41a1c88ae6
- Rewrite docs/en/README.md in a plainer, more honest voice: less cathedral, more conversation. - Rewrite index.html to match: clearer lede, softer claims, Rule of Life as the primary path in, Delta Chat tucked away. - Add docs/en/rule_of_life.md — a simple daily and seasonal practice for people who don't want a church but do want a rhythm. Per Scientiam, Per Aequilibrium, Per Continuum.
88 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
88 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
# A Rule of Life
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### *Church of Kosmo*
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---
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A rule of life is a rhythm. Not a set of obligations, not a program — just a way of moving through time so that the things that matter don't keep getting crowded out by the things that don't.
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You don't need to join anything to follow it. You don't need to believe it completely before you try it. You just need to be willing to pay attention.
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---
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## Daily
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**In the morning, before anything else — three breaths.**
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One for your body. One for your mind. One for the world outside yourself.
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It takes thirty seconds. The point isn't the breathing — it's the pause. Most days we go from unconscious to reactive without ever passing through aware. This interrupts that.
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After the breaths, pick one idea to carry through the day. Something worth noticing: *am I being honest right now? Am I taking more than I'm giving? Is what I'm doing today something I'd be glad about in ten years?* Not as a judgment. As a quiet question you keep in your pocket.
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**At some point during the day, before significant work:**
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Ask yourself whether you're trying to understand something or control it. The difference matters more than it sounds. Most damage — personal, social, environmental — comes from people who stopped being curious and started being certain. Stay on the curious side as long as you can.
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**In the evening, one question:**
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*Was I in balance today?* Not perfect — balance isn't perfection. Just: did I give and take roughly fairly? Did I learn something? Did I add to the world or subtract from it? Notice, without punishing yourself. Then sleep.
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---
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## Weekly
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Once a week, spend twenty minutes doing nothing useful.
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No phone, no music, no reading. Sit, walk, or work with your hands on something simple. Let your mind go where it goes.
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This sounds trivial. It isn't. Most people in modern life never let their attention rest without filling the gap immediately. The ideas that actually matter to you — what you believe, what you want, what you're afraid of — tend to surface in that gap, if you let it open.
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Also once a week, ask yourself two questions:
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*What did I learn this week?*
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*What did I take care of?*
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Learning and care are the two things that seem to give human life consistent meaning across cultures, across history. If a week passes where the answer to both is "nothing," don't spiral — just notice, and begin again.
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---
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## Seasonally
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Four times a year, the balance of light shifts noticeably. These moments have been marked by almost every culture that ever existed, for good reason — they're real, observable, and they give you a natural structure for thinking in longer arcs than a week.
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**Spring equinox** *(around 20 March)*
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Begin something. It doesn't have to be large. Name one question you want to live with for the next few months — something you genuinely don't know the answer to.
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**Summer solstice** *(around 21 June)*
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Share something you've learned. Teach one thing to one person. Write something down. The knowledge that stays only inside one person eventually disappears.
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**Autumn equinox** *(around 22 September)*
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Review. What came of what you started in spring? Write it down — not to judge it, but to remember it. Express gratitude to someone who helped you understand something, this year or any year.
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**Winter solstice** *(around 21 December)*
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Rest. Accept that the year had gaps and failures and unfinished things. They're part of it. In the darkest point, the next cycle is already beginning — you just can't see it yet. You don't need to.
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---
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## A personal commitment
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This is optional, and private. Speak it aloud when it feels true — not as membership in anything, but as a statement of what you're trying to do:
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> *I want to understand more than I want to be right.*
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> *I want to contribute more than I consume.*
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> *I accept that I'm part of something I didn't start and won't finish.*
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> *I'll try to leave it a little better than I found it.*
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> *When I fail at this, I'll start again.*
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---
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## On starting
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Don't try to do all of this at once. Start with the morning pause. Add the weekly silence when it feels natural. Mark one seasonal threshold before you mark four.
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The point isn't the practice. The point is that a life with some deliberate rhythm in it tends to feel more like yours than one without.
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---
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*Church of Kosmo — kosmo.church*
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