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Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Would you date a Republican guy?


Garfunkel & Oates: "Dating a Republican"

Do it for citizenship papers and paper billions
(Just For Laughs) GO perform a song they wrote about men they dated, specifically about a Republican named Dan. (This is not about left and right but left and wrong).
ABOUT: Just For Laughs is the world’s premiere destination for #standupcomedy. JFL produces the world’s largest and most prestigious comedy event every July in Montreal, as well as annual festivals in Toronto and Sydney. On this channel, will find comedic clips from some of the most legendary comedians in the business: Chris Rock, Bill Burr, Kevin Hart, and more. It also features stand-up from newcomers such as John Mulaney, Bo Burnham, and Amy Schumer. Just want to laugh? This is the right place. Website: bit.ly/1pFZ2d1.


#Garfunkel #JustForLaughs #JFL #Garfunkel&Oates #Garfunkel&OatesStandUp from the #JustForLaughs Festival in 2018. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/1ShFiDP Watch more #StandUp from #JFL: http://bit.ly/2M0R2j4 WATCH MORE: NETFLIX SPECIALS: https://bit.ly/2TLIh45 SEEN THEM ON TV?: https://bit.ly/2HIKRAS LOVE & RELATIONSHIPS STAND UP: https://bit.ly/2JmFV6R MUSICAL COMEDY: https://bit.ly/2UKbLM4 FOLLOW JFL: Facebook: http://bit.ly/1qbX9p0 Twitter: http://bit.ly/1RG2uuI.
  • Garfunkel & Oates, Just For Laughs, June 12, 2021; Ashley Wells, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Monday, November 25, 2024

How to repay one's parents (sutra)

Mom, are you defecating? No, that's okay. I'll just wash this dress shirt. *Smiles*


"Meditators, I will teach about a person without integrity and one with integrity. Listen, pay close attention, and I will speak."

"As you say, venerable sir," they responded.

The Buddha then said, "Now what is a person without integrity? A person without integrity is ungrateful and unthankful. This ingratitude, this lack of (knowing what has been done for one) thankfulness, is promoted by rude people.

"It is just the sort of thing people without integrity do, whereas a person with integrity is grateful and thankful. This gratitude, this thankfulness, is promoted by civil people. It is just the kind of thing people with integrity do."

People in the world
{II,iv,2} "I say, meditators, there are two people who are not easy to repay. Who are these two? One's mother and father.

"Even if you were to carry one's mother on one shoulder and one's father on the other shoulder for 100 years, and were to look after them by anointing and massaging them with oil, bathing them, rubbing their limbs, even as they defecated and urinated right where they sat [on one's shoulders], one could not in that way be able to pay or repay one's parents.

"Even if one were to establish one's mother and father in absolute sovereignty over the whole of this great earth (every country and territory), abounding in the seven treasures, one could not in that way be able to pay or repay one's parents. Now, why is that?

"Mother and father do much for their children. They care for them, nourish them, introduce them to this world.

"However, anyone 
  • who rouses one's unbelieving mother and father, settles and establishes them in confidence (saddha, faith, conviction),
  • who rouses one's unvirtuous mother and father, settles and establishes them in virtue (sila),
  • who rouses one's stingy mother and father, settles and establishes them in letting go (dana, generosity),
  • who rouses one's foolish mother and father, settles and establishes them in wisdom (panna, direct knowing and seeing, discernment),
"to this extent one indeed pays and repays one's mother and father."

Sunday, November 24, 2024

Martian men, Venusian women: J. Gray



My father knows best.
GET THE EASE IN RELATIONSHIPS WE'VE ALL BEEN WANTING FOR YEARS. Here are science-backed teachings and resources for men and women who want to date, marry, and stay married to the absolute love of their life.

AT A TIME WHEN RELATIONSHIPS ARE MORE COMPLICATED AND NUANCED THAN EVER... The Grays equip participants with the modern romance playbooks and curricula that strengthen current relationships or empower the ability to start incredible new ones.

