Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 3 2017

WHY SHOULD I MEDITATE?

LION�S ROAR Take an honest look at yourself.

Where are you in your life?

What have your priorities been up till now and what do you intend to do with the time

you have left?

We are a mixture of light and shadow, of good qualities and defects.

Are we really the best we can be?

Must we remain as we are now?

If not, what can we do to improve ourselves?

These are questions worth asking, particularly if we have come to the conclusion that change

is both desirable and possible.

EVERY ONE OF US HAS A MIND AND EVERY ONE OF US CAN WORK ON IT.

In our modern world, we are consumed from morning till night with endless activity.

We do not have much time or energy left over to consider the basic causes of our happiness

or suffering.

We imagine, more or less consciously, that if we undertake more activities we will have

more intense experiences and therefore our sense of dissatisfaction will fade away.

But the truth is that many of us continue to feel let down and frustrated by our contemporary

lifestyle.

The aim of meditation is to transform the mind.

It does not have to be associated with any particular religion.

Every one of us has a mind and every one of us can work on it.

IS CHANGE POSSIBLE?

The real question is not whether change is desirable; it is whether it is possible to

change.

Some people might think they can�t change because their afflictive emotions are so intimately

associated with their minds that it is impossible to get rid of them without destroying a part

of themselves.

It is true that in general a person�s character doesn�t change very much over the course

of their life.

If we could study the same group of people every few years, we would rarely find that

the angry people had become patient, that the disturbed people had found inner peace,

or that the pretentious people had learned humility.

But as rare as such changes might be, some people do change, which shows that change

is possible.

The point is that our negative character traits tend to persist if we do nothing at all to

change the status quo.

No change occurs if we just let our habitual tendencies and automatic patterns of thought

perpetuate and even reinforce themselves, thought after thought, day after day, year

after year.

But those tendencies and patterns can be challenged.

NO CHANGE CAN OCCUR IF WE JUST LET OUR HABITUAL TENDENCIES PERPETUATE AND EVEN REINFORCE THEMSELVES,

THOUGHT AFTER THOUGHT, DAY AFTER DAY, YEAR AFTER YEAR.

Aggression, greed, jealousy, and the other mental poisons are unquestionably part of

us, but are they an intrinsic, inalienable part?

Not necessarily.

For example, a glass of water might contain cyanide that could kill us on the spot.

But the same water could instead be mixed with healing medicine.

In either case, H2O, the chemical formula of the water itself, remains unchanged; in

itself, it was never either poisonous or medicinal.

The different states of the water are temporary and dependent on changing circumstances.

In a similar way, our emotions, moods, and bad character traits are just temporary and

circumstantial elements of our nature.

A FUNDAMENTAL ASPECT OF CONSCIOUSNESS This temporary and circumstantial quality

becomes clear to us when we realize that the primary quality of consciousness is simply

knowing.

Like the water in the above example, knowing or awareness is neither good nor bad in itself.

If we look behind the turbulent stream of transient thoughts and emotions that pass

through our minds day and night, this fundamental aspect of consciousness is always there.

Awareness makes it possible for us to perceive phenomena of every kind.

Buddhism describes this basic cognitive quality of the mind as luminous because it illuminates

both the external world through perceptions and the inner world of sensation, emotion,

reasoning, memory, hope, and fear.

Although this cognitive faculty underlies every mental event, it is not itself affected

by any of these events.

A ray of light may shine on a face disfigured by hatred or on a smiling face; it may shine

on a jewel or on a garbage heap; but the light itself is neither mean nor loving, neither

dirty nor clean.

Understanding that the essential nature of consciousness is neutral shows us that it

is possible to change our mental universe.

We can transform the content of our thoughts and experiences.

The neutral and luminous background of our consciousness provides us with the space we

need to observe mental events rather than being at their mercy.

We then also have the space we need to create the conditions necessary to transform these

mental events.

WISHING IS NOT ENOUGH We have no choice about what we already are,

but we can wish to change ourselves.

Such an aspiration gives the mind a sense of direction.

