Showing posts with label explosive growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label explosive growth. Show all posts

Monday, October 6, 2025

Full Harvest Moon 2025 (Buddhist day)


San Diego residents express excitement for first supermoon of the year
Full moon over Los Angeles, California, downtown skyline (Jesus Curiel/Unsplash)
 
(CBS 8 San Diego) Oct. 6, 2025: October's full moon, also called the "Harvest Moon," is happening Monday night with full illumination at 8:47 pm PT. It is the first supermoon for three for 2025. More

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Full moon calendar for 2025 with lunar phases
The year’s first supermoon rises over L.A. tonight — looking 30% larger and 14% brighter than usual. This evening, make sure to gaze skyward [in the direction of New York as seen from Los Angeles] to catch the first supermoon of 2025 at its peak brightness over LA.

The first supermoon of 2025, the biggest and brightest of the year, will peak over California at 8:47 pm. tonight, Monday, Oct. 6th, 2025. Make sure to find a great spot to sky watch and catch the stunning Harvest Moon lighting up Los Angeles' skies.


About the 2025 Super Harvest Moon
Rhythms and cycles of time
According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, October’s full Harvest Moon will be the first of three supermoons in 2025. Rising low on the horizon, it will create a strikingly dramatic view against the Los Angeles skyline.

The Harvest Moon is the full moon closest to the autumn equinox, which occurred this year on Sept. 22nd. Traditionally, this moon rises around the same time for several nights, giving farmers extra light to finish their harvests.

One way to calm and focus the mind is mandalas
This year’s Harvest Moon is also a supermoon because it coincides with the moon’s perigee, or its closest approach to Earth. NASA notes it will appear about 30% larger and 14% brighter than an average full moon.

The next two supermoons of 2025 are the Beaver Moon on Nov. 5th and the Cold Moon on Dec. 4th.

Where to watch the supermoon in Los Angeles

Los Angeles is expected to have clear skies tonight, making it an ideal spot to see the supermoon. It reaches peak brightness at 8:47 pm PST on October 6th, though it will appear full for several days. The Year's First Supermoon Rises Over L.A.

The significance of the moon in Buddhism
First human depictions of historical Buddha was in Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara/Afghan
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This is the time of mooncakes and the traditional Sabbath Day or uposatha. That means it's the best time to observe the "fasting day," which means not eating before daylight or after noon. This is part of observing the Eight Precepts, an ancient tradition the Buddha praised as something worth continuing.

How do Buddhists observe the uposatha service?

(Buddhism Reflections) Uposatha days hold a special significance on the Buddhist calendar, particularly in the Theravada tradition. These weekly observance days are aligned with the phases of the moon, including the full moon, new moon, and two quarter moons.

Uposatha (shrine hall), Buddhapadipa Temple
During these times, both lay Buddhists and monastics engage in various practices that enhance their spiritual journeys. On the one hand, lay practitioners often take on additional precepts, dedicating themselves to deeper spiritual activities and community involvement.

Monastics, on the other hand, focus on reflection and purification, reciting the Patimokkha ("Path to Moksha"), a summary of the major rules of the Monastic Code of Discipline, which is a vital aspect of their monastic life.

The uposatha service is not just about individual practice; it also fosters a sense of community as laypeople gather at monasteries to support monks and nuns through food preparation and participation in rituals (pujas).

This day is steeped in tradition and serves as a reminder of the commitment to the Dhamma or Teachings of the historical Buddha.

Full-moon Uposatha – Nalanda Buddhist Society
The observance of uposatha varies slightly among different sects and countries, adding a unique flavor to this rich tradition.

Let's delve into the practices and significance of uposatha days in Buddhism and discover how they contribute to spiritual growth and community bonding. #BuddhaTeachings #Buddhism #Mindfulness

Thursday, August 7, 2025

We choose our suffering (Edgar Cayce)


The struggle to meditate sucks. Being there, ah!
Edgar Cayce (A.R.E. or Association for Research and Enlightenment) conducted trance-channel readings that revealed a great deal more than he the man could have known. The council or collective that came through brought forth much understanding.

Our suffering is not necessarily accidental. While bad, offensive, and sometimes insufferable, there is something that could be learned if we would view it that way.

