My nephew (This nephew is likely of genius IQ; I wish he possessed the confidence and will to self-realize; yes, he does need to support his family.) posted a quote and picture on Facebook this week of Einstein making some fine quote about separating from the crowed and excelling as a loner. My reaction on line was that Einstein was a natural individuator. What does that mean? It means that a combination of the world around him, his genetic predisposition and his freedom of will all collided and stirred his psyche so much, that he came to individuate naturally.
There are countless other examples of this accident of nature (and the divine nudging of a strong soul towards living on earth as a great soul) through which the impressive individual is a concrete example of what it means to live exceptionally as a naturally occurring individuator: Maya Angelou, Ella Fitzgerald, Clarence Thomas, Mark Levin, George Washington, Elliot Rodger. Yes, Elliot. He got his 15 minutes of fame, and it would have been better for all if he would have known how live, and be a credit to his family, not a source of humiliating shame.
With training through Mavellonialist psychology, applied to their children by loving parents, almost any child can learn to overcome her selflessness, her selfishness, her base nature, her laziness, her fatalism, her paltry self-esteem, her herding obsession and cowardice to answer God's higher calling to reach for the stars.
With proper training and plenty of love, support and encouragement from family and the community, almost any child can learn to self-realize, love doing it and make it her preferred way of living. This manufactured, socially arranged desire to be all one can be and aim high is what I would refer to as becoming an unnatural individuator. One's environment, one's God and one's free will all deliberatley plan to educate her on how to be the best that she can be, and make her love so doing and have a good time, while on the road to success.
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