But just wishing is not enough.

We have to find a way of putting that wish into action.

We don�t find anything strange about spending years learning to walk, read and write, or

acquire professional skills.

We spend hours doing physical exercises to get our bodies into shape.

Sometimes we expend tremendous physical energy pedaling a stationary bike.

To sustain such tasks requires a minimum of interest or enthusiasm.

This interest comes from believing that these efforts are going to benefit us in the long

run.

Working with the mind follows the same logic.

How could it be subject to change without the least effort, just from wishing alone?

That makes no more sense than expecting to learn to play a Mozart sonata by just occasionally

doodling around on the piano.

IF WE TRANSFORM OUR WAY OF PERCEIVING THINGS, WE TRANSFORM THE QUALITY OF OUR LIVES.

We expend a lot of effort to improve the external conditions of our lives, but in the end it

is always the mind that creates our experience of the world and translates this experience

into either well-being or suffering.

If we transform our way of perceiving things, we transform the quality of our lives.

It is this kind of transformation that is brought about by the form of mind training

known as meditation.

WHAT IS MEDITATION?

Meditation is a practice that makes it possible to cultivate and develop certain basic positive

human qualities in the same way as other forms of training make it possible to play a musical

instrument or acquire any other skill.

Among several Asian words that translate as �meditation� in English are bhavana from

Sanskrit, which means �to cultivate,� and its Tibetan equivalent, gom, meaning �to

become familiar with.� Meditation helps us to familiarize ourselves with a clear and

accurate way of seeing things and to cultivate wholesome qualities that remain dormant within

us unless we make an effort to draw them out.

So let us begin by asking ourselves, �What do I really want out of life?

Am I content to just keep improvising from day to day?

Am I going to ignore the vague sense of discontent that I always feel deep down when, at the

same time, I am longing for well-being and fulfillment?� We have become accustomed

to thinking that our shortcomings are inevitable and that we have to put up with the setbacks

they have brought us throughout our lives.

We take the dysfunctional aspects of ourselves for granted, not realizing that it is possible

to break out of the vicious cycle of exhausting behavior patterns.

From a Buddhist point of view, the traditional texts say every being has the potential for

enlightenment just as surely as every sesame seed contains oil.

Despite this, to use another traditional comparison, we wander about in confusion like a beggar

who is simultaneously rich and poor because he does not know he has a treasure buried

under the floor of his hut.

The goal of the Buddhist path is to come into possession of this overlooked wealth of ours,

which can imbue our lives with the most profound meaning.

TRAINING THE MIND The object of meditation is the mind.

For the moment, it is simultaneously confused, agitated, rebellious, and subject to innumerable

conditioned and automatic patterns.

The goal of meditation is not to shut down the mind or anesthetize it, but to make it

free, lucid, and balanced.

TRAINING THE MIND IS CRUCIAL IF WE WANT TO REFINE AND SHARPEN OUR ATTENTION; DEVELOP

EMOTIONAL BALANCE, INNER PEACE, AND WISDOM; AND CULTIVATE DEDICATION TO THE WELFARE OF

OTHERS.

According to Buddhism, the mind is not an entity but rather a dynamic stream of experiences,

a succession of moments of consciousness.

These experiences are often marked by confusion and suffering, but we can also live them in

a spacious state of clarity and inner freedom.

We all well know, as the contemporary Tibetan master Jigme Khyentse Rinpoche reminds us,

that �we don�t need to train our minds to improve our ability to get upset or jealous.

We don�t need an anger accelerator or a pride amplifier.� By contrast, training

the mind is crucial if we want to refine and sharpen our attention; develop emotional balance,

inner peace, and wisdom; and cultivate dedication to the welfare of others.

We have within ourselves the potential to develop these qualities, but they will not

develop by themselves or just because we want them to.

They require training.

And all training requires perseverance and enthusiasm, as I have already said.

We won�t learn to ski by practicing one or two minutes a month.

REFINING ATTENTION AND MINDFULNESS Galileo discovered the rings of Saturn after

devising a telescope that was sufficiently bright and powerful and setting it up on a

stable support.

