The Source implanted self-interest in humans in order that they might be able to repair the world.
Every moment of life is holy. Acknowledge it. Say a prayer and meditate. Take off your shoes.
While on the way, we often delay or rush or wish we were on another road. But this is the way appointed for us (Gen 45.24).
We are energy, body and soul, a stream of light in the body and soul of the universe.
Ruach is pregnant energy, partner of the Source in creation (Gen 1.2).
Instead of getting caught up in the trivia of day-to-day life, we may glimpse at what really matters through dreams.
We are Adam’s kin, born out of earth’s womb, ready to return to her loving warmth.
Symbols are the path to meaning. They help makes us human. They allow us to connect to one another and to the universe.
Symbols express the core of who we are.
Joseph seeks his brothers (Gen 37:15-16). He does not really find them until they find one another at the end of Genesis.
When we walk through a familiar building, our home or workplace, we are also exploring the pathways of our unconscious and of the Source.
Symbols are the vehicles through which we experience life. Daily activity gives us the illusion that events are tangible and symbols are codes. Dreams allow us to see symbols as they are: the force that channels energy into form.
Jacob wrestling with No-Name: Can we really put a name to most of our struggles? (Gen 32:23-33)
Jacob wrestling with No-Name. That’s what we all do most of the time, isn’t it? (Gen 32.23-33)
Symbols express feeling at the most profound levels. If we do not interpret symbols, we are not fully in touch with our feelings. Without symbols, history describes people as automatons, stick figures empty of life.
There is always something to learn in every place and from every person.
Under waking anesthesia, life moves as a dream does. Time contracts. Moments take on greater meaning. Events do not flow from one to another, but from symbol to symbol, forming a poem and a painting.
Seeing Truth’s wrinkles helps me to stop making the same mistakes.
The wings of gratitude carry me to the present moment and allow me to enjoy it.
Patience takes me by the hand up to the summit of the mountain to view life’s panorama.
“Love your neighbor as yourself.” “Yourself” is not your I, but your divine spark, the authentic you. (Lev 19:18)
Integration: Making sense of opposites; living in diverse realms; finding a way to enjoy eating chocolate, garlic, sushi together: ONE
Anxiety: millennial residue; protection, also subversion; when transformed, a gateway to self-discovery, community renewal.
Calm: Long-sought after, so difficult to attain, yet right in front of us.
Opening our eyes is often difficult, but worth it.
The Source is an honored guest at every meal. Show it hospitality by taking pleasure in good food and by eating with gusto (Gen 18).
A beating heart, light breathing, oxygen, carbon, the earth, a puff of wind, the hum of life, gravity, quantum waves, dark matter: that which inconspicuously allows existence to exist.
The crackling fire inside you is your passport.
Many paths, many truths, One Source
Gulf disaster: When we wreak havoc on the earth, she vomits back.
Learning another language is an acting exercise. You practice feeling yourself in another’s skin and move to a new beat.
Languages echo the pulsating rhythms of life. To speak or read another language is to feel another rhythm.
Life pulses to a medley of rhythms.
Dreams flow from the warm currents of an unseen ocean.
http://www.newsvine.com/_news/2010/05/20/4315193-dalai-lama-21st-century-will-be-much-happier
Sometimes I wander in a desert looking for an oasis. Other times, I have too much water to drink. Now I see: Staggering in the dry sand, I give the desert time to prepare my refreshment.
When I feel my breath, I feel the presence of the Source. Awake and asleep, I inhale and exhale divine scents.
Flexibility–Perseverance: two sides of the same coin
Sometimes the door is open. Sometimes the door is closed. Sometimes you have to knock. Sometimes you have to open the door yourself. Sometimes you have to force the door open. Sometimes you have to find another door.
He was an adult in a field where there are too many children. The difference between adults and children is that children want power so that they can be somebody, and adults want power so that they can do something.”
Eric Severeid’s radio commentary on the death of John Foster Dulles
in 1959 (via Albert Pennybacker)
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