All Work and No Play and the Brainwashing of Jack

Mountains of Arizona
Clear 53 Degrees
7:16 a.m.

All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.

It also means that Jack has bought into the idea that there’s a division between work and play.

If you’re training a slave population to get used to the idea of working hard doing things they hate, you’ve got to be pretty crafty.

You can’t just order humans around forever. Eventually, they revolt. They rebel. They withdraw their consent.

But if you can trap their minds, then you’ve got a chance!

So you’ve got to create divisions and compartments that you can fill with programs.

Playing is something you do as a child.

Eventually, you have to “grow up” and get to work like the other slaves.

Join in and read along with me as I retell the story. You know it. You were taught it too!

So when you grow up, that’s when you stop playing. That’s when you’re supposed to be “responsible” and agree to spend your days doing things you don’t love with people you can’t stand in order to acquire a mind construction called debt-based “money.”

And this is “normal.”

It might be normal but I don’t think it’s human or humane.

So what if you want to undo the brainwashing?

You stop seeing the divisions that you were taught to project.

Work, play. What if there’s no difference?

What if you’re here to actually enjoy your journey through this plane?

If you hear that voice in your head saying things like, “Well I still have to pay the bills…” ask yourself if you’re really going to let that voice control your future?

What if work was play and play was work, if the boundary forever disappeared and you added value to the world by having a great time?

Think that’s not possible?

Well, I guess it just depends on how powerful you really think you are.

Whatever your answer is, you’re right.