2014.04.28 13:00 - Only the Dance

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    The Guardian for this meeting was Eliza Madrigal, who almost "called in" today but is so glad she didn't. The comments are by Eliza Madrigal, refreshed by company and longer pauses than usual.

    http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Four_Quartets

    8 sparrows_002.jpg


    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: Hi Bruce :) so nice to see you
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, Eliza! Always good to see you, too!
    Eliza Madrigal: having an agreeable day?
    Bruce Mowbray: Well, yes and no.
    Eliza Madrigal: how so?
    Bruce Mowbray: The good news is that my typist put the finishing touches on the lesson he'll be delivering next Sunday -- on Gnosticism.
    Eliza Madrigal: congratulations!
    Bruce Mowbray: The bad news is that he's experiencing some sort of flu, which has quite upset his usual vertigo.
    Wol Euler: hello eliza, bruce
    Eliza Madrigal: Hi Wol :) looking loverly
    Bruce Mowbray: So, he's staying close to level surfaces... and to the bathroom, if you get my meaning.
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, Wol!
    Wol Euler: awwww, sory to hear it
    Eliza Madrigal: Oh, dear :( yes, please take care of yourself Bruce
    Eliza Madrigal: 's typist ;-)

    Bruce Mowbray: Well, I have to take care of him!
    Bruce Mowbray: Especially since he refuses to do that for himself.
    Eliza Madrigal: you are the steady hand?
    Zen Arado: Hi all
    Bruce Mowbray: I am!
    Wol Euler: heheheh
    Eliza Madrigal: Hi Zen :)) Good day!
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, Zen!
    Wol Euler: hello zen

    Eliza Madrigal: how is the day going for your two, Zen and Wol?
    Bruce Mowbray remembers from Zen's presence that his typist forgot to load Dragon... (brb)
    Zen Arado: not too bad
    Eliza Madrigal has dragon too but is so far too impatient to use it in SL
    Zen Arado: ty
    Eliza Madrigal: :) good
    Wol Euler: unexpectedly well actually :) the office closed at 4pm when the boss drove off for his presentation, so I've been at home slacking and eating since then
    Zen Arado: it's hard to keep yourself using it
    Eliza Madrigal: yay, so glad to hear that Wol
    Zen Arado: yet it gets better the more you use and correct mistakes
    Wol Euler: actually I just discovered that the current Mac OS has built-in speech-to-text :)
    Eliza Madrigal: I like it for other kinds of writing
    Wol Euler: I'm going to set that up and try it on my other computer this evening
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, Zon.
    Zen Arado: yes...I tried it and it's quite good
    Eliza Madrigal nods
    Eliza Madrigal: Hi Zon :) ntsy
    Zen Arado: although just using the built in mic
    Wol Euler: hello zon
    Zen Arado: Hi Zon
    Zon Kwan: heya
    Zen Arado: I use it on iPhone for texts etc
    Eliza Madrigal: while waiting at the dentist with my son, a man was checking his email verbally, like in "Her" - it felt so strange
    Bruce Mowbray: I used it to prepare next Sunday's Sunday school lesson.

    Wol Euler: um, eliza, weren't you blonde when I arrived, three minutes ago? :)
    Eliza Madrigal: not 3 minutes ago no
    Eliza Madrigal: but I have been blonde recently
    Wol Euler: funny, it must have been an echo
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: everyone seeing their own version of one another
    Wol Euler: just like in RL actually
    Bruce Mowbray: or maybe you saw my antlers - glimmering through Eliza's hair....
    Wol Euler grins.
    Eliza Madrigal smiles

    Eliza Madrigal: No aggers today I guess... hm...
    Wol Euler: odd, that

    Eliza Madrigal: and I'm not sure of topic. For me this has been a *full* day - one of those days that seems like a year took place
    Zen Arado: oh sorry Eliza
    Eliza Madrigal: not at all bad
    Zen Arado: you asked me about my day and I didn't ask about yours
    Wol Euler: what's been happening?
    Bruce Mowbray nods and listens.
    Eliza Madrigal: oh, don't worry... just like to sort of take temperature
    Eliza Madrigal: I spent the morning in a lawyer's office :)
    Wol Euler: oops
    Eliza Madrigal: but... by this afternoon I felt very encouraged by the direction we were all going in
    Zen Arado: I don't know whether that is good or bad
    Eliza Madrigal: well, it isn't the sort of thing that you wake up like "yay, lawyer today!" lol

