Posts Tagged meme

I prefer “flock-minded” to “herdlike”…

So, bodhibird, your LiveJournal reveals…

You are… 3% unique (blame, for example, your interest in tara practice) and 8% herdlike (partly because you, like everyone else, enjoy writing). When it comes to friends you are popular. In terms of the way you relate to people, you are keen to please. Your writing style (based on a recent public entry) is intellectual.

Your overall weirdness is: 40

 

(The average level of weirdness is: 27.
You are weirder than 82% of other LJers.)

Find out what your weirdness level is!

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Meme time!

Your result for Tarot Card Guide Test…

YOUR GUIDE IS THE PRIESTESS

The Priestess is a teacher. She is quiet and reserved and is usually shrouded in the light of the moon. Shrouded in night, she tends to know things about you that you have never shared, or have been willing to admit to yourself. She can see right through you. Although she is a teacher, and knows many things, she won’t tell you everything. She tells you only that which you need to know for the next leg of your journey.

If the High Priestess is your guide, then this is a time of solitary investigation and the passing on of secret knowledge. You might find yourself spending time in old libraries, reading through dusty documents and letters, or studying old religious texts. Things kept secret will be revealed to you. Likewise, these secrets might come to you psychically by way of visions or powerful instincts. Insights may be found in crystal balls, tea leaves, dreams or conversations with spirits.

The High Priestess is the card of knowledge. She is instinctual, and supernatural. She follows her intuition and is surprisingly accurate in her observations. She possesses a secret knowledge which she may choose to impart to you, or withhold for your own protection.

TAKE MY TEST:OTHER WHAT COLOR ARE YOU? THE COLOR TEST.

http://www.helloquizzy.com/tests/the-color-code-test

Take Tarot Card Guide Test at HelloQuizzy

These Tarot images are lovely, but I wish that more of the traditional feminine imagery had been maintained. Many of the Trump figures appear as male who are traditionally female, such as Strength.

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Indeed.

If there are one or more people on your friends list who make your world a better place just because they exist, and who you would not have met (in real life or not) without the Internet, then post this same sentence in your journal.

(From versailles_rose.)

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And why not?

Your result for The Steampunk Archetype Test…

The Aetherist Bodger

The aether carries the information, the aether is information. You are one of the few who know the ins and outs of Aether Terminals. You can access information across the Aethersphere, tapping into the Aetherpipes of anyone you want and stealing the information stored in their datatanks. Some think of you as a myth, a legend created to scare people. You are no myth or legend, you are quite real and you are currently reading the Queen’s AetherMissives.

Take The Steampunk Archetype Test at HelloQuizzy

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A memory meme

I borrowed this from versailles_rose. Like her, I’ve confined most of my answers to my pre-teen years.

What was the name of your first doll or Teddy Bear?
–It was a gritchy old Raggedy Ann doll with one eye that belonged formerly to my sister. I loved it and still have it.

What was your favorite toy?
–My Lost in Space robot! Its head lit up and it moved on little wheels!

What was your favorite Christmas/Hanukkah ?
–I honestly can’t pick one out. There was a long stretch of time when, between home and church, the customs and traditions were really set, and one year was much like any other, not necessarily in a bad way. I do remember really enjoying the cassette tape recorder I got when I was about twelve.

What was your favorite vacation?
–I went a great many places with my grandmother, who loved to travel. I think the dual King’s Dominion/Busch Gardens trip was my favorite.

Did you go to camp and did you enjoy it?
–I did not go to camp. I went to piano bars.

Did you have a secret hiding place where you like to play?
–Every summer we had one of those small wading pools of rigid plastic, six or seven feet in diameter and maybe two feet deep. When empty, it made an excellent cave, propped against the granite wall at the foot of our yard.

What toy do you wish you still had?
–I so wish I still had that robot.

Where did you go to school?
–School #92, the same elementary school to which my grandfather went as a boy, and then to a new Gifted and Talented program started by the city from fourth through sixth grades.

What was your favorite movie when you were a kid?
The Poseidon Aventure. No, really. That was the first PG movie I was allowed to see! Back then people paid attention to movie ratings.

