Archive for the '5. do' Category

The Acceptance of Suffering

Friday, November 17th, 2006

“The acceptance of suffering is a journey into death. Facing deep pain, allowing it to be, taking your attention into it, it is to enter death consciously. When you have died this death, you realise that there is no death - and there is nothing to fear. Only the ego dies.”

The Power Of Now
Sing with Flora

Tree

Friday, November 17th, 2006

Tree is company

Ecstasy

Friday, November 17th, 2006

You need not leave your room. Remain sitting at your table and listen. You need not even listen, simply wait. You need not even wait, just learn to become quiet, and still, and solitary. The world will freely offer itself to you to be unmasked. It has no choice; it will roll in ecstasy at your feet.

Franz Kafka

Churches & Pubs

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

One will have
never visited too
many churches and
not enough pubs

Art

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

Art is a distraction, albeit a high-brow distraction; it allows the few to forget about their sins as they browse a white room, a container for artifacts.

Good art is a spontaneous impetuous that inspires, even if for a very brief moment.

Bad art shall be ignored.

Music is also a distraction but because invisible and completely portable (it resides in a remote part of the body, between the mind and the stomach), it is more valuable, more generous. It is, in fact, inevitable.

Painting is a primitive expression that is loosing its place in our increasingly virtual reality.

Photography is the need of the mind to confirm its existence by recording it and sharing it.

Sculpting has turned into Film & Television.

Writing comes first, as books can, and indeed do, change lives. When the mind reads, the mind instructs itself, becoming one. Writing is as necessary as it is mandatory; everything else is superfluous.

“… and the Word was God.” – John 1:1

United in One

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

“As soon as the race results appear in the paper, I hear the same old comments in the hospital where I work: “I see you let a girl beat you.” The statement is wrong on all counts; wrong in what it says; wrong in what it implies.
For one thing, these runners are not girls but women. Anyone who has had their consciousness raised knows better than to call a woman a girl, and it is about time everyone learned that.
Furthermore, women can be excellent runners. Some have amazingly high maximum oxygen uptakes, and their muscles can contain slow- and fast-twitch muscle fibers in the same ratio as men’s.
I have discovered in races and in training that women runners spread across the same spectrum as men, from very good to very bad. I have been beaten regularly by the best and have had some head-to-head struggles with those not quite so talented. When it comes to determining who’s faster, it’s not a question of the sexes. It simply depends on who is best on that particular day.
What upsets me most about the hospital corridor comments is the implication that something is wrong with women who participate in sports, particularly in mixed sports. Some people suggest that the whole thing is somehow unnatural.
But women gain so much in giving up the limitations society places on them. Running removes what Ortega called their perpetual self-concealment. Through running, a woman can come to know herself truly, not only her body but her soul as well.
People who see only the differences between men and women do not understand this. Their herd-thinking cannot conceive that sport has something to offer women, who, they believe, need nothing but children, church, and kitchen. These people cannot imagine any benefits from male-female competition. And their emphasis on the biological and social perpetuates the war of the sexes.
The truth is that sports, and that includes men running against women, may well be the salvation of the male-female relationship, the answer to our marriage problems, the solution of the eternal discord between what is masculine and what is feminine.
You may find this theory far-fetched, but consider what Plato believed: Our aim should be to find our other half. This cannot happen unless we reveal ourselves, body and soul, to the other. And where can this be done better than in sports? It is in those arenas that a person finds his or her moment of truth, comes to know what she or he has been all the time, and, in that knowing, reveals it to others.
We need more of this. Leisure and free time now make the psychological problems in our marriages more evident. In 1976, for the first time, divorces in the United States exceeded one million. Our affluence and 40-hour work week have allowed more communication, but we are failing to take advantage of these great opportunities.
Eventually, love, marriage, communication, good conversation or good silences depend on a total meeting with someone who is most like ourself. So that, as the Russian philosopher Berdyayev put it, we are “united in one androgynous image, overcoming our loneliness.”
That, of course, is the ultimate: creating union, knowing the other, overcoming loneliness, bringing together two solitudes.
Sport can assist in this undertaking. Athletes who know themselves in their bodies know when they differ from others. But even more, they know when they are alike. They know when they are simpatico.
When I see women running, I see a new world coming. A world in which men and women can both wear sweats and running shoes and train 30 miles a week. A world in which men and women can get to know themselves, and each other, better than ever before.”

Dr George Sheenan