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    1. #1
      Hungry Dannon Oneironaut's Avatar
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      Ram Bahadur Bomjon (Buddha Boy) has not eaten, drinken, or slept since 12 years old. Little Buddha!!

      Edit: I misunderstood. He hasn't claimed that he hasn't eaten or drank since he was twelve, just while he meditates indefinitely. In between months-long meditations he eats.


      I just discovered this guy and have been watching videos about him. Just amazing!


      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_Bahadur_Bomjan





      Spoiler for English translation:




      And there is so much more about him on youtube. Documentaries etc..
      Last edited by Dannon Oneironaut; 05-17-2010 at 04:03 AM.

    2. #2
      Member Specialis Sapientia's Avatar
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      He's a very interesting person, I have seen the documentary about him twice, and followed the updates about his whereabouts.

      Here's the documentary http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v29clGMWU84

      I think he has been mentioned on the forum before
      The wise ones fashioned speech with their thought, sifting it as grain is sifted through a sieve. ~ Buddha

    3. #3
      Hungry Dannon Oneironaut's Avatar
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      Man, he inspires me! He is not a monk or anything. Just decided to meditate non-stop until he became enlightened. He never stopped until people disturbed his meditations. He went over six months without moving, eating, drinking, sleeping! He disappeared and they found him in the jungle. He disappeared again. He has so much compassion, that is what really matters. They say that he is the reincarnation of the Shakyamuni Buddha, but he denies this. But he is A Buddha. I will watch the documentary!!!

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      Uhh...another person saying we have to believe in religion. Thanks but NO THANKS!

    5. #5
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      Uhh...another person saying we have to believe in religion.
      Really? 'Cause I missed that part.

      I pick up a half-eaten copy of a book by Neil Gaiman, and decide this is all his fault.

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      Read the english translation.

    7. #7
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      I missed the spoiler. Never mind, I see your point.

      I pick up a half-eaten copy of a book by Neil Gaiman, and decide this is all his fault.

    8. #8
      Hungry Dannon Oneironaut's Avatar
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      Actually the word that they are translating into the english word religion is "Dharma" which means "the way" or "the truth" and is not exclusive to any religion but includes all search for truth, including science, but also ethical behavior, etc. That is why the Dalai Lama keeps educated and up to date on what Science is discovering. That is "the Dharma". Dharma is not Dogma. They shouldn't have translated it as religion, but "the truth". Science also means "study of the truth" in latin I believe.

      Edit: science come from the latin "scientia" which means knowledge of truth, kind of like the Greek "Gnosis"
      Last edited by Dannon Oneironaut; 05-19-2010 at 04:03 AM.

    9. #9
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      So "the Dharma" would include all searches for truth?

      I pick up a half-eaten copy of a book by Neil Gaiman, and decide this is all his fault.

    10. #10
      Sleeping Dragon juroara's Avatar
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      This is a very interesting story, I wonder if the boy will reach his goal - or do people believe if he already has? In the video he looks haunting! Like he isn't 'there'. If someone told me that he was a corpse, I would have believed them. He's much more lively, or even present, in his speeches.

      I'm glad he decided to leave the first forest he was meditating in, I didn't like that committee, or how much money they were making.

    11. #11
      Hungry Dannon Oneironaut's Avatar
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      Dharma has a few meanings. It means: the Truth, the Way. It means the search for Truth as long as it is ethical and brings about healing, for example, laboratory testing on animals is not the dharma because it violates animals. Also, each person has their own dharma, it is what you like to do and are good at and what your purpose is, if it is in alignment with ethics, etc. You cannot follow someone else's dharma, that is against the dharma. You have to find your own dharma. Someone's dharma might be to surf, another person might follow their dharma by bringing awareness to an important issue, someone else's dharma might be to be a bus driver. It is kind of like fate, but you can shoose to follow your dharma or not. It is more like Aleister Crowley's idea of following your will. "Do what thou will shall be the whol of the law." Crowley didn't mean that you can do whatever the hell you want, but to follow your higher will, and not to follow your higher will is a sin, according to Crowley. So, when they translate dharma as "religious practice" that is a small meaning of it, but the real meaning is to follow your heart and do what you know is right and to live the truth as best as you can, not to defend your ignorance, not in a dogmatic way as "this is what you have to do to be right." In fact, the Buddha said "Do not believe anything anybody says to you, not even if I say it, or if it is written in scriptures, or if everybody seems to believe it, or if it is written in fancy books, but only if you investigate it for yourself and it agrees with your reason and common sense. As far as Buddhism goes, the things that are not to do are not to harm any sentient being, either directly or indirectly, not to steal/take only that which is freely given, not to slander or speak untruth, no sexual misconduct, not to get drunk or cloud your mind with drugs, not to overeat. It is because it is considered against the dharma to cause suffering to yourself or others beings.
      However, there is a story about a past life of the Buddha before he was a Buddha where he was a captain of a ship in search of some treasure. HE found out that there was a man on board who was planning to murder the whole crew and claim the treasure for himself. The Buddha (he wasn't the Buddha yet) decided that he must kill this man in order to save the man from all the bad karma he would get from murdering a bunch of people. In this way, even though the Buddha murdered a man, it was not against the dharma, because it wasn't motivated by any selfish gain, but out of compassion for the would-be mass murderer.
      So, science is also the dharma, as long as it is not motivated out of greed or to make a technology that will cause suffering. Especially if the science is used to ease suffering, it is dharma. So yes, any search for truth is the dharma. In the speeches the subject of this thread gives, he speaks about how religions now have a false dharma, i.e. not true. He says not to cause suffering, not to kill, etc. He is not saying that you have to be Buddhist, or join a religion, even though it was kind of translated that way.
      Last edited by Dannon Oneironaut; 05-20-2010 at 12:09 AM.

    12. #12
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      Man, Buddha boy's a real cynic.

    13. #13
      Hungry Dannon Oneironaut's Avatar
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      Meanings of "Dharma"

      Dharma in the Buddhist scriptures has a variety of meanings, including "phenomenon", and "nature" or "characteristic".

      Dharma also means ‘mental contents’, and is paired with citta, which means heart/mind. In major sutras (for example, the Mahasatipatthana sutra), the dharma/citta pairing is paralleled with the pairing of kaya (body) and vedana (feelings or sensations, that which arise within the body but experienced through the mind).

      Dharma means the source of things and Truth.

      Dharma is also used to refer to the teachings of the Buddha, not in the context of the words of one man, even an enlightened man, but as a reflection of natural law which was re-discovered by this man and shared with the world. A person who lives their life with an understanding of this natural law, is a "dhammic" person, which is often translated as "righteous".

      The Buddha would teach the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path, the Three Marks of Existence, and other guidelines in order to achieve the freedom and liberation from suffering.
      From Wikipedia

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