Description. Mushin is achieved when a person’s mind is free from thoughts of anger, fear, or ego during combat or everyday life. There is an absence of discursive thought and judgment, so the person is totally free to act and react towards an opponent without hesitation and without disturbance from such thoughts.
French speakers refer to the period as the “Années folles“ (“Crazy Years”),[2] emphasizing the era’s social, artistic, and cultural dynamism.
The economic prosperity experienced by many countries during the 1920s (especially the United States) was similar in nature to that experienced in the 1950s and 1990s. Each period of prosperity was the result of a paradigm shift in global affairs.
Life is gonna be ok after 2020. Make sure you see it in the right perspective. Just. Make. It. Through. 2020.
Update: Ok. So i just posted this post. I had selected a quick Pexels image from the wordpress media selector. And i preview my post and i see this:
“It’s not white vs black; it’s everyone vs racists.”
So is it me, or that statement is just a complete bunch of rice on a platter? Does it even make any sense. Let’s break it down.
“It’s not white vs black” – ok. It’s not, it could be asian, hispanic to name a few.
then…
“It’s everyone vs racists.” – so this is where it gets tricky. “Everyone” implies all persons regardless of anything. “EVERYONE”
So you could say, even, the racists. And then that word comes loaded up with so much more. No one was being racist in their own mind. They just believed they were doing the right thing by following the script.
The card they play is the same, it’s the game you need to change. If you don’t challenge their play, you will end up playing their game.
i imported many of my old posts as well. it’s an interesting data dump. missing source images in most unfortunately.
i’ve always been one to say the Bible is like our TV; which now could be Internet as a whole
but just like those empty mansions, so are the stories of the Bible. empty but full of life. a life we could only imagine.
Mary Magdalene,[a] sometimes called simply the Magdalene or the Madeleine, was a Jewish woman who, according to the four canonical gospels, traveled with Jesus as one of his followers and was a witness to his crucifixion, burial, and resurrection.[2] She is mentioned by name twelve times in the canonical gospels, more than most of the apostles and more than any other non-family woman in the Gospels. Mary’s epithetMagdalene may mean that she came from the town of Magdala, a fishing town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee.
The Gospel of Luke8:2–3 lists Mary Magdalene as one of the women who traveled with Jesus and helped support his ministry “out of their resources”, indicating that she was probably relatively wealthy. The same passage also states that seven demons had been driven out of her, a statement which is repeated in the longer ending of Mark. In all four canonical gospels, Mary Magdalene is a witness to the crucifixion of Jesus and, in the Synoptic Gospels, she is also present at his burial. All four gospels identify her, either alone or as a member of a larger group of women which includes Jesus’s mother, as the first to witness the empty tomb,[2] and the first to witness Jesus’s resurrection.[3]
All the world’s a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages. At first, the infant, Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms.