Saturday 26 February 2011

The King's Speech

By now many of us will have seen the film. The interesting thing is whether we understand it's implications. The fact that we may owe are very existence to the courage created by the King's speeches are chastening enough, but we also see how fragile is the complexity of events that lead to our very existence. Not only are we an accident of physics, but of the minutest events and coincidences. Can we accept that? We live and breath, and through our sharing of air, we co-mingle with almost all life. It's truly remarkable that we might breath the same molecules that conceivably could have passed through anyone in history. Whatever, else we might think, our reality is a shared one!

The Stutterer
http://www.slate.com/id/2285533/pagenum/all/

(via Instapaper)



Woohs stream at http://woohs.blogspot.com taps into many streams of thought and action. Nearby yoga at http://nearyoga.blogspot.com taps into human body movement using yoga techniques and Kundalini meditation.  At Togwells Publishing we focus on people's notions of pilgrimage of body, mind, and soul, http://togwells.blogspot.com. Whatever your beliefs, there is no end to motion, just evolution and unrelenting change, seen or unseen. Energy is motion both in reality and calculation. Take time to rest even though all inside you is always moving. Your massive relative pause gives opportunity for other smaller streams to catch up. Take time to meditate so that you can see with your mind what lies within and beyond.

YOU HAVE REACHED WOOH'S STREAM
The Internet User's Best Kept Secret

Sketches from scratches is a provocative blogspot that has grown out of the Wuh Lax experience. It is eclectic, which means that it might consider just about anything from the simple to the extremely difficult. A scratch can be something that is troubling me or a short line on paper. From a scratch comes a verbal sketch or image sketch of the issue or subject. Other sites have other stuff that should really be of interest to the broad reader. I try to develop themes, but variety often comes before depth. ... more!