��March 2005
Paste HTML code and press Enter.
- xw posted on 03/24/2005
- xw posted on 03/24/2005
- xw posted on 03/24/2005
- xw posted on 03/24/2005
- elly posted on 03/24/2005
- adagio posted on 03/23/2005How to Grow Old But in an old man who has known human joys and sorrows, and has achieved whatever work it was in him to do, the fear of death is somewhat abject and ignorable. The best way to overcome it C so at least it seems to me C is to make your interests gradually wider and more impersonal, until bit by bit the walls of the ego recede, and your life becomes increasingly merged in the universal life. An individual human existence should be like a river C small at first, narrowly contained withi
- adagio posted on 03/23/2005
- bai chi posted on 03/23/2005
- xw posted on 03/22/2005EARLY CHRISTIAN HISTORY AS SEEN BY RELIGIOUS LIBERALS & HISTORIANS First century CE: During the first six decades of the first century CE, Judaism was composed of about two dozen competing factions: Sadducees, Pharisees, Essenes, Zealots, followers of John the Baptist, followers of Yeshua of Nazareth (Iesous in Greek, Iesus in Latin, Jesus in English), followers of other charismatic leaders, etc. All followed common Jewish practices, such as observing dietary restrictions, worshiping at the Jerusal
- xw posted on 03/22/2005THE SEVEN SLEEPERS OF EPHESUS by: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe SIX young men of Caesar's household Fled before their master's anger; As a god he claimed their worship, Though a sorry god was he. For an insect, ever buzzing, Still annoyed him at the banquet, Still disturbed his rest and pleasure. All the chasing of his servants Could not drive away the torment. Ever round the head of Caesar Did the angry creature hover, Threatening with its poisoned sting Still it flew, and swif
- dddd posted on 03/21/2005
- ߸ posted on 03/21/2005
- maya posted on 03/21/2005
- Fengzi posted on 03/21/2005I'm experimenting with some fun software. If you would like to receive a satellite photo of your residence (house/apartment) in the United States, please feel free to send me your home address to xufengzi@hotmail.com. Your personal information will be kept strictly confidential, be used for no other purpose than the one stated above, and be permanently removed from the email account (computer hard drive, any storage media, etc.)after this recreational experiment is over. Note, however, that your sa
- thesunlover posted on 03/21/2005
- fanghuzhai posted on 03/20/2005
- fanghuzhai posted on 03/20/2005
- xw posted on 03/18/2005
- xw posted on 03/18/2005
- xw posted on 03/18/2005
- drinking posted on 03/18/2005"One of the reasons why so few of us ever act, instead of react, is because we are continually stifling our deepest impulses. Plots and character don't make life. Life is here and now, anytime you say the word, anytime you let her rip. The aim of life is to live, and to live means to be aware, joyously, drunkenly, serenely, divinely aware. The moment one gives close attention to any thing, even a blade of grass it becomes a mysterious, awesome, indescribably magnificent world in itself. Whatev
- xw posted on 03/17/2005
- xw posted on 03/17/2005
- adagio posted on 03/17/2005A Chinese Journalist in Peril Published: March 17, 2005 The New York Times Chinese journalists do not enjoy much legal protection, even if they work for well-respected international news organizations. Consider the case of our colleague Zhao Yan, a researcher in the Beijing bureau of The New York Times. For the past six months he has been held incommunicado by the Chinese government, barred from speaking with lawyers, family members or fellow Times employees. Zhao Yan is far from the only jou
- ߸ posted on 03/17/2005
- έ posted on 03/17/2005
- ĩ posted on 03/16/2005
(c) 2010 Maya Chilam Foundation