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Kubonismo©

Living chaotic life's chaos in simplified simplicity

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

The Third Eye

It hurts me... this pain that I feel inside, the longing that I feel. .is so strong...

It drives me crazy... I have always had this... this feeling before... the point where it is more than just jealousy... I have nurtured this negative feeling and it has come back to me now... again... Like an old friend, it knows how to push the right buttons and anger grows... doubt... hatred.. loneliness... fear... Why?

The person that I cared for has not changed... nor does the situation. What is wrong is what's inside me. This destructive feeling.. This child that I have fed for so long... will need to grow up and stop its tantrums. You will not do this to me now. This child has hurt the ones I cared for by my reactions to the negative feelings that I felt. This child has driven me to paranoia long enough, but never more.

The third eye, helps us see ourselves in the third person, the detached mind, the impartial observer, the third eye gives us the point of view to clearly see what eludes us. It is hard sometimes to see the mountain when you are standing on it.
 
If all this is confuses you... do not worry.. unless you are in the situation I have just mentioned, then all of this may seem absurd... But trust me it all works out fine.
 
P.S.: By being able to look at yourself impartially as a separate being, you can analyze what emotions are being brought about, why those emotions are there, what's causing them, realizing that the beloved has not caused the hurt but the message that they have imparted seems to have done so. Still more, if you reflect upon it, then you realize that the message cannot be the problem... It is the receiver who must change, for the receiver seems to be who is greatly effected by the message.. which were merely words... nothing more. The beloved has not changed, they have not done the wrongdoing. It is merely the illusion built up by not reflecting upon the message. I hope this helps.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

What's Lost is Found

I’ve found what I’ve lost 14 years ago, or rather the lost has found me. In any case, I’m happy for it, I’ve lived so long without it that I’ve forgotten how it felt like or forgotten if it really is important to me. Lethe… My friends, drinking and feasting on the Lotus flower, it is so easy to forget and time flutters by.


Just think of the possibilities… Everyone really loves reuniting with people you care about whom you haven’t seen for a while, or reminiscing about things that have been and memories flood back with just a hint of song or a scent, places bring you back in time.


The sad thing about this my friends, Is that you can never really go back home. You can only swim the river once. Meaning, that water flows and if you come back to that same place the water has already passed, the river has changed. All you have left is the memory and memories you cannot trust. I pray that everyone learns to live and enjoy the Now and present time, learn to be mindful of the present and everything you are and do, to be a beautiful presence to your love ones and to love everyone. Brothers and sisters all we are to each other. Love one another. I believe the Buddha of Love once said.

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Happy Mother's Day!

Well it's Mom's day and I'm at work, this things happen when you are a volunteer, sacrifice my dear friends... sacrifice. Not really enthused at the idea of not spending time with the family, but fortunately my lovely wife understands. Time is precious. I can never thank my wife enough and her Mom who she has learned everything from.
My mom on the other hand had left me, my siblings and my Dad in April 1988 to go to a better place and we missed "Nanay" very much.

Here's some of Thic Nhat Hanh's work in memory of moms:
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A Rose for Your Pocket
by Thich Nhat Hanh
link:http://www.quangduc.com/English/ullambana/05roseforyou.html

