I've done very little blogging of any type for the last year or so, but when I stumbled across an article from Vice on pacifist gaming, of all things, Grand Theft Auto, I had to place a link here. I haven't played Grand Theft Auto since I tried to get GTA 3 to play on a computer that was not nearly up to processing demands of the game, but it's hard to imagine this working well. My own pacifist gaming has taken a pause after I finished Alpha Protocol, and took what turned out to be a very long pause in Deus Ex. Stupid job, always getting in the way of good gaming!
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Pacifist Gaming in Grand Theft Auto
Labels:
ahimsa,
Alpha Protocol,
Deus Ex,
gamers,
gaming,
Pacifist Run
Sunday, March 9, 2014
Mortal Kombat and Surviving the 30 Day Plank Challenge
Recently I stumbled across a Facebook post recommending a
“30 Day Plank Challenge”, taking you from 20 seconds in plank to a full five
minutes in one month’s time. Seemed like
a great idea to me, although I realized that there is probably no scientific
validity behind this method or rate of improvement, and my fellow yoga teachers
pointed out the terrible form of the woman on the post. Regardless, I was up for a challenge and
raring to go.
Timing your plank is tough, and at first this was the
hardest part. If you have a timer in
front of you, you end up staring at the seconds go by, and then boy do they go
by slowly. As a yogi I wanted to spend
the time exploring my breath, alignment, and searching for my bandhas, not
staring at the clock. I got into a habit
at first of playing podcasts on tantra philosophy on my ipod, because it fit
the mood and gave me an accurate time.
Eventually I hit on an ideal way to proceed- setting my Kindle up under
my face and watching Mortal Kombat videos on YouTube, turning off the sound, and setting them up so the video ended at exactly my goal time.
Mortal Kombat and yoga?
I started to focus on my yoga practice at the same time that I started
reading the Matt Fraction / Ed Brubaker / David Aja martial arts comic Immortal
Iron Fist. I loved the idea of a superhero who solved problems with esoteric
notions like meditation, chi, and alignment.
When the comic took a turn into a pan-dimensional martial arts tournament,
it visually took on a look from the Mortal Kombat video game franchise. Thus there are times when I picture a room
full of yogis and it looks like a bunch of my friends in tadasana, and
sometimes it looks a lot more like Kitana, Raiden, and Mileena.
There are some fascinating Mortal Kombat videos on
YouTube, conveniently at or around the durations for the various stages in the
30 Day Plank Challenge. When I was at 45
seconds it seemed unlikely that I was ever going to make a minute. Today was my last day at 2:30. Time to start picking longer videos.
Labels:
embodyoga,
gaming,
mortal kombat,
plank,
yoga
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Meaning of Mudras
I’ve been holding my hands in the same mudra since I
started meditating three years ago, and never knew why. Here's a great chart to help you understand the meaning of the mudras.
Turns out Magneto and I both meditate with the shuni mudra (but only he gets to levitate) |
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