Saturday, August 31, 2024

Star People of Hawaii: Mu's Mt. Sumeru?


The axis mundi Mt. Sumeru
In Buddhist cosmology, the central mountain around which everything else on the plane of the Earth revolves is Mount Sumeru (or "Good Meru"). It is thought mythological because it would be bigger than Mt. Everest or Mt. Kailash and it should be in the middle of the ocean. The lost continent of Mu (or Lemuria) would fit the bill, and the peak of this sunken continent still sticks up above sea level, and it is called Hawaii's Mauna Kea. It did not get shorter when the continent sank; the floor got lower, and most of it is underwater. So it is like a tall person standing in a hole next to a guy named Everest standing on a platform. The "tallest" mountain is still Mauna Kea.
Ancient Aliens: Hawaii and Mauna Lea's link to extraterrestrial life and "star people" (S14, E12) | full episode
Pele gets very angry. Appease her.
(HISTORY) Aug. 31, 2024: The Native Hawaiians (and dwarf Menehune) of Hawaii trace their ancestry to star people beings from the Pleiades star system called the Atua (also Akua). A kind of "Atlantis" once existed in the middle of the Pacific known as ancient Lemuria (or Mu). And it had the world's tallest mountain, an axis mundiMauna Kea, as measured from the base to the snowy peak. Mauna Loa volcano and four others are still erupting and growing the big island. What are tikis, who were the royals and Hawaiian demigod chieftains emanating mana, and the "little people" or Menehune who worked to build walls and were recorded in past censuses?

Native American giants? (AI creation?)

See more in Season 14, Episode 12, "Islands of Fire."

How many little islands and outcroppings? Over 1,000 = Hawaii

Watch all new episodes of Ancient Aliens, Fridays at 9/8c, and stay up to date on all of your favorite shows on The HISTORY Channel website at history.com/schedule. #AncientAliens

To be the Goddess, Planet Wild's bear cub


We can save the world or at least this planet.
One needn't be a girl or a goddess to be a nurturer, a steward of Planet Earth, the Goddess Gaia (Bhumi, Tierra, Terra, Urth). Planet Wild is doing it by human power. As much as people think Buddhism is atheistic because it does not bow to some "creator God," it is actually nontheistic and polytheistic. There are many gods (devas), Gods (brahmas) and 
Great Brahma, and GOD (the impersonal/transpersonal Brahman) or "godhead" like the Vedic religion of old or modern Hinduism talk about. The celestial bodies are all deified (likely because ET visitors said they were from there or were rulers of those places visible in the night sky).

Countless worlds on 31 planes
In the Jataka (Rebirth) Tales of the Buddha, a kind of collection of Aesop Fables (with a strong moral to each story, which always seems to be the same moral -- what the person did in this life that person did in a previous life/lives), he recounts being reborn as the deity of the Moon (Soma) and Sun (Surya) multiple times, as were others close to him. Did he mean he was the ruler there, the embodiment, or a deity (deva) from there named after that world? It seems that when Dr. Steven Greer, MD of Disclosure Project, Sirius Disclosure, and Gaia TV, says that "Earth" is
literally a female deity, he is onto something. He has some reason for believing it and saying so other than others having said so. If we can be reborn as devas (shining ones, light beings), and we can, we can theoretically be born into the role of Mother Earth, the Goddess Gaia, Bhumi, or Tierra, just as Sakka King of the Devas was reborn as the king of the World of the Thirty-Three and the Realm of the Four Great Sky Kings, the two worlds immediately above the human plane.
If I were Goddess Terra, I'd be Mother Nature.
Saving animals like this cute baby sun bear?
 Yes! Here's one way to bring back our charismatic megafauna: Learn about "Planet Wild." What is PW?

Planet Wild is a nature protection organization, building a global community of people that care deeply about the planet and want to give back to nature and save the animals like the sun bear.

Monthly rewilding missions
Hindu Bhumi Devi (LACMA)
Planet Wild is bringing back endangered species, cleaning up our oceans from plastic debris, and rewilding entire forests to give them back to nature.

On the ground with pioneers
Planet Wild partners with the most impactful environmental initiatives around the globe to create real impact.

100% video documented
Every mission is documented for full transparency of the impact achieved. More: planetwild.com

Can we regain our US goddess?
Titular Goddess of the United States of [Columbia, as in District of Columbia]. Her Uncle Sam?

Secret California caverns open up (video)

A privately owned California cave, kept secret for decades, now shares its mysteries

Enter if you dare. Live in a cave tiny home.
(SF Gate) A visit to Black Chasm Cave promises history, rarities, and maybe a spider. Look inside this privately owned site in Volcano, California.

