All Posts Tagged ‘Photography (2)

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The Ugly Duckling… or Beyond prayers consisting of learned symbols and images…

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Deity did not create this universe

and is not responsible for 

what takes place within

(and “as”) it.

Simple organisms

and rather more complex organisms

are in the same boat together.

Deity may not be of a prejudice

that favors one over the other.

One, not sophisticated enough 

to pray, is not favored over

one with propensities to pray.

One that is beautiful 

is not favored over one 

that is ordinary or rather ugly.

But complex organisms

(themselves)

can

(with real action and affection)

directly help simple organisms

and complex organisms too…

and both the beautiful

and the not so beautiful.

Don't duck the question. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Don’t duck the question. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

 

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Fitting In…

9 comments

It’s easy to “fit in”… to merely accept what the crowd (i.e., what the masses) say is the truth.  It’s easy to comfortably “fit in” and lazily go along with what special groups say.  That is where many find security and that is where they are all too willing to absorb what others maintain.  Nazi Germany — and the way its people would blindly follow — was an example of this.  But to intelligently question everything, to stand alone, to deviate (psychologically and profoundly) from the norm is not easy; it is very arduous and it is where one puts security aside.  Many will not at all care for this; they will maintain that their special group has the answers; however, this (true independence and standing alone) may be the only way to come upon actual truth; otherwise one is stuck with old, secondhand, stagnant, and primitive values and traditions (which hamper real, legitimate discovery).  Most are too conditioned, too rigidly formulated from the mold that society utilized to fabricate their structure; they will — one way or another — dismiss any real invitation to independently probe deeply.

Most will not ever realize that the very way we observe things is heavily conditioned.  It is ironic that some, in the past — like the historic Christ (as can be seen in The Gospel of Thomas, Q, and the pre-narrative Mark) — transcended beyond normality and invited others to look within and find out for themselves… and that, after they died, others (over time) intentionally distorted and twisted their message in order to maintain power, authority, position, money, security, and control.  

No one but you can discover the uncontaminated truth.  However, if that “you” is a product of what was learned… then it will likely only find by way of limitation, contamination, and “secondhandedness.”  (One’s very concept of self, for most, is a learned image/symbol, or a set of learned symbols.) When distortion looks… what it perceives is of distortion.   The masses and the patterns of their world are full of distortion.  Very few independently and sagaciously go beyond that, but (to be truly wise and not deceived) going beyond is absolutely necessary.

Clustered and apart. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Clustered and apart. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Will you join the grasshopper looking at the dancing ant?…

3 comments

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One must

put up barriers

to

keep

oneself

in time

.

On the lighted stage... (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

On the lighted stage… (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

On the lighted stage... (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

On the lighted stage… (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Something to reflect upon…

9 comments

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As she brushed

her long, flowing, blond hair,

she continued to admire her radiant beauty

in the large mirror.

However, she didn’t

reflect enough

around that superficial mirror.

She never realized that 

the beauty that she was

a part of extended as

the trees, the butterflies,

the bees, the rocks,

and the fish.

Her mind was apart from the whole

which, when it’s all said and (never) done,

may be apart from 

the real beauty.

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Green Tree Frog in Flower. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Green Tree Frog in Flower. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Green Tree Frog in Flower. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Green Tree Frog in Flower. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Leaving psychological tradition…

4 comments

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Being truly mindful or of a deeply meditative mind, is not something that one can know that one is experiencing or part of.  The beauty of the unknown is that it cannot merely be held or captured by the known.  It is a state of true humility where the one who may be involved with it is not certain that it is being done.   There’s no certitude in full mindfulness and profound meditation, because the unknown cannot be captivated (and owned) by the known.  So many of us are indoctrinated by mere symbolic knowledge… by the known; it is what was poured into us — formulating us — throughout our youth.  Even our individual concepts of self are essentially learned symbols and images.  Concentration is all well and good, at times, but it has little to do with this; this goes far beyond mere concentration.  Concentration involves focusing on various images and mental patterns (symbolic patterns).  Concentration is often necessary, but a mind that merely concentrates is stuck in a very limited segment of what the mind is capable of.   We’ve been concentrating for eons, and look where it has gotten us.  We may have better machines and more comfortable lives, but we are lost in symbols, competition, separative ideologies, with power-hungry leaders and mechanical systems manipulating our lives.

It takes great courage and intelligence to step out of that field (that so many of us are immersed in).  To leave the field of the known (i.e., the field of absorbed symbols and learned mental formulations) is, indeed, a kind of psychological dying.  However, it is where the true innocence and true beauty of a different kind of intelligence exists.  Not doing it is truly a morbid kind of decay.  Most of us want to be certain.  We remain (perpetually) in the field of learned images and symbols; we are frightened to go beyond that.  Interestingly, remaining (perpetually) in that field continues with what remains secondhand, stale, and unoriginal.

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Softshelled Turtle. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Softshelled Turtle. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Thinking about oneself, one saw what one was taught…

9 comments

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Things in the universe, though they may seem to be separate and very different, may all be reflections of a larger whole.  However, most of us were educated to perceive via fragmentation.  Even most of the top scientists of the world currently tend to dissect things and look more at the parts…  not so much at the whole.  The mind can intelligently perceive without merely seeing via standard patterns and images (that were instilled within it, formulating its constitution).  For many of us, even self-images consist of fragmentary concepts and images that were accumulated from learned paradigms.  Even when we look inwardly, we see fragmentarily… we see learned symbols/images.  Undoubtedly, there would be less wars and less indifference towards nature if more of us would go beyond the norm and perceive more holistically.  The right arm will not robotically wage war against (and try to vanquish) the left arm if it clearly sees the reality of the whole.

