1. Short trips from flower to flower

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    Honey bees can fly at speeds of up to 15 miles per hour. That might seem fast, but in the bug world, it’s actually rather slow. Honey bees are built for short trips from flower to flower, not for long distance travel. Their tiny wings must flap about 12,000 times per minute just to keep their pollen-laden bodies aloft for the flight home. By Debbie Hadley, Insects Expert

    Photo credit: Randy Neufeldt

  2. Yummy…

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    Dogs have about 1,700 taste buds. Humans have approximately 9,000
    and cats have around 473. Source: Psychology Today

    Watch that plate! A Dog’s sense of smell is 10,000 – 100,000 times 
    more acute as that of humans. Source: PBS

  3. Very sleepy…

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    Dogs do dream! Dogs and humans have the same type of slow wave sleep (SWS) and rapid eye movement (REM) and during this REM stage dogs can dream. The twitching and paw movements that occur during their sleep are signs that your pet is dreaming. Source: Healthy Pet

  4. Yummy

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    Dogs have about 1,700 taste buds. Humans have approximately 9,000 and cats have around 473. Source: Psychology Today
    Watch that plate! A Dog’s sense of smell is 10,000 – 100,000 times more acute as that of humans. Source: PBS

    dog eating

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  5. Art of life

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    Living in the favourable and unfavourable situation is called ‘Part of life’, but smiling in all those situations is called, “Art of life”. People may not remember exactly what you did or what you said, but they will always remember how you made them feel… So Keep Smiling to make them feel good when they think of you. ~FunBull

  6. Through prayers…

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    Through
    P R A Y E R S,
    GOD hears more than you say,
    HE answers more than you ask,
    HE gives more than you desire…
    All HE needs is your smile!
    So keep smiling.

    ~ FunBull

  7. A sad girl

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    A sad girl was sitting next to her boyfriend
    Boy: You are the second most beautiful girl I have ever seen.
    Girl: Who’s the first?
    Boy: It’s you! When you smile!

    ~FunBull

  8. Life is uncertain death is certain

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    Jendhamuni with Dad and little sister.

    Years go by, but true love will never die… Today — March 14th, is my little sister Alanthara’s birthday. My mother, siblings, and her 6-year-old son are with little sis and my father at their graveyard, celebrating her birthday there, with a smile, I hope… ~Jendhamuni

    by Venerable K. Sri Dhammananda

    “Life is uncertain – Death is certain” This is a well known saying in Buddhism. Knowing very well that death is certain and it is a natural phenomenon that everyone has to face, we should not be afraid of death. Yet, instinctively, all of us fear death because we do not know how to think of its inevitability. We like to cling to our life and body and so develop too much craving and attachment.

    A child comes into this world bringing joy and happiness unto all near and dear ones. Even the mother who had to bear extreme labour pains is pleased and delighted to behold her newborn child. She feels that all the trouble and pain borne by her ere well worth it. However, by crying, the child seems to suggest it too has its share of suffering for coming into this world. The child grows into and adolescent and later into an adult, performing all sorts of good and bad deeds. He eventually grows old and finally bids farewell to this sorrow. Such is the nature of existence of a human being. People try to evade and escape from the clutches of death but no one is able to do so. At the moment of death, they have their minds hovering over their hoard of acquired wealth, unduly worrying about their dear children surrounding them. Last but not least, they keep evincing much concern over their own precious bodies, which despite the tender care and attention, lavished by them are now worn out, decaying and exhausted. It grieves one’s heart to separate oneself from the body. It is the way most people take leave in this world – with moans and groans. The pangs of death are considered dreadful, an attitude fed by ignorance.

    Fear of Death

    Men are disturbed not by external things, but by beliefs and imaginations they conjure up in their minds with regard to the form of their future lives. Death, for example, is not by itself dreadful: the dread or terror exists only in our minds. It is not often that we brave enough to come face to face with the thought pf our own mortality. Insistence upon the truth of suffering may seem horrible and unacceptable to the mind which is unable to face realities, but it certainly helps to reduce or eliminate the dread of fear by knowing how to face death. Once life is launched, like a bullet it rushes to its destination – death. Realizing thus, we must bravely face that natural occurrence. To be considered free in life, we must also be free from the fear of death. Fear only comes to those who are not able to comprehend the laws of Nature. “Whenever fear arises, it arises in the fool, not in the wise man,” says the Buddha in the Anguttara Nikaya. Fears are nothing more than states of mind. Remember what science teaches us about the process of dying? It is only a physiological erosion of the human body. We needlessly frighten ourselves with imagined or anticipated horrors which never come to pass. As a famous physician, Sir William Osler puts it:- “In my wide clinical experience, most human beings die really without pain or fear.”
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Hermit of Tbeng Mountain

Sachjang Phnom Tbeng សច្ចំ​​ ភ្នំត្បែង is a very long and interesting story written by Mr. Chhea Sokoan, read by Jendhamuni Sos. You can click on the links below to listen. Part 1 | Part 2

List of Khmer songs