    Zen Arado: of course we don't need to qualify' life anyway
    Wol Euler: depends on the reason and the outcome, I guess
    Eliza Madrigal: right

    Zen Arado: it's funny how much we read about lawyers in books
    Zen Arado: so they must be interesting
    Wol Euler: I hope both were good, or if not that the outcome at least was good
    Zen Arado: thinks about the Chinese story about good and bad
    Eliza Madrigal: thanks... I'm suspending judgment for now, but I'd say it was a bit of a leap for women and children kind
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal giggles
    Eliza Madrigal: tell us, Zen?
    Zen Arado: a giant leap?
    Eliza Madrigal: Or...after the bell perhaps..
    Zen Arado: nah
    Zen Arado: you all heard that I think
    Eliza Madrigal: a giant hop

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: okay... well, after the bell I say we settle in with a topic :) :::pauses::::


    Eliza Madrigal smiles
    Eliza Madrigal: that is the first time in forever none of us was typing during the pause
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Wol Euler: hehehe

    Bruce Mowbray: my typist was watching eight goldfinches on the feeder right outside his window.
    Eliza Madrigal: ::::ooooooh:::::
    Eliza Madrigal: 8!
    Bruce Mowbray: I could try to get a photo, if you like...
    Eliza Madrigal: would love that
    Zen Arado: photos aren't the same though
    Wol Euler: pleease
    Eliza Madrigal: it would be like peeking through Bruce's window to Bruce's typist's window


    Eliza Madrigal: :) anyway....
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal: topics?
    Zen Arado: the living reality of living creatures is so beautiful
    Bruce Mowbray: kk. They are getting skiddish. I can only manage to get 3 or 4 of them to pose for me.
    Zen Arado: I sit and watch my little sparrows when I sit in the sun
    Eliza Madrigal: aw... "my" little sparrows
    Eliza Madrigal: sounds very sweet
    Eliza Madrigal: I feel that way about the squirrels that come to the balcony
    Wol Euler smiles.

    Wol Euler: hello san
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, san!
    Zen Arado: hi San
    Santoshima Resident: hello
    Bruce Mowbray: afk -- uploading photo.... brb.
    Eliza Madrigal: I once visited a friend at her parents' house in Georgia... all while the kids were growing up and they'd had a place in the city, they had spent weekends building this other... well... hard to call it anything but a wonderland. Outside of one window there was a finch nest.. they were so bright and... mmm it was a big moment

    Eliza Madrigal: Hi San :) we're appreciating birdies
    Santoshima Resident: lovely
    Wol Euler: is this red shirt day?
    Eliza Madrigal: haha
    Wol Euler: I missed the memo
    Zon Kwan: hi San
    Eliza Madrigal: me too, obviously
    Zen Arado: we joined the red shirts
    Wol Euler: a dangerous move
    Wol Euler: "a job for life, but perhaps not for long"
    Zon Kwan: life is
    Eliza Madrigal: life is a dangerous move, Zon?
    Zon Kwan: nods
    Eliza Madrigal: :)

    Eliza Madrigal: :::takes a deep breath::::


    Eliza Madrigal: beautiful Bruce, thanks so much!
    Wol Euler: so funny to see a winter scene in that photo, when here it's full summer
    Eliza Madrigal: yellow is a friendly color
    Bruce Mowbray: We're barely into spring -- and the goldfinches havn't completely gotten their summer feathers yet.
    Eliza Madrigal: do they get puffier?
    Bruce Mowbray: No, but they change from a drab greyish to a bright yellow.
    Eliza Madrigal: ah :)

    Santoshima Resident: needing a nap ... please excuse me
    Bruce Mowbray: kk, Sna-ji.
    Bruce Mowbray: San-ji.
    Eliza Madrigal: okay san... happy napping
    Wol Euler: bye san, sleep well



    Eliza Madrigal: if Aggers were here, she'd be asking if she crashed you know ^.^
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Bruce Mowbray: :)

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal:

    "... at the still point, there the dance is,
    But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,
    Where past and future are gathered.
    Neither movement from nor towards, Neither ascent nor decline.
    Except for the point, the still point, There would be no dance,
    and there is only the dance."

