Author Topic: Jhananda's Blog  (Read 44986 times)

Jhanananda

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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #15 on: October 02, 2012, 03:44:17 PM »
As a demonized contemplative, who has been forced into the mendicant life, I am forced into a close relationship with the homeless.  I have learned many survival strategies from the career homeless. 

You know a career homeless person when you see how well they have worked their lifestyle.  Most of them live in an old van.  Often that old van is a Chevy G-20, like mine. 

The career homeless often work their van over and over again as life long project to make it comfortable, safe, and invisible.  Last year I carpeted the inside of my van, cleaned it out, and organized it.

Keeping warm in the winter is important to someone who lives in a van, because living in an automobile is like living in a heat exchanger, they are hot when it is hot outside, and cold when it is cold outside.  So, to keep warm in the winter time I have used curtains made of towels, blankets, and clothing; and I heat the inside with candles.

The career homeless often apply Double Bubble Foil Insulation to the windows as well; not just for warmth, but also for privacy.  So, more than a year ago I bought a large roll of the Double Bubble Foil Insulation to apply to my windows and insulate my ice chests.  Since then I found some 2" thick sheets of polystyrene insulation, which I shaped for my windows.  I cut them in two length-wise so that I could open my windows. It worked great for keeping warm in the van last winter in Prescott, AZ, which is at 5,500 feet (1600M) of elevation, where the temperatures can drop down to 0F (-18c) at night.  The insulation also helps to keep the van cool when it starts to warm up in the spring time.  I remove and store them for the summer months

The career homeless often have one or more ice chests, and I have noticed that some of them have improved its insulation with Double Bubble Foil Insulation, aluminized bubble insulation.  I noticed that when I recently turned a 5-gallon plastic bucket into an ice trap for distillation of waste oils that the ice remained in it for more than 24 hours.  So, yesterday, I improved the insulation on my two ice chests with the Double Bubble Foil Insulation.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2012, 05:52:19 PM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #16 on: October 09, 2012, 01:54:09 PM »
Providing services for the contemplative community has become increasingly hard for me to justify.  It has become clear to me that almost no one meditates deeply, and no one really cares to.  Most people are just playing mind-games when they think they are meditating, and they will donate mountains of wealth to frauds, before they will even send a nickle in support of an authentic contemplative tradition. So, I am going to find something more constructive to do with my time.
« Last Edit: October 10, 2012, 07:45:41 PM by Jhanananda »
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stugandolf

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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #17 on: October 10, 2012, 01:30:03 AM »
Jeff,  I have often wondered how you do what you do... But then we have met and I know how egoless you are.  You are an incredible person who is very skilled in advising contemplatives - sometimes a single word from you has my helped my journey.  This summer when you told me "you are a major financial contributer to the GWV" I was surprised.  I live in medium poverty and although I had a homeless period long ago, I have been a homeowner for 16 years.  I have donated money to the GWV when I could.  Others might donate to GWV if they only knew you. This past summer Jeffrey,  self ordained arhat, ordained me a once returner...  GWV members  you do not know what you are missing...  Stu

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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #18 on: October 10, 2012, 07:49:06 PM »
Thanks, Stu, for your kind and continued support.  You have been a steady contributor in one way or another to my work longer than anyone.  It goes to show your choice of a simple lifestyle, and dedicated contemplative life has born much fruit.  In fact you have more attainment than any Roche, or Rimpoche I ever met. It also shows that few people are as dedicated to the simple, contemplative life, as you and I are.  Blessings to you,
« Last Edit: October 10, 2012, 08:05:15 PM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #19 on: November 10, 2012, 03:05:56 AM »
A storm rolled through Sedona last night.  I found it very pleasant listing to the rain patter upon the roof of my van, as I waited to enter the immaterial domains.  I found myself thankful for the peace, quiet and solitude I find here.

This morning it was a bit cold for me, so I went inside the warehouse that a friend allows me to take refuge in, if I need it.  There I lit 20 candles to warm the main workroom, which is also a kitchen.

Last winter I found a box full of candles at a yard sale for very little money.  I bought it then, when I had a little money, and a fresh memory of how cold it had been the winter before.  I did not burn many of the candles last winter, because it was a warm winter.

