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April 21, 2009

Commentary On Aphorism 566

566

Many people fail as they preach depth can be bought with a ticket, and a vague sense of spiritual need.- To want more, that is what we all seek, of the material and the non-material in one desire or the other; it is greed to want more when one is hungry: to want more when one is not hungry is a sincere want. Allow me to add (what occupies most people in the civilised world) that the riddle of weight loss is also the riddle of living in a castle or tent: sometimes one does not feel hungry when one is hungry, how many full bellies feel hungry? To want a castle while seeing one’s misery is to want misery; for in one’s court of consciousness the context of ‘want’ is acknowledged. In the court of one’s consciousness, if a ‘want’ is empty it is anti-money, or anti-desire, though how can lust be desire if it consumes desire, and leads one to wanting desire more than feeling desire!

Commentary

To think like a mist, though the reader may desire certainty. But life in itself is vague, though it does have certainties. Psychology has proven this vagueness, linking it to our first experiences of life. Though one may not understand this aphorism....as a thriller is also not understood....it is what makes the brain the most content. Though it is not a vague mist of thinking, one has to wonder on the effect it has on the reader in the day, or the day after.

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