Saturday, October 4, 2025

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Via Alison Elizabeth Marshall blog

 Now on Video: A Symbolic Invitation to Paradise of Presence


A Symbolic Invitation to Paradise of Presence

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Via the Economist \\ A special edition on cancer

 

The Economist

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October 4th 2025

The Economist this weekend

A special edition on cancer


Photo: Agnes Jonas

Slavea Chankova
Health-care correspondent

Cancer is a disease of faulty DNA, I had been told. So this summer I went on a pilgrimage that many journalists writing about cancer make at some point in their careers: I took the train from London to the outskirts of Cambridge to visit the Wellcome Sanger Institute. It is a storied place for discoveries about how genes shape our health. Back in the 1990s Sanger scientists decoded a third of the first fully sequenced human genome. Since then their research has led to drugs for cancers that previously had no treatment at all.

What I learned there was astounding. The glitches in our DNA known as “cancer-driver” mutations may not be that at all. Scientists thought they were villains because they consistently turn up in tumours. But now they are finding them in perfectly healthy tissues, too. It is a fascinating story about the origins of cancer—and what it might take to prevent it.

Editor’s picks

A selection of must-read articles

An illustration of larger blue cells surrounding a smaller mass of reddish cells.
 

 

Illustration showing three human silhouettes—a child, an adolescent, and an adult—each displaying abstract representations of gut bacteria inside their bodies
 

 

 Illustration of a person whose head forms the dot of a large question mark. The curved part of the question mark is depicted as a red and white medical sample tube labelled PSA TEST
 

Via Daily Dharma: Beloved Community

 

Beloved Community

Within our practice, we share an intention, enact our purpose, and cultivate care for one another. We find intimacy, companionship, friendship, and a community of people who gather together in the same way that people have for over a thousand years.

Gabriel Kaigen Wilson, “The Beloved Embodiment of Community”


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Remythologizing the Buddha
Donald S. Lopez Jr. in conversation with James Shaheen
Scholar Donald S. Lopez Jr. discusses the dangers of stripping away the supernatural elements of the Buddha’s life.
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The Buddha
A Book Launch with Donald S. Lopez Jr.
Join us at the Liederkranz Club on October 9, 2025 for a Q&A and book-signing to celebrate the publication of Donald S. Lopez Jr.’s The Buddha: Biography of a Myth.
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Effort: Restraining Unarisen Unhealthy States

 

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RIGHT EFFORT
Restraining Unarisen Unhealthy States
Whatever a person frequently thinks about and ponders, that will become the inclination of their mind. If one frequently thinks about and ponders unhealthy states, one has abandoned healthy states to cultivate unhealthy states, and then one’s mind inclines to unhealthy states. (MN 19)

Here a person rouses the will, makes an effort, stirs up energy, exerts the mind, and strives to restrain the arising of unarisen unhealthy mental states. One restrains the arising of all five unarisen hindrances. (MN 141)
Reflection
Having gone through the five hindrances individually—sense desire, ill will, restlessness, sluggishness, and doubt—we are now encouraged to work with all five of them as the opportunity arises. Instead of looking at each in turn and exploring how it might be inhibited from arising (not suppressed once arisen!), we allow ourselves to guard against any of them erupting by learning to avoid the conditions giving rise to them.
Daily Practice
The hindrances are a natural part of our everyday lives, but we need not feel at their mercy. They are mental qualities that obstruct our ability to focus and relax our minds, and they can be resisted with some understanding of what sets them off and how to avoid triggering them. Cultivating equanimity, for example, will inhibit the arising of sense desire and ill will. The other hindrances too have antidotes that can be deployed.
Tomorrow: Establishing Mindfulness of Body and Abiding in the First Jhāna
One week from today: Abandoning Arisen Unhealthy States

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