Navigating Modern Life: Finding Moksha Through Mindfulness - Dandelion Doorways

Practice every day. Practice removing desires and expectations. Practice mindfulness and release ignorance. ༄ Moksha is a beautiful concept in Indian philosophy and spirituality, often seen as a way to break free from the endless cycle of birth, death, and rebirth (samsara). It’s seen as the ultimate goal of our existence—a journey towards self-discovery and […]

Dandelion Doorways

El proyecto de educación tecnológica para mi hija avanzó más de lo esperado este fin de semana. Debido a que comenzaba a ser molesto tener que cambiar de puerto USB el cable del dock para discos duros en cada encendido de la iMac, decidí instalar #BodhiLinux en una partición del disco interno.

Cometí un error de parvulario, luego de reparticionar el disco interno de la iMac, el instalador de Bodhi Linux indicó que no había detectado ningún sistema operativo previo y me ofreció usar todo el disco para instalar el nuevo. Supuse que la indetección tendría relación con la incapacidad del instalador para acceder al formato de partición del MacOS y que el "disco" que se usaría sería la partición vacía disponible (formateada en ExFAT)... ¿Cómo es que infringí la regla de oro de "no suponer"? Seguramente es porque suelo padecer ataques de estupidez.

El caso es que, inesperadamente, la iMac ya no tiene MacOS. No es algo que me duela tantísimo, porque de todas formas ya prácticamente no lo usábamos más que para comparar y sentirnos fenomenales por hacer que una computadora de 2011 funcione de maravilla en 2026. Los datos importantes de la partición de MacOS ya estaban respaldados, pero reconozco que cometí un error grave.

Eso sí, el error fue de esos que terminan en serendipia, porque Bodhi Linux se desempeña aún mejor que Elive, el entorno de escritorio #Moksha, un fork optimizado de #Enlightenment, hace que la iMac se sienta como comprada hace apenas un año.

Life Emerges Out of Oneness — And Sometimes, Out of “One Mess”

How a Typo Became a Lesson in Fractals, Emergence, and the Creative Logic of the Universe

Every so often, life hands you a moment so small and strange that it feels like a cosmic wink. Recently, while jotting down a thought for this very post, I meant to write:

“Life emerges out of oneness.”

Instead, my fingers offered me:

“Life emerges out of one mess.”

And honestly? Both felt true.

The slip wasn’t just funny — it was fractal. It mirrored the very idea I was trying to explore: that creation is not linear, predictable, or pristine. It’s iterative. It’s messy. It’s full of deviations that become discoveries. And in that way, the typo became the perfect doorway into this reflection.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Fractals: When One Pattern Becomes Many

Fractals are patterns that repeat themselves at different scales. Zoom in or zoom out, and the structure echoes itself — tree branches, lightning bolts, river deltas, blood vessels, coastlines. Simple rules govern them, yet they generate infinite complexity.

A fractal begins with a single seed pattern.
A gesture.
A shape.
A rule.

From that oneness, variation emerges. No two branches grow at the same angle. No two waves break the same way. The pattern is recognizable, but never identical.

This is unity expressing itself through diversity.

Emergence: When the Unexpected Becomes Essential

Emergent behavior is what happens when simple parts interact in ways that create something entirely new. No individual neuron understands consciousness, yet consciousness arises. No single ant grasps the colony, yet the colony behaves like an organism.

Emergence depends on non‑linearity.
On detours.
On missteps.
On the “wrong” thing happening at the “right” time.

Foibles, disasters, joy, triumph — they’re not interruptions to the pattern.
They are the pattern.

Just like my typo.
Just like evolution.
Just like every turning point in a human life.

The Esoteric Echo: The One Becoming the Many

Spiritual traditions have long held that the universe is a single source expressing itself through countless forms. “As above, so below.” “The microcosm reflects the macrocosm.” “We are all one.”

But oneness isn’t sterile.
It’s fertile.
It contains every possibility — including the messy ones.

