Steve Omohundro

Where Passion Meets Thought

Archive for the 'Quotes' Category


Dalai Lama quote: My Vision of a Compassionate Future

Posted by omohundro on April 7, 2008

Brute force can never subdue the basic human desire for freedom.
The thousands of people who marched
in the cities of Eastern Europe in recent decades,
the unwavering determination of the people in my homeland of Tibet
and the recent demonstrations in Burma
are powerful reminders of this truth.
Freedom is the very source of creativity and human development.
It is not enough, as communist systems assumed,
to provide people with food, shelter and clothing.
If we have these things
but lack the precious air of liberty to sustain our deeper nature,
we remain only half human.

In the past, oppressed peoples often resorted to violence
in their struggle to be free.
But visionaries such as Mahatma Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
have shown us that successful changes can be brought about nonviolently.
I believe that, at the basic human level,
most of us wish to be peaceful.
Deep down, we desire constructive, fruitful growth
and dislike destruction.

Many people today agree that we need to reduce violence in our society.
If we are truly serious about this,
we must deal with the roots of violence,
particularly those that exist within each of us.
We need to embrace “inner disarmament,”
reducing our own emotions of suspicion, hatred and hostility
toward our brothers and sisters.

Furthermore, we must reexamine how we relate to the very question
of the use of violence in today’s profoundly interconnected world.
One may sometimes feel that one can solve a problem quickly with force,
but such success is often achieved
at the expense of the rights and welfare of others.
One problem may have been solved,
but the seed of another is planted,
thus opening a new chapter in a cycle of violence and counter-violence.

From the Velvet Revolution in the former Czechoslovakia
to the popular pro-democracy movement in the Philippines,
the world has seen how a nonviolent approach
can lead to positive political changes.
But the genuine practice of nonviolence is still at an experimental stage.
If this experiment succeeds,
it can open the way to a far more peaceful world.
We need to embrace a more realistic approach to dealing with human conflicts,
an approach that is in tune with a new reality of heavy interdependence
in which the old concepts of “we” and “they” are no longer relevant.
The very idea of total victory for one’s own side
and the total defeat of one’s enemy is untenable.
In violent conflicts, the innocent are often the first casualties,
as the war in Iraq and Sudan’s Darfur crisis painfully remind us.
Today, the only viable solution to human conflicts
will come through dialogue and reconciliation
based on the spirit of compromise.

Many of the problems we confront today are our own creation.
I believe that one of the root causes of these manmade problems
is the inability of humans to control their agitated minds and hearts
– an area in which the teachings of the world’s great religions have much to offer.

A scientist from Chile once told me
that it is inappropriate for a scientist to be attached to his particular field of study,
because that would undermine his objectivity.
I am a Buddhist practitioner,
but if I mix up my devotion for Buddhism with an attachment to it,
my mind will be biased toward it.
A biased mind never sees the complete picture,
and any action that results will not be in tune with reality.
If religious practitioners can heed this scientist’s advice
and refrain from being attached to their own faith traditions,
it could prevent the growth of fundamentalism.
It also could enable such followers to genuinely respect
faith traditions other than their own.
I often say that while one can adhere to the principle of
“one truth, one religion” at the level of one’s personal faith,
we should embrace at the same time the principle of
“many truths, many religions” in the context of wider society.
I see no contradiction between these two.

I do not mean to suggest that religion is indispensable
to a sound ethical way of life,
or for that matter to genuine happiness.
In the end, whether one is a believer or a nonbeliever,
what matters is that one be a good, kind and warmhearted person.
A deep sense of caring for others,
based on a profound sense of interconnection,
is the essence of the teachings of all great religions of the world.
In my travels, I always consider my foremost mission
to be the promotion of basic human qualities of goodness
– the need for and appreciation of the value of love,
our natural capacity for compassion
and the need for genuine fellow feeling.
No matter how new the face or how different the dress and behavior,
there is no significant division between us and other people.

When I first saw a photograph of Earth taken from outer space,
it powerfully brought home to me how small and fragile the planet is
and how petty our squabbles are.
Amid our perceived differences,
we tend to forget how the world’s different religions, ideologies and political systems
were meant to serve humans, not destroy them.
When I traveled to the former Soviet Union in the late 1970s,
I encountered widespread paranoia,
even among ordinary people who feared that the West hated them so much
that it was ready to invade their country.
Of course, I knew this was mere projection.

Today, more than ever,
we need to make this fundamental recognition of the basic oneness of humanity
the foundation of our perspective on the world and its challenges.
From the dangerous rate of global warming
to the widening gap between rich and poor,
from the rise of global terrorism to regional conflicts,
we need a fundamental shift in our attitudes and our consciousness
– a wider, more holistic outlook.

