Saturday, 6 June 2026

MRCOLA Pairing vitamin D3 with magnesium and vitamin K2, tracking your levels, and staying physically active helps your body activate and maintain vitamin D year-round

SCHPNHR

 A

The quote:

“The shortness of life, so often lamented, may be the best thing about it.”
— Arthur Schopenhauer

captures a paradox: the very thing we complain about—life being finite—may be what gives it value.

If life were endless, many of the things we cherish could lose their urgency and significance. We value time precisely because it is scarce. We treasure moments with loved ones because we know they cannot last forever. Ambition, creativity, love, forgiveness, and adventure all derive part of their meaning from the fact that our opportunities are limited.

The quote also reflects Schopenhauer's broader philosophy. He believed that suffering is an inescapable part of human existence and that much of life is spent oscillating between desire and disappointment. From that perspective, an infinite life would not necessarily be a blessing; it could mean an infinite extension of struggle, boredom, and pain. Death, therefore, is not merely an end but a natural limit to life's burdens.

Even for those who disagree with Schopenhauer's pessimism, the quote raises an important point: mortality gives shape to life. A novel without an ending would never be complete. A song that never ends would eventually cease to be music. In a similar way, the finite nature of life may be what allows it to have meaning, structure, and beauty.

The quote is ultimately less about celebrating death and more about appreciating limitation. It suggests that our awareness of life's brevity can encourage us to live deliberately, cherish what matters, and avoid postponing what is important. In that sense, the shortness of life may indeed be one of its greatest gifts.

DTH Schopenhauer The shortness of life, so often lamented, may be the best thing about it.”

 A

Here's your text reworked into a more cohesive essay while preserving your voice and ideas:

Do You Fear Death?

For most of my life, I have feared death. The idea that one day I will cease to exist—that everything I know, love, and experience will simply end—has always been unsettling. Yet as I have grown older, I believe I have become much better at accepting the reality that one day I will perish and no longer be here.

Over time, I have developed several mental models that help me make peace with death. They do not eliminate the fear entirely, but they provide a framework for understanding and accepting what is perhaps the most universal aspect of the human experience.

1. If I'm Dead, Nothing Bad Can Happen

Much of our fear of death stems from uncertainty. We worry about what comes next, what we might lose, or what we might experience. Yet when I think about it logically, I remember that before I was born, there was nothing. I have no memory of that state, nor did I suffer because of it.

If death is similar—if there is simply nothing afterward—then there will also be no pain, fear, or regret. There will be nothing bad because there will be no consciousness to experience anything bad. In a strange way, this thought can be comforting.

2. The Religious Perspective

As a Catholic, my faith also shapes how I think about death.

One quote from Bishop Robert Barron has always stayed with me:

“The way to heaven is heaven.”

The idea is profound in its simplicity. If we strive to live virtuously, love others, and align our lives with God's will, then we begin experiencing heaven here and now. Heaven is not merely a destination waiting at the end of life; it is a way of living.

Seen through this lens, death becomes less of a terrifying end and more of a transition. If we have already begun living in communion with God on earth, then death is simply the passage from one form of that communion to another.

3. Focus on the Cause of Life, Not the Cause of Death

Many people become so preoccupied with dying that they forget to live.

We obsess over risks, probabilities, diseases, and worst-case scenarios. We spend so much time worrying about how our story might end that we neglect the chapters we are currently writing.

Instead of focusing on the cause of death, I try to focus on the cause of life.

What gives my life meaning? What am I building? Who do I love? What contribution do I want to make? These questions matter far more than endless speculation about mortality.

A meaningful life is not one that avoids death; it is one that embraces living.

4. The Pessimistic View

The philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer once wrote:

“The shortness of life, so often lamented, may be the best thing about it.”

While Schopenhauer is often regarded as a pessimist, there is wisdom in this observation.

No matter how fortunate we are, suffering is an unavoidable part of life. Wealth, status, success, and achievement cannot protect us from illness, loss, disappointment, or grief. To live is to suffer because the same existence that allows for joy, love, beauty, and meaning also exposes us to pain.

This may help explain why many elderly people accept death with greater ease than the young. After decades of life, many endure chronic illness, physical limitations, and persistent pain. For some, death no longer appears as an enemy but as a release.

Recognizing this reality does not make life less valuable. If anything, it makes life more precious. Our time is limited, and it is precisely that limitation that gives our choices significance.

Accepting the Natural Order

Ultimately, death is as natural as birth.

We celebrate the arrival of a newborn child because it marks the beginning of a human journey. Yet that journey is inseparable from its eventual conclusion. One cannot exist without the other.

Perhaps the healthiest approach is neither to obsess over death nor to deny it, but to acknowledge it as an inevitable part of life. To remember that our days are finite and therefore valuable.

As the Book of Genesis reminds us:

“Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” (Genesis 3:19)

Far from being a cause for despair, these words can be an invitation to live more fully, love more deeply, and appreciate the brief but extraordinary gift of being alive.

A

Key Points: Do You Fear Death?

  • I have always feared death, but over time I have become better at accepting my mortality.

  • Several mental models have helped me make peace with the reality that one day I will die.