    T. S. Eliot

    Wol Euler nods.
    Wol Euler: which one is that from? I can't quite place it
    Wol Euler: one of the Four Quartets, I think, or of that period
    Eliza Madrigal: http://www.coldbacon.com/poems/fq.html - yes, somewhere in here
    Wol Euler: aha! *beams*
    Wol Euler: well done me
    Eliza Madrigal: :::claps::::
    Zen Arado: Burnt Norton?
    Eliza Madrigal: this is something I'm "working on" though not too intensely, with qi gong
    Wol Euler listens.

    Bruce Mowbray:


    For most of us, there is only the unattended

    • Moment, the moment in and out of time,
      The distraction fit, lost in a shaft of sunlight,
      The wild thyme unseen, or the winter lightning
      Or the waterfall, or music heard so deeply
      That it is not heard at all, but you are the music
      While the music lasts.
       (V)



    Eliza Madrigal: T. S. Eliot's "Burnt Norton" initially appeared in 1936, but eventually this poem became the first of the Four Quartets (1943), a cycle expressing the poet's most mature meditations on time and the timeless.

    Eliza Madrigal: music heard so deeply, that it is not heard at all ~ a wow


    Wol Euler nods.
    Eliza Madrigal: Aggers! where've you been!
    Agatha Macbeth: Evenin' :)
    Wol Euler: yay :) hello aggerses
    Bruce Mowbray: Heya, aggers!
    Agatha Macbeth: Fell asleep reading >.<
    Zen Arado: Hi Aggers
    Wol Euler: awwwww
    Eliza Madrigal: couldn't have a proper session before :P
    Zen Arado: not an exciting book then?
    Agatha Macbeth: Maybe it wasn't :p
    Eliza Madrigal: haha Zen

    Agatha Macbeth: Did I miss anything?
    Eliza Madrigal: the finches
    Eliza Madrigal: two pauses
    Agatha Macbeth: Finches?
    Eliza Madrigal: and a still point

    Bruce Mowbray: OH! I will slide you the photo of my typist's birdfeeder, aggers.
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Agatha Macbeth: Great
    Agatha Macbeth: Is the same one?
    Agatha Macbeth: Oh yay
    Eliza Madrigal: not from the Goldfinch book (a good read)


    Bruce Mowbray: I'd mentioned that it was barely spring here, and that six finches were nibbling at the feeder outside the window -- and then took a photo, but could only get 3 to pose for me.

    Agatha Macbeth: Are your finches the same as ours?
    Bruce Mowbray: don't know.
    Agatha Macbeth: Or more exotic?
    Bruce Mowbray: these are not exotic at all.
    Wol Euler: we could ask Darwin
    Zen Arado: chaffinches?
    Agatha Macbeth: Darwin Mizser?
    Wol Euler: no Darwin Charles
    Agatha Macbeth: Oh him
    Zen Arado: Greenfinches?
    Agatha Macbeth: The pelican man


    Eliza Madrigal: what do you guys think of the professor from the buddhism/psychology book saying that buddhism is a rebellion against natural selection?
    Agatha Macbeth: Is it me or does Wol look like a tree?
    Agatha Macbeth: It is?
    Wol Euler: O.O
    Bruce Mowbray: I've not listen to the last week of lectures yet.
    Wol Euler: strange idea (eliza)
    Bruce Mowbray: looking forward to doing that tomorrow.
    Eliza Madrigal: she does not... she is sparkly and dramatic and glamorous today
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Wol Euler: thank you, eliza
    Eliza Madrigal: right, isn't it Wol?

    Agatha Macbeth: I don't think of it as a rebellion against anything
    Eliza Madrigal: he said that at the very beginning
    Bruce Mowbray: oh, he did?
    Bruce Mowbray: I must have missed it.
    Eliza Madrigal: and I kept waiting for him to really work through the thought
    Bruce Mowbray: I've listened to all but the last week.

