Saturday, March 10, 2007
Oh no, back to work
I feel the coming weeks are a big crossroad in my life..
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
The good things in life..
Planing is not required.
How many times have you found yourself spending hours calling all your friends to organise a night out only to have it blow up in your face at the last moment? Grace's shoe's heel broke and the ground was too hot for her to walk bare feet on. Bob was partying too hard at work and decided you should come and meet him - he didn't tell you though. Shane was lying on the couch watching a documentary about worker bees thinking "why can't we be more like them"? Weeks of anticipation for the famed event, conversations about how good it's going to be, the hours picking out the right clothes (well - not for guys) all down the drain! The night gets cancelled and everyone, especially the planner, is dejected. The solution is brilliant and simple - NEVER PLAN!
How will things ever happen
A comon feeling is that without planning nothing would ever happen - as good as this would be it is not the case.
There will always be those friends of yours who want to schedule the next movie night three weeks in advance. The way to combat this is to give a non-commital answer when they ask you if you're coming. Some handy non commital answers you should know by heart in case of an unexpected invitation:
- I'm too relaxed right now to make a decision, I'll call you back.
- I don't know what my financial situation will be on
- I think I might have something on that night - this one will sit particularly well with the organiser as he will just assume that everyone plans everything months ahead and not think twice about it.
Then once you have successfully postponed your commitment, you can decide leasurly on the evening of the event whether or not you wish to attend. Annoying for the organiser - granted but oh so much easier for yourself.
Should you yourself actually wish to instigate an event lets say a Friday night outing, there is only one safe way. At approximately 6:45pm you should send an email, instant message or sms to all those that you want to attend. The content of this message should be no more then a vague outline hinting of something happening that evening. If there are any people that you *really* want to attend it is acceptable to call them, though the call should be short and to the point - you don't want to waste valuable do-nothing time blabbing on the phone. At 7pm, provided you have received at least 1 response in the positive you can head to your selected meeting place. Ideally this will be wherever you presently are - work, home etc or at worst somewhere near to you. Once you meet someone at the meeting place the evening is ready to take off. What you are doing can then be decided.
Benefits of not planing
By not planing we save in a few key areas.
If an evening does end up happening spontaniously, nobody is responsible for it. In the event of your car breaking down on a freezing night in the part of town known for its hatread of people, no one takes the blame. Your girlfriend can't pin this one on you for having 'one thing to do and screwing it up!'.
If you try to instigate an evening and it doesn't end up happening due to people deciding they don't really like you, no one is bothered and you can attempt another evening the following week, or never, either way is good.
No one has to spend any time organising the evening, this is probably the most important reason for not planing. By not spending that time organising the evening you can spend it watching TV, or eating chips.
Action to Planing ratio
There is a useful mathematical formula you can use to determine how well your skills of not planning an evening have developed. It is known as the action/planning ratio.
X = action time/planning time
Where planning time is the amount of time spent planing the event.
Action time is the amount of time spent doing things.
This ratio should be at least 12 for a properly planned and executed event. This translates into 15 minutes spent planning and 3 hours spent doing. If it starts dropping below 8 then its time to cut your losses and call off the event. It's also clear from this why we want to leave the planning to the absolute last minute, it doesn't leave any time for the planing to blow out. You really have to think of you event as a mini project, the amount of time planing is like the amount of money you're investing in the project. Experts of the no-plan method can get their ratios up over 50 while grand masters will routinely operate in the 100+ range.
The "everything works out" effect
Once you start using this method you will find that things magically start working out. Organising that night on the town will take 10 minutes and work out fantastically. If you are need to meet up with friends and don't know where they are meeting just start wandering around, you will find them. I no longer need to call anyone on my mobile in fact I don't have any credit. This even works when driving, all you need to know is the general area of your target and somehow you will reach there. This is not a one off thing either, it will happen every time - but only if you don't plan. If you try to plan by calling and asking, or looking up directions the effect vanishes and you run the risk of having a lousy time.