1. If I'm Dead, Nothing Bad Can Happen

  • Much of the fear of death comes from uncertainty.

  • Before birth, I experienced nothing and suffered nothing.

  • If death is a similar state of non-existence, there will be no pain, fear, or regret.

  • The absence of consciousness means the absence of suffering.

2. The Religious Perspective

  • As a Catholic, faith plays an important role in how I view death.

  • Bishop Robert Barron's quote, "The way to heaven is heaven," has shaped my thinking.

  • Living virtuously and according to God's will allows us to experience a form of heaven on earth.

  • Death becomes a transition rather than an ending.

  • Heaven is not just a destination but a way of living.

3. Focus on the Cause of Life, Not the Cause of Death

  • Many people become so afraid of dying that they forget to live.

  • Constant worry about risks and mortality distracts from what truly matters.

  • The important questions are:

    • What gives my life meaning?

    • What am I building?

    • Who do I love?

    • What contribution do I want to make?

  • A meaningful life is not about avoiding death but embracing life.

4. The Pessimistic View

  • Arthur Schopenhauer observed that life's brevity may be one of its greatest blessings.

  • Suffering is an unavoidable part of human existence.

  • The same life that offers joy, love, and meaning also brings pain and loss.

  • Many elderly people accept death more readily because of chronic illness, pain, or exhaustion.

  • Life's finite nature makes it more valuable and gives significance to our choices.

Accepting the Natural Order

  • Death is as natural as birth.

  • Every life story has both a beginning and an end.

  • The healthiest approach is neither denial nor obsession, but acceptance.

  • Awareness of mortality can encourage us to live more fully and intentionally.

  • As Genesis 3:19 reminds us: "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return."

  • Rather than causing despair, mortality can inspire gratitude for the gift of life.

POMALO

 A

This Is Where the Medicine Unfolds


Imagine waking with a quiet sense of certainty, the kind that arrives before thought and settles gently in the body. Outside, the morning air is cool and fragrant with the scent of oak and rain-soaked earth. Sunlight filters through the trees, casting a golden glow across the garden and over the forest canopy beyond. There is nowhere to be, nothing demanding your attention. You place a sun hat on your head and step barefoot onto the grass, moving slowly, without urgency.

What strikes you first is not what is present, but what is absent. There are no sirens piercing the morning silence. No traffic, deadlines, or constant notifications competing for your attention. Instead, the landscape offers its own quiet soundtrack: the distant crow of a rooster, the soft rustle of leaves carried by a gentle breeze, and a stillness so profound that it seems almost alive. In a world that often rewards speed and constant activity, such silence can feel unfamiliar. Yet here, it feels natural.

The land itself seems to move according to a different rhythm. In Croatia, there is a word that captures this way of being: pomalo. More than simply "slowly," pomalo reflects a philosophy of living—an invitation to approach life with patience, ease, and an appreciation for the present moment. It is the art of unhurried joy. Standing on this ground, you do not merely understand the concept intellectually; you feel it. The pace of the land begins to influence the pace of your thoughts. Your breathing deepens. Your shoulders relax. The tension you have carried for so long begins to loosen its grip.

This transformation is subtle yet powerful. There is no dramatic revelation, no sudden breakthrough. Instead, healing arrives quietly. It emerges through the simple act of being present, of listening, of allowing yourself to move in harmony with the natural world. The noise that once filled every corner of your mind gradually fades, making room for clarity, reflection, and peace.

Perhaps this is why places like this hold such power. They remind us of something we have forgotten: that rest is not laziness, silence is not emptiness, and slowing down is not falling behind. Beneath the pressures and distractions of modern life exists a deeper rhythm—one that connects us to nature, to ourselves, and to what truly matters.

And it is here, in this stillness, that the medicine unfolds. Not as a cure delivered from the outside, but as a gentle awakening from within. It is the medicine of presence, of simplicity, and of belonging. It is the quiet realization that sometimes what we need most is not to do more, but to pause long enough to remember who we are.


A

This reads like the opening of a reflective essay, retreat invitation, or wellness-focused narrative. Its strength is that it doesn't begin by explaining "the medicine"—it creates a sensory experience that allows the reader to feel the shift before it's named.

A few elements that stand out:

  • Immediate immersion: "Close your eyes for a moment, Bobby" places the reader directly inside the scene.

  • Sensory detail: The scent of oak and wet earth, cool air, grass underfoot, and distant sounds create a vivid atmosphere without feeling overloaded.

  • Contrast through absence: "There are no sirens. No rushing." The peace is defined partly by what is missing, which makes the transition emotionally effective.

  • Cultural anchor: The reference to pomalo gives the feeling a name and connects it to place and tradition.

  • Strong emotional progression: The passage moves from external observations to an internal release: "Something in you exhales."

The final line—"This is where the medicine unfolds."—works because it arrives after the reader has already experienced the calm. If this is part of a longer piece, it naturally invites the next section to explore what that "medicine" is, whether that's nature, community, healing, rest, or a different way of living.

If you're aiming for a slightly more literary cadence, you might consider tightening one or two phrases. For example:

Through the window, morning light spills across the garden and the forest canopy beyond.

