http://ift.tt/1X7jizO
sheepfilms

roma★

izzy's playlists!

Love Begins

No title available
Keni
will byers stan first human second

JVL
we're not kids anymore.

tannertan36
noise dept.
One Nice Bug Per Day
Claire Keane
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kaledo Art
d e v o n
Cosimo Galluzzi
Game of Thrones Daily

oozey mess

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Australia
seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Brazil
seen from Switzerland

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
@creativepositivethinking
http://ift.tt/1X7jizO
There is no failure. Only feedback.
Robert Allen (via purplebuddhaproject)
‘I love you’ means that I accept you for the person that you are, and that I do not wish to change you into someone else. It means that I will love you and stand by you even through the worst of times. It means loving you even when you’re in a bad mood, or too tired to do the things I want to do. It means loving you when you’re down, not just when you’re fun to be with. ‘I love you’ means that I know your deepest secrets and do not judge you for them, asking in return that you do not judge me for mine. It means that I care enough to fight for what we have and that I love you enough not to let go. It means thinking of you, dreaming of you, wanting and needing you constantly, and hoping you feel the same way for me.
Foer (v (via sexual-passion-content)
http://ift.tt/1ntix8d
http://ift.tt/1YOdgU5
Sattvic knowledge sees the one indestructible Being in all beings, the unity underlying the multiplicity of creation. Rajasic knowledge sees all things and creatures as separate and distinct. Tamasic knowledge, lacking any sense of perspective, sees one small part and mistakes it for the whole.
Bhagavad Gita 18:20-22 (via brahmaanda)
Happy Feast of Life and Greater Feast to St. Siddhartha
From Sabazius’ Invisible Basilica:
Siddhârtha
(563-483 b.c.e.)
by T. Apiryon
Copyright © 1995 Ordo Templi Orientis. All rights reserved.
Indian prince and mystic. Also known as Sâkyamuni and Gautama, the Buddha. The founder of the religion of Buddhism. Crowley considered him to be a Magus of A:. A:., whose Word was ANATTA, literally “No Soul,” or “No Ego,” with “Soul” or “Ego” referring to a changeless substance. See Chapter 70 of Liber Aleph, Part III of The Heart of the Master, and Chapter 7 of The Book of Lies.
Born a wealthy Hindu prince in the north-east of India, Siddhârtha was brought up in the ease of the court and shielded from the sufferings of the world. One day, jaded by court life, he decided to secretly visit the local town. Upon leaving the shelter of home, his sudden exposure to old age, poverty, disease and death was a complete shock to him, and he was deeply disturbed.
Upon returning to the palace, he began to reassess all his beliefs and values, including the Hinduism of his childhood. He continued to recall one particular incident from his journey to the town: he had encountered a begging ascetic, who informed him that he had renounced the world to pass beyond joy and suffering, and had thereby obtained peace. Siddhârtha resolved to become an ascetic himself.
He stole away from his father’s palace, leaving his young wife Yasôdhara and his infant son Rahula behind, and made his way to a hermitage where he was received by the Brâhmanas as a disciple. He changed his name to Gautama, and spent years engaged in austere ascetic practices. But he remained troubled. He moved from hermitage to hermitage, hoping to find peace and understanding, but finding only more suffering. Finally, half dead, he sat down beneath a Bo (Pipal) tree and swore to himself that he would not arise until he had attained the knowledge he desired.
Though tempted all day by the demon Mâra and his voluptuous daughters, he remained unmoved in the fixity of his contemplation on human suffering. As night fell, enlightenment came to him; and by daybreak the next day, he had obtained perfect knowledge of his own past lives, the condition of all living beings, the nature of suffering and the way to destroy it. He remained beneath the Bodhi Tree for seven more days, then arose and began to preach a new religion.
Siddhârtha never set his teachings down in writing, and Buddhism has no single holy book. Instead, its basic tenets are set forth in a large canon of essays, dialogues, poems and tractates, most of which were written 600-900 years after Siddhârtha’s death. Two of these, The Dhammapada, a collection of the sayings of the Buddha, and The Questions of King Milinda, a primer of Buddhist doctrine in dialogue form, are included in the Liber E and A:. A:. Section 1 reading lists. In 1879, Sir Edwin Arnold composed a book-length poem on the life and teachings of Siddhârtha called The Light of Asia, which is included in Section 2 of the A:. A:. reading list.
The fundamental doctrine of primitive Buddhism is that all suffering is caused by the desire for pleasure. To escape suffering, one must extinguish all desire. The method of annihilating desire is to avoid the extremes of pleasure-seeking and self-maceration, and to living a simple life of lucidity, moderation and charity.
Anatta, the Word of the Magus Siddhârtha, is one of the “Three Characteristics” of Buddhist doctrine: 1. Anikka: “Impermanence” 2. Dukkha: “Sorrow” 3. Anatta: “No Ego”