A kaleidoscope is the perfect metaphor: one chamber, one set of fragments, yet infinite shifting worlds. Nothing new is added; only the relationships change. Oneness rearranges itself into new expressions.

Sometimes those expressions look like beauty.
Sometimes they look like chaos.
Often, they look like both at once.

Oneness and One Mess: Two Sides of the Same Truth

The more I sat with my accidental phrase, the more it felt like a teaching:

Oneness births form through variation.
Variation looks like mess.
The mess reorganizes into new patterns.
The new patterns reveal the oneness again.

It’s a loop.
A cycle.
A fractal.
A kaleidoscope turning itself inside out.

Life emerges out of oneness — but it often looks like one mess along the way.

And maybe that’s the point.

The Pattern That Keeps Becoming

So here’s the heart of it:

Everything is a fractal unfolding through time and space — a never‑ending cycle where the pattern is continuously changing. The accidents, the imperfections, the breakthroughs, the breakdowns… they’re not deviations from the design. They are the design.

Creation is not a straight line.
It’s a spiral.
A branching.
A shimmering, shifting mosaic of oneness discovering itself through form.

Even through typos.

#asAboveSoBelow #awareness #balance #cosmic #creativeLogic #emergence #emergent #emergentBehavior #emerges #experience #flow #foibles #fractal #fractals #happening #healing #lessons #lifeEmerges #meditation #mindful #mindfulness #mistakes #moksha #moments #oneness #practice #Writing

Kundalini Awakening vs Enlightenment:Comparing Buddhist and Tantric Traditions

https://youtu.be/XO9M7Wcu2QE

#kundaliniawakening #enlightenment #buddha #moksha #maya

Kundalini Awakening vs Enlightenment:Comparing Buddhist and Tantric Traditions

YouTube

Kundalini Awakening vs Enlightenment:Comparing Buddhist and Tantric Traditions

https://youtu.be/XO9M7Wcu2QE

#kundaliniawakening #enlightenment #buddha #moksha #maya

Kundalini Awakening vs Enlightenment:Comparing Buddhist and Tantric Traditions

YouTube
The Aghori are Hindu ascetics who seek enlightenment by embracing death, taboo, and ritual impurity. Feared and respected, they reject conventional boundaries to pursue moksha through radical spiritual discipline.
#Aghori #HinduMysticism #Varanasi #SpiritualExtremes #AncientTraditions #ReligiousHistory #Moksha #MysticIndia
Reed more:https://www.ancient-origins.net/history-famous-people/aghori-004778
Experimenting with more Artix Linux "spins" (that the right word?)

This is a USB live boot of Moksha desktop environment. Moksha is interesting to me as it is a continuation of the Enlightenment Desktop, written in C and with BSD style software license. Very #RetroEdge.

As configured, and with the choices of included software, it definitely would not be a daily driver for me, but I can see tweaking it a bit would make it more appealing.

#Linux #Artix #xLibre #Moksha
Navigating Modern Life: Finding Moksha Through Mindfulness - Dandelion Doorways

Practice every day. Practice removing desires and expectations. Practice mindfulness and release ignorance. ༄ Moksha is a beautiful concept in Indian philosophy and spirituality, often seen as a way to break free from the endless cycle of birth, death, and rebirth (samsara). It’s seen as the ultimate goal of our existence—a journey towards self-discovery and […]

Dandelion Doorways

Upanishads

Written primarily between 800-200 BCE. This is Sanskrit texts of the late Vedic & post-Vedic periods that “document the transition from the archaic ritualism of the Veda into new religious ideas & institutions” & the emergence of the central religious concepts of Hinduism.

The word Upanishad comes from the Sanskrit roots upa (near), ni (down), & shad (to sit). It literally describes a student sitting at the feet of a guru to receive “secret” or “higher” knowledge.

The central concern of all Upanishads is to discover the relations between ritual, cosmic realities (including gods), & the human body/person, postulating Atman & Brahman as the “summit of the hierarchically arranged & interconnected universe.” But various ideas about the relation between Atman & Brahman can be found.

