Be true to yourself.
Only.

On Aug 19, 4:14 am, Marcus <[email protected]> wrote:
> .
>
> 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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