Behold the gates of mercy
In arbitrary space
And none of us deserving
Of cruelty or the grace
O, gather up the brokenness
Bring it to me now
The fragrance of those promises
You never dared to vow
The splinters that you carried
The cross you left behind
Come healing of the body
Come healing of the mind
And let the heavens hear it
The penitential hymn
Come healing of the spirit
Come healing of the limb
O, solitude of longing
Where love has been confined
Come healing of the body
Come healing of the mind
O, see the darkness yielding
That tore the light apart
Come healing of the reason
Come healing of the heart
O, troubledness concealing
An undivided love
The heart beneath is teaching
To the broken heart above
And let the heavens falter
Let the earth proclaim
Come healing of the altar
Come healing of the name
O, longing of the branches
To lift the little bud
O, longing of the arteries
To purify the blood
And let the heavens hear it
The penitential hymn
Come healing of the spirit
Come healing of the limb
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Monday, January 30, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
~Irish Blessing
May brooks and trees and singing hills
Join in the chorus too,
And every gentle wind that blows
Send happiness to you.
Join in the chorus too,
And every gentle wind that blows
Send happiness to you.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Anne Lamott
Age has given me what I was looking for my entire life – it gave me me. It provided the time and experience and failures and triumphs and friends who helped me step into the shape that had been waiting for me all my life… I not only get along with me most of the time now, I am militantly and maternally on my own side. ~ Anne Lamott
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Did you know that the Earth has a heartbeat?
Yes! It is called the Schumann Cavity Resonance, the frequency of the Earth.
Earth's electrical resonance, the Schumann Resonance, is the result of the make up of Earth as a spherical resonator. This resonator is the result of the conductivity of Earth, the insulative properties of the lower atmosphere and a highly charged and conductive ionosphere. This combination creates a spherical capacitor as well as a resonator. Quite a large amount of electrical energy is stored in this capacitor.
Since its discovery up 'til 1986 the Earth's "heartbeat" was a constant 7.8 Hertz per second. Since then it raised dramatically up to 10 Hertz per second, up to 1998. After that, magnetic properties of the Earth have dramatically dropped and is expected to reach its zero point in 2012.
It is said that our brain waves have a frequency component that matches that of Earth base resonance. This frequency is strongest when we meditate. We seem to be somehow connected to Earth through her electrical field.
While earth's "pulse" rate is rising, her magnetic field strength, on the other hand, is declining.
The electrical current flow to the Earth, except through lightning, is a result of the highly ionized hydrogen particles spewed out from the sun. The positive charges, which are basically protons, have a relatively high mass as compared to the negatively charged electrons. These massive positive charges blast through the atmosphere and land on the Earth and can be considered an electrical current.
This ionospheric (sphere of ions) charge creates an electrical shield around the Earth. This shield then becomes the outer conductor of an electrical sphere (the Earth) within a sphere (the ionosphere). The atmosphere is a dielectric insulator, which separates the two. Thus a spherical capacitor as well as a spherical resonator is created and maintained. Electrical signals of sufficient wavelength (low frequency) are wave-guided around and around between this "sphere within a sphere" and is known as the base Schumann Resonance of 7.8Hz mainly traveling from West to East.
The sun flips its magnetic poles every 11 years. The next flip should take place in 2012.
Edited from Earth's Magnetic Field, Resonance and Us
By L. Oliver Duffy
Earth's electrical resonance, the Schumann Resonance, is the result of the make up of Earth as a spherical resonator. This resonator is the result of the conductivity of Earth, the insulative properties of the lower atmosphere and a highly charged and conductive ionosphere. This combination creates a spherical capacitor as well as a resonator. Quite a large amount of electrical energy is stored in this capacitor.
Since its discovery up 'til 1986 the Earth's "heartbeat" was a constant 7.8 Hertz per second. Since then it raised dramatically up to 10 Hertz per second, up to 1998. After that, magnetic properties of the Earth have dramatically dropped and is expected to reach its zero point in 2012.
