X-Git-Url: https://feistymeow.org/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=infobase%2Ffortunes.dat;h=ab0d4fd87c932b90cc7640980a7d2acb759bf5ae;hb=d9ef0e211c2934b627db7f18332a84ab941ee1c8;hp=2a4ea6244ecd740ec98abff5be75519898476b3f;hpb=542207be5648668169f6647428ca3ee1127e3610;p=feisty_meow.git diff --git a/infobase/fortunes.dat b/infobase/fortunes.dat index 2a4ea624..ab0d4fd8 100644 --- a/infobase/fortunes.dat +++ b/infobase/fortunes.dat @@ -17813,7 +17813,7 @@ for while we exist death is not present, and when death is present we no longer exist. -- Epicurus ~ -Singing and danching are the voice of dharma. -- Hakuin +Singing and dancing are the voice of dharma. -- Hakuin ~ All great truths begin as blasphemies. -- George Bernard Shaw ~ @@ -43854,4 +43854,34 @@ This is what yogis must recognize. -- Longchenpa, from "Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind: The Trilogy of Rest, Volume 1", translated by Padmakara Translation Group, published by Shambhala Publications +~ +The purpose of a knife is much like the purpose of the brain, and that is to +stop being used. Just as the brain should do some computation and then desist +from functioning for a while to rest and relax, so too should one stop using a +knife as soon as the purpose for which the knife was picked up is achieved. +If it seems like it's fun to play with a knife or if one feels that the knife +is an extension of one's penis, then that is not a very good reason to pick up +a knife; one should probably put the knife right back down in those degenerate +(in the mathematical sense) cases. #WhatILearnedFromTheBoyScouts + -- fred t. hamster +~ +Full of trust you left home, +and soon learned to walk the Path-- +making yourself a friend to everyone +and making everyone a friend. + +When the whole world is your friend, +fear will find no place to call home. + +And when you make the mind your friend, +you'll know what trust +really means. + +Listen. + +I have followed this Path of friendship to its end. +And I can say with absolute certainty-- +it will lead you home. + -- from "The First Free Women: Poems of the Early Buddhist Nuns", + by Matty Weingast