Thursday, October 26, 2006
Saturday, October 14, 2006
The eternal gypsy
She's the small girl with the big appetite for the sights and sounds of nature. As much in love with the little snail on a thorn as with the pink water lillies in the shallow pools along the roads of Puri. She remembers the fragrance of pine-cones in the cool hills as freshly after a decade as she did on the first day. And she doesn't think it has anything to do with good memory. It had to do with imprints on the hungry mind.
Hungry, greedy, she craves and cannot get enough...
The hills call out to her and so does the desert. The ocean is what she believe will someday claim her for it is her true love.
She cannot look away from the languid bend of the rivers she passes along her journey through the hinterlands. As the car drives her away, she looks back as if parting from a lover. Picture after picture of water under the bridges she passes over. Confused looks from those who say they know her. What does she see in them? She has no answers ready for none are at the surface.
She never wanted to visit Ayodhya but did. And loved it. And now, for some strange inexplicable reason, she's craving to visit Benaras. Also Lumbini.
She has the heart of a nomad and someday hope to say the same for her shoes.
She belongs everywhere and yet nowhere in particular
She envies the birds for their wings
Her name means sand
That which is never away from the sea, river or desert. That which you cannot hold on to. That which always slips away...
Thursday, October 05, 2006
The real test
Patience - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Patience is the ability to endure waiting, delay, or provocation without becoming annoyed or upset, or to persevere calmly when faced with difficulties.
Impatience is an opposite of patience.
Patience is described as a virtue in religion or spiritual practices. It is highlighted in the Bable and Qur'an in the story of Job. However, it is not one of the traditional Biblical three theological virtues nor one of the four cardinal virtues.
In Mahayana Buddhism, patience is one of the six (or ten) paramitas that a bodhisattva trains in and practices to realize perfect Bodhi (enlightenment).
Patience in Islam is one of the best and most valuable virtues of life. Through patience, a Muslim believes that an individual can get closer to God and thus attain true peace. It is also stressed in
Islam, that God is with those who are patient, more specifically during suffering.
Hinduism considers patience vital in gaining control of the five senses as part of achieving Moksha - the liberation from the cycle of life, death and re-birth.