I have these cards up. They have quotes from Sri Chimnoy on them. I got them when I went to one of the vegetarian restaurants run by his followers. He was a guru. His restaurants are oddly ubiquitous. There are at least five dotting the N. American landscape in key places like San Diego, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, and Ottawa- which we all know is the capital of Canada. In NY there are two known locations. They are both in Queens. I've been to the one in Jamaica. I went with my boyfriend at the time, Jud, which is short for Judson. He was from the South. He was a freegan. I don't think you, and I ever really talked much about him, which I think is neither a good or bad thing, but probably a good thing. In any case, that's where I got the cards. At the guru's restaurant in Jamaica, Queens. That was about six years ago. I found them recently in a purse. The purse I most likely used that day when I went to the restaurant. I don't think I've used that purse since. It's a red clutch that I hardly use. It usually gets taken out for weddings, and formal events- small purse functions. It's old. Probably from the seventies. I think it cost five dollars. I like red. Going to eat at Sri Chimnoy's restaurant is not a formal event, so I don't know why I used it that day. It doesn't matter. Sri Chimnoy has good quotes.
"Never depend on applause."
I like that one.
And this one,
"I tell my mind that it must never underestimate the abundant power of a disciplined life."
and these two,
one,
"Do not be afraid of tasting the bitterness of failure. Be brave! The sweetness of success will long befriend you."
and two,
"Nobody is destined to be perpetually wedded to doubt and suspicion. Indeed, it is a matter of personal choice: doubt or faith."
There are more. I have nine cards total. I think I took one of each. They were free at the restaurant.
I recently ate at a location in SF with Jen, Gaia, and Mauricio. This restaurant did not have the cards, but they had a book of his quotes for sale. I'm glad I have the nine cards that I do. They also have impressionistic paintings of flowers printed on them. They're quite nice.
I hope you're enjoying this as much as I am. I can't keep a straight face while I write to you about my Sri Chimnoy cards.
This one is the funniest: (if we were to measure them from least funny to most funny...)
"Do not try to make a happiness-fountain. Just try to break your unhappiness-tower and then see where you are: You are playing in and with happiness-power."
A happiness-fountain is funny. What does a happiness-fountain look like? I like this quote. I like all of them, but I always picture a grand fountain when I read this one. The type of fountain you'd find at Versailles, or in front of some palace in a country that has or has had a monarchy. I picture such a fountain, and it's filled with furniture, and it has all this stuff hanging off it- like a chandelier. It's ornate, and busy, and spewing just a dribble of water, and it looks miserable. It need's some redoing- the happiness-fountain in my head. It's a disaster. I think that's a good thing. What also comes to mind, unfortunately, is the intro to the TV sitcom Friends- which, yes, I've seen, but, no, did not embrace or follow to its over-publicized, and probably anticlimactic end. Ok, that's unfair. I don't know what happened. It might have had a good ending. It's just that long running sitcoms usually end on a low note. In any case, the intro to Friends has a fountain with a couch either in it or right next to it.
"Never depend on applause."
I like that one.
And this one,
"I tell my mind that it must never underestimate the abundant power of a disciplined life."
and these two,
one,
"Do not be afraid of tasting the bitterness of failure. Be brave! The sweetness of success will long befriend you."
and two,
"Nobody is destined to be perpetually wedded to doubt and suspicion. Indeed, it is a matter of personal choice: doubt or faith."
There are more. I have nine cards total. I think I took one of each. They were free at the restaurant.
I recently ate at a location in SF with Jen, Gaia, and Mauricio. This restaurant did not have the cards, but they had a book of his quotes for sale. I'm glad I have the nine cards that I do. They also have impressionistic paintings of flowers printed on them. They're quite nice.
I hope you're enjoying this as much as I am. I can't keep a straight face while I write to you about my Sri Chimnoy cards.
This one is the funniest: (if we were to measure them from least funny to most funny...)
"Do not try to make a happiness-fountain. Just try to break your unhappiness-tower and then see where you are: You are playing in and with happiness-power."
A happiness-fountain is funny. What does a happiness-fountain look like? I like this quote. I like all of them, but I always picture a grand fountain when I read this one. The type of fountain you'd find at Versailles, or in front of some palace in a country that has or has had a monarchy. I picture such a fountain, and it's filled with furniture, and it has all this stuff hanging off it- like a chandelier. It's ornate, and busy, and spewing just a dribble of water, and it looks miserable. It need's some redoing- the happiness-fountain in my head. It's a disaster. I think that's a good thing. What also comes to mind, unfortunately, is the intro to the TV sitcom Friends- which, yes, I've seen, but, no, did not embrace or follow to its over-publicized, and probably anticlimactic end. Ok, that's unfair. I don't know what happened. It might have had a good ending. It's just that long running sitcoms usually end on a low note. In any case, the intro to Friends has a fountain with a couch either in it or right next to it.
It's unfortunate that my imagination is corrupted by a sliver of overplayed simulated reality. I feel like it's going to be in there forever. I wish I could replace it with a memory of me and you. A memory I don't remember. That would be nice.
It is raining reallly hard right now. So hard that I used three L's. It is beautiful. The sun is shining to the left, and the sky is open, while on the right it's dark. I like staring into the patch of bright sky, out to the left, where the clouds are illuminated. There are pink blossoms on the trees. The rain is slowing down. It is quiet now. It is still.