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Estan Creando y Criando Una Generacion De Cobardes e Idiotas
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Estilo de vidaTranscripción
00:01Okay, I'm going to continue with a story I started last time, which has to do with the trail
00:08of peace.
00:09But I want to emphasize something that I think is super important to keep in mind.
00:16When one begins to become aware of life, it's because the biggest person who influences my life is myself.
00:24myself,
00:26And that hand that will always help me and will always be there to protect me, to take care of me,
00:32I will find that hand at the end of my own arm, when I take responsibility for myself.
00:40Sometimes you start out with a lot of enthusiasm and things happen, negative things, positive things,
00:48a coming and going of different energies, of different kinds.
00:53And it caught my attention that in this book by Morihei Huichiva, The Art of Peace,
01:00There was a part that I translated that talked about exactly that.
01:06Because sometimes I felt bad, I would say, hey, well, I'm already on the right path, I'm doing good,
01:10I've given up bad habits, I've done good things, I'm studying myself, I'm taking care of this and that,
01:15These are things that are supposed to be commendable, and then suddenly, um, adverse things happened.
01:26Every day of human life, every single day, contains joy and anger.
01:38What? Aren't we talking about the path of peace? Shouldn't anger be eradicated?
01:45No, this is a journey. It's like learning to walk. I'm going to walk, but what if I fall?
01:53Do I stop learning? No, I stop and keep walking.
01:56I want to ride a bike. Let's go for a bike ride. I fell.
02:01No, the bicycle isn't for me. No, well, I'll take the bicycle and carry on.
02:05Every day of human life, and especially for a person who is on the path,
02:13It contains joy and anger.
02:17And there is anger that is perfectly fair, perfectly justifiable, against injustice, for example.
02:28I always give this example of Jesus, who faced 5,000 people alone with a whip.
02:34that enslaved people through debt, through loans with interest.
02:41And he was filled with fury.
02:45One guy against 5,000 with a whip.
02:49Or when he confronted the priests of the temple, he went and confronted them with power.
02:54He told them, "You serve a demon," and he shouted at them.
02:57I hope they get killed.
03:00I hope they get killed.
03:02I hope they throw millstones at them and into the sea.
03:05He told a cabal of Jewish leaders of that religion
03:11that they were deviant, that they served a demon, and they are still around.
03:15And they are still linked to those people who make loans and enslave people.
03:21To this day.
03:23Every day of human life contains joy and anger.
03:27It's part of life, nothing more.
03:29Of course, if someone is going to be angry about everything, that's another issue.
03:34Joy can also be justified or not.
03:38Some people are happy, but some people find everything funny.
03:41that nothing is serious, that no...
03:43In other words, this is a balance.
03:48Every day of human life contains joy and anger.
03:52Grief.
03:54And pleasure.
03:57Darkness.
03:59Darkness and light.
04:02Growth.
04:03Like some flowers that opened up out there called lilies.
04:07For me they are magical.
04:10And decline.
04:12A gigantic wind came, knocked down a tree, and it fell on my house and two other houses.
04:19I still can't finish cutting its roots.
04:22He was there with the axe.
04:26Every moment is etched with nature's grand design.
04:32That's just how nature is.
04:36In nature there are all the seasons of the year that affect our mood day by day.
04:41And it's good to know this so that... precisely so that spirits don't fall.
04:48It's like when people feel sad because someone has died.
04:52It's normal to feel sad.
04:55It is good to observe a period of mourning.
04:58I think forty days is always a good time.
05:01And from there, goodbye.
05:03Remembering people, I don't know, for their birthdays, for the big parties that each one celebrates according to their culture.
05:12But we have to understand that life is like that, right?
05:16I want to send you my regards.
05:17Here is my friend Botafogo.
05:20Miguel Ángel Vilanova.
05:23Botafogo.
05:24This musician friend.
05:25Look for him, ask him for friendship.
05:27He is a powerful musician and natural philosopher.
05:31I remember that I drew inspiration from things he wrote.
05:34That he wrote to musicians like me.
05:37And he gave advice.
05:39And I was like, wow!
05:42I needed to hear it.
05:45This digression I'm making is important because our mission is related to that.
05:52Because of what he provoked, not in me, but in all the musicians who read his writings.
05:58Miguel Ángel Vilanova.
06:00Miguel Botafogo.
06:02The guitarist from...
06:05From papo.