The Upanishads isn’t a single book but a collection of over 200 texts (with 13 “Principal” Upanishads). Despite their diversity, they all converge on 1 revolutionary equation that changed religious thought: Atman=Brahman. Atman – the individual soul or the “true self” that resides deep within a person, beyond the ego & the body. Brahman – the ultimate, infinite, & formless reality that underlies the entire universe.

108 Upanishads are known, of which the 1st dozen or so are the oldest & most important & are referred to as the principal, or main (mukhya), Upanishads. The mukhya Upanishads predate the Common Era.

Of the remainder, 95 Upanishads are part of the Muktika canon, composed from about the last centuries of 1st-millennium BCE through about the 15th century CE.

The Upanishads argue that our suffering (Samsara) comes from the illusion (Maya) that we are separate from the universe. Liberation (Moksha) occurs the moment a person realizes that their inner self is identical to the cosmic reality.

Translation of the Upanishads in the early century started to attract attention from a Western audience.

The Upanishads gave the vocabulary for the next 2,500 years of Eastern spirituality:

  • Karma:
    • The law of cause & effect. While mentioned earlier, the Upanishads tied it to the moral quality of one’s actions & the cycle of rebirth.
  • Samsara:
    • The “wandering” or the cycle of birth, death, & rebirth.
  • Moksha:
    • The release from Samsara; the ultimate goal of human life.
  • Om (Aum):
    • Described in the Mandukya Upanishad as the primordial sound of the universe, representing the 4 states of consciousness (waking, dreaming, deep sleep, & the “4th states” of pure consciousness).

One of the oldest, & largest, it contains the famous dialogue between the sage Yajnavalkya, & his wife, Maitrey. When Yajnavalkya offers her his worldly wealth before retiring to the forest, she asks: “If this whole earth filled with wealth were mine, would I become immortal through it?” (Wise girl, we like that around here!)

His answer (which was a “Um, no ma’am. That’s not how that works around here, partner.”) leads into a profound discourse on how the Self is the only thing truly dear to us.

The Chandogya Upanishad (The “Song” Teaching) is famous for the phrase “Tat Tvam Asi” (Thou Art That). It tells of a dad teaching his son, Shvetaketu, using metaphors (parables if you’re from that world) from nature. He asks his son to dissolve salt in water. Even though the salt cannot be seen, its essence is everywhere in the water. This explains how Brahman permeates everything.

The Katha Upanishad (The Dialogue with Death) is perhaps the most “US culture”-friendly Upanishad. A young boy, named Nachiketa, finds himself at the gates of the underworld & waits for Yama (the God of Death). Yama is impressed by Nachiketa’s persistence & offers Nachiketa 3 boons/blessings/gifts (vara).

The 1st boon was Peace. Nachiketa asks that his dad’s anger be appeased & that Nachiketa would be welcomed home lovingly. This represents family harmony & emotional peace.

The 2nd boon was Knowledge of the Fire Sacrifice. Nachiketa asks for knowledge of the sacred fire sacrifice ritual (Agni Vidya) that leads to the Heavenly Realms. This represents righteous action(s) & spiritual discipline.

The 3rd boon was Self-Realization. Nachiketa asks for the mystery of what happens after death & the nature of the soul, seeking true knowledge of the Atman. Yama grants Nachiketa this request only after testing his dedication. For this last boon, Nachiketa asked: “What happens after death?” Yama’s teachings on the nature of the soul & the “chariot” of the body is a cornerstone of Vedantic thought.

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संगम तट पर आस्था का महाकुंभ Magh Mela Prayagraj 2026 – मोक्ष और विश्वास की अनूठी गाथा #Sangam #MaghMela #MaghMela2026 #Prayagraj #SpiritualJourney #MaghMela2026 #Prayagraj #SangamCity #KumbhPreps #IndianCulture #SpiritualIndia #GangaYamunaSaraswati #Kalpvas #Moksha #IncredibleIndia #HindiSahitya #ReligiousFestival

https://vrnewslive.com/magh-mela-prayagraj-2026-spiritual-mahakumbh-mela/