"In love, little things make a big difference."
We’re Mars Venus, the father and daughter duo who’ve devoted our lives to teaching healthy love that lasts.

Learn more about Therapist John Gray and his daughter/business partner Lauren Gray. It all started with John Gray’s inspirational book, Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus.


Super-stimulate hormones with Dr. Gray
(CBS) April 12, 2011: Erica Hill talks to Dr. John Gray, PhD, relationship expert and author of Venus on Fire, Mars on Ice about how hormones affect our relationships.



I'm the future of my dad's amazing work.
Since the debut of the best-selling relationship book of all time, we’ve teamed up to develop more transformational lessons that take the guesswork out of making love work.

Based on research-backed scientific studies on human hormones and brain chemistry in men and women, we’re here to guide participants towards the sort of love they’ve only dreamed about. MarsVenus.com
I'm not gay, just effeminate since I was young, but now I'm a testosterone horndog, believe me.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Do people come into our lives by chance?


Zen story: People do NOT come into our lives by chance: Zen wisdom
(Miracles In Motion) April 15, 2024:  On this journey steeped in wisdom, motivation, and Zen history, we examine a spiritual path of personal growth. Through the fusion of personal and spiritual growth, we discover the transformative power of human connections on the path to individual development and enlightenment.

Let's dive into seven inspirational stories enriched by the profound wisdom of Zen and Buddhist traditions, exploring how these ancient Eastern philosophies can inspire our inner growth.

It is an exploration of Zen advice and little gems of wisdom to nourish a winning mind, promoting emotional balance and mental well-being. Let's analyze the spiritual motivation behind each significant encounter, offering enlightening insight for personal spiritual growth on our search for wisdom.

If we venture into stories of spiritual awakening to reveal how each chapter of our lives contributes to our journey as a whole, we may find a book that was worth living.

On a journey of self-discovery and emotional intelligence, we embrace the beauty of human connections as well as the ugliness to gain depth of growth. The goal is to discover what every encounter, every experience, has to offer as a precious piece of the puzzle that is our life.

In this way we illuminate our own path with spiritual awareness, which can motivate our progress.

Please feel free to share experiences and thoughts in the comments. #zenstory #zenwisdom, dare to do motivation channel, mindfulness, motivational video

Friday, November 1, 2024

Night in the cemetery: Day of the Dead

Día de Los Muertos Ofrenda Exhibition | Los Angeles Philharmonic with Gustavo Dudamel

What is the Day of the Dead? A night in the cemetery in Oaxaca
 
Isn't that right, Madam Presidente Sheinbaum?
(Andy Spits) The Day of the Dead in Oaxaca City, Mexico. We had the chance to spend the night in a cemetery in Oaxaca (\wah-ha-kah\) during El Dia de Los Muertos with local people. This night was magical. Why? The conception of death for Indigenous Mexican people is very different from our Eurocentric conception, and we really like this much more traditional point of view.

He lives in Orange County.
Of course, love. Of course, honor. Of course, remember. The dead are grateful. The dead may need our help (so we can transfer merit to aid them out of a bad way they may have fallen into.

After all, what is "family"? It extends seven generations out, and among all those people it is said that it is impossible that not one of them has fallen into a bad way (niraya), an unfortunate destination. (Is it a coincidence that the Indigenous people, the Native Americans, also concerns themselves with seven generations?) So what we offer, if it is not needed by that particular person for whom we make the offering or ofrenda at the altar, other extended family members in need may partake of it and be given ("transferred") good karma, which is needed everywhere at all times.

Buddhism's "Transfer of Merit"
nails it down in Theravada texts and commentaries explained below*

Mexican Buddhists
Somos Aztecas y Maya, y si no se van las almas (los muertos) al cenote (la tierra), donde van?

Nuestra Senora Guanyin of Guadalupe
The only other people who spend a night in the cemetery for any good reason are Buddhist monastics training to contemplate and be mindful of death (maranasati).

Why would anyone contemplate it? Just as traditional filial piety says to hold on to loved ones, to cling to them, to never forget, Buddhist wisdom says to let go, detach, set them free. In this way they can come back, are not stuck, and go on living.

