Scribe: Vendy Walpole
The search for the truth has always attracted me. I have been wondering if there is ultimate truth, what it can be and are there different levels and channels towards the truth. As a main tool for the communication and presentation of the truth we have the words, but how much are they powerful and able to reflect the truth, to be inspirational or to make harm and hurt? How much one's personal perception has influence on it? I believe that truth can be found maybe more in silence and in communications without words.
In the conversations I have followed, curled up with my diary in the corner of "wagon" of PaB "train", during the three january days the similar search and questions have been explored by the group of travellers composed of people from distanced meridians. Must underline here that what I have seen and heard as meaning in these words is my view and some may not agree. It was not easy do decide where to make cut and the scribe task has reminded me how much one more line or word can change the meaning and also, about the potential of multiple meanings of the words and statements. What I am sure without doubts is that my Second Life avatar Miss Mouse will run for the wonderful books mentioned in the conversations.
Train station: "Words about words"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.07_07%3a00_-_Words_about_words
The conversation about the book "Watching the English" was perfect introduction of the exploration - meaning of words
Geoff Baily: i was given a book called 'watching the English" for Christmas
Geoff Baily: by Kate Fox an anthropologist
Storm Nordwind: Ah yes... a worthwhile read
Eden Haiku: One of your French friends's gift, I suppose ;-)
Geoff Baily: not finished it yet
Geoff Baily: not os actually, an English friend Eden
Storm Nordwind: My ex used it to try and understand me. AFter ten years, though, it didn't work!
Eden Haiku: Sounds interesting, I will take a note
Eden Haiku: Aren't Scottish Storm? You must not fit into the Englishmen category!
Geoff Baily: I find many of the things she says about the English apply to the French
Geoff Baily: Heresy!!
Eden Haiku: Ah ah!
Storm Nordwind: No I am not Scottish. I was simply an Englishman exiled in Scotland for 6 years!
Eden Haiku: Ah, ah, I was wondering why I could understand your accent...
Storm Nordwind chuckles
Storm Nordwind: Accents and dialects are strange. It is as though we need words to convey meaning, yet so often the words get in the way of the meaning!
Geoff Baily: but they also give context
Orl Auer: Words lead to magic : when you have the perfect formula (good keywords) on Google, doors open !
Eden Haiku: ;-)
Storm Nordwind smiles
Orl Auer: as in SL when searching !
Geoff Baily: one of my teachers (40 years ago) could tell anyone's home to within 5 miles in the UK by their voice
Storm Nordwind: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic"
Orl Auer: Yes, it is Arthir C. Clarke
Storm Nordwind nods
Eden Haiku: Hear something on the radio yesterday about the last sentence of a press release. About the death oy a young singer called Lhasa de Sela.
Eden Haiku: It said: After Lhasa's death, it snowed for 40 hours on Montreal.
Eliza Madrigal: Oh
Eden Haiku: Words can convey magic and empathy.
Geoff Baily: true
Eliza Madrigal nods
Orl Auer: yes, you are right
Storm Nordwind: Snow softens all sound / Feathers falling on a grave / A teardrop freezes
Geoff Baily: empathy
Eden Haiku: Beautiful Storm!
Geoff Baily: ;)
Eliza Madrigal: striking, Storm
Storm Nordwind smiles
Orl Auer: Close to the colonnades, the peachtree has flowered. And the sky is so blue that it fades In the Tyrrhenian Sea and who gleams.
Orl Auer: it is the beginning of one of my poem
Eden Haiku: Words. All made up of a few sounds, a few letters. In India they call it the MatrikaShakti: the mother of language.
Storm Nordwind: Words, like all tools, can convey beauty, peace, friendship, love, information... and be the vehicle for harm, ignorance, and assumption. When we open our mouths, we are partaking of something very powerful.
Eden Haiku: Nice poem Orl!
Orl Auer: only the beginning, Eden
Eliza Madrigal: yes thanks for sharing that part, Orl :)
Orl Auer: you are all peaceful and delightful
Orl Auer: i rest in peace with joy
Eden Haiku: Yes, true. Could be the sword of Manjushri cutting through ignorance as well as ignorance itself. Like when one of the bad gauys in ' Avatar' says 'Wake up'
Eliza Madrigal: powerful when we let our fingers play across the keyboards, too...
Geoff Baily: but its so easy to use words casually. Lovely start to the poem Orl
Eden Haiku: yeah...typoeing...
Storm Nordwind chuckles
Orl Auer: now we have translators in SL, it breaks the barrels between nations
Eden Haiku: Thai Ping.
Storm Nordwind: :)
Geoff Baily: barriers?, Orl or is it the demon drink that does it??
Orl Auer: Babel, lol
Is it possible to know anything without words?
Storm Nordwind: We can use words to free us from words
Eden Haiku: You mean as a path to freedom?
Storm Nordwind: Like a tantra, Eden
Storm Nordwind: I had a debate with a teacher... is it possible to know anything without words? :)
Eliza Madrigal: Words can be like certain people... in a room seeming to take up no space in fact give it somehow...
Eden Haiku: Allowing things to be born you mean Eliza?
Eliza Madrigal: maybe... words freeing from words seemed to bring this to mind...
Intuitive and logic perception and how they relate
Eliza Madrigal: What did the teacher think, Storm?
Orl Auer: words are pointers, like a finger to the moion
Storm Nordwind: The teacher thought no, Eliza, and I thought yes.
Orl Auer: to the SElf
Storm Nordwind: But she was trying to teach us all about madhyamika so it is was a complicated discussion!
Eliza Madrigal: teaching doesn't work if only using words, perhaps... but hm, no words...
Eden Haiku: Yes, that is so true!
Orl Auer: thinking witout thinking (pensar sine pensar)
Eliza Madrigal: :)
Storm Nordwind: It's like a right brained person trying to explain things to a left brained one. The right brained will always see the left brain point of view, but sadly the opposite is rarely the case!
Orl Auer: right brain is about holistic and intuition and left brain logic
Eliza Madrigal: so intuition can make room for logic to play
Storm Nordwind: yes Orl, and being holistic, it can also embrace the left
Orl Auer: yes, it fuels it
Orl Auer: contemplation leads to action then
Eden Haiku: Yes, sadly the opposite is rarely the case.This is clarifying things for me Storm ;-)
Storm Nordwind chuckles
Storm Nordwind: Long and hard experience Eden :)
Eliza Madrigal: Sure Orl, the logical person might deny that though
Eden Haiku: A fellow right brainer hey?