True independence is going beyond conditioning; it is going beyond the dependence upon old patterns and systems that were implanted by others (who absorbed and became them themselves).  If one remains in circumscribed patterns, one can’t go far; and, interestingly, such a “farness” is beyond distance and separation.  

Perpetuity (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Perpetuity (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 Perpetuity (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Perpetuity (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Many want to ignore this and sweep it under the rug…

18 comments

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When I was very young, (before I became a vegetarian) I was an avid fisherman.  I loved fishing tremendously; being out there, with nature, was a large part of it (and was very special).  There was a manmade lake that I would often fish at that was fairly new; adjacent to it, and connected to it by a narrow channel, was a huge, shallow swamp area (that was nearly as big as the lake itself).  Most people who fished at the lake didn’t know about the swamp area; it was a superb area that contained many fish, many of which would go there to spawn and lay eggs.  All kinds of other wildlife were there.  There was a large factory not far from the swamp, however, and each year the swamp would get more and more slime and oily residue floating at the surface, much of which was undoubtedly due to pollution from the factory and from the industrial environment.  Each year would be exponentially worse than the next.  There would be less and less fish each year and more and more noxious algae and scummy debris. Back then, as a kid, I felt that what was going on in the swamp was a precursor to what would be going on for our entire planet; I deeply felt that often.

Now scientists are saying that we don’t have much time left (before it’s too late) to “get it right” with changing things for the better with regard to the environment.  The permafrost of the globe is melting rapidly, and they say it will get exponentially worse each year, which will affect our environment in drastic ways.  Our weather is getting more and more erratic and violent and the coral reefs are rapidly dwindling.  Please try to do something more green; please try to use fossil fuel planes and automobiles less frequently and please recycle and look into using alternative energy forms that don’t leave as big of a carbon footprint.  Our human population, additionally, needs to be regulated more and intelligently diminished; an aquarium with too many fish within it cannot adequately recycle the waste and remain balanced.  Each one of us is highly responsible and must do our part.

(This won’t fit under a rug; it’s our planet.)

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 Fly-catching. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Fly-catching. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Fly-catching. (2) (Digital Crayon). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Fly-catching. (2) (Digital Crayon). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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It’s taking off time… (Multi-Photo)

5 comments

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It’s taking off time

4 the bee.

4 U 2 soar, beyond being and unbeing,

there must be taking off time

4 U.

U can’t be there

if U are not taking off time.

A mere sequence of accumulating 

patterns and experiences in time

isn’t soaring;

it’s unsoaring-merelybeing.

Every now and then

(beyond the mere groping after sequential patterns or the mere running away from patterns)

take off some time

(beyond conflict) and soar.

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Taking off time. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Taking off time. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Taking off time. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Taking off time. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Fishing…

5 comments

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Fishing for insects

in the lake so blue

did you realize 

that what your eye can catch is you?

Are you searching for truth

as you sit in your chair?

Do eye realize that what is here

is an extension of what’s out there?

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Fishing for insects. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Fishing for insects. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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On the bank of the river…

7 comments

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Having money

in the bank

is important

2 many; 

but this mom

has something

much more precious

in the bank.

Money isn’t

everything.

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Precious little one. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Precious little one. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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From one fragmentary mode to the next…

2 comments

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Many minds depend upon experiences in order to exist… without fully realizing that they are those experiences.  Reacting to (and “as”) experiences involves  conditioned responses following each other, in sequence.  Without such experiences most minds would be lost, for their very composition desperately depends upon such experiences.  Even ancient organisms, such as the mighty Tyrannosaurus rex, had brains that exclusively depended upon experiences.  However, a few very intelligent minds — very few — though being highly appreciative of many experiences, have realized that they need not just exclusively depend upon experience.  Such minds, though they often use and appreciate experience, go beyond it at times.  Such minds are a light to themselves, and they do not exclusively depend upon things… not even upon experience.  To be beyond dependence is to be truly free; the other way is primitive, limited, partial, and without majestic vastness.

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Duck with a T-rex face.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Duck with a T-rex face. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Beyond the stale…

6 comments

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All of the mumbo jumbo

from all of the politicians

and bureaucrats

doesn’t hold a candle

to the radiant mojo

that a white candle heron

in nature has

as it silently

wades

beyond

the 

superficial

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Heron gulping down its prey.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Heron gulping down its prey. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Beyond hand-me-down perspectives…

3 comments

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The wellspring of truth isn’t to be found by secondhand thoughts and formulations… (and all thoughts are directly or indirectly secondhand).  One can’t discover the new with an instrument ingrained in the old.

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Together. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Together. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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What Katy did…

9 comments

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What Katy did

and what you 

did…

Are they related?

Of course they are.

But what you did

affects Katy

much more

than what 

Katy did

to you.

Recycle and promote

green energy. 

(Humans, need to go more green.)

Katy did.

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Katydid.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Katydid. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Insight #12

2 comments

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E

Turn

8

Tea

is

4

Ev

R

&

sew

R

Yew!