It is said that our brain waves have a frequency component that matches that of Earth base resonance. This frequency is strongest when we meditate. We seem to be somehow connected to Earth through her electrical field.
While earth's "pulse" rate is rising, her magnetic field strength, on the other hand, is declining.
The electrical current flow to the Earth, except through lightning, is a result of the highly ionized hydrogen particles spewed out from the sun. The positive charges, which are basically protons, have a relatively high mass as compared to the negatively charged electrons. These massive positive charges blast through the atmosphere and land on the Earth and can be considered an electrical current.
This ionospheric (sphere of ions) charge creates an electrical shield around the Earth. This shield then becomes the outer conductor of an electrical sphere (the Earth) within a sphere (the ionosphere). The atmosphere is a dielectric insulator, which separates the two. Thus a spherical capacitor as well as a spherical resonator is created and maintained. Electrical signals of sufficient wavelength (low frequency) are wave-guided around and around between this "sphere within a sphere" and is known as the base Schumann Resonance of 7.8Hz mainly traveling from West to East.
The sun flips its magnetic poles every 11 years. The next flip should take place in 2012.
Edited from Earth's Magnetic Field, Resonance and Us
By L. Oliver Duffy
Can someone who’s lazy really be a successful professional?
Marc Allen: How You Can Be Lazy Yet Successful:
"The answer is: Yes, absolutely!
There are a lot of people who have understood and mastered time and money enough so that they’re successful and lazy as well.
How did they do it?
In a great many different creative ways of course — everyone is absolutely unique and develops their own unique methods that lead them to success.
The way I did it was so simple that I can teach it to nearly everyone:
The day I turned 30, I took a sheet of paper and wrote “Ideal Scene” at the top. Then I dared to dream the kind of life I wanted ideally. It included financial success, but it also included having a life of ease. I didn’t want to work too hard.
I wanted plenty of time for other creative things, and for family, and fun. In fact — ideally — I wanted to be pretty lazy a lot of the time. That’s my natural inclination, and has been since I was a kid.
My ideal is to work when I feel like it, and not work when I feel like doing something else.
I started affirming that I was becoming successful — in fact I was creating the life of my dreams — in an easy and relaxed manner, a healthy and positive way, in its own perfect time, for the highest good of all.
After I affirmed it a few thousand times over a few years, some pretty remarkable changes started happening in my life — including going from rags to riches, in my own lazy way.
Is it possible to be lazy and productive at the same time?
Absolutely.
Most of us think that we have to be active all the time to be really productive. And where does that lead? To burnout, or illness, or something else that limits or destroys your productivity.
But if we allow ourselves to be lazy, what happens for almost every healthy being is that after a period of time, we wake up one day and find we’re filled with energy. There’s nothing we’d rather do than be highly productive.
So many people feel they have to work 40 or 50 or even 60 hours a week — but half the time, they’re not being productive anyway.
Sometimes during the day it would be far better to take a nap, because you wake up with more energy and get more done in the long run.
I live my ideal week: I don’t do mornings, ever. I have no plans before noon. I don’t do Mondays either: That’s my day to myself, with no plans at all (my favorite day of the week).
When I go into my office Tuesday afternoon, I’m energized. I really look forward to it — there’s nothing I’d rather be doing. I work Tuesday through Thursday afternoons, usually. Friday afternoon is a swing day — I might work or do something else. Saturday I’m at home. And Sunday is family day — I never work on Sunday.
That’s a fairly lazy week — I usually don’t work much over 20 or 25 hours a week. But it’s enough: I’ve built a company that has fulfilled my dreams in every way, including financially, for the past 30 years."
These words are powerful, life-changing words:
The dreamers are the saviors of the world.
- James Allen, As You Think
"The answer is: Yes, absolutely!
