--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "sandiego108" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Alex Stanley" 
> <j_alexander_stanley@> wrote:
> <snip> I suppose it's entirely possible that someone established in the
> > perfection of now could just blissfully zone out into inertia,
> > inaction, and apathy. But, I think recognition of the perfection of
> > now also offers a grounding in serenity from which one can perform
> > action more skillfully and powerfully than the person grounded in
> > highly reactive ego drama. To use a pop culture reference, it's like
> > Kwai Chang Caine instead of drunken, reactive cowboy.
> >
> exactamundo! I spend my time quickly finding creative solutions vs. 
> pushing against the inertia of "what it should be". No longer lost in 
> the ephemeral past or future; the endless narcissistic reflections of 
> my prior ignorant self that the unenlightened will always lose 
> themselves in, go mad in. No longer anyone to get lost.


Unfortunately what's apparently left of you is glaringly repellent.







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