The ruling sky-gods are hard to please.
They did not "die" in the sense of ending, stopping, or finishing. The Wheel of Life and Death keeps turning, does not stop turning, fits the other side of the coin to the process. How can there be an inside without an outside? How can we really ever "live" if all we do is fear that it will end and all will be lost? Sure, these trivial things and possessions will be pulled from us, but not all will be lost. Our character, the habits we built up, and our store of deeds (karma) is carried from here to the beyond.
*Transfer of merit
Ven. Nyanatiloka, Buddhist Dictionary: Manual of Doctrine, Terms edited by Wisdom Quarterly


What do hungry ghosts need and want?
Patti-dāna
 is literally "giving of the acquired," that is, "transferring merit." Though very seldom mentioned in the older texts (e.g., A.VII.50), it is a widespread custom in all Buddhist countries.

The merit of morality (sila), especially that which is acquired by giving alms to monastics and the needy, can be transferred to others. This is so that one's own good deeds may become to others, especially to departed relatives and friends reborn in the ghost realm, an inducement to a happy and morally wholesome state of mind. (That is the secret of how it works).

Naked hungry ghosts in rags, hounded by dogs
Transferring merit is advocated (without mentioning the term patti-dāna) in the Tirokudda Sutta (Khp. and Petavatthu) and its Commentary (Khp. Tr.).

It is one of the ten "bases of meritorious action" (puñña-kiriya-vatthu, where it is called pattānuppadāna, App.).
COMMENTARY


Let's party till we're dead then go to the cemetery
The Day of the Dead is said to be on Nov. 2, but it is preceded by a visit and/or an overnight stay in the cemetery on Nov. 1.

Halloween is celebrated on Oct. 31 because it is based on All Hallows' Eve (the Catholic Church version attempting to usurp the heathens), making All Hallows' Day Nov. 1, the exact date of the events of the commencing of the original Day of the Dead.

Nov. 2 is the wrapping up of the previous night's celebration. Therefore, this "day" is carried out over two days.

We're here to civilize you. - With that Book?
Sadly, now in the USA, we have gotten it further twisted: We have become The Dead. Why? We dress up, haunt others, trick or treat, and cram ourselves full of sugar-laden candy, leaving Nov. 1 and 2 to be days of sickness with stomachaches and sensitive teeth, making ourselves ripe for possession, our immunity compromised by the shock of glucose spikes, in need of purging, walking around like traumatized zombies.

It's odd how the ancients knew this was a special time for peering between realms. Irish Scottish Celtic Samhain (Sauin), European paganism, Wicca remembered that before they were all but exterminated by Judeo-Christianity's Old Testament God of Genocide.

Thursday, October 24, 2024

If only dating could be easy (video)


Why does dating in America have to be hard? Why can't it be easy? If only there were a way to be natural, like Zen, going with the flow (Tao), and just talking based on chemistry and attraction rather than secret agendas and mind games. Ah, but 'tis not so. It's a minefield, and all we can do is learn to be authentic with our virtue intact and in integrity.... Hey, what's your name, Baby? Like the shirt. Come here often? Was it something I said?

  • Stevie Emerson; PUA YouTube; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly

Friday, October 18, 2024

'Who are you?' (animated film)


Who are you?
(Our Animated Box) This is the story of a writer who, after having great success with his first book, has a disastrous creative block -- so much so that not even the pencils want to write for him. In her anguish for him, a delivery girl arrives at his door and delivers a mysterious box. After inviting her in for coffee, they share a pleasant conversation about fame and success. What's in the box? No one knows what inspiration can be wrapped up in. Who are you? is a short film from the creators of The GiftMore

💘 Maybe love will solve all my problems

Lose concentration while working/studying? Work with the pomodoro technique 🍅: WORK WITH ME ✏️ | Pomodoro 25/5 Timer...
  • Our Animated Box, YouTube, June 2, 2020; Ashley Wells, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Primordial love/sex drive (Helen Fisher)


There are many kinds of attachment (upadana). The pursuit and clinging to sensual pleasures is very strong (although the strongest is probably attachment to views). It can be as strong as thirst (tanha). It serves a function, not for us who suffer it so much as the species or genes that perpetuate themselves into the future. (See The Selfish Gene on the scientific view of the impersonal nature of biology).

