#monkship
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writer-dipsundarkanjilal · 2 years ago
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Hospital and Us
Why people go to Hospital? 
If people are so strong and successful why they become so weak and dependent during their sickness? 
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Some recent Millionaires will provide lots of advices through their mind-blowing speeches but when it comes to sickness of their body and mind, nothing comes out to secure their own life but to listen to doctors only. Doctors follow certain processes which are common principles in the medical science, through that an experienced doctor can smoothly nourish a patient, it does not require any eye-opening messages like we generally admire from so called millionaire leaders of the inorganic world.
People becomes weaker and lacks confidence when sick because they are not aware of the meaning of "Attachment". In current world, we encourage to follow our passion. Passion has become fashion in some places. However, lets understand what Swami Vivekananda says about passion:
“The less passion there is, the better we work. The calmer we are the better for us and the more the amount of work we can do”.
Attachment to our financial success, to our families, to our career, even to our body and so on gives us pain. You can like your success but can't be attached to it. If you do so, you will end up having pain sometimes and you will become restless, agitated and powerful without love and compassion within you. What is the point of gaining such power which can’t be used for the mankind? So, passion is good if the motive is beneficial for all, not only for yourself.
On the other hand, if you want to take some examples, monks and sages taught us how to hold our nerves during any bad situation. For them, our body and awareness about our body are separate. They could control any ailment to their bodies and minds. During any setback, they used to use their minds towards solving the issue rather trapped into it. They never used to consider any problem to body or mind as their own problem.
Until you do so, you will find yourself entangled with pains, miseries of life.
One common argument is a Monk and a general public are different. Just to avoid family responsibilities and attachments of the material life, a Monk does not marry or make a family.
But that is not true.
Monk's life is not easy. Otherwise, every poor people would have refused to continue family responsibilities and join "Sanyasa". 
Monks love their spiritual practices so much that family life is meaningless for them. That doesn't mean they stop others from making family or they try to escape from family issues. Being a Monk, they solve most of our daily life problems which even a typical family person with high caliber and lots of money cannot solve. General people don't listen to Monks until they are in deep trouble. This is not true love. That is why general people are attached to profit and loss and Monks are not. 
Pain become inevitable sometimes due to our actions or inactions. You can easily figure that out if look at your problems from a spectator's point of view and try not to own the pain. Be calm to accept all situations in life. If success is sweet, failure should also be sweet. Living a Monks life in family is the best way to keep everything in control. At that time, you will be calm and protected by your intelligence even in a hospital.
Happy reading....
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neopuff · 6 years ago
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jinja/beyal // rewrite the stars
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Episode 35 - Wolfson, Cam vs Emmanuel, Cam
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Tonight’s match has been described as the most eagerly anticipated match in University Challenge history, and for once such a moniker cannot be attributed to the hyperbolic keystrokes of The UC Review. 
The mere fact that a headline like that exists is in some way indicative of its truth. Its rare for a journalistic publication to discuss the Challenge in the first place (beyond deplorable paragraphs about the attractiveness rather than brainpower of the few female contestants). Yet the Sunday Times this week compared the meeting of Cambridge colleges Emmanuel and Wolfson to the Borg-McEnroe Wimbledon Final of 1980 in terms of the excitement it has generated.
And if a thirty minute quiz show can come anywhere close to equalling the level of visceral thrills served up by four hours of the most exhilarating whacking of a tennis ball you will ever see, then it will certainly have lived up to its billing. At the very least it can boast the clashing of the two biggest names in the game this year, in a meeting many hoped would be the final
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Bobby Seagull is a man with a name so good it could only be made up, and as it turns out it was. His parents gave him the surname of the irreverent protagonist from the novella Jonathan Livingstone Seagull, and we can thank them for choosing the best of the three names on offer. Robert Jonathan doesn’t quite have the same charm. Nor perhaps, would we have the precocious, squawking personality that comes from the nominative determinism of having such a glorious name.
He leads the Emmanuel quartet like an excitable child who happens to be extremely knowledgeable on Renaissance art, and who appears to be having the absolute time of his life on the show. But his propensity for endearing gestures, and genuine delight at his team’s correct answers hides another side to Seagull. The side that wouldn’t hesitate to swoop down and steal a flapjack from the pudgy hands of a squalling toddler. 
There is a ruthlessness to his adorableness. He isn’t just here to be an enchanting oddball. He wants his beloved Emmanuel College to regain the famous silver trophy. He wants to emulate the victorious class of 2010. And he wants his name to go down in history beside the legendary Alex Guttenplan, whose spirit haunts his every waking moment. 
His opposite number, Eric Megamouth Monkman (not his actual middle name), has the most starter questions of any semi finalist (35), and exponentially increased sales of protective earwear in the Manchester area during the filming of this series. I don’t know if he left his inside voice in Canada on purpose, or if it was lost by British Airways’ baggage handlers, but either way he shouts like he’s trying to shatter the glass case Jeremy Paxman long ago built around his person for fear of coming into contact with the bourgeoisie.