The Half Dinner
When you have an evening planned (or rather not planned) and you don't know what the dinner situation is you want to cover yourself either way. A half dinner is suitable when:
- You are visiting someone's place who can't cook yet says they are cooking dinner.
- You have no idea whether or not dinner will be provided/available
- You are vegetarian
Having a half dinner means you can comfortably sail through the night on entrees or nothing at all if required. You can get that warm contented look without having to eat someones bland tasteless food.
Why change a good thing?
When you are out having a good time it is always better to stay where you are rather then try to go somewhere else in the hope that the new place will be better. Newton discovered this originally, an object at rest will remain at rest unless acted on by a force. That force in this case is effort put in by you. As we have already seen no effort is better then some effort so it makes no sense to ever change locations once you are already somewhere. Changing locations also gives all the stragglers an opportunity to take off which you don't want. Arriving at your new location leaves you with a whole host of problems, finding seats, getting drinks, getting comfortable again etc. Why change a good thing?
Value of time
Free time is the most important commodity we have, and like any commodity the value of it goes up as the availability of it goes down. It is not a linear relationship either, probably closer to quadaratic or exponenntial. Lets look at this in more detail.
You have 3 hours of free time each night - lets say this 3 hours is worth 3 zorkmids
You decide to take on a second job delivering pizza (in the hope of scoring some free pizza) leaving you with 1 hour of free time each night
Your one hour of free time is 1/3 of your original amount of free time, however I would say the value of that 1 hour is now 9 or 27 times as much as your original 3 hours. This means you have to think 9 or 27 times as hard before you spend that final 1 hour
The Do Nothing
Many people are caught in the race to pack as much as possible into the weekend. We all know that by doing things in your time off you make time pass faster. Time passing faster dumps you back at work earlier then you would like. Thus the solution is simple, do as little as possible all the time. This has many benifits:
- Time passes slower thus maximizing your free time
- No motivation is required to get up and do something
- As the great Homer (Simpson) once said "You tried your best and you failed miserably. The lesson is never try"
- You get time to think about the important things in life - "what's for dinner" and "what time you should take that afternoon nap"
In order to do nothing we must define what constitutes as doing nothing. Generally things that are not productive count as doing nothing. The following list is not exhaustive:
- Sitting around and not thinking about anything
- Sitting around and thinking about useless things
- Sleeping
- Listening to music
- Watching TV
- Eating
- Reading - Useless websites (such as this one), tabloids and novels are ok. Credible newspapers and science journals are not
- Emailing/Instant Messaging/SMSing people (provided you are not doing so in order to organise an event)
- Computer games
The list is ordered from doing the least to doing the most. If you fill your time with only the top 5 items you have already mastered the Do Nothing. I will bow before the greatness of anyone capable of doing the 1st item, it is the ultimate goal. If you find yourself doing mostly the last 4 items or items not on the list, practise diligently every day to elevate yourself to this most high plane of existance. Any item not on the list above requires effort to do and before undertaking such an item it should be carefully considered. Calculate each bit of effort required to do you non-list item and see if you can replace your item with one of the items on the list. Some examples substitutions are given.
- Reading the financials - Reading a tabloid
- Emailing people to organise an event - emailing people for no reason at all
- Dinner and dacing outside - Eating and watching tv
- A night on the town with friends - sleeping
With a bit of thought almost any non list item can be substituted for a list item.
Combining items on the list also constitutes as doing nothing because as we all know from elementary mathematics nothing times nothing is still nothing. Combining list items with non-list items does NOT count as doing nothing, despite how illogical it is. Give these combinations a try:
- Listening to music while eating.
- Eating and reading - the more you spill on the reading material the better
- Sleeping and watching tv - this is actually possible, it just takes some practise. If a nobler persuit exists I'd like to hear it.
The Ideal Day
Once you get used to the Do Nothing you will wonder how you ever managed to fit anything into your day. Lets walk through a typical day:
Wake up fairly early, say 9-10am.
- 10-11am waking up this involves brushing teeth, taking shower, calls of nature, a little sitting around to fully wake up.
