“To the right, books; to the left, a tea-cup. In front of me, the fireplace; behind me, the post. There is no greater happiness than this.”
~Teiga
Blog
forgiveness
“Life is an adventure in forgiveness.”
~Norman Cousins
People with opinions
“People with opinions just go around bothering one another.”
~The Buddha
TO REALIZE
To realize
The value of a sister
Ask someone
Who doesn't have one.
To realize
The value of ten years:
Ask a newly
Divorced couple.
To realize
The value of four years:
Ask a graduate.
To realize
The value of one year:
Ask a student who
Has failed a final exam.
To realize
The value of nine months:
Ask a mother who gave birth to a still born.
To realize
The value of one month:
Ask a mother who has given birth to a premature baby.
To realize
The value of one week:
Ask an editor of a weekly newspaper.
To realize
The value of one hour:
Ask the lovers who are waiting to Meet.
To realize
The value of one minute:
Ask a person
Who has missed the train, bus or plane.
To realize
The value of one-second:
Ask a person
Who has survived an accident.
To realize
The value of one millisecond:
Ask the person who has won a silver medal in the Olympics.
To realize the value of a friend:
Lose one.
Time waits For no one.
Treasure every moment you have.
You will treasure it even more when
you can share it with someone special.
[/sappy-internet-forward-poem-thingy]
A most disturbing dream
I had the most horrible dream last night. I won't go into the details, because it wouldn't be prudent; but the short story is that I murdered someone. At the moment I did it, I thought I was doing “good”, but it became clear to me that I committed a defenseless act of homicide and I'd likely be sentenced to death for it. I was horrified at myself. Bad dream. Bad dream.
to love wisdom
“To be a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found a school, but so to love wisdom as to live according to its dictates, a life of simplicity, independence, magnanimity, and trust.”
~Henry David Thoreau
sweet water
“Clomp clomp the monk’s feet
through ice and dark
drawing sweet water.”
~BashÅ
A little nonsense
“A little nonsense now and then is cherished by the wisest men.”
~Roald Dahl
An Epistle On Failure
What follows is an essay written by a net friend of mine named Peter. He wrote it for a college admissions application, but it was so good, I thought it should be seen by more than just some anonymous admissions officer who may or may not have the intelligence to know just what they had in their hands.
My whole life has been driven by, and to, failure. I've failed in schools, in friendships, in family relationships. I've failed to reach goals, and I've failed to set them in the first place. I've even failed to vary sentence structure, and I imagine that I will continue failing, in these things and others, until I finally fail to draw breath.
I think that's true of all people. That we all fail, constantly. I suppose one could argue that it's failure that makes our accomplishments worthwhile, but that's an oversimplification, and one that's a bit too Western (that is, dualistic) for my tastes. But maybe that's not a bad thing, the failing. I've failed, for instance, to become a cracked out homeless black man (granted, this would have been difficult since I am white and chronically sober). I've failed to become a homophobe or a misogynist. I've failed to have the perfect body, the perfect saccharine smile, the perfect, vacant expression, plastered onto my face and my demeanor. I've failed to cash in because I've failed to sell out (or I had, until I said that). I've failed to turn my back on the truth, and I've failed to speak it behind others' backs.
It wouldn't be unfair to say that we all sometimes fail where we should succeed and succeed where it would be best to fail. Success is tricky that way – like wine and like failure, it should be used in moderation. That's where experience comes in. Not as a means by which to succeed, but as a means of knowing (or better guessing) when to succeed and when to fail.
My goal is neither some sum of money nor some standard or ideal of happiness. My experience is, unfortunately, not sufficient (if experience ever CAN be sufficient), and my intuition is like a compass held near a magnet, though I've always failed to entirely lose my balance. My passion is to fail, loudly and spectacularly.
Passion, too, is bound to failure. Passion demands action, and all actions lead to failure. But if one MUST fail, then why not fail passionately? People shouldn't do only those things that they find pleasurable, but they should find pleasure in all things that they do.
There are many tricks to life, though they're not really tricks at all – we merely call them that because they're so much simpler than we want the world to be. After all, when everything is complicated, it becomes okay to fail; most of us fail to see that trying to justify failure is like painting the sky blue – not only is it redundant, but the paint won't stick. Regardless, the trick is to have grace in the acceptance of failure, beauty in its doing, pragmatism in its placement, wisdom in its interpretation, and celebration in every moment.
Time goes on, and experience is gathered, like honey in a hive. But my failure is a contagious one, and the bees fail to sting me (or maybe I merely fail to notice), so my experience is extracted and relished (incidentally, I hate honey). It is not, then, success in the conventional sense that I am after. I fail, and I STRIVE to do so. I began by failing at all things, but I've plundered many hives since then, and so my failures have become more productive, more timely, more beneficial. No, it is not at all success that I am after, but rather a constant and eternal string of failures – but of the RIGHT ones. The trick to life is to fail at the right things. Once that is achieved, success is incidental, and passion is fulfilled.
the essence of mind
“In Zen meditation we think non-thinking — that is, we think nothing. What this means is that our whole psychological mind ceases to function, and as a result, our whole being becomes united with the essence of mind, which we signify by Mind. You call this essence the God within you, absoluteness, ultimate reason — it doesn’t matter. No matter what you call it, to unite with this essence is the very reason we are gathered here to meditate.”
~Robert Aitken