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Question: There were once three frogs on a log and on of them    made a decision to jump in. How many were left? Answer: There are still three frogs on a log, he only made a    decision, he took no action!
If some bodily pain or weakness of health has prevented your    coming to the games, I put it down to fortune rather than your own wisdom: but if you have made up your mind    that these things which the rest of the world admires are only worthy of contempt, and, though your health would    have allowed of it, you yet were unwilling to come, then I rejoice at both facts—that you were free from bodily    pain, and that you had the sound sense to disdain what others causelessly admire. Only I hope that some fruit of    your leisure may be forthcoming, a leisure, indeed, which you had a splendid opportunity of enjoying to the    full, seeing that you were left almost alone in your lovely country. For I doubt not that in that study of    yours, from which you have opened a window into the Stabian waters of the bay, and obtained a view of Misenum,    you have spent the morning hours of those days in light reading, while those who left you there were watching    the ordinary farces[1] half asleep. The remaining parts of the day, too, you spent in the pleasures which you    had yourself arranged to suit your own taste, while we had to endure whatever had met with the approval of    Spurius Maecius
On the whole, if you care to know, the games were most    splendid, but not to your taste. I judge from my own. For, to begin with, as a special honour to the occasion,    those actors had come back to the stage who, I thought, had left it for their own. Indeed, your favourite, my    friend Aesop, was in such a state that no one could say a word against his retiring from the profession
Once, a professor went to a Zen Master. He asked him to explain the meaning of Zen. The Master quietly poured a cup of tea. The cup was full but he continued to pour. The professor could not stand this any longer, so he questioned the Master impatiently, "Why do you keep pouring when the cup is full?" "I want to point out to you," the Master said, "that you are similarly attempting to understand Zen while your mind is full. First, empty your mind of preconceptions before you attempt to understand Zen."

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