The candles are seasonal candles, mostly for Christmas, so they are not practical shapes for candles.  This means at least 1/2 of the wax goes to waste when the candle had burned itself out.  I have been collecting the wax from the burned out candles into a plastic bag from a 10-pound bag of ice.  The bag is now full, and I this fall I have already burned through half the candles.

So, today I worked on reviving 2 votive candles that had burned out with half the wax left.  I found I could heat them on one of my candle-stoves until all of the wax melted, and add more wax until it was full,  then I pressed into the molten wax a taper, which would be the new wick.  I placed tweezers around the top of the taper to keep it centered as the wax cooled and solidified around it.

This candle stove is big enough for 2 4-hour candles, but I only need one for this project.

I also used a diffuser to avoid over heating a small portion of the glass and causing it to shatter.  The diffuser is just an electrical cover, but it happens to fit over the candle-stove perfectly, and works very well as a diffuser.

This morning I also fired up a candle sensor, which I had found in the yard here, and I placed some pine sap on the burner so that the warehouse smelled like the forest.
« Last Edit: November 10, 2012, 03:11:19 AM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #20 on: November 10, 2012, 02:36:55 PM »
Tooth decay is one of the many realities of impermanence that we all must face in life.  A mendicant has to deal with the results of tooth decay without the aide of a dentist.  The root of a tooth that has been falling apart for years, finally came out this morning while sipping hot soup.

There was no pain or discomfort, but there was some sensitivity in that area of my mouth until it finally came out this morning.

Free at last.  Thank God all mighty, free at last!
« Last Edit: November 11, 2012, 04:40:46 PM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #21 on: November 11, 2012, 05:27:06 PM »
With the arrival of cold winds, clouds, rain and snow, exacerbating my arthritis, it became imperative to work in a warm, dry place, so for the last few days I have worked on insulating and heating the workshop space in the warehouse.  Even though the temperatures dropped to about 25F (-4c) I found the office was a fairly comfortable 50F (10c) when I came in from my van this morning.

Over the weekend, I insulated the 2 major heat loss zones, which were the chimney for a fire place,

and a vent for the swamp cooler. 

I plugged them both up with poly styrene foam sheets, which I found in the yard, and cut to fit.
I heated the office with candles.  I found it took about 20 candles to warm the office up to a comfy 65F (18c)


I have a solar array of 30 136watt solar panels

So, since I was not running the waste oil distillation system, then during the day I dumped excess watts into lights which heated the office, which also dried the hand-laundry

Needing to cook and heat and light mostly with candles, especially after sunset meant I was back to making candles and candle-stoves.
I converted a mint tin to a two-burner 4-hour candle stove

I also converted an empty can of stew into a 4 burner 4-hour candle stove,

but I typically find I only need 1 candle to heat a cup of coffee up, or 2 candles to warm up a can of stew

Burning 20 candles a day means I am going through a lot of candles.  Fortunately last winter I bought a box full of candles, but they are pretty inefficient, so I have burned most of them already, and they have left me with 2 large bags of stubs.  So, I modified the candle stove and 2 more empty cans of stew to function as a candle making oven.

I cut the top off of a 1-gallon water container and turned it upside down to function as insulation for the candle-oven.

Using the candles-oven to make jar candles with canning jars, which were here at the warehouse, and many of the candle stubs I had, then yesterday I made 5 canning jar candles

I also repaired 2 votive candles

I found over the years that votive candles are one of the cheapest sources of fuel and light, so I have been using them for years to keep warm in the winter in the van.  I made harnesses for all of my votive candles to keep from tipping them over.

But, I am really happy with the canning-jar-candle so I plan to make harness for them and get away from votive candles.  Also, thrift stores and yard sales are turning out to be the cheapest way to get wax, and candles.
« Last Edit: November 11, 2012, 05:34:58 PM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #22 on: November 28, 2012, 09:06:17 PM »
While keeping warm this fall I have made, and burned, a lot more candles.  I also found a large pile of wood, from a recently cut tree, sitting in the alley nearby, so I carted some of it to the garden.  I have been chopping wood for the last 2 days. 

I got the fireplace in the warehouse functional, and I have been keeping very warm next to it.  The grate for burning wood was too wide, so I recycled the fan shield from the roof top air-conditioner that I recently found by the dumpster.

