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Inner Quests

Gandhi’s Racism

Gandhi’s Racism

January 25, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Some of the information in this short video is inaccurate, notably the reference to ‘Dravidians’ but the assertions about Gandhi’s racism are correct.

Throughout his life, Gandhi preached racism and prejudice against every minority group he encountered – African blacks, Indian blacks (commonly called Dalits), Sikhs, and Muslims. He severely damaged Indian minority campaigns for equality, and arguably even contributed to the rise of apartheid in South Africa. He never admitted to his racism or apologized for it. In fact, India’s black community condemns Gandhi. Mayawati, a Dalit leader, blames Gandhi for India’s caste problems, saying, “He divided Indian society into two categories – the weaker sections and upper castes.” Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, a contemporary of Gandhi, was even more blunt, saying: “If a man with God’s name on his tongue and sword under his armpit deserved the appellation of a Mahatma, then Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was a Mahatma.”
Source: OFMI

Colin Wilson

Colin Wilson

January 24, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

“When I’m bored, my sense of values goes to sleep. But it’s not dead, only asleep. A crisis can wake it up and make the world seem infinitely important and interesting. But what I need to learn is the trick of shaking them awake myself . . . And incidentally, another name for the sense of values is intelligence. A stupid person is a person whose values are narrow.” ~ Colin Wilson The Black Room (1975)

I learned that one of my favourite authors, Colin Wilson died in December at the age of 82. I never read his most celebrated mainstream book ‘The Outsider’ but I read some of his other work including two science fiction novels, ‘The Mind Parasites’ and ‘The Philosopher’s Stone’, that I rate very highly. One of his themes, the major one, is that there is something blocking humans from being all that we could be. In his sci-fi he identifies the blockage with discarnate alien entities who have some reason for inhibiting our development. In his non-fiction he talks about boredom and the ‘trick’ of shaking ourselves from it.

Wilson’s writing draws us into his quest for finding this ‘trick’ of shaking ourselves awake and he constantly reminds us that it is necessary and possible to stay awake. He was a very optimistic writer and one whose writing and ideas may well be worth revisiting.

Population

Population

January 23, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Professor Hans Rosling’s interesting presentation, using state of the art visuals, argues that the world’s population will stablise at about 11 billion by the end of this century because of a declining birth rate. Also looks at changes in global poverty over the last century.

Dodge

Dodge

January 23, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Mick Dodge is an exceptional person who followed his own path right out of civilisation and into the wilderness. Someone posted about Dodge on Facebook and I read more about him on the Zen Gardner blog. I commented that he is a real life Tom Bombadil.

Dodge is inspirational even though I could never follow his example nor would want to. He chose a life of what I would call extreme hardness and became a kind of nature mystic. The details of that life, eating grubs and road kill are not attractive to me. Evading the poisonous aspects of our social reality is, however, ever more attractive. What we can learn from Dodge is that it is possible to break the pattern and step into a different reality. He also reminds us to be close to the body and to nature and to work in harmony with them. It’s in the attitude. Don’t mind the discomfort, dirt and danger; live with them, work with them, get out there and be more alive.

Resolutions

Resolutions

January 17, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

I see thine eyes gazing at the dark of my heart,
Lord of my life,
I wonder if my failure and wrongs are forgiven.
For many were my days without service
and nights of forgetfulness; futile were the flowers
that faded in the shade not offered to thee.

Often the tied strings of my lute slackened
at the strains of thy tunes.
And often at the ruin of wasted hours
my desolate evenings were filled with tears.

But have my days come to their end at last,
Lord of my life, while my arms round thee
grow limp, my kisses losing their truth?
Then break up the meeting of this languid day!*
Renew the old in me in fresh forms of delight;
and let the wedding come once again in
a new ceremony of life.

~Rabindranath Tagore

At the beginning of a new year we hope for renewal. About a week ago I wrote in a Facebook post:

I didn’t want to make my resolutions all at once at the beginning of the new year. Hitting myself with a long list hasn’t worked well in the past so this year I will add one new (behaviour change) resolution each week until Lent at the beginning of March. My first resolution, to run at least three times a week, has survived its first week. My second resolution, is to get away from computers, TV, smartphones, tablets, the Internet and even radio for the 12 hours between 21:00 and 09:00.

My first resolution has now survived the first two weeks but the second lasted two days. I am not dropping it however; I am persistent if not consistent and this will continue as a rule even if it is not always and entirely observed. All Sabbaths are made for us and not we for the Sabbaths and the breaking of a Sabbath does not mean that it is not useful to us or that we shall not return to observance of it.

My third resolution, prompted by my return to a very unhealthy looking belly and being overweight by almost three stones, is to change my eating habits in order to lose weight and become healthier. At minimum this means giving up confectioneries and sweet drinks including juices with the exception of an occasional morning orange juice. I will also give up alcohol with the exception of an occasional glass of wine and give up milk products with the possible exception of plain yoghurt and cottage cheese.

