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Post by MagnetMan on Jan 5, 2009 17:44:43 GMT -5
If Buddhism has a central philosophy for life it is "Right Attitude" I always thought that right attitude was simply having enthusiasm for life.
I got my first adult lesson of the true depth of quality right attitude can bring to life on a golf course.
I had became an avid golfer the moment I lobbed a ball a hundred and eighty yards through the air and landed it three feet from the target I was aiming at and sank the putt for my first birdie. Ten years into my golf game, on my home course in Johannesburg, I watched Gary Player play it the way a professional does.
On one of the par four holes he drove into the rough a hundred eighty yards short of the green. Between him and the green a large weeping willow guarded the approach. Its long leafy tendrils trailed on the edge of the green. I had landed in more or less the same place many times myself. From that lie I had never managed to float a ball over the willow and land it anywhere on the green So I was particularly keen to see how Gary played the shot, and said so to an older companion standing beside me. He chuckled. "Gary is not trying to get the ball on the green. He is trying to get it in the hole."
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fay
Global Steward
Posts: 100
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Post by fay on Jan 20, 2009 18:17:24 GMT -5
well, if focus is fine tuned then nothing seems impossible.
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Post by lavender1 on Jun 27, 2010 15:29:01 GMT -5
this focus gradually shifts from surprise to "self-consciousness" to comparison to competition to .....
"If there is love, there is hope that one may have real families, real brotherhood, real equanimity, real peace. If the love within your mind is lost and you see other beings as enemies, then no matter how much knowledge or education or material comfort you have, only suffering and confusion will ensue"
H.H. The Dalai Lama, The Little Book of Buddhism
the (w)hole is the ultimate receiving end?
right attitude ought to be spontaneous, just as pre-meditation is special beyond the calculations.
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