Today a $10 donation came in through PayPal, as a thank-you for my alternative fuels work, but it is not going to cover the immediate needs to keep moving forward, as I need about $15 worth of fuel and some batteries.

It occurred to me today while scrounging through boxes for the two 9-volt batteries needed to operate a thermocouple gauge and my multimeter, which are needed for distilling waste motor oil, that I could be looking for sponsorships to support my research.  I am not sure how to go about it, but I would be happy to put a decal on my van, and/or place a link and an image for a sponsor on the website and forums.

Perhaps some readers here will give me some goo ideas for sponsorships.
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #23 on: December 15, 2012, 04:33:00 PM »
Beans are ready

Rain and snow arrived here Friday night, and it is now snowing, and we are expecting a major snow storm to start any minute, so it is a good thing that I found some free firewood, and I chopped it all just before the storm hit.  But, most of the wood is now gone.  With the wood nearly gone, and this warehouse being a cement tomb, means it is going to get very cold here before the end of the day, so i broke out my thermal coveralls to keep warm inside. If I only burn one stick every hour, then I can make it to 7PM tonight.  I feel like the little match girl.

Michael and Karen Hawkins came by for a visit on Michael's way to and from a retreat that was held here by someone else.  I started soaking a pot of beans 2 days before their return, and started them cooking 24 hours before, but the beans were not finished cooking for 2 more days, after they left.  I am a novice at cooking in a fireplace.  In a fire pit I would have just put the pot on top of the coals and we would have had beans in a few hours.

Sponsorships have not yet been figured out, but some donations came in, so I was able to get the gasoline I needed to make fuel, and the batteries for the multimeter, thermocouple gauge and my headlamp.  The GWV Yearly Hosting Renewal is due for website, forum,s and domains, at $120.00.

The recent donations allowed me to run my waste motor oil distillation system again.  It was a very successful run, but there were some problems, which indicated a few upgrades for the system were needed.  When more money comes I will be able to install the upgrades, which will hopefully get the waste motor oil distillation system fully functional.

I looked around to see how I could winterize this warehouse to make it more comfortable for the winter.  Four sheets of insulation could be used to cover the 3 doors, which would go a long way to making the fireplace room a comfortable sitting room.   

Still firewood is all but gone, so wood will have to be secured very soon.  It occurred to me that once I can make fuel for the van with the waste motor oil distillation system, then I could purchase a firewood gathering permit and drive out into the national forest, which is just a few miles away, and gather wood every weekend for keeping warm during the week.

A long-term solution has to be worked out, because I have solar panels, but it has been cloudy for the last 2 days, and it will be cloudy all day today.  It is 10:30AM, and there is only 36watts of gain, which is enough solar gain to power the computer, some low power lights, and the internet router, there is not enough gain to power the electric water heater, or an electric space heater, or the waste motor oil distillation system.

Being able to make diesel fuel, I searched the web for portable generators that run on diesel fuel, and found Steele Products SP-GG200 2000 Watt diesel Generator, which runs for 9.5 hours on only 1.3 gallons of diesel fuel.  I can make 10 gallons of diesel fuel in that time, so only 13% of the fuel I make could go into running the generator, and the rest could go into powering my van to get groceries, firewood, and more waste oil for fuel. The generator is only needed on cloudy days. 

I can also use the generator to power the water heater on cloudy days.  It is also light weight enough that I could mount it on the rough of my van to power the waste motor oil distillation system, which will be mounted on the pumper when it is done. And, I could run the portable diesel generator indoors, with the exhaust piped outside, and the heat generated by the engine would more than heat the entire warehouse. So, it seems like a sustainable solution for a 21st century mendicant.  Now all I need is the money to buy one.
« Last Edit: December 15, 2012, 05:28:34 PM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #24 on: December 28, 2012, 01:10:56 AM »
It has been back-to-back winter storms here now for weeks.  I have spent most of my time chopping and burning wood.  I burned the free fire wood up in the first 2 weeks.  Last week I burned through scrap lumber that lay in piles around the yard. 

