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Topics - Mancklin

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16
Words / Tibetan thoughts
« on: May 10, 2007, 05:26:55 AM »
Today's puzzle made me regret that lamrim--the stages of the path in Tibetan Buddhism--is not allowed.

I have also tried torma  on other occasions without success:
here is a little piece on tormas:

Food
Tormas (Skt.: bali) are offering cakes. They symbolize the food offering.  Originally made of dough (in Tibet, roasted barley flour is used,) and also sculpted from butter, they have evolved into elaborately decorated objects.  Since making them is time-consuming and uses resources, people have begun to use clay, wood and more recently, synthetic substances. These include resin modeling products, and at least one Asian company produces small, injection-molded plastic tormas.

Each torma -- which at one time (pre-Buddhism, naturally,) may have been a substitute for a living being -- has specific characteristics that depend upon the deity to whom it is offered. However, all tormas have three fundamental elements: foundation, body, and decoration that symbolize respectively the qualities of body, speech, and mind.

The energies of these qualities are represented by two or three small, rather flat, discs applied to the front of the conical body.  Usually they are in the form of flowers; the rims can be pressed to create the scalloped effect of petals. 

Finally, one or more dabs of coloured butter known as gyab gyen are sometimes pressed onto the "back" (Tib. gyab) of the torma.  This action dedicates the offering: 

 . . .  it seals the torma offering so that its essence won't be lost or stolen before you get a chance to offer it.  I've also heard that it's a gesture, as if you were saying, "thus, I offer." ~ ani Yeshe Wangmo

A torma of elaborate design may be decorative, but it is not as important as the action of generosity which it represents.  The colours reflect the nature of the deity to which it is being offered, and can also correspond to traditional yogic principles.

 

17
Say Hello / Word-pox
« on: May 07, 2007, 11:17:10 PM »
Greetings all!
I've been playing for a while but it took me months to figure out how to post here.
Am I the only conflicted Chihuahua player on the board? You all seem content to be spending hours--perhaps only minutes for some--with letters flying around inside your heads--when a part of me feels that more constructive things ought to be going on in my head, at least.  (The other part is very happy not to be making any further efforts at creativity or engagement with the world or earning a living.)

Also, although I love the new format with the little rosettes for finding all the "common" (ha bloody ha) words--(nong? give a break!)--this  entails a further mild torture when one simply cannot find the last elusive word or two--or three, today.

What oh what can they be? I have shuffled and shuffled until my index finger is sore. I will fix myovertaxed brain on the letters as I ride the train to the dentist.  I can cut the agony short by looking at the solution--or worse, and a sign of utter moral corruption, by  going to a word unscrambler--but then I will know that I could have tried harder, that I was a quitter.

The name I hereby give to this affliction is word-pox.

Mancklin


18
Words / New word suggestion
« on: May 05, 2007, 11:53:30 PM »
How about regift? And regifted? And regifting?

Is the concept of regifting confined to cheap lower middle class immigrant New Yorkers such as myself?  To tell the absolute truth I usually only regift in the direction of my daughter, or possibly the garbage can; I have however been the recipient of several regiftings including a Coach bag I have not yet used, and which might, after another few months, be regifted onwards.

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