Vogue, 9/27/22; Ananda (Dharma Buddhist Meditation), CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Wow, I used to look up to Gwynie |
In celebration of her 50th birthday, leading actor and elite Hollywood royalty Gwyneth Paltrow sat down with Vogue to reflect on this milestone.
Ahead of the celebration the actor turned [Goop.com] wellness mogul was feeling calm, which she explained was a change from how she had felt in previous decades [particularly when endangering her child on a scooter without a helmet while lecturing others on how to parent or consciously decoupling from ex-husband Chris Coldplay Martin].
Goop Mogul Gwen? Ha, she has some nerve posing nude holding her[self] shiny in gold glitter. |
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Paltrow discussed how her sense of style has — and has not — changed over the years, what it’s like to see images of her younger self canonized in fashion history, and what she’s most grateful for that she did in her 20s.
Vogue: Happy early birthday! How do you feel approaching this milestone?
ALA, Resveratrol, Vit. C? (goop.com) |
Really?
Largely because I had a very strong relationship to my livelihood and importance being tied to my image and relevancy in the world. Rightly or wrongly, I really felt that way. When you’re kind of rewarded for being attractive and then you build a living and a livelihood, it’s predicated on that.
Gwyneth Paltrow stars in Shakespeare in Love
SUTRA: The Great Conflagration
Bhikkhu Bodhi (trans.), Mahāpariḷāha Sutta — Saṁyutta Nikāya
Connected Discourses on the Truths (SN 56.43), "The Great Conflagration" edited by Wisdom Quarterly
The Buddha, Gandhara (Afghanistan/Indo-Pakistan) |
- undesirable (sn.v.451), never desirable;
- unlovely, never lovely;
- disagreeable, never agreeable.
"Whatever odor one smells with the nose…
"Whatever taste one savors with the tongue…
"Whatever tactile object one feels with the body…
"Whatever mental [object] phenomenon one cognizes with the mind is:
- undesirable, never desirable;
- unlovely, never lovely;
- disagreeable, never agreeable.”
“There is, meditator.”
(SC 3) “But what, venerable sir, is that conflagration more terrible and frightful than that one?”
(SC 4) “Those wandering ascetics or [temple] Brahmins, meditator, who do not understand as it really is:
- ‘This is suffering’
- ‘This is the cause of suffering’
- ‘This is the cessation of [all] suffering’
- ‘This is the way leading to the cessation of suffering’
"Delighting in such volitional formations, they generate volitional formations that lead to rebirth, generate volitional formations that lead to aging, generate volitional formations that lead to death, generate volitional formations that lead to sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair.
"Having generated such volitional formations, they are burned by the conflagration of rebirth, burned by the conflagration of aging, burned by the conflagration of death, burned by the conflagration of sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair.
"They are not freed from rebirth, aging, and death; not freed from sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair; not freed from suffering, I say.
(SC 5) “But, meditator, those wandering ascetics and Brahmins who do understand as it really is:
- ‘This is suffering’
- ‘This is the cause of suffering’
- ‘This is the cessation of suffering’
- ‘This is the way leading to the cessation of suffering’
"Not delighting in such volitional formations, they do not generate volitional formations that lead to rebirth, nor generate volitional formations that lead to aging, nor generate volitional formations that lead to death, nor generate volitional formations that lead to sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair.
"Not having generated such volitional formations, they are not burned by the conflagration of rebirth, nor burned by the conflagration of aging, nor burned by the conflagration of death, nor burned by the conflagration of sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair.
"They are freed from rebirth (sn.v.452), aging, and death; freed from sorrow, lamentation, pain, displeasure, and despair; freed from suffering, I say.
(SC 6) “Therefore, meditators, an exertion should be made to understand:
- ‘This is suffering…’
- ‘This is the cause of suffering…’
- ‘This is the cessation of suffering…’
- ‘This is the way leading to the cessation of suffering.’” Source
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