Saturday, November 26, 2011

Energy Tip:
Make Your Energies Crowd-Proof this Holiday Season!


As we head into the holiday season, we are sure to encounter more people than usual in our day-to-day life. Large crowds are usually the norm with holiday get-togethers, shopping, etc. And sometimes, the energies of crowds can really stress us out. You can protect yourself by "zipping yourself up" when you find yourself in an uncomfortably large gathering or are feeling vulnerable. Central meridian runs like a zipper from the pubic bone to the bottom lip. If the energy in Central meridian is unstable, we can take on the energies of others.To protect ourselves, we can use the energies of our hands to "zip-up" Central meridian.

"Zipping-Up" will help you:
Feel more confident about yourself.
Think more clearly.
Protect yourself from overwhelming energies around you.
Before doing a zip up (pp. 94-8), briskly tap the K-27 points toinsure that your meridians are moving in a forward direction.

Then, zip-up as follows:
Place your hands at the bottom end of the Central meridian. (see Figure 10, pg. 116)
Inhale deeply as you move your hands, slowly and with deliberation, straight up the center of your body to your lower lip.
Continue upward, bringing your hands past your lips and raise them into the sky.
Circle your arms back around to your pelvis.
Repeat three times.
Voila', your have made your energies more crowd-proof!

Donna demonstrating the Zip-Up.
Page references are to Donna's Book Energy Medicine, 2008 Tarcher/Penguin.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Sagittarius New Moon Solar Eclipse, November 24-25, 2011
By Cathy Lynn Pagano
It is the North and South Nodes of the Moon which determine where our yearly eclipses fall. The North Node points out what we have to integrate into our collective vision; the South Node delineates what we have to leave behind. This year we are called by Sagittarius to stand in our Truth and leave behind the false dichotomies of the Gemini Rational Mind which has controlled our society since the Age of Enlightenment. This is the year we get to really shift our Minds -- time to start using all sides of the brain. Since Gemini's ruler Mercury goes retrograde in Sagittarius a few hours before this Thursday's solar eclipse, we can count on spending the next few months contemplating what we believe and how we use our minds -- or not!

Sometimes you just "gotta have faith'!

This Sagittarius new Moon partial solar eclipse occurs on November 24 at 10:10pm PST and on November 25 at 1:10am EST/ 6:10am GMT. It will be seen at the bottom of the world in Antarctica, South Africa and New Zealand.

The Sabian symbol for the New Moon solar eclipse at 3* Sagittarius is: Two men playing chess. The two opposing sides in the game must use strategy and cunning to conquer their opponent. Chess trains us to be more objective and aware of the big picture. It images for us the interplay of light and dark, good and evil, male and female, yin and yang. We all need to understand the big picture and create accordingly. Our Wizard's Chess board sharpens the mind as it presses towards its goal.

If I had to pick a story to go along with this month's Sagittarius New Moon, it would be the story of Harry Potter. Harry is asked to stretch his mind around the fact that he is a Wizard -- he has magic in his blood. But because he has to confront the evil Voldemorte, he must confront the question of what he values. Before Voldemort becomes embodied again, he tries to entice Harry to side with him and take up Power. But Harry values Love and loyalty and friendship and rejects the call to Power. It is this grand mythic story of the struggle within one boy to decide if he will stand for Love or give over to Power that has captured our collective imagination. This is especially true for men -- it is up to men to make this choice for Love, for men still control much of the world's wealth and power.


It is not the power of the rational mind itself which is good or evil -- it is what we each chose to do with ours that matters. Objective rationality can be death-dealing if it is cut off from heart values just as subjective emotionality can be delusional if we can't discriminate between good and evil. We have to achieve a balance of letting the heart lead the way while strengthening our ability to focus our minds on what is important. The proper balance is the Mind supporting the Heart.

Ancient wisdom says that magical powers -- which include the focused power of Intention - are not meant to be used for personal gain -- no matter what The Secret says. Our beliefs give rise to our reality. If we believe that we can use our "magical power' of intention to make money and have power over other people, we are siding with Voldemort and his Death Eaters. We have to decide if we are here to use our creative powers to serve the greater good or our own personal good. As we can all see, that hasn't worked out for the best, has it?

