hasunoha

From ten years ago

Time cannot be taken back, and I regret it when I wish I had noticed this sooner. The same goes for shopping. Even though there are more advanced ones later... I'm starting to worry when cars, motorcycles, etc. with good performance are sold later. I'm selling my current car. I'm at a loss with the purchase again. I'm always at a loss as to whether it's good to go shopping or something a little better. Doesn't Obo have that kind of hesitation?

4 Zen Responses

Selected Hell

It's there. I said I'd buy a Blu-ray recorder that can record 2 channels at the same time, but my wife decided not to record 1 channel for 10,000 yen. Well, I thought it would be good if it was what the person himself wanted, but after all, every time there was an incident, I thought, “So I wish I had given another 10,000 yen...”

However, it is Buddhism that doesn't drag on such thoughts.

“Careful selection of people makes them poor.” Whether it's a car, motorcycle, PC, marriage hunting, choosing a monk, or choosing a job, that's the case. Careful selection means getting rid of a satisfactory hurdle limit. It's a horrible affliction that makes familiar things obsolete from end to end. The worry of this evaluation and careful selection is called taking (shu).

Not carefully selected, not carefully... because you carefully select, you become poor... because you aim for the best, you become poor... If you develop a habit of careful selection, remember that the monk said that.
And now, let's chew on the happiness in front of us.

I don't buy when I want to buy when I want or when I'm unsure

 I remember the celebrity Tokoro George jokingly saying, “If I knew a pod would come out, I shouldn't have bought a record.”
At the time, there were only records, and I don't think it was possible to predict that Pods would go on sale.
That's what it is. When you want it, when you want to buy it. When something better comes out later, I think you should try to think “I was convinced of the best thing at that point and bought it.” Also, I don't buy when I'm in doubt. I think the time isn't ripe yet, so I'm at a loss.

Controlled by greed

When I was a kid, I didn't have much greed, probably because I grew up poor.
I've always grown up with the same clothes and the same shoes.
I don't feel like it's okay because I'm a monk.

However, humans have had the experience of “oh, that was a silly time.”
Well, I also feel joy, anger, sorrow, and joy, so it probably makes sense.

For me, who wears smooth shoes, I'm jealous of Namashi-san's ability to find things that much, but...
I felt that you were being controlled by a monster called greed.

If you move away from greed, your mind will be freer.
“Huh...” becomes “relieved.”

I wonder what it's important to do it for

If you really want to master that path rather than greed, tools are absolutely important.
In order to do a good job, tools are also essential.
Of course, the appropriate skills are even more important.
The palace carpenter also said that tools are life.
The light only comes out when you use it.
It's important not to leave the tools up to others; it's also important to sharpen and sharpen your own to make them the best.
For example, boys wear clothes called work clothes.
I'm still wearing the work clothes I bought when I was at the ascetic dojo. It's been 9 years now.
There are holes all over the place.
Work clothes are also work clothes, so when you buy a new one, you feel like you don't want to get it dirty.
If that were the case, it would just be just greed.
Even though your work clothes are work clothes, if you don't like getting dirty and don't work, it dies as a tool.
Musical instruments exist only for players, but when owned by collectors, instruments cry.
It doesn't make use of the thing itself.

If you're buying something, isn't it more important what you do through it?
Please use good tools in a good way.
Use SNS, language activities, and the tools you have in a good way.