Monday, September 29, 2008

Love Play – A Path of Presence and Transcendence: Dr. Patti Talks to Bernie Prior, Master Teacher of Pure Tantra

Our Nature – not just our path to enlightenment

Our innate and deep attraction to the masculine and the feminine is because it’s the root of our way home to the Source, where our delight and our love and our pure pleasure and our peace reside.

Simply, what it means is that we have conditioned our minds and our response to life from the belief that we are all linear, egoic beings. Whereas that is something that we have added to ourselves over thousands of years.

So we consistently look through our past interpretations and our future hopes and dreams, yet never really knowing and understanding that each individual man and woman is already themselves and The Self. The pure Self is manifested as masculine and feminine.

And the attraction is, of course, when any of us experience love directly through that attraction, in the loving, there is neither masculine or feminine, there is only the love, and that is the Self.

http://www.bernieprior.org/

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Greatness is not encouraged . . . . because greatness is relative, and that’s very hard to industrialize.

The Sudbury democratic school has been used as the model for 40 other schools around the world. One of them, Fairhaven School of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, was featured in a documentary called Voices from the New American Schoolhouse. The trailer gives a glimpse at what the Sudbury model is like from the perspective of the kids attending.

Go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgpuSo-GSfw.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Here we are - the Yogin Christ Reiki™ chapter of Columbia, South Carolina!

from L to R that's moi, Joy, Barbs, MWT, Jeannine, Pam, Maggie, Debbie, Dan, Mary

It was a drive of over 3 & a half hours - one way. But so well worth it! The gang were so eager & open hearted.

Barbs & Jeanine are close friends & biz partners & it was Barbs who first found YCReiki on the web & told Jeannine to check it out.

Jeannine went to our site but signed up for Gurudevi's Karttikeyan Yogic Method(TM) course instead & for some reason Barbs ended up missing both classes.

So they both got their gang of health practitioners together & created this class for themselves. How neat is that?!?

To learn more about Yogin Christ ReikiTM, go to http://ycreiki.blogspot.com/.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The Joy & Delight of Chanting

Chanting may be considered speech, music, or a heightened or stylized form of expression.

Devotional chanting is the spiritual practice of chanting the Name of God.

Its proper practice is neither for ritual or recreation. It is best that the chanter remains alert and awake while fully tapped into Source.

It is done to acknowledge the gifts received, to show our appreciation and to experience our connection to the Light.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

So why do you blog?

From Chip's Blog: The Mechanic & The Muse

Here are seven reasons I joined the millions who communicate through a form that is part reverse diary, commonplace book and soapbox.


1. Blog items respond to a rapidly changing media landscape. I like the way blogging lets me tackle multiple topics in a day or through the week instead of focusing all my time and energy on one weekly column. It's the difference between being a beat specialist and a general assignment reporter. I can write on subjects that draw my attention. I've written about journalistic subjects and pointed readers to repositories of stories that represent best practices. But I've also written about fiction and memoir, two forms that are passions of mine. Like Cream, the '60's mega-group, sings, "I feel free."

2. When I blog, my standards are lowered, always a key element in producing writing that can be revised, even after it's published. A blog, by its very nature, is more informal than a column and less freighted with the expectations that a metro or sports column can impose. Blogging hasn't made me indifferent to revision or accuracy; it just makes the process of generating words less susceptible to the inner critic. In a
recent radio interview, former U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins talked about his art, and it helped me understand why I like to blog.

"The real thrill is composition," Collins said. "To be kind of down on your hands and knees with the language at really close range in the midst of a poem that is carrying you in some direction that you can't foresee... It's that sense of ongoing discovery that makes composition really thrilling and that's the pleasure and that's why I write."

3. I'm my own editorial board. As a newspaper reporter, I was trained to keep my opinions out of my stories. In a blog, I can be as opinionated as I want. Case in point:
my no-holds-barred reaction to the James Frey-Oprah's Book Club fiasco. I feel free to have an opinion and share it.

4. Change is vital. Wise editors realize that a reporter can burn out on a beat and so they switch their assignments, knowing that a fresh pair of eyes will benefit the writer and readers. They feel free.

5. Blogs are not new, but they're still on the leading edge of communication technology. I've always been an early adopter and I don't want to be left behind. In a time when reporters and editors are blogging on their news organization's Web site, I feel free to be part of this experiment.

6. Let's face it, a blog can also be a great marketing device. I've posted examples of my own writing, some published and others that have yet appeared in print, along with books I've written or co-authored with links that make online purchasing a snap. Like most writers, I harbor the dream that an agent or publisher may see commercial possibilities in my work.

7. To paraphrase Kafka: my blog is the ice-axe that broke the frozen sea within me. It has helped me find myself again as a reader and writer. It has set me free. Blogging is like having an office but also keeping a studio where you can experiment, take risks with your craft, and share your discoveries with others.

Some things won't change. I'll always be grateful for comments, questions, story suggestions, and most of all, your companionship.