But the existing version already has a warm, contemplative tone that feels welcoming rather than overly polished.

Overall, it's evocative, paced well, and emotionally resonant. The reader is gently guided from busyness into stillness, which appears to be exactly the effect you're aiming for.

Friday, 5 June 2026

AA


“The Master came to make religion easy. People were being crushed under the weight of rules and regulations. To repeat the Lord’s name and to worship Him no special time and place are necessary. In whatever condition one may be, one can take His name.”

SW Saradamanda

If you want, I can help you explore its meaning more deeply, or connect it to daily practice or Ramakrishna’s approach.

C after D

 Q

o reach out to us, sometimes in dreams other times in other ways. I will share a story with you believe it or not but it’s true! A few years ago my husband passed away A few days later as I was taking my dogs out as I usually did every morning in a fenced in area in our backyard. I was sitting on a bench and tears were streaming down my face as I was thinking about him. So I asked him to please show me a sign to let me know he was OK and that he was reunited with all our loved once that have passed away humans as well as our beloved animals. I specifically said “ a dove would be very nice” as he knew the love that I have for doves and at his funeral I had three doves released two by my little grand kids and one by myself . Doves symbolize love, hope and peace and the soul of a deceased but nothing happened at that. moment so I went back inside the house As I stood by the kitchen window a dove appeared and sat down on my deck looking straight at me. Usually if they see you they fly away but he just kept on starring at me as I softly spoke to him. Suddenly he looked up at the sky and out of the blue there where a dozen birds flying in the sky and what was unusual about this was that they were all different not the same breed . There were cardinals which symbolizes angels the souls of our dead ones, other birds consisted of sparrows, blue jays ,crows and robins and hummingbirds. Upon seeing them he looked deeply at me for the last time and then flew into the sky to join them and in a flash they all disappeared into the sky. I was numb for a few seconds but I knew that I had just witnessed something unbelievable but true.. My husband showed himself to me in the image of the dove and all the other birds were the souls of my beloved loved ones humans as well as my animals that have crossed over the rainbow bridge! I know deep down in my heart what I have witnessed was real so to me Heaven is real!


D

Thank you for sharing something so personal. I can see why that experience stayed with you so deeply.


What stands out in your story is how vivid and specific the moment felt to you: the grief you were carrying, the very particular sign you asked for, the timing of the dove appearing, and the way the other birds gathered and then vanished. Experiences like that can feel profoundly meaningful, especially in the raw days after losing someone you love.


Many people who are grieving describe moments that feel like a connection with someone who has died—through dreams, animals appearing unexpectedly, songs, coincidences, scents, or a strong sense of presence. Some interpret those moments spiritually, as signs from loved ones or confirmation that there is something beyond this life. Others see them as meaningful experiences shaped by love, memory, and the mind’s way of staying connected. Those views don’t have to cancel each other out.


What matters is that, for you, this experience brought meaning and a sense of peace at a time when you were heartbroken. The symbolism you described—the dove you specifically asked for, the cardinals, the gathering of different birds including animals you associated with loved ones—clearly resonated in a very personal way. It makes sense that you would hold that memory close and feel, in your heart, that it was real.


The image of the dove looking at you and then joining the flock is especially striking. I can understand why that moment felt like an answer to your question about your husband and all those you love who had passed.


Whether someone sees this through a spiritual lens or another perspective, your experience is yours. And it sounds like it gave you something important: comfort, connection, and perhaps a sense that your husband was still, in some way, reaching back to you.


How long ago did your husband pass? And has anything like that happened again since then—dreams, signs, or moments that made you feel close to him?


BG 13.20

 Bhagavad Gita Chapter 13, Verse 20 (13.20) is commonly translated as:

“Prakṛti (material nature) and Puruṣa (the conscious self) are both understood to be beginningless. The modifications and the three guṇas (qualities of nature) are said to arise from Prakṛti.”

Sanskrit (transliteration):
prakṛtiṁ puruṣaṁ caiva viddhy anādī ubhāv api
vikārāṁś ca guṇāṁś caiva viddhi prakṛti-sambhavān

Simple meaning

  • Prakṛti = material nature (body, mind, matter, emotions, the changing world)
  • Puruṣa = consciousness / the experiencer / the self (ātman)
  • Guṇas = the three qualities of nature: sattva (clarity), rajas (activity), and tamas (inertia)

The verse says:

  • Both consciousness (puruṣa) and material nature (prakṛti) are beginningless.
  • All changes, forms, and qualities in the material world arise from prakṛti.
  • The self experiences, while nature acts and transforms.

In the flow of Chapter 13 (“The Field and the Knower of the Field”), this verse begins explaining the relationship between the body/matter and the conscious self, which becomes central in the next verses (13.21–13.23).

Different traditions interpret this differently:

  • In Sāṅkhya philosophy, puruṣa and prakṛti are distinct eternal principles.
  • In Vedānta, especially as interpreted by commentators like Adi Shankaracharya, the relationship is understood within the framework of ultimate unity under Brahman.

If you want, I can also give  13.20 with word-by-word meaning or a  commentary from Śaṅkara, Ramanuja, or Prabhupada.