    Zon Kwan: he has a point
    Eliza Madrigal: yes... he does talk a little more about it in his last lectures
    Bruce Mowbray listens.
    Zen Arado: I have gotten behind on that course
    Bruce Mowbray: Oh, good -- I'll look forward to that
    Eliza Madrigal: last lectures are very good - about "enlightenment"
    Zen Arado: I thought he was mostly comparing evolutionary psychology with Buddhism and finding many parallels
    Zon Kwan: we are driven to ceratain point by our instincts
    Zon Kwan: then we must take charge
    Agatha Macbeth: Charge!

    Bruce Mowbray: Yes, and he has mentioned several times how evolution has brought forth certain behaviours in us.
    Eliza Madrigal: to go against what seems the natural grain of thinking/conditioning could be seen as rebellion... but doesn't buddhim assert that the "natural state" is not the conditionig?
    Bruce Mowbray: for example, gratification, and how short-lived it is. and why
    Agatha Macbeth: Revolution as opposed to evolution?
    Zon Kwan: awakening
    Agatha Macbeth: Yowza
    Eliza Madrigal smiles
    Eliza Madrigal: I think of "enlightenment" 'as' the next evolutionary leap... not an end state to anything

    Bruce Mowbray: I think his point is that evolution has condition asked to respond sometimes in reactive ways, and that Buddhist practice can enable us to overcome those responses. and in that sense it is anti- Darwinian, perhaps.

    --BELL--

    Zen Arado: it comes back to me that he says our natural state is one of survival and are being driven by our genes but that makes us suffer
    Bruce Mowbray: yes, Zen said it in fewer words - and better.

    Zon Kwan: natural means directed by outside forces
    Eliza Madrigal: Bleu and I were talking about this on Sunday... seems to me it is a transcendence beyond but including the conditioning we know... like one has to 'know themself' to go beyond the self... not undo the self?
    Eliza Madrigal: hmmm... nature is really hard to define
    Zon Kwan: to know oneself yes
    Zon Kwan: ultimate aim


    Bruce Mowbray: I was telling Eliza earlier that I have just finished putting together my Sunday school lesson on Gnosticism. and knowing oneself, to the Gnostics, was how we come to know God, or so they thought.
    Zon Kwan: yes
    Bruce Mowbray: they called it gnosis.
    Eliza Madrigal: Bruce I'd love to hear more of your lesson
    Wol Euler listens.
    Eliza Madrigal: if you're willing :)
    Agatha Macbeth: Hip gnosis
    Bruce Mowbray: well, what shall we do.
    Zon Kwan: to manifest oneself
    Bruce Mowbray: it's all printed out and I could send it to you in a word document if you wanted.
    Eliza Madrigal: nice

    Eliza Madrigal: well could you give us highlights now?
    Bruce Mowbray: I suppose I could record it and posted on my website. but all that seems a bit self-serving.
    Bruce Mowbray: well I'm presenting it in three parts.
    Eliza Madrigal: which things jumped out as crucial to know?

    Bruce Mowbray: the first part is a broad stroked historical context,
    Bruce Mowbray: the second part is an investigation of Gnostic thought and worldview
    Bruce Mowbray: in the third section which will not be given until the following Sunday,
    Eliza Madrigal: I really enjoyed hearing your audio of John teaching... but understand if you don't feel comfortable
    Bruce Mowbray: will be an investigation of the gospel of Thomas.
    Bruce Mowbray: thank you so much that's very kind of you.
    Eliza Madrigal: ah, Thomas gets his own class?

    Bruce Mowbray: it's not that I feel uncomfortable. I just don't want to monopolise people's time.
    Wol Euler: funny coincidence, a friend was telling me about the Gospel of T recently, I'd never heard of it before
    Eliza Madrigal: definitely not a waste
    Bruce Mowbray: yes the gospel of Thomas will get his own class, its own class, and also this class really needs opportunities for discussion, so I hope there will be ample time for that too.
    Eliza Madrigal: marvelous

    Bruce Mowbray: I think the gospel of Thomas is the most famous of all the antiquities found at Nag Hammadi in 1945.
    Bruce Mowbray: it certainly the one that has been studied the most.

