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That Limited Mental Space…

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That space, that limited, cadaverous space, that separates most people from what they see (and are)… it may nourish a callous indifference (though they may insist otherwise). When limited mental space exists between the perceiver and that which is perceived, then a fabricated center manifests a false radius. This is what allows hatred and indifference to take hold. This is what manifests as secondhand mediocrity and unfeeling psychological cadaverousness.

That learned, absorbed, embedded psychological space must end (without clinging to the apron-strings of tradition, customs, and learned habits). True compassion does not flower with restricted, fragmentary, small, isolated perception. It radiates beyond the ice-cold limited. Stagnant perception is the result of its own illusory psychological cage. In that dead cage, it remains (and claims to be free)… while it decorates and reinforces that cage with superficialities. That stagnation depends on (and is) the cage. (There never was a true center in control of thoughts and emotions. It — i.e., the supposed controller — is a learned protrusion of thought/thinking.) Real joy and love of life can exist beyond limitation based on falsities. Please transcend beyond psychological separation and existing as a consciousness with a limited radius based on a phony center.

Buddha Mind … Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2024

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My Blog primarily consists of close-up nature photos (that I've taken locally) combined with original holistic-truth oriented prose and/or poetry involving mindfulness/awareness. I love nature and I love understanding the whole (not merely the parts and the details). I'm a retired teacher of the multiply handicapped. I have a number of interesting hobbies, such as fossil collecting, sport-kite flying, 3D and 2D close-up photography, holography, and pets. Most of all, I am into holistic self-awareness, spontaneous insight, unconventional observation/direct perception, mindfulness, meditation, world peace, non-fragmentation, population control, vegetarianism, and green energy. To follow my unique Blog of "Nature Photos and Mindfulness Sayings" and for RSS feeds to my new posts, please access at: tom8pie.com (On my regular Blog posting pages, for additional information and to follow, simply click on the "tack icon" at the upper right corner... or, on my profile page, you can click on the "Thomas Peace" icon.) Stay mindful, understanding, and caring!...

22 Comments Join the Conversation

  1. Sara Wright's avatar

    These days I am caught momentarily by golden falling leaves or witch hazel fingers – catapulted into the present by nature and by one tiny green frog who still lives in my pond -BUT I keep getting stuck – it feels like Something is pressing down on me – our indifference to nature is a thorn that continues to bleed … who is that frog? S/he’s beautiful – frogs are the perfect image for the buddha mind – a mind I don’t possess.

    Reply

    • Tom's Nature-up-close Photography and Mindfulness Blog's avatar

      Well, my suggestion, Sara, is not to judge that you didn’t attain it, or can’t attain it. It’s not what can merely be attained, anyway. It’s not just another fragment or component of a cause-and-effect continuum. So don’t be concerned about whether you attained it or not. You’re close to nature; that is immense in itself! The rest may be poppyrot anyway. So just smile, be at one with the order that is there, and don’t try to soar to some fictional possession or mental realm. πŸ˜‰

      Reply

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        ‘be at one’ with what is! Thanks for the encouragement Tom…. I’m enjoying the leaves but so many fall prematurely now – too inept ridden – found a spot yesterday where the ducks were enjoying the sun.. I watched them bob up and down in the still waters – they will soon be migrating… how about you? You are close to the river – yes? you must see migrating birds a lot.

    • Tom's Nature-up-close Photography and Mindfulness Blog's avatar

      Leaves are falling here too, Sara, and we are getting some much needed rain. It’s been dry for a good while. Yes, there are birds here heading south, but i also see geese heading north. Hopefully, it will be a mild winter. It’s difficult now for those people south who were affected by Hurruicane Helene; a lot of flooding occurred. Not being in a hurricane zone is, here, a very lucky thing. Keep enjoying nature and all of its blessings!

      Reply

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        Oh, glad that you are getting rain – and yes, it’s so hard for so many now and we don’t know what’s next. the geese are gone – but the ducks are still here.. Tonight I heard a chirp just before dark right here at the bedroom window. The cardinals have been away, nesting in the field all summer and just returned tonight! They know the season is changing and made sure i knew they were back. I went out to check the feeder in the front of the house and sure enough it was empty! Chirping indignantly it seemed to me while I hurriedly replaced seed one swooped down before I got back in the house. They prefer to eat seed on the ground and I indulge them occasionally – but not too much – otherwise they bug me by coming to whatever window i happen to be closest to – how do they know???? I have given up asking. Only nature knows! hurricanes do hit here – and oh, how I hope for a mild winter too but with so much precipitation in n/east I think it’s probably unrealistic….ugh.

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        actually that’s what I do during the winter – but not enough for the mice to feast on at night.. I have only one bird feeder and it looks like my cabin!… maybe I should try to clean it just in case… thanks for the reminder – I do not have strange birds visiting just winter regulars – do you suppose the makes a difference?

    • Tom's Nature-up-close Photography and Mindfulness Blog's avatar

      Winter regulars are probably OK but who knows. There are other bird diseases that birds give to each other at bird feeders and that’s why i quit using bird feeders. Their feces and their beak emissions and eye emissions can spread diseases. I wish it wasn’t that way but it is. No crows in our area any longer nor seagulls. Bird flu and West Nile virus seem to be why. It’s definitely not windmills killing them, like insane (fossil fuel-money-taking) Trump claims.

      Reply

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        actually windmills do kill birds – but bird flu is worse – a warming climate confuses migrators – and habitat loss is perhaps the worst threat of all – i don’t know about you but I have tons of birds here during the summer but few visit my feeder – most are warblers – of course the lakes are full of water birds…most of my regulars are here year round so I am banking on that.. your caveat is important though.

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        I am not surprised because it is usually (maybe all?) compromised birds that run into windmills – to follow that thought through to t – he was using a few bird deaths as his argument – unbelievable crap

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        Tom, ‘sad’ is too kind a word – Terrifying maybe? I know that I am at the point where I am desperate to have this thing OVER – to get beyond this endless waiting..into god knows what next horror…

      • Sara Wright's avatar

        Tom here is my reply to your post 10/10 – they wouldn’t;t let me post it “true joy seldom comes invited”… “do nothing” – it either makes an appearance or doesn’t – and you nail it! Wonderful Tom! Was thinking about joy two days ago – Beautiful day I decided to take my little dogs with me to see the trees on the mountain – of course their agenda was different than mine and they spent their time with their noses to the ground while I followed them and looked to trees and sky – hours passed meandering -it started to get chilly so we left – it was only later reflecting that I realized I had experienced a joyful afternoon with two tiny beloveds and trees I love…Joy is a gift. Yes?

  2. Linda Schaub's avatar

    It’s best to be “real” in all aspects of your life. Tom, I love your little frog, all tucked up onto this leaf nd yes, it is so quiet, that it looks almost like a statue.

    Reply

      • Linda Schaub's avatar

        People are laughable and pitiful at the same time. I feel like an old soul so often Tom. Yes, the frog did remind me of a Buddha statue, motionless and solemn looking. πŸ™‚

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