Did you have pets?
–You’re expecting me to say I had birds, I know. But I was in my twenties before I started keeping birds, although my sister had a budgie when I was very small–I only remember him dying, alas. I had hermit crabs and/or goldfish. I was sixteen when we got a dog.

Did you have brothers and sisters?
–My older sister is eleven years older than I am.

What was the first record/cd that you bought?
–I am ashamed to say that the first thing I myself paid money for in a store was probably Foreigner’s first album.

What was your favorite record/cd?
–I had a storytelling record of Rag Doll’s adventures in Somewhere that I played over and over and over. I also loved the Archies and the soundtrack to The Jungle Book.

What was your favorite book?
–Definitely Charlotte’s Web, tied perhaps with The Egypt Game by Zilpha Keatly Snyder.

What was your all time favorite TV show?
–STAR TREK. I also loved Warner Bros. cartoons and Carol Burnett.

Did you play any sports?
–Only if occasional rounds of dodge ball count as sport.

Did you have music lessons?
–I took guitar lessons for a while as a teenager.

Did either or both of your parents like to cook and did you help out in the kitchen?
–My mother cooked and so did my grandmother. My grandmother came from the “overcook everything” school, but my mother could occasionally be creative; she baked and made candies at Christmas, at Easter, and to raise funds for my grandmother’s senior citizens’ club.

Who influenced your life the most?
–My parents, for good and ill; the church I went to and the people there; adults I met in amateur theater; the two librarians at my neighborhood branch.

What did you like to do that made you feel grown up?
–Hang out in piano bars. You think I’m kidding, but I’m not. The piano bar was my mother’s natural habit; I lurked in the underbrush.

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A bookish meme from dadi

1. A favourite book.

Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers. This is a book I come back to over and over again, not for the mystery plot but for the evolving relationship between Peter and Harriet, and for its searching consideration of the relative importance of love and work in the lives of women and men.

2. A book that affected you in your YA years.

The Spiral Dance, which clued me in to Wicca, Neopaganism, and magic. I was so affected by that original edition that I have the ten- and twenty-year updates, too.

3. A favourite fantasy novel.

Wizard’s Holiday, one of the Young Wizards series by Diane Duane (dduane). I am very fond of this whole series–I’ve been reading it for more than twenty years–but you gotta love a book where one of the characters is a sentient fir tree with red berries who buys and wears a baseball cap when he visits Earth.

4. A favourite sci-fi novel.

Lately this honor has been taken by Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars. World-building, hard science, characterization, the long view–it’s great stuff.

5. An awesome book you think not many people around you have heard of/read.

dadi named the biography of a famous castrato, so I’m going to take a leaf from her and mention Perdurabo, a biography of Aleister Crowley by Richard Kaczynski (richard_kaczyn). It’s the most detailed and at the same time most balanced bio of Crowley I know, written by someone who’s a Thelemite, a magician, and a rigorous scholar.

6. A book you own more than one copy of.

dadi named the Divine Comedy, which I also own more than one copy/translation of. I must also add the Bible (multiple translations), The Spiral Dance (multiple editions), the Revelations of Julian of Norwich… what?

7. An author whose every single book you own/will buy.

I’m not sure anybody falls in that category for me right now. Diana Paxson (dpaxson) is probably the closest.

8. The worst book you’ve ever read.

If by “worst” I can intend “strangest, most confusing and bewildering, and what the fruit is going on here?”, then it has to be Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow, which I had to read in college and have never gotten over.

9. A book you dislike that lots of other people you know like.

Anything by Dan Brown. Eek. That man’s prose makes me cringe.

10. The most difficult book you’ve ever read.

Hm, Gravity’s Rainbow, Red Mars the first time through, Hildegard of Bingen’s Scivias, a massive visionary opus.

11. Tell me what kind of books your mum reads/read.

Mystery novels and horror. She was a huge fan of Stephen King.

12. What have you read so far this year?

A LOT.

13. What are you reading now?

A LOT. Yesterday I started Clear Blogging by Bob Walsh, which is going to be really helpful to me in managing and promoting my blogs.

