Monthly Archives: May 2013

“Prayer is not asking. Prayer is putting oneself in the hands of God, at His disposition, and listening to His voice in the depth of our hearts.”  — Mother Teresa

Everyone on the Path carries a wound as big as God

Everyone who is destined to have a spiritual transformation comes to the journey with a wound a big as God. There are very few people who become advanced mystics because they simply feel happy on Sunday afternoons. ~ Andrew Harvey   “We’ve all been wounded in life. The more profound… the greater the lesson, the more the ego’s shell is cracked, the greater reward that awaits you. We can be victims to pain or explore ourselves deeply, becoming active participants in our own growth. Accept and forgive those experiences and love those who’ve hurt you. Honor them, for they are truly our greatest teachers.”

Tarot card of the day: 10 of Cups Reversed

Meditate upon the meaning this card might have for you since it showed up for you at this exact moment.
MEANING: The reversed 10 of Cups is another card full of promise and joy. This card points to happiness in general, but also carries the warning not to overlook the happiness already in your life in a quest for some elusive “perfect future.” Live for today. Even with the implication that you may be overlooking some important cause for happiness which is right under your nose, this is still a good card to see; regardless of the question. Continue reading

Which is preferable?

Which do you prefer? For someone to continue to blame you for something you didn’t do or for mutual friends to THINK they continue to blame you when it’s really now about someone else entirely?  I prefer to keep out of it, because it has nothing to do with me. Bless everyone involved.  It is not mine to attend to.

You have the power

As hopeless as any situation feels, it‘s really only your thoughts that you’re dealing with.  And you have the power to change those.    Louise Hay

Shamans “see” through their hearts

Shamanic tribes like the Maori of New Zealand believe that the physical world we experience is actually a projection coming from each individual heart. The Mayans and the Q’ero tribe in the Peruvian Andes have their own versions of this basic understanding. Their shamans know that self-importance, created by the ego, is dedicated to keeping the powerful heart portal closed off enough to prevent Spirit from shining through. The ego accomplishes this by shutting down the heart to the point where the portal remains closed to the spirit world. The portals pop open only when a certain amplitude is reached, so keeping it below a certain level prevents opening. What keeps amplitude low are all the familiar maladies: fear, hostility, self-importance, depression, self-doubt, cynicism, and frustration. Because of these, most people’s hearts are shut down most of the time, which feels bad in the chest and cuts off the main avenue of escape from pain and suffering — an open heart. Gratitude counters these ploys by the parasitical false personality and raises the amplitude high enough to begin the heart-opening process.
Hank Wesselman and Sandra Ingerman

“Most people are in love with their particular life drama. Their story is their identity. The ego runs their life. They have their whole sense of self invested in it. Even their — usually unsuccessful — search for an answer, a solution, or for healing becomes part of it. What they fear and resist most is the end of their drama. As long as they ARE their mind, what they fear and resist most is their own awakening.” ~ Eckhart Tolle, from The Power of Now

A Prayer for Oklahoma

Heavenly Father/Mother God: Allow the flood waters to flow through your loving hands and bring comfort and hope to those impacted. Bring those communities together in love and mutual assistance.
“In the end only kindness matters. We are God’s hands” – Jewel

 

“Perhaps this is the best we can do; to help when we can, to witness each other with kindness, to offer our presence, to show the trust we have in life. Spiritual life is not about knowing much, but about loving much.”  Jack Kornfield