Vol 3, Page 96 – Okay
Oh! Oh! Now he’s done it.
This week SpiderForest welcomes some webcomics about Fantastic New Worlds. Remember to always travel with a buddy.
The Last Traveler: Keira is lost in an alternate world where portal travelers are outlawed and met with an untimely end. Finding a way home becomes increasingly complicated as she hides among nobility where she becomes the catalyst to uncovering long kept secrets of a royal family.
Corner the Maze: Follow the adventures of Chimalli Ramírez, a racing driver who has found himself stranded in another dimension after veering off track during a sudden rain storm. He’s still not sure whether he hit the wall or actually went through the strange glowing green portal, but either way, he’s determined to fight his way back home and finish the race.
Fighting Dreamers: Whenever something dreams, a universe is created. Thousands are spawned a day. But when these universes are under threat by monsters that aim to destroy them, warriors are needed to protect these universes. And that’s where the Dreamers come in,the dream avatars of sleeping heroes that are capable of jumping into these universes to save the day! Oh yeah and the sleeping heroes happen to be house cats.
Goddess of Paradise: An ancient goddess wakes from a long slumber only to find her divine authority mysteriously taken from her. In order to restore her former glory, she’ll need to journey across the remains of her territory, reunite with close relationships, and face the problems she left with them long ago.
HOW DARE, JC! The nerve of him!
*googles bulldagger*
GASP, JC, your mother would be appalled, sir.
He seems a little bitter.
a most important existential question. so very hard to answer.
our mind’s perception of our mind is a very slippery subject.
Alan Watts used to describe as a headlight trying to illuminate itself.
i’ve heard people with heart surgery sometimes feel they are a different person afterwards.
and then there are ample examples of amputees with “phantom limbs,” which not only feel as if they are there but itch sometimes as well. and that’s just the “physical” side of it, so to speak.
to change one’s entire body would be an even further extreme.
if i understand it rightly, the Taoists never had the mind/body problem inherent in western philosophy. the mind and the body were always “one”, never “two.” the question never arose. if the body changed of course the mind changed. they were the same entity. to separate the mind from the body would be like trying to separate “wetness” from “liquid.” while not exactly the same the definitions of each are inherent in the other.