The thought "mother" cannot be separated from that of "love". Love is sweet, tender, and delicious. Without love, a child cannot flower, an adult cannot mature. Without love, we weaken, wither.
The day my mother died, I made this entry in my journal: "the greatest misfortune of my life has come!". Even an old person, when he loses his mother, doesn't feel ready. He too has the impression that he is not yet ripe, that he is suddenly alone. He feels as abandoned and unhappy as a young orphan.
All songs and poems praising motherhood are beautiful, effortlessly beautiful. Even songwriters and poets without much talent seem to pour their hearts into these works, and when they are recited or sung, the performers also seem deeply moved, unless they have lost their mothers too early even to know what love for mother is. Writings extolling the virtues of motherhood have existed since the beginning of time throughout the world.
When I was a child I heard a simple poem about losing your mother, and it is still very important for me. If your mother is still alive, you may feel tenderness for her each time you read this, fearing this distant yet inevitable event.
That year, although I was still very young
my mother left me,
and I realised that I was an orphan,
everyone around me was crying,
I suffered in silence...
Allowing the tears to flows,
I felt my pain soften.
Evening enveloped
Mother's tomb,
the pagoda bell rang sweetly.
I realised that to lose your mother
is to lose the whole universe.
We swim in a world of tender love for many years, and, without even knowing it, we are quite happy there. Only after it is too late do we become aware of it.
People in the countryside do not understand the complicated language of city people. When people from the city say that mother is "a treasure of love", that is already too complex for them. Country people in Vietnam compare their mothers to the finest varieties of bananas or to honey, sweet rice, or sugar cane. They express their love in these simple and direct ways. For me, a mother is like a "ba hu+o+ng" banana of the highest quality, like the best "ne^'p mo^.t" sweet rice, the most delicious "mi'a lau" sugar cane!
There are moments after a fever when you have a bitter, flat taste in your mouth, and nothing tastes good. Only when your mother comes and tucks you in, gently pulls the covers over your chin, puts her hand on your burning forehead (Is it really a hand, or is it the silk of heaven?), and gently whispers, "My poor darling!" do you feel restored, surrounded with the sweetness of maternal love. Her love is so fragrant, like a banana, like sweet rice, like sugar cane.
Father's work is enormous, as huge as a mountain. Mother's devotion is overflowing, like water from a mountain spring. Maternal love is our first taste of love, the origin of all feelings of love. Our mother is the teacher who first teaches us love, the most important subject in life. Without my mother I could never have known how to love. Thanks to her I can love my neighbours. Thanks to her I can love all living beings. Through her I acquired my first notions of understanding and compassion.
Mother is the foundation of all love, and many religious traditions recognise this and pay deep honour to a maternal figure, the Virgin Mary, the goddess Kwan Yin. Hardly an infant has opened her mouth to cry without her mother already running to the cradle. Mother is a gentle and sweet spirit who makes unhappiness and worries disappear. When the word "mother" is uttered, already we feel our hearts overflowing with love. From love, the distance to belief and action is very short.
In the West, we celebrate Mother's Day in May. I am from the countryside of Vietnam, and I had never heard of this tradition. One day, I was visiting the Ginza district of Tokyo with the monk Thien An, and we were met outside a bookstore by several Japanese students who were friends of his. One discretely asked him a question, and then took a white carnation from her bag and pinned it on my robe. I was surprised and a little embarrassed. I had no idea what this gesture meant, and I didn't dare ask. I tried to act natural, thinking this must be some local custom. When they were finished talking (I don't speak Japanese), Thien An and I went into the bookstore, and he told me that today was what is called Mother's Day. In Japan, if your mother is still alive, you wear a red flower on your pocket or your lapel, proud that you still have your mother. If she is no longer alive, you wear a white flower.
I looked at the white flower on my robe and suddenly I felt so unhappy. I was as much an orphan as any other unhappy orphan; we could no longer proudly wear red flowers in our buttonholes. Those who wear white flowers suffer, and their thoughts cannot avoid returning to their mothers. They cannot forget that she is no longer there. Those who wear red flowers are so happy, knowing their mothers are still alive. They can try to please her before she is gone and it is too late. I find this a beautiful custom. I propose that we do the same thing in Vietnam, and in the West as well.
Mother is a boundless source of love, an inexhaustible treasure. But unfortunately, we sometimes forget. A mother is the most beautiful gift life offers us. Those of you who still have your mother near, please don't wait for her death to say, "My God, I have lived beside my mother all these years without ever looking closely at her." Just brief glances, a few words exchanged-asking for a little pocket money or one thing or another. You cuddle up to her to get warm, you sulk, you get angry with her. You only complicate her life, causing her to worry, undermining her health, making her go to sleep late and get up early. Many mothers die young because of their children. Throughout her life we expect her to cook, wash, and clean up after us, while we think only about our grades and our careers. Our mothers no longer have time to look deeply at us, and we are too busy to look closely at her. Only when she is no longer there do we realise that we have never been conscious of having a mother.
This evening, when you return from school or work or, if you live far away, the next time you visit your mother, you may wish to go into her room and, with a calm and silent smile, sit down beside her. Without saying anything, make her stop working. Then, look at her for a long time, look at her deeply. Do this in order to see her, to realise that she is there, she is alive, beside you. Take her hand and ask her one short question to capture her attention, "Mother, do you know something?" She will be a little surprised and will probably smile when she asks you, "What, dear?" Keep looking into her eyes, smiling serenely, and say, "Do you know that I love you?" Ask this question without waiting for an answer. Even if you are thirty or forty years old, or older, ask her as the child of your mother. Your mother and you will be happy, conscious of living in eternal love. Then tomorrow, when she leaves you, you will have no regrets.
In Vietnam, on the holiday of Ullambana, we listen to stories and legends about the bodhisattva Maudgalyayana, and about filial love, the work of the father, the devotion of the mother, and the duty of the child. Everyone prays for the longevity of his or her parents, or if they are dead, for their rebirth in the heavenly Pure Land. We believe that a child without filial devotion is just artificial. But filial devotion also arises from love itself. Without love, filial devotion is just artificial. When love is present, that is enough, and there is no need to talk of obligation. To love your mother is enough. It is not a duty, it is completely natural, like drinking when you are thirsty. Every child must have a mother and it is totally natural to love her. The mother loves her child, and the child loves his mother. The child needs his mother, and the mother needs her child. If the mother doesn't need her child, nor the child his mother, then this is not a mother, and this is not a child. It is a misuse of the words "mother" and "child".
When I was young, one of my teachers asked me, "What do you have to do when you love your mother?" I told him, "I must obey her, help her, take care of her when she is old, and pray for her, keeping the ancestral altar when she has disappeared forever behind the mountain." Now I know that the word "What" in his question was superfluous. If you love your mother, you don't have to do anything. You love her; that is enough.
To love your mother is not a question of morality or virtue. Please do not think I have written this to give a lesson in morality. Loving your mother is a question of profit. A mother is like a spring of pure water, like the very finest sugar cane or honey, the best quality sweet rice. If you do not know how to profit from this, it is unfortunate for you. I simply want to bring this to your attention, to help you avoid one day complaining that there is nothing left in life for you. If a gift such as the presence of your own mother doesn't satisfy you, even if you are president of a large corporation or king of the universe, you probably will not be satisfied. I know that the Creator is not happy, for the Creator arises spontaneously and does not have the good fortune to have a mother.
I would like to tell a story. Please don't think that I am thoughtless. It could have been that my sister didn't marry, and I didn't become a monk. In any case, we both left our mother -- one to lead a new life beside the man she loved, and the other to follow an ideal of life that he adored. The night my sister married, my mother worried about a thousand and one things, and didn't even seem sad. But when we sat down at the table for some light refreshments, while waiting for our in-laws to come for my sister, I saw that my mother hadn't eaten a bite. She said, "For eighteen years she has eaten with us and today is her last meal here before going to another family's home to take her meals." My sister cried, her head bowing barely above her plate, and she said, "Mama, I won't get married." But she married nonetheless. As for me, I left my mother to become a monk. To congratulate those who are firmly resolved to leave their families to become monks, one says that they are following the way of understanding, but I am not proud of it. I love my mother, but I also have an ideal, and to serve it I had to leave her -- so much the worse for me.

