Monthly Archive for March, 2010

Chapter of the Week: #42

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He Who Speaks Does Not Know, but…

Beyond words

Beyond words

Years ago I began to notice that I was incapable of really being in the moment when I was speaking – or even while I was thinking! In other words, when I’m speaking, I’m not reporting from an instantaneous state of knowing. Rather, I am passing on things I’ve already thought through some what. Speech references past experience, if even only a moment old. It is not of the ‘now’.  ‘Now’ is all I can truly know. The rest is only a partial view, after-thoughts, of the ‘nows’ dead and gone. On the other hand… Continue reading ‘He Who Speaks Does Not Know, but…’

Hunger: A Natural Stimulant

Modern 'hunting & gathering'

Modern hunting and gathering

It has been my habit for decades to eat nothing much until late afternoon. That  goes against the standard ‘breakfast is the most important meal of the day’ rule, especially seeing how I get up at 7am. Sure this may be a little stressful to my body, but that turns out to be a good thing. As with most everything, it isn’t the what that matters, it is the how much that ‘breaks the camels back’.

Consider this excerpt from Anti-aging: A little stress may keep cells youthful,  a recent article in Science News.

“The study focused on individual cells, but for whole organisms the finding could shed light on a link between stress and life span. “A little bit of stress can actually prolong life,” says molecular biologist Richard Morimoto of Northwestern, a study coauthor. Mild stress activates the heat shock response but does not harm the cells, he adds. Continue reading ‘Hunger: A Natural Stimulant’

Chapter of the Week: #41

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Know ‘Truth’, Live True

Just sitting...bzzzz...giving blodd

Just sitting...bzzzz...giving blood

‘Truth’? What’s truth? Okay, so this is really about what passes for truth.  At least in that regard, more people are able to agree on scientific ‘truth’ than any other ‘truth’. Interestingly, science is proving (through brain imaging) that there is more pleasure in giving than in receiving (1,2,3). Of course wise people have known this for ages. It is an essential pillar of most religions.

Science also lends empirical support to the spiritual view that ’self’ is illusion (e.g., the ephemeral effect of billions of neuronal connections), and that reality is Oneness (e.g., the inherent ‘non locality’ of quantum mechanics). I find a real benefit in having these ancient viewpoints confirmed in the non-religious ways that science offers. Science can be a much more impartial observer in such matters.

Continue reading ‘Know ‘Truth’, Live True’

Why Not Protest To Raise Taxes?

Why not protest for taxes There are a lot of people out (mostly students now, I think) protesting against spending cuts in education. This state, California, as well as the country as a whole, is massively in debt. However, all that I hear are frantic cries for: no more spending cuts and no more new taxes. Now, just how is that suppose to work?

On top of this, when California had a massive budgetary surplus, the people spent it left and right, saving none for an economic downturn. Should I laugh or cry? My kids as toddlers had a better sense of frugality than many adults these days. I can only guess that this is due to the habits ‘taught’ in an extremely affluent culture like ours. It was different in the old pre-capitalist days of famine and serious want. Back then, people were motivated to save surpluses. Continue reading ‘Why Not Protest To Raise Taxes?’