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Always keeping busy.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Always keeping busy. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Are You Experienced?…

9 comments

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Experience is good oftentimes, especially when it is occurs with sensitivity and learning.  However, too many fall into experiences, exclusively,  just like moths into the flame.  A mind that does not habitually, robotically blast into experience… goes beyond it at times.  It might seem odd or strange that one suggests that going beyond the realm of experience is beneficial and healthy… (but it is).  Many of us seek new and “more exciting” experiences.  In doing this, one thinks that one will achieve happiness.  However, once something is experienced,  its supposed “newness” tends to quickly evaporate and when we experience similar things, they tend to lose their quality of being beyond the same old patterns; so we seek new and different patterns, different experiences.  However, different patterns are still mere patterns.  A mind that clings to various series and strings of patterns (to be stimulated) becomes dependent upon such patterns.  A brain dependent upon mere patterns, for its happiness, is a mind that is not at all independent and free; it is enslaved with dependency upon the patterns (as so many people, unfortunately, are).  Then boredom, frustration, and depression often easily slip in; for a mind that is based merely upon patterns (an their recognition) easily gets fixated in robotic cause and effect reactions (based largely on what the patterns may or may not provide).  Inevitably, they never provide enough.  The experience and the experiencer are not two separate things.

A mind beyond mere experience — and there are few such minds — is really independent and free.  It goes beyond mere patterns and the recognizing of patterns.  It doesn’t do so out of volition and will; it just happens; intelligence is a factor.  When it happens, the mind is still (though highly active and aware); however, it is not merely absorbing or rearranging patterns.  Being beyond sequential reactions and patterns of recognition, it is an explosion of the new and immeasurable.  Joy and insight, beyond dependency upon experiences, exists then.

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Moth Head Study. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Moth Head Study. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Ducking the issues…

5 comments

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If you duck the issues and don’t pay full attention in life… then when thoughts and feelings occur in (and “as”) you, you will not attend to them completely and fully.  To attend to thoughts and feelings completely (as they occur) there is intense observation without separation, without the indifference of distance.  In looking fully and attentively, which is deep learning, there need not be mere judgment, condemnation, or control according a learned authority at some (supposed) distance (be it external or internal).  

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[Note: Paleontologists have been saying that birds are a branch of dinosaurs that survived the great extinction event.  A close-up of this duck shows what eerily looks like dinosaur raptor teeth.  The tooth-like structures are really lamellae… sieve-like projections that help to extract edible items, such as seeds or insects, away from mud or sand.  They also may be beneficial for defense.  Duckasaurus rex!]

Duck Teeth. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Duck Teeth. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Be Balm

11 comments

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In an oscillating universe, if an entity does not get it together and transcend mediocrity psychologically, then the consequences remain infinitesimally dull, like a seed that never germinates.  If one flowers and grows, the winds of enlightenment may be truly endless. 

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Wild Beebalm. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Wild Beebalm. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Internal disorder is projected outwardly…

2 comments

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Interesting, isn’t it, about how perfectly the universe works with orderly sequences creating the higher elements via nuclear fusion, with supernovas (creating rare elements) and the like, all with immense order and precision?  Yet isn’t it curious how we humans — many of us — live in tremendous disorder, with wars, violence, deceit, damage to the environment, manipulation via power, and all kinds of disorder that is willing to let others be harmed?  So amongst all of the order, there is the continuing disorder of man; and that needs to change.  

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Facing it.   Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Facing it. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Limitations….

4 comments

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One of the fundamental problems — which was observed even when one was rather young (in college days) — was that people who were trying to transcend beyond the self (in order to meditate or merge with the whole) were still clinging (in various ways) to the notion of a central “I” or central “ego.”   Innumerable people would each say things like: “This is my form of meditation which I practice daily.”  Or:  “I am observing my behavior throughout the entire day.”   Or:  “I watch thoughts as they take place and vanish from consciousness.”   

Separating the “I”, psychologically, from the rest of thought/thinking and maintaining that it has control is a waste of time and energy, and it contributes to friction and separation within (and “as”) the mind.  A dog perpetually trying to catch its own tail wastes energy (though in such a case it may at least be getting some needed exercise).  As was stated before (in previous posts)… one can function quite easily without the ego (which is, in itself, inherently false anyway).  Thoughts are tools used by organisms in order to achieve certain ends.  Maintaining that there is a central agency that is “separate from and controls these thoughts” may not be at all accurate.  (See my previous posts about the corpus callosum.)  Thoughts are conditioned responses; the manifestation of the “I” or “me” is another conditioned response, another thought or projected symbol.   Ego projections overly utilizing the “I” or the “me” are manifestations of brains that have some transformation or evolving to do.  The ego, being a falsity, tends to create an erroneous psychological radius and circumference around itself… (which tends to involve separation, learned space, and indifference).  Nullification of the “I” or the ego does not destroy boundless intelligence nor the eternity and timelessness of dynamic wisdom.

Though one can still use the term “I” in conversations with people, one may not — if one is fully aware — use it as a reference to a central point.  When not talking or communicating with others,  this movement — while thinking internally — often uses “we” instead of “I.”  Or one can use the term: “this movement” (instead of “I”).  Of course, the “I” can represent all of one’s thoughts; but one is actually far more than conditioned mental reactions… and far more than some temporary, biological mass.   This isn’t some kind of mental game.  If we were educated wrongly and cling to primitive falsities, we will remain in what is a circumscribed circumference that perpetuates limitation and disorder.

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Ant on Lichen. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Ant on Lichen. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Beyond the mold…

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Top scientists have stated that it is likely that our universe functions in ways that are totally different than what we expect or think.   One couldn’t agree more.  So, one has to discard what one has been taught, and look and perceive freshly, without all that was poured into one to mold and shape the way that one perceives.  If one merely sees with the patterns that were implanted into one, then there is likely mostly jaded perception (that is looking through a fabricated psychological screen).  Only a dynamic mind can go beyond what was rigidly poured into it.  If we don’t see beyond the limitation that has been provided, then we will remain circumscribed by those who were also defined and shaped by others who, in the old past, delineated and fabricated them.  If we remain in the limited, we will never discover the new, the timeless, and the truth.

