What's easy for you?
e a s y.
in wikkapedia online:
Adjective
- Requiring little skill or effort.
- The teacher gave an easy test to her students.
- (informal, derogatory) A person who readily consents to sexual activity, often with anyone.
- That girl sure has a reputation for being easy.
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in me: When I know a skill to such an extent that I do not view it as a skill. Like walking... or going to the toilet... Riding a bike... Playing a persenal instrument...
What is the Earth saying to you?
I am addicted 2o no-thing =)
Who have you underestimated?
On this day...
On this day... I, Karl RAsmus Nertlinge Willhelm, became M.T of all my imagined distortion.
I am peace, peace is existenz, in truth, in lie, in me, in you, in it, out in 2, 3 me in, realie, real, reality. Living meditation in relation, in creation... there is no real out =) What the general colective view on death is 2 day, as this is written, is fals fear, fals death, is the path, to real life, to Find joy, in this.
Get this idea of death being out of here out of your head... lett it drop dead. There is only in 4r you... I speak true. I am in love with you =)
From now on... My dedication, is, to the universal meditation... It all starts, with me... Not you... project true...
Back 2 basic.
Adicted...
Adicted to fucking life. Adicted to judging strife. Adicted to judging shape. Adicted to giving resistance. Adicted to greed. Adicted to feed. Adicted to leed. Adicted to a leader. Adicted to a breeder. Adicted to a place. Adicted to work. Adicted to a car. Adicted to take me far. Adicted to change. Adicted to *stay the same*. Adicted to bliss. Adicted to, I miss this. adicted to shaping fate. Adicted to creting sequence. Adicted to breath. Adicted to death. Adicted to birth. Adicted to me. Adicted to you. Adicted to 1. Adicted 2 too. Adicted to heart. Adicted to start. most of all adicted to the middle part or the bend. Adicted to the end. Adicted to Time. Adicted to adiction. Adicted to love. Adicted to hate. Adicted to relate. Adicted to shape. Adicted to create. Adicted to mind. Adicted to "find". Adicted to memorie. Adicted to be free. Adicted to not beeing free. Adicted to family tree. Adicted to spirit family. Adicted to direction. Adicted to speed. Adicted to slow motion. Adicted to story. Adicted to glory. Adicted to read. Adicted to bleed. Adiction contrediction. Mind in confliction. Adicted to music. Adicted to age. Adicted to youth. Adicted to numbers. Adicted to blunders. Adicted to rage. Adicted to sage. Adicted...
Adicted... The word adicted. The world adicted. The world conflicted. The universe awating birth. The universe waking up to be aware. The universe a cosmic scare. The universal joke. The universal stroke. The universal heart. The universal start. The universal state. The universal relate. Universal relate. Cosmic state. Pulsing shape. Constant blur. Fuzzy points of tingling sensation all over relation to creation.
No more
Contemplation
Contemplation comes from the latin root templum (from Greek temnein: to cut or divide), and means to separate something from its environment, and to enclose it in a sector. Contemplation is the Latin translation of Greek 'theory' (theoria). In a religious sense it is a type of prayer or meditation. Within Western Christianity it is related to mysticism, and portrayed by the works of authors such as Teresa of Avila, Margery Kempe, Augustine Baker and Thomas Merton. In Eastern Christianity contemplation is to force all of the faculties of ones consciousness on God or things divine. This is to cultivate an understanding and relationship with the divine. Many religions share the concept of contemplation. Naropa University, for example, offers a Master's program in contemplative education in the context of Buddhism.
Contemplation was an important part of the philosophy of Plato; for Plato, by means of contemplation the soul may ascend to knowledge of the Form of the Good or other divine Forms.
The words contemplation and meditation sometimes have almost opposite meanings in the Western and Eastern traditions. In the West, contemplation may refer to a contentless direction of the mind to God (Christianity) or to the Good (Platonism), whereas meditation may involve a specific, directed mental exercise, such as visualization of a religious scene or consideration of a scriptural passage. In the East, however, these two terms' definitions may be reversed.
Contemplation as a practice is finding greater resonance in the West both in business (for e.g. Peter Senges book - [The Fifth Discipline]:The Art and Practice of the Learning Organisation)and in an academic network involving a diverse range of universities and disciplines from architecture, to physics, to liberal arts.
Other usage
In a non-religious sense, contemplation can also mean:
- an act of considering with attention;
- the act of regarding steadily.
- Contemplative prayer
- Interior Life
- Meditation
- Miksang (contemplative photography)
- Prayer of Quiet
- Quote on Contemplation in Wikiquote
Right now, who do you miss the most?
What part of your day goes by the most slowly?
The part where I am aware of time and not in a state of aprisiation... That is what I would have awnserd back when I could relate to the question... Thank god that time is past =)

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