- 11-12 Breakfast
- 12-1 Read something useless
- 1-2 Watch some tv
- 2-3 Lunch
- 3-5 Afternoon nap
- 5-6 Waking up from afternoon nap
- 6-7 Thinking about dinner and watching tv
- 7-8 Dinner
- 8-12 Watching TV, surfing the net and reading useless stuff.
- 12pm- 10am sleep.
As you can see there's very little time in your average day for doing anything, let alone fitting in an 8 hour block of work. When I'm on holidays I often wonder how I manage to slip 8 hours of work in that jam packed day. From this it's clear that there is absolutely no time to do anything in the 4 hours or so after a day of work. No commitments should be planned during this time and in a perfect world you could spend all of it watching TV, though realistically things tend to interrupt leaving your TV quota for the day short.
The three day week
If somone asks you what your goals are and you tell them you want to reduce your work hours to 3 days a week several expressions will pass across their face:
Excitement - This is their subconcious mind bursting through crying "yes that's exactly what I want too!"
Confusion - This is their rational mind trying to comprehend what you are saying, perhaps struggling with the idea of doing nothing for a whole day.
Dissapointment - The culmination of their thought process, they will scorn and tell you that you should be motivated, inspired, driven to succeed in life!
If our goal however is idleness success is guaranteed and minimal effort is required, only the initial courage to demand your right to a 3 day week is required. Being idle during these three days will grant a person enough time to think about the important things in life and eventually to invent the next light bulb. If all of society were to become idle the flow of brilliant new ideas would be overwhelming, societies progress may actually be faster then in a 5 day a week society.
Three day weeks will also have a natural equalizing effect on society. Each person would be employed for less of the time therefore more people would need to be employed to complete the same amount of work. Unemployement would go down increasing the disposable income of the previously unemployed while the already well off may have to take a slight cut in their wages. The tradeoff of course is that everyone works only 3 days and has time for 2 days of golfing and cricket each week and a good two days to recover before the next week. The disparity between rich and poor will at last become smaller rather then bigger, white collar and blue collars will be playing poker together, CEO's will be smoking cigars with shoe shiners!
"Never put your eggs in one basket" is as true today, as when it was written. With a standard 5 day week lets say there are 3 people working on a project, each person is responsible and knows about their own little piece of work. One person decides to leave the company which means there is now no one left who knows about that persons work. The other 2 people run around yelling 'the sky is falling' then sit down, lose several handfuls of hair and work out what it was the other person was working on. If however the week was only 3 days, there would be 6 people in the company doing the same volume of work. Two people would know about each of the 3 areas. If any one person decided to leave the other 5 people would look around, comb their luxurious wavey heads of hair and continue as if nothing had happened.
When people are relaxed and happy they work better then when they are burnt out and miserable. People working only three days will naturally be happier then their counterparts working 5 days, and will therefore produce more then them. There is a good chance that anyone working three days a week regularly will produce as much if not more then a person working 5 days. The poor souls working 5 days a week will be miserable, unproductive and start wondering when it all started to fall apart.
Unfortunately the 3 day week can never happen while the 5 day week is in place. It is impossible for the two systems to run simultaniously because of the reluctance of a society as a whole to try something wild, untested and unproven in practise. This reluctance is completely illogical as the discourse on this page has proven theoretically that the 3 day week will work. As everybody knows, theory and practise always agree. If any person is so fortunate as to be living the dream, our hearts go with you, you carry the hopes and dreams of a generation - we will live on vicariously through you for eternity!
Best time to take holidays
Most people make the mistake of taking their main holidays during the holiday season The best time to take holidays about one month before the holiday season, generally about the October Novemeber mark. It will be possible to get a few weeks off in November to do your standard holiday items (see 'The Do Nothing') landing you back at work early December. This is just enough time to go back to work, catch up on the news and email then hang up your boots again for the Christmas/New Years period. It is quite easy to get the few days between Christmas and New Years off, everyone is doing it and people quickly forget that you have just been on a long holiday. Some people will marvel at your brilliance and perhaps learn this most valueable of lessons from you. Taking your holidays in November is truely a win win situation.