As a society, we need to shift our basic attitude
about how we educate our younger generation.
Something is fundamentally lacking in our modern education
when it comes to educating the human heart.
As people begin to explore this important question,
it is my hope that we will be able to redress the current imbalance
between the development of our brains
and the development of our hearts.

To promote greater compassion,
we must pay special attention to the role of women.
Given that mothers carry the fetus for months within their own bodies,
from a biological point of view women in general may possess
greater sensitivity of heart and capacity for empathy.
My first teacher of love and compassion was my own mother,
who provided me with maximum love.
I do not mean to reinforce in any way the traditional view
that a woman’s place is confined to the home.
I believe that the time has come for women
to take more active roles in all domains of human society,
in an age in which education and the capacities of the mind,
not physical strength, define leadership.
This could help create a more equitable and compassionate society.

In general, I feel optimistic about the future.
As late as the 1950s and ’60s, people believed that war
was an inevitable condition of mankind
and that conflicts must be solved through the use of force.
Today, despite ongoing conflicts and the threat of terrorism,
most people are genuinely concerned about world peace,
far less interested in propounding ideology
and far more committed to coexistence.

The rapid changes in our attitude toward the Earth
are also a source of hope.
Until recently, we thoughtlessly consumed its resources
as if there were no end to them.
Now not only individuals but also governments
are seeking a new ecological order.
I often joke that the moon and stars look beautiful,
but if any of us tried to live on them, we would be miserable.
This blue planet of ours is the most delightful habitat we know.
Its life is our life, its future our future.
Now Mother Nature is telling us to cooperate.
In the face of such global problems as the greenhouse effect
and the deterioration of the ozone layer,
individual organizations and single nations are helpless.
Our mother is teaching us a lesson in universal responsibility.

The 20th century became a century of bloodshed;
despite its faltering start, the 21st century could become one of dialogue,
one in which compassion, the seed of nonviolence, will be able to flourish.
But good wishes are not enough.
We must seriously address the urgent question
of the proliferation of weapons and make worldwide efforts
toward greater external disarmament.

Large human movements spring from individual human initiatives.
If you feel that you cannot have much of an effect,
the next person may also become discouraged,
and a great opportunity will have been lost.
On the other hand, each of us can inspire others
simply by working to develop our own altruistic motivations
– and engaging the world with a compassion-tempered heart and mind.

The 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is the spiritual leader of Tibet. Since 1959, he has been living in Dharamsala, in northern India, the seat of the Tibetan government in exile.

From: The Washington Post, October 21, 2007, page B01

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Alexander quote: Architecture which is against life

Posted by omohundro on March 31, 2008

In the 20th century
we have passed through a unique period,
one in which architecture as a discipline
has been in a state that is almost unimaginably bad.
Sometimes I think of it as a mass psychosis of unprecedented dimension,
in which the people of earth
– in large numbers and in almost all contemporary societies –
have created a form of architecture which is against life,
insane, image-ridden, hollow.
The ugliness which has been created in the cities of the world,
and the banality and pretentiousness
of many 20th century buildings, streets, and parking lots
have overwhelmed the earth.
… the ugliness of what has been created
is caused by new relations between
time, money, labor, and materials
and by a set of conditions in which the real thing
– authentic architecture that has deep feeling and true worth –
is almost impossible.

from The Nature of Order,
An Essay on the Art of Building and The Nature of the Universe,
Book One, The Phenomenon of Life

by Christopher Alexander

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Campbell quote: Rapture of being alive

Posted by omohundro on March 7, 2008

 

People say that what we’re all seeking is

a meaning for life.

I don’t think that’s what we’re really seeking.

I think what we’re seeking is

an experience of being alive,

so that our life experiences

on the purely physical plane

will have resonances

within our own innermost being and reality,

so that we actually feel

the rapture of being alive.

 

Joseph Campbell

 

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Bohm quote: On Dialogue

Posted by omohundro on October 3, 2007

Some time ago there was an anthropologist
who lived for a long while with a North American tribe,
a small group of twenty to forty.
Now, from time to time the tribe met in a circle.
They just talked and talked, apparently to no purpose.
They made no decisions.
There was no leader.
And everybody could participate.
There may have been wise men or wise women
who were listened to a bit more - the older ones -
but everybody could talk.
The meeting went on,
until it finally seemed to stop for no reason at all and the group dispersed.
Yet after that, everybody seemed to know what to do,
because they understood each other so well.
Then they could get together in smaller groups and do something or decide things.