Sagittarius New Moon Solar Eclipse


Sagittarius New Moon Solar Eclipse 2011 by Cathy Pagano/Kepler


This New Moon is a Solar Eclipse as well as a SuperMoon, bringing in more intense energies that can shift our awareness and beliefs. The Moon is at its closest to the Earth now, exerting a greater pull on both our inner and outer waters; the Solar Eclipse brings the Moon onto the same plane as the Earth and Sun, setting up a new energy grid as the old one dies out. This Sagittarius New Moon wants to expand our beliefs about what is possible. In this dark time, it is the light of Sagittarian truth that sparks our curiosity and deepens our belief in Life.

This New Moon is challenged by a few energies that have to be included in this extra potent seed time: Neptune at 29* Aquarius and Chiron at 1*Pisces confront us with the truth that it is the power of community that will create these new possibilities and give us new hope; and Mars at 7*Virgo, challenging us to get our act together, know who we are and create the perfect vehicle to express it as we wait for the next chapter in our cosmic story -- the upcoming Uranus/Pluto square.

Jupiter rules Sagittarius, the sign of Cosmic Order and Laws. Sagittarius focuses its energies on cosmic law and truth, always pushing the boundaries of knowledge, curiosity and inclusion. The constellation of Sagittarius contains the Galactic Center, located within the starry river of the Milky Way. Jupiter's spirituality continually expands our knowledge of the Universal Laws of Life, bringing justice into our collective code of laws and wisdom to our personal consciousness about Life's laws.

Venus, the ruler of Taurus, is in Jupiter's sign of Sagittarius, right on the Galactic Center. Jupiter is in Venus' sign of Taurus at this solar eclipse, asking us what is most valuable to us. If your answer is Life itself, then Jupiter in Taurus says we need to get going to save our environment, because the window of opportunity is fast closing to reverse the worst outcome of climate change. Scientists say we have 5 years before our children will inherit a world of continuing environmental disasters. This new Moon is all about the heart chakra.

The Occupy Wall Street movement is demanding economic equality. What we really need is a redirection of wealth toward healing the environment first. The wealthy 1% is holding the planet's health and our lives hostage to their short-sighted greed. Jupiter in Taurus encourages us to listen to the Earth's Laws of Life. If our environment is in jeopardy, the Earth can teach us how to heal it if we listen and observe her laws. We have to shift collective consciousness to do this.

Jupiter is in a wonderful helpful aspect with Pluto in Capricorn and Mars in Virgo for this solar eclipse New Moon. What we work on we can manifest. If we really need it! Because of Mars' retrograde next January, it will stay in Virgo from mid-November 2011 to July 4, 2012. Mars' extra-long stay in Virgo can give us the determination we need to heal ourselves and work to bring healing into our world.

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Everything in the universe
is a pitcher brimming
with wisdom and beauty.

Moonlight floods the whole sky
from horizon to horizon;
How much it can fill your room
depends on its windows.

There are thousands of wines
that can take over our minds.
Don't think all ecstasies are the same

Look past your thoughts,
so you may drink
the pure nectar of This Moment.

If I can only recount
the story of my life
right out of my body
flames will grow.

The soul is here
for its own joy.

Rumi

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

A Serving of Gratitude May Save the Day
By JOHN TIERNEY

The most psychologically correct holiday of the year is upon us.

Thanksgiving may be the holiday from hell for nutritionists, and it produces plenty of war stories for psychiatrists dealing with drunken family meltdowns. But it has recently become the favorite feast of psychologists studying the consequences of giving thanks. Cultivating an “attitude of gratitude” has been linked to better health, sounder sleep, less anxiety and depression, higher long-term satisfaction with life and kinder behavior toward others, including romantic partners. A new study shows that feeling grateful makes people less likely to turn aggressive when provoked, which helps explain why so many brothers-in-law survive Thanksgiving without serious injury.

But what if you’re not the grateful sort? I sought guidance from the psychologists who have made gratitude a hot research topic. Here’s their advice for getting into the holiday spirit — or at least getting through dinner Thursday:

Start with “gratitude lite.” That’s the term used by Robert A. Emmons, of the University of California, Davis, for the technique used in his pioneering experiments he conducted along with Michael E. McCullough of the University of Miami. They instructed people to keep a journal listing five things for which they felt grateful, like a friend’s generosity, something they’d learned, a sunset they’d enjoyed.

