š¾ Archived View for idiomdrottning.org āŗ hermit-crab-on-laundry-day captured on 2024-12-17 at 12:08:01. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Okay but did you know
some animals have clothes
itās called Hermit Crab
So itās not dumb that humans have clothes
And also in humid hot places
like rain forest
they donāt use that much clothes
In hot dry places like desert
you do need lots of clothes. š§š»
And itās a way to get to hang out
with G-d on the daily
So donāt be discouraged
just cause Adam and Eve
noshed on the science fruit
Now
thanks to their liāl fruit snack
we know that weāre hunks of
spoiling flesh on disintegrating bones
and we just have to
live with
that knowledge every day. šš»āāļø
But
thatās fine
because the blood of G-dās Lamb
made it so that
all sentient beings
could actualize buddhahood.
Whatās that gonna look like
for us
today
this fine Friday afternoon?
Maybe a mindfulness exercise
or a hymn?
I feel bad for Kierkegaard
with his āleapā
when itās just three centimeters away.
We can just reach out and touch it.
No matter how hard
all the flies
and decay
and absurdity
and entropy
makes it to see that.
Thatās why the
beginner mind
is so great.
Even though we
have all these mountains of clothes and laundry to sort,
even the lilies of the field have raiment
and the hermit crabs have their ceramic dollās heads
and sea shells.
Ligotti followed Zappfe in talking
about the four responses:
anchoring,
isolation,
distraction and
sublimation.
And of those four sublimation comes closest
to the
real answer
but sublimation sometimes feels like
itās just passing the buck
like a Sadako āRingā tape.
Like the only reason youāre talking about how bad it is
is so you donāt have to
think about how bad it is.
The real answer is:
showing up.
Iām grateful for these aching bones
and these heavy rusty breaths.
Beauty and ugliness.
Itās all there anyway š¤·š»āāļø
And thanks to
the life-changing magic of
āhedonic adaptationā
we humans tend to grade things on a curve.
In heaven weāre gonna be like
āOMG this harp-playing angel absolutely
sucks
compared to
this other gorgeous harp-playing angelā.
An inch of time is worth a foot of gems.
And even in the perfect Buddha nature,
our lives have texture and variety.
Right now,
my face and my feet
both hurt like heck.
Thatās part of the texture of sensation.
I wish they didnāt
but thanks to hedonic adaptation,
if they didnāt,
some other ache would stand out.
There was this dumb ad campaign
when I was in my late twenties:
āit gets betterā
and I was like when!???
And now Iām in my mid forties
and it never got better but
you know what did happen?
The gratitude attitude!
Even with tears down my cheeks
and my heart in pieces on the floor
and G-dās kicks with both feet and boots on,
here I am.
One second at a time,
like the victory of a cat on a hot tin roof.
I was an unhappy child.
Hedonic adaptation to this
trash dump world
took a while
to kick in.
And Ligotti is right about one thing:
the idea that
āitāll get better and better and betterā
is delusion.
But thatās why we have
radical acceptance.
Probably better known as:
showing up.
And sometimes things do get worse.
Unrepairably worse.
Thanks, thermodynamics š¤¦š»āāļø
Scrounging up
that sixpence for praise
can feel like
rolling a boulder up a hill,
forever.
And sometime itās shiny and sometimes itās dull.
Itās right here