06:06A musician of papo.
06:07A great blues guitarist who played with B.B. King and a lot of other people.
06:12Why is this important?
06:14That's why.
06:18Every moment is etched with nature's grand design.
06:23That's why sometimes you're sad, sometimes you're happy, and sometimes you're angry.
06:29It's part of life.
06:31Sure, at first one can be like when one is a teenager.
06:34But then, over time, one gradually becomes more like a sine wave or a stiller line.
06:42Every moment is etched with nature's grand design.
06:45Do not deny or oppose the cosmic order of things.
06:57For example, when we cut a branch off a tree, the rest of the branches grow bigger.
07:05When the father's branch, an important branch, or the mother's branch is pruned in a family tree.
07:14Do you know what's going on?
07:15The rest receive more energy from life.
07:20One has to be aware of these things.
07:22There is a cosmic order.
07:23Everything is in order.
07:25Even in the midst of chaos, if one takes a step back, things become clear.
07:30Even war.
07:33War, among other profound objectives, aims to make people lower their everyday barriers.
07:39who get angry over silly things.
07:41No.
07:42In war, people unite, of course, against a common enemy.
07:47And if the common enemy were our own stupidity,
07:52There would be no reason for people to be fighting.
07:57In other words, even war has a reason.
08:03And this is what I wanted to get to with this aside I made quoting my friend Botafogo.
08:11Protectors of the world and guardians of the paths of gods and Buddhas.
08:22That's us.
08:24That's us.
08:26It is absolutely related to the first job of human beings, which was to take care of an idyllic world.
08:35The Garden of Eden.
08:38Where there were not only animals and humans and beautiful flowers.
08:42No.
08:43There were gods who spoke to humans.
08:47Therefore, that is what we do when we help others to love wisdom.
08:54What does it mean to be a philosopher?
08:56Like when I found these writings by this Argentinian friend.
09:00And I said, wow.
09:02I chose the path of music.
09:04I don't have to be sad if I find myself in this situation.
09:07But if I go through this other one, look, I can do this.
09:10A guide.
09:12Someone who looked after me along the way.
09:15Clear.
09:16He probably wrote to her, sent it, and published it.
09:19Without knowing the impact it would have.
09:23What are we?
09:26We are protectors of the world.
09:29We are the guardians of the paths of wisdom.
09:33It literally says.
09:35And guardians of the paths of gods and Buddhas.
09:41The technique of peace enables us to understand each challenge.
09:51Suddenly, oh no, what happened?
09:53Well, we're already on this.
09:55Let's see what we can do.
09:57And you always learn something.
10:00Always.
10:02Life itself is always a challenge.
10:08A training program where you will have to review and refine yourself.
10:15People began building houses when they faced the challenge of the weather.
10:21In more desert-like places, some houses do not have a roof.
10:24A roof is not necessary.
10:26In some places where earthquakes are frequent, like in Chile, when people build here in Chile,
10:33They build a wall and at the corner they put something called a chain, which is an iron structure.
10:39that they fill with cement,
10:40to anchor the walls at the four corners, and sometimes in between like pillars, and above.
10:46All the walls tied together, when there is an earthquake, do not sway, they do not move.
10:51But if you cross to the other side of the mountain range, Mendoza, San Juan, or wherever, all the way to Buenos Aires,
10:58Houses are made of bricks, right?
11:01Just like the Babylonians did.
11:04Well, each challenge teaches us different techniques, but not only for building our houses,
11:10but to build ourselves up.
11:14What Alexander the Great said about the Persians, he said, these guys have been living in luxury for so long, in the
11:22comfort,
11:24that their spiritual muscles are already soft.
11:27They're like these little children they're raising now, oh, my child is indigo, and my child is not crystal!
11:33What does the child want?
11:34They are turning future generations of human beings into real pains in the neck.
11:41People who are not prepared to face any frustration in challenging circumstances,
11:46Frustration is what they teach us.
11:49Challenges do teach us.
11:54Life itself is always, not today or maybe tomorrow, no, it is always a challenge.
12:03A training program where you will have to review and refine yourself,
12:07in order to face the great challenge of living.
12:15The challenge of living.
12:19I was working on some songs, writing them, by a group called the Bee Gees.
12:25I am impressed by the harmonies of the voices, I love them.
12:28And I want to incorporate them into what we do with my friend Janina de Ángela, the singer,
12:34for our concerts.
