Internal Reincarnation
War catalyzed life processes, and now there is a need to quickly adapt and build new connections, thus forming a new personality as a tool for interacting with the world. This doesn't mean we've become different; no, now we react differently to new circumstances, although they are always the same: challenges for growth, spiritual, social, and physical.
Death is a change of body, but even within the history of this body, there are also small deaths and rebirths. The country's body changes, the social body, the subtle body of worldview, the historical body of culture and lifestyle, the assessment of the world, self-perception, climate change, paradigm shifts, and thinking.
The example of people with chronic illnesses shows how they have to fight for themselves: defending the right to life every minute. Illness (problem) becomes a loud call to action, a pain you endure, treat, or overcome.
Ideas, goals, desires, plans, sadhana, mission, project, love—these should not be turned into problems or diseases. Although fear and pain drive action quite strongly, such motivation is not of a very healthy quality.
Consciousness and personality reincarnate through different versions of themselves. And it is within our power to manifest the reality, choice, that brings us closer to the goal, embodies ideas, carries ideals and meanings into the world.
The question is whether we agree to the death of our former selves in order to consciously reincarnate our values and meanings through new strategies and roles.
Personality, Freedom, and Choice are necessary for Love in the Game. Games can be different, but the essence and principle are the same: to move upward, from participation in low-quality simple games to higher-quality and more complex ones. This means constantly evolving and becoming someone else, a new personality, revealing our freedom, making conscious choices, playing, and loving.