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Writer's pictureSteven Bailey

Music Monday's

Garfield hated Monday's but loved Lasagna. What can we learn from these truths? Monday's follow our least stressful day of rest and worship, and back to the grinding stone. For those that live to work, Monday's are easy, if not enjoyable, For those that work to live, Monday's are the start of 5 day's of "WHATEVER".; Hell you might say. Now Lasagna, that's a horse of a different color.

Lasagna can be eaten without teeth, it satisfies our cravings for cheese, and our hereon like addiction to the wheat of man's creation. You add oregano, tomato sauce, salt, and grated cheese, you have the laziest, easiest consumed meal on the planet. nd you have the creation of Western disease. Cancer, heart disease, diabetes, you name it, all 10 to 100 times the historical record.

What is living? How do we know if we are even approximating our potential for life? What reflection, meditation and review do we give to our daily walk? Good questions, but the answers are much more poignant. The answers to these questions are as simple as their pop-enlightenment rhetoric would prescribe.

Living is awakening to opportunity, and another day. Living is breathing, moving, vocalizing, and attending tp our nest. In Walden, Thoreau writes about a neighbor who sailed to India to make a fortune for his wife and family. For over 20 years this husband and father stayed in India. Did he live his life? Did money equal losing your children's youth, and your wife's best as well? When asked "what is the purpose of life?, Krishna Mujrti, in 1939, Detroit Michigan, replied "the purpose of life is to live". Simple, yet so very hard for most. So, live, laugh, dance and sing, and from there do good works and share gratitude.



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