society
estranged from the interest of the soul.
Not to suffer one's nerve's in this case implies that
one needs the nerve to be nice and
polite. 
x)
Stick to your decisions and keep your promises as much as
possible.
Basic
rule of heroism is to keep principle, to stay
consequent, to persevere, stand firm. Not to be stupid
and stubborn is the mission. Without the faculty of
discrimination this is not possible. So one must keep
one's mind
to the matter.
Not to lose your mind
then is the mission. Following this continence is the
essence of the true teaching. The question is not only
how to contain, but also what to contain. Just to
contain the mind
does not imply the soul,
just as just to contain the seed does not imply the
soul
either. Just to contain the love-making or spending of
seed either. Of course only right decisions and
realistic promises can be kept. If you want to stay
right and realistic the so-called eternal values come
in view. Shortly these are: compassion, truthfulness,
cleanliness and non-possessiveness (pict.).
Or in simple man's language: stay clean, don't lie,
care for others and share. Upholding these basic
values will make one steadfast and
reliable.
y)
Do the necessary and don't cause grief.
Beyond
necessity there is a fool's paradise with holiday's
called warfare. Why complicate the issue when simple
is o.k. Why do we need more than one division of
time
as with the division of weeks not matching the
division of month's e.g.. Why does the twentiest
century cherish timezone's
having abandoned the accord of true time?
We don't need an other division of weeks set apart
from the month, we don't need time-zone's.
The answer to these questions is attachment.
Because we are used to the old roman calender we
continue thinking tradition is soul.
This is not so. Soul
means conscience, not blind obedience. Sometimes
things have to be abandoned when we know and can do
better. Above that something new does not imply that
the old is forgotten. On a new calendar old divisions
can be indicated and vice versa (see table).
End of the twentiest century one is also still
printing books while in the nineties enough computing
power has been developed to publish virtual
only.
Not
to cause grief means not to violate traditions by
abandoning them but to cherish alternatives that are
better, that is to say more clear, truthful, simple
and easy. When we have paid off to the old the new can
be enjoyed. Alternative's are necessary to the freedom
of choice. Without it no consciousness will be but
captivity in attachment
and the unreason of fall-down in ignorance. Cherishing
the unnecessary the necessary tends to be obliterated.
It is not forbidden to be a fool, it a shame and even
dangerous to neglect what is necessary. Everyone
agrees: freedom of choice is necessary ; it belongs to
the method (pict.). 
z)
Make a rule, break a rule in guard of your
integrity.
No
set of rules lasts forever. Writing this set-up rules
replaced each other. Each set pretends to be absolute
and final, but the truth is different. The
soul
may be absolute and final, but it's material
expression is not. It is in flux; it is subject to the
reality
of time
(pict.)changing
everything. So constant adaptation to time
and circumstances is necessary. Therefore rules are
broken and created, broken again and recreated. This
is natural to the integrity of life and the person.
Everything is subject to the conscientious of the
adapting selfrealising soul.
Certainty is found in the eternal values of clean
truthful sharing and caring (pict.).
As long as man exists these will be the foundation of
human integrity and will be necessary although the
interpretation will greatly differ.
Forever.
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