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Friday, November 9, 2012

Paths to enlightenment

There are many paths to enlightenment. One often associates enlightenment with sufferings. One must suffer, and be striped from all materials in order to find true happiness. One Diamond Mountain (a group based their practice on a new branch of Buddhism. Note - some may call them a cult. I'll leave you to be the judge of that.) member died from dehydration during a three year three month and three day long retreat in the Arizona desert. 

I'm actually not interested in the group nor the death per se. I'm intrigued by the idea of finding happiness through sufferings. Why can't one find happiness through actually living the lives they already have? Could it be that enlightenment is within all of us already? I have found my path to enlightenment. (I know it's a big claim, but no one can be the judge but me.) And it can not be any further from suffering. I choose to live life. Explore new things, places, emotions, perspectives, opportunities, thoughts, tastes... Yes, I'd rather explore than to retreat. I'd rather consume than to conserve. I'd rather to be than to search. And it feels great to be enlightened. 


Related reading-
Diamond Mountain retreat death: Ian Thorson dies after fleeing mysterious yoga retreat with wife | Mail Online:

'via Blog this'

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

my take on career advice

Forget about dress for the job you want. Just act the one you want to be.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

iPhone 5 preorder sold out in record time. Genius marketing.



iPhone 5 is a flop. Let's not debate this. It just is.

What would you do if you were the chief marketing officer in light of the less than enthusiastic media and blogger response? Create demand. How? By faking it. I haven't read anywhere the stock number of initial supply. For all I know, it could be 10 units. It's not that hard to sell out in 'record time' with a small amount of supply. It doesn't reflect actual demand. It's simply a numbers game. The trick here is to create shortage which is no new technique in the marketing playbook. People want what they can't have. And in turn, it stimulates real demand.

This is a genius marketing move. But let's not be fooled by the 'sell out' headlines anymore.