02.28.08
Posted in Spirituality at 1:31 pm by Administrator
When sitting to meditate, it is important to remember the main point of meditation. The techniques, whether they are mantras, breathing exercises, etc., are just a technique to still the mind and emotions. The most beneficial effects occur after the techniques have stilled or at least quieted your awareness and you are resting alert and watchful within the stillness. Sitting in the stillness, and merging with the stillness is what it is all about. Everything else is secondary.
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02.25.08
Posted in Spirituality, Happiness, Healing at 4:09 pm by Administrator
This weekend we spent at the CSA meditation retreat in Lakemont, GA. I was reminded of the importance of being with people that you want to be like. I want to be like Roy Eugene Davis, and so I find it beneficial to be with him. It is the clarity of his consciousness that also uplifts my own.
Also I was reminded that the thoughts we think have an influence in the quality of our life. Today after your meditation practice, ask your self, “what thoughts do I want to think today?” “What do I want to be true for my self today?” Then hold to those thoughts, letting go of identification with all others.
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02.22.08
Posted in Spirituality at 3:44 pm by Administrator
Meditation is an excellent method of training you to experience the stillness of your being. When you can experience it sitting silently for a while, try to remember what that stillness was like while interacting with the situations in your life.
Meditate regularly, (daily, at the same time if possible), go deep into the stillness. Identify with the stillness. That is your natural state. When interacting with the world, look on observing, but don’t identify with what you see. What you see and experience floats within the stillness, which is what you really are.
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02.20.08
Posted in Uncategorized at 11:22 pm by Administrator
First sit in a comfortable position with the back straight. Close your eyes and look slightly upward gazing into the darkness of your eyelids. Upward gazing will keep you alert and awake. Take a few deep breaths, and feel the air come in and leave your body. With each exhalation let your worries or concerns fall away. As you
settle into a relaxed attentive state set your intention to experience the essence of divinity within and without you. This can be done with a prayer if you are inclined. Now, return your attention to your breath. For the next fifteen minutes just breath, and be aware of breathing. Should thoughts arise, let them pass. Remember to
give yourself fully to the practice. Become absorbed in the breath, prayer or stillness. This is the time for inner rejuvenation. You have all day to attend to other matters. After any form of distraction, gently return your attention to your breathing. When you are ready, drop the breath from you attention. Rest within the stillness that has been allowed to emerge from this simple practice.
After a few weeks gaining proficiency in the above routine, utilizing the following schedule can deepen the practice. Twice a day sit for thirty to forty-five minutes. Set aside the same time every day. Sit where you will not be disturbed. Take a few deep breaths and get comfortable with your back straight. Close your eyes and
direct your attention within. Again, looking slightly upward to stay alert and affirm your innate divine nature. Recite a memorized prayer, or speak one spontaneously silently to allow the connection with the divine to become more real. Now, use a two word phrase to direct your attention toward. This can be as simple as
“Peace, love” or any other word that positively attracts your attention.
With your breathing recite your word phrase. On the inhale, listen to the first word inside your head. On the exhale, listen to the second word. Let it fill your entire awareness. Give all of your attention to it. Should thoughts or distractions arise, gently bring your attention back to your word phrase and breathing. Practice
feeling the word phrase resonating in your awareness for the next ten to fifteen minutes. This will calm the mind and allow the body to relax deeply. Now rest in this relaxed, yet alert peaceful state. Remain calm and poised for as long as possible. Once internal or external distractions begin to make themselves known, start over
again. Continue practicing in this way until you have reached your proscribed time. Finish with a silent prayer, and acknowledge the divine peace you experienced, and let it fill your day.
After resting for a while in the pure state of awareness you may conclude and go about your day, or remain a little longer engaging in constructive problem solving. It is after the practice that we can most appropriately address any issues in our lives that need it. When our awareness is not clouded by overactive thoughts or
emotions we are more easily able to understand why things are the way they are. With this understanding proper action can be taken to change.
This practice creates the structure in life for the unfoldment of self-realization and spiritual knowledge. Without this understanding we wander pointlessly into suffering. Each day we meditate or pray to realize our spiritual purposes and how they transpose into our physical life, we lay a few more bricks into the structure.
With patience and consistency we will eventually wake up to find that the last brick was set yesterday morning, and from there all we need do is let life happen spontaneously and constructively.
