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Self-Predation

Moral values arise from an arbitrary line we draw between what is socially acceptable and what is not. I imagine any die-hard moralist might well find this an immoral view. However, historical experience shows the moral line moves profoundly over time and geography. Morality draws its line somewhere along the food chain between the user […]

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Apr 14, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations

Finding Your Original Self

When do we give life our all? Often, we give this 100% only when other people are watching and possibly judging us. Indeed, this is one key function of teachers and coaches; they watch and evaluate us. This tendency to “live” for others (1) is our innate social nature, while our true character only reveals […]

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Apr 2, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, cultural baggage, Eden, social self, tribal, well being

Feeding the Worry Gene

Have you noticed how there is always something wrong? No matter how ideal circumstances are, something will go awry shortly. All this may be obvious, I suppose. What is less obvious is how the perception and experience of good fortune and misfortune are complimentary. As chapter 58 puts it, Misfortune, yet of good fortune its […]

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Mar 24, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical,  'Podcasted' Tagged With: 'the constant', emergent property, fear, food, freedom, hunter gatherer, imagination, learning, need, perfection, religion, shopping, understanding, worry, yoga

Hold the Knowable

In my previous, Good Enough Is (p.356), I suggested that we have an innate need to pursue an important goal… something to hold in mind, to hunger after, and fill our mind space. I also put forward the view that this was an emergent property (p.121) of the basic hunter-gather instinct that drives life to […]

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Mar 18, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, emergent property, health, hunter gatherer, patience, science, self-honesty, thinking

Good Enough Is!

Good enough is good enough, and naturally so. As chapter 46 notes, Therefore, in being contented with one’s lot, enough is usually enough indeed. Besides, isn’t this how nature plays out… step by step? Surely, this is the sentiment expressed in chapter 64, A thousand mile journey begins below the feet. This is how reality […]

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Mar 9, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, emergent property, imagination, language, mind, religion, step-by-step, thinking

Ponder Between the Lines

First, google this short video, [ABC’s George Stephanopoulos interviewing NBA star Dennis Rodman] about Rodman’s visit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. As you can see, George and Dennis exemplify two profoundly different ways of seeing the world. Each is representing an extreme, which helps highlight polar archetypes… yin vs. yang, as it were. […]

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Mar 4, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, civilization, freewill, mysterious sameness, religion, responsibility, symptoms point of view

Soaking in Inspiration

I began taking a morning hot bath every morning to get my arthritic joints in the mood for morning yoga(1). It works, but I found an unexpected bonus. The bath brings about nearly unavoidable insights. Indeed, sometimes I deliberately Squeeze exchange, shut the gates, as chapter 52 puts it, in the hope of cognitive stillness. […]

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Feb 24, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: Buddha, fear, inspiration, need, obsession, thinking

A Tao of Parenting

Breeding, and the parenting that follows, are the most significant things we do in life; without this, none of us would be here. Most would agree that the best gift you can give children is raising them as balanced and wisely as possible. This has become more daunting in civilization’s post Agricultural Revolution environment. Gone […]

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Feb 18, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical,  'Podcasted' Tagged With: balance, family, parents

Buddha’s Work

I review Buddha’s Four Noble Truths (p.604) during my yoga headstand every morning. Today, the fourth truth stood out, although not in a profound way, more in a “Well, duh” kind of way. First, though, here is the fourth truth: The Fourth Noble Truth is the Middle Path that leads to the cessation of suffering. […]

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Feb 9, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, knowing, thinking, understanding, work

Insatiably Curious at 70?

In the book, The Ravenous Brain(1), the author Daniel Bor refers to my age group. He argues that consciousness is a “chronic mental hunger.” That has certainly been my experience. He also says, “During aging, the insatiable brain becomes less so. We are less ravenous for new jewels of wisdom, and our entire existence, examined […]

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Feb 7, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: aging, consciousness, curiosity, knowing, life milestones, mysterious sameness, wisdom

Breathe Into It

It helps me to regard language as the smoke that arises out of emotion’s fire. You could say words are the cognitive reflections of human emotions. As such, they’re more fantasy than reality. For example, you can understand a volcano with words metaphorically, symbolically, abstractly, but you cannot truly know it through words. You can […]

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Jan 29, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, Blowing Zen, breath, Buddha, civilization, desire, fear, mind, need, shakuhachi, worry, yoga

Tao of Government

Why does government function the way it does? One thing that often stands out is how the authorities in bureaucracies, both leaders and subordinates, easily over-react in silly irrational ways. From a symptom’s point of view, I immediately notice fear as the operative force behind this. To be sure, this applies to most, if not […]

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Jan 22, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, common-purpose, fate realist, government, hypocrisy, self-interest, trust

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