Nadaism is not dead

Do you want to know if a person who passes all the time doing nothing would be able to live a normal and happy life?

... I will not work, I will not engage any activity in the long or even in the medium term - but I'll need help! Please check out the nadaist contract at the bottom of the page

... and there's other pointless investigations ongoing, just take a look to the bar on the right hand side

Sunday, February 25, 2007

People work Monday to Friday in here

A friend, who has just started working after a few months on holiday, told me: "while I was in C... doing nothing I actually felt I was very busy and amused and I did not have much free time, but now that I'm here working, often in the evenings I wonder, what shall I do now!. And the weekend is 2 full days to be filled with and I don't know what to to do!".

By the way, that's the reason why you need so much money to spend when you are working: you get bored so easily and feel the need to indulge yourself. However if you are happily doing nothing (i.e. you are not desperate to find a job), you don't need much to amuse yourself and are able to live cheaply.


Now I am staying with a friend, and the place is really small, a 1 room apartment. I sleep on the floor and obviously have to go to bed and wake up when he does, he's always lazy to get up and late to work. Finally when I'm on my own I do my practise and have lunch, and hardly find a couple of hours in the afternoon for doing something like looking for my own room, until he comes back from the office...

I'm having a very good time, and I appreciate so much he's giving me shelter. My life quite chaotic, and I'm doing nothing like never ever - but I guess I'm just indulging myself. However I'm afraid, when I go back to myself (I have the room and I'll move on thursday) it's going to be difficult to get back into the arranged and neat routine of doing nothing.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

A few sutras in bitter Europe

Bitter cold, I mean.

When I wrote the last post I was just coming out of a flu, I was still locked in a warm place and basically I had not been outside yet. At least London was cheap, from my bed. Now in Spain, I've been around for 3 weeks in Europe and the cold seems to be still in my bones. I've postponed any serious thought for the moment... not much time for the yoga sutras either. Here you have a few however, the fist 14. There's 200 in total, it might take me around one year to finish?.

" Now starts a guide on yoga. Yoga means calming down the states and movements of the consciousness. When it's achieved, the most inner layer of the self comes out strongly; the rest of the time, the self identifies itself with the states and movements of the consciousness.
" There's 5 states and movements, which may be painful or not. They are: knowledge, illusion or error, delusion, sleep and memory. Direct knowledge may be based either on perception, or on inference, or on authority. Illusion is a false impression of facts or reality. Delusion is a verbal fabrication which is empty of any substance. Sleep is an involuntary absence of movements of consciousness. Memory is remembering words and experiences.
" The practice of yoga and detachment are the ways to calm down those states and movements; practice is the continuous effort, and if it is long, uninterrupted and awake and alert, it's the foundation to get to calm down.


Not very exciting I'd agree... that's because I havent reached the "superpowers" yet, which the practitioner is supposed to acquire through continuous discipline and after quite some years. It will be more "challenging" (I've always hated that word in its professional use) but not impossible to translate. Should I mention I've met some Westerns in India who were quite interested on those powers, (maybe they want to acquire them, or only understand them?). Anyway there's no reason to laugh; for Indians, our European obsession on achieving enlightenment sounds quite funny as well.