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balance

“Fixation on same same”

Recently my friend Andy teased me about my “fixation on same same”, as he put it. My habit of noticing similarities between apparent opposites bugs him a little. “Fixation on same same” was his response to my comment, “Folks on the left use folks on the right as scapegoats and vice versa”. The underlying needs […]

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Sep 15, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, fairness instinct, fear, mysterious sameness, need, stress

Seat of Consciousness

I recently received a kind email from someone who ended with this: Lastly, from reading Lau Tzu and Chuang Tzu, do you agree that it would seem that they would likely favor vegetarianism? I am becoming vegetarian myself, but it seems that eating clams and mussels might be possible, because they have no brain, and […]

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May 22, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, consciousness, favoritism, hypocrisy, self-honesty

Jack of All Trades, Master of None?

Is there any true difference between a generalist “jack of all trades” and a master? After all, isn’t a “jack of all trades” simply a master generalist? I’ve been doing several activities for many years: yoga (~55 years), tai chi (~45 years), shakuhachi sui Zen (~40 years), gardening (~35 years) and, I have various other […]

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Mar 26, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, master, yoga

We!

Knowing that we are all in this together evokes a sense of community and well-being. Not long ago humanity had a narrower view of what we are in all this together involved. Happily, science is showing us just how deep and vast the we of this actually reaches. The Science News article, Inside Job, covers […]

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Jul 16, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, cost/benefit

So, I’d like to ask…

A Centertao member asked me if I had any advice for a 30 year old. Right away, too much came to my mind for that question! I had to sleep on it awhile. Interestingly, not thinking about a tricky issue is often the best way to resolve it. Not thinking doesn’t mean disregarding it, but […]

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Jun 3, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, Buddha, happy, knowing, learning, symptoms point of view, thinking, understanding, well being

Don’t trust anyone under 60

The Science News’ article, Don’t trust any elephant under 60, reveals factors elephants use to choose a leader. (Google [Leadership in elephants: the adaptive value of age].) Surely, their criterion applies to all animals including people. Our choices for what to look for in a leader runs the gamut, as this excerpt from the Science […]

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May 29, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, civilization, future, hunter gatherer, intelligence, mind, progress, wisdom

Wandering Mind Is Unhappy Mind

Google [Many unhappy returns for wandering minds] for research that supports watchfulness, as I call it. Left-brain science and right-brain Taoist thought are my two best resources for avoiding the Dunning–Kruger effect (p.144). Together they offer points of view from opposite ends of the awareness spectrum. Each balances the other. Alone, either one can mislead. […]

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Jan 11, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, belief, freewill, happy, mysterious sameness, watchfulness

The Nutty Things We Do

While pulling myself into an odd yoga shape this morning, I thought, this is nuts! No normal animal on the planet would do this. In fact, no other animal does most of the things our species does. Working, resting, and engaging in the basic biological functions is all that we have in common with other […]

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Nov 25, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, Buddha, civilization, symptoms point of view, understanding, yoga

Science, Religion, Truth

It is striking how obvious, yet subtle, the relationship between science, religion, and truth is. This could be an example of chapter 71’s, My words are very easy to understand and very easy to put into practice, yet no one in the world can understand them or put them into practice. There are profound spiritual […]

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Oct 23, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, civilization, language, religion, science

Exquisite Balance

I never ever use the word exquisite, but this morning while standing on my head I thought, “How exquisite this moment of perfect balance feels”. I went on to consider other facets of life such as working, eating, speaking, and shopping. In all cases, balance is possible, but is often only partial and so seldom […]

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Sep 23, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, civilization, food, pleasure v pain, tai chi, yoga

Tao As Emergent Property

Generally, emergence occurs when something has a trait that its parts don’t have individually. The emergent property exists only when its parts interact in a combined whole. In a Taoist version of this, the ‘simple’ forms the basis upon which the ‘complex’ emerges. Here, I see each layer of existence as an emergent property modeled […]

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Sep 4, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, civilization, emergent property, ethics

Omega-3 and Vitamin D

When it comes to human nutrition, it is a struggle separating the wheat from the chaff. Each era has its blind alleys of nutrition. Foods deemed healthy today could easily be less so tomorrow… and vice versa. In the 70’s, I got nutrition religion and set out to uncover information that was closer to the truth. […]

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Apr 2, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, diet, food, hunter gatherer, nutrician, omega 3, science, vitamins

Peeking in on Nature’s Hoodwink

We are born with a bio-illusion — a bio-hoodwink(1) — that goes like this: Through hunting, “I” gathers fillers to satiate (fill) the hole. Primal emotions of need (e.g., desire, wish) and fear (e.g., insecurity, anxiety) drive this illusion forward. This illusion originates in the survival instinct to find food to fill the empty belly. […]

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Dec 13, 2008 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, civilization, hunter gatherer, pleasure v pain

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