Don’t Stand
to Close to Me
Loose talk in the classroom
To hurt they try and try
Strong words in the staff room
The accusations fly
It's no use, he sees her
He starts to shake and cough
Just like the old man in
That book by Nabokov
Don't stand, don't stand
Don’t stand so close to me.
Is this a commandment or a warning?
When a toddler hears “ Don’t touch the hot stove”, he may
interpret that as a commandment. If the statement is given with the toddler’s safety
in mind, with love, it can be a warning that the toddler will not like the consequences
of touching a hot stove. The salient point is the consequences of the action. If
touching the hot stove will cause harm to the toddler, then it should be taken as a warning, not a
commandment. If touching the hot stove will cause no harm to the toddler, then
it is correctly taken as a commandment. On this basis the Ten Commandments are
more properly the Ten Warnings. No harm can befall an absolute by the action of a human who is far less than
an absolute. Killing, stealing, lying, oath breaking, coveting, etc. do NOT cause harm
to the absolute, thus they are more properly warnings rather than commands. Do
not eat from the tree of Good and Evil in the Garden of Eden which would make
you an absolute and there is only one absolute, and you are NOT an absolute is a warning because of the consequences, not a commandment. Don’t
stand to close to an absolute is a warning, not a commandment, because of what may happen when you do. A commandment is meant to control. A warning is NOT meant
to control. Grow up and listen.
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