His discovery would not have been possible if his instrument had been inadequate or if

he had held it in a trembling hand.

Similarly, if we want to observe the subtlest mechanisms of our mental functioning and have

an effect on them, we absolutely must refine our powers of looking inward.

In order to do that, our attention has to be highly sharpened so that it becomes stable

and clear.

We will then be able to observe how the mind functions and perceives the world, and we

will be able to understand the way thoughts multiply by association.

Finally, we will be able to continue to refine the mind�s perception until we reach the

point where we are able to see the most fundamental state of our consciousness, a perfectly lucid

and awakened state that is always present, even in the absence of the ordinary chain

of thoughts.

WHAT MEDITATION IS NOT Sometimes practitioners of meditation are

accused of being too focused on themselves, of wallowing in egocentric introspection and

failing to be concerned with others.

But we cannot regard as selfish a process whose goal is to root out the obsession with

self and to cultivate altruism.

This would be like blaming an aspiring doctor for spending years studying medicine before

beginning to practice.

There are a fair number of clich�s in circulation about meditation.

Let me point out right away that meditation is not an attempt to create a blank mind by

blocking out thoughts�which is impossible anyway.

Nor is it engaging the mind in endless cogitation in an attempt to analyze the past or anticipate

the future.

Neither is it a simple process of relaxation in which inner conflicts are temporarily suspended

in a vague, amorphous state of consciousness.

There is not much point in resting in a state of inner bewilderment.

There is indeed an element of relaxation in meditation, but it is connected with the relief

that comes from letting go of hopes and fears, of attachments and the whims of the ego that

never stop feeding our inner conflicts.

MASTERY THAT SETS US FREE The way we deal with thoughts in meditation

is not to block them or feed them indefinitely, but to let them arise and dissolve by themselves

in the field of mindfulness.

In this way, they do not take over our minds.

Beyond that, meditation consists of cultivating a way of being that is not subject to the

patterns of habitual thinking.

It often begins with analysis and then continues with contemplation and inner transformation.

To be free is to be the master of ourselves.

It is not a matter of doing whatever comes into our heads, but rather of freeing ourselves

from the constraints and afflictions that dominate and obscure our minds.

It is a matter of taking our life into our own hands rather than abandoning it to the

tendencies created by habit and mental confusion.

Instead of letting go of the helm and just allowing the boat to drift wherever the wind

blows, freedom means setting a course toward a chosen destination�the destination that

we know to be the most desirable for ourselves and others.

THE HEART OF REALITY Meditation is not, as some people think, a

means of escaping reality.

On the contrary, its object is to make us see reality as it is, right in the midst of

our experience, to unmask the deep causes of our suffering, and to dispel mental confusion.

We develop a kind of understanding that comes from a clearer view of reality.

To reach this understanding, we meditate, for example, on the interdependence of all

phenomena, on their transitory character, and on the nonexistence of the ego perceived

as a solid and independent entity.

THERE IS INDEED AN ELEMENT OF RELAXATION IN MEDITATION, BUT IT IS CONNECTED WITH THE RELIEF

THAT COMES FROM LETTING GO OF HOPES AND FEARS, OF ATTACHMENTS AND THE WHIMS OF THE EGO THAT

NEVER STOP FEEDING OUR INNER CONFLICTS.

Meditations on these themes are based on the experience of generations of meditators who

have devoted their lives to observing the automatic, mechanical patterns of thought

and the nature of consciousness.

They then taught empirical methods for developing mental clarity, alertness, inner freedom,

altruistic love, and compassion.

However, we cannot merely rely on their words to free ourselves from suffering.

We must discover for ourselves the value of the methods these wise people taught and confirm

for ourselves the conclusions they reached.

This is not purely an intellectual process.

Long study of our own experience is needed to rediscover their answers and integrate

them into ourselves on a deep level.

This process requires determination, enthusiasm, and perseverance.

It requires what Shantideva calls �joy in virtuous ways.�

Thus we begin by observing and understanding how thoughts multiply by association with

each other and create a whole world of emotions, of joy and suffering.

