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/lit/ - Literature


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16609183 No.16609183 [Reply] [Original]

What did he mean by dis?

>> No.16609192

Cope > action is what he meant

>> No.16609206

>>16609183
He was a loser coping with being a loser, it’s no wonder that his biggest fan turned out to deliver pizzas

>> No.16609211

>>16609192
>>16609206
The scapegoat is a knot - a mass of unresolved karma : an unseen part of the psyche that must be visited in order to mature into an adult. The scary thing about hitler was that he was not a monster, but just a normal human being just like everyone else.

The attitude needs to be cultivated for all emotions. The child reacts immediatly to their emotions. If you observe childen younger than two, you will see their emotions directly on their face. After three, you will see them think for a few moments, choosing their response to a given input. They have developed interiority - cavity of the spirit has begun to grow. The adult makes room for the space between stimulus and response. Self-cultivation is the process of widening this space. It involves self-mastery: just because something feels good does not imply that it is worth doing. Suffering becomes noble.

Have sex

>> No.16609260

https://www.livingislam.org/trg.html
>When I inquired from his son as to the precise nature of his (Guénon's) spiritual practice, he replied in one word: “contemplation.” Upon being asked to elaborate, he explained that Guénon would sometimes stand in his balcony overlooking Cairo and stare into the night sky literally for hours. But Guénon also participated very much in the Sufi culture of Egypt, despite his general privacy, especially with respect to visiting the shrines of the saints of Cairo, and the Ahl al-Bayt, and attending the circles of dhikr. And he had also developed close ties to some of the leading spiritual authorities of the city, not the least of them being Shaikh Ibrahim, a Shadhili master who taught Maliki fiqh at Al-Azhar, and whose daughter he later married.

He was high out of his mind

>> No.16609365

>>16609260
>he explained that Guénon would sometimes stand in his balcony overlooking Cairo and stare into the night sky literally for hours. But Guénon also participated very much in the Sufi culture of Egypt, despite his general privacy, especially with respect to visiting the shrines of the saints of Cairo, and the Ahl al-Bayt, and attending the circles of dhikr. And he had also developed close ties to some of the leading spiritual authorities of the city, not the least of them being Shaikh Ibrahim, a Shadhili master who taught Maliki fiqh at Al-Azhar, and whose daughter he later married.

What a spiritual giga-Chad

>> No.16609369
File: 138 KB, 698x838, guenon good anon post.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16609369

Also might as well repost

>> No.16609372

>>16609183
It’s a transposition to the political domain of the religious problematic of gnosis versus works.