Is it the End of Time.
Islamic ideas of the struggle between truth and falsehood, the Hindu concept of Kali Yuga, and the Abrahamic notion of the End Times. These ideas exist in many cultures because human beings naturally try to make meaning out of chaos. When events are overwhelming, the mind seeks a narrative that explains them.
But there is another way to look at it alongside that cosmic framing.
Throughout history people have believed they were living at the final turning point of the age. During the Black Death, during the World War I, and again during the World War II, many sincere believers were certain the end of the world had arrived. Yet humanity continued. The suffering was real—but the cosmic finale did not come then.
One reason is that wars, sadly, often arise from a tangled mix of fear, power, history, identity, and survival, not just pure good versus pure evil. Governments make alliances for strategic reasons, sometimes cynical ones. Ordinary people—Muslim, Jewish, Christian, Hindu, atheist—are usually just trying to live, raise children, and avoid being caught in forces larger than themselves.
It is strange how life gathers its wisdom in the most unlikely places. Tonight, I sit in quiet reflection, munching on cold watermelon, grapes, and oranges straight from the refrigerator, with a handful of wasabi-coated peas adding just enough heat to keep me awake. I sip my drink, take a deep breath, and step outside for a cigarette break. The night is calm. The sky is mostly empty… until a sudden flash of lightning splits the darkness.
And I cannot help but say, quietly to myself, Subhanallah! La hawla wa la quwwata illa billah!
In that moment, the absurdity and the profundity of life converge. Here I am, speaking of the fate of the world, of wars and prophecies and the end of days, and yet the turning point—the revelation—comes quietly in ordinary acts: eating fruit, stepping into the night, observing lightning.
It reminds me of an earlier moment, decades ago in Green Bay, Wisconsin. I was thirty-two then, a Malaysian student, wearing a polyester security uniform and standing guard inside a McDonald’s. Outside, the snow lay thick on the streets; inside, fryers hissed and teenagers shouted their nonsense. I was carrying a Double Cheeseburger in one hand and The Way of Zen in the other—a Muslim holding haram meat, reading Buddhism, sweating under my uniform, feeling the strange in-between of worlds and identities.
And then it happened.
Time suspended. The absurdity of it all revealed itself. I looked down at my hands and saw clearly who I was—a stranger, a participant, a rascal—and in that moment, a name thundered through my mind: “You are nothing but a Cheeseburger Buddha!”
That was the birth of a character, yes, but more importantly, the birth of a lens through which to see life: simultaneously serious and ridiculous, profound and playful. The Cheeseburger Buddha is my reminder that awakening does not always occur in temples or meditation halls. Sometimes it sneaks up in the middle of the Midwest, over a cheeseburger, with the hiss of fryers as witness.
And now, decades later, I see the same pattern repeating in the quiet moments. The world rages with wars, greed, and destruction. People suffer. Economies falter. Yet the turning points—the flashes of clarity, the brief satori—come quietly, in ordinary life: in the cold sweetness of watermelon, the green heat of wasabi peas, the flash of lightning in an empty sky, the soft chuckle of the rascal inside.
I realize the thread linking all these moments is simple: presence, surrender, and quiet laughter. The Cheeseburger Buddha, the young Malaysian guard, the seventy-six-year-old observer—he is always there, reminding me not to take life too seriously, yet not to take it lightly either.
So, tonight, I release the paradox with gratitude. For the fruit. For the cold, dark night. For the lightning that blazes without reason. For the rascal spirit that refuses to leave, even after decades. For the sacredness hidden in the ordinary.
And I murmur once more, softly, to the universe: Subhanallah! La hawla wa la quwwata illa billah!
The Cheeseburger Buddha smiles. And so do I.
#CheeseburgerBuddha #EverydaySatori #ZenHumor #OrdinaryAwakening #CosmicJoke #RascalSpirit #PresenceAndGratitude

































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