Orl Auer: there is also fuzzy logic
Storm Nordwind: Yes Orl. Sadly neglected and even ostracised
Eliza Madrigal: when action (including words perhaps) arises from that wordless place, then 'one torch can dissipate the accumulated darkness of a thousand eons'
Mickorod Renard: is there a strand to follow,,that I am unaware of? please forgive me for being a bit ignorant
Eliza Madrigal: (tilopa)
Eliza Madrigal: Even if its gone in a slurp, Eden. heheh
Storm Nordwind: We're talking, mystically at times, about words (it seems)
Mickorod Renard: ok thanks
Eden Haiku: How compelling Eliza! Words arising from a wordless place, that is how how I would like to write.
Storm Nordwind: Words as the expression of the wordless
Eliza Madrigal: it seems to me you do, Eden :)
Words as inspiration and need
Eden Haiku: I have been rewriting the opening chapter of my new novel for months now. Did not struch the right note yet...
Orl Auer: -> i am reality
Storm Nordwind: Then write all the others chapters Eden, and come back to it! ;)
Eden Haiku: Haikus can catch glimpses maybe but novels are tricky...
Mickorod Renard: thanks eliza
Eden Haiku: ah ah...not a bad idea Storm!
Orl Auer: poetry is very poqwerful : John of the Cross, a mystic spanish
Eliza Madrigal always hopes that a book will come to her in a dream
Geoff Baily: perhaps the words will come after your visit to India Eden!!
Eliza Madrigal: Ah, yes inspiration
Orl Auer: yes !
Storm Nordwind hopes that a book will come to him in the post before he has to claim a refund and doesn't have to just dream about it!
Eliza Madrigal: hahaha
Geoff Baily: ;)
Eden Haiku: My feeling is that the book already exists, and my only humble task is to synthonize it.
In how many of us a novel awaits to appear on daylight?
Mickorod Renard: I wrote a novel about a year ago and have left it in an unfinnished condition
Eliza Madrigal: goodness Mick... just needs cleaning?
Mickorod Renard: I have lost the momentum
Orl Auer: to tune it ?
Eliza Madrigal: yes maybe we can know without words, but can we convey?
Geoff Baily: you are giving birth to it Eden?
Eden Haiku: Yes, tuning in. I did that for most of my books. Published many of them. But this one, this one...I want it to be great!
Storm Nordwind: Mick... are you keeping it from us? Get thee to thy keyboard!
Eliza Madrigal: When I was a child I hated to hear 'be patient' but it is seeming like a very powerful word these days!
Eden Haiku: And yes, Geoff, India is a scared ground of inspiration for me.
Mickorod Renard: he he , I thought it was great,,the first few times I read over it,,now i have lost my feeling that its any good
Geoff Baily: sacred!
Storm Nordwind chuckles
Orl Auer: you have to be abandoned when you write, i think
Mickorod Renard: thats a nice way of putting it Orl
Eliza Madrigal: hmm...the sacred ground the book will be made of...
Eden Haiku: Very revealing typo of mine. India is also a scared ground indeed, as well as sacred. ;-)
Eliza Madrigal: :)))
Geoff Baily: hmmm
Eliza Madrigal: fearful and wonderful perhaps
Orl Auer: it is indicible Eliza ?
Storm Nordwind: Like a blessed Mother who may both chide and embrace
Eliza Madrigal: MMM
Eliza Madrigal looks up indicible...
Eliza Madrigal: :)
Orl Auer: like the tao ?
Geoff Baily: the lake one can drink from or drown in
Eden Haiku: Yes, reading Shantaram recently was a great experience, The writer makes me see things I have bee unabled to se by myself in India,
even when living there for almost a two years stretch.
Eden Haiku: What is your novel about Mick?
Eliza Madrigal: ahhh incommunicable....
Train station: "Signal and noise"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.07_13%3a00_-_signal_and_noise
About the amount of thruth in media
arabella Ella: i am watching a very good italian documentary about how islam and hindu merge together in india
Agatha Macbeth: They do?
Mickorod Renard: but do they merge?
Wol Euler: I think that would be news to those on the border with Pakistan
Mickorod Renard: I thought there was much friction
Agatha Macbeth: Do they not usually try to kill each other most of the time?
arabella Ella: well it is going back to the 15th century and describing the integration in many famous indian monuments including the taj mahal
Wol Euler: "well, yeah, but apart from *that* ..."
Agatha Macbeth: Mmmm
arabella Ella: and don't forget
Selective news
arabella Ella: we get very selective news here in the west
arabella Ella: there are more than religious conflicts in those areas
Mickorod Renard: do they have an islamic kama sutra?
arabella Ella: more variables i mean
arabella Ella: good question Mick
arabella Ella: i dont have an answer
Wol Euler: yes mick: remain fully clothed, upright, and separated by at least 30cm at all times.
Agatha Macbeth: We have no way of really knowing tho Ara
Liza Deischer: :-)
Mickorod Renard: or was that the bit about 'more variables'
arabella Ella: we do Agatha
Agatha Macbeth: How so?
arabella Ella: through internet access to newspapers in english from that area
Eliza Madrigal: :) I return to computer to read "Come back Eliza!" hehe
Agatha Macbeth: But do we know that we get the facts?
Eliza Madrigal: It worked
Different newspapers point out different happenings
arabella Ella: i am always amazed when i read some papers on emirates flights en route to or from dubai ... with so many different takes on what is happening
Wol Euler: that's true, it is useful to be able to compare Al Jazeera with Haaretz in English, the truth is usually somewhere in between
arabella Ella: it is up to us to judge if we wish or assess and to decide what is credible and what is not
Agatha Macbeth: It is? :)
arabella Ella: try having a look at Gulf news for example
Mickorod Renard: I think there is much seduction in the mystery..rather than the blatent
arabella Ella: or bangkok times
arabella Ella: and many more
arabella Ella: Al Jaz poached many of Beep's people
Agatha Macbeth: Beep?
Calvino Rabeni: I think, liiturature may be a better source than "news" for this purpose
arabella Ella: literature too
Mickorod Renard: I wonder sometimes how relevent anything is,,especially when we cannot ven decide whether we even exist
arabella Ella: i love buying books from airports where you can get publishers (books) which are not mainstream in europe
Different sources - different truths
Agatha Macbeth: As always folks, it all depends on who you listen to
arabella Ella: best to listen to as many sides as you possibly can
Agatha Macbeth: Indeed :)
arabella Ella: i was in india recently
arabella Ella: and they dont talk against islam
arabella Ella: but against their neighbouring country
Mickorod Renard: but sometimes one attaches more truth to those who look important..or rich
arabella Ella: because there are quite a few muslims in india who are indians
Agatha Macbeth: 'Neighbouring country' being Pakistan?
arabella Ella: yes Agatha
arabella Ella: for many obvious reasons
Mickorod Renard: for example,,would we take the word of Obama..or the word of the Iranian chap as the truth?
