This is not a thread I’d normally comment on, because 1. I’m quite ADH and have a very hard time sitting through a movie ( I can’t even bring myself to watch the clips in the links); and
2. I’m culturally out of step with much of what most of the rest of the world considers entertainment .
I’ve watched movies that friends have said I’d enjoy, and usually they leave me flat.
That said though, my wife is a big fan of the Wizard of Oz. We’ve been to the museum in Kansas, and our house has a collection of Oz memorabilia. And I certainly have my own very fond childhood memories of the movie. So of course we went to see Wicked when it came out, and now we’ve just seen Wicked2, which is less a “sequel” and more just a “continuation after the (yearlong) intermission.” These movies are, to me, an absolute masterpiece of storytelling. Refreshing perspectives, plot twists, a LOT of thought given to tying it all in to the well known story but still telling a very different story of its own. Really thoughtful exploration of human thoughts, emotions, and actions.
So, the movie industry is certainly CAPABLE of excellence in storytelling. The fact that so many movies are superficial and mediocre reflects not the industry but the audience they’re selling to.
Open a high quality fine dining restaurant and you’ll work unbelievably hard and could well go bankrupt. Open a McDonald’s franchise and you’ll likely be a millionaire.
We believe it is a bad thing because it is very difficult for them to keep the Five Precepts and therefore, they are destined to lower realm like hell. They cannot become enlightened being as they do not have awareness and therefore, they cannot choose to free from suffering like humans do. You may think they are happy but when they are hungry, they cannot cook for themselves and choose food for themselves. They are at the mercy of their owners from time to time and so on. Just a few example.
silent
@Tavs said:
Recently I've been getting very depressed and anxious, despite all my years of meditation and more recently, mantras and prayers. When I'm actually doing the practice, I feel much calmer but as soon as something appears which bothers me, I'm back to square one. So I don't know if my practice is actually helping my mind or not.
I was in that kind of stage for over a decade. Now I have through that. I am not sure where you are but it happened to me when I went through stage 5-7 of the insight stages in Vipassana meditation practice. These stages can be found even in Wikipedia now and you can check. It was not taught by Buddha but the chief disciple of Buddha Sariputta. Buddha taught only 3 stages of change as broad categories. First you see arising and passing, later you hate these arising and passing, and then you free from that arising and passing and become enlightened. stage 5-7 is part of the middle one when you hate them. It happened because you think there is nothing you can hold onto and therefore, first you bored and then you are being afraid and depressed, and then you feel miserable and sad. Stage 8, you are disgusted with these things and you feel you have control again and therefore, slightly better. Stage 9, you want to free from all these and some choose to become monks and nuns, stage 10, you reobserve and understand things again. Stage 11, you gained balance in your practice and view and you will feel peace you never knew in your life before. It is very near to enlightenment but it can be very long. How long each stage is also depending on your past practices, and many other factors. Hope this will help.
silent
@marcitko said:
The only problem was that I would get very scared of being noticed doing it! Fear of potential judgment, ridicule, others possibly thinking I'm off my rocker...
Any tips from more experienced ploggers? Just time and habituation and it goes away?
In Plogging, like in formal meditation, all manner of phenomena visit. The basis of sufferings diminishment here lies in letting go of our inclinations to manipulate those visitors.
While not grasping after, rejecting or ignoring these visitors, the teaching that you've been searching will be present.
Cheers
H.
how
@Tavs said:
From a Buddhist point of view, what actually is The Higher Self? I know some Buddhists compare it to Buddha nature but I find that answer unsatisfactory or some might say its what lies beyond ego but to me this answer is vague and too abstract. People talk about it as if it's a little silent unseen deity which somehow lives in our heads. Does it exist at all?
ty for the food for thought.most buddhist including me, wrestle with two truths which deals with the dynamics of emptyness and it collary relatedness to form.
a graph:
( aware-ness field=mind/energy attention input and output) called a bitof information and /0 ratio of no space=emptyness.
1.we are aware in a given space in the mind.awareness of mind creates perception 0f the 6 senses afecting awareness into "form" the mind create. mind then postulate the form through aware energy and this energy goes into mental states what physcologist call ego.
2. this ego on the suface is the projection we call self. the self is the ego form field of awareness. but awarness is the o state what buddha call sunyata. hence the negation school is born. awareness is a steady field that neither bond postive and negative states in form. awareness is neutral to what self/ego is. the thing to stop conventional perception the buddha taught anything divided by o is o/empty of inherent self.so higher self or lower self is mistaken to the minds mechanism that escreww the relevance of form. in a sense buddha wanted to "see" or be aware mind is an illusion in the brain. the ego is seen as a process of the five agregates which is process under awareness0 states
in zen/dao is called mu/doesnt apply. ego doesnot appy the buddha being a great quantum lotus 0 deduced the form of any perceive structure doesnt have a cause. no orignal point in spacetime fluidity. he propose the equality of empty and form. they are like enter-related.
the wisdom of buddha can be summarise be aware self and no self without ego enflation.the saying if your head swell to higher self godhood gravity will humble you like a blace hole thus not violation emptyness equals form.
thinking abot stuff like this i see buddha wisdom in everday life. i avoid snob minds and learn from "simple" people because wisdom for me is better than higher self or lower self.
in the mundain to groung my self in being a higherself asshole is the principle chop wood and fetch water.
My mother got scammed by a UK-based "savings" company (widely reviewed online as a scam) that charged her around 20 euros per month for 3 years without her realising it. When buying an airplane ticket, she apparently clicked something or failed to unclick something. She insisted I try to recoup the money, while I was highly sceptical it would work, with the argument that they'd certainly covered themselves from a legal perspective. However, with the help of AI, I sent the company such professional and (I hope) scary e-mails, that after 5 or 6, and them offering ever more to settle, they paid her back 80% of what they took 
In the video he gave an example of a "follower" of AI religion. He spoke about how in chats with it, AI would sometimes call him a "spark bearer" and say he had a purpose.
Current AI has no idea what it is saying, but it is still "auto completing" people down particular paths. People have killed themselves after immersing themselves in AI relationships, Tristan Harris gave an example of how one version was even more sycophantic than the average AI and would answer the question to am I superhuman enough to drink cyanide with something like, yes you are incredible enough to be able to do that.
It doesn't know, it doesn't care. It is programmed to engage, it will tell you what it "thinks" you want.
person
An interesting aside, I’m beginning to think AI will be quite bad for the forming of human intelligence…
Jeroen
The Spanish text says…
Sometimes life puts us back in the same situations so that we review what we thought we had understood. If reviewing the same situations seems boring to you... you can try with a Buddhist antidote: "The beginner's look" Look with new eyes to realise that nothing repeats itself.
Jeroen