12:35The lyrics are profound.
12:38And there's a movie, I don't know how old it is now, but it's many years old,
12:46where John Travolta is, Saturday Night Fever.
12:51It's the soundtrack to the movie.
12:54And I saw the movie, I saw it now that I'm older.
12:58I saw some dialogues that, if I look at them with my eyes today, seem silly, like...
13:03But I remembered the teenager I once was.
13:07And I placed myself in the movie.
13:09And of course, I had no idea what my life was going to be like, where I was going to go,
13:16what could I do to generate money,
13:19And how was he going to find a partner?
13:22And what if I want to leave my house?
13:24And what was happening at my house?
13:26Was there pure peace and harmony?
13:27Or was it there like in that house they were complaining about because of the economic problems?
13:33And there were fights sometimes, and they divided into factions,
13:36And then they would apologize, and then they would fight again.
13:41Super identified.
13:43I said, wow, I lived through all of that.
13:48And more.
13:51Therefore, I understood that dynamic.
13:54And at that stage, my challenge was to understand life, to understand myself.
14:00Of course, if I evaluate myself now as an adult,
14:03And I see and they say, they have no idea about anything, they're all stupid.
14:08And yes, society is obviously more stupid.
14:12But those people who are there are surely going to be some of them.
14:18I wish many of them, I wish most of them, I wish they were all of them,
14:21great people, great human beings.
14:25And they will only achieve that by facing the challenge of living.
14:32The challenge of living.
14:35I must have been 14 years old,
14:38when a friend, Juan Ramírez Mancilla, arrived.
14:41He came from the north, Antofagasta.
14:44And it arrived, like a case.
14:46He opened it.
14:49There came some pointed pliers, with a conical tip,
14:51flat-tipped pliers, a pair of cutting pliers.
14:54On the other hand, a bag, a roll of wire.
14:57And he takes out some jars with some small green, blue, red, and yellow stones.
15:01And he went to get the pliers.
15:05He made a treble clef out of wire, with some small stones.
15:09A hoop.
15:09And I was a child, he said, oh, I want to learn.
15:14And I went, we would stand there.
15:16And I remember that those were my first tools, working in art.
15:21Making things, making necklaces.
15:25And when we went on vacation, we made crafts and sold them.
15:31And ha, ha, ha, ha.
15:33But I faced a challenge, what am I going to do?
15:36And suddenly, boom, an exit.
15:38And in that outing, fine motor skills.
15:41And over there I saw a guy with a last name, he had an English last name, but he was Chilean.
15:47Well, well, he played guitar.
15:51And we went to Valdivia, backpacking, 16 years old, to King Island.
15:54And the guy played guitar.
15:57And even though there was always a guitar and everything in my house, I never thought I could play guitar.
16:02No, not like that.
16:05I remember we were on King Island, which once belonged to my family, drinking apple cider.
16:12And eating fish by candlelight, the place was called the coal pier.
16:20And I said, I have to learn guitar.
16:24I need to learn guitar.
16:27And I arrived, I enrolled in a course in the neighborhoods, just a cultural center.
16:32I was a classical guitar teacher.
16:35And there, going to classes.
16:39And each challenge, each challenge forced me, frustrated me for a while.
16:47Boom! And I found a way out.
16:49And I found another way out.
16:50And I found another way out.
16:52Sure, but with each exit I found it was like Russian nesting dolls.
16:58It was like breaking a mold.
17:00I've mentioned them to you before.
17:02From the book Demian, by Nobel Prize winner for Literature Germán Gess.
17:06When an old man tells a child, showing him a sculpture of an egg that was being broken by a
17:13bird.
17:14Did I say to you, do you understand what that sculpture is?
17:16No, he told a child.
17:20That's the reality.
17:23You have to break one world to enter a bigger one.
17:28Every challenge, every challenge, every frustration when facing it, forced.
17:32Pah!
17:32And they keep opening other doors and other doors and other doors.
17:38I must have been 20 years old when I accompanied a girlfriend I had.
17:43She later studied philosophy at the Catholic University.
17:49His last name was Serrano.
17:51We were related at some level of the family tree.
17:55And I accompanied her.
17:56She wanted to study sound.
17:59And I went with her there.
18:00And there's a piece of paper over there that said "sound".
18:03And all the branches of the degree, electronics.