Agatha Macbeth: Yes! :)
Agatha Macbeth: Iranian chap?
Mickorod Renard: I dont know his name
arabella Ella: i dont think you can take 'all' they say and judge that Mick
arabella Ella: you take concepts or policies or positions
Agatha Macbeth: Neither do I Mick ;-)
Mickorod Renard: you believe who you are conditioned to believe
Eliza Madrigal: Amadinijad?
arabella Ella: but today with internet we can explore so much more
Agatha Macbeth: Could be
Wol Euler: we have the chance and the chioce to become aware of our conditioning though.
arabella Ella nods to Wol
Mickorod Renard: indigestion Eliza?
Eliza Madrigal: :)
Mickorod Renard: yes,,we can read the paper instead of trusting the tv
arabella Ella: or search all sorts of international papers on the web Mick
arabella Ella: get diverse slants
arabella Ella: takes
Eliza Madrigal: yes, economic downturns actually reduce international news so have to be persistent...
arabella Ella: yes
Mickorod Renard: I think the ones in power rely on the masses not to get that involved in the truths
Eliza Madrigal: Sure
Agatha Macbeth: :)
arabella Ella: well there are many institutions that try to control our thinking ... but whether they do or not is up to us as mature thinking beings
Eliza Madrigal: One might have to make a full time job in order to be actually 'fully informed'...
arabella Ella: :)
Lia Rikugun: yes...
Agatha Macbeth: nods to Eliza
arabella Ella: would be nice ... but time seems to be such a precious resource nowadays
Mickorod Renard: and how much voice do those who truly suffer have?
www. - Better possibilty to search for the truth or to get lost in too many information
arabella Ella: the web has given us such a huge platform to express our concerns ...
Liza Deischer: Slowly I get less interested in news
Liza Deischer: especially the political one
arabella Ella: depends which news Liza
arabella Ella: local political news is often boring
Mickorod Renard: I think most of us here are lucky in being in countries where a balance is maintained,,,loosly fair
Liza Deischer: it is not the boring part
Bertram Jacobus: (lia told me what you are talkin about - ty again here) :-)
arabella Ella: which is the boring part then for you?
arabella Ella: :)
Lia Rikugun: :) to bertram
Liza Deischer: well, I guess it is about trust and what you can do
Mickorod Renard: but many who live in area's where they cannot access computors are likely to be in an unfair area
arabella Ella: could you say more Liza?
Eliza Madrigal nods to Ara and Liza... yes there is potential to be focused and rather informed on things one decides to have a voice about, etc
Liza Deischer: The more I get closer to myself
Should we join "Information boycott"?
Calvino Rabeni: #TMI
Liza Deischer: it seems that that means that I get further off from all the political arguments
Bertram Jacobus: tmi ? cal ? what is that, please ? :-)
Calvino Rabeni: You may find yourself to be more or less already fully formed
Calvino Rabeni: TMI is an acronym for Too Much Information
Liza Deischer: there is so many you can read on just one topic
Mickorod Renard: there is much unfairness that goes on ,,even in my local area,,i feel bad that I am so inactive about it
Eliza Madrigal: Well, perhaps less mired?
Calvino Rabeni: You may want to join the information boycott
Agatha Macbeth: Or Geoff Boycott
Lia Rikugun: what is that?
Eliza Madrigal: ?
Mickorod Renard: how does that work cal?
arabella Ella: but Calvino for me in life ... part of life is the learning curve ... and can you have learning with no information?
Agatha Macbeth: :)
Calvino Rabeni: Yes
Bertram Jacobus: mick ... i think ... one can never do "enough" ... so it's not always correct to feel bad about that ...
Calvino Rabeni: It is a matter of balance
Mickorod Renard: experience?
Calvino Rabeni: Most are flooded now with information
Liza Deischer: Well, there is something in between no information and a lot of it
Calvino Rabeni: Yes
It is possible to distinguish between "signal" and "noise" and to filter the information which interests us?
Wol Euler points to the distinction between "signal" and "noise"
Liza Deischer: but I think to me it is more: where are you focusing on?
Eliza Madrigal nods
arabella Ella nods to liza
Eliza Madrigal: News can be an addiction... people can get wrapped up in every story...
arabella Ella: i think balance is fine, one focuses of course ... but information boycott seems to be going too far
Calvino Rabeni: Focusing is about who you are, not about the information
Wol Euler: right.
Mickorod Renard: its all very clever really,,too much information can be like disinformation,,then the information becomes useless
Calvino Rabeni: Information sabbath then ? Occasional fast?
arabella Ella: but let me give one example
Liza Deischer: and about how you want to perceive information
Calvino Rabeni: Just a little, to shake up the addiction
Eliza Madrigal: agree
arabella Ella: Storm gave us the link to a video in this session yesterday
arabella Ella: and i watched it
arabella Ella: but then it led to more and more links
Calvino Rabeni: @ara :) ACCK, no more links please :)
arabella Ella: but it does not always have to be an addiction, Calvino, because as Wol said,
Mickorod Renard: so the proof of the cake is in the tasting?
Eliza Madrigal nods to Ara.... yes! we can do things to not let that chain rule 'over' us... make active choices.
Calvino Rabeni: You are not a machine, machines filter things
arabella Ella: dont worry Calvino, no links from me
Lia Rikugun: i think thats true calvino
Calvino Rabeni: The world is also fully formed, not a noisy channel
Mickorod Renard: well,,i am not so sure
arabella Ella: but i was reading ... the trend for example is to move away from hard copy books ... towards e-books and consoles to read them on
Eliza Madrigal followed a you tube chain link of mantras today... was quite nice actually :)
arabella Ella: and just imagine how the next generation will perceive the printed word
Mickorod Renard: one day I am sure I will see on the tv that we are in the end machines
Does the quality of information get better?
arabella Ella: @ Calvino ... done we as humans filter information through our perception?
Agatha Macbeth: Is it catching Eliza?
Eliza Madrigal: it might be
Mickorod Renard: I am actually disapointed that we may be percieved by science as nothing but mechanical blubber
Calvino Rabeni: Ara, no I dont think so
Agatha Macbeth: oooh I'll move then :)
Eliza Madrigal: we're science too, Mick
Liza Deischer: And you can ask yourself if the information is getting better now we have so many of it
arabella Ella: @ Liza ... there is good and there is bad of course
Eliza Madrigal: you may be far enough away Agatha.. but they may help tame your yas
Calvino Rabeni: Partly I meant, boycott "informationthe concept" as a metaphor for what you do and what your mind is
Liza Deischer: true Ara, I don't deny that
arabella Ella: you dont think we filter information Calvino ... if we dont filter info we could not even take a decision to cross a busy road with so much 'noise'
Calvino Rabeni: I didn't mean so much, pull the plug on your computer
arabella Ella: :)
Eliza Madrigal nods... can't pull the plug on the new collective unconscious ;-)
arabella Ella: if we pulled out our PC or laptop plugs then none of us would be here
Is the truth just a personal view?
