One devotes a good part of one's time to hoarding the useless, in the form of objects, likes, recognitions, power, possessions.
Read MoreWe should be here, I mean on this Earth and in this body, to experience, to know ourselves and our nature through direct experience.
Read MoreJesus was a strongly misrepresented revelatory mystic and this verse is of such force today that it is worth remembering.
Read More"Experts" are those who, instead of nourishing themselves holistically, have committed themselves to the study of a single field of knowledge.
Read MoreWe are the ephemeral magnetic field formed by the set of many, infinitely small, particles. Nothing reproducible, nothing determinable.
Read MoreI am writing these few lines to all of you, to clarify on the one hand, a fundamental attitude that I expect from our teachers, so that students can find their right dimension while also demanding that this attitude be followed.
Read MoreWe homo sapiens are part of the animal kingdom. This premise, often forgotten, is essential to find the right balance with oneself and with other animals.
Read MoreApart from the many natural wonders and many unforgettable moments, what I saw, and humanly refreshed me, were the many people who, especially on weekends, leave the comforts of their home to camp in tents and campers in the different parks.
Read MoreHowever, it remains in our memory as a beautiful experience: moving through the tunnels, finding a way to enter and descend into very narrow holes, perceiving the underground flow of water, being in a sort of underground cathedral without being able to see its contours.
Read MoreIn the historical period in which we live, the so-called celebrities of entertainment and sport, with very few exceptions such as the immense Djokovic, are nothing more than sad regime jesters.
Read MoreAnyone who has lived "awake" for the past four years is fully aware of what has happened and is still happening and consequently of the endless lies that have been told and digested by a population of "undead".
Read MoreSpeaking clearly, the need to be the center of attention, to be seen by others, is one of the most serious social diseases and involves everyone.
Read MorePsychoanalytic therapy is enormously successful because it partly fills the void left by the total lack of ties of contemporary beings. The ridiculous idea of sponsored freedom today is rooted in the idea of being able to free oneself from the need of the other.
Read MoreThe individual who forgets his inner self, and pursues rationality, is distinguished by his inauthenticity. The thought action is always inauthentic. Any movement (but it also applies to the intellect) that one learns and "thinks", is inauthentic, that is, fragmented and inelegant, as if it were always out of context.
Read MoreIt would be nice to quantify the number of hours lost around food: useless chatter; Television; nutrition experts (among yoga practitioners the latter are teeming); "ethical" speeches that verge on the ridiculous, with new tribes that see themselves as part of something because they choose to eat one thing rather than another; passing trends.
Read MoreWhat can Lao-Tzu mean in this enigmatic and magnificent aphorism? In Taoism, not acting does not have the same meaning that we find in yogic (Vedic) philosophy, which is more literal for the latter. The Taoist non-action is the action in tune with the Wu-Wei, that is, the spontaneous and natural action.
Read MoreA contemporary young person might think that the current Olympics are a sporting event and not an entertainment show and an indoctrination as they have actually become. A sort of Sanremo festival.
Read MoreThe Olympics, even more than any other sporting event, should be a celebration of sporting values. These values should transcend wars and fads of the moment. They should be a celebration of virtues (a word that derives from "virtus" or virility) or courage, pride, a sense of belonging, beauty and honor, which net of healthy competitiveness, should concern the winners as well as the losers.
Read MoreThe Bhagavad Gita, like many ancient religious texts, is a source of remarkable insights that must be reviewed with the sensitivity of a matured conscience and a changed linguistic figure. What follows is an interpretation of one of the most remarkable verses of the text.
Read MoreAs I watch educated writers speak, I notice that more and more often they have planned speeches that I am unable to ignore. When a question or something comes up that is out of what they expect, they always respond with the "drivel" prepared totally out of context.
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