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At the County Fair... Rooster, Hen & Youngster.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

At the County Fair… Rooster, Hen & Youngster. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Beyond ordinary…

4 comments

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One must purge what all the pundits, leaders, and experts have taught.  Most of them are full of themselves. We (despite thinking otherwise) live in very primitive times psychologically… and if one doesn’t figure things out for oneself, one will remain within (and “as”) the quagmire of the false and crass.  If one’s very mode and manner of thinking (and, hence, perceiving) was constructed by them, then there must be a fundamental transformation of the mind if one is to see without past corruption and without merely looking with old patterns and standard modes.  To observe without distortion, one must look without a blueprint, methodology, system, or absorbed structure; that can only take place via pristine observation that is unsullied by past dictates or precepts.  Most are unwilling or unable to do this.  They are too mesmerized by what was poured into them, unfortunately.  When they try to guide others, psychologically and spiritually, they are often (even unknowingly) merely projecting what they were taught, (which is essentially second-hand).  Direct observation, without all the garbage and distortion, is possible; deep insight and profound understanding depend upon it.

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[Note:  If you are using the “Reader”/ “Blogs I Follow” method, note that they have recently revised it.  Personally, I am not too fond of  the revision (photograph-wise).  If you wish to see my photos much better than what happens after “one” or “no” clicks… please click on the “three dots” at the upper righthand corner of the initial presentation, then click on “Visit Site.”  Then you will see the photos the way that they were meant to be seen. (WordPress needs to explain the revision better to everyone.)  Of course, my site is primarily about philosophy, mindfulness, and true self-awareness… not merely about pictures/images.  The photos are an accompanying addition (about splendid nature), but are not the primary thing that I really want to share.]

 

Three's company. (There's a fourth, but it's hiding.)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Three’s company. (There’s a fourth, but it’s hiding.) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Beyond the suffering…

6 comments

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One can be stoic in life —  and be rather indifferent to pain — and brightly live and smile beyond the ludicrous, limited, opaque behaviors of others… and beyond the inauspicious, vile, dark circumstances that befall upon one.

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Ladybug and the aphids it eats.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Ladybug and the aphids it eats. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Effortlessness… (Multi-Photo)

8 comments

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Effortlessness is essential in regard to being a mind that is open to real wisdom and harmony in (and “as”) the universe.  Effortlessness occurs when the mind is not merely regulating and performing things from what seems to be a center (i.e., central point) and as mere fragmentary reactions.   Effortlessness exists beyond measuring and copying (i.e., imitating what was learned).  The moment one knows or thinks that one is in a state of effortlessness, effortlessness is likely negated.  In effortlessness there is no imagery of an observer separate from the observed; and in deep effortlessness, the observed undergoes a transformation into what exists beyond mere categorization and rote recognition.  A wise individual in effortlessness is not merely lazy; on the contrary, true effortlessness is tremendous, majestic/intelligent action; one can do many things while effortlessness is taking place, wherein the acting and the actor are not two separate things.  One can be diligently watering and caring for some garden plants, for example, and be in a state of effortlessness.  There can also be effortlessness while sitting or sleeping.

Involved in all this is an effortless psychological dying from moment to moment.  Deep psychological creativity manifests as a measureless, unbridled dying from moment to moment.  Only a mind engaging in such psychological dying can be renewed from moment to moment, without merely carrying the burden of the past.  A mind that is not of such dying is likely stuck in the past, (which is stale, rehashed, and what is truly fundamentally dead).  A mind that clings to being a separate observer, that clings to merely being “known and accumulated patterns that react” (and project themselves from a supposed center that was learned), is not likely to be the joy of the measureless and the freedom of profound depth.  A mind of effortlessness, unlike innumerable other minds, does not often waste energy (with internal friction involving conflict, fields of separation, and mere fragmentary struggles).

Only a mind of effortlessness is what is immersed in profound grace.  Minds not of such grace are involved with friction, conflict, rigid images, separation, and psychological energy wastage.  A mind full of feelings of domination from a (supposed) central point is composed of patterns of subjugation and tyrannizing influences that eclipse pristine perception and waste time and energy.  

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Insect in Lily. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Insect in Lily. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Insect in Lily - crayon version. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Insect in Lily – crayon version. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Drops…

3 comments

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Each and every drop has its place

and is accounted for

The tears of the world are

all accounted for

What lies beyond all the tears

is accounted for

is blossoming

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Returning. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Returning. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Keep your distance…

9 comments

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You needn’t be concerned about me;

I’m a vegetarian, not a hunter.

And this movement realizes 

that your hearty fervor to flee

reflects your deep passion for living.

 

These effusive camera shots 

aren’t meant to kill.

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Seeing each other.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Seeing each other. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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We are… (Multi-Photo)

4 comments

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We are the mountains

We are the golden sun

We are the butterflies

We are the stirring spoon

We are the bird’s song

We are the turning key

We are the churning thoughts

We are the thunderstorms

We are the wars of lies

We are the poetry lines

We are the rocking chairs

We are the light through the forest down the lane

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We are the butterflies. (1)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

We are the butterflies. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

We are the butterflies. (2)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

We are the butterflies. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Prickly

2 comments

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Protecting mysocalledself 

from all that’s ever bad

perhaps with wisdom’s razor-sharp points 

that innumerable many never had

 

In a world full of violence, destruction, 

dull ignorance and some joy

a coating of fine needles

is unblunted intelligence to employ

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A point here and there.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

A point here and there. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Congrats to many regarding Supreme Court’s ruling on Same Sex Marriage…

4 comments

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Two_________female

antswish

____ing

to

share________________ the same

flower for

ever

Whoever says that they should not

is out of the blossoming

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[Added note:  My sister-in-law is married to another woman; both she and her spouse are very sweet, caring, and kind; they are far better parents than mine ever were.]

