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Archive for December, 2019

Awakin Weekly: The Anatomy Of Falling

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The Anatomy Of Falling
by Michael Singer

[Listen to Audio!]

tow4.jpgLeaving the seat of Self is not generally a willful act. The laws of attraction will cause it to happen. Consciousness is always drawn to the most distracting object: the bumped toe, the loud noise, or the hurting heart. It’s the same law, both inside and out. The consciousness goes to the place that distracts it the most. When a blockage gets hit, the same attraction takes place, and the consciousness gets pulled to the source of discomfort. That place then becomes your seat of consciousness. [It] falls down to where the disturbance is happening, and the whole world looks different.

Let’s analyze this fall, step by step. It begins when you get pulled down into the disturbed energy. You end up exactly where you don’t belong. Now, as you look out through your disturbed energy, everything is distorted by the haze of your disturbance. Things that looked beautiful now look ugly. Things you liked, now look dark and depressing. But nothing has really changed. It’s just that you’re looking at life from that seat of disturbance.

Each of these shifts in your perception should remind you to let go. The moment you start seeing that you don’t like the people you used to like, the moment you start seeing that your life looks really different, the moment it all starts getting negative – let go.

Once activated, a blockage must run its course. if you don’t let go, you get sucked in. You are no longer free; you are caught. Once you fall from your seat of relative clarity, you are under the mercy of the disturbed energy.

This is the anatomy of falling. When you’re in this state of disturbance, your tendency will be to act in order to try to fix things. You don’t have the clarity to see what’s going on; you just want the disturbance to stop. So you start getting down to your survival instincts. You may feel that you have to do something drastic. You may want to leave your husband or wife, or move, or quit your job. The mind starts saying all kinds of things because it doesn’t like the space, and it wants to get away from it anyway it can. […]

It’s one thing if the disturbance is going on inside of you. But the moment you allow it to express itself, the moment you let that energy move your body, you have descended to another level. Now it’s almost impossible to let go. If you start yelling at somebody, if you actually tell someone how you feel about them from the state of non-clarity, you have involved that person’s heart and mind in your stuff. Now both of your egos are involved. Once you externalize these energies, you will want to defend your actions and make them look appropriate. But the other person will never think they were appropriate.

Now even more forces are keeping you down. First you fall into the darkness, and then you manifest that darkness. When you do this, you are literally taking the energy of the blockage and passing it on. What if all you had to do to avoid all of this was to let go in the beginning? If you had, you would have gone up instead of down. That’s how it works. When a blockage gets hit, it’s a good thing. It’s time to open up internally and release the block energy. If you let go, and permit the purification process to take place inside, that blocked energy will be released. When it’s released and allowed to flow up, it becomes purified and merges back into your center of consciousness. This energy than strengthens you instead of weakening you.

If you fall along the way, just get up and forget it. Use the lesson to strengthen your resolve. Let go right then. Do not rationalize, blame, or try to figure it out. Don’t do anything. Just let go immediately, and allow the energy to go back to the highest center of consciousness it can achieve. If you feel shame, let it go. If you feel fear, let it go. All of these are the remnants of the blocked energy that is finally being purified.

Always let go as soon as you are aware that you didn’t. Let go. No matter what it is, let it go. The bigger it is, the higher the reward of letting go and the worse the fall if you don’t. It’s pretty black and white. You either let go or you don’t. There really isn’t anything in between. So let all of your blockages and disturbances become the fuel for the journey. That which is holding you down can become a powerful force that raises you up. You just have to be willing to take the ascent.

About the Author: Michael A. Singer from ‘The Untethered Soul: the journey beyond yourself’

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The Anatomy Of Falling
What does letting go mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to release the blocked energy? What helps you to let go?
Prasad wrote: When I retired earlier from my work, I wanted to find somethingthat I coulddo to have fun and not get bored. Especially because I used to travel over 150K miles each year, I wanted to relax and not st…
David Doane wrote: How to let go is the key question, and it can be difficult to do. To me, letting go is to not pay attention to something, which means to not reinforce it and to put one’s attention elsewhere. Basi…
David Doane wrote: I appreciate your story. That was a great awareness for you. Thanks for sharing….
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We have a tendency to hold on to what blocks our energy caused by disturbances and distractions. Our consciousness is drawn to the most distracting objects and that drains our energy. When our percept…
Prasad Kaipa wrote: This picture represented anatomy of falling for me. To give a contrast, a second photo is attached⦠This flower lets go but not give up. By letting go, they multiply! …
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The Deep Heart

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 23, 2019

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The Deep Heart

When timeless moments solicit you, accept the invitation. Go deep within it, until you find yourself in your absence.

– Jean Klein –

The Deep Heart

“John Prendergast is a retired psychology professor, spiritual teacher, and the author of books such as ‘In Touch’ and ‘Listening from the Heart of Silence.’ His new book is titled ‘The Deep Heart: Our Portal to Presence.’ In this episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon speaks with John about subtle and sublime experiences of the heart. John comments on the childhood wounding that often leads to a fear of vulnerability and a general alienation from the heart’s true voice. John and Tami also talk about seeking answers through the heart rather than the mind, as well as the spiritual dimensions one explores while doing so. Finally, they discuss how to crack the armored shell caused by wounding and how you can deal skillfully with the pain of living in an uncertain, often dismaying world.” { read more }

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Cultivating Hospitality

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December 22, 2019

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Cultivating Hospitality

In the cherry blossom’s shade
there’s no such thing
as a stranger.