The Aggregates that experience are dukkha.
What is "suffering"? The Buddha often spoke of it long before Cayce, so it might be good to ask him, as this is a very misunderstood term. The ancient term is dukkha, "disappointment," "unsatisfactoriness," the range of the unpleasant between annoyance and agony. The Buddha defined suffering this way:

An Exploration of Anicca, Anatta, and Dukkha in Buddhism – Indo-Buddhist Heritage Forum
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Suffering is much more than one thing.
"Rebirth is suffering, aging is suffering, death is suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair are suffering; contact with what is disliked is suffering; separation from what is liked is suffering; not getting what one wants is suffering. In short, the Five Aggregates clung to as self are suffering [unsatisfactory, disappointing, unable to fulfill, associated with pain]" (SN 56.11).
  • Hey, why talk about it? Why doesn't the B shut up already? Yeah, yeah, yeah, we suffer. Got it. That's clear enough. We're doing everything we can to AVOID it. So the less we talk about it, the better we'll feel. Duh! Become a hedonist. And shut yer yapper, O Great One.
Sadly, this view has been prevalent since before the time of the Buddha, so when the Buddha, the Awakened One, bothered to mention this ugly word, dukkha ("suffering"), were people or devas happy to hear it? No way. That's the last thing they wanted to hear about.

Pain is inevitable, but suffering's optional.
This is where the misunderstanding begins, and it could end here if hearers would just put away their aversion and LISTEN. A doctor comes in with the results of your scan and examination. Want to hear what's wrong? No way, just get right to the cure! Let's only talk about perfect health. What's it going to take? It's going to take all that? Forget it. I'll keep my illness. Why, I never... It's only when we see how bad and big the problem is that we adopt the right view about it and are open to the cure.

Hacking of the American Mind
The Buddha would have had a much nicer time to only speak positively and in an "airy fairy" sort of way, doling out magic, bliss, sprinkles, blessings, smiles, good cheer, good news, and the energy of a modern motivational speaker. He could have just told everyone who came to him in pain, confused, or ignorant, "That's right, you're doing great, attaboy, right on, keep it up!" They would have been so happy to hear it. But because he understood and was willing to show us the awful truth, he came to be called the Master Physician. He never met a kind of pain he couldn't cure. The first step? Recognition. Second step? Cause or diagnosis. Third step? Assessment or prognosis. Fourth step? (This is the best one!) The cure, solution, course of treatment, the way to fix what's broken as described in the first step.

"Suffering"?
I can take it because I'm a bodhisattva. Ouch!!!
No single English word captures the range, depth, and subtlety of the ancient Pali and Sanskrit term dukkha. Many translations try ("disappointment," "suffering," "unsatisfactoriness," "stress," etc.) Each captures part of the meaning in a given context. There is value in realizing more than one term is needed because the thrust of Buddhist practice is broadening and deepening the understanding of a term so important to the Buddha that he often claimed to only teach two things -- what is dukkha and what is the elimination of dukkha. Until its roots are finally exposed and eradicated, we will not understand why he focused almost as much on the problem as its solution. When landing on the single best English translation, think again. No matter how we translate dukkha, it's always subtler, deeper, and less satisfactory than that.
The Number 1 misconception tech founders have – that it has to hurt (Renita Kalhorn)

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Las Vegas bombed, loses Tropicana Hotel


FULL VIDEO: Tropicana Hotel imploded in true Las Vegas spectacle
(News 3 Las Vegas) Oct. 9, 2024: Bombers (controlled demolishers) love spectacle in Iraq as in the U.S. Some purposely rigged and blew up (blew in) the famous Tropicana Hotel in Lost Wages, Nevada, this morning, while a fireworks show and drones were seen swarming the desert sky.

There was advance notice of the event and, in true Vegas style, rooms were being rented out in neighboring high rise hotels for better views of the destruction and subsequent implosion. As with 9/11 and the purposeful bringing down of Twin Towers real estate in Manhattan (NY, NY), the entire area was "Trop dusted," with dangerous particulate matter now clogging the lungs of Las Vegans breathing without protective firefighter filters, iron lungs, and/or sufficiently stringent facemasks.

This is the 15th such takedown (controlled demolition) on or near the Vegas Strip. Will future lung cancer cases be compensated? Stay indoors until the skies clear and blow this over into the desert and all over Bunny Ranch.