There are a lot of people who have understood and mastered time and money enough so that they’re successful and lazy as well.
How did they do it?
In a great many different creative ways of course — everyone is absolutely unique and develops their own unique methods that lead them to success.
The way I did it was so simple that I can teach it to nearly everyone:
The day I turned 30, I took a sheet of paper and wrote “Ideal Scene” at the top. Then I dared to dream the kind of life I wanted ideally. It included financial success, but it also included having a life of ease. I didn’t want to work too hard.
I wanted plenty of time for other creative things, and for family, and fun. In fact — ideally — I wanted to be pretty lazy a lot of the time. That’s my natural inclination, and has been since I was a kid.
My ideal is to work when I feel like it, and not work when I feel like doing something else.
I started affirming that I was becoming successful — in fact I was creating the life of my dreams — in an easy and relaxed manner, a healthy and positive way, in its own perfect time, for the highest good of all.
After I affirmed it a few thousand times over a few years, some pretty remarkable changes started happening in my life — including going from rags to riches, in my own lazy way.
Is it possible to be lazy and productive at the same time?
Absolutely.
Most of us think that we have to be active all the time to be really productive. And where does that lead? To burnout, or illness, or something else that limits or destroys your productivity.
But if we allow ourselves to be lazy, what happens for almost every healthy being is that after a period of time, we wake up one day and find we’re filled with energy. There’s nothing we’d rather do than be highly productive.
So many people feel they have to work 40 or 50 or even 60 hours a week — but half the time, they’re not being productive anyway.
Sometimes during the day it would be far better to take a nap, because you wake up with more energy and get more done in the long run.
I live my ideal week: I don’t do mornings, ever. I have no plans before noon. I don’t do Mondays either: That’s my day to myself, with no plans at all (my favorite day of the week).
When I go into my office Tuesday afternoon, I’m energized. I really look forward to it — there’s nothing I’d rather be doing. I work Tuesday through Thursday afternoons, usually. Friday afternoon is a swing day — I might work or do something else. Saturday I’m at home. And Sunday is family day — I never work on Sunday.
That’s a fairly lazy week — I usually don’t work much over 20 or 25 hours a week. But it’s enough: I’ve built a company that has fulfilled my dreams in every way, including financially, for the past 30 years."
These words are powerful, life-changing words:
The dreamers are the saviors of the world.
- James Allen, As You Think
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Thank you for visiting my weblog and joining me as I examine and explore things I am passionate about and what is beyond the realms of what I don’t yet know.
My thoughts and opinions evolve, because I like to keep an open mind as I gain new knowledge. Please note that I do not always agree with and take no responsibility for the opinions or statements found on other sites when you follow links elsewhere. Many techniques and ideas I talk about are a complementary alternative for self-healing, self-help, and behavioral modification and are not meant as a substitute for standard medical, psychological or psychiatric treatment. Please consult with any professional of your choice. Any action you may choose to take in following any information or suggestions are completely of your own choice for which you take complete responsibility. Please use your own judgment of what is right for you.
I hope you benefit from the information shared here. If this is different from what you have been taught, I am sorry. Please enjoy what is of interest to you and leave the rest.
May you get the most beneficial outcome possible for each experience in your life.
My thoughts and opinions evolve, because I like to keep an open mind as I gain new knowledge. Please note that I do not always agree with and take no responsibility for the opinions or statements found on other sites when you follow links elsewhere. Many techniques and ideas I talk about are a complementary alternative for self-healing, self-help, and behavioral modification and are not meant as a substitute for standard medical, psychological or psychiatric treatment. Please consult with any professional of your choice. Any action you may choose to take in following any information or suggestions are completely of your own choice for which you take complete responsibility. Please use your own judgment of what is right for you.
I hope you benefit from the information shared here. If this is different from what you have been taught, I am sorry. Please enjoy what is of interest to you and leave the rest.
May you get the most beneficial outcome possible for each experience in your life.