Life is a constant flux and flow between using our mind and letting it go; achieving Satori and then resting in Zazen. It is a balance; a union; an expression of Harmony played out and experienced by us, the end user; the Player One; the pilot in the passenger seat to our lives.
Read MoreIn truth, we are all already Enlightened. We all have perspectives relative to that which we once knew. The question is: how much perspective do you wish to gain?
Read MoreWithout exploring both knowledge and experience in life, we become extremely limited in our full understanding of the events that have just transpired. Without both, we cannot achieve real truth—or become wise to the situation at hand.
Read MoreIt’s not what an animal thinks, but what an animal feels in the moment that guides them. They do not strategize or plan out the next few days in order to get their way; they simply act in accordance with the elements that they are given at that singular point in time.
Read MoreTo cut oneself off completely from ‘society’, all ‘attachments’, and what is ‘material’ is not the answer; but to see what beauty each of these things holds is.
Read MoreThought provoking books set to tantalize, enlighten, and engage you on the path towards esoteric illumination. Demystifying-mysticism, only to find out how truly mystical it was all along.
Read MoreAttachment is a good thing. It's also a bad thing. Attachment is what fills our life with colour. It's also what takes that colour away.
Read MoreAttachment is the root of all suffering. The mind is the root of all attachment. If we learn to accept everything as it is, then there would be no suffering, no desire, no expectation towards any perceived outcome. But is this how we really want to live our lives?
Read MoreWhat the english language has failed in is its lack of words to describe our more subtle-realities, both in their feeling states and slight differentiation.
Read MoreIf you begin to take a look at the varying "great" personalities and free-thinkers, you will begin to realize that each of these "great" individuals was simply a merger between them both - the mystic who also found themselves out to be the scholar.
Read MoreThe more you work, the better the opportunities that will eventually present themselves. However, I think the misunderstanding here lies in the two most pivotal words from that sentence, “M-O-R-E" and "W-O-R-K.”
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