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Musings on a world I am no longer sure about
The philosophy of least resistance
When I was lil, I had a Religious Education teacher. At heart, he didn’t want to be there, so his lessons were an exercise in banality with him mouthing the words of the syllabus and the majority of us taking the opportunity to nap. He went on to be a very successful used car salesman, a job that has some similarities with those of a more ecclesiastical bent. After his departure, I gained another teacher, but she was somewhat different. She loved teaching, she loved learning and she loved her job. She was also a Buddhist, which is a rarity in a CofE school. So when we were being talked to, her enthusiasm rubbed off on us and we woke up and paid attention. One of the things she talked about was Buddhism, and how it helped her in life. This piqued my interest as I’d always been somewhat sceptical of organised religion. I used to belong to a Methodist church in the village where I grew up, but I’d always sniffed a faint whiff of self importance from the congregation. So when it was decided that we should spend time fundraising so we could buy bibles for the children in Romanian orphanages, I decided that enough was enough. I suspected, rightly, that children in orphanages in Romania probably could’ve used heat or food or bedclothes or anything really that wasn’t a book. Well, unless they felt like burning them I guess... Anyways, I digress (as you, faithful reader, know I do quite well...). One of the ideas that grabbed my interest and wouldn’t let go is that in Buddhism, they talk of Suffering, and from there, they arrive at the “four noble truths”.
- The Nature of Suffering
"Now this ... is the noble truth of suffering: birth is suffering, aging is suffering, illness is suffering, death is suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are suffering; union with what is displeasing is suffering; separation from what is pleasing is suffering; not to get what one wants is suffering; in brief, the five aggregates subject to clinging are suffering." - Suffering’s Origin
"Now this ... is the noble truth of the origin of suffering: it is this craving which leads to renewed existence, accompanied by delight and lust, seeking delight here and there, that is, craving for sensual pleasures, craving for existence, craving for extermination." - Suffering’s Cessation
"Now this ... is the noble truth of the cessation of suffering: it is the remainderless fading away and cessation of that same craving, the giving up and relinquishing of it, freedom from it, nonreliance on it." - The Way Leading to the Cessation of Suffering
"Now this ... is the noble truth of the way leading to the cessation of suffering: it is the Noble Eightfold Path; that is, right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration."
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Flu
After last year’s amazing fluness, I’ve decided to have a flu jab this year. So I’ve spent since Tuesday feeling like I have mild flu. Grr.
Don’t seem to be sleeping too well, which is annoying as I’m not hugely focussed at work.
Acquired Mercury Rev’s new album. It’s pretty. There’s also a free accompanying album to download that goes with the commercially released one, an interesting experiment. You sign up to their mailing list and they give you an album to download
Wonder how many tracks are going to be B side singles...
www.mercuryrev.com/
One week until payday. Also less than a week until my new bike arrives (fingers crossed). I now have access to the bike shed at work. You brush its outside with a security pass and there’s a low hum of power and the two slatted slabs of metal part before you like slow motion saloon bar doors. Most surreal.
Considering spending most of the weekend asleep. Might do me good I reckon...
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Ow
I just burned my mouth on a potato!
Was good to see e’eryone at the OBash on Saturday. Those of you who failed are NAUGHTY. I shall deal with you later.
All I can say is this. Judging by the state of my head yesterday morning, I’m glad I didn’t have the champagne...
Is it wrong that I’m quite proud of getting the last pint served that evening?
After the bash, I headed to XXL with Nav, Taha and some others. Which, I believe, was madness. So very very very drunk.
Renewed my membership tho
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Curious
British Gas let me view my energy consumption as a funky graph. But I’m suspecting that it might possibly have some issues. Either that or I’m dead every other month...
Cwoor!
In other news, I got my watch back, it’s now a little dusty shiny and lovely and doesn’t have scratched glass any more. Mostly had a chilled out weekend. Cooked a rather fabulous spinach and ricotta cannelloni last night which was substantially tastier than my first attempt the other week. Not sure why, but I think part of it was probably posher Waitrose chopped tomatoes
On call all this week, also doing a deployment at 6am tomorrow morning. This is good as it means I get to finish at 1:30 tomorrow if I don’t take lunch. Which means I get to go home and actually do some work on Freakcity — it’s dying a bit as I’ve not had time to finish the work I started. Although on the plus side, I’ve suffered no successful sql injection attacks on the new code, so what I intended to happen has. I just hate releasing new software before it’s finished, I’m all like “look at the new shiny version!” and everyone else is like “where’s my themes? How comes half of it doesn’t work? Weren’t you going to make it better?”. Giggle.
Been listening to lots of Cats in Paris thanks to "Liam":ref:ljos. Fab birthday present
Also been listening to some Dirty Three — a suggestion from last.fm — who are a bit Mogwaiish and really quite fun. In a slow, melancholy and depressive way, of course.
Speaking of Mogwai, their new album came out a couple of weeks back, so I’ve been listening to that rather a lot as well.
That and Dave Gilmour, Live at Gdansk — somewhat poignant for two reasons, firstly, he was asked to play the Gdansk shipyard in Poland to celebrate the 26th anniversary of Soldarity, secondly, it’s the last time we’ll ever see Rick Wright playing live.
Accompanied by the Baltic Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, he plays a variety of music from the Floyd back catalogue as well as almost all of his solo “On an Island” album. The highlight for me is probably “Echoes”, played in its 25 minute entirety, followed by both “The Division Bell” and “A Great Day For Freedom”, the late Michael Kamen’s amazing arrangements being played live by the orchestra.
I think everyone should have a live orchestra when performing. Marve
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Boing
So now I have a macbook air that runs Vista
I think this is fun. Other people are horrified. I am irritated that the tap functionality doesn’t work in Apple’s driver for the multitouch pad... Bah.
This weekend I may get some stuff done. This weekend I may get some other stuff attempted. I am on call though, so I can’t do anything fun.
Went shopping earlier in the week and bought some jeans that are too big for me. Bah. Bought a nice shirt too. The Tshirt broke tho. Already. Dammit.