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 Mr_Adams
				Mr_Adams
			

















 
		Mr_Adams wrote:Had this conversation with somebody from work after Piers Morgan interviewed the Dalai Lama. So, your choice. Who would you rather have lunch with?

 chang50
				chang50
			











 
		
 Juan_Bottom
				Juan_Bottom
			









 
		
 Army of GOD
				Army of GOD
			




















 
		
 Army of GOD
				Army of GOD
			




















 
		
 Maugena
				Maugena
			Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.

 Mr_Adams
				Mr_Adams
			

















 
		Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.

 chang50
				chang50
			











 
		
 AndyDufresne
				AndyDufresne
			











 
			Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.

 Army of GOD
				Army of GOD
			




















 
		chang50 wrote:Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.
Indeed some people say Buddhism and some other Eastern religions are more philosophy than religion,having lived in Thailand for over 4 years,and married a Thai Buddhist, I can testify the differences between Christianity,which by background I am familiar with,and Buddhism are enormous.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880

 saxitoxin
				saxitoxin
			











 
			saxitoxin wrote:chang50 wrote:Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.
Indeed some people say Buddhism and some other Eastern religions are more philosophy than religion,having lived in Thailand for over 4 years,and married a Thai Buddhist, I can testify the differences between Christianity,which by background I am familiar with,and Buddhism are enormous.
I don't have chang50's breadth of experience with Buddhism, however, once I visited a Buddhist monastery adjacent to a Tibetan refuge camp in India. My taxi driver insisted I go there, though I was headed elsewhere and had no real desire to visit the place. On arrival I was handed over to a Buddhist monk who was probably 17 years old. He took me to the Abbot's room and then told me to give him $50. I did - he took me inside, told me to bow in front of the Abbot. The Abbot then looked over at me, turned down the volume on his television, threw a cheap polyester prayer cloth around my neck and murmured a blessing, then I was led back out and to the waiting taxi driver, who I'm pretty sure got a cut of the cash.I guess the only reason I bring this up is to note that the depictions of ethically pure monks sitting in the forest communing with nature may (or may not) be as much a product of Hollywood as Ninjas. That said, to be fair, I guess someone's got to pay the cable bill at the monastery.
Again, though, that was one experience and I'm hardly an expert.

 BigBallinStalin
				BigBallinStalin
			
















 
			

 AndyDufresne
				AndyDufresne
			











 
			
 BigBallinStalin
				BigBallinStalin
			
















 
			
 Mr_Adams
				Mr_Adams
			

















 
		saxitoxin wrote:chang50 wrote:Maugena wrote:Dalai Lama.
Philosophical thinking is one of their main focuses as opposed to, 'hOW i pReeZ gaWd'?
They even hold a debate for who is to be the successor to the Dalai Lama, if what I had read in the past is correct.
Honestly, I'd like to be able to talk to him/one of his subordinates some day just to see where my thoughts are in comparison to theirs.
Indeed some people say Buddhism and some other Eastern religions are more philosophy than religion,having lived in Thailand for over 4 years,and married a Thai Buddhist, I can testify the differences between Christianity,which by background I am familiar with,and Buddhism are enormous.
I don't have chang50's breadth of experience with Buddhism, however, once I visited a Buddhist monastery adjacent to a Tibetan refuge camp in India. My taxi driver insisted I go there, though I was headed elsewhere and had no real desire to visit the place. On arrival I was handed over to a Buddhist monk who was probably 17 years old. He took me to the Abbot's room and then told me to give him $50. I did - he took me inside, told me to bow in front of the Abbot. The Abbot then looked over at me, turned down the volume on his television, threw a cheap polyester prayer cloth around my neck and murmured a blessing, then I was led back out and to the waiting taxi driver, who I'm pretty sure got a cut of the cash.I guess the only reason I bring this up is to note that the depictions of ethically pure monks sitting in the forest communing with nature may (or may not) be as much a product of Hollywood as Ninjas. That said, to be fair, I guess someone's got to pay the cable bill at the monastery.
Again, though, that was one experience and I'm hardly an expert.

 chang50
				chang50
			











 
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