Mickorod Renard: I have often wanteed someone just to tell me the truth,,about the second world war,,or why there is conflict in the middle east,,yet the truth seems to depend on who's side is telling it
arabella Ella: and laptops have long life batteries too :)
Lia Rikugun: so truth is personel?
Liza Deischer: exactly Mick, that's the whole point
arabella Ella: perhaps you need to explore the concept of truth Mick
Mickorod Renard: exactly
Lia Rikugun: hm tahts intersting
Calvino Rabeni: From doug's point of view, little currency symbols are running up the wire, into my laptop and coming out the pixels on the screen
arabella Ella: IMHO truth is different perspectives
Mickorod Renard: well,,who's truth is it anyway,,the polititians, comerce?
Mickorod Renard: is it our truth,,for ordinary people
arabella Ella: everyone ... and no one
Three sides of the story: yours, theirs and truth
Lia Rikugun: is there a general truth?
Eliza Madrigal: What a question :)
Wol Euler: no (IMHO YMMV)
Mickorod Renard: that would be told by an ordinary person,,and news isnt
Wol Euler: many things are true, but The Singular Truth does not exist.
arabella Ella nods to Wol
Calvino Rabeni: About the "truth" of ordinary people - my mother read "This is Water" and said, do you think that's actually how people go around seeing others ?
Wol Euler: the trouble with "what caused the war" is often that both explanations are true.
Eliza Madrigal nods... and none of the explanations are true, too
Calvino Rabeni: Is that how we think others perceive others?
arabella Ella: but Wol, then niehter explanation it a complete one
Wol Euler: but people want only one to be true, becuase they want "our side" to be in the right Mickorod Renard: I dont think we ever get to know the real truth,,its too ambarrasing
Wol Euler: indeed, ara, that is why there is no Perfect Singular Truth
Calvino Rabeni: Comparing is good, it might be less embarrasing the assumed
Mickorod Renard: its about someone getting their pockets filled
Eliza Madrigal must be going, thank you everyone!
Calvino Rabeni: Or not
Agatha Macbeth: 'There are three sides to every story: yours, theirs and the truth'
Liza Deischer: what interest me more is why people are telling what they are telling
Liza Deischer: what moves them?
Is there a general angle to see the truth?
Lia Rikugun: but arent we trying to loose a single perspective
Calvino Rabeni: Can't know unless you actually ask and express
Lia Rikugun: and see things from a general angle
arabella Ella: the problem sometimes is that some 'truths' are only half truths
Calvino Rabeni: Seeing things from a general angle went out, with Picasso
Lia Rikugun: i dont understand
arabella Ella: and with Thomas Nagel too Calvino
Calvino Rabeni: Now we see things from many angles at once
Mickorod Renard: its now abstract
Wol Euler: and James Joyce, for that matter
arabella Ella: yes
Calvino Rabeni: Not abstract, it is more intricate than before
Liza Deischer: what is it you don't undestand Lia
Mickorod Renard: its nearly time for Wok
Agatha Macbeth: The return of Zon!
Lia Rikugun: what picasso or nagel or joyce did
The "View from Nowhere"
arabella Ella: ok Nagel wrote a book called The View from Nowhere
Agatha Macbeth: I take mine without sugar :)
arabella Ella: where he argued that it is impossible to be objective
Lia Rikugun: ok
Zon Quar: nods
arabella Ella: every view is from a subjective perspective
Wol Euler: and Calvino and I have an appointment with Pema to talk about the wiki
Calvino Rabeni: same same
Zon Quar: if all is perceptions..what is objectivity ?
Mickorod Renard: no answer
arabella Ella: Nagel argues that there is no objectivity
arabella Ella: it is not possible from a human thinking perspective
Zon Quar: what is objectivity by definition ?
Train station: "To hear the silence within sound"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.07_19%3a00_-_To_hear_the_silence_within_sound
Even inside the crudest sound, there is deep silence...
Calvino Rabeni: one night I think it was bolo and I were talking about listening deeply into sound
Calvino Rabeni: and an experience of hearing the deep silence inside the sould
Paradise Tennant: ok what is bolo ?
Calvino Rabeni: Bolonath, a PAB guardian
Calvino Rabeni: Or maybe I misremember - you can search it in the log keywords sound and silence
Paradise Tennant: ok
Calvino Rabeni: Even inside the crudest sound, there is deep silence
Paradise Tennant: smiles .. sound has a resonance .. that dissipates into silence .. yes..
Calvino Rabeni: Loud, you could meditate on the bus stop, doesn't matter, the background is there
Paradise Tennant: yes often meditate in all kinds of places
Calvino Rabeni: It doesn't dissipate into it, it coexists
Paradise Tennant: standing in line .. sitting on a bus .. what ever
Calvino Rabeni: But in one practice in a school I went to,we would use a bell
Paradise Tennant: or a singing bowl ?
Calvino Rabeni: and follow it into infinitely quiet after each time the bell rang.
Calvino Rabeni: It was a zen martial arts dojo practice
Paradise Tennant: to hear the silence within sound ?
Calvino Rabeni: But that was like using a mantra to get a taste - it seems later the bell sound isn't needed any more
Calvino Rabeni: Yes
Paradise Tennant: tibetans have a sort of symbol which they think can part reality .. it has a beautiful sound
Calvino Rabeni: I like the singing bowl - it is fun to have a group meditation with those
Paradise Tennant: yes bought one this summer .. they are beautiful to look at as well
Calvino Rabeni: Yes, I'd like to have a big quartz one
Paradise Tennant: lol hmm not sure you would get the sound .. the resonance or frequency comes from the comingling of seven or eight types of metal
Paradise Tennant: I have an explanation somewhere of how they are crafted
Calvino Rabeni: There is a tibetan guy teaching with different bowls made of mineral - i just saw it on youtube - don't know if he's good
Paradise Tennant: I am going to have to try to listen for the silence within the sound though
Calvino Rabeni: RIght there's an ancient art to it
Calvino Rabeni: One thing I really liked about temples in asia is some have lots of bells
Paradise Tennant: yes and they are works of art and love
Calvino Rabeni: Maybe dozens or hundreds, with scriptures etc, on them
Paradise Tennant: yes each symbol with a meaning
Calvino Rabeni: Yes, the bells speak them
Train station: "This is water"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.08_01%3a00_-_This_is_water
Is there a deffault setting in us to communicate with others, what it could be and can we control it?
Wol Euler clears her throat. "Does anyone have anything to say about Play as Being's meditation practices, or their effect in your life?"
