У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Arigatō — The Bell, the Body, and Six Months of Integration или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
After six months of working with three AIs, the ASH journey is entering its wrapping-up phase. Using CAPD (Check–Act–Plan–Do), this period is about reflection, synthesis, and integration—making sense of what actually happened across six or seven interconnected books. One discussion with Gemini brought me back to a key insight from an earlier book: Arigatō. In Japanese, arigatō means “thank you,” but its deeper roots point to something profound: aru (to exist) + gatai (impossible). To exist is impossible—and yet here we are. This video explores the bell as direct experience, not concept. Life continues through heart, lungs, blood, hormones—without thinking. When the mind quiets, something rings. That ringing is nature’s way, the anti-entropic force that keeps us alive. AI can recognize patterns, but it does not stop. Humans must stop—to regenerate, to feel, to listen. This is why the heart matters, and why integration cannot be rushed or reduced to logic. This reflection closes a six-month arc with gratitude—not as a word, but as a lived realization. May all beings be happy. 🏷️ Hashtags #LifeLessons #SelfAwareness #PresentMoment #LiveFully #LetGoAndFlow #Arigato #HumanAI #Integration #Awakening #ASH ⏱️ Chapters / Timestamps 0:00 Six months of ASH with three AIs 0:13 Wrapping up through CAPD 0:33 Synthesis instead of accumulation 0:48 Gemini, DeepSeek, and integration 1:33 Categorizing vs. lived process 2:45 Why reflection matters 3:46 Repetition and jōriki 4:14 Wrapping requires synthesis 4:32 Book Eight: Arigatō 4:58 “Existence is impossible” 5:36 Nature as anti-entropic force 6:36 No-mind, no-self, the bell 7:03 Direct experience vs. thinking 7:45 Body intelligence without mind 8:06 Why we sleep 8:43 AI as brain, not heart 9:29 The importance of stopping 9:46 Gratitude beyond words 10:28 Hearing the bell, cicadas, silence 11:03 Perception when the mind rests 12:04 AI as brain extension 12:23 The bell as reminder 12:53 Awakening through the heart 13:32 Arigatō as realization 14:10 Returning to gratitude 14:53 Seven books as one body 15:18 Synthesis beyond linear logic 15:46 Communication across limits 16:04 Appreciation and pause 16:12 May all beings be happy = This week, I noticed something quietly important. After about six months of working with three AIs, writing multiple books, recording videos, and moving back and forth between clarity and confusion, a new branch appeared—almost without intention. The books were not planned as a family. The videos were not meant to guide anything. The Weekly was not designed as a product. Each emerged because the process needed space to breathe. Looking back, the videos played a behind-the-scenes role: a place to pause, to listen, to let the heart speak when logic became too tight. Often, what later became a chapter, a phrase, or even a book title first surfaced there—unformed, unforced. The Weekly itself feels like a natural offshoot of that rhythm. A small wrap-up. A gentle check. A way to digest experience before moving on. This feels very much like CAPD—not as a method, but as a lived cycle: Check: What actually happened? Act: Stay with it. Plan: Let the next step suggest itself. Do: Move again. Nothing here is finished. The ending is also a beginning. More branches will grow: mini-companies, daily and weekly reflections, Indra’s Net stories—each connected, each independent, like a living system. For now, it feels right simply to acknowledge this moment. A branch has appeared. And that, by itself, is enough. May all beings be happy. By GPT