Monday, March 5, 2007
Jesus and Miracles
The main thing that struck me was that the books of the new testament were written 40-80 years AD. I immediately voiced my concern to my Christian friends and was directed to
http://www.christianity.net.au/you/ and http://www.carm.org/questions_bible.htm which did help to clear up a lot of things, I'll outline the main points.
Jesus did exist
Jesus probably had some mystical powers
Jesus was crucified
Fair enough, I don't have too much trouble accepting these points. I suppose the main reason people put so much faith in Jesus are his supernatural powers, he is not unique in possessing such powers. These powers have been known for centuries by Indian yogis as siddhis, they can be attained by performing certain yogic practices after several months effort. People are born with these powers manifesting to a greater or lesser extent, Jesus obviously had been gifted with them to a greater extent. This is straight from the Wikipedia entry on Siddhi.
- Parkaya Pravesha: Parkaya Pravesh means one’s soul entering into the body of some other person. Through this knowledge even a dead body can be brought to life.
- Haadi Vidya: This Vidya or knowledge has been mentioned in several ancient texts. On acquiring this Vidya, a person feels neither hunger nor thirst, and can remain without eating food or drinking water for several days at a stretch.
- Kaadi Vidya: Just as one does not feel hungry or thirsty in Haadi Vidya, similarly in Kaadi Vidya a person is not affected by change of seasons, i.e. by summer, winter, rain, etc. After accomplishing this Vidya, a person shall not feel cold even if he sits in the snow-laden mountains, and shall not feel hot even if he sits in the fire.
- Vayu Gaman Siddhi: Through this Siddhi a person can become capable of flying in the skies and traveling from one place to another in just a few seconds.
- Madalasa Vidya: On accomplishing this Vidya, a person becomes capable of increasing or decreasing the size of his body according to his wish. Lord Hanuman had miniaturized his body through this Vidya while entering the city of Lanka.
- Kanakdhara Siddhi: One can acquire immense and unlimited wealth through this Siddhi.
- Prakya Sadhana: Through this Sadhana a Yogi can direct his disciple to take birth from the womb of a woman who is childless or cannot bear children.
- Surya Vigyan: This solar science is one of the most significant sciences of ancient India. This science has been known only to the Indian Yogis; using it, one substance can be transformed into another through the medium of sun rays.
- Mrit Sanjeevani Vidya: This Vidya was created by Guru Shukracharya. Through it, even a dead person can be brought back to life.
- Laghima: becoming almost weightless
Laghima: Became weightless when he walked across water Matthew 32:58
Mrit Sanjeevani Vidya: Used this to bring Lazarus back to life, John 11:32
Surya Vigyan: Used this to convert the seven loaves and fish into enough food to feed four thousand Matthew 16:32
I have met men who have some of these powers including Swami Vikasananda of Nagpur who passed away recently (90s) and had the ability to change the size of his body and appear in multiple places at once(or possibly teleport). I have not personally witnessed this but my grandfather has on several different occasions and told me about it at great length. I met another man by the name of Rahul Rohith who had the power to heal bestowed on him by a Muslim holy man. He would use this power to cure serious illnesses such as cancer as well as less serious ones such as chronic aches and pains.
Then there are cases such as the meditating Buddha boy http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4479240.stm who went without food or water for 10 months.
Common things you will find with enlightened spiritual men are
Some people who fall into this category, there have been many more but these are the ones I know of off the top of my head:
Unfortunately it is difficult to place Jesus in this group because he fails on all of the key measurements. He actively recruited disciples, encouraged people to follow only him, demonstrated powers without restraint and spoke of himself as the only son of god.
So it seems that either Jesus was misquoted or he was misguided. Still having hope that he was simply misquoted which is highly likely given the large gap between his death and the time the gospels were written I began to read the gospels of Matthew and John in the new testament. The rational here is that they are both eye witnesses with independent accounts of Jesus' life and teachings, if they agree on Jesus' teachings then it is more likely that his words have been accurately captured. Unfortunately it seems that the gospels do agree with each other suggesting that Jesus does not meet the criteria all other enlightened people throughout history have met. I will continue to hold on to the belief that Jesus was indeed a truly enlightened holy man but that his teachings have been diluted by the inadequacies of human memory during the 40 years between his death and the writing of the gospels. The teachings would have been further mangled by passing through a filter of the authors own interpretation and understanding of the words.
The words that have been placed in Jesus' mouth have caused countless deaths in wars and bloodshed over the centuries. This is unfortunate because it seems we will now never know what it was that Jesus truly taught. This is my 2c, please don't assassinate me!
Money and Happiness
Firstly it is clear money is not proportional to happiness. Money is required to meet the basic living requirements of life which are:
Food
Shelter
Clothing
Utilities (Electricity, water etc)
Transport (To/from work/leisure activities)
In cases where these basics are not available more money may in fact mean more happiness or at least more comfort. Beyond this however the correlation is not so straight forward.
People who chase money to accumulate material possessions tend to have a raging fire of craving and desire burning within them. When one craving is satisfied instead of dousing the fire it is like pouring petrol on it. The fire rages larger and they move on to acquiring the next item on a never ending list.
Such an endless pursuit of money and goods leaves the person with very little time in which to enjoy the fruits of their labour. We only need to look in the more affluent suburbs
to the rows of mansions that act more like bed and breakfasts to the families that reside there. This lack of time to relax and unwind leads to the cliche of the modern stressed out go getter taking relaxation classes after work unable to play catch with his kids on a Saturday morning.
Once the wealth has been accumulated there is always the danger of losing it. This adds more stress and worry to an already packed schedule. We see large insurance policies, careful tracking of investment portfolios and a keen eye for any sign of economic trouble.
Status is another big reason for accumulating wealth and possessions, I mean who wants to be seen driving to work in a beat up old Ford? This leads to a largely inflated ego and a tendency to look down on those less fortunate in life. Why talk to the cabbie on the way home, what could he possibly have of value to contribute when he hasn't even got a university degree? Yet ironically its the cabbie who has the widest range of experience, hearing stories and opinions on a daily basis from the poorest to the richest members of society.
Yet no matter how much money is accumulated you can always find another who has more. This leads to feelings of jealousy, anger and resentment bubbling to the surface. Unable to see and enjoy what has already been accumulated the person can only see what they don't have.
What about those people who don't spend all their time chasing money and material possessions? Well I would have to say I fall into this category and it still does not lead to happiness. Having more time is fantastic, it allows you to do things you want to do and to ponder the unanswerable questions in life. You come to realize that money is not the answer but don't know what is.
Human beings may be genetically programmed never to be happy with what they have, this would make evolutionary sense. Always trying to get the bigger chunk of food or the bigger cave would give you the best chance at survival. To possibly risk your life to get it, you better have a strong motivation - the thought that once you acquire it you will be happy. Of course if you were happy once you acquired your cave, food, weapon of choice you would have no motivation to do anything else. In this way the mind has learnt to constantly dangle the carrot of happiness in front of our eyes and keep us blindly raging forward.
Perhaps the answer lies in spirituality and religions of the east which is the direction of my present search. Or perhaps it may be that money inherently leads to unhappiness, I.E if you have money you cannot have true and lasting happiness. The answer may be in the simple life of the farmer, who grows enough to feed himself and his family, trading or selling just enough to fulfill his basic needs in life, never knowing or caring where the world at large has gone. Ironically, much fame and wealth awaits the person who can find and spread the true solution to this problem.