Yesterday I drove to Prescott, where I received two small grocery bags of food from the local food bank, and I collected about 12 gallons of waste vegetable oil from a local restaurant, which will be turned into enough fuel to get back there in 2 weeks when I expect to find more waste vegetable oil, and some more groceries.  I also found two wooden pallets which I strapped to the rear of the van to be burned later.

One of the local church groups which serves the homeless meals on a regular basis had a turkey dinner starting at noon.  So, I ate there before leaving for Sedona.

Today I chopped up the two wooden pallets that I had recycled in Prescott, and I warm warming my feet by the fire, which is made from those pallets.  I also drive around doing errands today, and found two more wooden pallets.  It looks like one wooden pallet will keep me warm each day.
 
Recent donations have thankfully come in to support the GWV.  So, the web-hosting for the website, and two forums, and domain names has all been paid.  There was some funds left over, so I purchased some materials for the pyrolysis project.  The goal of the pyrolysis project is to be able to turn almost anything into fuel.

The original goal of the GWV's alternative fuels project was to come up with a technological solution to the problem of funding.  That project culminated in producing a mobile waste oil processing system, pictured below in a recent article published on the GWV's alternative fuels project in a local new paper in Prescott.  The project has been fully operational for 6 years, and it can turn waste vegetable oil into diesel fuel, and the van can run on it just fine.

However, since 2007, when fuel prices skyrocketed, waste vegetable oil has become more difficult to come by.  Since then I have been working on ways to transform other waste oils into diesel fuel.  That project just about ruined the engine on my van, and left me stranded numerous times.  However, I have developed methods to convert almost any waste oil, other than waste motor oil, into diesel fuel with the equipment attached to the rear of the GWv's van.

Starting about 8 months ago I began working on a way to distill waste motor oil so that it can be used as diesel fuel. That distillation project has since been expanded into a pyrolysis project in which almost anything can be converted into fuel including recycling plastics, and even wood.  The ultimate goal of the pyrolysis project is an extension of the original goal to fuel the GWV on waste oils.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2012, 01:19:51 AM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #25 on: January 30, 2013, 12:16:04 AM »
With the cold weather, rain and snow here in Sedona, AS, USA, some times I do not have enough solar gain to power the water heater.  Most days I am huddled by the fireplace to keep warm in this, otherwise, unheated warehouse.  So, I have spent my time thinking about and tinkering with wood stove designs that would work for firing my 6-gallon (24L) pyrolysis unit with, and heating water, and cooking, and keeping warm with. 

I started experimenting with a 14oz (400ml) soup can-stove, and turned it into a little hobo stove.

I then graduated to a 26oz (770ml) soup can-stove.

Then I moved to a 49oz (1.5L) broth can-stove

I then put the 26oz (770ml) soup can-stove inside the 49oz (1.5L) broth can-stove so that I could rest the pot on top of the stove without choking the fire

Then I moved to a 2lb (.9kg) coffee can-stove

Today I made the big jump to a 5-gallon (20L) bucket-stove

The holes around the bottom let air in to fuel the fire.  The holes around the top of the can help the fire burn cleaner.  There is no smoke, or soot, or smell from burning wood in these cans.  I found I could even burn painted wood cleanly in the 5-gallon (20L) bucket-stove.

There are 2 contractors here who produce a lot of scrap wood, and they like to recycle, so they bring it back to me to burn.  I plan to try running a batch of scrap wood through the pyrolysis unit to see what I get.  Then after the wood has been baked I will have charcoal, so I plan to burn the charcoal residue to fuel the next pyrolysis run.
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #26 on: March 10, 2013, 11:30:17 PM »
I have kept warm burning pallet wood this winter.  I drive around every 3 days, find 3 pallets, then take them back to the warehouse and chop them up.  The last batch of pallets kept me warm during this last 2 day winter storm in which it either rained or snowed non-stop. 

This morning I burned the last of the copped up pallet wood, so I started dismantling the last of the pallets.  My back went out so bad from chopping and prying, that I am now back on the cane. 

Chopping and hand sawing are going to have to be out from now on.  Since it was warm and sunny today, I would normally collect pallets, but I could barely walk, so I drove to the hardware store and looked into buying a kerosene heater.  They did not have one, but they had kerosene at $10/gallon.  Well, that is out.