The gratitude journal was brief — just one sentence for each of the five things — and done only once a week, but after two months there were significant effects. Compared with a control group, the people keeping the gratitude journal were more optimistic and felt happier. They reported fewer physical problems and spent more time working out.

Further benefits were observed in a study of polio survivors and other people with neuromuscular problems. The ones who kept a gratitude journal reported feeling happier and more optimistic than those in a control group, and these reports were corroborated by observations from their spouses. These grateful people also fell asleep more quickly at night, slept longer and woke up feeling more refreshed.

“If you want to sleep more soundly, count blessings, not sheep,” Dr. Emmons advises in “Thanks!” his book on gratitude research.

Don’t confuse gratitude with indebtedness. Sure, you may feel obliged to return a favor, but that’s not gratitude, at least not the way psychologists define it. Indebtedness is more of a negative feeling and doesn’t yield the same benefits as gratitude, which inclines you to be nice to anyone, not just a benefactor.

In an experiment at Northeastern University, Monica Bartlett and David DeSteno sabotaged each participant’s computer and arranged for another student to fix it. Afterward, the students who had been helped were likelier to volunteer to help someone else — a complete stranger — with an unrelated task. Gratitude promoted good karma. And if it works with strangers ....

Try it on your family. No matter how dysfunctional your family, gratitude can still work, says Sonja Lyubomirsky of the University of California, Riverside.

“Do one small and unobtrusive thoughtful or generous thing for each member of your family on Thanksgiving,” she advises. “Say thank you for every thoughtful or kind gesture. Express your admiration for someone’s skills or talents — wielding that kitchen knife so masterfully, for example. And truly listen, even when your grandfather is boring you again with the same World War II story.”

Don’t counterattack. If you’re bracing for insults on Thursday, consider a recent experiment at the University of Kentucky. After turning in a piece of writing, some students received praise for it while others got a scathing evaluation: “This is one of the worst essays I’ve ever read!”

Then each student played a computer game against the person who’d done the evaluation. The winner of the game could administer a blast of white noise to the loser. Not surprisingly, the insulted essayists retaliated against their critics by subjecting them to especially loud blasts — much louder than the noise administered by the students who’d gotten positive evaluations.

But there was an exception to this trend among a subgroup of the students: the ones who had been instructed to write essays about things for which they were grateful. After that exercise in counting their blessings, they weren’t bothered by the nasty criticism — or at least they didn’t feel compelled to amp up the noise against their critics.

“Gratitude is more than just feeling good,” says Nathan DeWall, who led the study at Kentucky. “It helps people become less aggressive by enhancing their empathy. “It’s an equal-opportunity emotion. Anyone can experience it and benefit from it, even the most crotchety uncle at the Thanksgiving dinner table.”

Share the feeling. Why does gratitude do so much good? “More than other emotion, gratitude is the emotion of friendship,” Dr. McCullough says. “It is part of a psychological system that causes people to raise their estimates of how much value they hold in the eyes of another person. Gratitude is what happens when someone does something that causes you to realize that you matter more to that person than you thought you did.”

Try a gratitude visit. This exercise, recommended by Martin Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania, begins with writing a 300-word letter to someone who changed your life for the better. Be specific about what the person did and how it affected you. Deliver it in person, preferably without telling the person in advance what the visit is about. When you get there, read the whole thing slowly to your benefactor. “You will be happier and less depressed one month from now,” Dr. Seligman guarantees in his book “Flourish.”

Contemplate a higher power. Religious individuals don’t necessarily act with more gratitude in a specific situation, but thinking about religion can cause people to feel and act more gratefully, as demonstrated in experiments by Jo-Ann Tsang and colleagues at Baylor University. Other research shows that praying can increase gratitude.

Go for deep gratitude. Once you’ve learned to count your blessings, Dr. Emmons says, you can think bigger.

“As a culture, we have lost a deep sense of gratefulness about the freedoms we enjoy, a lack of gratitude toward those who lost their lives in the fight for freedom, a lack of gratitude for all the material advantages we have,” he says. “The focus of Thanksgiving should be a reflection of how our lives have been made so much more comfortable by the sacrifices of those who have come before us.”

And if that seems too daunting, you can least tell yourself —

Hey, it could always be worse. When your relatives force you to look at photos on their phones, be thankful they no longer have access to a slide projector. When your aunt expounds on politics, rejoice inwardly that she does not hold elected office. Instead of focusing on the dry, tasteless turkey on your plate, be grateful the six-hour roasting process killed any toxic bacteria.

