Archive for the 'Wahrheit' Category

Sep 11 2008

9/11 - Life in a World of Illusions

9-11.jpg     When was the last time you couldn’t believe your eyes?

     For me that was Tuesday 11 September 2001, seven years ago today, when I saw airplanes crashing into the World Trade Centre in New York on TV, collapsing the twin towers within two hours.

     This simply cannot be happening, I thought. Is this a movie? It was just too outrageous to be real - and yet, as the tragedy unfolded before our very eyes live on TV, I had to accept it as true - seeing is believing, isn’t it?

     As incredible as the 9/11 events were at the time, they are part of our reality today and we see the world with different eyes - life as we know it has changed, not only in the USA.

     Although I lived in Cape Town at the time and I haven’t been visiting New York since then, it never occurred to me that 9/11 might be a gigantic, cruel show. Of course is wasn’t. However, we can believably show anything on screen these days with special effects technology.

     After all, in 1997 a movie called ‘Wag the Dog’ with Dustin Hoffman and Robert de Niro won two Oscars : a clever Hollywood producer and an American politician fabricate a war in Albania for TV, only to divert the public’s attention from a sex-scandal which threatens the re-election of the country’s president.

     Is it ironic that this whole scenario is very believable these days?

     Watching Fahrenheit 9/11 again on Tuesday and last night’s daily soap operas about the election campaigns in Austria and the USA didn’t exactly help, either.

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Feb 29 2008

Simple Truths : Great Inspirational Quotes

Published by Berend under Zeit, Wahrheit, Zitate/Quotes, English

Zeit     Have you got a minute?

     Of course you do - the end of the world week has arrived, relax.

     Yes, I’m writing this in English for a change, just a quickie - if you want the gist of it in German, go to my article ‘African Horizons’ that I wrote in November : today is all about inspirational quotes again.

     Why? Because you told me that you love them just as much as I do - and earlier this week Mac Anderson of ‘Simple Truths’ sent me a link to his little movie ‘Great Quotes from Great Leaders’ in his newletter.

     It’s really very nice, I’d like you to watch it here and no : I am not one of his affiliates trying to sell you something. Maybe I should.

     But Mac Anderson reminded me that I have my very own collection of favourite inspirational quotes with even better photos - its a PowerPoint Show called ‘African Horizons’, you can watch it online here and even download it to your computer safely. 

African Horizons Screen meditation

     I am sure you have a minute - just click, sit back and relax.

     And if you then click on ‘Emal this’ below you can pass this article on to someone else who reads English and wants to relax this weekend - try, it’s fun!

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Oct 23 2007

Zeit Ist Geld

Published by Berend under Geld, Zeit, Wahrheit, Inspiration, Deutsch

     “Zeit ist Geld?” Das ist ja gar nicht wahr.

     Tatsache ist, daß Zeit viel wertvoller ist als Geld. Das sieht man schon allein daran, daß wir gerne viel mehr Geld ausgeben würden, wenn wir mehr davon hätten.

     Zeit dagegen sparen wir, wo immer wir können. Wir erfinden die tollsten Sachen, nur um irgendwas schneller machen zu können - und stellen hinterher oft fest, daß wir mehr Zeit für die Geräte brauchen als für die Erledigung der Aufgabe.

     Zeit ist nicht erneuerbar, jeder hat nur 24 Stunden am Tag zur Verfügung und sobald wir sie verbraucht haben sind sie unwieder-bringlich weg. Was bleibt ist nur die Erinnerung an diese Zeit.

     Für Geld kriegen wir auch einen Gegenwert, aber überleg dir ganz genau, was du heute mit deiner Zeit machst, damit deine Erinnerungen daran nicht verrosten oder sonstwie auf dem Müll landen.  

     Weißt du noch, was du gestern gemacht hast?

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Sep 17 2007

Ist Das Wahr?

Published by Berend under Wahrheit, Zitate/Quotes, Deutsch

     Ist das eigentlich wahr?

  • Viren verursachen Krankeiten
  • Kalorien beeinflussen unser Körpergewicht
  • Inflation ist unvermeidlich
  • Gefängnisse reduzieren Kriminalität
  • Waffen bringen uns Sicherheit

     Die meisten glauben das - und was wir glauben, das ist wahr für uns. So stellen wir uns die Welt heute vor.

     Wir glauben auch, daß die Welt wirklich so ist, wie wir sie uns vorstellen. Unsere Vorstellung von der Welt prägt unser tägliches Verhalten und bestimmt damit die Realität, in der wir leben.

     Vor ein paar hundert Jahren glaubte man, daß die Erde flach sei und man herunterfallen würde, wenn man nur weit genug segelt. Ist die Welt wirklich so, wie wir sie uns heute vorstellen?

