UnbornTao

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About UnbornTao

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  • Birthday January 8

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  1. God, it's literally out of this world haha.
  2. Sorry It was quite strong a few months ago. Definitely. I'd add Courtois to the mix. Best goalkeeper in the world. Former Chelsea player, too.
  3. Don't you dare invalidate my direct experience of Last Thursdayism. Pick another belief system.
  4. @Natasha Tori Maru Turns out you weren't the only one complaining about the state of Outlook! Microsoft Outlook frustrates Artemis II astronauts live from space lol
  5. Hard to tell sometimes. Okay, then.
  6. This conversation started because you said you've never experienced depression, if I recall. We can ask, then, what is it really? We might sometimes hear things like depression or suffering as special things that we only occasionally experience. Maybe they're rather commonplace and easily accessible - just as joy, enthusiasm, frustration, love, etc. might be. And this isn't saying anything about degree or intensity. When you say 'come,' it's actually generated. We're just ignorant of how that comes about. And you do create it. How else would it exist? Wealthy and famous people living their dream life get depressed, and the circumstances of their lives are great. They might have achieved everything they want. And they're massively successful at their jobs. But how come they might get depressed, or bored, or whatever? It definitely seems to me like you're seeing depression as something more profound, special, and inaccessible than it really is. That's essentially a fantasy you've got going on. Think about it: How come you aren't feeling X or Y now? The main assertion to reflect on is: Because you aren't currently 'generating' it. What we experience is not a function of circumstances, even though, as a culture, we believe it is. This is a challenging point to grapple with. I'm still struggling with it. Anyway - Can depression exist if you don't create or imagine a future, for example? Can it exist when that future is positive, or positively-held? What is hope, for example?
  7. Even then, I'd still use qBittorrent. It's open-source, too. uTorrent was great in 2006.
  8. It's a pleasure. I do what I can.
  9. @Ramasta9 often likes to spread conspiracies and conspiratorial thinking. Is he a propagandist funded by dark forces working to destabilize the emotional atmosphere of the forum?
  10. Yeah. And being a scatologist doesn't necessarily qualify someone as a professional plumber. We're talking about different domains. It’s like soccer players, on the one hand, and soccer analysts on the other. When it comes to actually playing the sport, the players know best. And even good analysts usually need to have played professionally to have any real credibility.
  11. Pretty much. When it comes to an ability, whether you can do it - and how well - is the measure of genuine understanding. The opposite is believing you understand it, and/or understanding it conceptually. But the real proof lies in the doing.
  12. I'd say that it depends on the purpose you've set for your meditation session. What you describe could just be the same distraction dynamic that occurs off the cushion - your mind coming up with excuses to stray from your main aim, whatever it is. But hey, it depends. How much leeway do you allow yourself? Maybe you have no specific aim when sitting down, in which case there's more flexibility to be creative, and more room to get distracted.
  13. He doesn't. It's speculation, most likely.
  14. "for many," "out of many," "among many" - Season 1.