I could extract the kerosene fraction from my distillation and pyrolysis runs, but that needs to go to fueling the van. because every gallon of gasoline I make, will make 5 gallons of diesel fuel; and every gallon of kerosene I make, will make 3 gallons of diesel fuel.  I need 10 gallons of diesel fuel every week to get groceries and check my mail at the Food Bank; as well as collect at least 10 gallons of waste oil, that I can turn into enough diesel fuel to get back to the Food Bank. So, I pondered other options.

I have plenty of solar gain from the solar panels now, and expect to have so through next Fall, with the exception of our infrequent rainy days in Norther Arizona.  So, I decided that I could purchase an electric circular saw, with which I can cut pallets apart, as well as use for the occasional building project.  I also plan to make fuel from dead and down wood while camping, so I could use the electric circular saw for that, powered by my solar panels, 6 batteries, and for a last resort the alternator on the engine, through a 2KW inverter over 200 feet of electrical extensions cords that I have already.

The declining back injury and chronic joint pain tell me; however, that this body is on the last go around.
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #27 on: March 12, 2013, 01:40:56 AM »
Relaxing for the rest of the day yesterday did not relieve the pain in my back sufficiently to rest well at night, so I drove to the emergency room, where I waited for 2 hours to be treated.  After 2 hours the nurse shot me up with something, and I drove back to the warehouse, and slept in the van for the night.

I awoke around 4:30AM, which means I slept in about 2 hours later than normal.  My back still hurt, but I could move.  I went inside I burned the last of the wood keeping warm.  I resolved to make it easier on this old beast from now on, because it is almost spent.

After the last of the wood was burned it was late morning and the temperatures outside were quite reasonable.  So, I drove to the hardware store to price an electric chain saw, and/or a circular saw.  I found the electric chain saw was $105, while the circular saw was only $60.  So, I bought the circular saw reasoning that it was about the same price as 5 gallons of kerosene, and it would last longer.

I then drove around the neighborhood in search of waste wood.  It was a good day for waste wood.  I brought three loads of scrap wood back to the warehouse.

I then ran 100 feet of extension cords (which I had already) out from the solar-powered inverter, then I used the new circular saw to cut apart one pallet.

Into a stack of fire wood

It took about 5 minutes, and did not cause much stress upon this old beast's back.

This evening I burned the wood in the new 5-gallon wood burner, which I have been using for a month now.

Finding success in free-fuel I tried baking a potato in a can.  It worked great

Recently I transformed an old 20-gallon oil drum into a can stove and tested it.  It worked great.
« Last Edit: March 12, 2013, 01:59:20 AM by Jhanananda »
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #28 on: August 23, 2013, 01:55:58 PM »
This looks like a project that actually may have some effect for the homeless.
http://www.wickedlocal.com/cambridge/features/x574261777/Signs-of-Hope-Project-aims-to-humanize-homelessness-in-Cambridge

Last week I was having one of many interesting conversations with some of my fellow homeless people at a feed, when I realized that all of us were geniuses, and that on any given day there are more geniuses present at a homeless feed than present in any university colloquium I ever attended while doing research at the University of Arizona.

We can thus gauge the sustainability of any culture by how they treat their geniuses.  If they alienate their geniuses, like the USA does, then we can conclude that it is the next dead civilization. Whereas, any civilization that constructively employs its geniuses, honors and respects them, will be the next great civilization.
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Re: Jhananda's Blog
« Reply #29 on: September 02, 2013, 02:29:35 PM »
Friday I sold my bus, and the new owner asked me to drive it for him to Tucson, so I did.  It took about 6 hours of driving, which was tiring.  Along the way we drove through 2 cities having rush hour traffic, which was anxiety producing.  Driving an old bus 235 miles was also anxiety producing.  We also drove through rain storms along the way, which was also anxiety producing.

The contemplative who wishes to make progress toward mysticism really needs to radically modify his or her lifestyle to reduce anxiety.  We often times end up living simple lifestyles, which means little money coming in.

However, sometimes life simply presents stressful situations for us to deal with, so while I drove the ancient bus on the highway, I recognized the rise of tension in my body as a response to these anxiety producing situations.  I relaxed the body, let go of the tension, kept my mind empty, and still.  Every time anxiety arose due to a thought regarding the stressful situation that I was in, I would simply release the thought, and take refuge in the still mind of the second jhana, and the charisms that arise in the 3rd.