14. What are you reading next?

[rolls eyes] You mean there are people who read one book at a time? Not me.

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I has an interview!

Some time ago

did this interview meme and I asked her for questions.  She asked good, probing ones, as she always does when this meme comes around, and it took me a while to generate my answers.
1. Knowing what you know about me as a person, would Buddhism be a good path for me? Why or why not? (I’m not looking to convert, just curious.)

At this point, I am inclined to say that Buddhism would be a good path for *everybody*.  Let me clarify that by saying that I think *some* form of Buddhism would work for most people, if they could make contact with it.  You might be attracted to the teaching of Thich Nhat Hanh, which is an outgrowth of Vietnamese Zen, a kinder gentler zen with no sitting and getting whacked while your knees ache, or to the Insight Meditation groups that have come out of the southeast Asian Theravadin traditions.  I don’t think you could make a good connection with Tibetan Buddhism; it might remind you of Catholicism in ways you don’t want to be reminded.

2. What is the thing you love the most about Baltimore, and the thing you hate the most?

I love the old traditional Baltimore that is a network of neighborhoods, each with its own distinctive character.  I love the eccentricity of Baltimore, and the eccentrics, which Homicide: Life on the Streets and the movies of John Waters celebrate in different ways.  I love white marble steps, hard crabs, the Inner Harbor, my little jewel of a neighborhood, the old-style blue-collar people and the funky artists.

I have to admit, though, I pretty much hate our transit system.  It’s crowded, it’s inefficient, there aren’t enough lines, there’s no easy and cheap link to D.C. that runs on weekends as well as workdays, and they put up pretty signs about not smoking, eating, drinking, or making noise with your music but never enforce them.  (People don’t actually smoke on the bus, not usually, but they do eat and drink with impunity, and I am elitist enough to *really hate that*.

3. You’re given creative carte blanche and a healthy budget to design and cast your own dream TV series. What’s it about and who stars in it?

It’s a night-time drama/soap opera called Forty or Better.  It revolves around a largish cast, the core group of which are between forty and sixty years old.  Some of the characters are married, some are divorced or never married.  Some have kids who are nearly adults, others started later and have younger kids; no one has grandchildren yet.  Everyone knows everyone else in some way, is interconnected.  There’d be lots of relationship drama, stuff about money and job changes, midlife crises, dealing with aging parents, and also spiritual upheavals.  It would be clear that people who’d been married a long time were still having sex and enjoying one another; maybe one married couple would be notably unhappy.  I’d have both gay and straight characters. I know I’d want TonyHead to be in it, Candice Bergen, Juliet Stevenson, David Spader… all sorts of fun and interesting people.

4. What do you think is the single biggest, most urgent problem facing the world today, the one where if we don’t address it NOW everything else will start to fall apart? Be as specific or general as you like.

I had to think about this one for a while before I hit on the answer, but once I did, it seemed obvious and right.   I think that the biggest, most urgent problem facing the world today is fundamentalism: the belief that there is only one right way of doing things, and it’s MINE.  Religious fundamentalism is the most obvious example, of course.  Non-fundamentalist religions don’t send their adherents out to bomb others who disagree with them, to gang up on women and beat them up for not dressing with proper decorum, to hold riots about the depiction of a religious leader in a cartoon.  Those examples sound like I’m picking on Islam, I know, and Islamic fundamentalists are loud and often dangerous, but they’re not alone.  The fundamentalist Latter-Day Saints who insist on holding onto polygyny, generations after the mainstream church gave it up in exchange for mainstream acceptance; the evangelical Christians who pointed to America’s tolerance (bare tolerance) of feminism and homosexuality as the cause of the 9/11 bombings, instead of our economic and foreign policies; the Chinese Communists who deny that they have a religion but have persecuted Buddhism in Tibet and China both with nothing but religious zeal.

