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[Parlortricks] Good habits?

Peter Fraterdeus
Tue, 06 May 2008 16:33:01 -0700

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/04/business/04unbox.html

Note this passage from the above cited article, which is related to a point 
I've been making for quite a while... 
"""
Researchers who asked folks to do something different every day - listen to a 
new radio station, for instance - found that they lost and kept off weight. No 
one is sure why, but scientists speculate that getting out of routines makes us 
more aware in general."
"""

Paying attention keeps the perceptive brain awake. It also slows down the 
passage of time, producing some traction on the slippery slope of mortality. To 
keep the decades from flying by, wake up regularly under a different sky, in a 
different climate, hearing a different language. If you can't travel the world, 
at least take a different route to the shower every morning. Stop; the new day 
is a DIFFERENT DAY than all the others you have lived; proceed to shower.

This awareness helps to mitigate the redundancy through which many repetitions 
become a single experience. How many times have I stumbled from my bed to the 
shower? Thousands, but it's as if it is a single experience, and all collapse 
into a single moment, a flash of time. Decades of mornings go by, with only the 
differences registering as meaningful. That which changes from day to day 
registers in life's journal. The rest is a chain of dittos. This is one reason 
I refuse to "watch the news" at 6 pm every day (there are plenty of others...)

Conscious Deliberate Awareness. Awareness is the body's sensual perception. 
Deliberation, the rational mind, and Consciousness the core perceiver. To be 
fully functional in all three is the key to a calm, centered life.

The NYT article also talks about "... a Japanese technique called kaizen, which 
calls for tiny, continuous improvements". 

Indeed. To be like an interplanetary spaceship, making, tiny, instantaneous 
course corrections based on new information which we receive as we proceed. 
Realizations that as one proceeds, our destination may well change along with 
the landscape. This is the big problem with religion, and other such spiritual 
"practices". They are systemically incapable of subtle self-correction. The 
Path has never been trodden. The Destination is forever new. This is the 
ancient core! What more is worth seeking? 

P

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Also, see http://fraterdeus.com/cda : the Conscious Deliberate Awareness blog



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  • [Parlortricks] Good habits? Peter Fraterdeus