SF Gate Managing Editor Katie Dowd, June 16, 2024: The first person to peer into the 18-inch crack in an Amador ["Lover"] County hillside got quite the surprise. The gap swallowed the sunlight, exhaling sweet, cool air.
They're better in Buddhist Asia (Chiang Mai)
Translucent pillars flushed orange in the glow of weak candlelight. Deeper inside, the cavern held secrets, treasures, and creatures that would be found — and forgotten — over the next 170 years.

Black Chasm Cavern is one of Earth’s rarest creations full of gems. Although the Indigenous people of California likely stumbled onto it long before, the first recorded sighting was in the 1850s when the hills around Volcano, a hamlet about an hour east of California's capital, Sacramento, were crawling with gold miners.

What did cavemen do in caverns? Dream?
One of them stumbled onto that 18-inch crack. After the disappointment that it held no gold subsided, he saw a new opportunity: tourism. [Why should everyone be limited to Calabasas Caverns?] 
  • Early goldminers became tourist guide, giving candle tours for a "pinch" of gold. But it was a scam: Midway, deep in the cave, they would blow out the candle and demand another pinch to guide adventurers to the exit.
Guides at Black Chasm Cavern today tell visitors the story of how the first chamber ended up in its present state. After descending a tight, steep set of stairs, explorers find themselves in a space filled with blunt stalactites.

The best European archaeology is in Spain.
Each stalactite takes thousands of years to form as water slowly drips down [depositing minerals in their wake]. In a moment, gold miners destroyed them, chipping off the tips to take home as souvenirs.

Those stalactites will never grow back [not even in millions of years]. Privately owned California cave, kept secret for decades, shares mysteries (sfgate.com)
Explore natural cave, Black Chasm in Volcano, California | A Bartell's Backroads Pit Stop
(ABC10) Sept. 27, 2019: National Natural Landmark Black Chasm in Volcano, California, is a great pit stop to make during a road trip. An hour east of Sacramento, go caving – known as spelunking – at this natural cave. ABC10's John Bartell visits this underground wonder on at journey to the backroads.

Destination California: Back to Black Chasm Cavern
(FOX40 News) June 14, 2022: Fox40's Melanie visits Black Chasm Cavern in the woodlands and wine country of Amador County, northeast California, Land (and Underworld) of the Miwa Tribe.

Mom and me in Boyden Cave, California

Boyden Cavern and the wild cave exit in Kings Canyon National Park
(Through My Lens) Nov. 29, 2020: Boyden Cavern is located deep in the heart of Kings Canyon National Park. We got a chance to visit the cave in 2020, and it was a really fun experience. The cave is only open seasonally but make sure to do the tour if you get the chance. Read more about it here: californiathroughmylens.com/b...

Friday, August 30, 2024

Practice: What is "mindfulness"?

High quality, handmade Himalayan craftsmanshp of gold-faced Buddha - Etsy

What is that? - I don't know. I just let it be.
The Buddha talked about mindfulness (watchfulness, wakefulness, vigilance, diligence, sati) as a human capacity. It is being aware of the present in a dispassionate, nonreactive, unentangled way.

How do we become entangled? We follow automatic habits (going through life on "automatic pilot" rather than actually living).
Love me. I'm cold and all alone and need a hug.
Our most pronounced habit is to crave and cling, to feed our greed and lust for pleasurable experiences. For example, rather than simply observing a beautiful thing, we want (and often do) reach for it, grasp it, hold onto it. This is attachment and clinging. When it fails to satisfy us, displeases, and disappoints, it becomes unlovable, unliked. And we fall into our second habit. Imagine a cute white lab mouse (or baby piglet) sniffling and looking for cuddles. We love it until we don't.

I've had with you, you dirty fat pig! Bacon!
We have the habit of experiencing fear, revulsion, annoyance, disliking unpleasant things and experiences. For example, rather than simply observing an ugly thing, we want (and often do) push it away, grab it and throw it away, resist it, beat it, destroy it (or, fearing it, we ourselves run away). Imagine a dirty rat, greasy and growling with shifty eyes.

Our most fundamental habit, which makes these other two or three (greed, hatred, and fear, fear being a kind of hate or "aversion"), is delusion, confusion, ignorance. It is not knowing, not understanding, not seeing things as they really are. One could say our whole experience is really a hallucination -- in the sense that we are rarely if ever looking at what's actually there, rarely being "mindful."

If we were being mindful, everything would be alright, acceptable, and we wouldn't abandon ourselves or the experience of the present moment.

Could we experience a pleasant sight, sound, scent, savor, (bodily) sensation, or simulation (mental thing) and simply let it be, radically accept it, not get entangled, involved, attached, not grasp or cling?