In life, it is often necessary to make difficult choices. We cannot catch two fish at the same time: one in each hand. It is difficult, because if we accept growing up, we must accept suffering. I don't regret leaving my mother to become a monk, but I am sorry I had to make such a choice. I didn't have the chance to profit fully from this precious treasure.
Each night I pray for my mother, but it is no longer possible for me to savour the excellent "ba hu+o+ng" banana, the best quality "ne^'p mo^.t" sweet rice, and the delicious "mi'a lau" sugar cane.

Please don't think that I am suggesting that you not follow your career and remain home at your mother's side.
I have already said I do not want to give advice or lessons in continuing to look into her eyes with a serene smile, tell her, "Do you know that I love you?" Ask her this question without waiting for an answer.
Even if you are thirty, forty years old, or older, ask her simply, because you are the child of your mother. Your mother and you will both be happy, conscious of living in eternal love.
And tomorrow when she leaves you, you will not have any regrets.
This is the refrain I give you to sing today. Brothers and sisters, please chant it, please sing it, so that you won't live in indifference or forgetfulness. This red rose, I have already placed it on your lapel. Please be happy.
Thich Nhat Hanh (1962)

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Life Hacking Peerflix (conclusion)

As I've said before Peerflix is great especially if you plan on streamlining your DVD collection and getting rid of your DVD purchase mistakes and DVDs you've received during the holidays that your relatives thought was the best thing since sliced bread. But by no means is Peerflix perfect... Here are the cons:

1. You may receive a used DVD, or it may not work.
2. There will be no DVD case.
3. You will not get the DVD cover art.
4. The packaging is not the best out there, nor is it eco-friendly (the scotch tape)

some minor solutions I've developed or what works with me:

1. If you received a damaged, scratched or unplayable DVD, simply mail it back... The peersafe program protects you from this. There was a DVD that I had to order 3 times because it seems like the postal worker hated the thing and it kept arriving cracked but I got the replacement a working one.

