Tag: buddhism
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Musings
I’ve made a lot of offerings to the powers that be—soul-stirring appeals, fancy-sounding deductions—but over the span of time, the most widely accepted one seems to be competence.
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Musings
I’ve been lied to by my heart. I’ve been lied to by my head. I have never been lied to by ethics-bounded results.
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Musings
While it may be annoying, it’s prudent to slog through complexity time and again in order to produce simple solutions. Those solutions keep complexity “annoying,” rather than “overwhelming.”
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Musings
One of the best defenses against micromanagement from others and life is, in my opinion, managing yourself so well that it becomes stupidly obvious that anyone who tries to micromanage you is destined to fail, for they will clearly look like an idiot to any observer with an ounce of sense. This internally powered effort,…
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Musings
The writer’s mind mustn’t cling to beauty or horror, for both concepts will be rendered meaningless if that mind rots away in a stasis-made prison.
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Musings
If someone doesn’t study themselves in an effort to correct deficiencies, I think they’re almost guaranteed to continue running the same, obsolete scripts over and over again. We’ve all seen people who employ the same, ill-fated approaches because it’s easier to do than hold themselves accountable by looking into the mirror. In my mind, this…
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Musings
Competence—and just as importantly, the ability to increase it—could possibly be the most valuable commodity in all of existence. It allows us the luxuries of downtime and morals, and it is a formidable shield against personal pain. I also believe that one who seeks competence across all domains can realize deeper teachings from age-old texts…without…
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Musings
Whatever model of reality I examine—eastern/western religion, science, philosophy—futility and abstraction seem to pop up more and more the deeper I go. (From my paltry understanding of physics, time is a construct and if you invoke cosmological instances where it doesn’t exist, the idea of causality falls apart as well, meaning that at the heart…
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Musings
The food I eat, the exercise I engage in, the sleep I get, the stress I experience, the luxury I revel in…every little thing affects my ability to live my life in the manner I wish. I realize that trying to quantify all these causative factors (I think that even if that were possible, trying…
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Musings
It seems that science, history, psychology, and even magic are based on the employment of inductive logic. Due to the one-way flow of time—from past to present to future—we can examine experiments, historical anecdotes, behavioral anecdotes, or arcane rituals to see whether or not they can be employed as useful tools, or at least draw…
