Muse in the Morning |
Hate never yet dispelled hate.
Only love dispels hate.
This is the law,
Ancient and inexhaustible.
–The Dhammapada
Phenomena XV: Love
Transition
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Jul 14 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–The Dhammapada
Phenomena XV: Love
Transition
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Jul 13 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–Bhagavad Gita
Phenomena XIV: crying
Tears
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Jul 12 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–The Dhammapada, 201
Phenomena XIII: hurting
Ice
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Jul 09 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–The Dhammapada, 389
Phenomena XII: interacting
True Colors?
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Jul 08 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–Bhagavad Gita
Phenomena XI: uniting
Flow Lines
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Jul 07 2010
Muse in the Morning |
What do I not teach?
Whatever is fascinating to discuss,
divides people against each other,
but has no bearing on putting an end to sorrow.
What do I teach?
Only what is necessary to take you to the other shore.
–Siddhārtha Gautama, The Dhammapada
Phenomena X: Separation
Campfire
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Jul 06 2010
Muse in the Morning |
Phenomena IX: choosing
Surfaces
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Jul 05 2010
Muse in the Morning |
Phenomena VIII: accepting
Becalmed
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Jul 02 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–Bhikkhu Bodhi, Introduction to The Dhammapada
Phenomena VII: changing
Seeking to Connect
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Jul 02 2010
It was just yesterday that we decided to take a day off from politics and talk about music, both familiar and not so much; the conversation ran a bit long, and when we got halfway through we decided to get together tomorrow.
It was pretty fun, what with sewers and male models and Gorillaz and all, and when we had put down the pen it was just after taking in Sarah Vaughan’s reworked dance version of the Peggy Lee classic, “Fever”.
They say tomorrow never comes…but now it has…and we have eight more songs to talk about before we can finish our multigenerational “Summer Music Appreciation Playlist”.
Today we’ll incorporate jazz and dance, the invention of modern musical recording, arguably the greatest saxophone player ever, and a shout out to “our man in Paris”.
If all that wasn’t enough, we also discover what happens when you graft a certain Pepper onto Jamaica’s musical tree.
You don’t want to stop now, so jump on board and let’s get this train rollin’.
Jul 02 2010
I probably shouldn’t pull punches here. I find some of the rhetoric and claims in this video a bit suspect.
Perhaps the oddest part for me is that the videomaker is using imagery that she considers disgusting at least, while arguing (it seems to me) that the ads for children’s clothing used by American Apparel are somehow pornographic.
Now there’s a part of me that sympathizes with this view. And then there’s the part of me that thinks… didn’t you just manage to make an unpaid ad for this company by using the same images as part of your critique? Aren’t you also exploiting these children by showing the images, and not only that, but unlike the company that paid the models and their parents, you’re exploiting them without any compensation. (Then again, by embedding this and drawing attention to it, perhaps I’m doing the same thing?)
It strikes me as a very slippery slope, to say the least. Before I sound like a pontiff from a religion that doesn’t institutionalize child sexual abuse, let me just embed the video I’m talking about, so you can make up your own mind before I continue my rant.
Don’t view the following video if you think it might contain soft-core pron.
Jul 01 2010
Muse in the Morning |
–ancient, traditional prayer of India
Phenomena VI: praying
Sun
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