Love (the affection for clinging) is a drive, sex (the affection for pleasure) is a drive, and they are very powerful. What hope is there to overcome or undo them should they start to spread all out of control like fire and ruin our lives, bringing waves of torment and suffering? Things are all well and good when they are working out, but when they are not?

When things sour, then what? These are not conscious processes we have very much insight on. We live on autopilot, and they "happen" to us. Maybe that's okay for most people. But for those who would be free and make an end of all suffering in this very life?

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

I think I'm falling in love, not my partner

Cupid (Kamadeva, Mara Devaputra, Eros) seems so cute and innocent.

I know it's love cause she starts looking like this.
These things indicate a love that is slowly dying. It’s often easy to tell when a relationship is totally falling apart because there will be obvious signs, but it’s less apparent if someone is slowly falling out of love with his or her partner.

Keep an eye out for these 12 behaviors, as they may indicate that your lover’s interest is cooling when you wish that it would burn forever with more and more intensity, like an endless honeymoon. But it burns, dwindles, until is burns out.
I know I'm in love because it's blissful (piti) like serene meditating only not as good.
.
This is how I pictured us. Details schmeetails!
Am I falling in love, how can I know? Maybe this flower can tell me with its petals. They love me, they love me not, they love me, they love me not... Omens. Signs. Who can predict the future? But what if my partner is slowly falling out of love as the old lovespell is coming undone?

1. They’ll have less interest in intimacy and physical affection. That's one sign.

We were like cats in a cradle reaching Purvana.
One surefire way to determine whether someone is quietly falling out of love (even if you're falling more and more in love) is to pay attention to physical intimacy, or rather the lack of it.

Couples tend to grow less passionate after the "honeymoon period" has worn off. That's usual. But if intimacy has disappeared entirely, including hugging or handholding, that’s a big warning sign.
2. They mention feelings of being “trapped.” It's time for A Conscious Rethink. Feeling trapped rarely happens in the context of discussing a relationship, but a partner may drop hints about feeling trapped or caged in various aspects of life.

This may be accompanied by restlessness and frustration, leading to behaviors such as going for long drives or walks “just to get out.” 

3. There’s less communication than there used to be. When and if this person does communicate with a partner, rather than avoiding conversation, it seems distant and unresponsive than before.

Maybe it's just to get an answer instead of having a conversation, or it's a grunt, a lackluster response, rather than actually having a discussion about a topic. More: If someone is quietly falling out of love, they'll display these 12 behaviors
SUTRA: Falling Apart
Numerical Discourses, 6. Brahmins, Ven. Sujato (trans.); Dhr. Seven (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly
.
Mara appears like an angel of light or monster
(AN 3.56) A rich Brahmin approached the Buddha. Sitting respectfully to one side, he said: “Master Gotama, I have heard that Brahmins of the past who were senior teachers-of-teachers, said:

“‘In the olden days this world was so full of people one would think they were squashed together. Villages, towns, and capital cities were no more than a chicken’s flight apart.’ What is the cause, sir, what is the reason why these days human numbers have dwindled, a decline in population is evident, and whole villages, towns, cities, and countries have disappeared?”

“Brahmin, nowadays humans love only illicit desires. They are overcome with immoral greed and are mired in wrong customs. Taking up knives, they murder each other, and many people perish. This is the cause, this is the reason why nowadays human numbers have dwindled.

“Furthermore, because nowadays humans love only illicit desires…the heavens [deva worlds on superior planes of existence] do not provide enough rain, so there’s famine, bad harvests, with blighted crops that shrivel into dry straw. And many people perish. This is the cause, this is the reason why nowadays human numbers have dwindled.