    Eliza Madrigal: "if you bring for what is within you, what is within you will save you - if you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you"

    Bruce Mowbray: yes that's one of the more famous quotes from the gospel of Thomas.
    Wol Euler nods.
    Agatha Macbeth: Got that right
    Eliza Madrigal: was completely blown away when I first heard that line from GoT
    Agatha Macbeth: GoT :p
    Eliza Madrigal: :)

    Bruce Mowbray: , to me, it seems that modern day Christians do not appreciate that until the fourth century, there were many versions of Christianity---- many responses to this guy called Jesus.

    Zon Kwan: so better express oneself
    Agatha Macbeth: Love it
    Bruce Mowbray: many Christianities.
    Eliza Madrigal: yes
    Wol Euler: mmhm
    Eliza Madrigal: it would help if more people knew
    Bruce Mowbray: the various Gnostic movements were just some of those versions of early Christianity.
    Eliza Madrigal: Gospel of Mary too
    Bruce Mowbray: were maybe a few more people will know after next Sunday morning!
    Eliza Madrigal: (there is a)
    Eliza Madrigal: :)) Bruce

    Bruce Mowbray: yes the gospel of Mary. it's also believed that Jesus and Mary Magdalen were husband-and-wife -- which of course would not work with the Orthodox Church.
    Eliza Madrigal: I think the divisions that exist now are based on people not wanting to know things
    Bruce Mowbray: absolutely so!
    Bruce Mowbray: that's the purpose of orthodox theology: confining the religion to narrow limits.
    Agatha Macbeth: Back to orthodoxy
    Bruce Mowbray: some people feel we are born into our politics and into our religion. it sure makes life easier.
    Eliza Madrigal: the Jesus with wife stories keep coming back, but I thought her name was Margaret now, lol
    Bruce Mowbray: ;-)

    --BELL--

    Agatha Macbeth: Maybe that was her second name
    Bruce Mowbray: you ought to check out the very last verse in the gospel of Thomas
    Bruce Mowbray: (I'll find it.)
    Wol Euler makes a note

    Bruce Mowbray: Logion 114 -

    "Simon Peter said to them, Mary (Magdalene, probably) should leave us, for females are not worthy of life. Jesus said, see, I am going to attract her to make her male so that she too might become a living spirit that resembles you males, for every female that makes herself male will enter the kingdom of heaven."


    Eliza Madrigal: that's weird
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Wol Euler raises an eyebrow.
    Bruce Mowbray: Marvin Meyer has written an excellent essay about this in his book about the gospel of Thomas.

    Zen Arado: it's funny but I have never read any of those apocryphal books from the Bible
    Zen Arado: they seem alien
    Bruce Mowbray: yes they do seem alien.
    Zen Arado: to me
    Eliza Madrigal: well that verse does ^^
    Bruce Mowbray: and such a variety!
    Bruce Mowbray: no wonder the church fathers were upset!
    Zen Arado: I am conditioned to the old-fashioned Bible
    Bruce Mowbray: I think most of us are, Zen.
    Eliza Madrigal: I'm sure that what was meant at first was "this sort of life" kind of the same argument of women going into ministries
    Zen Arado: but Catholics use the Apocrypha?

    Bruce Mowbray: well, the all-male hierarchy was one of the things decided at the Council of Nicaea.
    Agatha Macbeth: Probably :p
    Bruce Mowbray: that the Gnostics are well known for using coded language.... especially after the Council of Nicaea.
    Bruce Mowbray: when their various texts had been banned.