There may be no pat political “answer” to the world’s problems.
However, the important point is not the answer
- just as in dialogue, the important point is not the particular opinions -
but rather the softening up, the opening up, of the mind, and looking at all the opinions.

If we can all suspend our assumptions and look at them,
then we are all in the same state of participatory consciousness.
In dialogue the whole structure of defensiveness and opinions and division can collapse.

I think the whole human race knew this for a million years,
and then in five thousand years of civilization we have lost it,
because our societies got too big.
But now we have to get started again,
because it has become urgent that we communicate,
to share our consciousness.
We must be able to think together,
in order to do intelligently whatever is necessary.

from On Dialogue by David Bohm

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Canfield quote: I recently heard a story about a famous research

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

I recently heard a story about a famous research scientist
who had made several very important medical breakthroughs.
He was being interviewed by a newspaper reporter who asked him
why he thought he was able to be so much more creative than the average person.
What set him so far apart from others?

He responded that, in his opinion, it all came from an experience with his mother
which occurred when he was about two years old.
He had been trying to remove a bottle of milk from the refrigerator,
when he lost his grip on the slippery bottle and it fell,
spilling its contents all over the kitchen floor, a veritable sea of milk!

When his mother came into the kitchen,
instead of yelling at him, giving him a lecture, or punishing him, she said,
“Robert, what a great and wonderful mess you have made!
I have rarely seen such a huge puddle of milk.
Well, the damage has already been done.
Would you like to get down and play in the milk for a few minutes
before we clean it up?”

Indeed, he did. After a few minutes his mother said,
“You know, Robert, whenever you make a mess like this,
eventually you have to clean it up, and restore everything to its proper order.
So, how would you like to do that?
We could use a sponge, a towel or a mop. What do you prefer?”
He chose the sponge and together they cleaned up the spilled milk.

His mother then said,
“You know what we have here is a failed experiment
in how to effectively carry a big milk bottle with two tiny hands.
Let’s go out in the back yard and fill the bottle with water and see if you can discover
a way to carry it without dropping it.”
The little boy learned that
if he grasped the bottle at the top near the lip with both hands,
he could carry it without dropping it.
What a wonderful lesson!

This renowned scientist then remarked that
it was at that moment that he knew that
he didn’t need to be afraid to make mistakes.
Instead he learned that mistakes were just opportunities for learning something new,
which is, after all, what scientific experiments are all about.
They are simply that - just experiments to see what happens.
Even if the experiment doesn’t work, we usually learn something valuable from it.

from Remember You Are Raising Children, Not Flowers! by Jack Canfield

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Seligman quote: Flow, however, doesn’t have shortcuts.

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

Flow, however, doesn’t have shortcuts.
When I was an undergraduate one of my teachers, Julian Jaynes, …
was given a South American lizard as a laboratory pet,
and the problem about the lizard was that
no one could figure out what it ate,
so the lizard was dying.

Julian killed flies, and the lizard wouldn’t eat them;
blended mangos and papayas, the lizard wouldn’t eat them;
Chinese take-out, the lizard had no interest.
One day Julian came in and the lizard was in torpor,
lying in the corner.
He offered the lizard his lunch,
but the lizard had no interest in ham on rye.

He read the New York Times and he put the first section down
on top of the ham on rye.
The lizard took one look at this configuration,
got up on its hind legs, stalked across the room,
leapt up on the table, shredded the New York Times,
and ate the ham sandwich.

The moral is that lizards don’t copulate and don’t eat
unless they go through the lizardly strengths and virtues first.
They have to hunt, kill, shred, and stalk.
And while we’re a lot more complex than lizards,
we have to as well.
There are no shortcuts for us to reach flow.
We have to indulge in our highest strengths in
order to get eudaemonia.

from “Eudaemonia, The Good Life” by Martin Seligman

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Oliver quote: Tell me, what is it you plan to do

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

 

Tell me,

what is it you plan to do

with your one wild and precious life?

Mary Oliver from The Summer Day

 

 

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The Ancient Buddhist Dream of Indra’s Net

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

In the heaven of the great god Indra

is said to be a vast and shimmering net,
finer than a spider’s web,
stretching to the outermost reaches of space.
Strung at each intersection of its diaphanous threads
is a reflecting pearl.
In the glistening surface of each pearl
are reflected all the other pearls,
even those in the furthest corners of the heavens.
In each reflection,
again are reflected all the infinitely many other pearls,
so that by this process,
reflections of reflections continue without end.

from Indra’s Pearls by David Mumford, et. al.

