Quote of the Day

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Ole-Jørgen Edna at TEDxBKK  

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My Heart Burns Like Fire

Soyen Shaku, the first Zen teacher to come to America, said: “My heart burns like fire but my eyes are as cold as dead ashes.” He made the following rules which he practiced every day of his life.

  • In the morning before dressing, light incense and meditate.
  • Retire at a regular hour.
  • Partake of food at regular intervals. Eat with moderation and never to the point of satisfaction.
  • Receive a guest with the same attitude you have when alone. When alone, maintain the same attitude you have in receiving guests.
  • Watch what you say, and whatever you say, practice it.
  • When an opportunity comes do not let it pass you by, yet always think twice before acting.
  • Do not regret the past. Look to the future.
  • Have the fearless attitude of a hero and the loving heart of a child.
  • Upon retiring, sleep as if you had entered your last sleep. Upon awakening, leave your bed behind you instantly as if you had cast away a pair of old shoes.

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Buddhism

Buddhism is based on the teachings of Siddhartha Buddha. The general creed of Buddhism is based on the “four noble truths” and the “eightfold path.”

The truths are:

  • Life’s a bitch.
  • The reason life’s a bitch is that people are attached to material things.
  • Life doesn’t always have to be a bitch. You can achieve nirvana.
  • The way to achieve nirvana is by following the eightfold path.

Naturally, when you hear about these truths, you’re going to be curious about the eightfold path, which consists of:

  • Right views, i.e., smarten up.
  • Right intentions. Once you’re smart, try to do the right thing.
  • Right speech. Say the right thing.
  • Right action. Knowing and saying the right thing isn’t good enough, you have to actually do the right thing.
  • Right livelihood. Make your living in an honorable way, i.e., don’t work for Halliburton.
  • Right effort. All of the above doesn’t just happen on its own. You have to work at it.
  • Right mindfulness. Once you’ve beaten your physical self into
    submission, you have to start working on your mental state, seeking the
    ability to think clearly and see things as they really are.
  • Right concentration. Focus, focus, focus! The path is only
    complete when you have refined your mind into a state of total focus on
    reality, which is generally thought to be accomplished by the process of
    meditation.

Following the eightfold path is key to Buddhism’s system of spiritual
advancement, in which doing the right thing (as outlined above) earns
you karma, metaphysical bonus points which can be exchanged for only one
fabulous prize, Nirvana. In order to make the trade, however, you have
to accumulate an unspecified number of karma points, a process which
usually takes several lifetimes. (Your karma points roll over when
you’re reincarnated.) Alternatively, you can lose karma points by
engaging in wrong views, wrong intentions, wrong speech, wrong actions,
and so on.

The Buddhist concept of karma comes from Hinduism, and some Buddhists
revere Hindu deities. Buddhists also believe in yin and yang, which is
drawn from Taoism.

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Women persecute themselves with a desire to retain adolescent figures. ‘Nearly everyone I know’, says Saville, ‘is obsessed with dieting-from
anorectics who end up in hospital to friends who take hundreds of
laxatives a day. It’s like an epidemic. Some companies write the
provision of body management into employee’s contracts; you can have
liposuction so as to conform to company image. Plastic surgeons use
computers to create the perfect face, but it will achieve such
blandness. What would beauty be, if everyone were the same?

   

Branded (1992) by Jenny Saville                 

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