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grok (grawk) vt., vi.
[<Martian, to drink] 1. a) to merge, blend,
intermarry; lose identity in
group experience b) to become one with c) being
identically equal 2. to understand something so thoroughly
that you merge with it and it merges with you 3. the observer
becomes part of the observed |
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| So, What Does It Mean to "Grok In Fullness?" |
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For those
of you unfamiliar with the term, the word "grok" was coined by
author Robert A. Heinlein for use by his character Valentine Michael
Smith in his classic science fiction novel Stranger in
a Strange Land.
The title comes from the fact that Mike is the only survivor of
the first human expedition to Mars. When Earth gets around to
putting together a rescue mission, some twenty years later, they
find that Mike -- a child born out of wedlock between two of the
original members of the exploration team -- has been raised by
the Martians. The book then details Mike's "adventures" as he
is brought back "home," explores human nature, and tries to bring
the Martian philosophy to Earth.
In this book we find Mike using
the term "grok" frequently. At first when he says "I grok" it
appears to mean "I understand." But later, in response to a question,
Mike declares that grok means "to drink" in a literal translation
from the Martian. As his friends discuss the term further they
determine that the exact meaning is hard to pin down because in
Martian it tends to imply everything that humans mean when they
refer to religion, philosophy, and science.
So the phrase "may you always grok in fullness" is intended to
convey your hope that someone will not jump to conclusions, will
not immediately pass judgment, will not act without thought; but
instead will look at every problem, opportunity, and action from
any and all perspectives. It is asking that the recipient try
to understand a situation so thoroughly that they effectively
become one with it -- that they can see all of the other points
of view from all of the other perspectives. Then, once this "understanding"
has been attained -- once the observer has become part of the
observed and understands its perspective -- then they can act
in full confidence that they will do the best and the right thing.
Some interesting information
about the different editions of the book with cover art.
An outline
of the plot and characters in the book. |
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| What does this have to do with Druidism?
Or the Order of The Mithril Star? |
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The
Order is one of a handful of Pagan groups inspired by "Stranger
In A Strange Land," which are beginning to be referred to as the
"Heinleinian Tradition." The Order practices water sharing
as a sacrament, poly fidelity
as a lifestyle, and recognizes that deity resides in each and
every one of us ("Thou art God.") In our The Druid Path course we require students to read the
novel (and they are tested on it) |
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Grok
is a kinda of "Zen" like concept, and meditation is
way of grokking the universe isn't it? To help you along, we offer
you a weekly meditation - usually a quote. Something to think
about, to ponder, to, well, uhm, Grok. :) We call it
"Monday Meditation" or "Your Weekly Druish Moment
of Zen." To have it delivered to your mailbox every Monday,
subcribe. You'll be enlightened if you do. Maybe.
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