    Eliza Madrigal: have been listening to Jimmy Carter recently, and hadn't known that he left the So Baptist Convention when they made similar decisions to exclude women
    Bruce Mowbray: ooops.
    Bruce Mowbray: wrong hot key.
    Agatha Macbeth: Still growing peanuts?
    Zen Arado: the Presbyterian Church I attended didn't allow women to become elders
    Bruce Mowbray: I am a deep admirer of Jimmy Carter.
    Eliza Madrigal: (he's) still teaching Sunday School, like Bruce :)
    Agatha Macbeth: He must be getting on a bit now
    Zen Arado: because it says in the Bible that women should not teach men
    Bruce Mowbray: I actually met him in 1976, when he was running for president.
    Zen Arado: and they are just to be a helper
    Eliza Madrigal: you did? wow
    Eliza Madrigal: he is beginning activism for women now actually
    Eliza Madrigal: although always part of his belief system
    Agatha Macbeth makes a note to get active
    Bruce Mowbray: yes the woman I was dating at the time was a lobbyist at the State house in Columbus, and she got free tickets for both of us to "Dinner with the Next President."
    Eliza Madrigal: neat
    Wol Euler: cool
    Eliza Madrigal: daughters have volunteered Habitat for Humanity... think a wonderful thing
    Bruce Mowbray: wonderful.
    Eliza Madrigal: meanwhile George W is painting :P
    Agatha Macbeth: Would make a good tag
    Bruce Mowbray: oh my God.
    Eliza Madrigal grins
    Bruce Mowbray: I understand his paintings are getting mixed reviews.
    Bruce Mowbray: have you seen them?
    Eliza Madrigal: I was surprised he could paint
    Wol Euler: I have, they seem pretty amateurish to me
    Agatha Macbeth: For one moment I thought you meant Washington >.<
    Zen Arado: I'm sure he could sell them anyway because of his ....
    Wol Euler: my answer to the question "if these were signed 'Fred Bloggs', would you care about them?" was "no".
    Zen Arado: fame?
    Bruce Mowbray: well, maybe it's a case of simple does as simple is.
    Agatha Macbeth: Doing a self portrait crossing the Delaware
    Eliza Madrigal: fame with a question mark..yeah
    Bruce Mowbray: ha ha.
    Eliza Madrigal: hehe Aggers

    Eliza Madrigal: impressed me a little that he painted Dalai Lama
    Agatha Macbeth: Hope it came off after
    Eliza Madrigal: hahahha
    Wol Euler: *rimshot*
    Zon Kwan: waves
    Agatha Macbeth: What colour would you like Mr Lama?

    Eliza Madrigal: thank goodness you came today Aggers :D - AND you jumped into 99 Days
    Bruce Mowbray: I think he might have been a better president if he had practised painting before going into politics.

    Agatha Macbeth: Shalom Zon
    Eliza Madrigal: Bye Zon :)
    Eliza Madrigal: maybe so Bruce
    Bruce Mowbray: Bye Zon!

    Agatha Macbeth: I jumped in with one toe
    Eliza Madrigal: one toe is enough
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: to begin with
    Agatha Macbeth: Single step and all that

    Bruce Mowbray listens to hear more about how 99 days is going.
    Eliza Madrigal: we're on day 6
    Bruce Mowbray: nods.
    Eliza Madrigal: am enjoying the contributions
    Bruce Mowbray: I keenly remember the day that Wol presented that idea at the retreat in Nova Scotia.
    Eliza Madrigal: am not being personally as disciplined as I'd envisioned
    Eliza Madrigal: yes me too... wonderful day
    Bruce Mowbray: ;-)
    Agatha Macbeth: Pretend it's FB
    Zen Arado: :-)
    Eliza Madrigal: how would that help? lol
    Zen Arado: my creative writing course started to day and I still have to other courses running
    Eliza Madrigal: post pictures?
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal: oh wow Zen... didn't know. You're taking more than 3 classes?
    Agatha Macbeth: Horses for courses
    Zen Arado: yeah but the other two will finish this week
    Bruce Mowbray: I just started one from future learn today -- a course in mathematical symbolism, of all things!
    Agatha Macbeth: Yay
    Zen Arado: these courses are addictive
    Bruce Mowbray: yes they are.

    Zen Arado: we need a course on how to withdraw from doing courses

    Bruce Mowbray: I sometimes take up to 4 courses at one time.
    Eliza Madrigal: @@
    Agatha Macbeth: Mauna Loa
    Bruce Mowbray: fortunately now I'm only enrolled into . . . the Buddhism and the mathematical course.

