Whether the Cologne city of my birth in the saying "et et for cries for cries of how" so "it depends how it is," were influenced Buddhist? Probably not :-) And yet it is so. When you learn to accept that nothing in life (usually) and all stock has always and constantly in transition, you learn not to stick to things. The attachment is seen in Buddhism as a way to grief. We tend to the things we have worked as hard not to want to give him away. Do you have for us a very high value that we want to protect everything in the world. As a result we are suffering but often. If I buy a great Clock, it fills me with pride, perhaps, I like to wear because I like it, I am pleased when others talk to me on it, I feel good with it. The times are bad, I'll probably have to sell them. Many people hesitate out such things to the last. The separation of cherished objects hurts, produces pain, because you had to save perhaps for a long time. But if you in the moment when you can afford something nice, just satisfied that it is currently and the object, be it a car, a piece of jewelry, etc. from the beginning as something seen that the constant change subject and may also soon gone again may be, we suffer not later. Today there beautiful! Gone tomorrow? . Ok too
As we come back to the point: In the here and now to live! To enjoy what we have today, rejoice, enjoy it ... it could be gone tomorrow and if it is not existential, then do not mourn what was untenable. "Et Kütt et Kütt as" uuuunnnd .... Cologne would add: "Et'd still jotjejange forever!"
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