Lost in the moment, I disappear. Time melts into eternity.
When your I recedes, you make room for your genuine You.
Searching for the answers: It’s the search that matters.
We are here to help repair the world.
http://blogs.jta.org/politics/article/2010/07/10/2739990/fun-was-there-in-color-and-its-still-there
This is a deeply moving video showing for the the first time color video of life in Israel from 1947 on. The videographer, Fred Monosson, was a charismatic man who could pretty much get in anywhere and get anyone to let him photograph them. And to think that the film was almost thrown out!
Breathing is three-dimensional: depth, height, width. So is life fully lived.
We all have wounds we carry around with us. Awareness of this should make us much more compassionate to one another.
We have millennia between us, you and I. Feel the centuries melt as time recedes.
Deep inside everyone is a well of calm. Drink from it.
I will be what I will be (ehyeh asher ehyeh): the Source cannot be fully understood (Ex 3.14).
http://www.wimp.com/duckcover/
What to do in a nuclear attack according to “experts” in 1951: Hilarious, naive, and sobering (via Nelson French).
http://www.youtube.com/user/chickenturkeypenguin
Hilarious.
Our greatest accomplishments are invisible to the eye, but felt by the heart and mind.
The horizon: where heaven and earth meet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P65XdTlk4vA
The internet as a verb: self-creating, transformative, and spreading kindness (via Nelson French).
In this world, do what you came here to do. That’s all there is to it. (Ex 38.22)
Symbols do not merely bestow meaning; they are the vehicles through which meaning exists.
What is, what was, and what will be are not. There is only what is.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCnAjel02lM
Ultimate cuteness.
It’s not what you accumulate that matters; it’s what you learn.
Almost all that popular culture ranks as important in fact is not. Still waters run deep.
If ever the Palestinians and Israelis get it together, this will become the big issue in Israel: progressive and secular Jews vs. the Ultra-Orthodox. Israel is only 20% Orthodox, and many of them are not Ultra-Orthodox. E.g. Shimon Peres is Orthodox, and he’s no fan of the ultra-religious and their parties. About 15 years ago, everyone predicted that the Ultra-Orthodx would grow substantially in numbers, but that has not happened, as many children of Ultra-Orthodox families are influenced by the broader global culture (as many of the youth are in Iran) and do not stay within the fold. The Palestinian conflict helps the Ultra-Orthodox, since it divides everybody else. In the long run, I don’t think that the Ultra-Orthodox can win, because the numbers are not on their side and because this is not the direction of human culture. Time is on our side.
Each person contains the history and memory of the species and the planet in his or her cells.
Wherever you go, be there (Ex. 24.12).
The most magnificent buildings and career accomplishments pale in significance before a smile, a hug, kindness, love, learning, wisdom.
Humans are earth beings (Gen 2.7), created from millennia of terrestrial DNA. To connect with our bodies is to connect with our primal origins.
Why do we so fear death? How many times have we died before we die?
A poet is one who sees into the fire that creates and sustains the universe.
We’re all actors on a stage, each of us with our assigned role. Waking up means taking a place in the audience to see this.
Time and space are symbols, pointers toward something eternal and boundless.
As we all wander for a while in the wilderness, we each receive the sustenance, the manna, we need (Ex 16.4ff).
Everything and everyone has a spark of light. We are here to learn to see it.
Faith is trust in the universe, in the Source, Adonai Eloheinu, All-That-Is.
Curiosity from reverence and awe engenders deep learning and knowledge.
The One and the Many: No Many without the One, no One without the Many.
The parting of the Re(e)d Sea: A little order in the midst of chaos (Ex 14).
Humility does not shrink the self, but expands the self until the self erupts into sparks of fire.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marcus-chown/11-of-the-craziest-things_b_628481.html#s107477
My personal favorite: There are an infinite number of copies of each one of us living out an infinite number of alternate lives. I actually find that comforting.
Torah is a living tree (etz chayim), never staying the same, always changing and growing.
Life grows as a tree. Slowly the roots extend and descend, while the trunk rises and expands into branches.
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