Mindful when walking, sitting, doing, viewing
If we could, that would be mindfulness.

Could we experience an unpleasant thing (internal or external) and simply let it be, radically accept it, allow it, not get entangled (by the habit of hate or fear), involved, not resist or run away, not deny or attempt to fix or destroy it? If we could, that would be mindfulness, seeing it just as it is and allowing it, letting it be whatever it is or wants to be without "fixing" it or making it be otherwise.

(This would mean fixing ourselves to be at ease with experience rather than trying to fix experience. If we could do this, then we would really be on our way to seeing things as they really are rather than constantly imagining them to be some way or other from our expectations, past experiences, fears, anticipations, neuroses, phobias, vulnerabilities...).

Could we experience a neither-pleasant-nor-unpleasant thing (external or internal) and simply let it be without being bored, trying to escape the discomfort or confusion, without trying to figure it out and be one way or another, without trying to replace it with a pleasant and "interesting" thing? If we could, that would be mindfulness -- simply seeing what really is (right here, right now) without projections, distortions, expectations, preferences, just simply letting it (this moment) be whatever it is. That is mindfulness.

So the silly and downright foolish definition or idea that "mindfulness is walking in nature with awareness" becomes clear. We are never walking in nature, not mindfully. We are usually enjoying the change of scenery, the natural beauty, the slower pace, the fresh air, the uncluttered vistas, the everything-pleasant, hating the bugs and mosquitoes, weather and inconveniences, and missing most of the scenery because we're not really paying attention to what's there just noticing what we notice and daydreaming the rest of the time. Rather than ever being "here" right now, we instead constantly abandon ourselves, leave ourselves in the lurch of unpleasant experience, run these wheels of habit and automaticity, fail to engage with the real or the now or the present moment.

We dream of the past, imagine the future, and abandon the present. The first makes us depressed. The second makes us anxious. And the third makes us unhappy because, well, there's an interesting saying that takes some getting use to:

"There is no way to happiness; happiness is the way." If we were happy by being present, everything would be happiness. If we only allow ourselves to be happy when everything is pleasant, boy, we're in for a bumpy ride in life. If we insist we be unhappy when meeting the unpleasant, we have a lot of suffering coming our way (because a lot of, maybe most, experience is going to be unpleasant or boring). That will be the painful, the dukkha (the imperfect, off-kilter, off-center) causing us a bumpy ride.

How now if instead of habitually reacting all the time, judging, jumping to conclusions, thinking we know, being sure we know, we were to look with fresh eyes? "Beginner's mind," a famous attribute of Zen in particular and mindful meditation in general, is far better than the boredom, restlessness, annoyance, confusion, and insanity called "monkey mind."

The Buddha always has a little smirk or gentle smile.
The problem is this. The antidote is instant. It is called mindfulness (sati) because in mindfulness there is no greed, hatred/fear, or delusion. There is just this, just this moment, whatever is in it. And it's okay. It's fine because we let it be. We allow it. We accept it. We radically accept and embrace it because it is and for no better reason. Now it may change. (It will change). But for the moment, this moment, whatever this moment, we LET (allow) IT (whatever) BE (is). Allow whatever is. And smile. It feels nice, and it doesn't need a reason.

Now, the Buddha in talking about sati did not leave it at that. In fact, it's hard to ever find a definition of sati. That should be clear and well understood, implicitly one supposes, because all of the emphasis is what to be mindful of. That the Buddha called catu satipatthana, the Fourfold Setting Up of Mindfulness to be exact or the Four Foundations of Mindfulness to be conventional.

Sure, mindfulness is best. One can never be too mind. It is good for all things, to just let them be and observe them calmly, dispassionately, objectively, unentangled. As a path to enlightenment, the Buddha spelled out FOUR things of which to be mindful, which are categories:
  1. body
  2. feeling
  3. mind
  4. mind-objects.
Buddhas teach mindfulness.
We will not be able to be mindful of any of them very well until we establish the habit of mindfulness, which runs against the stream of our other four habits (liking the beautiful, disliking the ugly, fearing the ugly, or being bored or confused by the neutral). Watch. Stay. Be here now. Don't abandon yourself or the present experience.

The Dharma (Teaching) of what it means to practice systematic mindfulness of those four foundations (which is the practice of vipassana, "insight meditation," "practicing to see things as they really are") is taught often enough at Buddhist retreats.

For now, just be mindful of all that is (right now), which is an ever-changing stream of things, always interesting if one investigates dispassionately.