2. No DVD case? No problem! Your now empty DVD case of your previous trade should do the job if not them just go to walmart or some store and buy one, if not then get it from the thrift store, since people usually just throw them away.

3. No DVD art? A little bit harder but you can search google for "DVD cover" and you'll find more than a dozen websites that will let you download the DVD covers and all you have to do is print and cut them to size, there are even sites that offer free custom DVD covers to replace the ugly original ones.

4. Yes, the packaging needs work, it's actually quite ingenious how you can just print it out and by folding it you'll have a postage ready "peer mailer" but what about the scotch tape for you treehuggers out there. I have some solutions for these basic problems:



Next time you have to send out a peermailer, do this:

-Print the peermailer
-Remove the DVD cover art and fold it by the spine colsest to the front cover
-then fold the back side of the cover outwards touching the barcode
-Insert the DVD in-between the folds
-Now fold the printed "Peermailer so that you can fit the folder DVD cover art with the DVD
-Make sure all the folds are folded inwards on the peermailer
-Carefully apply glue or paste to seal the mailer
-Attach the correct postage and Voila!

You now have an earth friendlier mailer with the inclusion of the DVD cover that some members can appreciate.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

My $25 a month Phone Bill (Part 1)


I’ve been trying to remember how Sprint has gotten me so riled up that I actually now my own phone company.

Should have written about the whole process during that time while everything was still fresh in my memory, but I’m sure that their hidden charges and their very vague bill explanation has something to do with it.

Moved to Las Vegas in 2003, had the house built in a new subdivision master plan community, and my phone line from Sprint was two months late in the installation, Sprint was nice enough to lend us a cellular phone while the work is finished, (and they were nice still to let me know that I could keep the phone afterwards for only $40), got my first bill from them and I remember I was pretty happy with them even after I have gotten my bill. What started the troubles was when I (of course) wanted high speed internet ASAP, and they couldn’t deliver not for another six months. So for half a year I was dialing-up. Got deployed in Iraq, got back and a month later (8 months after the inquiry) Sprint contacted me about their high speed DSL. Had the work done and found out afterwards that EarthLink was the ISP for the DSL. Not too shabby since I was actually pretty happy about my previous EarthLink’s service when I was still living in Tucson, AZ. Two months down the line started having connection problems, contacted costumer support and was told by EarthLink that I need to talk to Sprint since they provide the lines, And was immediately bounced back by Sprint explaining to me like I was a mental deficient that I need to be talking to EarthLink. Finally got to somebody who knows what the *&(*$ is happening and promptly connected me to EarthLink 2nd level of support…. In INDIA. I was way past boiling point 45 minutes ago waiting on my wife’s Chicago area code cell phone burning minutes (I returned the Sprint cell you see and for some reason during the tech support talk my Sprint Land line Tango Uniformed {Tits Upped [Died on me]}) and this poor guy tech support guru instead of solving my dilemma was adamantly trying to convince me that actually s located in phoenix somewhere instead of a tech support farm in India. I asked to speak to the supervisor to get some resolution and was leveled up to the third level of hell tech support, This guy decided to let me know that I should be talking to Sprint, I slowly explained to this dude how I got to talk to him in the first place and he seemed to understand and placed me on hold (or so he thought). No background music or anything I could hear him talking to someone in his office in Tagalog talking about me. (pretty much the same way we techies made fun of stupid “ossifers” and clients who keep breaking their PC cup holders) I just blew up. And waited asked to speak with his Super, But this guy said he didn’t have one, I asked to be sent to billing so I could cancel my service, and he just would not stop talking to the point of being threatening, telling me that they know my account info and I would be very lucky in the future to ever get out of dial-up hell ever again. That was it. I told him I born and raised in the PI and told him his local time in Manila. The next day I didn’t have land line, and of course DSL also.

10 days later, After arguing with Sprint about my extra charges for early cancellation and explaining to them what I have to go through they have decided to waive the penalties. THANK YOU SPRINT!

No landline no internet, my lovely wife still has her cell phone and keeps bugging me if I was cheating on her since I was pretty much talking to someone for 2 hours non-stop according to her bill.

What to do now… (Stay tuned next post.)

