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MCC 7 Rituals And Rendering

MCC Ritual What is a Ritual A ritual is a sequence of activities involving gestures, words, actions, or objects, performed in a sequestered place and according to a set sequence. Rituals may be prescribed by the traditions of a community, including a religious community. Etymology online describes the word Ritual as 1560s, from Middle French ritual or directly from Latin ritualis "relating to (religious) rites," from ritus "religious observance or ceremony, custom, usage," how are Rituals defined **an established or prescribed procedure for a religious or other rite. **a system or collection of religious or other rites. **observance of set forms in public worship. **a book of rites or ceremonies. Psychologists approve of Rituals their founding reasons are according to To be seen or observed What is the difference between ritual and Habit ? from the wall street website https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-rituals-and-focus-can-turn-isolation-into-a-time-for-growth-115

MCC E2 Reward

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Multidimensional Comedy Club E2 Reward What does reward mean, do we reward ourselves with energy, emotions, or physical attributes, does this sustain us...make us feel better about ourselves, do we need reward system to assist ourselves going forward in this system.... Lets hear your opinion on this?

Episode 1 Shame

Multidimensional Comedy Club Ep 1 - "Shame" Do we feel shame because we are programmed to feel it, or do we feel shame because we feel we are guilty Reference material https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generations_of_Noah#Sons_of_Noah:_Shem,_Ham_and_Japheth https://www.etymonline.com "shame (n.) Old English scamu, sceomu "feeling of guilt or disgrace; confusion caused by shame; disgrace, dishonor, insult, loss of esteem or reputation; shameful circumstance, what brings disgrace; modesty; private parts," from Proto-Germanic *skamo (source also of Old Saxon skama, Old Norse skömm, Swedish skam, Old Frisian scome, Dutch schaamte, Old High German scama, German Scham). The best guess is that this is from PIE *skem-, from *kem- "to cover" (covering oneself being a common expression of shame). Until modern times English had a productive duplicate form in shand. An Old Norse word for it was kinnroði, literally "cheek-redness," hence, "blush of sham