Articles in the Reality and Ego Category
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 26 April 2005
When you are angry ask yourself: Who is angry?
When you are disappointed ask yourself: Who is disap-
pointed?
When you are in need of something ask yourself: Who
needs?
When you are sad ask yourself: Who is sad?
Why is it that it is always the external world that is to be
blamed? And yet, all of [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 21 April 2005
Everything with a form and shape falls into the trinity of cre-
ation, sustenance, and dissolution. These three states are
inevitable and they materialize in time-space. Each manifes-
tation is a child of its age; it uses the concepts, structures, and
ways of the current relative reality. It has a limited existence
and relevance as well. Nothing lasts forever in [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 11 February 2005
The world we know exists only in our mind. It is real for us,
but it is not to be found elsewhere. We are dependent on our
sensations coming from our five main doors (i.e., sight, hear-
ing, smell, taste, touch). The world for us is constructed ulti-
mately in our mind. For example, colors do not exist in [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Poems, Reality and Ego on 19 January 2005
All there is,
is right here and just now;
Don’t wait,
don’t travel,
shift forward or delay;
Postpone to escape,
move to forget;
Still it does not matter—
all there is,
is right here and just now.
Pre-set for presence,
and set free,
or reset.
To be and not to be—together,
is the key.
Live real and
realize,
right here and just now.
Cannot force,
cannot push,
no way to rush;
Distant yourself,
just now [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 16 January 2005
Everything we see, have, are, and live within is based on two
structures: the substance (i.e., the essence) and its representa-
tion (manifestation). The appearance is the structure that is
easy to comprehend and is the only truth existing for the
inexperienced.
Only the wise can separate the representation from the
substance. The ignorant regards the appearance as the essence
and [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 20 November 2004
Our existence is relative. We are only in relation to some-
thing. Nothing has any meaning or significance per se, unless
it is in relation to something. The world outside of us just is.
We give it the meaning and the purpose, and it has the signif-
icance and relevance we define and understand it to have.
Because our existence [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 17 November 2004
Why is the doer so important? Or, to be more specific, when
is the doer important? In most of the cases, the performer is
relevant only when we are doing it ourselves. We emphasize
the subject more than the actual deed or the doing process. In
brief, when we are the subjects it is very important but when
others are [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Poems, Reality and Ego on 13 November 2004
We are free,
to stay,
or to go;
No one holds,
but us.
We have so much,
to do,
and are so busy to achieve.
We hold tight,
for all we know.
It’s up to us,
when everything is done,
and there is nothing,
more to do,
cling,
or achieve.
We just get enough,
realize,
and undo.
Nothing to learn,
no more to gain,
nothing to achieve,
nothing to lose,
only no thing.
We give [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 7 November 2004
Our world consists of atoms and smaller particles, quarks. The
scale does not end here, but all the same, everything is still
energy. Therefore, one can say that we are focused energy states.
Our physical bodies are built on atoms (and other smaller parti-
cles) that are held together by internal forces physics is still dis-
covering. Our existence is [...]
Posted in Fragments of Reality, Personal, Reality and Ego on 4 November 2004
Limited understanding leads to misinterpretations and
imperfect actions. These actions are perceived emotionally
and assumed to be conducted with full intention and under-
standing of the causes and consequences by the actor. This
realization raises strong emotional sensations in the receiver
and causes responses that are not based on full consideration
(i.e., something one is regretting later on as too excessive [...]
