It is obvious that personal stability must be achieved through conscious choices to seek dynamic balance. So balance may only be effected in one's consciousness-of-self. Thus by simply knowing the choices within itself, the Indeterminable Being affects balance through a sense of need. He knows he is not stable and wants to restore balance. But there is a prerequisite in the process to establish or reestablish, or to extend balance: The Indeterminable must always remember the one true thing it actually knows about itself. The Indeterminable Being must consistently recall that it absolutely cannot change what it is, what it was, and what it will always be: The Indeterminable Being is the eternal alternative to whatever it thinks it is. This is to say that you, the Indeterminable Being, can only change the manner in being Indeterminable. This means you can only change your manner-of-being states.
This is the foundation of the first principles of balance and stability: The Indeterminable Being can only change its manner-of-being states; because it perpetually remains being the alternative to all that it may think it is.
Balance comes into effect only through conscious considerations to remain balanced, or to seek to reinstate balance. Stability, or equilibrium arises in this understanding. The Indeterminable is a self-participatory being participating in the potentiality inherent within itself. Thus the Indeterminable has the aptitude,the power and the potentiality to change its manner-of-being states. And that's all the knowledge it ever needs to proceed to maintain, and extend stability throughout its preparations to create and to change its every manner-of-being state period.
All manner-of-being states are temporal, but Being (being-ness) is the Permanent Standing reality. Thus equilibrium, in his consciousness-of-self is effected when and as the Indeterminable Being remembers that he is eternally participating in the continuum of his being-ness. The Indeterminable knows it cannot be transformed beyond whatever it experiences; for the Indeterminable will remain what it always will be: An infinite, unlimited potentiality.
Note: The Penguin Dictionary Of Science defines dynamic equilibrium in this manner --- If two opposing processes are going on at the same rate in a system, thus keeping the system unchanged, the system is said to be in dynamic equilibrium.
This is as good a description of the reality of the whole activity of being Indeterminable as you will get. The Indeterminable must remember that he always maintains stability; because as he witnesses his physical body becoming changed, transformed within his awareness against his the opposite considerations he is drawing from his own unlimited potentiality; he, himself, naturally remains unchanged since his witness is going on at the same rate throughout the change process.

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