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02.18.08
Posted in Uncategorized at 10:31 pm by Administrator
Here are clips from a talk given at Namaste Yoga Center in Asheville.
http://www.healingeasy.com/yogarecordings
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02.15.08
Posted in Uncategorized at 4:45 pm by Administrator
There are some good points in this video. Please enjoy…
http://video.stumbleupon.com/?s=ithct48cqw&i=ufcchmyxqsuj9vwsemax
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02.08.08
Posted in Thoughts at 5:41 pm by Administrator
I have seen time come and go
Smoke rings in the sky
This is the last time
But only I know, that is a lie
Whither has it blown me
Over arching mountains vastness
Gentle sentinel, always shining
Green even in winter’s fastness
Drums beat the hurt
In the heart of a quiet mead
A song, sweet singing, lullabies
Old things return from forgotten seed
A tide will come
Beyond the brake of memories
Washing even Heaven pure
Beyond the guile of both our ways
A certain wave assured
Moving on Eternity
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02.07.08
Posted in Uncategorized at 8:24 pm by Administrator
II.19 “Non recognition of the existence of Supreme peace in the heart and assumption of the reality of imaginary factors, are both born of imperfect knowledge and the consequence of perverted logic.”
In this verse, what is referred to as the heart is the essence of one’s being. It is the eternal spirit that is the foundation for all that is experienced in the world and the enlivening power of all life. Recognition of the Supreme peace within the heart requires one to keep awareness centered in the clear stillness of the spirit while functioning in the world. To not do so, fragments consciousness and leads one to mistake transient experiences for reality.
Reality (something that exists independently of all other things and from which all other things derive) is the essence of one’s being. Much like when one dreams, everything within the dream is the dreamer and also the product of the imagination of the dreamer, the objects of perception in the world are products of the imagination of one’s true self.
To entertain the notion that the products of one’s imagination is real results in ignorance of one’s true self and is the cause of misunderstanding about the nature of reality. The more attention given to the transient things of the world the less attention is given to the eternal changeless nature of one’s own spirit, resulting in less peace and more attachment to things that cannot last, further blurring the clarity needed to remain fully awake to what is real.
Knowing that the world of experience is ultimately imaginary does not require a denial of the world. The objects of perception are to be related to appropriately as they are experienced. The purpose of acquiring flawless knowledge about what is and what is not real is to enable one to participate in the game of life without losing the perspective that it is a play of consciousness in the field of nature.
Remaining stable in the understanding of one’s true nature requires training. Realizing one’s enlightenment has a rich history of training opportunities. The study of authentic enlightenment scripture by writers of clear awareness provides ample reading material to study. From thousands of years past to the present enlightened sages have taught, those ready and willing to receive, soul liberating knowledge. Techniques to control the mind and return attention to one’s spiritual essence have been devised for all temperaments.
The way is always open for those committed to walking it. To be express one’s enlightenment requires learning from credible sources and applying what is learned. Then through direct experience the truth is revealed.
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02.06.08
Posted in Spirituality, Happiness, Thoughts at 8:11 pm by Administrator
I sincerely want to see more people awake.
The more people that are awake, the better the world will be for them and many others.
To be awake is to know what you are, eternally and presently. This can be discovered by really wanting to know and taking the time to figure it out. Figuring it out is benefitted by shaking off the comfortable ideas you have created about yourself and your place in the world and doing what is necessary to experience clear awareness and inner stillness.
Being with people who are awake and effectively functional in the world is one way to begin. Finding ways to clear your mind and detach your awareness from the objects of the world is another way. Reading spiritually inspired books that do not play on fantasies or infantile desires is another.
Then all sorrow falls from you, and an eternal bliss (not the exagerated emotion, but the source of reality) blossoms from you.
What are you waiting for?
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02.05.08
Posted in Spirituality, Thoughts at 3:04 pm by Administrator
I was walking through Namaste Yoga and Healing Center here in Asheville on Sunday and found a painting of a buddhist monk with words written around the edge. It read “Life has no meaning. Sing Dance Live”
Too often we search for meaning, which is a waste of time. It is a mental trip. Life is beyond the mind, and any questions, answers, words, feelings or thoughts are all of the mind.
It is easy to get caught in the trap of the mind when you don’t know anything else. If we knew what we were at the very core of our being, which is not an object in this world, we would not have the sorrow that comes with identification with our physical possessions, our personalities, or our belief systems, etc. In the end, all of these perish. Yet one thing alone remains, and that IS you. One thing always IS, and that is YOU.
You are that right now. You are always that. There is no need to find it. The experiences you have happen within you. Yet most people identify with the experience as opposed to their real Self. To move beyond the mind, intend to do so. To identify with your eternal Self, intend to do so. Then wait, knowing the realization is on the way. Accept it when it arrives, however simple it might be.
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