Antonia Braveheart (at PaB session on January 19, 2009)
Antonia Braveheart: in Italian, we have different kinds of love :P
Antonia Braveheart: it depends on who's addressed
Antonia Braveheart: for example, the kind of love for friends
Antonia Braveheart: it's " bene"
Gaya Ethaniel: Good?
Antonia Braveheart: yes
Antonia Braveheart: when you say "ti voglio bene" it kinda means "I love you" but it is addressed to a friend
Antonia Braveheart: when we address to someone who love, or God as well....it is proper love..."amore"
Antonia Braveheart: "ti amo" means properly "I love you"
Arabella Ella (at PaB session on March 21, 2009 13:00)
Arabella Ella: if you are christian i think the two most important things are Love God and Love your neighbour
***
Arabella Ella: we as humans are social beings and we have an innate need to share our experiences
Arabella Ella: but sharing experiences does not imply either conflict or power
Artemisia Svoboda (at PaB session on January 27, 2009 01:00)
Artemisia Svoboda: It sometimes feels like my entire life is a series of experiences of being stuck
Artemisia Svoboda: and life-long discovery of how to get more and more unstuck
Artemisia Svoboda: but often falling back and forgetting
Artemisia Svoboda: that the "stuckness" is not my inevitable fate
Bertrum Quan Hana Hendrassen
Pema Pera: why is it that looking at a mirror left and right are reversed but not up and down
Bertrum Quan: To the layman like myself, the exapmle of the mirror is important,
Bertrum Quan: It’s a matter of translation.
Pema Pera: ah, you have thought about this before?
Pema Pera: it baffles most people, the first time they hear it
Bertrum Quan: a perfect metaphor of the “problem”
Pema Pera: can you say more?
Bertrum Quan: Well as I said earlier, the nature of the mirror is duality.
Bertrum Quan: Inherent in that is also illusion.
Pema Pera: yes
Bertrum Quan: But most important for me (in the PaB context) is this: I think we (humans) make a mistake to think we find ourselves (identity, spirituality, etc.) by looking in the mirror.
Bertrum Quan: The article, of course, makes the case for the higher level function in our brains that do a certain degree of translating for us–what is real and what it reflection.
Bertrum Quan: But it’s still a trick.
Bertrum Quan: You new PaB excercise–to see as Being sees–mean we cannot use a mirror!
Bertrum Quan: means
Bertrum Quan: We are in love with our own image! We believe we are in the image of God!
Bertrum Quan: But the mirror is a metaphor for a kind of blindness…
Bertrum Quan: Does that make any sense?
Chiaiu Chiung (at PaB session on March 11, 2009 01:00)[Chiaiu's First Session]
Chiaiu Chiung: i like that arising suggest the constant change of things, they come and go
***
Chiaiu Chiung: can we say arising is a kind of energy that manifests into appearances?
Tarmel Udimo: unless Chiaiu wants to kick off:-)
Tarmel Udimo: that's how I was meaning it espacially if we go Arising=Being
Chiaiu Chiung: it emphasizes movement, creation/destruction
Tarmel Udimo: the energy arising
Chiaiu Chiung: if being=arising, then being=energy
Tarmel Udimo: Buddhists use the word appearances linked to phenomena ie everything we see is empty phenomena
Tarmel Udimo: yes its just a preference on my part at the moment
Chiaiu Chiung: appearance seems static at first, but is not in fact
Chiaiu Chiung: this is how i understand empty..
Chiaiu Chiung: it is not a thing itself
Tarmel Udimo: appearance you mean Chiaiu ?
Chiaiu Chiung: appearance yes, which is empty
Delani Gabardini On the nine seconds (from June 6, 2008 13:00 session)
Delani Gabardini: well before that let me say that I like letting my mind go free to “dance” so to speak
Delani Gabardini: and of course, play
Delani Gabardini: my first thought was “No I ams - more what ifs”
Eliza Madrigal (3/27/09)
I am not sure what I expected to discover when signing on to Second Life, but it wasn't a thriving, beautiful, meditative community. And it wasn't the richly diverse, sometimes-overwhelming-but-always-welcoming environment of Play as Being. What is difficult to articulate, is how *at home* I feel here, and how natural it seems, that I am.