Is that too much of a stretch? When all else fails, remember the Monty Python mantra of the Black Plague victim: “I’m not dead.” It’s all a matter of perspective.

Monday, November 21, 2011

This Amazing Day -- e. e. cummings

i thank You God for most this amazing
day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky;and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun's birthday;this is the birth
day of life and love and wings:and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any-lifted from the no
of all nothing-human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)

~ e.e. cummings ~

(Complete Poems 1904-1962)

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Thrive - The Movie...

Dreams are Whispers From the Soul Movie

Dreams are Whispers From the Soul Movie: There are many different aspects that live inside of us and two of them have respectfully been dubbed the Dreamer and Doubter. When it comes to pursuing your dreams, The Dreamer is often gung ho while the Doubter can provide a laundry list of concerns and issues. Your movie today will inspire you to find your purpose and passion in life while you strive to live your dreams.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Blue Moon Lodge: Being the Transformation
https://shiftnetwork.infusionsoft.com/go/see/J1951/

The Shift from Ego to Essence | The Shift Network
theacetraining.com
The Shift from Ego to Essence offers you the keys to shifting from your egoic “local self” to your Essential Self -- giving you access to divine guidance and the ability to live with grace, confidence, creativity, purpose and joy.

Monday, November 14, 2011




Remember

Remember the sky that you were born under,
know each of the star's stories.
Remember the moon, know who she is. I met her
in a bar once in Iowa City.
Remember the sun's birth at dawn, that is the
strongest point of time. Remember sundown
and the giving away to night.
Remember your birth, how your mother struggled
to give you form and breath. You are evidence of
her life, and her mother's, and hers.
Remember your father. He is your life also.
Remember the earth whose skin you are:
red earth, black earth, yellow earth, white earth
brown earth, we are earth.
Remember the plants, trees, animal life who all have their
tribes, their families, their histories, too. Talk to them,
listen to them. They are alive poems.
Remember the wind. Remember her voice. She knows the
origin of this universe. I heard her singing Kiowa war
dance songs at the corner of Fourth and Central once.
Remember that you are all people and that all people are you.
Remember that you are this universe and that this universe is you.
Remember that all is in motion, is growing, is you.
Remember that language comes from this.
Remember the dance that language is, that life is.
Remember.

~ Joy Harjo ~

(How We Become Human)

Thursday, November 10, 2011

How Genuine Care and Compassion Affect Us

Did you know that your immune system, the body’s complex process of protecting you from illness and disease, is profoundly influenced by your emotions? It’s true: Anger, joy, love, depression, compassion and any of many other possible emotions affect your immune system and, ultimately, your health and well-being. Positive emotions, naturally, can help strengthen the immune system, while negative emotions can deplete it.

The effects of two specific emotions – care and compassion – on the immune system have been of particular interest to researchers, who have studied this phenomenon for decades.

How Genuine Care and Compassion Affect Us

In the mid-1990s, Institute of HeartMath Director of Research Rollin McCraty and a research team wanted to go beyond a 1980s experiment by Harvard Psychologist Dr. David McClelland, who found that immune-system functioning, as measured by IgA, or secretory immunoglobulin A levels, increased in students who were shown a video about Mother Teresa.

McCraty and the team wanted to know whether self-induced care would have the same effect as vicarious care, so they began by duplicating McClleland’s experiment and produced very similar results in their study, The Physiological and Psychological Effects of Compassion and Anger. After study participants had learned the Institute of HeartMath’s Freeze-Frame® Technique, they were instructed to employ it to help them intentionally feel care and compassion for five minutes.

Several days later, they were asked to feel five minutes of self-induced anger by remembering a situation or experience that made them angry and trying to recapture the feeling they had at the time.

The results McCraty and the team obtained were quite remarkable: In both cases, IgA samples were taken immediately after and then every hour to six hours. After five minutes of intentionally feeling care and compassion, the subjects had an immediate 41 percent average increase in their IgA levels. After one hour, IgA levels returned to normal, but slowly increased over the next six hours.

The researchers observed that self-induced care resulted in a much larger rise in IgA than the care experienced by viewing a Mother Teresa video. In some individuals, IgA increased as much as 240 percent immediately after they performed the Freeze-Frame Technique. Interestingly, there also was an 18 percent increase in IgA levels when the participants experienced anger, but an hour later, their IgA levels had dropped to only about half of what they were before the anger. Even after six hours, their IgA levels were still not back to normal.