Someone's aunts on Stella D'oro. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Someone’s aunts on Stella D’oro. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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The Confederate Flag needs to go… (Multi-Photo)

7 comments

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My heart goes out to those in Charleston, South Carolina who lost their lives or loved ones.  The Confederate flag needs to go.  To many, it (justifiably) represents repression and hatred.  Personally, one doesn’t care to wave flags of any type.  If you are a global citizen (i.e., a true citizen of the world), then separative flags have very little meaning.  Flags tend to reinforce the feeling of separation and indifference regarding “those at a distance.”  Many think that their country or area is superior to “that” country or “other” place… or is superior to “those other people.”  During war, so many feel that “God” is on their side… as if God takes sides in violent, separative confrontations!  A truly perceptive mind realizes a profound truth that places it in a common bond (united) with all living creatures.  Separative flags (of any kind), which promote boundaries and divisiveness (and they pretty much all do), have little significance to a mind that is truly in such a bond beyond demarcations. 

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/the_confederate_flag_needs_to_go_loc/?bqntMib&v=60732

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[This baby snapping turtle was in the backyard, running about.  The adults lay their eggs in the ground; when the babies finally hatch, they need to quickly get to water (or else they get eaten by raccoons, coyotes, foxes, or crows and such).  After taking a few photos, I carefully tossed this little guy into the river that we live on.]

Baby Snapping Turtle (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Baby Snapping Turtle (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Baby Snapping Turtle (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Baby Snapping Turtle (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Perception is the key, not separate from it… (Multi-Photo)

4 comments

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Moving the key

to unlock the door

is something the mind has been

many times before

 

Before the key 

to unlock the mind

is something the door will be

moving many times

.

Mayfly Study (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mayfly Study (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mayfly Study (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mayfly Study (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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The beauty of the unknown exists beyond the confines of that nest… (Multi-Photo)

15 comments

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When we are young, we are like fledglings, depending on the those who are more mature to help us to do well and survive.  However, at some point, we (if we are to really soar in life) have to leave the nest.  As human beings, many of us never actually leave the nest; we continue to depend.  We cling to the ideologies, patterns, religions, politics, traditions, and habits imprinted upon us by others; and so we never really independently soar.  Most of us “feel safe,” nested in their ways and traditions.  For human beings, however, true enlightenment is never merely within the circumscribed confines of a limited, little nest (or prepared space).  Most of us are afraid to take the plunge, to let go of all the habits and traditions that we have been nesting in.  Most merely cling to symbols, words, representations, ideologies, and learned concepts of (and including) a central “I”… and never ascend from being supposedly “safely nested” in those limited conceptions.  That is why most never soar, and it is as simple as that.

Hatched and Hatching. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Hatched and Hatching. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Unhatched. Photo by Thomas Peace c.2015

Unhatched. Photo by Thomas Peace c.2015

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Beyond fragmentary ways… (Multi-Photo)

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The understanding of how the universe functions doesn’t, interestingly enough, merely come about by way of a process.

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Tulip Study. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Tulip Study. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Tulip Study. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Tulip Study. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Animal – Parrot Intelligence…

16 comments

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Before I retired, I used to (as a hobby) keep and breed macaws.  Now that I’m older and retired, I have 3 pet parrots… two that are macaws, and one that’s a Yellow Naped Amazon. 

Parrots make great pets but, because of their intelligence, you have to give them a lot of time and stimulation.  In many ways, they are a lot like dogs… except they can talk.  I exercise all of my birds daily… taking them out of their large cages and moving up and down with them many times (as I simultaneously exercise).  They have their own high definition TV in their room, where they like to watch things like The Muppets, Sesame Street, and Rock’n Learn (learning/phonics) videos.  

Their intelligence is phenomenal!  Makes me glad I’m a vegetarian… though I realize that certain birds, like chickens, don’t even come close to the intelligence of parrots.  There are many other intelligent animals, including pigs and dogs.  Tweety Pie, the bird pictured here, talks in complete sentences.  She creates and makes up her own sentences and has great comprehension.  Some birds just mimic; others have comprehension.  For example, when we put on our coats or jackets to go outside, Tweety would ask: “Are you going to go bye-bye now?”  … or “Can I go too?”  We never taught her those questions; she came up with them herself; she says them with the right intonation for a question.  She sings complete songs, like the “Oh what a beautiful morning” song  and other songs including one by the Backstreet Boys.  (I don’t even know the lyrics to that Backstreet Boys song, thank goodness.)  Once, when I was in the living room and couldn’t get the Playstation to work, she said, “What seems to be the problem?”  I said, “I can’t seem to get the TV to work right.”  She then said, “Can I help?”  Something else!  Last night I kept the birds up a bit late because I was cleaning aquariums in their room.  On two separate occasions I told the birds that they could “sleep in late”… (by me not turning on lights or opening window shades until later in the morning); after each of the two times that I told them that they could “sleep in late in the morning,” Tweety Pie” said “Thank You”!  The night before, I asked the birds about which video they’d like to watch; I said, “What do you want to watch… Children Singing, Sesame Street, or The Muppets?”  Tweety said, “Muppets.”  So The Muppets were put on.