We drove in convoy and arrived in Tucson around 8:30PM.  I parked the bus in the yard of its new owner, and made a bed for myself on one of the platforms that I had built, and rested for the night.

Rainstorms had passed through the city, which had made the air cool and most, so with the windows all open, I felt cool.  The city had its noises, which kept me awake, so I rested in deep meditation until I left the body into the immaterial domains for a few hours around midnight.

The next morning AJ, the bus owner took me out to breakfast.  We had quite an interesting conversation while we waited for my bank to open to get the money out to purchase a truck that I had been shopping for to replace the bus.  It turned out that he too is a genius, and he has had a number of religious experiences.

After breakfast he drove me to Benson, Arizona to inspect the truck.  It turned out to be even better than I expected from the stand point of features, such as it has a crane that it can deploy with considerable lifting power, but the crane folds up against the bed of the truck and takes up little room otherwise. 

The truck is an M756A2 pipeline construction truck, driver's side, which based upon the chassi of the M35A2 troupe carrier.

When I first heard of the Multi-fuel M35A2 engine about 7 years ago I thought it would be the perfect engine to run alternative fuels, and since I like to camp off-road in remote areas, then the M35A2, deuce and a half, 6x6, 2 1/2 ton vehicle, seemed to be the perfect match for my interests. 

So, after much research, and tracking people who want to sell surplus military vehicles, I finally found one that had more of what I needed than the average M35A2.  It is a 1968 M756A2 pipeline construction vehicle from Kaiser Jeep Corporation. It is based upon the M35A2 but was modified for pipeline construction.  It has 3 winches, and a A frame boom that the winches operate to move large equipment around.

M756A2 pipeline construction, front.

I plan to run it on my waste oil-gasoline blended fuel.

Driving it back to Sedona was another anxious sequence, because it is a large vehicle, which I had no experience driving.  The truck came with a 5-speed manual transmission with over drive, so on the rolling flat from Tucson to Phoenix I was able to get the truck up to 60mph (96K/H).  The vehicle turned out to drive even better than the old bus.

However, just north of Casa Grande the vehicle had a blow-out, which caused it to swerve radically to the right.  Fortunately I was in the right lane.  The vehicle drove across the shoulder, through the medium, across an on-ramp, which thankfully had no other vehicles on it, before I brought it to rest on the shoulder of the on-ramp, just before a ditch, which brought me to wounder if a 6x6 can be rolled.  The maneuver required me to stand on the brake peddle with all of my weight, while pulling to the left with all of the strength in my arms. 

The advantage of a contemplative life that bares fruit is I was able to keep my mind still to the depth of the 3rd jhana throughout the event.  However, once I had the truck at rest I found myself shaken and week.

I sat on the door step in the shade from the southern Arizona summer sun, and called AAA.  I had just upgraded to AAA RV, which states its use is for large vehicle, such as RVs, motor homes, and trucks with campers.  They told me they do not service surplus military vehicles.  But, they did send out one of the local tow truck drivers to help me figure out how to change my tire without a jack or a lug wrench.

The local tow truck drivers told me that when he had heard that an M35-class vehicle needed service he jumped for the chance to help.  However, he could not help me.  He spent an hour calling every tire shop and commercial road service business in the area, and found one of them would come at any price.  So, he left.

I called the man I bought the truck from, he couldn't help.  I called the man I sold the bus to, he was willing to help, if I could not find another option.  Then I called Daniel, my friend in Prescott, who I call Superman, because he comes to the rescue of homeless people.  He was homeless until he met and married a woman on disability, so you can imagine that they do not have much money.  The local churches and service groups in the area cover his expenses for driving the disabled, homeless, and veterans to their medical appointments, and rescues of road gypsies, like me. 

While waiting for Daniel to come I sat in the shade of the disabled truck.  It was hot, so I ended up drinking all of my water before he arrived. It was 150 miles drive for him, so it took him 3 hours to get to me, which was well after sunset.  He bought me a 20 ton bottle jack, and his 1" socket set, and a 10foot long 1" pipe to use as a cheater on his 1" ratchet to move the 1 1/2" lug nuts.  We needed the cheater.