    Eliza Madrigal: I smiled about Wol's blue meditation cushion. Mine is blue also... but I noticed that the very week I bought it a year or so ago, I stopped meditating regularly. I think the cushion felt too official

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: but now I've broken it in...feels like a hurdle
    Agatha Macbeth: Breaking in a cushion is an amazing concept
    Wol Euler smiles.
    Eliza Madrigal: these we're on are well worn :)
    Wol Euler nods.
    Agatha Macbeth: Indeed
    Eliza Madrigal sees buckwheat spilling out



    Eliza Madrigal: can't even fathom taking a math course for fun
    Agatha Macbeth: It can be quite fun
    Agatha Macbeth: That's the benefit of an exact science
    Bruce Mowbray: well my typist is a real dunce when it comes to math, so I thought I'd give him a taste and see if the course could help a bit.
    Eliza Madrigal: I'd like that to be true for me... am open to believing it could be

    Bruce Mowbray: it's only a three-week course.
    Eliza Madrigal: really?
    Bruce Mowbray: yes only three weeks
    Eliza Madrigal: fascinating
    Wol Euler: how many days is that?
    Zen Arado: I used to like pure mathematics
    Bruce Mowbray: I have not listened to the first lecture yet . . .
    Wol Euler: or how many "events"
    Zen Arado: it can be quite fun
    Bruce Mowbray: well there appear to be a lot of events in the first week . . .
    Zen Arado: but not the applied stuff
    Bruce Mowbray: I mean maybe eight or 10?

    Zen Arado: I still wonder why we have to learn algebra at school when we never use it
    Zen Arado: unless you're an engineer or something
    Bruce Mowbray: just a sec. I'll find it.
    Agatha Macbeth loves quadratic equations
    Eliza Madrigal: Algebra is the bane of my existence
    Zen Arado: of yes I use quadratic equations all the time
    Agatha Macbeth: Aww, poor Al
    Wol Euler: well, I thought it was about teaching abstact thinking, rather tahn a particular tool
    Zen Arado: I use them for doing shopping :-)
    Zen Arado: I struggle with arithmetic these days

    Eliza Madrigal: I would have my degree now if it wasn't for phobia of algebra :) my college transcipts show my enrolling and dropping like a dozen times
    Eliza Madrigal: ::hangs head::
    Zen Arado: but as Wol says it also trains your mind
    Agatha Macbeth: Doesn't sound like you Liz
    Eliza Madrigal: I know..
    Wol Euler: wow
    Eliza Madrigal: am full of surprises :) lol
    Zen Arado: oh an algebraphobe

    Bruce Mowbray: https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/.../8885/progress
    Agatha Macbeth: Surely
    Wol Euler: and nobody saw that and took you aside to talk about it?
    Eliza Madrigal: well, coincided with some pretty touch times at first... then later no... I do well then hit a block where algebra represents everything wrong in the world, hands sweating, etc..
    Agatha Macbeth: Ick
    Wol Euler: awwwww

    Eliza Madrigal: it is much different to go back when older too, and kids have learned in diff ways
    Eliza Madrigal: teachers are impatient... but, I'm determined to do it... just may be 80
    Bruce Mowbray: they say that students tend to be good in either geometry or in algebra . . . but not both. something about the brain's maturity
    Wol Euler: that's the spirit!
    Eliza Madrigal: :)
    Eliza Madrigal: yes, I did great in one algebra course
    Eliza Madrigal: because the teacher taught it in a visual way, and a story way... felt useful

    Bruce Mowbray: I loved plane and solid geometry -- but algebra threw me for a loop, until I was much older and got into computer programming ( which has almost nothing to do with algebra, actually)

    Eliza Madrigal: a friend tells me that when I go back I need to make lots of time to live in the lab
    Eliza Madrigal: and not feel embarrassed no matter what
    Wol Euler nods.
    Bruce Mowbray: nods.
    Agatha Macbeth: The dragon takes wing
    Eliza Madrigal: did you take to programming in spite of the algebra?
    Bruce Mowbray: they actually had nothing to do with each other. I was referring mostly to maturity of the brain.
    Bruce Mowbray: ooops

    Bruce Mowbray: sometimes I think I do better without the Dragon altogether.
    Agatha Macbeth: Tell him to stick to guarding gold
    Wol Euler: Fafner!
    Eliza Madrigal smiles
    Wol Euler: can you name it?`
    Eliza Madrigal: and pearls
    Agatha Macbeth: Bless you
    Bruce Mowbray: Wagner?
    Wol Euler: I certainly would
    Zen Arado: tell me about it Bruce :-)
    Wol Euler: can you name your dragon, I meant
    Agatha Macbeth: Cyril?
    Bruce Mowbray: I'm not going to name him until he's trained, and tamed.
    Wol Euler: like "Diane" in Twin Peaks
    Eliza Madrigal: heheh
    Eliza Madrigal: or her...