     Glaube ist ja eigentlich Illusion und ändert sich mit den Jahren - was wir heute glauben ist nicht unbedingt ‘wahrer’ als das, was man früher glaubte.

“Was wir zu wissen glauben
hält uns häufig davon ab,
zu lernen.”
Claude Bernard (1813 - 1878)

Glaube birgt also auch Gefahren.

Was glaubst du zu wissen? 

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Sep 02 2007

Flying Dutchman Seen in Cape Town’s False Bay

Flying Dutchman     I believe there is a ghost ship knocking around in our parts, and it’s not just a legend!

     Doing some research on the Internet, I tripped over some eerie fables about the Bermuda Triangle - but now I am looking out for the red sails of the Flying Dutchman on the horizon right here at Cape Town’s False Bay in South Africa.

     According to the tale of the Flying Dutchman, a maniacal Dutch sea captain once struggled to round the Cape of Good Hope in the teeth of a terrible gale that threatened to sink his ship and all aboard.

     Despite the pleadings from sailors and passengers, the captain refused to change course, swearing blasphemous oaths. When he finally killed the leader of an ensuing mutiny and threw him overboard, a shadowy figure appeared on the quarterdeck and condemned him to sail the oceans for eternity with a ghostly crew of dead men, “bringing death to all who sight your spectral ship, and to never make port or know a moment’s peace.”

     For centuries the Flying Dutchman was spotted, canvas spread and masts creaking in a fearful wind. Sometimes he lead other ships astray, onto shallow beaches and hidden reefs. The story of the Flying Dutchman has been elaborated by many writers, and apparently it is more than a piece of fiction - it even inspired German composer Richard Wagner to write his opera “Der Fliegende Holländer”.

     The phantom ship has also been seen in the 20th century, by the crew of a German submarine during World War II amongst others. One of the first recorded sightings, however, occurred on 11 July 1881 when the Royal Navy ship H.M.S. Bacchante was rounding the tip of Africa and sighted the Flying Dutchman.

     The midshipman, a prince who later became King George V of England, recorded in his log that the lookout man and the officer of the watch had seen the Flying Dutchman : “A strange red light as of a phantom ship all aglow, in the midst of which light the mast, spars and sails of a brig 200 yards distant stood out in strong relief.”

     As recently as March 1939, the ghost ship was seen here in False Bay by dozens of bathers in neighbouring Glencairn who supplied detailed descriptions of the ship, although most had probably never seen a 17th century merchant vessel. The British South Africa Annual of 1939 included the story, derived from newspaper reports : “With uncanny volition, the ship sailed steadily on as the Glencairn beach folk stood about, keenly discussing the whys and wherefores of the vessel. Just as the excitement reached its climax, however, the mystery ship vanished into thin air as strangely as it had come.”

     Is it true that a phantom ship appears to unsuspecting people here? Having lived in Simon’s Town for nine years with a view of False Bay reaching from Cape Point to Muizenberg, I have never seen the Flying Dutchman myself. It is, therefore, not part of my reality - but it could nevertheless be true. The above eyewitness reports are credible enough to suggest that a ghost ship is not mere hocus-pocus.

     When we look for ‘the truth, and nothing but the truth’ in criminal proceedings, it is easy enough to determine ‘the truth’ - even if the suspected thief is lying, witnesses will testify that he walked into a jewelry store at a certain date and time and stole a golden watch. Sadly, this is a common and believable occurrence these days.

     Anything we believe is true for us. Most people today believe that calories affect body weight, viruses cause illness, inflation is inevitable, jails curb crime and weapons create safety. Our conception of the world shapes our daily behaviour, our beliefs determine our ‘reality’ and the world we experience is the result of the general agreement that things really are the way we think they are.

     But are they? Only a few hundred years ago, the earth was believed to be flat and if one sailed too far, beyond ‘the four corners’ of our world, one would fall off the edge into a great abyss. This became ‘the truth’ of the Dark Ages because enough persons of authority accepted that belief at the time and used it to extend their positions of power as long as they could.

     Beliefs change, however, and the beliefs we hold today are not ‘truer’ than what people believed some time ago. Beliefs are illusions, actually - an illusion is something that you think is true, but is not.

     Another implication of this is that there is no such thing as ‘the truth’ - we are free to believe anything we want, and no two belief-systems are absolutely identical, so the only truths that exist are ‘my truth’, ‘your truth’, ‘his truth’ and about six billion others.

     If we are obsessed with finding ‘the truth’, we are barking up the wrong tree. Because our age is ruled by facts and science, the idea of illusions ruling our lives is frightening to many. All too easily, however, we overlook the enormous opportunities of being able to believe anything we want, perceive our own truth, act accordingly and therefore create our own reality. Believe it or not, but that’s what you and I are doing every day.

     If you live in the neighbourhood and see the Flying Dutchman, please let me know, will you? I mean it.

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