Calvino Rabeni: Ahem
Wol Euler listens attentively.
Calvino Rabeni: No, but I have a book to ask you about
Wol Euler: ah!
Calvino Rabeni: "This Is Water"
Calvino Rabeni: My mother read it - and was not impressed
Calvino Rabeni: (I thought it was OK)
Calvino Rabeni: The comment was - do you really think people go around being irritated and annoyed all the time at other people in public, on the road, in the supermarket?
Wol Euler: actually, yes I do
Calvino Rabeni: So, it was a comment on the *presumptive* zeitgeist.
Wol Euler: for certain values of "people" and "all the time"
Wol Euler: road rage exists.
Wol Euler: people who swear at others in the lineup at a supermarket certainly exist.
Bertrum Quan: I haven't read the book. Can you talk about it a bit?
Calvino Rabeni: Yes, but it was addressed at a population of college graduates
Wol Euler: do we have to be like them? no. That is DFW's point
According the book above mentioned, everybody is normally, an impatient jerk!
Calvino Rabeni: And its implicit message is -
Wol Euler: Bertrum, we are talking about a very short book called "This is water", a commencement address by the late and much-lamented David Foster Wallace
Calvino Rabeni: OK, if I came up to you at a party out of the blue and said - "Glad to meet you - you know, you don't have to be a jerk all the time" - wouldn't that be negatively presumptuous?
Wol Euler: yes, of course.
Bertrum Quan: Thanks for the link.
Calvino Rabeni: And if I said it to a huge group of people, ditto?
Wol Euler: but commencement addresses are not parties, and students are used to people telling them what to do.
Calvino Rabeni: It would be saying - well maybe YOU are not an ass, but most of the people around you probably ARE
Calvino Rabeni: Solving a problem that doesn't necessarily exist
The reason of our dissapointments and suffering
Calvino Rabeni: I'm saying, it communicates a normative idea of human nature
Wol Euler: mmmmmm yes
Calvino Rabeni: If a newspaper article had the presumptive opinion that EVERYBODY has road rage, it would be similar
Wol Euler: and then proposes that we can do something about that.
Calvino Rabeni: Sure
Wol Euler: and that our lives would be better for being aware that this "default setting" (as he calls it) exists, and that it is an option
Wol Euler: I read that differently, though I can certainly see where you got your impression.
Calvino Rabeni: Next question is, if you went around doing an empirical experiment, and trying to find out whether people normally felt so bent out of shape by their public encounters, what do you suppose would be discovered?
Wol Euler: I thought DFW was saying "our default setting is to think we are the centre of the universe, and to be upset when life contradicts that."
Calvino Rabeni: And in the absence of the ability to do that, what information does it comunicate as a default assumption?
Wol Euler: the same as Buddha and Ecclesiastes and Schopenhauer communicated (not to say that their statements made it "correct" either)
Wol Euler: that by assuming ourselves to be the most important thing in the universe, we set ourselves up for disappointment and suffering
Calvino Rabeni: It struck me as a bit like a Christian going around saying "All Ye SInners"
Wol Euler: thanks for dropping in. We are talking about "This is water" by David Foster Wallace
Calvino Rabeni: Which seems OK on the steet corner as a kind of rant
Calvino Rabeni: but not necessarily in a theater of public opinion, like a college
Wol Euler: on the contrary, I can think of no better setting for this lesson than in a place where learning allegedly occurs :)
Calvino Rabeni: The overall lesson - good
Calvino Rabeni: The "don't be a jerk" - I have doubts about it
Calvino Rabeni: It just seems patronizing
Wol Euler: I should say in fairness, that I read this after reading and loving "Infinite Jest", so I bring a certain amount of trust and good-feeling to DFW
Calvino Rabeni: See, I liked the book, other than that
Wol Euler: my reaction might have been different had I read this first
Calvino Rabeni: Fairly said
Wol Euler: as for the "don't be a jerk", it is a traditional part of commencement speechifying
Wol Euler: remind me, does he actually use those words?
Wol Euler: (flipping through my copy)
Calvino Rabeni: No, he doesn't, its implied in my opinion, in the supermarket scene
Calvino Rabeni: (end of digression into ethical aspect of public speaking)
Wol Euler: yes, ok, his description is slanted to make you despise them — while knowing yourself to have been there and done that too
Calvino Rabeni is studying his fingernails
Freedom as attention, awareness, discipline and effort
Wol Euler: page 120 "The really important kind of freedom involves attention, and awareness, and discipline, and effort, and being able to truly care about other people and to sacrifice for them, over and over, in myriad petty little unsexy ways, every day. That is real freedom."
Wol Euler: when I remember "This is water", I think of that, not the supermarket scene
Pema Pera: I just read http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/sep/20/fiction -- presumably that's the gist of it? I wasn't familiar with it
Calvino Rabeni: I'm wondering what an empirical study would show about this aspect of public intersubjectivity
Wol Euler: yep, that's it
Pema Pera: yes, just read that quote, Wol, sounds pretty good!
Wol Euler: more than half of it actually :) It is a very short book
Pema Pera: and utterly realistic
Pema Pera: perhaps he talks like a younger brother of Stim? :-)
Pema Pera: same message, a bit more in your face
Wol Euler chuckles
One possible answer what is truth (according the book "This is Water")
Wol Euler: page 130 "[The truth] is about making it to thirty, or maybe even fifty, without wanting to shoot yourself in the head."
Wol Euler: which of course, sadly, DFW himself didn't.
Calvino Rabeni: Yes, luckily
Wol Euler: O.O
Wol Euler: would you unpack your use of "luckily" please?
Calvino Rabeni: I mean, it would have been much more ironic if he had killed himself in precicsely the fashion he foreshadowed in that book
Wol Euler: ah, yes. Right.
Calvino Rabeni: So I'm glad that he used a different method, - of course goes without saying, too bad he did it at all
Wol Euler nods.
Each statement is a shadow, a projection of something, and never catching or really limits the something in any way...
Calvino Rabeni: What strikes me is the dearth of objective information about others subjective perceptions of the public sphere
Calvino Rabeni: So for instance, someone can go around saying "it's a dog eat dog world", and that can't be contradicted
Calvino Rabeni: Although it may not be at all accurate, it becomes part of the zeitgeist
Wol Euler: except to say "that is your perception, I see it differently"
Wol Euler: but there is no "proof" either way
Calvino Rabeni: But that's a weak position, pragmatically
Calvino Rabeni: No, evidence could in principle be provided
Calvino Rabeni: That would be good enough to affect public opinion
Pema Pera: each statement is a shadow, a projection of something, and never catching or really limits the something in any way
Pema Pera: it does give *some* information
Wol Euler ponders. Why is it that people who presume goodness are felt to be naive, and those who presume bad intentions are felt to be clever?
