milhaus

paphos, cyprus 1.9. ->



I'm doing 41 things
 

milhaus's Life List

  1. 1. Make 2008 an excellent year
    6 entries . 16 cheers
    2 people
  2. 2. watch 150 movies in 2008
    4 entries
    9 people
  3. 3. live, laugh, love
    8 entries . 23 cheers
    42 people
  4. 4. list life's happy moments
    9 entries . 4 cheers
    5 people
  5. 5. be straight edge
    4 cheers
    24 people
  6. 6. Become a vegetarian
    7 cheers
    1,391 people
  7. 7. practice buddhism
    3 entries . 8 cheers
    101 people
  8. 8. learn about Sufism
    1 entry
    7 people
  9. 9. speak louder, clearer and more slowly
    1 entry . 12 cheers
    1 person
  10. 10. be a holiday rep
    5 entries . 2 cheers
    8 people
  11. 11. major in religious studies
    1 cheer
    2 people
  12. 12. have more queer friends
    7 cheers
    2 people
  13. 13. post randomly
    11 entries . 3 cheers
    97 people
  14. 14. Manage my money better
    3 entries . 6 cheers
    432 people
  15. 15. pay back the money i owe my parents
    1 cheer
    2 people
  16. 16. become financially independent from my parents
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    9 people
  17. 17. get in better shape
    1 entry . 5 cheers
    735 people
  18. 18. only eat when I'm hungry
    5 cheers
    493 people
  19. 19. just write, anything
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    1 person
  20. 20. travel, travel, travel
    1 entry . 9 cheers
    183 people
  21. 21. get an awesomely cool tattoo, or tattoos
    2 entries . 2 cheers
    1 person
  22. 22. have dreadlocks again
    6 cheers
    7 people
  23. 23. Sponsor a child
    1 cheer
    196 people
  24. 24. fund a microloan through kiva.org
    3 cheers
    30 people
  25. 25. list 43 people i wouldn't kick outta bed
    25 entries
    9 people
  26. 26. stretch more
    3 cheers
    103 people
  27. 27. draw more
    2 entries . 2 cheers
    1,767 people
  28. 28. Read more
    10 entries . 4 cheers
    6,361 people
  29. 29. read more Haruki Murakami
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    2 people
  30. 30. read more douglas coupland
    1 entry . 2 cheers
    1 person
  31. 31. visit dubrovnik
    1 cheer
    2 people
  32. 32. visit new york city
    1 cheer
    758 people
  33. 33. Visit San Francisco
    2 cheers
    272 people
  34. 34. Visit South Africa
    1 cheer
    183 people
  35. 35. Visit Australia
    1 cheer
    2,083 people
  36. 36. Visit Canada
    2 cheers
    455 people
  37. 37. visit copenhagen
    1 entry . 2 cheers
    26 people
  38. 38. Visit Barcelona
    123 people
  39. 39. Live to see the end of LOST
    1 entry . 9 cheers
    5 people
  40. 40. learn to use my mooncup
    1 person
  41. 41. learn the Greek alphabet
    30 people
Recent entries
list life's happy moments (read all 9 entries…)
This is heartbreakingly cute. 1 day ago

“Fluffy, I’m not your real daddy-”
“Yes you are daddy”
“No, I’m a man and you’re a bunny”
“I’m not a bunny”

Fluffy,
a graphic novel by Simone Lia


practice buddhism (read all 3 entries…)
Hsin Hsin Ming - verses on the faith mind / inscribed on the believing mind 2 days ago

I read this in Finnish and I loved it. This is the mainstream English translation by Richard B.Clarke. There’s also a translation that is more poetic and intricate but I prefer this simpler one.

What I love about Buddhism is that it matches my mind and thoughts and feelings but it also always offers me something new every time.

I have a bad concentration but I’m glad I stuck with these verses until the end.

-

”” The great Way is not difficult for those who have no preferences.
When love and hate are both absent everything becomes clear and undisguised.
Make the smallest distinction, however, and heaven and hell are set infinitely apart.

If you wish to see the truth then hold no opinions for or against anything.
To set up what you like against what you dislike is the disease of the mind.
When the deep meaning of things is not understood, the mind’s essential peace is disturbed to no avail.

The way is perfect like vast space where nothing is lacking and nothing is in excess.
Indeed, it is due to our choosing to accept or reject that we do not see the true nature of things.

Live neither in entanglements of outer things, nor in inner feelings of emptiness.
Be serene in the oneness of things and such, erroneous views will disappear by themselves.