18:07I had studied electronics at the Anglo-Chilean University.
18:08I had been there for a couple of years, but then I was at another electronics institute here.
18:11I already know electronics.
18:14Music.
18:15Oh, music!
18:16Hey!
18:17And I saw the curriculum for the sound engineering degree.
18:21And I loved it.
18:24But it fascinated me.
18:27Well, I finished my degree and she didn't.
18:30I was exempt from the last semester and all that.
18:33Sometimes I wasn't even looking for a challenge.
18:36But life led me to something.
18:40And I went through the door.
18:42I felt it in my soul.
18:44I have to do this.
18:45And so I progressed.
18:49Life is the path of the warrior.
18:52I'm reading parts of a book that was actually written by a guy who was a samurai warrior.
18:56Descendant of the samurai warriors.
18:58Creator of Aikido.
18:59And that martial arts technique is so that the bigger the opponent, the more effective it becomes.
19:07We can turn it against us even more.
19:10We turn that force against them.
19:13Well.
19:15We are all warriors.
19:18That's why even the Bible talks about, hey, haven't you heard that we have a fight going on here?
19:28No.
19:30We are fighting.
19:31Not against people.
19:34Against spirits.
19:36Spiritual hosts that dominate this world.
19:40Therefore.
19:43In a hurry.
19:45Find a sword.
19:47Have your sword.
19:50Your helmet.
19:51Your shield.
19:53And he begins to explain that the sword is the word.
19:57The shield is faith.
19:59The helmet is the certainty of the life that awaits us beyond.
20:04It's identical, identical, identical.
20:07I remember the movie Troy.
20:08I think I'll upload a scene of that tomorrow.
20:11When the warrior Achilles goes.
20:14And he dies, his protectors and his entire helmet.
20:17And he's going to face it.
20:19He's going to face what he has to face.
20:22Period.
20:24Protected.
20:26Of course, it's not stupid to confront them either.
20:28Oh no.
20:29One has to use cunning.
20:31He needs to use his intelligence.
20:33He has to do things with artistry, with beauty.
20:37Like when we used to make those crafts.
20:39We made a complete mess of things.
20:41I remember once I was with some friends.
20:45And my friend Patricio Martínez Reyes arrived.
20:48Hey, let me do something.
20:50And I had been doing things for years.
20:53And it was already there.
20:55Ah, astute.
20:56And it was.
20:57And he quickly did something.
20:58And we laughed.
21:00Because it wasn't something...
21:01It was the first one I'd ever done, obviously.
21:03With time he would have done really well.
21:05And it made us laugh.
21:06The same applies to life.
21:08One has to prepare for these things.
21:11The challenges I faced when I was 14 years old.
21:15If I saw them from now on, they were nothing.
21:18But at that moment they were my whole life.
21:23The child who cries because he cannot have a bicycle.
21:27It is identical to the adult man who cannot have a car to take his family on vacation.
21:32It's the same thing.
21:34Each at their own level.
21:36We are like fractals.
21:38They're like Russian nesting dolls.
21:40One breaks that and breaks.
21:42And it's as if one keeps encountering the same challenges.
21:44But on a larger scale.
21:46In a higher octave.
21:51Therefore...
21:54Thanks have still been given for the insults.
21:57Hey, this happened to me.
22:00My neighbors...
22:02So much for that, I pulled up the tree.
22:04The other tree fell down.
22:06The other tree withered away from grief, my friend.
22:08All the little birds that lived there are gone.
22:12Well.
22:14But now there is more sun.
22:16They gave me some flowers that I love.
22:19I remember that in a book I wrote...
22:21I wrote a chapter about that flower.
22:23What is a lily?
22:25Which has another name in Celta.
22:27I smell that flower.
22:29And I put it on.
22:30And that's literal.
22:31Just from smelling that flower.
22:33That pink flower.
22:36It was worth it, my friend.
22:37Live.
22:38It sounds exaggerated.
22:40That's just how I am.
22:42I really feel that way.
22:43You smell like a lily when you see her.
22:44Smell it.
22:45And tell me what you think.
22:50The trees are gone.
22:51More sun is coming.
22:52I even thought...
22:53I'm going to install some solar panels.
22:55Well.
22:56Some flowers appeared.
22:57They filled a mountain with blue flowers.
22:59It turned out that he had never had it before.
23:01A neighbor has already come out to complain...
23:03Hey, there are a lot of blue flowers.