There is much to see and much to learn, but not if we come at it with expectations and like we already know. A little beginner's mind goes a long way as does noble silence, not explaining, categorizing, conceptualizing, imagining, measuring, figuring, minding, or verbalizing. Just let it (this moment) be.
Dharma Buddhist Meditation (meetup.com)

Mindfulness in Mother Nature (exercise)




Mother Earth (Bhumi, Terra, Gaia), it may be said, is an enigmatic and magical source of wonder. From the delightful colors of the sunrise to the hypnotic light of a full moon, Mother Earth provides limitless beauty and awe.

However, she actually does a lot more than only creating spellbinding sights. She creates life-affirming experiences from connecting to her.

The seasons, for example, are opportunities for rebirth, growth, recreation, and rest. Here are some reasons we should communicate with Mother Earth:

Limitless abundance
We better start by getting out among the trees.
We may grow our vegetable and herb garden, gather fruit from orchards look to the Moon, charts of the stars, or the sun for guidance, select crystals or medicinal and entheogenic herbs for healing. Why? Mother Earth gives us everything we need.

When we are aware and appreciative, we look after what we have been given, and Mother Earth is no exception. In order to excite our gratitude, she gives us provisions and resources.

Limitless empowerment
The woodland devas are all around.
Our intuitive and psychic abilities are actually enhanced when we respect Mother Earth. This is because their natural home is grounded in her warm embrace. While we appreciate, we absorb healing energies and vibrations of various frequencies in line with her rhythms. In this way, Mother Earth is constantly sharing with us, divine powers of a goddess.

Joy and happiness on tap
Mother Nature is a powerful living goddess.
When we are in nature, we boost our feelgood energies, clear our minds, and become inspired to act and express ourselves creatively. Positively energized, we better focus our energies on bringing joy into our lives.

Mother Nature gives us many wonderful opportunities to connect to our psychic selves. Mindfully walking in nature makes us more conscious with improved sensory apparatuses and powers.

Mother Nature reminds us that we are part of everything around us, a web of life. We form a part of her. To bring that to life and give it concrete meaning, here is a walking meditation to connect ourselves with the world beneath our sensitive feet.


Dryads inhabit trees.
Every time we feel we need to harmonize and ground ourselves, simply find nature and perform this: 
  • As we start our walk, ask our Mother Nature for help to find the solution to any problem we are facing.
  • Focus on the breath and permit the senses to see, hear, and otherwise feel ourselves supported.
  • Remain aware that Mother Nature is simply the power in our stride, the air in our lungs, the beating of our heart.
  • Listen to the answers she gives, the solutions that will solve our problems and bring peace.
  • Stop. Close the eyes, place hands over heart, and thank her for everything she does.
We are part of Mother Earth, the essence of her love, the spark that ignites. Mother Earth loves us. Source: "How to Better Channel the Energies of Mother Nature and Make Them Work in Your Favor"

What is "mindfulness"?
What is that? - I don't know. I just let it be.
The Buddha talked about sati as a human capacity to be aware of the present in a dispassionate, nonreactive, untangled way. How do we become entangled? We follow automatic habits (going through life on "automatic pilot" rather than actually living). Our most pronounced habit is to... CONTINUED: Practice: What is "mindfulness"?

'Desert Daze' cancels 2024 festival


Desert Daze cancels 2024 festival
We're lost, just admit it, we're lost. - We're not lost. There are other things to do out here.

Turn around. Show cancelled.
(Billboard) Organizers for the California festival Desert Daze have called off this year's event. In an announcement organizers stated:

"It is no longer possible to execute the weekend as planned." The event, which has remained independent since launching in 2012, was unable to move forward with the 2024 edition due to "rising production costs and the current volatile festival market," according to the announcement.

Yeah, I'll walk back. Is it this way?
"Desert Daze is more than a festival or business venture to us," said Desert Daze co-founder Phil Pirrone in a release. "The community that we've cultivated together means so much to us and is the reason we will work to find a way to keep this beautiful thing going for many years to come."
.
The 2024 edition of Desert Daze was set to take place Oct. 10-13 in Lake Perris, California. Headliners for this year's event were to include:
Super-ancient Buddhist stupa with parasol top, according to chinesediscoveredamerica.com
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What else is there to do in the desert? UFO hunt?
"With each year, we do our best to serve the Desert Daze community," added Pirrone. "We are always learning and working diligently to improve the experience, and we tried everything to find a way forward this year. While we hit pause for now, we will be working in the background to deliver another special experience for all of us to share in the future. We thank you for your support."

We should move out to the California desert.
All pass holders for the 2024 festival will be refunded and will be contacted directly via their point of purchase. While the main event will not take place this year, side shows under the Desert Daze Presents banner will go forward as scheduled.

For additional information, head to the website: desertdaze.org. More from Billboard