Then we penetrate the screen of thoughts and glimpse the fundamental component of consciousness:

the primal cognitive faculty from which all thoughts arise.

LIBERATING MONKEY MIND To accomplish this task, we must begin by

calming our turbulent mind.

Our mind behaves like a captive monkey who, in his agitation, becomes more and more entangled

in his bonds.

Out of the vortex of our thoughts, first emotions arise, and then moods and behaviors, and finally

habits and traits of character.

What arises spontaneously does not necessarily produce good results, any more than throwing

seeds into the wind produces good harvests.

So we have to behave like good farmers who prepare their fields before sowing their seeds.

For us, this means the most important task is to attain freedom through mastering our

mind.

If we consider that the potential benefit of meditation is to give us a new experience

of the world each moment of our lives, then it doesn�t seem excessive to spend at least

twenty minutes a day getting to know our mind better and training it toward this kind of

openness.

The fruition of meditation could be described as an optimal way of being, or as genuine

happiness.

This true and lasting happiness is a profound sense of having realized to the utmost the

potential we have within us for wisdom

and accomplishment.

Working toward this kind of fulfillment is an adventure worth embarking on.

For more infomation >> WHY SHOULD I MEDITATE - Duration: 18:35.

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You remember: Strider ? #2 - Duration: 4:51.

For more infomation >> You remember: Strider ? #2 - Duration: 4:51.

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Towers of Arches - Duration: 10:30.

So we are here in Arches and we would like to shoot some sunrise, sunrise is going to

start in like 20-30 minutes, and that's what I see.

On this side you have those main arches, like double arch or windows, and sun is coming

this way up, and that's what I'm focusing.

I'm going to take couple shots this way on the sun as it lights the clouds, but then

that's what I'm here for, to photograph those towers.

There is Three-Gossips, Courthouse, and Tower of Babel.

It should be nice when everything is going to be lighten.

I set my tripod here, in level, and for foreground I'm going to use those little tiny trees,

and then the tower.

We have to wait now and we will see what is going on, how's it's going to be light work

for us, so that's it for now, let's wait for light!

Now here is what you can see.

That's what I'm photographing, everything is lighten.

I have a 3-stop ND filter, and this tower looks like this, it's beautiful.

And I'm waiting for everything to lighten and the East is looking like that.

Now I have to be quick because the light is going to be just for seconds.

I would like to do Pano, and I put everything in the level again, tripod is in the level

but I was messing around with the cameras.

Ok and this one this way, little zoom in, and I can start to pano.

I'm using for foreground those little bushes and let's see.

First shot, second shot, another one, and one more.

It's beautiful.

Now I will switch it to the regular position, and try to take a couple shots straight to

this big mountain, switch the filter.

maybe I can zoom in a little bit.

Again put into the level, and good, I can zoom into little on this one and take it straight.

This one I can stack one for foreground, one for middle ground, but the colors are already fading.

It was really really short because, if you see on the back, it was just tiny bit opening

and now it's getting behind the clouds sun.

But I think I picked up some good colors, and that's how it was.

It was, It was, I don't know, even like 20 seconds and it was over.

because the clouds cover the sun on the horizon.

What we're going to do now, we going to do a couple shots, couple details, and move behind

these big cliffs, and behind those cliffs, they call Park Avenue, and there is pretty

nice, I have a couple places what I would like to take pictures of, and I will guide

you through.

For now, I have to pack it up and move to other side.

Here we are in Park Avenue and that's how it looks like here.

The sun is not here yet but it's just beautiful, nice big rocks, and that's how it looks.

Here's my camera, I set up my camera here.

And what I'm photographing here, as you see, those flowers I have on the foreground and

then on the background I have those cliffs.

And here is my camera.

I have a circular polarizer on, just to get the color in, and I have a 3-stop ND filter on

and I'm shooting manual, speed 1/20 second, ISO 200 and f/ 9.

And that's what I see in the camera, It's beautiful.