23:04I'm going to cut off the ones that are coming this way.
23:07Already.
23:08Do it.
23:11I am in this world.
23:12There are spirits that control the world.
23:15There are strange people.
23:16Ideally, one would be at peace with everything, but sometimes it's not up to oneself.
23:21Be grateful even for the insults, setbacks, and even for those bad people who make you live through bad times.
23:28Treating each obstacle as an essential part of your training in the art of peace.
23:39Having learned crafts.
23:42Learning crafts taught me to stop and focus, to use fine motor skills.
23:47I later used that same technique when playing guitar.
23:51And I later applied all those disciplines to teaching.
23:54And so it progressed.
23:57Well, and then books appeared, and other friends, and other people.
24:01That and others were leaving.
24:03That's life, it's a journey.
24:06The path of the warrior.
24:09That's why all ancient people grew up with books like the Iliad or the Odyssey.
24:17They are warrior sagas.
24:20All the Nordic people, almost three-quarters of all the Nordic sagas are made in honor of Big Wolf.
24:30A warrior who was going to fight.
24:33Where there were villages that, I don't know, were harassed by monsters.
24:39And he would go and fight.
24:41And he faced it.
24:43Together with their Aucas, they believe that their warrior.
24:47And they taught people how to fight.
24:51That's how life is.
24:54Some people get used to facing challenges.
24:58And those are the teachers, the professors, the older brothers of others.
25:01As was the case with my friend Botafogo at one time.
25:04He doesn't even know this.
25:05But for all my people from that time, it was like, wow!
25:09The writings of Botafogo.
25:11Wow!
25:12An Argentinian.
25:14It got to the point that he later wrote a magazine called Musiquero.
25:18Thanks to that magazine, there were other teachers like him.
25:22I made my first sound console.
25:24I didn't have the money to buy a console.
25:26I made it myself, I manufactured it.
25:28There are always teachers.
25:30Always.
25:34What's important sometimes is understanding that we are protectors of the world and guardians of the paths.
25:42Then when we learn that, we then see other friends or disciples or brothers of the path.
25:49And we explained to them, "Hey, go this way."
25:52Haven't you thought about doing this?
25:55Sure, I was just asking.
25:58I didn't have anyone to tell me, hey, do this.
26:00But he simply gave up his life.
26:03Life guided us.
26:05There is an advantage then, when one finds someone from whom one can learn something, a piece of advice.
26:12Not having him as a teacher and everything he says is true, that doesn't exist.
26:15But examine everything and retain what is good.
26:18Learn from good examples.
26:20And there are as many good examples as bad examples.
26:27Every disappointment is a key to success.
26:32How is that possible?
26:34Sure, it's like a path that wasn't meant to be that way, you know.
26:40I remember that this girlfriend, all I wanted was to marry her.
26:45Well, we separated because of life's circumstances.
26:48And then, with time, I saw her; she was as beautiful as ever.
26:51But I realized that our spirits were different.
26:55We would have separated by now.
26:59Every disappointment is a key to success because it guides us.
27:02It's not that way.
27:05Sometimes you have to insist, yes.
27:08But sometimes you have to follow the signs and say, hey, it's not just this way.
27:12Every disappointment is a key to success.
27:16Every mistake teaches us something.
27:19And if we learn that something, we can explain it to others so they can avoid making the same mistake.
27:27same mistake.
27:29There is a plant, I don't remember the name, a field plant, that is poisonous.
27:33No, I don't have to taste the poison to know it's poison.
27:37Someone has already tried it and died.
27:39That's also how one explains things.
27:43Now, life is practical.
27:45With everything one can share, everyone has to learn from practice.
27:49I want to end this.
27:51Each day of human life contains joy, anger, sorrow and pleasure, darkness and light, growth and decay.
27:58Every moment is etched with nature's grand design.
28:02Do not deny or oppose the cosmic order of things.
28:06We are being trained.
28:09Because we are protectors of the world and guardians of the paths of gods and Buddhas.
28:16Well, friends, this was part of the book The Art of Peace.
28:19And we're going to go at a faster pace so we can get ahead of the others who are coming later.
28:24back.
28:24Because this is a human chain that never ends.
28:28We are just passing through this world, we are learning.
28:32Guardians of the world, protectors of the path of gods and Buddhas.
28:36That's who we are.
28:37See you tomorrow.
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