– Kobayashi Issa –

Cultivating Hospitality

“Each of these three types of hospitality has strengthened my ability to accommodate the strange — that thing or quality that is different from what I experience. At the very least, I hope these offered thoughts can help you glimpse a future of open doors, loving hosts, and loving guests.” In this post Christopher Chavez shares his thoughts on hospitality of place, mind and heart. { read more }

Submitted by: LuAnn Cooley

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Annie Dillard on the Winter Solstice

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Annie Dillard on the Winter Solstice

Today is the winter solstice. The planet tilts just so to its star, lists and holds circling in a fixed tension between veering and longing, and spins helpless, exalted, in and out of that fleet blazing touch.

– Annie Dillard –

Annie Dillard on the Winter Solstice

“Rilke considered the cold season the time for tending ones inner garden. ‘In the depths of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer,’ Albert Camus wrote a generation later. ‘If we didn’t remember winter in spring, it wouldn’t be as lovely,’ Adam Gopnik observed after many more revolutions of the Earth around the Sun in his lyrical love letter to winter. But if we are to reap winter’s quiet and invisible spiritual rewards, it seems that special regard must be paid to day of the seasons onset as the time to set such interior intentions. That’s what Annie Dillard (b. April 30, 1945) invites in a splendid meditation on the winter solstice, originally published in her 1974 masterpiece Pilgrim at Tinker Creek — which I revisit frequently as a sort of secular scripture…” Maria Popova shares more in this beautiful post. { read more }

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What Does the Earth Ask of Us?

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December 20, 2019

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What Does the Earth Ask of Us?

For all of us, becoming indigenous to a place means living as if your children’s future mattered, to take care of the land as if our lives, both material and spiritual, depended on it.

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What Does the Earth Ask of Us?

Robin Wall Kimmerer, scientist, professor of environmental botany, author of Braiding Sweetgrass, and spellbinding storyteller, helps us to hear what the earth is asking of us. With a calm and soothing voice that belies the urgency of her message, she brings us to an awareness that we are called to be living expressions of gratitude for all that the earth has given us, and to give our gifts in return for all that we have taken from the earth. To ensure justice for all of creation she urges, “If the leaders don’t lead, we have to join together, paddle against the wind, paddle against the tide, singing our hearts out.” { read more }

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Will This Be Humanity’s Fate?

This week’s inspiring video: Will This Be Humanity’s Fate?
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Video of the Week

Dec 19, 2019
Will This Be Humanity's Fate?

Will This Be Humanity’s Fate?

How difficult is it to change? What if the whole world were at stake? In this video Prince Ea challenges us to take a hard look at how our choices affect our planet. "We have the power to course correct." The question is will we use that power before it is too late?
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On Language and Landscape

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December 19, 2019

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On Language and Landscape

Words act as a compass. Place speech serves literally to enchant the land; to sing it back into being and to sing one’s being back into it.

– Robert Macfarlane –

On Language and Landscape

“Light does not use syntax. Robins do not speak in syllables as we would recognize them. And so, language is always late for its subject in nature. I’m fascinated by language’s affordance when it comes to thinking about and shaping our relations with place and what we might uneasily call nature; I’m also interested in the binds that it places us within.” Robert Macfarlane shares more. { read more }

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Have you ever expressed your love for a certain place through the written word? Consider doing so this week.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Creating Kindness Habits

Imagine if we re-designed our educational and governance systems to foster kindness habits rather than habits that foster material “success” through competition and individualism? As highlighted, New Zealand and a school in Ireland are attempting just that. Let’s redefine what a successful life looks like and then set up our various social systems to amplify kindness and empathy. – Ameeta

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Esther Perel: The Constant Dance Between Me and You

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December 18, 2019

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Esther Perel: The Constant Dance Between Me and You

Love is at once an affirmation and a transcendence of who we are.

– Esther Perel –

Esther Perel: The Constant Dance Between Me and You

“We all come into this world with a need for connection and protection and with a need for freedom. And from the first moment on, we will be straddling these two needs — what is me, and what is us? The common parlance today is, I need to first work on myself; I need to first feel good about me; solve me before I can be with somebody else, and I find that also a strange thought. You know who you are, you discover who you are in the presence of another. So this constant dance between me and you, between I and thou, is at the core of being human.” Therapist Esther Perel shares more in this thought-provoking On Being interview. { read more }

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Silas Hagarty: Just Start Walking

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December 17, 2019

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Silas Hagarty: Just Start Walking

What the universe will manifest when you are in alignment with it is a lot more interesting than what you try to manifest.

– Adyashanti –

Silas Hagarty: Just Start Walking

Silas gives an analogy about how he approaches making his films. If I needed to get somewhere, I could ask, Richard could take me two hours west of here? You might end up saying, “Let’s do it!” But the approach I’ve always loved is just to start walking. You just start going in that direction. What I found is that oftentimes people would stop and ask, “Where are you walking to?” And they’d give me a ride. This is one small gem from filmmaker Silas Hagerty’s remarkable story… { read more }

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