Pema Pera: that's all
Calvino Rabeni: Yes that's my point - it is a bias
Wol Euler: well, we too can affect public opinion (we the non-dog-eat-doggers)
Wol Euler: by broadcasting our view
Pema Pera: Wol, I think the media likes to exaggerate, and perhaps it is easier to exaggerate the bad than the good :-)
Wol Euler: or better still: by living it publicly
Calvino Rabeni: I think it works between friends also
Wol Euler: definitely
Wol Euler: and strangers
Wol's story or how Wol managed to make unpleasant circumstances to become pleasant
Wol Euler: I was on a train last winter that took six hours for a 90 minute journey
Calvino Rabeni: If you have positive expectations of those you meet, they feel it, and vice versa, and it influences their perceived possibilities in some real way
Pema Pera: dog reminds dog to stop eating for 9 seconds -- how about that headline? Should try in August!
Wol Euler: everyone including me was getting annoyed and irritated: "why does this happen to me?"
Wol Euler: "why did the world choose ME to do something bad to?"
Pema Pera: :-)
Wol Euler: I felt myself doing that, and decided that it was the wrong way to behave
Calvino Rabeni: Another bias - that ME gets the worst of the deal compared to others
Wol Euler: so I told myself that this was an adventure, and that I should relax into it and see what comes out
Pema Pera: can you remember what triggered you to make that decision, Wol?
Wol Euler: and without my actually saying anything, that attitude communicated itself to those around me, and we started a really good, calm, discussion
Pema Pera: wow, that's great, Wol !
Pema Pera: and yes, I've seen those things happen
Pema Pera: doesn't take too much sometimes -- just the surprise smile can be enough
Wol Euler: the trigger was listening to myself, to the words falling out of my mouth, and the inner observer sneered and said "you sound like a spoiled child"
Calvino Rabeni: :)
Pema Pera 's inner observer is envious of Wol's inner observer :)
Wol Euler: it might have been better had my inner detached-and-peaceful observer said "that is not quite right, dear wol" but that isn't how it happened :)
Pema Pera: hehehe
Pema Pera: that might not have cut it, though
Wol Euler: yeah
Wol Euler: [1:40] Calvino Rabeni: If you have positive expectations of those you meet, they feel it, and vice versa, and it influences their perceived possibilities in some real way
Wol Euler: yes, very true!
Calvino Rabeni: I had a personal example of this today
Calvino Rabeni: The idea in action as it were
Calvino Rabeni: (a fog congeals into a sleek mass of latex)
Calvino's story or how our own expectations could mislead us
Calvino Rabeni: I was walking a public street, and an old woman was approaching
Calvino Rabeni: with a head scarf, kind of walking as an elder does
Calvino Rabeni: And as I approached, I had a feeling of approaching a grouch
Calvino Rabeni: but I checked myself as I didn't want to reflect that to this person
Calvino Rabeni: SO I dropped the feelign
Calvino Rabeni: And when she spoke, her voice suprised me with its quality
Wol Euler smiles.
Calvino Rabeni: which was quite resonant and lovely - a foreign voice
Calvino Rabeni: And I almost had a feeling she might be a saint, or at least, have some wonderful depth
Calvino Rabeni: But it felt like I could have showed her I thought she was a grouch
Calvino Rabeni: It's pretty quick impressions that go between people
Wol Euler: mmhmm, and she would have spoken differently or not at all
Calvino Rabeni: exactly
Calvino Rabeni: in a way, I set myself to get that resposne
Wol Euler: yep, we make the world that we live in.
Calvino Rabeni: To a greater degree that we think,
Calvino Rabeni: partly by questioning the presumed privacy of our so calld subjective impressions
Wol Euler: mmhmm
Calvino Rabeni: OK, so would that go over with the college commencement crowd ? :)
Wol Euler: heheheh
Wol Euler: they might not yet have enough experience, or enough self-awareness, to see it
Wol Euler: certainly I didn't know this when I was 22, or even 30
Wol Euler: it took me many decades to stop being a jerk :)
Calvino Rabeni: No doubt there are some in the college crowd who can see that kind of thing.
Calvino Rabeni: I think about certain motivational speakers I have heard
Calvino Rabeni: They often have a "be positive" message
Calvino Rabeni: but the subtext varies
Train station:"Gardenians in the darkest hour of the night"
Changes and what they offer
Eliza Madrigal: Re changing nature... it isn't natural for things not to circulate...
Eliza Madrigal: it is when things stop changing one should worry
Eliza Madrigal: we have these daily practices of, for instance, letting go of what we have to see what we are....
Eliza Madrigal: letting go is what though... it is acceptance of a kind of groundlessness
Eliza Madrigal: of constant change...
Eliza Madrigal: which brings the energy, really....
Eliza Madrigal: the breeze...
Geoff Baily: yes
Eliza Madrigal: so if that is what is 'real'... constant change....
Eliza Madrigal: it is safer to embrace, as it were, that
Eliza Madrigal: :)
Geoff Baily: energy
Eliza Madrigal: which basically means embracing others...
Groundlessnes, being grounded and how does the ego relate with them
SophiaSharon Larnia: interesting contrast groundlessness and being grounded
Eliza Madrigal: Yes indeed
Zen Arado: grounded in groundlessness?
SophiaSharon Larnia: what part does the ego play in that, do you think?
Eliza Madrigal: hmm...
Zen Arado: ego wants solid ground I think
SophiaSharon Larnia: one, stripping off the layers of and the other something to stand on
Eden Haiku: I need solid ground.
Zen Arado: a solid idea of self
Eliza Madrigal: ego wants the illusion of control/identity/unchanging....
Eden Haiku: No, solid ground. not the same ;-)
Geoff Baily: now? Eden but not always
Eden Haiku: Connection to the centre of the earth.
SophiaSharon Larnia: didnt think of it in those terms before, i always thought being grounded was a sign that i was doing something 'right'
Eden Haiku: Yes, me too.
Zen Arado: yeah...not 'up in the clouds'
Eliza Madrigal: Well, solid ground would be that which is 'real' as contrasted with what is illusory (Ie stability)
Eliza Madrigal: so one could phrase it that way, too....
Eden Haiku: It is different fro one person to the other also I suppose.
SophiaSharon Larnia: grounded as in being sharp in the moment
Zen Arado: Pema Chodron talks a lot about groundlessness
Eliza Madrigal: "Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature.... Life is either a daring adventure or nothing." H. Keller
Inner energy field
Zen Arado: can you feel an inner energy field as suggested by Eckhart
Tolle Eliza?
Eliza Madrigal: Ah, yes I'm very aware of the 'inner body'
Eliza Madrigal: but it seems energy field implies something else? more a collective?