I tried to do videos of Tweety, but she won’t talk in front of a camera (at all).  Once, when I worked (before retiring), I recorded her conversations on an audio recorder, took it to work for people to listen to, and people were totally amazed.  (I included a couple of YouTube videos here — of other people’s parrot friends — for people to see, so that they can observe just how intelligent these birds can be; the ones in the videos are not against being video recorded.)  Many of these birds don’t just mimic.  Some, especially, have great comprehension.  One of our macaws, Scarlet, talks and has great comprehension.  When I was younger, I took her to work with me (to my classroom for the multiply handicapped); she would sit on my lap in the car, as I was driving, and was perfect in behavior in the car and in the classroom.  Sometimes Scarlet calls for me by name, saying “Tom, come here,” and Marla, my wife, says that it sounds like I have another wife!  Just last night, I had been playing a learning-video for them about colors, shapes, and counting, and as they (on the video) demonstrated counting to ten; Scarlet then, after they got up to ten, said “eleven.”  

(See the videos below.  The one of the African Grey Parrot, named Einstein, is one of many; to see other of her – she’s a female – videos, do a YouTube search on “Einstein Texan Talking Parrot”; there are other videos of another bird, that’s a show bird, named Einstein… but I like Einstein from Texas best.)

Tweety Pie. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Tweety Pie. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Birdhouses are for the birds… (Multi-Photo)

8 comments

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In my birdhouse 

we take shelter from the rain

In my birdhouse

we sleep well,without pain

 

In my birdhouse  

we are safe from violent wind

In my birdhouse

we are born,we come in

.

 

[Note:  Birdhouses at my sister-in-law’s (Mary’s) and brother-in-law’s (Gary’s) place.  They were constructed, homemade, by Gary…. painted by Mary.]

 Birdhouse (4... At my sister-in-law Mary's place.) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (4… At my sister-in-law Mary’s place.) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (3... At sister-in-law Mary's place). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (3… At sister-in-law Mary’s place). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (2... At sister-in-law Mary's place.) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (2… At sister-in-law Mary’s place.) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (1... at sister-in-law Mary's place).  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Birdhouse (1… at sister-in-law Mary’s place). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Time and Timelessness… Quartet #1: Burnt Norton

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BURNT NORTON  (by T.S. Eliot)
(No. 1 of ‘Four Quartets’)
I

Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden. My words echo
Thus, in your mind.
                              But to what purpose
Disturbing the dust on a bowl of rose-leaves
I do not know.
                        Other echoes
Inhabit the garden. Shall we follow?
Quick, said the bird, find them, find them,
Round the corner. Through the first gate,
Into our first world, shall we follow
The deception of the thrush? Into our first world.
There they were, dignified, invisible,
Moving without pressure, over the dead leaves,
In the autumn heat, through the vibrant air,
And the bird called, in response to
The unheard music hidden in the shrubbery,
And the unseen eyebeam crossed, for the roses
Had the look of flowers that are looked at.
There they were as our guests, accepted and accepting.
So we moved, and they, in a formal pattern,
Along the empty alley, into the box circle,
To look down into the drained pool.
Dry the pool, dry concrete, brown edged,
And the pool was filled with water out of sunlight,
And the lotos rose, quietly, quietly,
The surface glittered out of heart of light,
And they were behind us, reflected in the pool.
Then a cloud passed, and the pool was empty.
Go, said the bird, for the leaves were full of children,
Hidden excitedly, containing laughter.
Go, go, go, said the bird: human kind
Cannot bear very much reality.
Time past and time future
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.

II

Garlic and sapphires in the mud
Clot the bedded axle-tree.
The trilling wire in the blood
Sings below inveterate scars
Appeasing long forgotten wars.
The dance along the artery
The circulation of the lymph
Are figured in the drift of stars
Ascend to summer in the tree
We move above the moving tree
In light upon the figured leaf
And hear upon the sodden floor
Below, the boarhound and the boar
Pursue their pattern as before
But reconciled among the stars.

At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,
But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,
Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,
Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,
There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.
I can only say, there we have been: but I cannot say where.
And I cannot say, how long, for that is to place it in time.
The inner freedom from the practical desire,
The release from action and suffering, release from the inner
And the outer compulsion, yet surrounded
By a grace of sense, a white light still and moving,
Erhebung without motion, concentration
Without elimination, both a new world
And the old made explicit, understood
In the completion of its partial ecstasy,
The resolution of its partial horror.
Yet the enchainment of past and future
Woven in the weakness of the changing body,
Protects mankind from heaven and damnation
Which flesh cannot endure.
                                          Time past and time future
Allow but a little consciousness.
To be conscious is not to be in time
But only in time can the moment in the rose-garden,
The moment in the arbour where the rain beat,
The moment in the draughty church at smokefall
Be remembered; involved with past and future.
Only through time time is conquered.

III

Here is a place of disaffection
Time before and time after
In a dim light: neither daylight
Investing form with lucid stillness
Turning shadow into transient beauty
With slow rotation suggesting permanence
Nor darkness to purify the soul
Emptying the sensual with deprivation
Cleansing affection from the temporal.
Neither plenitude nor vacancy. Only a flicker
Over the strained time-ridden faces
Distracted from distraction by distraction
Filled with fancies and empty of meaning
Tumid apathy with no concentration
Men and bits of paper, whirled by the cold wind
That blows before and after time,
Wind in and out of unwholesome lungs
Time before and time after.
Eructation of unhealthy souls
Into the faded air, the torpid
Driven on the wind that sweeps the gloomy hills of London,
Hampstead and Clerkenwell, Campden and Putney,
Highgate, Primrose and Ludgate. Not here
Not here the darkness, in this twittering world.

    Descend lower, descend only
Into the world of perpetual solitude,
World not world, but that which is not world,
Internal darkness, deprivation
And destitution of all property,
Desiccation of the world of sense,
Evacuation of the world of fancy,
Inoperancy of the world of spirit;
This is the one way, and the other
Is the same, not in movement
But abstention from movement; while the world moves
In appetency, on its metalled ways
Of time past and time future.

