Make sure personal development time is reserved, just for you. So you can continue doing what you love doing.
courtesy of
I often wonder why walking is so thought provoking. Certainly Mr. Jobs enjoyed his strolls.
Some years ago I began to suspect thought has a physical place in space, perhaps a 幽霊 or something metaphysical we’ve yet to imagine. For example, when we walk into a place and realise we forgot the task that took us to that place. If one returns to where one had the thought, often the thought will recurr. Is that because the thought resides in that space?
The difference between looking up and looking down is perspective.
- courtesy of IT
When I was in grad school, the program director's spouse let me borrow one of xes motorcycles. We went for a ride through EasternCapital and Kanagawa to ScytheGodown。One day we were standing outside their garage on a KingMountan street in BigRicePaddy. We were remarking at how vivid our memories are in Japan. Xe said one of xes acquaintances in Australia said the same.
On my recent return to Japan after more than five years, I was a bit taken aback by how unstunned I was by the memories. Time seemed to have barely transpired. Yes, some memories were less happy than others, but overall, my emotions were much more stable, less melancholy, perhaps due to the 侘び寂び。
There is a network of minds in the aether. That aether exists everywhere, whether in an American desert or a Sapporo brothel. Plugging into that network becomes easier the thicker the aether. Aether density matters also. Thicker aether will provide a variety of hooks and ladders. Denser aether results from low quality minds. Thicker aether results from greater population density and passing of souls into The Great Beyond.
Perhaps my ability to access this is thanks to Japanese. The を indicates the object. The に (knee) indicates the destination. Is 'left' a destination in Japanese and not in American? The corner is an object in Japanese. In American, a corner is a destination.
Mindfulness is more accurately called mindlessness. Being light as a feather is admirable in Eastern cultures. In Western cultures, those are insults. Being airy in Japanese is a good thing. The moral lessons of American is often 180 degrees from Eastern languages.
Dr. Evil meets Jean Luc.