I am currently reading a diet and exercise book called ’10 Pounds in 10 Days’ written by ‘celebrity trainer’, Jackie Warner. The book is good enough for me to have read beyond the first chapter and to have started following some of its advice. I have reintroduced chicken breast (free-range) to my diet and cooked this with broccoli, carrots, spinach and new potatoes as my main meal yesterday. I also bought a pair of 6 kg dumbbells and did over an hour of exercises from Warner’s book with these. This morning, after my shower and before breakfast, I weighed 12 stone 10 lb. I will, mostly, follow Warner’s programme over the next 10 days but as I won’t be following it exactly (I never follow anything exactly) I won’t be able blame her if I don’t drop 10 pounds in that time.

Happy 2014

Happy 2014

January 12, 2014 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Yesterday the Christmas tree was finally put back into its box, like Dracula returned to his coffin, and the new year can truly begin. This is my first blog post for the year and I have little time this morning, some of my family are here and I have duties, so this is just a marker.

Running and Yoga

Running and Yoga

December 21, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

As the New Year approaches I think about resolutions or intentions. A mixture of running, yoga and tai-chi is a combination that appeals to me as a kind of core physical discipline.

The Man with a Tiny Brain

The Man with a Tiny Brain

December 19, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Fascinating article from the New Scientist website. Anomalies like this suggest (to me) that mind and consciousness might not be entirely dependent on the brain and I’m interested in that possibility. The article suggests that ‘brain plasticity’ accounts for the normal functioning of a man whose brain tissue was ‘50% to 75%’ reduced but that doesn’t sound entirely convincing.

Man with tiny brain shocks doctors
 
12:17 20 July 2007 by New Scientist and Reuters
A man with an unusually tiny brain manages to live an entirely normal life despite his condition, which was caused by a fluid build-up in his skull.
 
Scans of the 44-year-old man’s brain showed that a huge fluid-filled chamber called a ventricle took up most of the room in his skull, leaving little more than a thin sheet of actual brain tissue (see image, right).
 
“It is hard for me [to say] exactly the percentage of reduction of the brain, since we did not use software to measure its volume. But visually, it is more than a 50% to 75% reduction,” says Lionel Feuillet, a neurologist at the Mediterranean University in Marseille, France.
 
Feuillet and his colleagues describe the case of this patient in The Lancet. He is a married father of two children, and works as a civil servant.
 
Not retarded
 
The man went to a hospital after he had mild weakness in his left leg. When Feuillet’s staff took his medical history, they learned that, as an infant, he had had a shunt inserted into his head to drain away hydrocephalus – water on the brain.
 
The shunt was removed when he was 14. But the researchers decided to check the condition of his brain using computed tomography (CT) scanning technology and another type of scan called magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). They were astonished to see “massive enlargement” of the lateral ventricles – usually tiny chambers that hold the cerebrospinal fluid that cushions the brain.
 
Intelligence tests showed the man had an IQ of 75, below the average score of 100 but not considered mentally retarded or disabled.
 
“The whole brain was reduced – frontal, parietal, temporal and occipital lobes – on both left and right sides. These regions control motion, sensibility, language, vision, audition, and emotional and cognitive functions,” Feuillet told New Scientist.
 
Brain adaptation
 
The findings reveal “the brain is very plastic and can adapt to some brain damage occurring in the pre- and postnatal period when treated appropriately,” he says.
 
“What I find amazing to this day is how the brain can deal with something which you think should not be compatible with life,” comments Max Muenke, a paediatric brain defect specialist at the National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, US.
 
“If something happens very slowly over quite some time, maybe over decades, the different parts of the brain take up functions that would normally be done by the part that is pushed to the side,” adds Muenke, who was not involved in the case.
 
Journal reference: The Lancet (vol 370, p 262)

See also: Wikipedia: The Mind-body problem.

Posted to Facebook

Posted to Facebook

December 7, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Just reviewing some stuff I posted to FB this week:

This exhibition by vegan Frank Medrano impressed me.

My own physical discipline is running but I haven’t done any this week and I missed my Tai Chi and Qigong classes also. But some new year resolutions are in the pipeline.

I was interested in the reports that Syrian nun Mother Agnes had pulled out from a STWC conference in London because of objections from the likes of Owen Jones and Jeremy Scahill. Red Youth ran a decent article on this. George Galloway’s interview with her is worth listening to.

I thought this comment by Jane Fonda was worth sharing and thinking about:

Jane Fonda: Our Sons from Omega Institute on Vimeo.

People have been talking about the crisis with masculinity for decades and I remember conversations from the 1980’s and 90’s that were interesting. Interesting but focussing on individual men rather than on the culture of hyper masculinity that is wedded to violence. Male violence is not an accident it is part of the culture as any audit of TV series and films will show.

I shared Tom Morley’s tribute to Nelson Mandela on Friday after we heard of Mandela’s passing:

The problem with FB is that FB pages do not make it easy to review/reflect on and develop from stuff that has been posted. Less continuity.

Gaddafi’s Harem

Gaddafi’s Harem

November 17, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Gaddafi’s Harem by Annick Cojean appears to pit the final nails into the coffin of Gaddafi’s reputation. I haven’t read the book but have looked at newspaper articles about it. The Mail Online has a pretty detailed review. However Linda Housman a contributor to Pravda Ru suggests that this is a character assassination. Housman presents a decent argument that the West’s media has used stories of sexual exploitation as propaganda before, as in the false stories that Gaddafi’s troops were being given Viagra and ordered to rape women. I have no idea where the truth lies in all this but on past form there is good reason to be suspicious of anything coming from mainstream journalists.

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