Science of the Spirit
Let's start here with what nobody looks like: nobody looks like the people in magazines or movies. Not even models. Nobody. Lean people have a kind of rawboned, unfinished look about them that is very appealing. But they don't have plump round breasts and plump round asses. You have plump round breasts and a plump round ass, you have a plump round belly and plump round thighs as well. That's how it works. (And that's very appealing too.)
Woman have cellulite. All of them. It's dimply and cute. It's not a defect. It's not a health problem. It's the natural consequence of not consisting of photoshopped pixels, and not having emerged from an airbrush.
Men have silly buttocks. Well, if most of your clients are women, anyway. You come to male buttocks and you say -- what, this is it? They're kind of scrawny and the tissue is jumpy because it's unpadded; you have to dial back the pressure, or they'll yelp.
Adults sag. It doesn't matter how fit they are. Every decade, an adult sags a little more. All of the tissue hangs a little looser. They wrinkle, too. I don't know who put about the rumor that just old people wrinkle. You start wrinkling when you start sagging, as soon as you're all grown up, and the process goes its merry way as long as you live. Which is hopefully a long, long time, right?
Everybody on a massage table is beautiful. There are really no exceptions to this rule. At that first long sigh, at that first thought that "I can stop hanging on now, I'm safe" - a luminosity, a glow, begins. Within a few minutes the whole body is radiant with it. It suffuses the room: it suffuses the massage therapist too. People talk about massage therapists being caretakers, and I suppose we are: we like to look after people, and we're easily moved to tenderness. But to let you in on a secret: I'm in it for the glow.
I'll tell you what people look like, really: they look like flames. Or like the stars, on a clear night in the wilderness.
Reader Comments
We're all beautiful the way we are, right now, this very instance in time.
Eat well, play well, work well, be healthy, be creative, learn the truth and then live in truth.
Always
For such a positive affirmation. Body needs to feel beautiful and accepted. For too long it has been a second class item, subject to Spirits supposed superiority.
I get the point of the article that people don't look like the airbrushed figures in the media etc but I wouldn't go as far to say 'all women have cellulite and men have silly buttocks' at least that's certainly not the natural order of things. With that said we all have imperfections and that's fine but if you're close to living how natural humans should live I think you would be surpised how most people on your table would look, most men would be lean and muscular, and most women would be leaner that average but have a higher body percentage than men being slightly more curvaceous for obvious reasons. I don't think cellulite is so natural that it should be strived for but I get the point that the human body will degrade and you should accept those changes.
"Everybody on a massage table is beautiful. There are really no exceptions to this rule. At that first long sigh, at that first thought that "I can stop hanging on now, I'm safe" - a luminosity, a glow, begins. Within a few minutes the whole body is radiant with it. It suffuses the room: it suffuses the massage therapist too. People talk about massage therapists being caretakers, and I suppose we are: we like to look after people, and we're easily moved to tenderness. But to let you in on a secret: I'm in it for the glow.
I'll tell you what people look like, really: they look like flames."
If he's on about some "appearance obsession" or other, I missed it.
It seems to me he's talking about people giving up pretense and the way their energy changes when they do so . . .
I believe that the thrust of this article is to promote seeing beyond the flesh. It promotes the fact that we are all beautiful creations of Life and that it is time to move beyond the falsities of a materialistic view of Natural Order.
I would also agree with user JHARDY, that there is an underlying tone that we should accept the poor state of human fitness on the planet today.
We do not live the lifestyles that Nature intended, if we did we would all be very fit without celluloid or atrophied musculature. That fact cannot be denied, especially if one looks to nature to prove the point. When was the last time that you saw a wild animal with more fat on its bones than what is healthy?
Have you ever seen a healthy horse with dimpled cellulite or a flat ass? Probably not.
The fact is that most humans, through a life that poses very little in the way of natural fitness, are hopelessly unfit. Diet plays a very large role in this as well as our seemingly safe and secure societies.
I do appreciate the underlying context of this article and yet it leaves me with a bad taste, the article could very easily be misread into being a diatribe on the uselessness of striving for physical fitness in a world that demands less and less physical activity every day. In essence it could be read to mean that we are doomed to be fat and lazy so we might as well just accept it.






Thank you for the positive observation of human life.