Siddhârtha’s teachings are rooted in the doctrine that all experience is illusory, impure, changeable and transitory; hence futile and meaningless. The “Four Noble Truths” of Buddhism are: 1. “Existence is Sorrow.” All is transitory. 2. “Sorrow’s Cause.” The cause of sorrow is desire. 3. “Sorrow’s End.” The end of desire is the end of sorrow. 4. “The Noble Eightfold Path.” The way to Nirvâna, which is the end of desire and sorrow.
The Eightfold Path consists of the following steps: 1.Right Views 2.Right Aspiration 3.Right Speech 4.Right Conduct 5.Right Living 6.Right Effort, or Right Energy 7.Right Remembrance 8.Right Concentration
To become a Buddhist, one agrees to abide by the Five Precepts, which indicate one’s aspiration to extinguish desire: 1. Not to take life. 2. Not to take what is not given. 3. Not to indulge in sexual misconduct. 4. Not to lie. 5. Not to indulge in intoxicants which cloud the mind.
One’s resolve to keep one’s vows is fortified by the Three Refuges: 1. The Buddha himself: as an example of achievement. 2. The Dharma: the truth of the Teaching. 3. The Sangha: the Buddhist community – the efforts of others.
Primitive Buddhist doctrine rejects the religious ideas of the existence of God, the immortality of the soul, and the efficacy of ritual; but accepts and incorporates the religious ideas of reincarnation and karma. Buddhism has undergone considerable development and elaboration over its 2400 year history, including the introduction (as in Taoism) of many miraculous legends, rituals, and systems of gods, goddesses, angels and demons. It has also split into many sects, which can be roughly classified under three major schools:
Theravâda (also called Hînayâna) Buddhism: This represents the original Monastic Buddhism, and is prevalent in Sri Lanka, Burma, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia.
Mahâyâna Buddhism: This represents “Evangelical” Buddhism, and includes Zen and the other forms of Chinese, Japanese and Korean Buddhist systems.
Vajrayâna Buddhism: This represents “Magical” Buddhism, and is exclusive to the Tibetan Buddhist systems, now practiced primarily in Bhutan and Northern India.
Buddhism, along with its twin sister Jainism, exerted considerable influence on later Hinduism, and may have influenced the teachings of Apollonius of Tyana and the Gnostics. It certainly influenced the philosophy of Pessimism of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860 e.v.) which in turn influenced the thought of Friedrich Nietzsche and Richard Wagner.
References:
Arnold, Sir Edwin; The Light of Asia [1879], Little, Brown & Co., Boston 1899 Babbitt, Irving (Transl.); The Dhammapada [1936], New Directions, New York 1965 Bucke, Richard Maurice; Cosmic Consciousness [1901], E.P. Dutton & Co., NY 1923 Conze, Edward (Ed.); Buddhist Scriptures, Penguin, London 1959 Crowley, Aleister; The Book of Lies [1913], Samuel Weiser, NY 1978 Crowley, Aleister; The Heart of the Master [Ordo Templi Orientis, 1938], New Falcon Publications, Scottsdale, Arizona 1992 Crowley, Aleister; Liber Aleph vel CXI, The Book of Wisdom or Folly [Thelema Publishing, 1962], Samuel Weiser, York Beach, Maine 1991 Crowley, Aleister; “Science and Buddhism” in The Works of Aleiser Crowley, Vol. II, Society for the Propagation of Religious Truth, Foyers 1906, reprinted by the Yogi Publication Society, Des Plaines, Illinois Masson-Oursel, P. and Louise Morin; “Indian Mythology” in The New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology, Hamlyn, NY 1959/1968 5/9/95 Originally published in Red Flame No. 2 – Mystery of Mystery: A Primer of Thelemic Ecclesiastical Gnosticism by Tau Apiryon and Helena; Berkeley, CA 1995 e.v.
Tips for Overcoming Shyness
1. Notice your triggers – the people and situations that make you want to hide. 2. Identify the different thoughts that you are thinking at these times, and the negative things you are saying to yourself. 3. Identify your special and your unique qualities – all your good points and your strengths, the different things that make you you. 4. Try to grasp that other people aren’t thinking about you (as they are thinking of themselves, and how they come across, instead.) 5. Realise that you are usually so much harder on yourself – whereas others like and love you as you are – for being you. 6. Try to see that just conforming is a boring way to live. It’s so much better to be natural, and to be your real, true self. 7. Resist the urge to escape quickly when you feel uncomfortable. Just hang in there and you’ll find that things will slowly start to change. 8. Notice all the times you’re brave and move outside your comfort zone … and find that things don’t fall apart - but go much better than you’d thought.
Don’t let anyone ever make you feel like you don’t deserve what you want. Go for it.
Heath Ledger in 10 Things I Hate About You (via flaizen)
Have a mind that is open to everything, and attached to nothing.
Tilopa (via purplebuddhaproject)
Anything that you resent and strongly react to in another is also in you.
Eckhart Tolle (via purplebuddhaproject)
The Sage Charaka
Charaka is known to be a leading contributor to Ayurveda, the Science of Life and the Sister science to Yoga. Many people believe that Charaka Samhita was actually written by the sage Patanjali, author of the Yoga Sutras and well known for his great contributions to the fields of Grammar, Medicine and Philosophy.
Learn more about the upcoming Charaka Yoga 200hr Teacher Training this September 2015 in the beautiful Himalayas of Northern India with yogicasino and Liza Mahar here .