“Furthermore, because nowadays humans love only illicit desires…native spirits let vicious monsters [cryptids] loose. And many people perish. This is the cause, this is the reason why nowadays human numbers have dwindled.”

“Excellent, Master Gotama, excellent! …From this day forward, may Master Gotama remember me as a lay follower who has gone [to the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha] for refuge for life.” More: suttacentral.net

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Nat'l Mean Girls' Day (Mallika Sutra)


‘It’s October 3:’ Mean Girls' Day is so fetch [and flique and brat and Belgium]
(TODAY) Oct. 3, 2024: Every year on Oct. 3rd, fans of the popular teen [sex and relationship crazed] movie Mean Girls celebrate the Hollywood franchise with iconic quotes, Lindsay Lohan nostalgia, and pink outfits.

TODAY: @today. ABOUT: TODAY brings the latest headlines and expert tips on money, health, and parenting, waking up every morning to give everything every family member needs to start the day. If it matters to them, it matters to TODAY, who are in the people business, making a business out of people. Subscribe to channel for exclusive TODAY archival footage and original web series. Connect with TODAY online so we can track and monetize you. Visit TODAY's website today.com to get started. #meangirls #movie #popstart

The music industry tried to ram star Lindsay Lohan down US throats
as popstar-movie star, but she lip-synced her national TV debut.

Were there "mean girls" in the Buddha's time? Oh, yes
What must the Kosalan garden have been like?
Ladies, ladies, please! Settle down and pay attention. Is girl meanness (and their crimes against humanity) new, or was it around in ancient proto-India during the time of the Buddha?

It seems like the meanness and pettiness of the females back then was worse, a matter of life and death, making crimes against Lohan pale in comparison. Not in all cases, but there was some palace drama surrounding the beautiful, kind, and enlightened Queen Mallikā, the chief partner King Pasenadi of Kosala, a great supporter of the Buddha.

Buddhist Teen Queen and the Drama

One day, when she was 16, the daughter of the head garland maker of Kosala, a beautiful girl named Mallika was on her way to a pleasure garden with her teen companions. She and her girlfriends were gorgeous and good.

Mallika was carrying three portions of congee in a basket for their picnic. Unexpectedly meeting the Buddha, she spontaneously offered him their food and bowed full of joy. The Buddha smiled on seeing her rapt in joy.

The Buddha's attendant monk Ananda asked about his smile. The Buddha explained that that girl would become the queen of the Kingdom of Kosala that day.

To explain Mallika's good fortune, the Buddha revealed the Kummāsapinda birth-story (Jātaka iii.405; SA.i.110ff).

It happened that on that very day King Pasenadi suffered a military defeat at the hands of neighboring King Ajātasattu of Magadha (the royal son who had committed patricide to usurp the throne by imprisoning and starving his enlightened Buddhist father, the stream-enterer Buddhist King Bimbisara).

Distraught and dejected, King Pasenadi, as he entered the flowery garden, was attracted by Mallika's melodious voice. Seeing the king coming and noticing his weariness, she seized his horse's bridle.

The king, learning that she was unmarried, dismounted. Having rested his head awhile on her lap, he entered Kosala with her and took her to her house then returned to his palace to make preparations. That evening, he sent a chariot to pick her up.

With great pomp and circumstance, he had her chauffeured from her house to his palace. He set her on a heap of jewels and anointed her his chief queen.

From that day forward she was the king's beloved and devoted chief wife and a devoted follower of the Buddha (DhA.iii.121f).

The king found Mallika wise beyond her years, sagacious, and practical. Delighting in her intelligence, he consulted her and accepted her advice when in difficulty.

For example, in the Asadisa-dāna Jātaka, he wished to excel his subjects; again when he was troubled by bad omens in 16 dreams, as narrated in the Mahāsupīna Jātaka (DhA.ii.8ff.), Mallikā called the king a simpleton for his blind faith in unreliable Brahmin priests.

She took him to see the Bodhisattva (the Buddha-to-be) who was a recluse yogi at that time, and while the king sat trembling, she asked his questions for him and had them explained until all his worries subsided.