    Bruce Mowbray: but nevertheless, time for Dragon, fish, and antlered being to be off a scraping.
    Agatha Macbeth: Pema is a dragon
    Wol Euler: if I had a current-generation iPhone, I would find a hack to rename Siri to Diane
    Eliza Madrigal: :) bye Bruce, enjoy your dinner
    Bruce Mowbray: thank you everyone!
    Wol Euler: bye bruce, scrape well
    Agatha Macbeth: Bye Brucie, scrape well
    Eliza Madrigal: that would be fantastic Wol
    Zen Arado: by Bruce


    Eliza Madrigal: did you see the Twitter made for following up with TP characters?
    Wol Euler: bye zen
    Agatha Macbeth: Oh oh Diane
    Agatha Macbeth: Zen is still here:p
    Eliza Madrigal: :))
    Zen Arado: I just joined twitter again
    Wol Euler: oh, sorry
    Zen Arado: not sure why
    Eliza Madrigal: I talk to Eden there mostly
    Wol Euler: yes, eliza, that crossed my path but I didn't really get on with it
    Agatha Macbeth: Yay Edie
    Eliza Madrigal: I use my "RL" twitter now rather than eliza
    Zen Arado: I think I follow eliza but you didn't follow me back
    Eliza Madrigal: am integrating identities
    Eliza Madrigal: Oh?
    Zen Arado: :(

    --BELL--

    Eliza Madrigal: I'd follow you for sure if I knew it was you
    Agatha Macbeth ponders a fake Zen
    Eliza Madrigal: okay let me find you....
    Zen Arado: I can't be bothered looking up people to follow
    Zen Arado: I think it was because I wanted to follow the tweets on that Buddhism course
    Agatha Macbeth: Sounds like a Brasilian footballer

    Eliza Madrigal: I have followed you now :)
    Zen Arado: I don't think I have made one tweet even
    Zen Arado: ty :)
    Agatha Macbeth: Look out Zenny, you're being followed
    Eliza Madrigal: you have a few music links... that's convenient...much harder to find shares like that on FB

    Zen Arado: I try to get people to follow me on sound cloud
    Zen Arado: :)
    Zen Arado: but I get these young woman with big boobs who want me to look at their website
    Eliza Madrigal: hehe wonder why I never get those
    Agatha Macbeth: Not me :p
    Wol Euler: yeah right
    Zen Arado: she usually has a name like uswr 148562
    Agatha Macbeth: Probably Russians looking for a husband
    Zen Arado: user
    Eliza Madrigal: a good man is hard to find Zen :)
    Zen Arado: in Kentucky?
    Zen Arado: ha one was in Detroit
    Agatha Macbeth: Amazing to think some women can be that desperate
    Eliza Madrigal: everyone has a story
    Agatha Macbeth: Indeed
    Zen Arado: detroit is a bit rundown
    Agatha Macbeth: It got run down by the motor trade
    Zen Arado: yeh
    Eliza Madrigal: yes
    Agatha Macbeth: Suzi Quatro is from there tho
    Agatha Macbeth: So not all bad
    Agatha Macbeth: And Lene Lovich originally

    Eliza Madrigal: Wol, falling asleep? time for a little meditation so you can write in 99 days? :)))
    Agatha Macbeth: Yay
    Wol Euler: awwwww, yes
    Wol Euler: thanks
    Wol Euler: heheh
    Eliza Madrigal: Zen want to come to Zen Retreat?
    Agatha Macbeth seems to hear music
    Zen Arado: ok
    Eliza Madrigal: we can sit for 10 minutes
    Wol Euler: do you ahve a LM?



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