Eden Haiku: At the source of Reiki, there was this question by a theology student in Japan: 'How did it work when Christ applied his hands and people would heal'.?
Zen Arado: maybe the same thing different names?
Eliza Madrigal: hmm
Zen Arado: Qigong?
Eliza Madrigal: go on Eden?
Eden Haiku: The teacher went to Mount Fuji to reflect on the question.
Eden Haiku: And there, he "received' mantras and techniques of Reiki.
That is what is transmitted now.
Eliza Madrigal: Ah
Zen Arado: interesting
Eliza Madrigal: I didn't know reiki dealt with mantras
Zen Arado: you can do it from a distance too?
Eliza Madrigal has experienced feeling 'better' after a session here....
Eden Haiku: I was joking but nevertheless, I think you can access Reiki even if you haven't been trainde in it Eliza. You might be doing it, channeling this healing energy, when you are touching your child's foerhead when he has a fever.
Zen Arado: when they start talking about chakras and third eye I start getting switched off though
Eliza Madrigal: hmm
Zen Arado: maybe diseases are caused by energy blockages
Train Station:"Hello recorder"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.08_13%3a00_-_hello_recorder
Another book - "Touching Enlightenment with the body"
Zen Arado: I am trying to sense this 'inner body as a single field of energy' as Tolle puts it
Solobill Laville: I am a bit of a "practice freak", in that to me anyway, discipline and regularity are vital
Solobill Laville: Sounds great, Zen, how is it going??
Zen Arado: works a little
Zen Arado: can feel.....something
Zen Arado: warmth
Zen Arado: takes a lot of practice
Zen Arado: and I want this body awareness to be there all the time
Liza Deischer: 'want'
Zen Arado: be able to sense people at this level instead of mentally
Zen Arado: make any sense?
Solobill Laville: Indeed
Wol Euler: yep
Liza Deischer: yes it does
Zen Arado: thought this was mumbo jumbo not so long ago :)
Solobill Laville: What? Not with a first name lilke Zen! ;)
Wol Euler smiles.
Zen Arado: :)
Agatha Macbeth: Zat's it Zen
Zen Arado: find Zen teaches me to stand back from thoughts
Zen Arado: but not much emphasis on body awareness
Solobill Laville: Ah, depends on the school of Zen
Zen Arado: but I am prob wrong
arabella Ella: perhaps on virtual bodily awareness?
Solobill Laville: :)
Zen Arado: I got that initially from MBSR bodyscan
Zen Arado: mindfulness based stress reduction
Wol Euler nods
Zen Arado: and book I read lately
Solobill Laville: Well, that is a truism
Zen Arado: about
Zen Arado: Touching Enlightenment with the body
Agatha Macbeth: What exactly is MSBR Zen?
Solobill Laville: zen - there are also schools (most of them actually) that integrate body practices with meditation
arabella Ella: yes could you describe how it happens Zen please?
Zen Arado: body scan is just visualising each part of your body mindfully
Zen Arado: giving each part full attention
Solobill Laville: If I may add to that Zen
Zen Arado: go ahead
Zen Arado: Solo
Solobill Laville: Body scan meditation also helps to alleviate tightness / pain when in meditation
Solobill Laville: with the breath
arabella Ella: how lovely that sounds Solo
Solobill Laville: It also helps to practice placing your center "not in your head"
Zen Arado: yes visualizing the breath flowing to each part helps too
Agatha Macbeth: Where is the centre then Solo?
Liza Deischer: ore using beathing as a meditation oject
Solobill Laville: tanchen - in Korean
Solobill Laville: Just below the navel
Zen Arado: it was developed by guy called Kabat Zinn in Boston
Agatha Macbeth: Ah right
Wol Euler: aaah, that name rings bells
Zen Arado: adapted from Zrn
Wol Euler: so to speak
Zen Arado: Zen
Solobill Laville: Oh, I think it is much older than Zinn, but I'm sure he customized it a bit :)
Wol Euler: :)
Zen Arado: oh yes
Zen Arado: he saw how it could be useful for patients
Zen Arado: who might not like the religious connotations
Solobill Laville: But, to me, the main point is that it help to break away our certainty that our mind is our brain
Liza Deischer: but everybody thinks they found out the new thing
Agatha Macbeth: Yes Sol :)
Zen Arado: Zinn was a Zen practitioner for a long time himself
Solobill Laville: I'd recommend everyone to try it out - lay on your back and work your way up in you mind from your toest to the top of your head
Train station:"The six words of advice of Tilopa"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.09_01%3a00_-_The_six_words_of_advice_of_Tilopa
Old Tibetan wisdom in 6 words; starts with a question about Schacth's school
Pema Pera: how are your Tibetan lessons going?
Scathach Rhiadra: quite well, we have a few students and meet regularly
Pema Pera: are you reading any particular text?
Archmage Atlantis: Is not the Tibetan text already distilled, Pema...for this life?
Scathach Rhiadra: no, the alphabet takes a lot of time with new students, though Stim recommended a text for learning some doctrinal topics
Scathach Rhiadra: so we may use that in the future
Scathach Rhiadra: oh, we do use a language text-book, if that is what you meant?
Pema Pera: no, I wondered whether there was a simple text
Pema Pera: some texts are very very short
Scathach Rhiadra: true, and I have some in the display system, but we are only now starting to use them
It will be easy to remember these words definetely, they are clear, let's see how much I will imply it into my daily life
Pema Pera: For example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilopa#...ords_of_Advice
Pema Pera: literally six words!
Pema Pera: it is one of the texts that has inspired me most . . . . the six words of advice of Tilopa
Scathach Rhiadra: yes, I have that in Tibetan:)
Pema Pera: is it part of your practice?
Scathach Rhiadra: Don't recall. Don't imagine. Don't think. Don't examine. Don't control. Rest.
Pema Pera: yes
Zon Quar: dont understand 3rd word
Archmage Atlantis: Say the six word yourself Pema
Scathach Rhiadra: yes, resting is good:))
Zon Quar: let go what is happening now ?
Scathach Rhiadra: don't analyse
Pema Pera: The more free translation by Ken McLeod is: Let go of what has passed. Let go of what may come. Let go of what is happening now. Don't try to figure anything out. Don't try to make anything happen. Relax, right now, and rest.
Zon Quar: u should be watchful
Zon Quar: now
Archmage Atlantis: It is a mantra for the commanded then
Zon Quar: by resting ?
Pema Pera: the first three are about time, the next two about input/output: sensori/motor, the last one only is positive: rest
Pema Pera: five no's and one yes
Pema Pera: don't live in time, don't focus on input/output, rest
Scathach Rhiadra: mmm, relaxed alertness
Pema Pera: yes
Archmage Atlantis: Do you believe we learn new things Pema?
