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Eat the Cookie

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Manage episode 374777473 series 3504257
Content provided by Sam Ellis, Joe Loh and Ali Catramados, Sam Ellis, Joe Loh, and Ali Catramados. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sam Ellis, Joe Loh and Ali Catramados, Sam Ellis, Joe Loh, and Ali Catramados or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Growing up Hare Krishna / Note to self: "I love you. Keep going" / the beach

1. Being in the Moomba Parade as a Hare kid, in a fierce competition with the Gas and Fuel Corporation for Moomba float prizes / Krishnas coverage of Moomba Back to Godhead magazine July 1985

(Does Moomba mean 'up your bum'? Was it revenge from Bill Onus for Moomba organisers deliberately upstaging Labor Day in a plot against workers?)

Hare Krishna Moomba on youtube, closer to 1990

George Harrison explains why chanting Hare Krishna does something

Going to India. The shock of recognition. Discovering that one religion borrowed heavily from another one. If a Sikh person offers you a cookie from in a passing parade of dancing and singing... take the cookie, and hopefully it might change you. Pilgrimage could be to India, or New York.

Whatever happened to the Hare Krishnas? Life in Hare Krishna boarding school

2. "I love you, keep going" - not an inspiration from instagram, but a guy in New York with a very uncomfortable skin condition. Try it yourself!

3. The beach - why is it such a great place to think and let go of your worries? Because it's liminal. The littoral is the line between land and sea. It's always moving. This is a reminder that everything is temporary, and that either relaxes you or can freak you out. Don't even worry it's all good, that house on the cliff, you can't afford it, and it will fall in the sea one day. The almighty ocean says 'you are small' and that's good

But also the beach can mean body image worries. And that's why lots of us are not 'beach people' and neither is Joe, not in that way. But he sure loves a walk on the beach.

Coastline paradox

Fractal dimension of coastline of Australia, in the journal Nature

Earth scale fractals

Earths most beautiful fractals

Fractals and Britain's coast

Image: a Hare Krishna flat from Back to Godhead magazine. Sometime in the 80s

Creators & Guests

Hit us up on threads or instagram @thetenthousandthings
or email, that’s the classy thing to do
  continue reading

49 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 374777473 series 3504257
Content provided by Sam Ellis, Joe Loh and Ali Catramados, Sam Ellis, Joe Loh, and Ali Catramados. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sam Ellis, Joe Loh and Ali Catramados, Sam Ellis, Joe Loh, and Ali Catramados or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Growing up Hare Krishna / Note to self: "I love you. Keep going" / the beach

1. Being in the Moomba Parade as a Hare kid, in a fierce competition with the Gas and Fuel Corporation for Moomba float prizes / Krishnas coverage of Moomba Back to Godhead magazine July 1985

(Does Moomba mean 'up your bum'? Was it revenge from Bill Onus for Moomba organisers deliberately upstaging Labor Day in a plot against workers?)

Hare Krishna Moomba on youtube, closer to 1990

George Harrison explains why chanting Hare Krishna does something

Going to India. The shock of recognition. Discovering that one religion borrowed heavily from another one. If a Sikh person offers you a cookie from in a passing parade of dancing and singing... take the cookie, and hopefully it might change you. Pilgrimage could be to India, or New York.

Whatever happened to the Hare Krishnas? Life in Hare Krishna boarding school

2. "I love you, keep going" - not an inspiration from instagram, but a guy in New York with a very uncomfortable skin condition. Try it yourself!

3. The beach - why is it such a great place to think and let go of your worries? Because it's liminal. The littoral is the line between land and sea. It's always moving. This is a reminder that everything is temporary, and that either relaxes you or can freak you out. Don't even worry it's all good, that house on the cliff, you can't afford it, and it will fall in the sea one day. The almighty ocean says 'you are small' and that's good

But also the beach can mean body image worries. And that's why lots of us are not 'beach people' and neither is Joe, not in that way. But he sure loves a walk on the beach.

Coastline paradox

Fractal dimension of coastline of Australia, in the journal Nature

Earth scale fractals

Earths most beautiful fractals

Fractals and Britain's coast

Image: a Hare Krishna flat from Back to Godhead magazine. Sometime in the 80s

Creators & Guests

Hit us up on threads or instagram @thetenthousandthings
or email, that’s the classy thing to do
  continue reading

49 episodes

All episodes

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