BTW: Tagalog = Philippine Language, Ossifers = Non-enlisted military

LifeHacking Peerflix


I’ve been a member of Peerflix since October last year and I’m very much satisfied with their service, Peerflix is the first DVD trading company out there, it’s like Netflix or Blockbuster except there is no monthly fees and you get to keep the movie that you receive. Sounds a great deal right? The catch is well, It’s DVD trading. You list all the DVD’s that you want and if someone wants it then you send it out (just the DVD) it will cost you 39 cents for the postage, and in return you will get credits based on the worth of the movie that you sent, which in turn you can use to get the DVDs that you want. Trades cost 99cents.

Here’s the lowdown:

New DVD’s at Walmart = $15 (approx)

Old sale DVDs at Wals = $10 (approx)

Same disk at peerflix = $0.99

Peerflix is a good way of streamlining your DVD collection. Since October I have increased the size of my library to 126 DVDs at little cost.

Pros: Cheap, Easy, Environmentally friendly (their packaging is ingenious)

Cons: Used DVD, No DVD cover art and no DVD case comes with DVD; sometimes it takes longer to get the DVD that you want

The DVD that you receive will not have the DVD case or cover but I found out that with a little bit of Google-ing, you can almost always download an image of the DVD covers that you need from the net (Search: DVD covers) and of course when I send out the DVDs to peerflix I end up with empty DVD cases and so I just use those. Being in the military it is a necessity to be able to live within your means and anything I can do to save greenbacks and at the same time increase my quality of life is always a good thing. It’s legal and at the same time it’s a sort of recycling.


Monday, February 20, 2006

Forwarded Air Force Print News story: Airmen at Philippine exercise provide real world assistance

You can view the original story at http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123016474.

Airmen at Philippine exercise provide real world assistance
By Capt. Ben Alumbaugh
374th Airlift Wing Public Affairs

CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (AFPN) -- Airmen from Yokota Air Base, Japan, and Andersen Air Base, Guam, who were in the Philippines as part of an annual bilateral exercise are providing real-world humanitarian assistance after mudslides engulfed a village and 1,800 people Feb. 17.

U.S. Pacific Command authorized approximately 5,500 U.S. troops already in the region as part of a bilateral exercise called Balikatan to assist in disaster relief and humanitarian assistance shortly after a mountain overlooking a village in the southern part of Leyte Island in the Philippines disintegrated into mud following two weeks of steady rain.

Yokota's 36th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron, which flies C-130 Hercules, has already transported more than 40 people and several tons of equipment, including ;a forklift, to be used in the relief efforts.

"First of all, our thoughts are with the families who lost members in the mudslide," said Lt. Col. Bill Summers, 36th EALS commander. "We are ready to assist along with our sister services in supporting the relief efforts of the Philippine government."

According to reports, the village is so remote it takes five to six hours to get there from the nearest airport in Leyte's provincial capitol, Tacloban, which is about 400 miles south of the Philippine capitol of Manila.

"Yokota is the airlift hub of the Pacific, we stand ready and able to get whatever is needed to assist in the effort," Colonel Summers said. "The 36th trains for all sorts of contingencies and I'm confident we'll be able to get the much needed supplies and equipment to the affected areas as quickly as possible." ;

In addition to the 36th EALS, the 36th Contingency Response Group from Andersen is providing assistance. The group, which consists of the 736th Security Forces Squadron and 36th Mission Readiness Squadron, deployed to Clark Air Base in early February to open the air base in preparation for the upcoming exercise. ;

The group's mission is to be on 12-hour alert and ready to open an airfield or engage in any other mission as Pacific Air Forces sees fit. In 2005, they assisted with tsunami relief efforts in Southeast Asia, deployed to the Kamchatka Peninsula to aid in the rescue of the trapped Russian submariners and traveled to Mongolia in support of the president's tour. ;

Additional Airmen throughout the Pacific theater are gearing up to support as needed. The 15th Airlift Wing at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, which just received its first C-17 Globemaster III Feb. 8, is on alert to deploy their new aircraft and supplies to the region. ;

The Hickam C-17 is the first such aircraft to be permanently based outside the U.S. mainland and is jointly flown and maintained by active-duty and Hawaii Air National Guard Airmen. ;

The Kenney Warfighting Headquarters, also based at Hickam, is coordinating PACAF's support to the operation. ;

So far, 56 bodies have been found and 906 people are officially listed as missing, but the Philippine National Red Cross fears the numbers of dead will drastically increase, according to reports.

(Senior Master Sgt. Charles Ramey, Kenney Headquarters Public Affairs, contributed to this report.)