His unique brand of being both the smartest and loudest person in the room naturally resulted in his becoming the most consistently meme-able contestant the show has ever seen. Everything he has done on camera has been instantly caption-able or gif-able. Basically, if you think of any verb, there is a decent chance that the adjectival transformation would be applicable to him. 
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Those are the two big names, but there are six other people sitting beside and vertically adjacent to them, without whom neither would have made it this far. Seagull has Bruno (who goes only by his first name), Tom Hill and Leah Ward, with the mono-named physicist leading the side in the buzzer stakes, with 18.
Monkman has helping him the talents of Justin Yang, Ben Chaudhri and Paul Cosgrove, none of whom come close to him in the number of starter questions answered. But he has other things to thank them for, especially Chaudhri, whose powerfully subdued demeanour can only be a sign that he is donating a significant portion of his own mana to his captain, so that his Monkship can keep his volume in the thousands of decibels. 
But whoever wins tonight, the loudest sound will be the sound of loss that accompanies the unlucky quartet as they leave the competition... Apart from when the Wolfson captain says the immortal words ‘Hi I’m Eric Monkman and I study economics’
He does so this evening with a conspiratorial pause before the word economics, and Cosgrove tries to hide his amusement as he introduces himself. Paxman reminds us that the winners of this semi final will make it to the final, just incase we’ve all forgotten how cup tournaments work (although maybe he’s still traumatised by the chaos of the quarter final format) and then we’re off. 
Bruno kicks us off with a reasonably early buzz of ‘Deus Ex Machina’ on the first starter, which would have worked better if it had been on the last question of the match to win it. Seagull gives it the now-obligatory fist pump in his suit and tie, once again obeying the non-existent dress code. Bonuses on art history. Twenty nil to Emmanuel.
Predictably Monkman isn’t best pleased and belts out the Gunpowder Plot with considerable fireworks. Chaudhri takes the next, and the lead swings to Wolfson. Then immediately swings back to Emmanuel with a Hill ten pointer. Monkman booms ‘De Broglie’ to maintain the momentum of the victory seesaw. However he is apparently unable to give Paxman numerical answers (you’d have thought that wouldn’t be a problem for an economist, or indeed anyone, but even Monkman isn’t infallible), so outsources the bonuses to Cosgrove, who metronomically nods out lists of integers between one and four.
Wolfson edge slightly away, but three in a row from Emmanuel drag them back into it and following the music round there are only five points in it. Ninety to ninety five. Three from Wolfson restore the gap, and then with the scores at 110-145 Bruno is perhaps unluckily disallowed the answer ‘apposite’ in place of apposition. Following two starters excruciatingly dropped by both sides Hill beams ‘Yorkshire’ and going into the final minute only fifteen points separate the Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe of British University TV Quiz shows.
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Being the maestro that he is, Monkman takes the next, and most vital ten points of the match, much to the dismay of the entire Emmanuel team, who know the day is lost. Hill takes the last question of the match, bringing his total to 15 for the series, but the gong confirms it as mere consolation.
So it is Wolfson who advance, knocking out an immensely entertaining Emma team. As for the captains, it was 7-0 to Monkman on the night, but Bobby can be incredibly proud of his and his college’s achievements, and he remains well clear at the top of the ‘grooviest name’ leaderboard. 
Final Score: Emmanuel, Cam 140 - 170 Wolfson, Cam
The second Semi next week will see Balliol, Ox take on the University of Edinburgh for the chance to join Monkman and Co. in the Grand Final on the 10th April. Thank you for reading, feel the love
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ncko-art · 7 years ago
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just dreamt that there was a monsuno season three episode that i had missed apparently, it entailed gambling from dax's side, more monkshipping stuff and a new, quiet girl clad in monks robes with brown short hair who was to be protected at all times and it turns out she was chase' sister.
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bbbenihana · 11 years ago
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06-21-2013
I begin my monkship. 
It's been probably more than a year since I've posted something original on here. But it begins again today. I'm going to do my best to try and post a photo a day as I did before. This time around I guess you can say I'm documenting life after school. Also, this'll help me write more. (I've been meaning to do that.)
I'm still in El Paso being lazy as fuhhhh but I'm trying to get out of it. I plan to finish a book a week, watch those movies that I've been meaning to watch, and get to work on those screenplays. And also, begin the job search in LA!
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rai-vindur · 12 years ago
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"Agora, porém, você me faz uma pergunta dizendo: "Como eu poderia pensar nele mesmo e o que Ele é?" A isto eu só posso responder nestes termos: "Não tenho a menor idéia". Pois, com esta pergunta, você me introduziu nessa mesma escuridão, nessa mesma nuvem do não-saber onde eu gostaria que você mesmo estivesse. Porque um homem pode, pela graça, possuir a plenitude do conhecimento de todas as criaturas e das suas obras como também das obras do próprio Deus, e ele é bem capaz de refletir sobre elas. Mas homem nenhum pode pensar em Deus como Ele mesmo".
A Nuvem do Não Saber
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rai-vindur · 12 years ago
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"Nós fomos feitos para amar e todo o resto foi criado para tornar o amor possível"
A NUVEM DO NÃO-SABER - Monge inglês - século XIV.
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