This whole spectacle is reminiscent of the "shock and awe" campaign the U.S. military rained down on Iraq (Mesopotamia) that time it wanted to steal artifacts like Gilgamesh's body and tomb relics and control the Middle East with its partner and client state Israel no matter what Iran or Saudi Arabia had to say about it. More: News3LV.com

US War on Iraq: 'Shock and awe' assault on Baghdad begins (2003)
(ITN Archive) On 21 March 2003, ITN's John Irvine reported from CIA Asset and Supreme Leader Saddam Hussein's Iraqi capital of Baghdad as the "shock and awe" phase of the US-led war campaign by air got underway. While the US bombardment of Baghdad had begun on 19 March, this had in fact consisted of relatively limited strikes targeting Saddam Hussein himself (who was hiding faraway in a tunnel), senior regime officials, and other specific targets. At 17:00 UTC on 21 March, the air campaign moved into the next phase. In one night, 504 cruise missiles were launched [dumped out of the US armory so that new more modern ones could be justifiably ordered to enrich private war profiteers like the Bush Dynasty, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Powell, and others] at Baghdad's government district. The pictures captured by ITN's cameras that night are to this day considered defining images of the 2003 invasion and the Iraq War as a whole.

#Iraq #IraqWar #ShockAndAwe #Baghdad #WarOnTerror #Conflict #KineticAction #AmericanGlee

To license the footage featured in this clip, follow the link below: gettyimages.co.uk... To search the ITN Archive collection on Getty Images, follow the link below: gettyimages.co.uk/footage...

Monday, September 9, 2024

When did California join USA? Today in 1850


Today in 1850, California became a state. When Mexico ceded the land in the Treaty of Hidalgo, no one told them gold had been found and would lead to the world's greatest gold rush to the island (because California is an island or was for a long time as European cartographers documented many times) with many of the 49ers being Irish in search of riches. The state has since become the most powerful economic and cultural force in the country and in much of the world. Much of California still belongs to Mexico and is divided into two states south of the border, Baja (Lower) California and Sur de (South of) California, a peninsular land that certainly looks like a great island and, when sea levels were higher, may well have been. California started as a free state, avoiding slavery but not for the abolitionist principles for which others fought. The Natives were wiped out and nearly erased, the grizzlies were all killed or driven out (only remaining on Catalina Island, a part of Los Angeles County). Is it time to break away from the rest of the country?

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Not having sex? You're not the only one

Editor-in-Chief and Co-News Director Danielle Johnson (Eden Prairie HS News)


Not having sex? You’re not the only one
Editor-in-Chief Sydney Lewis, EP Eagle News Network, 12/19/19
Letter from editor Sydney Lewis
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minnesota - In many ways, Eden Prairie is an above average high school [a real life Sweet Valley High] but not when it comes to sex.

About 35 percent of 11th graders surveyed last spring by the Minnesota Department of Education had had sex before.

Compared to that state-wide average, in the EPHS junior class, 21 percent of males and 14 percent of females have had sex.

How to present boring statistics in a useful way?
These numbers have stayed constant in the past six years, though other numbers relating to relationships have changed.
Prime Video: Sweet Valley High, Season 1 | Sweet Valley High (TV series)
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Peeing in the woods? EOTW
Relationship violence, verbal and physical, has decreased since 2013 for every surveyed group at EPHS except for 11th grade females. For this demographic, there has been a slight increase in the number of females who have encountered verbal or physical violence in a relationship.

With heterosexual sex, the biggest concern is often pregnancy. Condom use has significantly improved at EPHS since 2013. In the 2013 survey, 62 percent of female 9th graders who have had sex reported not using a condom the last time. In 2019, that number was 0 percent.

Prime Video: Sweet Valley High, Season 4 | Prime Video (amazon.com)
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My senior year (Jadan Fix)
More troublesome data comes from responses from female 11th graders to the same question, whose trend was the inverse of 9th grade girls. The percentage of 11th grade girls who did not use a condom the last time they had sex doubled from 2013 to 2019.

Overall, trends in sex and relationships have neither increased nor decreased drastically.

Winner of Black History Month Art Contest Sarah Mullah

Double Love (Sweet Valley High#1)
Although it may seem like everyone around you is having sex, that simply is not the case.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Girls are developing earlier: 'New Puberty'

Life is not fair! I had to wait until the 5th grade before pubes, but Wendy hit it earlier.
The New Puberty: How to Navigate Early Dev' in Today's Girls (Dr. Greenspan/Dr. Deardorff)

Many girls are beginning puberty at an early age, developing breasts sooner than girls of previous generations. But the physical changes don't mean the modern girls' emotional and intellectual development are keeping pace.

