GREG SIPE
USA
URL 1: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/2911
URL 2: http://members.tripod.com/~JSpoon/index.html
Email subscription: No
Profession: architect, former professor, photographer, writer
UCS Member since: 9/30/1997
Last login: 9/22/1999
Last update: 9/22/1999
Personal Introduction
Born USA, trained as an architect, lived in Europe for much of my adult life-- have developed larger-than-national consciousness. Strongly influenced by native american indian art/mythology/belief systems; politically a social anarchist. Very interested in growth beyond ego and something akin to the buddhist position of self as pure simple being/reaction as one's own unique spirit-- if this is inarticulate it's because it's a difficult concept to tightly and precisely define. I have never been able to understand competition (except in games which are pursued for pure enjoyment-- not winning). THIS human(?) has always advocated curiosity and cooperation to bring out each others' strengths, with a view to enhance each other and the whole. I encourage my site visitors to grow in these ways, and to search and act politically to defend all their freedoms.
Web Site
Name: Quavajo
URL: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/2911
Description: A Place of Arrival and Departure. Dedicated to finding our true selves, growing beyond ego and the realization of both our full human and spirit potential. And a defense against those who would control us.
Skills
- Public speaking/lecturing/writing
- photography
- architectural design
- perceptive, empathetic teaching
- critic of qualitative systems/designs
Goals
- Reducing the "rules" of human interaction to utter common-sense
simplicity and helping in its propagation.
- Convincing all that fear in the principle enemy of humanity and
Encouraging unself-conscious openness to the point that the "true
self" will bloom and grow beyong ego.
- Eliminating imposed authority from human relations and interactions.
- Finding any means to encourage the re-establishment of "tribal"
community/culture/society which has as its highest goal the
maximization of the unique "gifts" of each individual.
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