Diagram 010
Re talk: 090
Consider the basis of triads: these three interconnected triangles. Each leg of these isosceles triangles is divided into five parts: predominant, secondary, major, minor, and the balanced area in the middle. Remember, this is a two dimensional drawing and you have to imagine these triangles in three dimensions and simply floating in four dimensional space with no up or down values. Any circumstance human awareness can describe or conceive is a continuing turning of all three triangles. They act as gears and cogs and touch in certain places. Each side, each leg, of the triangle is divided into five parts and represented by different colors. Within one triangle, say the blue, one leg is divided into blue, one leg is divided into red, and one into green. One end, say the primary end of the triangle colored in blue, is touching the secondary end of the triangle in red. They are that close together. It is the turning, the consistent turning of this triad that creates what appears to be reality.
I want you to Consider something else about these triangles, these triads. Within each person and further within each situation as your awareness sees it, from your immediate so-called situations of family, job, or professional association, to greater situations of race, religion, nationality, there is a consistency. Within you and within what you think you can observe as different situations, these three triangles continually turn into the same positions over and over. They fall together in these same positions over and over and give each individual person's awareness a feeling of safety, stability, and continuity. "I can count on who I am, I can count on the fact that all attorneys are such and such, all doctors are such and such."
These triangles seem to fall consistently into a certain pattern, a certain relationship to each other. You seem to be conscious but you're being conscious in the same way toward the same things over and over and over and over and over. That is a function of the triad: all three of the triangles fall consistently into certain places -- hence, your repeated feelings of anger or criticism toward some group of people, or your repeated fears. What people have attempted to describe as being identified, or being captured, is simply being in an oft-repeated configuration of these three triangles. That arrangement represents what you perceive as the reality of an expected situation. It's one common facet of your ordinary life, perceived by an ordinary you.