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Roll up, roll up,...Greetings Cards aplenty;

When we lose ourselves in what we're doing or in whatever is happening, what we lose is the sense of me.  We are still experinecing, but

the sense of "I" is no longercentral to that experience; the sense of being someone who is experiencing something is absent.  There's just

experiencing.  We aren't referring the experience we're having back to ourselves-to how it's going for me and what it means to me.  When we lose ourselves this way, we enjoy whatever we're doing, regardless of what that may be.  Being lost in the moment is inherently pleasurable and fun.  Children do this naturally in their play.  Play or fun could be defined as losing yourself in what you are doing.'_Gina Lake

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