And religious fundamentalism isn’t the only thing I see as a problem.  There’s also the political fundamentalism which turns members of the Other Party into the Devil’s Minions instead of the Honorable Opponent.  There’s the scientific fundamentalism which insists that the answers of science are complete and final and which turns atheism into a crusading religion of its own.  It seems like in every aspect of life and culture, there are fundamentalists who take the most extreme positions and then defend them as The Only Right Way.  There are environmentalists who think that the only way to “save the Earth” is to get rid of all the people, but I don’t see them volunteering to go first.

I think what’s so exciting for me about the Integral Approach is that it’s the very opposite of fundamentalism: Integrating all perspectives into a whole.  Unless we can do that, yeah, I think we might be doomed.

5. What’s a book you’ve always meant to read, and want to, but never seem to get around to reading?

I’m stumped on this one.  When I worked at a Christian bookstore, there were a number of Important Authors whose books I always meant to read, but never did: Jurgen Moltmann, Edward Schillebeeckx, Raymond Brown come to mind.  I occasionally issue a vague sigh because I haven’t read more Great Novels, and even more occasionally I read a classic novel and find it awesome, as I’ve done with Huxley, Orwell, and Sinclair Lewis (It Can’t Happen Here and Elmer Gantry.  But I read so much that there isn’t a lot I really want to read that gets by me.

–If you would like to play, leave a comment and ask me to interview you, or feel free to ask me five new interview questions.

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Teh Interest Meme

Comment on this post and I will choose seven interests from your profile and ask you to explain what they mean and why you are interested in them. Post this along with your answers in your own journal so that others can play along.

asked me about:

tulkus

A tulku, according to Tibetan Buddhism, is the incarnation of an enlightened being who can choose when and where to be born.  Originally, the word was a translation of the Sanskrit “nirmanakaya”, which is usually Englished as “emanation body”.  The tulku lineages of Tibet ran monasteries, administered provinces, and performed other traditional duties.  The Dalai Lama is the best known example of a tulku, but he’s not the only one; the Panchen Lama is also highly revered, and the Karmapa, who has just visited the U.S. (and spammed my LJ with his pictures) is the oldest of those lineages.  If a highly advanced Tibetan master dies, people will start looking for his tulku, who will carry on his work.  The movie <i>Little Buddha</i> is about the search for a revered teacher’s tulku.

integral approach

The Integral Approach is a system of philosophy and practice developed principally by Ken Wilber that I’m just starting to learn about.  It has lots of neat colorful diagrams ‘n’ stuff.  More on this later.

magic

Magic is still on my interests lists because I think magic, principally ceremonial magic, is the Vajrayana of the West, and Tibetan Vajrayana is basically a kind of ceremonial magic.  Both are tools for accelerated personal development; both are tools that must be handled carefully.  The advantage of the Eastern methods is that they’re firmly attached to the other vehicles, as Buddhists say, of personal morality and liberation and the desire to become enlightened in order to help suffering beings most effectively.

householder yogins

A householder yogin is a person who is an advanced Vajrayana/Tantric practitioner in the context of a normal mundane life, without monastic vows.  The great historical example is Marpa, the teacher of Milarepa.  Mila meditated half-naked in a cave for years, but Marpa was a farmer and translator with a wife and family.  Basically, this is what I aspire to be; right now I’m a n00b, but I hope to advance to Tantric practice, and I don’t plan on leaving

and living in a cave while I do so.

tenzin kyatso

This is the proper name of the current Dalai Lama, the Great Fourteenth.  No, I’m not the only person who calls him “the Great”.  I think that’s how he’ll be remembered.  (The first Dalai Lama to be called “Great” was the Great Fifth, who was the first of the line to rule the nation.)

sambhogakaya

All fully developed Buddhas are said to have three bodies: the dharmakaya, the sambhogakaya, and the nirmanakaya.  The dharmakaya is the body of truth, identical with absolute reality; the nirmanakaya is the historical incarnation (see above under “tulku”).  The sambhogakaya, the body of enjoyment or body of fruition, is the beautiful magical form in which buddhas manifest to other advanced beings, buddhas and bodhisattvas.  The images in Tibetan sacred art are considered to be representations of this body.

ken wilber

The bald-headed big-shouldered guy who has written umpty books about the Integral Approach.  More on him later.

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