Produce Quotes - page 55
As writers, of course we're interested in human beings, human stories, human trauma, and all that is very compelling for readers. But when we write these powerful stories about individual people, we have the illusion that we've made a difference. And of course we have-people read the books, they're touched emotionally by these kinds of stories, and that's great. But to the extent that the stories that we're telling are about people who are weaker, in some way-they come from a small country, or a forcibly removed population, they're underrepresented collectively-individual stories don't change the conditions that produce those refugees in the first place...
Viet Thanh Nguyen
Denying miracles, the Teacher pointed out the concealed powers of human nature which, when developed, can produce the so-called miracles.
The method of developing these powers is interpreted in Buddhist books and is known under the name of the science "Iddhi-Vidhanana,” which points out two forms of manifestation of these powers and two ways to attain them. One, the lower, is reached by way of various ascetic and other physical practices; the other higher one, embracing all possible manifestations, is attained by the power of inner development. The first method of developing these powers is not lasting and may be lost, whereas inner development can never be lost. Its mastery is attained by following the noble way indicated by Buddha. All these hidden powers gradually unfold in man, usually of themselves, in proportion to man's mastery of the lower expressions of his nature in a whole series of previous lives.
Helena Roerich