Wednesday, November 26, 2008

The Face

I said the same thing to each of these people. Can you guess what?

the face 2the face 1the face 3

An email I just wrote

http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a96/Link2Cool/AlexGrey-Theologue.jpg

The most important argument I forgot to make about yoga nidra I was talking about.

The brain does connect everything, but it is very good at tricking itself, many people with ptsd have disassociated, or forced themselves to forget, their experiences that have hurt them. The body does not lie or forget.

Going directly into the body for sensation and memory (the seven energy centers of the body have their own 'brains' or intelligence particular to the nature of the energy that they are) has been proven to solve more than just psychotherapy or drugs, which just mask the problem.

Any time there is 'dis-ease' that does not mean it is an unsolvable condition to feel helpless about. All it is is an imbalance and balance can be attained from within. Medicine usually dulls the senses and hides the problem.

It's like when I was a substitute teacher, there were always kids who would cause trouble. The way they are handled resemble our Western medicine mindset. They are suppressed and are still unhappy and frustrated, continue to get nothing from school. Then we wonder why our schools are the WORST of any industrialized nation. Troublemakers, or dis-ease, represent an imbalance within a larger system, they aren't to be singled out or handled as an individual problem, they are to teach us the nature of our larger situation. A lot of times with kids for example, the reason they don't behave in school is not their fault, it is an expression of pain or lack of something that they are not receiving, usually love.


So anyway, using medicine to dull the body is the same as suppressing students...it is still damaging to the overall ecosystem. But going in and asking the body how it needs to be balanced or what memory it is dealing with that has physical consequences allows the owner of the body to understand their condition more fully and be a more happy and adjusted individual.

Adhd is actually a great teacher to those who have it, and also our society. People who have it usually have great intelligence and psychic abilities that are misunderstood and mishandled in our society in the way it currently is. The unpleasant aspects of it can be balanced within through meditation and other techniques. The powers from it are usually dulled with medication.

You are a powerful being, own up to your light! It will serve you. It will serve you less the more you smother it.

Interesting to Read

http://www.scribd.com/doc/8072492/Drunvalo-Melchizedek-The-Ancient-Secret-of-the-Flower-of-Life-Volume-1

http://www.scribd.com/doc/6423826/Drunvalo-Melchizedek-Ancient-Secret-of-the-Flower-of-Life-Vol2

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

What Obama Means to Me

I was talking with a friend who is about 15 years older than me, and she asked me what I think of my generation. I said, I think my generation has amazing potential for healing our world, but we were raised in a numbing environment, so for a lot of us, that is what we know. Many of my peers were raised by baby sitters and day cares, cable tv and McDonalds. Many of my peers have divorced parents. My generation (generation Y I guess?) was the first to live and be raised in this way. I think light comes from darkness. I think working through darkness brings empowerment and healing.

Hip hop music at its core is a peaceful refutation of systematic oppression. Black Americans have a history of having core identity repressed. One reaction to this was gang systems, which represent a reclaiming of that core identity and independence from the oppressor. Where it got interesting though is when in the 1970's oppressed people turned on each other. It's been awhile since I've read Can't Stop Won't Stop but the main idea is somewhere in the 70's in the south bronx amidst corrupt landlords burning buildings and violence to each other, people started realizing they could gain empowerment through creative expression. Instead of fighting with guns, people 'battled' with creative expression. Who had the better tag, the better dance, whatever. That's what hip hop represents for me--core identity oppression being owned and transformed through love and creative energy into core identity empowerment. Darkness can always be transcended. Not to say we should discredit darkness. It gives us our power. We cannot see what we want without seeing what we don't want. This is why George W. Bush and Dick Cheney have been some of our most powerful spiritual teachers.

To me, if we vote for Obama, it means we have learned our lesson. Also, for me it marks an awakening for my generation. I think many of us have been asleep and I sensed the electricity through college as we felt the war starting and protested it, when we saw the pictures of prisoners at abu gharib and felt sick inside. The defeat we felt when Kerry won the popular vote in 2004 but Bush's reign continued regardless. I felt more and more people sensing the craziness of what was happening. We felt helpless. I saw many of my generation numb, still, but I do sense the change.

I think Obama's record breaking campaign is the most inspiring aspect of this campaign whether he wins or not. People donated and volunteered time at record rates. We don't want to feel helpless anymore, he is allowing us to participate. This alone to me means we are ready to take ownership of the healing of our world. The darkness of my generation is that we are asleep amidst a world that is hurting, the light is we will awaken to our hurting world and heal it. And you know, I think this election is the first time I have ever felt patriotic. Obama wants us to work together to fix things. Patriotism doesn't only mean fighting in the armed forces, it means volunteering time to help in our communities, it means being a peace corps member and travel around the world to help those in need. As the economy falters, we will learn how little being greedy elevates us and how much being selfless does.

Obama, to me, doesn't represent one man who will change everything. He represents our power to rally together, wake up, rise up, and change things ourselves. This is something we have been wanting for eight years and through his campaign alone he has helped facilitate this. We are all one. I encourage you on this election day to take a moment to reflect how you want to help contribute to the healing of our world.

Let us elevate ourselves, our hearts, as we move into a world of one love.