Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Jerzy Kasinski - Quote

"What we remember lacks the hard edge of fact. To help us along we create little fictions, highly subtle and individual scenarios which clarify and shape our experience. The remembered event becomes a fiction, a structure made to accomodate certain feelings. This is obvious to me. If it weren't for these structures, art would be too personal for the artist to create, much less for the audence to grasp. Even film, the most literal of all arts, is edited."

Contribution: ZB

"Atlas Shrugged" - Ayn Rand

"Independence is the recognition of the fact that yours is the responsibility of judgement and nothing can help you escape it -- that no substitute can do your thinking, as no pinch-hitter can live your life -- that the vilest form of self abasement and self destruction is the subordination of your mind to the mind of others, the acceptance of an authority over your brain, the acceptance of his assertions as facts, his say as truth, his edicts as middlemen between your consciousness and your existence."


Contribution: ZB

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Instructions For Freedom - No. 9

When the karma of a relationship is done, only love remains. It's safe. Let go.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Eat, Pray, Love - Chapter India aka Congratulations to meet you!


The Yogic path is about disentangling the built-in glitches of the human condition, which I'm (the author) going to over-simply define here as the the heartbreaking inability to sustain contentment. Different schools of thought over the centuries have found different explanations for man's apparently inherently flawed state. Taoists call it imbalance, Buddhism calls it ignorance, Islam blames our misery on rebellion against God, and the Judeo-Christian tradition attributes all our suffering to the original sin. Freudians say that unhappiness is the inevitable result of the clash between our natural drives and civilization's needs. (As my friend [again, the author's] Deborah the psychologist explains it: "Desire is the design flaw.") The Yogis, however, say that human dis-contentment is a simple case of mistaken identity. We're miserable because we think we are mere individuals, alone with our fears and flaws and resentments and mortality. We wrongly believe that our limited little egos constitute or whole entire nature. We have failed to recognize our deep divine character. We don't realize that, somewhere within us all, there does exist a supreme Self who is eternally at peace. The supreme Self is our true identity, universal and divine. Before you realize this truth, say the Yogis, you will always be in despair, a notion nicely expressed in this exasperated line from the Greek stoic philosopher Epictetus: "You bear God within you, poor wretch, and know it not."



Note from blogger: Please do not let this post throw you off. This is not a forum dedicated to spirituality or the discovery of the higher/inner/true self. I just happened to be half-way through the book (whose philosophies, by the way, I find very interesting) when the idea for the blog came to me. Hence, a rather thought-provoking first post!

So feel free to quote from anything you are reading, listening to or watching now.