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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

A Sense of Doership


~Satsang with Mooji, 1/22/11, Tiruvannamalai, India




Mooji: Although you are consciousness, at the moment you are not functioning as consciousness. You're functioning as a person, as identity. As such, one has to speak to you, consciousness, in your costume as being this particular identity.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Friday, August 12, 2011

Your Ego Only Satisfies You.

~By Pamela J. Wells
Published on 8/12/11


Your ego only satisfies you—temporarily. It is fleeting. The ego has to be fed continuously or it will settle in its own feeling of emptiness and insecurity.

Release the need to be accepted by others; to be recognized by others; to be superior to others. When you release the ego, you release Yourself, to be settled in your natural, true nature, which does not perceive others as separate from oneself, so there is no need to distinguish yourself from others.

You Allow Yourself To Be;
As Nature Is.
The Natural State of Being;
Non-threatening and Non-threatened.

Free Your Mind To Free Yourself.


Copyright © 2011 Pamela J. Wells. All Rights Reserved



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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

The Emptiness of Perception ~ Christopher Hebard Interviews Bentinho Massaro



Sunday, August 7, 2011

Native American Code of Ethics




1. Each morning upon rising, and each evening before sleeping, give thanks for the life within you and for all life, for the good things the Creator has given you and for the opportunity to grow a little more each day. Consider your thoughts and actions of the past day and seek for the courage and strength to be a better person. Seek for the things that will benefit others (everyone).

2. Respect: Respect means "To feel or show honor or esteem for someone or something; to consider the wellbeing of, or to treat someone or something with deference or courtesy". Showing respect is a basic law of life.

Treat every person from the tiniest child to the oldest elder with respect at all times. Special respect should be given to Elders, Parents, Teachers, and Community Leaders.

No person should be made to feel "put down" by you; avoid hurting other hearts as you would avoid a deadly poison.

Touch nothing that belongs to someone else (especially Sacred Objects) without permission, or an understanding between you.

Respect the privacy of every person, never intrude on a person's quiet moment or personal space.

Never walk between people that are conversing.

Never interrupt people who are conversing.

Speak in a soft voice, especially when you are in the presence of Elders, strangers or others to whom special respect is due.

Do not speak unless invited to do so at gatherings where Elders are present (except to ask what is expected of you, should you be in doubt).

Never speak about others in a negative way, whether they are present or not.

Treat the earth and all of her aspects as your mother. Show deep respect for the mineral world, the plant world, and the animal world. Do nothing to pollute our Mother, rise up with wisdom to defend her.

Show deep respect for the beliefs and religion of others.

Listen with courtesy to what others say, even if you feel that what they are saying is worthless. Listen with your heart.

Respect the wisdom of the people in council. Once you give an idea to a council meeting it no longer belongs to you. It belongs to the people. Respect demands that you listen intently to the ideas of others in council and that you do not insist that your idea prevail. Indeed you should freely support the ideas of others if they are true and good, even if those ideas are quite different from the ones you have contributed. The clash of ideas brings forth the Spark of Truth.

3. Once a council has decided something in unity, respect demands that no one speak secretly against what has been decided. If the council has made an error, that error will become apparent to everyone in its own time.

4. Be truthful at all times, and under all conditions.

5. Always treat your guests with honor and consideration. Give of your best food, your best blankets, the best part of your house, and your best service to your guests.

6. The hurt of one is the hurt of all, the honor of one is the honor of all.

7. Receive strangers and outsiders with a loving heart and as members of the human family.

8. All the races and tribes in the world are like the different colored flowers of one meadow. All are beautiful. As children of the Creator they must all be respected.

9. To serve others, to be of some use to family, community, nation, and the world is one of the main purposes for which human beings have been created. Do not fill yourself with your own affairs and forget your most important talks. True happiness comes only to those who dedicate their lives to the service of others.

10. Observe moderation and balance in all things.

11. Know those things that lead to your well-being, and those things that lead to your destruction.

12. Listen to and follow the guidance given to your heart. Expect guidance to come in many forms; in prayer, in dreams, in times of quiet solitude, and in the words and deeds of wise Elders and friends.

Source: Inter-Tribal Times - October 1994

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Care & Understanding

By Thich Nhat Hahn



When you plant lettuce,
if it does not grow well,
you don’t blame the lettuce.
You look into the
reasons it is not doing well.

It may need fertilizer,
or more water,
or less sun.
You never blame the lettuce.

Yet if we have problems
with our friends
or our family,
we blame the other person.

But if we know
how to take care of them,
they will grow well,
like lettuce.

Blaming has
no positive effect at all,
nor does trying to persuade
using reason and arguments.
That is my experience.

No blame,
no reasoning,
no argument,
just understanding.

If you understand,
and you show
that you understand,
you can love,
and the situation will change.