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Ojibway quote: Sometimes I go about pitying myself,

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

Sometimes I go about pitying myself,
and all along
my soul is being blown by great winds across the sky.

Ojibway saying

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Ray quote: Begin doing what you want to do now.

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

Begin doing what you want to do now.
We are not living in eternity.
We have only this moment
sparkling like a star in our hand
and melting like a snowflake.

Marie Beynon Ray

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Deida quote: By leaning just beyond your fear,

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

By leaning just beyond your fear,
you challenge your limits compassionately,
without trying to escape the feeling of fear itself.
You step beyond the solid ground of security with an open heart.
You stand in the space of unknowingness, raw and awake.
Here, the gravity of deep being will attend you
to the only place where fear is obsolete:
the eternal free fall of home.
Where you always are.

Own your fear,
and lean just beyond it.
In every aspect of your life.
Starting now.

David Deida in The Way of the Superior Man

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Gendlin quote: What is true is already so.

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

What is true is already so.
Owning up to it doesn’t make it worse.
Not being open about it doesn’t make it go away.
And because it’s true, it is what is there to be interacted with.
Anything untrue isn’t there to be lived.
People can stand what is true,
for they are already enduring it.

Eugene Gendlin

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Gendlin quote: What is split off, not felt, remains the same.

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

What is split off, not felt, remains the same.
When it is felt, it changes.
Most people don’t know this!
They think that by not permitting
the feeling of their negative ways
they make themselves good.
On the contrary, that keeps these negatives static,
the same from year to year.
A few moments of feeling it in your body
allows it to change.
If there is in you something bad or sick or unsound,
let it inwardly be and breathe.
That’s the only way it can evolve and change
into the form it needs.

Eugene Gendlin

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Castaneda quote: A path is only a path

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

A path is only a path,
and there is no affront, to oneself or to others,
in dropping it if that is what your heart tells you.
Look at every path closely and deliberately.
Try it as many times as you think necessary.
Then ask yourself, and yourself alone,
one question - Does this path have a heart?
If it does, the path is good;
if it doesn’t it is of no use.

Carlos Castaneda in The Teachings of Don Juan

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Unterecker quote: Though we may never see precisely how

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

Though we may never see precisely how
the protean dancing stuff of
everything endlessly becomes itself,
we have no choice,
being human and full of desire,
but to go on perpetually seeking clarity of vision.
The ultimate form within forms,
the final shape of change may elude us.
The pursuit of the idea of form -
even the form of force,
of endlessly interacting process -
is man’s inevitable, crucial need.

John Unterecker

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Patanjali quote: When you are inspired by some great purpose

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

When you are inspired by some great purpose,
some extraordinary project,
all of your thoughts break their bonds.
Your mind transcends limitations.
Your consciousness expands in every direction.
You find yourself in a new and great and wonderful world.
Dormant forces, faculties, and talents come alive,
and you discover yourself to be a greater person by far
than you ever dreamed yourself to be.

Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, 200 B.C.E.

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Kurzweil quote: To this day, I remain convinced of this basic philosophy

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

To this day, I remain convinced of this basic philosophy:
no matter what quandaries we face -
business problems, health issues, relationship difficulties,
as well as the great scientific, social, and cultural challenges of our time -
there is an idea that can enable us to prevail.
Furthermore, we can find that idea.
And when we find it, we need to implement it.
My life has been shaped by this imperative.
The power of an idea - this is itself an idea.

from The Singularity is Near by Ray Kurzweil

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Shaw quote: This is the true joy in life

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

This is the true joy in life,
the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one;
the being a force of nature
instead of a feverish, selfish little clod of ailments and grievances
complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy.
I am of the opinion that my life belongs to the whole community
and as long as I live,
it is my privilege to do for it whatever I can.

I want to be thoroughly used up when I die,
for the harder I work, the more I live.
I rejoice in life for its own sake.
Life is no brief candle to me.
It is a sort of splendid torch which I have got hold of for the moment,
and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible
before handing it on to future generations.

from Man and Superman by George Bernard Shaw

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Graham quote: There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening,

Posted by omohundro on September 20, 2007

There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening,
that is translated through you into action,
and because there is only one of you in all of time,
this expression is unique.
And if you block it,
it will never exist through any other medium, and be lost.
The world will not have it.

It is not your business to determine how good it is,
nor how valuable,
nor how it compares with other expressions.
It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly,
to keep the channel open.
You do not even have to believe in yourself or your work.
You have to keep open and aware directly
to the urges that motivate you.

Keep the channel open.

from Dance to the Piper and Promenade Home quoting Martha Graham

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