IV

Time and the bell have buried the day,
The black cloud carries the sun away.
Will the sunflower turn to us, will the clematis
Stray down, bend to us; tendril and spray
Clutch and cling?

    Chill
Fingers of yew be curled
Down on us? After the kingfisher’s wing
Has answered light to light, and is silent, the light is still
At the still point of the turning world.

V

Words move, music moves
Only in time; but that which is only living
Can only die. Words, after speech, reach
Into the silence. Only by the form, the pattern,
Can words or music reach
The stillness, as a Chinese jar still
Moves perpetually in its stillness.
Not the stillness of the violin, while the note lasts,
Not that only, but the co-existence,
Or say that the end precedes the beginning,
And the end and the beginning were always there
Before the beginning and after the end.
And all is always now. Words strain,
Crack and sometimes break, under the burden,
Under the tension, slip, slide, perish,
Decay with imprecision, will not stay in place,
Will not stay still. Shrieking voices
Scolding, mocking, or merely chattering,
Always assail them. The Word in the desert
Is most attacked by voices of temptation,
The crying shadow in the funeral dance,
The loud lament of the disconsolate chimera.

    The detail of the pattern is movement,
As in the figure of the ten stairs.
Desire itself is movement
Not in itself desirable;
Love is itself unmoving,
Only the cause and end of movement,
Timeless, and undesiring
Except in the aspect of time
Caught in the form of limitation
Between un-being and being.
Sudden in a shaft of sunlight
Even while the dust moves
There rises the hidden laughter
Of children in the foliage
Quick now, here, now, always—
Ridiculous the waste sad time
Stretching before and after.

The Rose Garden. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

The Rose Garden. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Separated space… separated time… (Multi-Photo)

7 comments

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The space that apparently separates you from others is similar to what seems to separate the past from the future.

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Sunbathing (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Sunbathing (1). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Sunbathing (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Sunbathing (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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“The sky is falling!”… said Chicken Little (Multi-Photo)

2 comments

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Birds are a type of feathered dinosaur.  Now many paleontologists are contending that all dinosaurs were feathered to some extent or another, just as all mammals have fur.  Meat-eating theropod dinosaurs were very feathered, had stereoscopic vision and had chicken-like feet.  They didn’t all go extinct after that massive asteroid impact. That asteroid was six miles across, and its impact was equal to the energy of 300 million nuclear weapons; it created temperatures hotter than on the sun’s surface for several minutes.  If we don’t stop having wars and ruining the environment, we may well follow in the footsteps of those that didn’t survive.  We need to do much better.  

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Stereoscopic Vision. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Stereoscopic Vision. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Theropod-Dinosaur-like Feet. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Theropod-Dinosaur-like Feet. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Looking with the antiquated past… (Multi-Photo)

8 comments

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Don’t fall into merely accepting hand-me-down thoughts, beliefs, and systems.  If you do (absorb and become them), you’ll see what you are programmed to see… which (though seeming comfortable and safe) may not really be seeing whatsoever.

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Mostly Yellow. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mostly Yellow. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mostly Yellow. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Mostly Yellow. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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For Goodness Sake…

3 comments

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Just because you are good does not mean that only good things will happen for (or to) you.  True goodness is not for some later prize, but exists as its own effortless beauty.  True goodness is far beyond the norm; it is beyond what “mostpeople” subscribe to and unexist as.  True goodness involves an immense awareness that exists independent of group ideas, traditions, and values.  The ideas, traditions, and values of others are often binding and limiting.  True goodness, like real creativity, is causeless and effortless… and merely following the patterns of a system or group nullifies profound creativity and independence.  Interestingly, true goodness does not merely cling to being in patterns of experience.  Habitually clinging to “needing experience” is another form of dependence.  A mind twisted up in psychological dependence and in habits is not capable, for the most part, of being intrinsically good.  Goodness exists beyond descriptions and learned concepts.  Most are unwilling to cut themselves off from dependence… dependence on governments, nations, religions, philosophies, ideals, hypnotic effects, learned concepts, experience, and false habits; therefore, real enlightenment and profound goodness eludes them.  Only what is free, independently wise, and whole can be visited by what is immensely sacred and profound.  It cannot, and will not, enter into what is distorted and corrupt. 

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Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Beyond learning from the old past… (Multi-Photo)

2 comments

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Instead of going

out

and seeing a tulip

go out

look at everythingtogether-

withoutseparateformslabelsnames-

andwithouttherebeinganyseparation-

fromwhatyouactuallyare

 

or

you can

go

and

with a very

sep

a

rate

ego

see

what 

you 

were

taught

by

sep

a

ra

tion

.

Whatever. (1)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Whatever. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Whatever (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Whatever (2). Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Songbird… Silent Fish…

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When decent music is listened to, be not separate from the song; be the harmony… and though the song ends, let true harmony remain.

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A male Celebes Rainbowfish in a large, freshwater aquarium; this fish has continued to live for a very long time. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

A male Celebes Rainbowfish in a large, freshwater aquarium; this fish has continued to live for a very long time. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Heart Blossom

14 comments

.

May one’s heart blossom 

to a true compassion

and a love

for nature

 

May one’s compassion blossom

to a true heart

and a nature

for love

.

[Side Note:  My wife, Marla, though there have been complications, continues to do much better, improving following her shoulder replacement therapy.] 

