English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Ex. Music... some times ofter 2hr... r 3hr its also bore... to listen same music... so what U feel that never bored U...

2006-07-05 23:27:42 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

9 answers

A Balanced Life


Principles of Yin and Yang

Everything can be described as both yin and yang.

1. Yin and yang are opposites.

Everything has its opposite—although this is never absolute, only relative. No one thing is completely yin or completely yang. Each contains the seed of its opposite. For example, winter can turn into summer; "what goes up must come down".

2. Yin and yang are interdependent.

One cannot exist without the other. For example, day cannot exist without night. Light cannot exist without darkness.

3. Yin and yang can be further subdivided into yin and yang.

Any yin or yang aspect can be further subdivided into yin and yang. For example, temperature can be seen as either hot or cold. However, hot can be further divided into warm or burning; cold into cool or icy. Within each spectrum, there is a smaller spectrum; every beginning is a moment in time, and has a beginning and end, just as every hour has a beginning and end.

4. Yin and yang consume and support each other.

Yin and yang are usually held in balance—as one increases, the other decreases. However, imbalances can occur. There are four possible imbalances: Excess yin, excess yang, yin deficiency, and yang deficiency. Like the Day Light Saving's Time, there is more 'yin' than 'yang'. They can again be seen as a pair: by excess of yin there is yang deficiency and vice versa. The imbalance is also a relative factor: the excess of yang "forces" yin to be more "concentrated".

5. Yin and yang can transform into one another.

At a particular stage, yin can transform into yang and vice versa. For example, night changes into day; warmth cools; life changes to death. However this transformation is relative too. Night and day coexist on Earth at the same time when shown from space.

6. Part of yin is in yang and part of yang is in yin.

The dots in each serve: 1. as a reminder that there are always traces of one in the other. For example, there is always light within the dark (e.g., the stars at night), these qualities are never completely one or the other. 2. as a reminder that absolute extreme side transforms instantly into the opposite, or that the labels yin and yang are conditioned by an observer's point of view. For example, the hardest stone is easiest to break. This can show that absolute discrimination between the two is artificial.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yin_yang

2006-07-05 23:43:45 · answer #1 · answered by ideaquest 7 · 0 0

Transience. It is difficult to abide by a familiar, patterned life as in the saying, "familiarity breeds contempt".

This is such a good question. What bores us is the repetition of a thing. That thing must change. We are bored by things that have grown "old". To be old is to have arrived at a destination. We look for things that are constantly new and ever-changing. Since all things material grows old eventually we must look towards the beauty in transience.

This is why it is so cliche-ic (cliches are old too, but some bring light of ever-changing ideals) to say that wherever you are headed, it does not matter so much when you arrive; it is all about the journey.

So if you are enjoying the journey you take in life and do not get too wrapped up in the moment, you can find wonderful things along the way. As far as your example is concerned, I would say change the CD. Read a book. Alter your forms of media that you use to entertain you. Take a lesson in transience. You must keep on a journey. Arriving is the boring part. If you are constantly bored, you become bor"ing".

Keep your imagination flowing, and act on your imagination. Explore. Simply explore.

2006-07-05 23:50:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the owner made the alternatives, not you, and not in any respect the vet. i imagine it really is really sparkling the owner advised the vet to take care of her conservatively (i.e., affordably), or perhaps as confronted with the realities in the morning (extra vet expenses to do some thing) they elected to placed her down. the owner comes to a decision even as and how a lot therapy would take delivery of. If the vet is prevalent with the owner gained't authorize remedies, then the vet won't be able to strive against for the horse. So no, there changed into honestly not some thing you've gotten executed otherwise which could have kept her. the owner wasn't prepared to make investments any extra money in her, and keen to placed her down. strolling does not have kept her. Getting a vet out without proprietor consent does not have kept her because the vet ought to not have labored on her. The proprietors, as you're saying, couldn't be stricken. would not count number number what the vet changed into doing or the position she changed into, the proprietors did not choose her to assist. The vet can in ordinary words strive against as demanding because the owner is prepared to strive against. may the owner have fought harder if the horse changed into youthful? likely. Neither you, the barn proprietor, nor the vet ought to sense any guilt over this. in ordinary words the owner.

2016-11-01 07:14:43 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Some where somebody did write the perfect line "A thing of beauty is joy forever' Please search for true beauty you will find it amongst nature its people cultures and food

2006-07-05 23:42:04 · answer #4 · answered by sudiptocool 2 · 0 0

Nature it remains the same yet its different

2006-07-05 23:35:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

friends ,sports , chats. intrenet serching,travelling,reading

2006-07-05 23:49:40 · answer #6 · answered by pratik t 1 · 0 0

My husband, my friends

2006-07-05 23:41:15 · answer #7 · answered by Carla 4 · 0 0

friends. never a dull moment.

2006-07-05 23:31:03 · answer #8 · answered by the man 3 · 0 0

1 A GOOD FRIEND
2 GOOD MUSIC
3 GOOD FOOD

2006-07-05 23:50:04 · answer #9 · answered by san k 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers