Lyrics ACCEPTED TOO (feat. Alan Watts & Carl Jung) - Akira the Don
Jung,
Jung,
Jung
I
want
to
read
A
passage
from
one
of
his
lectures
Which
I
think
is
One
of
the
greatest
things
he
ever
wrote
And
which
has
been
a
very
marvelous
thing
for
me
People
forget
That
even
doctors
have
moral
scruples
And
that
certain
patients'
confessions
Are
hard
even
for
a
doctor
to
swallow
Yet
the
patient
does
not
feel
himself
accepted
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
And
yet,
the
patient
does
not
feel
himself
accepted
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
No
one
could
bring
this
about
by
mere
words
It
comes
only
through
reflection
And
through
the
doctor's
attitude
towards
himself
Of
his
own
dark
side
If
the
doctor
wants
to
guide
another
Or
even
accompany
him
a
step
of
the
way
He
must
feel
with
that
person's
psyche
When
he
passes
judgment
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
And
yet,
the
patient
does
not
feel
himself
accepted
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Whether
he
puts
his
judgements
into
words
or
keeps
them
to
himself
Makes
not
the
slightest
difference
To
take
the
opposite
position
And
to
agree
with
the
patient
offhand
is
also
of
no
use
Feeling
comes
only
through
unprejudiced
objectivity
This
sounds
almost
like
a
scientific
precept
And
it
could
be
confused
with
a
purely
intellectual
Abstract
attitude
of
mind
But
what
I
mean
is
something
quite
different
It
is
a
human
quality
A
kind
of
deep
respect
for
the
facts
For
the
man
who
suffers
from
them
And
for
the
riddle
of
such
a
man's
life
The
truly
religious
person
has
this
attitude
He
knows
that
God
has
brought
All
sorts
of
strange
and
inconceivable
things
to
pass
And
seeks
in
the
most
curious
ways
to
enter
a
man's
heart
He
therefore
senses
In
everything
the
unseen
presence
of
the
divine
will
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
And
yet,
the
patient
does
not
feel
himself
accepted
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
And
yet,
the
patient
does
not
feel
himself
accepted
Unless
the
very
worst
of
him
is
accepted
too
This
is
what
I
mean
by
unprejudiced
objectivity
It
is
a
moral
achievement
on
the
part
of
the
doctor
Who
ought
not
to
let
himself
be
repelled
By
sickness
and
corruption
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