Once we had the truck raised on the jack and the flat off, the fresh tire was too tall to fit on with the jack fully extended, so I had to dig a pit under the tire to get it to fit.  We then lifted the spare onto the truck, which took everything both of us could muster.  It nearly did my back in.

Once the spare was tied down, I then tried starting the engine, but the batteries were dead.  I inspected the battery box where 2 12 volt batteries are tied together in a 24 volt array, and found that the battery cables to one of batteries were not even tightened, and one of the cables had come off, and the other had shorted out on the metal battery box.  The two batteries were ancient as well.

So, I called AAA, being a good member for years, for a jump.  They told me that none of the tow trucks in the area had the ability to jump start an auto with a 24 volt system.  So, there was a 24hr-Walmart super center only 5 miles away.  So, Daniel drove me to the 24hr-Walmart super center where I bought 2 of the largest 12 volt batteries they sold at $100 each. 

We then drove back to the military truck and I loaded the batteries into the battery tray, and wired them properly to the electrical system, then I tired starting the truck.  It started right up.

Daniel lent me his 1" ratchet set in case one of the other old tires gave on along the way.  I stowed my new 20 ton bottle jack with the 1" ratchet set under the driver's seat and set off to Sedona, with Daniel following me at 45 m/h (70K/H).  It was 10 M/H below the speed limit, but acceptable, because it is a big, old truck, and it was by then late at night and traffic was low.

Daniel suggested that I stop at the first exit for us to inspect the tire and tighten the lug nuts again.  We found the lug nuts needed considerable tightening. 

After getting underway I stopped again after an hour of driving just south of Phoenix, where we inspected the tires again.  The lug nuts needed a small amount of tightening.  The spare that we had just put on had never been used.  It still had the nubs on it from manufacture; however, it was ancient and was heavily checked from sun damage.  Daniel noticed a large chunk of the tread was hanging off.  So, I stopped again just north of Phoenix to inspect the tire.  I could see no more deterioration of the tire, so I figured it would get me back to Sedona.  We checked the torque on the lug nuts and found them all tight. 

It was very late by then, so I told Daniel, "When I get to the steep incline coming up soon, the truck is likely to slow down to 25M/H, so you are welcome to head home, because I think the truck should make it the rest of the way to Sedona."

He said, "My old van needs to run above 35M/H to keep cool to avoid overheating, so I will run on home.  Give me a call if you have any more trouble."

From my window I waved goodby to him and yelled, "Thanks for everything."

The old military truck drove fine the rest of the way on the flats.  It did well on the gentle slope leading up to Black Canyon City, so Daniel followed me. However, driving up the steep slope toward Cortes Junction, the truck slowed down to 25M/H, so I put on the wrecker lights that the truck came with, and Daniel drove by waiving out his window.

I stopped at Camp Verde to take a break and inspect the tires and the rest of the running gear.  There was still no further evidence of tire deterioration from the mounted spare.  I checked the heat on all of the tires with my hand and found them all cool. Rains had passed through the area earlier and had cooled everything off.  I even rolled up one of my windows.  I also checked the heat of all of the hubs and inspected under the vehicle.  There were no drops of oil, but there was a spider web oil stain on one tire, which suggested a break fluid leak, but the breaks were very good, and not spongy, so I concluded that the driver side front hub was most probably leaking lubricant; however, it was not hot, so I figured I could continue on.

I drove to Cottonwood; where I found the whole Verde River Valley was filled with fog. I also noticed a glow on the horizon, and was confused by it, until I realized that it was 5 AM.  I drove on to Sedona, and arrived there by 5:30AM.  I had not slept in more than 24 hours, and slept little the night before, so I was exhausted.  I parked the truck in front of the warehouse, and went straight to bed and slept for several hours.  I spent the rest of the day resting.

Even though we contemplatives with attainment radically modify our lifestyle to maximize our religious experiences, sometimes we have to rise to the challenges of life.  While I was exhausted, could still feel the charisms that accompany me every day all day long, and I rested well, and entered the immaterial domains with ease, where I was rejuvenated somewhat.  Form experience full recovery can take days to weeks or rest and meditation.
« Last Edit: June 11, 2014, 07:05:42 PM by Jhanananda »
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