Muse in the Morning |
yet meet the next life totally unprepared.
–Drakpa Gyaltsen
Phenomena XXXV: posterity
River of Time
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Jul 03 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Drakpa Gyaltsen
Phenomena XXXV: posterity
River of Time
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Jul 02 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Dhammapada, verse 150
Phenomena XXXIV: dying
Doorway
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Jul 01 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Dhammapada, verse 135
Phenomena XXXIII: aging
Spectacle
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Jun 30 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Bhagavad Gita, Chapter VI, verse 29
Phenomena XXXII: adapting
Mirages
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Jun 29 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–The Dhammapada, verse 23
Phenomena XXXI: musing
Seeds
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Jun 28 2009
BBC America just ran the new installment of Doctor Who. It has surpassed my expectations, let alone hopes. David Tennent is so well suited to the role of The Doctor (and to think that I did not like him very much at first, since Eccleston was so good) that one actually believes that he believes that he is The Doctor.
For those of you not hip to this series, I can not even begin to begin to explain. It started as a children’s television program on BBC in 1963, starring William Hartnell as a very aged Doctor, traveling with his first companion. She was, in the story, his granddaughter, and this has never been resolved in the years of the series.
Jun 27 2009
Amsterdam means a lot of different things to a lot of different people, but to me it is the city of Rembrandt van Rijn. More on that, but first the modern city.
Jun 26 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Tenzin Gyatso (the fourteenth Dalai Lama),
from Religious Values and Human Society
Phenomena XXX: ephemeron
Searching for Fertile Ground
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Jun 25 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–M. K. Gandhi, from his poem, Violence
Phenomena XXIX: helping
Beyond the End
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Jun 24 2009
Monaco
Monaco is a tiny independent nation, tucked into the southern French coast. Its national defense is the responsibility of France, but it is a constitutional monarchy, ruled by the Grimaldi family since 1297, and a full member of the United Nations. The vast majority of its population is wealthy foreigners, who live there because it is a tax haven. Its chief industry is tourism, and its botanic gardens and casino are world famous.
We stopped in for just a couple hours, on a drive from Torino to Nice, and the gardens already were closed.
(Photo-intensive after the jump…
Jun 24 2009
Muse in the Morning |
–Thich Nhat Hanh
Phenomena XXVIII: planting
Relative Size
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