1995. Laos. Cats.

sporadicinked:

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dharmarainbow:

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#logic #authority #ignorance #tradition

silentgong:

The self is realized much in the same way that the eye is discovered through the property of vision. The eye sees everything but itself, yet through the act of seeing, the eye is implied and required.

So then, the self that is “I” exists, yet it is not an idea that can be formed in the mind. It is all of existence, and more, and less. We can confirm its existence because this experience exists. However, the second we say more than “I am”, we have lost what we are trying to describe. Beingness. Is-ness. It can only be experienced directly, without words, labels, judgments, or definitions obscuring the vision of what is witnessed. The mind attempts to generate this understanding through language and logic, but it is not capable of generating something so infinitely complex and sublime as the self. It can, however, recognize this “I am” once the distractions of ego are no longer interfering. It is this recognition that is Awakening. It is the start of enlightenment.

It is like eating a meal is Awakening, and looking at the menu is the mind attempting to generate this understanding but still not really getting the experience of the flavors.

nvm-illustration:

nvm-illustration:

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Another small Shibari piece.

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Small little series, Iโ€™ll maybe do one more because 3 is a better number.

Controlling Anger

zenmister:

To control anger you have to pay attention to anger. It is a hard emotion to control because when it arises it takes over your mind, cutting off your reasoning ability and pushing you into angry action.

Angry action is generally destructive action, so a big part of controlling anger is controlling what we do when we are angry. We have to try to limit the destruction and harm our anger does to us and to others. It is like anger makes us radioactive. We need to limit how we expose others to our radiation and how long we endure it ourselves.  Recognizing the toxicity of our anger helps us to break its spell.

When you are under anger’s spell and you want to let it go, you can channel the angry energy into helpful actions. You can write about whatever is making you angry,  go for a walk, do some physical labor, do something constructive to burn it off. Figuring out where to channel your anger is the immediate safety plan. Changing your anger habit is the long-term approach.

To change your approach, pay attention to how much time you spend angry each day. From one day to the next, you spend a consistent amount of time being angry. Once you get a sense of how much of your life you spend angry, you can work on lowering it. Lowering the amount of time you spend angry is like quitting smoking. Your body will crave anger like a smoker’s body craves nicotine. The world will provide just enough problems to get you however much anger you are used to.

Also, pay attention to the situations that get you angry. As you become more familiar with the kinds of things you use to get angry about, you will be able to see them coming and make an effort to respond differently.  Anger seems like an involuntary response to situations, but when you learn how you get angry and become curious about how it arises, you will find that there is a brief opening, between when something happens and when anger begins. That opening allows you  to come up with a more aware response. For example, if you get road rage, you can notice when another driver makes a bonehead move and, instead of becoming enraged, notice the fear you feel for your safety. Instead of screaming, take a breath and wish for everybody on the road to be safe from accidents. 

With a strong anger habit, anger becomes an overused emotional response that overrides more subtle emotions. Anger often arises from feelings of fear or helplessness. As you practice approaching your anger with awareness, you will get better at feeling the more subtle, less comfortable emotions. Feelings of vulnerability may be less comfortable than flying off in a fit of rage, but those feelings are necessary and are less destructive to you and the people around you. 

When you act angry at people, defenses arise and they try to protect themselves. When you become sad around people, compassion arises and they try to comfort you. It is a great life skill to be able to control anger because, without that skill, anger will control you.

silentgong:

“Fear is the main source of superstition, and one of the main sources of cruelty. To conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom, in the pursuit of truth as in the endeavour after a worthy manner of life.”

— Bertrand Russell, Unpopular Essays
(via philosophybits)

nvm-illustration:
“๐Ÿฏ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿงก I want to call this a small sketch but yeah, this be how things are these days. Smaller ideas that turn into something bigger but not fully fleshed out. Limbo phase and I’m feeling those growing...
zenwords:
“Self-validation Can Sound Like:
- “I was right to stand up for myself.”
- “I did the best I could with what I knew at that time.”
- “I am proud of myself for challenging myself.“
- “Today has been a difficult day for me.”
- “I can do hard...

norablvck:

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I feel good ๐ŸŒธ

octoberwitch:

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You’ve gotta climb the fence

Get past the stones

Unlock the gate

Then maybe I can let you

Come home

To a warmer place

With forehead kisses

And a suffocating emrace

Then I’ll tell you

“I’m yours”

Because you couldn’t get enough

Of a love like this