Heart of the Sunrise. (From my sister-in-law Mary's yard) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Heart of the Sunrise. (From my sister-in-law Mary’s yard) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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My absence…

25 comments

I have not been blogging lately.  The reason why is that my wife, Marla, had to have surgery recently.  She had a total shoulder replacement done.  I have not had time to do any blogging due to helping her with things.  Perhaps I will be able to blog once in a while soon; we will see.  The surgery went well… and she is recovering better than expected.  Marla has a very delicate constitution and is extremely fragile.  A lot of this has to do with the Wilson’s Disease that she has.  Wilson’s Disease is a rare disorder; it is genetic and involves the inability of the body to metabolize copper.  The copper can then act as a poison within individuals who are not properly treated for the disease.  Related to the Wilson’s Disease, Marla has very severe neck dystonia… wherein her neck muscles become extremely tense and rigid; she gets botox injections to help treat the dystonia.  For a long time, Marla was on penicillamine to treat the Wilson’s.  However, that medication had so many side-effects that it was almost as bad as having the disease itself.  Marla, likely due to the penicillamine, developed ARDS and almost died.  Then she had to have neck surgery for collapsed neck vertebrae, a surgery that took 11 hours and caused her to have very limited swallowing ability.  Now she mostly receives nutrition via a gastrostomy tube that goes to her stomach area.  I help her with the enteral feedings and various things, and it is time consuming.  These days, Wilson’s Disease is easily treated with zinc; the zinc has, fortunately, little or no side effects.  Marla bravely contends with her physical problems; she often helps others (who have Wilson’s Disease or dystonia) to better understand things about those ailments; she, as a person, is as sweet as can be and is an extremely wonderful and very understanding person.  I am honored to be married to her and want to make sure that she does well throughout the recovery process.

 Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

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Peace…

6 comments

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Peace is everyone’s responsibility.  We must all go beyond violence and care for one another.  One is different from, but not separate from, whom one perceives.

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I’m 63 years old and I’ve kept tropical fish ever since I was in the 5th grade.  I even had an aquarium in my college dorms when I went to college.  For a long time now, I’ve been keeping, raising, and breeding, various forms of miniature catfish called Corydoras (“Cory” catfish).  In terms of peace, all of the species of the genus Corydoras are totally peaceful and non-belligerent; I have never, in all the years that I’ve had them, ever observed them acting aggressively or being hostile to one another, or toward other fish.   I was taking photographs of my miniature Corydoras Reticulated Julii Catfish when I noticed them laying eggs.  In the bottom photograph, the female is with a male (doing their thing); look closely at her bottom ventral fins; she is holding two eggs in those fins (as the fins are held together in a prayer-like fashion).  Later (after they are fertilized) she will (carry them around for quite some time) and then secure them to plant leaves or upon the aquarium glass.  (These catfish are definitely good for going green while keeping aquarium fish.  They do not require aquarium heaters, and two separate aquariums can be maintained with a 4 watt air pump.)  Corydoras are, like I mentioned, extremely peaceful… (plus they are beautiful and are always comical in their actions).

 

Trio of Corydoras trilineatus. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Trio of Corydoras trilineatus. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Corydoras trilineatus mating with eggs below clasped in female's bottom fins.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Corydoras trilineatus mating with eggs below clasped in female’s bottom fins. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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1/4 Inch Long Wild Violet Flower

14 comments

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Violet was a girl

with very few faults

she could sing and dance

and do somersaults

 

Violet was quite pretty

just as a flower

she loved to be in her garden

even during a shower

 

Violet blossomed in time

and loved to sun-bathe outdoors

she liked nature wild,

was never found in stores

 

All girls are Violets

in their own special way

they need never fear death,

while inevitably withering away

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 Wild Violet; one of many in the backyard. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Wild Violet; one of many in the backyard. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Going beyond the melancholy and blue…

4 comments

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If you are melancholy and blue, transcend what you are.  This can be done by, without method, being highly observant from moment to moment, without clinging to the methods, systems, and stale images that were seeded within (and “as”) you.  If one often merely perceives with (and “as”) stale, redundant images that one constantly “recognizes” things with… then one is seeing what was taught; and that is the old, stale, antiquated, and musty “known.”  Perceive without that dust-laden past… and one may see joyfully without merely just recognizing.  That may bring real ecstasy.  Then one won’t be blue any longer… unless one is an Indigo Bunting.

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Returning Indigo Bunting. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Returning Indigo Bunting. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Dragon King (Multi-Photo)

8 comments

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Mighty dexterous Dragon King

far back as the Carboniferous

heavy-bodied, strong flying,

adroit acrobat of the air

with iridescent soap-bubble-like wings

an aerodynamic, amphibious, predatory, territorial glider

who hunts on the wing

and who has to answer to

nobody

.

Dragon in his Lair. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Dragon in his Lair. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Dragon in his Lair. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Dragon in his Lair. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

 

 

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To look, without all that slop, on a fine Spring Day… (Multi-photo)

3 comments

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To look, on a fine Spring Day,

at what you are not

from what you are…

takes an assimilated separation 

of “me” and “not me.”

But that looking isn’t “looking”…

it’s merely repeatedly hurling what was absorbed.

 

To really look, on a fine Spring Day,

at what’s real,

is to look without separation,

without the gobbled “known.”

And that means looking 

without the ingested “me” or “I”…

for otherwise, it’s habitually regurgitating 

what was consumed.

.

Together as one. (1)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Together as one. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Together as one. (Color Pencil rendition). (2)  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Together as one. (Color Pencil rendition). (2) Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

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Poor Dandelion… (Poorer Man)…

17 comments

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many people want to wage war on them

many hate them

(really hate them)

see them as ugly

and want them eradicated

 

many insects want to enjoy them, live in them, and feed from them

many love them

(really love them)

see them as beautiful

and want them to flourish

Dandelion Study.  Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015

Dandelion Study. Photo by Thomas Peace c. 2015