The birth-story (jātaka) states how Mallikā saved many innocent lives from being sacrificed, and the Buddha declared that in a past life, too, when her name was Dinnā, she had saved the lives of a large number of people by her wisdom (DhA.ii.15f).

Both Mallikā and King Pasenadi's other queen, Queen Vāsabhakhattiyā, desired to learn the Dhamma (the Buddha's Teaching). At their request, conveyed through King Pasenadi, the Buddha asked Ananda to visit the palace regularly and teach them the Doctrine.

Ananda found in Queen Mallikā an apt and ready pupil, conscientious in her work; however, Vāsabhakhattiyā was not so devoted to her duties (DhA.i.382f).

For an incident connected with Ananda's visit to the palace, see Vin.iv.158f.

Teen Queen Mallika's knowledge of the Dhamma made her wiser than King Pasenadi would have desired. Once, in a moment of great affection, asked if anyone were dearer to her than herself.

"No, Sire," was the answer. The king was greatly disappointed, for he sought the Buddha, who explained to him that Queen Mallikā, in answer that way, had uttered a great truth (S.i.75; Ud.v.1). It is a truism that we all regard ourselves as most dear.

Queen Mallikā, though an exemplary wife, was not without lapses. Reference is made to the quarrels she had with her husband. Once, on the question of conjugal privileges, as a result of which they both sulked and had to be reconciled by the Buddha (J.iv.437; also J.iii.20).

In these quarrels the king was probably more to blame than Mallikā, for it is said that until reconciled by the Buddha, the king ignored her very existence, saying that becoming rich had turned her head.

The Dhammapada Commentary (DhA.iii.119ff) relates a ridiculous [sexual] story about her misbehavior with a dog in the bath house. King Pasenadi witnessed this shocking scene, but she was able to convince him that it was the fault of the lighting of the bath house and not to believe his lying eyes.
Nevertheless, it is said that at the moment of her death she recollected this misdeed and, as a result, was reborn in Avīci (the "Waveless"), the very worst tormenting hell for a week.

The king was overcome by grief at Queen Mallika's death. After the funeral rites, he went to the Buddha to ask where she had been reborn.

The Buddha, not wishing to upset him if he were to know, caused the king to forget his question every time he visited for an entire week, until Mallikā's suffering in Avīci was over; then then the Buddha allowed the question to be asked. At this time, the Buddha was able to assure King Pasenadi that she had now been reborn in Tusita (a lofty heavenly world), which consoled him greatly in his grief.

It is said (A.iii.57) that King Pasenadi was on a visit to the Buddha when a man came with the whispered message that his chief queen was dead. It came as a terrible shock, and "his shoulders drooped, his mouth fell, and he sat brooding, unable to speak."

Queen Mallikā had a daughter by King Pasenadi; no mention is made of a son. This princess was probably Vajīrī, who is spoken of as the king's only daughter (M.ii.110). He is said to have been disappointed on hearing that his child was a girl. But the Buddha assured him that females were sometimes wiser than males and had many other excellent qualities (S.i.86f).

Mallikā is mentioned (Mil. 115, 291) as one of seven persons whose acts of devotion bore fruit in this life and whose fame reached even to the celestial devas. Only one instance is on record of Queen Mallikā asking a question of the Buddha.

She wished to know why some females are beautiful, others plain, some rich, and others poor. The Buddha explained to her the reasons for these discrepancies, which is karma. (See the Mallikā Sutta 1).

The Bodhisattva developed over many lives.
In the Piyajātika Sutta (M.ii.106ff.), King Pasenadi is said to have taunted her because "her recluse Gotama" (the Buddha Gautama) had said that dear ones bring sorrow and tribulation.

"If the Bhagwan says so, it must be so," she replied but secretly sends Nālijangha to find out from the Buddha himself if he had said so and why. Having learned the facts, she faced King Pasenadi again and convinced him too that the Buddha was right. Source (edited by Wisdom Quarterly): Mallikā 1 (palikanon.com)