Coding your future

If we are programs, is there is a great programmer behind a screen we can’t see? And if so, why would fear exist? There’s nothing we’re programmed to do that exceeds what we are capable of. If there is, you simply Derez. We Rez at birth and begin to slowly Derez until death. A malicious program can cause us to Derez quickly or even immediately.

My program is a set of instructions written to produce an intended result. But the specific outcome isn’t known until the program is run. From this perspective, setting a goal is only predicting one possible outcome. To produce any outcome at all is success, because it provides me (the programmer) with feedback needed to debug the program. Often the outcome produced is unexpected. There are many factors outside my control at play. In fact, the program I ran yesterday that produced one result may in fact produce a new result today given outside forces beyond my control.

The debugging never ends.

Did you know that on average, the maintenance cost on a application can exceed $1 mil/year?

When bugs are identified, the programmers job is to debug and test. The programmer monitors the console to see what errors are logged. When all the right conditions are met, the desired outcome is produced. Or the program may be commissioned for another purpose or abandoned all together if the user determines it's no longer effective.

Think of the programs that once served you that you've since abandoned.

As participants in the program, we may fall victim to anticipation. False expectations lead to the emotions, which themselves are tiny charged holons. We give them labels like disappointment, disillusionment, despair, and suffering.

Despite our best intentions, often the outcome produced requires further coding.

The Code Becomes the Coder

To produce what I want, I simply need to write the code. The code is the effort, but there are limits to what my CPU and memory can support. Do I want more than I'm programmed for?

I may be reaching for a result that will require additional computing power. But computing power is limited, so I must write code that works within the limits of the system. I find that shutting down other programs frees up more computing power to work with.

The accomplishment of any goal is only limited by what is written in the code to achieve it.

When I meditate, I attempt to put my computer in sleep mode. Sometimes it doesn't go to sleep. Every night, I reboot. Even a deep meditation or blissful yoga class can be like a reboot.

I know that when my computer comes back online, it will begin to process the programs as always does, only more efficiently as the result having freed up some memory and taken a load of the CPU.

Running either too many programs, or a poorly designed program will continually overclock my CPU. An overtaxed CPU burns out sooner than others that are less taxed.

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