Two doctors have written a book called The New Puberty that looks at the percentage of girls who are going through early puberty, the environmental, biological, and socioeconomic factors that influence when puberty begins and whether early puberty is linked with an increased risk of breast cancer.

“What I find concerning is that puberty is a process that's very sensitive to the environment and we can move the timing of puberty, unintentionally." - Julianna Deardorff, co-author of The New Puberty

"It has been established that girls who enter puberty earlier are more likely to have symptoms of anxiety, higher levels of depression, initiate sex earlier, and sexual behaviors earlier," Julianna Deardorff tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross.
Deardorff and Louise Greenspan are co-investigators in a long-term study of puberty. They've been following 444 girls from the San Francisco Bay area since 2005, when the girls were 6 to 8 years old.

The study is funded by the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

Deardorff says that while early puberty could be hard on a young girl, family and school support matters.

"The family can serve as a huge buffer against some of those negative effects of early puberty," she says. "There's also been some research to show that certain aspects of the neighborhood context and also schools can be protective. ...It can completely mitigate the risk associated with early puberty on girls' emotional and behavioral functioning."
 
On early puberty
Hey, adults, naff off! (Serkan Engin'in...)
Louise Greenspan: The evidence suggests that in the past, age 8 was the cut-off for normal puberty, so we thought that less than 5 percent of girls were going through puberty before the age of 8. I do want to define what we mean in the medical profession by "starting puberty."

A lot of people in the lay public think that that means getting your period. What we're talking about is actually starting with breast development and pubic hair and what the research that we did with our colleagues found was that at age 7, 15 percent of girls had breast development, and at age 8, 27 percent had breast development. And in terms of pubic hair development, at age 7, 10 percent of girls had it and by 8, 19 percent had pubic hair development. That was significantly higher that what had been found in the past.

On how the numbers vary by race
Greenspan: At age 7, 25 percent of black girls have breast development, compared to 15 percent of Hispanic girls and only 10 percent of white girls and 2 percent of Asian girls. The same pattern can be seen for pubic hair development.

Julianna Deardorff (left) is a clinical psychologist and is on the faculty of the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. Louise Greenspan is a clinical pediatric endocrinologist at Kaiser Permanente and is on the faculty at UC San Francisco (Majed Abolfazli/Rodale Books).

 
On separating puberty from sexuality
Greenspan: I think we do want to make sure we do separate puberty and sexuality. For these kids, they're used to their bodies changing: they're losing teeth, they have to get new shoes every six months because their feet are growing, so for them, if the adults in their lives don't put it into a sexual context, it's just sort of a different change that can be happening in their body. We have to be careful to [not] immediately leap to sexualizing 7-year-old girls.

On how early puberty could be linked environmental exposure
Julianna Deardorff: What I find concerning is that puberty is a process that's very sensitive to the environment and we can move the timing of puberty, unintentionally, vis-a-vis environmental exposures.

...Puberty in and of itself in starting early has a lot of disconcerting aspects... [I wonder if] this [is] kind of a canary in a coal mine, or a barometer for other things that we're all being exposed to in our environments that may not be healthy for other reasons -- we're just not seeing those as obviously.

On chemicals that are hormone mimickers
Deardorff: They're referred to endocrine disrupting chemicals, or EDCs, or another term for that is "hormone mimickers." That's because in the body, they mimic hormones and, in this case, when we're talking about girls' early puberty, estrogen is the hormone that we're most concerned about.

Greenspan: There [are] several chemicals that may mimic estrogen in the body. In animal studies, a big one that we're looking at -- the culprit is called Bisphenol A or simply BPA. BPA was actually invented as a medical estrogen, it's a weak estrogen, and it ended up becoming ubiquitous in plastics [and]... it's also on paper, receipts, and in other compounds. The concern is that it may leech out of those and into our bodies and may act like an estrogen.

Our study has not yet demonstrated that this one, single chemical is causing early puberty, but it is one of the ones we're looking at. One of the problems with deciding which chemical is that there's no one single smoking gun. We live in a toxic milieu of many, many, many chemicals and it's actually becoming impossible to isolate the single one, so we're looking at the ones that may work together.