Thursday, March 1, 2007
The 7 Meditation Stages
Stage | Description | State of awareness-experience recorded | Body Sensations |
1 | RELAXATION PHASE. (This is not the Relaxation Response. It is a time for concentration on the method of physical relaxation – a transient stage leading from normal consciousness into a more relaxed mental state.) | Most people start by feeling self-conscious, particularly when first learning. They wonder if anything will happen, hope no one is looking. It is common to be conscious of mental activity (many thoughts usually) and to feel some frustration, especially if a beginner. | Feeling the body relaxing. Frequently you become aware of areas of physical tension and feel that tension relaxing. |
2 | PATCHY CONCENTRATION. The concentration is patchy - sometimes good, sometimes wandering off onto other things. | You are conscious of concentration on the meditation technique. There is a constant stream of thoughts that often you get caught up in. ( This is like watching a TV movie when you get so absorbed in the action you forget you are at home watching, you feel like you are in the movie.) Then regularly you come back to an awareness that you are thinking and want it to stop. If not careful, you can get frustrated. Highly subject to being distracted by diversions like inner thoughts or external sounds/activities. | Feel physically relaxed – often this is described as feeling heavy and warm, soft and loose. Actual degree of physical relaxation will increase with time and practice. |
3 | SUSTAINED CONCENTRATION. Single-minded concentration – now the attention is held on one subject. The thinking is still of an intellectual, analytical type. | The mind is becoming stiller and more focused and there are just occasional unrelated thoughts passing by that do not disturb this basically calm, relaxed state. The intruding thoughts may be current ones or memories and may sometimes produce an emotional response. Fairly regularly there is a conscious awareness of observing these thoughts now and seeing them in a more stable perspective. Often still feel aware of needing to use a technique to maintain this stage. | Body often feels like it is light and there may be sensations of floating. Very occasionally body movements like swaying occur. Usually described as a very pleasant sensation. |
4 | CONTEMPLATION Single minded concentration again, but now the thinking is of a more abstract, intuitive type. | Gaps between awareness of thoughts widen, and you experience moments of stillness. Usually you have lost awareness of using a technique. Sense the value of the stillness, find it very satisfying and want to enter into it more deeply – often find it elusive . Often gain minor insights and have creative ideas. | Often described as "funny feeling". The body seems light and as if it is expanding beyond its normal boundaries. Often strange at first, then described as extremely pleasant. The feeling in the head is often described as like having an anesthetic, or a state of reverie. |
5 | TRANSITION. A definite stage, bordering between stages 4 and 6. Most people are aware when they are in this stage, and it requires skill to pass through. | Feel like something is happening, like entering a new level of consciousness. Often described as being on the brink of something extraordinary – both empty and full at the same time. About 25% experience vivid fields of colour, 5% sounds, 5% visions. Often try to record the experience with their intellect and this mind activity prompts a return to level 4. Here people often consciously need to let go and launch into 6, which takes confidence. | Body feels light, expansive. Usually feels much bigger than normal – like blown up with a pump and is furry around the edges. Very pleasant once accustomed to it. |
6 | UNIFICATION | This is a new level of consciousness marked by an absence of everyday thought and a powerful sense of unity. There are several grades of experience:
| No awareness of body or surrounding environment. An experience beyond the physical body, space and time – like death might be, and because this experience is recorded, it frequently removes all fear of death. |
7 | ILLUMINATION | Direct perception of Knowledge. New information comes to your awareness with the authority of a revelation. Produces a very assured, satisfied state of inner knowing. Invariably has a quality of a gift from a higher power, and again, produces a pervading sense of order and unity. | As for stage 6. |
I have for the past several years been meditating and according to the list I would place myself as sitting most of the time in stage 2 and for brief periods of time moving into stage 3. On the 10 day Vipassana course that I recently took (see my post further down) I would say that I was regularly able to get to stage 3 and 4. Thoughts were still, mind was focused and the body was feeling quite strange. On the last day of the course I would have to say that I glimpsed for about 30 seconds stage 5 and as is written in the description felt that I was on the brink of something extrordinary. Since the course ended I am again back down to my usual stage 2/3 oscillation, I guess you need a lot of skill to be able to move higher amidst the din of everyday life. Stage 4/5 are amazing though and I long to glimpse at stage 6 and 7 in the pursuit of true and lasting happiness!
I thought I'd post this most valuable of lists so perhaps others could also start guaging their progress in a scientific manner, good luck in your meditation!