As to 9 second practice, for me it is simply a lovely way to "check in" and re-set Intention to Be. Perhaps the most resonating PaB idea to my mind, is that of greeting each experience and person anew...of, as Pema might say, "bracketing" preconceptions and time.
Hana Hendrassen(at PaB session on November 30, 2009 13:00)
Hana Hendrassen: "ignorance is bliss"... there also could be two kinds of ignorance: that which you don't want to know, and that which you are content to be unable to know
Mickorod Renard
Myna Maven
Myoko Fang
Neela Blaisdale (at PaB session on October 25, 2008 07:00)
Neela Blaisdale: yes. Seems easier to do that here, sometimes hard to do in RL when caught up in the day to day. the 9 sec helps
Pema Pera: yes, little breaks seem to make big differences . . . .
Corvuscorva Nightfire: any space makes a difference.
Pema Pera: can you give some examples, perhaps, Neela , of how the 9 sec has helped in RL?
Neela Blaisdale: well if feeling overwelmed, work, election, whatever makes me stop and change "heads", shuts off the "loop"
Neela Blaisdale: then after I find I'm feeling very diferently
Pema Pera: yes, opening the loop can be a great relief!
Neela Blaisdale: that's the immediate effect. In the long term I 've been feeling a much more intense "universal connection" for lack of a better word
Corvuscorva Nightfire looks at this with interest.
Pema Pera: can you say more, Neela ?
Neela Blaisdale: well I now think it is possible to feel conected to Being, although I always believed intellectually in the idea that we are all connected, now I feel it at times
Nostrum Forder
Quilty Bookmite (at PaB session on October 9, 2008 13:00)
Quilty Bookmite: To my Buddhist perspective, all things have the Buddha nature, even the clinging.
Quilty Bookmite: i'm not sure I want to say very much about that. :-) Buddhism isn;t really the subject.
Quilty Bookmite: But the self that didn't trust yourself also has the Buddha nature. :-)
Vertigo Ethaniel: i believe its important to keep questioning ourselves and those things we hold sacred, else we run the risk of turning religious
Quilty Bookmite: Questioning is good. Not so sure about blaming. :-)
Rajah Yalin On the nine seconds (from May 28, 2008 19:00 session)
Rajah Yalin: seems short but seems like a large accomplishment when you take into consideration how much is being done daily
Rajah Yalin: keeps the positive energies going
Shilv Tigerauge
Sonic Moonites (from February 24, 2009 07:00 session)
Sonic Moonites: thats one of the reasons i find running so useful for meditations, the movement and sense of the body makes it harder not be aware of
Sonic Moonites: especially as SL makes us even further away from our RL bodies
Sonic Moonites: easy to disconnect
Sky Szimmer (from May 19, 2008 07:00 session)
Sky Szimmer: yes. it reminded me of our conversation in RL, last month
Sky Szimmer: i think I was talking about there is always going to be a connection with “Being” and the body
Sky Szimmer: anyway, the explanation is consciousness has an “I” and in awareness not
Sky Szimmer: ‘I” being a bundle of memories and experiences, the five senses, etc.
Sky Szimmer: so in death, those attribute fades
Sky Szimmer: finer states of consciousness remains
Sky Szimmer: awareness being not a form of consciousness
Susi Alcott
Vertigo Ethaniel (at PaB session on July 27, 2008)
Vertigo Ethaniel: adelene, i view conversation like a river... it has many components, and all contribute to a greater whole
Adelene Dawner: And there is a joy in being here.
Vertigo Ethaniel: there is joy wherever you want to see it
Vertigo Ethaniel: or feel it
Vertigo Ethaniel: or experience it in any way
Wester Kiranov (at PaB session on December 2, 2008)
Wester Kiranov: i was just thinking, if you keep on doing something like the 9 second practice, you punch tiny holes in Ego, until it starts falling apart automatically
Becka Finesmith: That hasn't happened for me so far. The 9 seconds has so far made me more aware of it. It looms large like I didn't know it was there
Wester Kiranov: very important first step
Wester Kiranov: first notice how much you are wrapped up in what you think is real
Becka Finesmith: COuldn't be more wrapped up unfortunately.
Becka Finesmith: at what point do we stop unwrapping
Wester Kiranov: You could be more wrapped up, otherwise you wouldn't be here
Wester Kiranov: You stop unwrapping when you get to the Present ;-P
Wester Kiranov: actually, you don't stop unwrapping at all