When you try to stop activity by passivity your effort fills you with activity.
As long as you remain in one extreme or the other, you will never know oneness.

Those who do not live in the single way, fail in both activity and passivity, assertion and denial. To deny the reality of things is to miss their reality; to assert the emptiness is to miss their reality.

The more you talk and think about it, the further astray you wander from the truth. Stop talking and thinking, and there is nothing you will not be able to know.

To return to the root is to find meaning, but to pursue appearances is to miss the source. At the moment of inner enlightenment, there is going beyond appearance and emptiness. The changes that appear to occur in the empty world we call real only because of our ignorance.

Do not search for the truth, only cease to cherish opinions. Do not remain in the dualistic state. Avoid such pursuits carefully. If there is even a trace of this and that, of right and wrong, the mind-essence will be lost in confusion.

Although all dualities come from the one, do not be attached even to this one.
When the mind exists undisturbed in the Way, nothing in the world can offend.
And when a thing can no longer offend, it ceases to exist in the old way.

When no discriminating thoughts arise, the old mind ceases to exist.
When thought objects vanish, the thinking-subject vanishes.
As when the mind vanishes, objecta vanishes.

Things are objects because of the subject (mind), the mind (subject) is such because of things (object). Understand the relativity of these two and the basic reality: the unity of emptiness. In this emptiness the two are indistinguishable and each contains in itself the whole world. If you do not discriminate between coarse and fine you will not be tempted to prejudice and opinion.

To live in the Great Way is neither easy nor difficult, but those with limited views are fearful and irresolute: the faster they hurry, the slower they go. And clinging (attachment) cannot be limited: even to be attached to the idea of enlightenment is to go astray. Just let things be in their own way and there will be neither coming or going. Obey the nature of things (your own nature) and you will walk freely and undisturbed.

When the thought is bondage the truth is hidden for everything is murky and unclear.
And the burdensome practice of judging brings annoyance and weariness.
What benefit can be derived from distinctions and separations.

If you wish to move in the One Way, do not dislike even the world of senses and ideas.
Indeed, to accept them fully is identical with enlightenment.

The wise man strives to no goals but the foolish man fetters himself.

There is one Dharma, not many. Distinctions arise from the clinging needs of the ignorant. To seek Mind with the (discriminating) mind is the greatest of all mistakes.

Rest and unrest derive from illusion; with enlightenment there is not liking and disliking.
All dualities come from ignorant inference. They are like dreams or flowers in the air – foolish to try to grasp them .Gain and loss, right and wrong, such thoughts must finally be abolished at once.

If the eye never sleeps, all dreams will naturally cease. If the mind makes no discriminations, the ten thousand things are as they are, of single essence.
To understand the mystery of this One-essence is to be released from all entanglements.

When all things are seen equally the timeless Self-essence is reached, no comparisons or analogies are possible in this causeless, relationless state. Consider movement stationary and the stationary in motion, both movement and rest disappear.

When such dualities cease to exist, oneness itself cannot exist.
To this ultimate finality no law or description applies.

For the unified mind in accord with the way all self-centered striving ceases.
Doubts and irresolutions vanish and life in true faith is possible.
With a single stroke we are freed from bondage: nothing clings to us and we hold to nothing.

All is empty, clear, self-illuminating, with no exertion of the mind’s power.
Here thought, feeling, knowledge and imagination are of no value.

In this world of suchness, there is neither self nor other-than-self.
To come directly into harmony with this reality, just say when doubt rises “not two”.
In this “not two” nothing is separate, nothing is excluded.

No matter when or where, enlightenment means entering this truth. And this truth is beyond extension or diminution in time and space: in it a single thought is ten thousand years.

Emptiness here, emptiness there, but the infinite universe stands always before your eyes. Infinitely large and infinitely small; no difference, for definitions have vanished and no boundaries are seen.

So too with Being and non-Being. Don’t waste time in doubts and arguments that have nothing to do with this.

One thing, all things, move among and intermingle without distinction.
To live in this realization is to be without anxiety about non-perfection.
To live in this faith is the road to non-duality, because the non-dual is one with the trusting mind.

Words!
The Way is beyond language, for in it there is
no yesterday
no tomorrow
no today. ””

-

ps.
My geeky heart also loves how the Buddhism-themed episode of the X-Files that was written and directed by Gillian Anderson was called all things . I think she might’ve read this poem as well.


live laugh love (read all 8 entries…)
Who is the one who said 2 days ago

“sometimes the only sane answer to an insane world is insanity”?


See all entries ...


 

I want to: