Mr. Cat
Senior Member
- Messages
- 156
- Location
- Nothern California
Nice pictures! For me, forests increase the spiritual sense! I have some redwoods not far from my home that I should probably go visit.
Beautiful! Looks like highway 1 up the Mendo coast. Used to spend lots of time out there...really miss it. Glad you had such a happy birthday..... The pic of the redwoods was taken on the Prairie Creek-Fern Canyon trail just north of Orick, and just a short ways from home.
It's funny, though, how with ME/CFS, you can become a bit of a simulated emulation of your former self!
I love this description i sometimes think a simulated emulation is a lot safer for our health. I think my personality was too large for my physical body to handle so i've been put on a leash. While irritating, maybe it was necessary
When asked "what I do" I have come up with some interesting answers for them. My favorite so far is: I have been exploring the void of human consciousness for signs of life. hehehe!
I love this description i sometimes think a simulated emulation is a lot safer for our health. I think my personality was too large for my physical body to handle so i've been put on a leash. While irritating, maybe it was necessary
LOL! I love it! May I borrow that?!
I've recently had 2 contrasting experiences:
An acquaintance asked what I'm doing these days. I responded "Living." He: "But what do you do?" Me: "Really, just living." He: "But what are you doing?" He just couldn't let it go!
The other: met the leader of an enlightenment intensive workshop/healing center, who asked the same thing: "What do you do in [hometown]?" Me: "Not much." He: "Ah, you're one of those lucky ones!"
(It would be a great thread: How do you answer the "what do you do?" question? Maybe there's a thread already...)
Hi gretac--Hehehe! Thank you. And sure, feel free to borrow it.
"What do you DO?" can be an annoying question. I think "Living" is a great answer. It's nice and brief and honest. So I will borrow that from you. How strange that that acquaintance of yours couldn't handle hearing this. I suppose he's like most people, who want to hear only those things that affirm their reality, and their own doing-ness. Any answer that contradicts the beliefs of a do-er will make him/her/them uncomfortable. Too bad for them.
I love that video, Dreambirdie, about the plankton skeletons -- and now I know why your avatar seemed so familiar to me! My dad had sent me the Red Book a year or two ago.
I'm deeply grateful for the spiritual work I did early on because there is just no way I would have survived some of the last 20 months. Mr. Cat talked about being in the body vs. dissociation and I think also was the one who made the point about there always being an internal faculty or witness/observer. No matter how bad things got, as one of my teachers often said, there was always a space to rest between the breaths. Especially the long nights of unremitting nausea and wolverines clawing at my stomach lining. just being with the breath seemed to move me through the hours until sleep.
Hip that was a great question "what was that antioxidant you took" I didn't see a response but was curious myself what it could have been.
Without wading into the theological debates above, I will say that at every stage of my own explorations, I always found myself resonating with the mystic tradition of the faiths I was studying. Not going to make a statement about the commonality of all mystic experience or such, but Eckhart sounds a lot like Dogen in part because once you reach the limits of language to convey realization, there's really not a lot left but poetry and/or statements that seem so contradictory as to confound (kind of the point).
Hip and everyone who has felt this loss of connection, aside from hoping and praying daily for your full recovery to vibrant health, I wish for you any inkling -- waking or sleeping -- to help assuage that hunger, feed that desire for connection to your spiritual source.