I'm going to do multiple exposures and then blend them in the Photoshop just for depth

of sharpness and depth of field.

And as you see here, many people they saw pictures on my gallery of Dancing Lady, I

call that tree Dancing Lady, and it looks, many of you maybe think it's huge but it's pretty

tiny, and then I'm going to do one more exposure of this tree.

I like it, I like the texture on the wood and how it's twisted, and how beautiful it

is against the red rocks, with the greens down below.

So that's how it looks.

It's just beautiful, those canyons and rocks and everything.

Ok, we were waking up early morning again, we came home yesterday around, I don't know,

around 11pm, and we woke up today before 5am, drive wasn't long, but it was nice, it wasn't

bad weather or anything.

It was just a little bit cool but now it starts to get windy on the open spots.

But that's what it is, it's beautiful place those Arches.

For more infomation >> Towers of Arches - Duration: 10:30.

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Who and what is TOC - Episode 1 - Duration: 2:14.

hi I'm Bryan Ponstein, I'm chair of the

newly formed EGSA committee the

Technical Oversight Committee. I'm joined

here with Dan Bigelow. The mission of the

Technical Oversight Committee is to

provide educational resources in the

form of video and white papers. These

videos are going to be approximately 90

seconds long and something that we can

share on social media you can link and

you can share with other industry

professionals that you interact with on

a daily basis to give them an

understanding on these topics, A bit

wordy, that! It's a work in progress. By the

way, when we start doing accents? I don't

know, just thought it'd be funny. Don't quit your day job.

it's just not going to work. We're not

all experts in everything and users alike

are relying on EGSA for education

While our initial conversation centered

around fuel infiltration our shared area

of expertise we quickly realize that

there is an opportunity to discuss more

than just that. There's a potential have

an impact not just for the EGSA

community but for on-site power industry

as a whole. The topics considered are

renewable fuels, CNG, power quality metering

sola,r emissions testing or pems

additional topics to be addressed as

needed and requested. The purpose of the

documents to be written from the EGSA

body so that the carry the weight of many

manufacturers voices and be considered

third-party unbiased. The medium that

we're going to use is going to take upon

two forms: the first is going to be a

technical article that you can go and

you can share for those that really want

to read about these topics; the second is

going to be videos like what you're

watching now. We're going to target these

to be one two three minutes long so that

they are actually interesting and you

don't get sick of just watching the two

of us talk all the time, not fun. Please

like and share this video. We want to

hear from you. Put your questions below

in the comments section below or just

tell us what we missed and let's have a

two-way conversation. Write your

questions there tell us how you want to

be involved don't forget to subscribe

there should be a box floating around

some probably right over our faces right

it could be very unlikely yes or or just

click that button down at the bottom oz

bottle from the both of us thanks for

watching have a great day we look

forward to seeing you again good to see

them yeah but they can see us it doesn't

make any sense but i'll be looking right

at them

For more infomation >> Who and what is TOC - Episode 1 - Duration: 2:14.

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Chris Lopez, Kailyn Lowry's Baby Daddy: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know - Duration: 3:41.

Kailyn Lowry, one of the stars of Teen Mom 2 and 16 And Pregnant, has finally confirmed that Chris Lopez is the father of her third child.

The 25-year-old Lowry, who wrote the bestsellers Love Is Bubblegum and Pride Over Pity, is already the mother of Lincoln Marshall Marroquin, 3

and Isaac Elliot Rivera, 7. Both of her sons are from previous relationships. Isaac's father is Jo Rivera

an ex-boyfriend. Lincoln's father is Javi Marroquin, to whom she was married to from 2012 to 2016

Here's what we know about Lopez and Lowry's relationships.

1. Lowry Finally Confirmed Lopez Is the Father on Twitter

2. Lopez Once Tweeted & Deleted an Apology to a 'Miracle Child'

3. Lowry Wrote That This is the Baby She 'Wasn't Sure If I Could Have'

4. Tyler Hill & J.C. Cueva Were Considered Potential Baby Daddies

5. Lopez Is Lowry's Third Different Baby Daddy

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