Zon Quar: whats the difference between 3 and 4
Pema Pera: biological organisms live in time and hence have needs, for the future, and input/output
Pema Pera: the challenge is to go beyond the purely biological view of things
Pema Pera: beyond our boundaries
Pema Pera: at least that's how I read it
Pema Pera: 3 is about the present, Zon, while 4 is about analyzing the world (past, present, future)
Zon Quar: 3 then ?
Archmage Atlantis: Many of the young see that as mechanical/computationa betond
Zon Quar: sounds similar
Pema Pera: don't focus on past, future, or present; don't spend time on figuring out or acting -- live without friction
Pema Pera: how so, Zon?
Zon Quar: thinkin
Zon Quar: 3
Zon Quar: examinin 4
Zon Quar: both r thinking ?
Zon Quar: analysing
Zon Quar: when u think the present,,u r either thinking past, future or analysing the world ?
Zon Quar: oops
Scathach Rhiadra: focusing on the present can mean getting caughtup or lost in what is happening around you, distracted
Pema Pera: "thinking" here means "focusing on the present as an isolated point in time, "using your thinking now" -- while "analyzing or figuring out seems to be a more goal-oriented activity; analyzing what is happening, has happened, will happen in the future, a very tedious way to live -- in contrast, a wu-wei kind of spontaneous way of live doesn't use "thinking" as such, but something much more direct and fluid
Pema Pera: yes, nice summary, Scathach!
Different impressions; time is missing element in logs
Pema Pera: (our chat logs don't show when we are silent for ten minutes . . . )
Scathach Rhiadra: :))
Scathach Rhiadra: looks like everyone is resting:)
Pema Pera: (the time element is missing -- sometimes the impression in reading is very different from being here!)
Train station:"Struggle"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.09_07%3a00_-_Struggle_theme_session_5
Can we own anything here?
SophiaSharon Larnia: we struggle when things change and feel the emptiness of the perceived loss
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: and also to do with One-Self`s own choose , how people do choose to think, or act, or both Eliza Madrigal: Ah, yes.... loss can be quite painful
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: hmm, those kind of things do happen in life all the time, changing.. but what happens if we can just trust.. so that we notice we have trusted on Trut??
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: fear to loose something..
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: can we own anything in here?
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: how we can loose it then?
Eliza Madrigal: :) Lots of questions Cosmic, but I definitely hear what you are saying....
Eliza Madrigal: Yes, in a big picture way we understand that we can't hold onto things and this is what causes us pain so often....
SophiaSharon Larnia: yes Cosmicflower :0 that is the question
Eliza Madrigal: In a day to day practice way.... We are hit with surprises...
Eliza Madrigal: and even things we know are coming we can't plan or expect...
Eliza Madrigal: and that can hit hard
Eliza Madrigal: in a solid way, perhaps
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: well, its because we can not controll everyhting, and especially others free will to choose
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: I think
About enlightenment, heart and truth
Zen Arado: Eckhart Tolle warns about putting enlightenment as somethng to be achieved in the future
Eliza Madrigal: we're surrounded by things that have died or are dying... things that are coming to life, etc
Bertram Jacobus: nice warning ! :-)
sophia Placebo: nods to zen
Eliza Madrigal nods
Eliza Madrigal: a line from him I love is "When you are seeing the future, you are seeing it now..."
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: One day I had interesting conversation with one person about enlightement
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: I think its not the way its "teached"
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: "not to do this or that"
Eliza Madrigal: that even if you build a time machine and go back to the past, you arrive there 'now'...hehe
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: But following One`s heart
Eliza Madrigal: Ah, yes nice Cosmic
Zen Arado: yes Eliza
Zen Arado: it was always now :)
Eliza Madrigal: So there is something essential in a way ....
sophia Placebo: heart works with association with ego , desire and emotions to run the body so one must know where the order to move your body/emotions come from
Eliza Madrigal: even when we let go we embrace in a larger way, etc..somehow
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: ;)
Eliza Madrigal: Oh wow sophia, yes that's a powerful point reemotions/body
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: Hmm, I think ego is worked with head
Eliza Madrigal: and how we affect others too, emotionally. We can't always 'help' in a tangible way but we can just be together and it matters
Cosmicflower Ushimawa: And heart do work with One`s own truth
Train station:"Revisiting dreams"
http://playasbeing.wik.is/Chat_Logs/2010/01/2010.01.09_19%3a00_-_Revisiting_dreams
Dreams and Being
Maxine Walden: You know, I have come to wonder whether the intelligence of the dream may be akin to aspects of Being, something bigger than we are, but intimately linked to us Maxine Walden: Still trying to do some thinking about this but it is intriguing
stevenaia Michinaga: was thinking something similar just now
Maxine Walden: oh, Steve? Interesting
Archmage Atlantis: "rock-aby,,,,the city, the land, we are more"
stevenaia Michinaga: being comes from (is seen from) that place dreams comes from
stevenaia Michinaga: big B
Oversoul in "The Urantia Book"
Eden Haiku: Thinking about the Oversoul of the Urantia Cosmology...Not remembering exactly what I read, years ago
Maxine Walden: yes, Steve
stevenaia Michinaga: googling that one
Maxine Walden: Ah, Eden, not familiar with Urantia
Calvino Rabeni: This might or might not come under the same idea - but when we do an oracle like the I Ching, I think of it as a dream like query into reality
Maxine Walden: yes, deserves a google
Maxine Walden: interesting, Calvino
stevenaia Michinaga: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Urantia_Book
stevenaia Michinaga: is that it, Eden?
Calvino Rabeni: A form of active dreaming
Eden Haiku: Can't see the oversoul I was remembering though, but I read it in French so..It was something like a Soul that connected many souls, a kind of intermediary between Being and us.
"Tales of Wonder" and dreaming like eating dessert
Paradise Tennant: huston smith wrote a great book autobiography called Tales of Wonder captures many moment of awe where the boundaries .. have shifted in the course of ordinary life
Calvino Rabeni: It is more interesting to me to focus on the interdisciplinary scientists, compared to the dogmatic ones
Paradise Tennant: was curled up reading it ealier tonight
Eden Haiku: Tales of Wonder. looking it up...
Paradise Tennant: what is the urantia book?
Archmage Atlantis: Someone has to do the data collection
Archmage Atlantis: To lead is to love
Eden Haiku: http://www.harpercollins.ca/books/9780061154263/Tales_of_Wonder/index.as
px?AA=index_authorIntro_9210Eden Haiku: Steve gave us the link earlier. Something in the conversation about dreams and Being reminded me this book I read years ago.
Eden Haiku: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Urantia_Book
Paradise Tennant: ;) often thinks dreaming is like eating dessert really .. another layer of experience that is an added treat
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