.

This so true Marko,

In the past so much of my education suggest that there is stuff I can
own, lead, control, adopt, appose, compete with, love or hate.   So-
called civilised society presents the would in such a preformed
package.  It’s bloody painful when we live these delusional cycles of
expectation and disappointment.   But looking back,  it’s strange how
it all becomes so essential.    How pain and suffering are the only
way we mere-mortals learn.   If it was not for all my years of
stupidity, I might not have looked for a better way of being me.
This I think is the purpose of pain and suffering.   When the human
heart says, enough is enough.   The time has come to search for a
better way.   Finally we all arrive at roughly the same conclusion.
Today is the only true reality and being good is much for fun than
being bad.

King Solomon’s treasure is that wealth which occurs when each day one
lives this personel truth.   (Solomon is an old word for peace)   King
Solomon was famous for his wisdom.   Full responsibilty of the self
using peaceful wisdom.

Enlightenment, awakening, self realisation,  Kingdom of heaven.  All
these wonderful historic labels where only to suggest to those
searching,  that such emancipation from pain and suffering is humanly
possible.

Happiness needs unhappiness,  hence their non-duality.  Advaita.

Welcome to the real world …………………


.

On Aug 19, 9:05 am, [email protected] wrote:
> I think one has to be deluded a 'million' times by entertaining thoughts in 
> order to suddenly understand this always leads to delusion. I had to try all 
> the shit before I convinced my mind that every field of thought leads to 
> delusion. Nobody was able to convince me until I tried all the shit myself. 
> After that once I've really tried the I am sense watching and I saw that is 
> the only path which produces 'results', it was all finished.
> What I want to emphasise here is the importance of learning by one's own 
> experience, the importance of suffering as the thing which tells you where 
> not to go, the importance of getting burnt after touching fire, a million 
> times, until you realize you won't touch it again.
> The imprtance of other people advice (even guru's advice) is limited in 
> comparison to one's own try-fail-try-  succeed exercise.
> Sent via BlackBerry from Vodafone

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