tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8648345.post4748993743121480427..comments2024-03-20T19:15:29.520+09:00Comments on the qualia journal: WeedsKen Mogihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15611963596749734670noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8648345.post-26860249132643018732009-07-27T13:10:22.788+09:002009-07-27T13:10:22.788+09:00Thank you for these essay and pictures.
I'm so...Thank you for these essay and pictures.<br />I'm so encouraged and inspired. I'd like to embody these thoughts in my piece.<br /><br />I sometimes think of qualification as the lord of creation if such a thing exists. I feel human is not enough to be called the lord because we have not yet grasped and practiced the theme of creation.<br /><br />I like a thirsty bear that murmurs thus. <br />"Yet, they share the same principles of living. They are hopefuls on this earth. They are green, and thriving, or trying to thrive, as best they could. Hope is the unifying theme of all that is living,..."<br />Give him a glass of cold beer.Utakonoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8648345.post-22349980976959840082009-07-27T09:47:05.755+09:002009-07-27T09:47:05.755+09:00I was in Nara the other week too, and instead of t...I was in Nara the other week too, and instead of the temples I kept taking pictures of moss. These plants are relentless. They bear a lot of weight and bounce back and just keep growing. I think there is a lot of Zen to learn from them, more so than in the buildings.<br /><br />I took a small piece of moss and brought it back to Taiwan. I'm trying to grow it in my study, and if it gets big then I'll put some cuttings in the wild. Living relics from Nara.logatexhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14226278990483993173noreply@blogger.com