[FairfieldLife] Re: Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

2006-08-26 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Rick Archer [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
quoted Mark Morford, who said many wise things, the wisest
being:

 Or you can easily argue that we are discovering shocking 
 new wonders every day but we have merely lost the ability 
 to be surprised, that given our media and our movies and 
 our terrific level of sad jaded ennui, nothing short of 
 giant amorphous aliens landing here in vagina-shaped 
 spacecraft and declaring the disastrous experiment over 
 and ushering everyone back into the jar would shake us 
 from our intellectual and spiritual lethargy.
 . . .
 
 Maybe the dolphins already know. But we just haven't 
 learned to listen.

Mark, in his usual funny way, nails the same issue
I noticed when catching up with a few weeks of
FFL. One of the phrases that struck me while doing
this was, Fairfield Life seems to be the kind of
place where people come to talk about the spiritual
experiences of others when they're not having any 
of their own. 

So many people are searching for something *flashy*,
something extraordinary that will shake them out
of the boredom of their lives. Crop circles, true
levitation, golden glowing visions of Brahman 
dancing a jig, saviors showing up and speaking
all the languages of Earth at once as they tell
us what to do and how to do it. 

In other words, childish fantasies along the lines
of waiting with 'bated breath for the next Star Wars
movies so that the special effects can take us out
of ourselves for a couple of hours, and we don't
have to remember that most of the other hours have
been pretty boring, because *we* have grown boring,
because *we* have grown bored.

I'd suspect that the great revelation Mark is talk-
ing about will be far more individual, and far more
Zen. It'll consist of people finally noticing the
wonder of breathing in and breathing out, and of
the sound of the wind in the trees, and the way light
dances on the surface of water as they walk along a
river. It'll involve an appreciation of the sound of
children's laughter and our own laughter, not some
big booming Maitreya-voice from the sky telling us
more stuff to convince us that we know things.

Face it -- the more you think you know, the less
you actually do. And the more convinced you are that
you've got a handle on Truth, the more bored you
become *because* you think you've got things all
scoped out. Zen -- an openness to the wonder of the
everyday -- seems to me to be the way to go, clinging 
to nothing, open to everything as a source of wonder, 
not just the special effects of life. 







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[FairfieldLife] Re: Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

2006-08-26 Thread nablus108
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Rick Archer groups@ 
 quoted Mark Morford, who said many wise things, the wisest
 being:
 
  Or you can easily argue that we are discovering shocking 
  new wonders every day but we have merely lost the ability 
  to be surprised, that given our media and our movies and 
  our terrific level of sad jaded ennui, nothing short of 
  giant amorphous aliens landing here in vagina-shaped 
  spacecraft and declaring the disastrous experiment over 
  and ushering everyone back into the jar would shake us 
  from our intellectual and spiritual lethargy.
  . . .
  
  Maybe the dolphins already know. But we just haven't 
  learned to listen.
 
 Mark, in his usual funny way, nails the same issue
 I noticed when catching up with a few weeks of
 FFL. One of the phrases that struck me while doing
 this was, Fairfield Life seems to be the kind of
 place where people come to talk about the spiritual
 experiences of others when they're not having any 
 of their own. 
 
 So many people are searching for something *flashy*,
 something extraordinary that will shake them out
 of the boredom of their lives. Crop circles, true
 levitation, golden glowing visions of Brahman 
 dancing a jig, saviors showing up and speaking
 all the languages of Earth at once as they tell
 us what to do and how to do it. 
 
 In other words, childish fantasies along the lines
 of waiting with 'bated breath for the next Star Wars
 movies so that the special effects can take us out
 of ourselves for a couple of hours, and we don't
 have to remember that most of the other hours have
 been pretty boring, because *we* have grown boring,
 because *we* have grown bored.
 
 I'd suspect that the great revelation Mark is talk-
 ing about will be far more individual, and far more
 Zen. It'll consist of people finally noticing the
 wonder of breathing in and breathing out, and of
 the sound of the wind in the trees, and the way light
 dances on the surface of water as they walk along a
 river. It'll involve an appreciation of the sound of
 children's laughter and our own laughter, not some
 big booming Maitreya-voice from the sky telling us
 more stuff to convince us that we know things.
 
 You are not very well informed. My suggestion is that you brush up 
your knowledge before you write.

http://www.shareintl.org





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[FairfieldLife] Re: Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

2006-08-26 Thread authfriend
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
 Mark, in his usual funny way, nails the same issue
 I noticed when catching up with a few weeks of
 FFL. One of the phrases that struck me while doing
 this was, Fairfield Life seems to be the kind of
 place where people come to talk about the spiritual
 experiences of others when they're not having any 
 of their own.

Strange, as I recall that was someone suggesting
what Barry's comment would be in some discussion
that took place while he was away (it's not an
exact quote, it seems; the Search feature won't
find it).

 So many people are searching for something *flashy*,
 something extraordinary that will shake them out
 of the boredom of their lives. Crop circles, true
 levitation, golden glowing visions of Brahman 
 dancing a jig, saviors showing up and speaking
 all the languages of Earth at once as they tell
 us what to do and how to do it. 
 
 In other words, childish fantasies along the lines
 of waiting with 'bated breath for the next Star Wars
 movies so that the special effects can take us out
 of ourselves for a couple of hours, and we don't
 have to remember that most of the other hours have
 been pretty boring, because *we* have grown boring,
 because *we* have grown bored.

Actually, crop circles don't belong on that list,
since they're extraordinary even if they're made
by human beans in a perfectly mundane fashion--
just like the Picasso film Barry thought was so
terrific, or the similar Japanese clips, or the
puppet shows Lawson posted a video of.

 I'd suspect that the great revelation Mark is talk-
 ing about will be far more individual, and far more
 Zen. It'll consist of people finally noticing the
 wonder of breathing in and breathing out, and of
 the sound of the wind in the trees, and the way light
 dances on the surface of water as they walk along a
 river. It'll involve an appreciation of the sound of
 children's laughter and our own laughter, not some
 big booming Maitreya-voice from the sky telling us
 more stuff to convince us that we know things.
 
 Face it -- the more you think you know, the less
 you actually do. And the more convinced you are that
 you've got a handle on Truth, the more bored you
 become *because* you think you've got things all
 scoped out. Zen -- an openness to the wonder of the
 everyday -- seems to me to be the way to go, clinging 
 to nothing, open to everything as a source of wonder, 
 not just the special effects of life.

You mean, like the levitation you claim to have
witnessed that you said was such a valuable
experience?

...It *definitely* had its intended effect of
blowing your mind and forcing you to drop all the
conditioning you'd grown up with about what is
and is not possible.

Or have you changed your mind and no longer think
it was of any value compared to the wonder of
breathing in and breathing out?








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