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p_shift90

Member
Alright, my name's mike, and I don't really have a steady religion. I call myself Chaoist right now because it's the best explanation, but I constantly shift religious paradigms and I could feel Wiccan one day, Buddhist the next, so on, so forth. I try very hard to find a religious path that I can stick with, but I'm aware of my own tendency to shift unpredictably. It can be influenced by external stimuli, but more often than not I just get bored with the religion I'm currently pursuing. As such, I'm very open to different religions because I can understand the experiences that cause a person to believe in something. On the negative side, I have no religious stability. I was raised into a family that's practically atheist, but inexplicably, I have a deep yearning to find a single form of belief. My attention-deficit disorder coupled with my intense spiritual inclination sucks balls. Right now I'm studying Wicca. But I can almost already feel another shift coming on. There are a few general spiritual beliefs that I've held on to, and those are:

-the meta-belief of chaos magick, which is basically that magic or any other miraculous occurances are a placebo effect created by placing belief on the idea that if you do this-->that will happen.

-the belief that some form of extraterrestrial life influenced early human life and later on was deified through myths and legends, and that perhaps these beings were the cause of humans inhabiting this planet, an idea known by the term exogenesis.

-a belief that self-deification is possible by removing the conceptual "I" from your worldview and developing a self that exists beyond the worldly self.

-A belief in chakras, points in the body that influence the emotional/mental/spiritual spheres of self.

as of yet, I have not been able to find a spiritual belief system that encompasses each of these four beliefs.
 

p_shift90

Member
Thanks guys! I can see there's ALOT of religious diversity on this site. Considering my beliefs I'm thankful that most of the people here are very tolerant and open-minded.
 

Scott1

Well-Known Member
Considering my beliefs I'm thankful that most of the people here are very tolerant and open-minded.
You do the same and we'll all get along just fine!

Let us know if you have any questions about the site and get posting!
 

Scott1

Well-Known Member
Think you have to hit 10 posts... check the FAQ... or do you know for sure, Katzpur?
 

TheKnight

Guardian of Life
Welcome. I'm fairly certain that a belief system which incorporates those 4 tenets does not exist. Those things come from different religions.

In essence, you'll probably just have to remain a Chaosist (believer in Chaos?) and define your own religious views.
 

GiantHouseKey

Well-Known Member
Greetings

Interesting religious concepts. When my path was not marked for me, my eyes showed me the way through the emptiness. This is YOUR path, so why should you follow the path of another? In short, I believe that you should believe what you believe and not what somebody else believes. If some part of a religious system makes no sense to you, or you don't really feel entirely comfortable with it, then change it or exclude it.

But if you're dead set on finding a marked path then I hope you find one. Good luck on your journey to Ourd.

Oh... And welcome to RF :)

GhK.
 

Breathe

Hostis humani generis
Welcome to RF!
Whee, someone else who feels like a different religion frequently, too! :D

Your views sound kind of New Age-y, possibly with some Hindu influences. :)
 

p_shift90

Member
I think maybe I am just new age. After all, "New Age" isn't a religion really, just a term used to describe a number of different spiritual beliefs. But throughout my life I've been Mormon, Buddhist, Protestant, Luciferian, Atheist, and Chaoist, and between those I've studied a vast array of religious spectrums. And in each of these religions, I felt that I truly had perfect faith in their doctrines. So for now I think I'll just call myself "new age." To be honest though, I've never studied Hindu in depth. I tried to approach it, but I think I was intimidated by it's variation and complexity.
 

Breathe

Hostis humani generis
Agreed, New Age is just a blanket term, but it can be quite a useful one. :D

I think you should definitely check out the Hindu ones. I totally understand how Hinduism can be intimidating with its variations (and all those new terms! Brahman, ParaBrahman, atman, etc!), but when you get down to it and begin to understand all these new words and concepts, you may like it. :)

For me, Hinduism and Sikhism are two of my favourite religions, as well as being ones I find fascinating. If Buddhism was something you liked, but you felt you believed in things contrary to what Buddhism teaches (for example, you believe in permanence, a God, a soul, etc) then these may be religions you're interested in, too.

I wonder, have you taken the "Belief-o-Matic" test?
Belief-O-Matic - Beliefnet.com
 

p_shift90

Member
Yeah, I've taken the belief-o-matic test ... many many times. Each time I take it I get completely different results! :facepalm: I like Buddhism for it's philosophy, it seems like more of a study of the mind than a religion to me. I've also read about Sikhism, but it was also intimidating to me. Is it really necessary to abstain from cutting one's hair?
 

Breathe

Hostis humani generis
LOL! You're like me. :D I get different results; usually Sikhism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Reform Judaism and Islam are up in the top 12 though.

Yeah, I can see how they would be an intimidating practice. For me, the idea of abstaining from cutting/removing any hair is not something I like (despite me having quite long hair :D) - though I can understand why most do this (because it's accepting God's creation and stuff like that), but I don't think I would like to be bound by it.

There's a survey on the net which says something like 80% of baptised (the ones who abstain from cutting hair) Sikh youths in the Punjab region have cut their hair at least once after their baptism. The Sikh Times - News and Analysis - Gobind's Shorn Flock

Perhaps you're like me in that you might like a majority of a faith but feel that if you're unable to commit to something (like the hair thing) you'd feel as though you're not following that faith "right" (for lack of a better term)? It's always the small things, really, isn't it?
 

p_shift90

Member
Exactly. But eventually I hope to come up with my own personal, nameless religion that works for me. One that combines all of the aspects of my core beliefs and everything good I've learned from various religions.
 

Breathe

Hostis humani generis
Exactly. But eventually I hope to come up with my own personal, nameless religion that works for me. One that combines all of the aspects of my core beliefs and everything good I've learned from various religions.
Good luck with that. :)
I've actually combined bits of various religions for a bit of fun, to see how they would look. The results are.. interesting. :D
 
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