One of the reasons we were really motivated to get this book out there was so that folks could have some guidelines about how to use what many people call the "precautionary principle," which is -- if you're not sure about it, find a safer alternative, because the science just isn't there yet.

On boys' puberty
"The way we talk to our children becomes their inner voice" - Peggy O'Mara (rawforbeauty)

 
Violence solves everything chop-chop!
Greenspan: The jury is still out on what's happening with boys' puberty. There is some evidence that boys' puberty may be starting earlier as well, but we don't have the definitive studies that demonstrate that yet. One of the concerns is that the hormones that are estrogen mimickers might actually delay boys' puberty because boys' puberty is not an estrogen-related process, it's more of a...testosterone-related process. So the same chemical may have different effects in boys versus girls in terms of their pubertal development.

On how antibiotics in our food could be causing early puberty
Greenspan: The concern about antibiotics is that one of the reasons antibiotics are used in the food supply is not just to treat animals' infections, it's actually because when animals are given antibiotics they get fatter and they go through pubertal development earlier. So it speeds up the process of raising a young animal to an animal that's ready for slaughter. It makes them bigger, so it's more efficient. The concern is that if antibiotics are doing this to animals ... and they're not broken down in the intestinal system, in fact they're absorbed orally in the stomach when we eat them, could they be having a similar effect in kids?

On soy and its connection (or lack thereof) to breast cancer
Soy and tofu alert! (westonaprice.org)
Greenspan: We did look at soy intake, both by asking the girls what they ate and also the measuring the levels in the urine. And we found preliminary data that suggests that soy is actually protective and that higher soy intake may lead to later puberty, even when controlling for the differences in the families where there was a lot of soy intake because obviously there are differences in families that are giving their kids a lot of tofu.

“We think that children should eat soy because that's when it trains their body to become resistant to estrogen." - Louise Greenspan, co-author of The New Puberty

The theory would be that the estrogen mimicking effects of soy may actually cause the body to become resistant to estrogen -- that it may down-regulate the estrogen receptor, so that later in life, your body doesn't perceive or see estrogen in quite the same way.

We think that soy may actually be protective. The data is now coming out that women shouldn't worry so much about their soy intake for breast cancer, but it does speak to another concept in environmental health, which is the window of susceptibility. That means the timing of when you are exposed to something does affect the outcome. We think that children should eat soy because that's when it trains their body to become resistant to estrogen. More + AUDIO

Monday, July 6, 2009

Thailand's cruel, criminal elephant begging

Dan Rivers (CNN)

Good treatment during "Elephant Day" celebrations on 3/13/09 contrasts with widespread exploitation in Thailand (Xinhua).

BANGKOK, Thailand -- A lumbering grey shadow can often catch your eye as you drive along one of Bangkok's most polluted and congested streets, Sukhumvit. A new plan aims to return street elephants to the wild by paying owners for the animals.

Dan Rivers' Report on Elephant Begging

If this were not Bangkok, you would think you'd had one too many beer Singhas. But in this city of contradictions, anything seems, and often is, possible. And so it is that spotting a huge elephant, dodging the tuk-tuk motorcycle rickshaws, the ubiquitous taxis, and blizzard of traffic is nothing out of the ordinary.

I remember seeing my first elephant just outside the front gates of our home here -- and standing in wonderment -- it seemed magical and slightly surreal. I stood and the elephant owner insisted I gave him a dollar -- which I did, just to have the chance to feed this huge creature and stroke its rough, scaly trunk.

But I was naive, like so many tourists and newcomers here, as to the cruelty involved in this "elephant begging."

Over the next three years, I started to notice more and more elephants and see how some seemed distressed; shaking their massive heads from side to side, their eyelash-framed eyes wide with concern and bloodshot. I wondered why it was allowed and why the government did not do something about it.

But then talking to friends and colleagues here I soon realized that this was a problem that successive governors had tried and failed to tackle -- perhaps running up against vested interests and unscrupulous businessmen, who invest in elephants like they would a good stock or a race-horse.

The elephants were often run by criminal gangs and could bring in a healthy $30 per animal per day I was told -- not bad money in Thailand.

But now, authorities say elephant begging is going to be phased out with a mixture of financial inducements and tougher fines. A foundation with links to Thailand's Queen is offering to buy elephants from their owners for more than $20,000 -- hoping the owners will instead use the money to buy land or start a more conventional business. The fine for bringing an elephant into the city will rise from just a few dollars to a few thousand. More>>