Key findings: Heart-focused, sincere, positive feeling states boost the immune system, while negative emotions may suppress the immune response for up to six hours following an emotional experience. Read the abstract or the entire study: The Physiological and Psychological Effects of Compassion and Anger, 1995, Rein, Atkinson and McCraty.



Differences in mood change before (solid bars) and after (hatched bars) experiencing anger and frustration (5a) and compassion and care (5b). Moods were assessed using the Profile of Mood State test. TMD refers to total mood disturbance. Results are expressed as mean (±SEM) for the 10 subjects in each of the two groups. * p < 0.01 for the Wilcoxon sign-rank test, ** p < 0.05 for Wilcoxon sing-rank test. © 2011 Institute of HeartMath, Boulder Creek, Calif.

Care, But Don’t Overcare

"A drop of genuine compassion is more effective than a gallon of drama-based sympathy, which often drains sender and receiver as the day ends." – Doc Childre, founder HeartMath

The quote above appears on Childre’s website, www.heart-basedliving.org. There he explains the difference and importance of distinguishing between care and overcare. The following is excerpted from that explanation:

Care from your genuine heart regenerates your system, while overcare drains and debilitates your system. Overcare is when the mind and emotions cross the line of balanced care and get too attached and bogged down with whomever or whatever they care about. Once you become too entangled in another’s web and realize your energy is drained from overcare and attachment, you often can be seduced into blaming and resenting the people or issues you care about.

As you become trapped in the blame and judgment loop, you drain energy further because judgment and blame are energies that are not aligned with our heart of hearts or the way of spirit so they feed back into our system. The nature of our true heart is designed to care and support others, but it’s an individual responsibility to learn to discern and balance the personal energy and feelings that go out to others and within yourself.

Judgments are energies that are accountable, and their deficits play out within our mental, emotional and physical systems, even if we are unaware of it. Storing judgment and blame is counterintuitive and counterproductive to personal empowerment, wholeness health, and resonance with yourself or others.

A HeartMath Tip: Below is a simple exercise adapted from HeartMath’s Cut-Thru® Technique to help you achieve emotional coherence, which has been shown in many studies to improve the efficiency of the immune system. The Cut-Thru Technique is discussed in greater detail in the HeartMath book, Transforming Anxiety by Childre and Deborah Rozman.

Be aware of how you feel about an issue at hand.

Breathe a positive feeling or attitude.

Be objective, as if the issue or problem is someone else’s.

Rest peacefully in this neutral state, allowing your heart intelligence to offer new perspectives and possibilities.

Soak and relax all resistances and disturbing or perplexing feelings in your heart’s compassion.

Ask for guidance, and then be patient and receptive. While awaiting an answer from your heart, find something or someone to genuinely appreciate.

For a deeper understanding of this topic, read the IHM newsletter article, Overcare – Make Sure Your Care is Helping, Not Hurting.

"Increasing your care for the concerns of the global whole brings spirit and increased empowerment to the personal self. Practicing wholeness care advances your effectiveness in self-care and manifestation of joy and personal peace." – Doc Childre

Monday, November 7, 2011

OpEdNews - Article: The Cosmic Story: Taurus Full Moon, November 10, 2011

OpEdNews - Article: The Cosmic Story: Taurus Full Moon, November 10, 2011:

'via Blog this'
The Cosmic Story: Taurus Full Moon, November 10, 2011
By Cathy Lynn Pagano (about the author)

The Cosmic Story:Taurus Full Moon:

November 10, 2011

Life Flashing Before Our Eyes

This month's Taurus Full Moon stands across from the Scorpio Sun, making us aware of life flashing before our eyes during this season of death. The Taurus Moon energizes the beauty and possibilities of life that we want to conserve and protect during the coming months of darkness and cold, so they can blossom again next May. At this full moon, we stand at that moment before death when we see what we have chosen to believe is important in life. Look deeply at what you value and decide if it's still important to you. If it is, conserve it; if it's not, let it go -- let it die.

Since this full Moon lands right on my Taurus Venus, I will take this opportunity and tell you what I'm seeing as I face my yearly Scorpio shedding of skins. I see the beauty of the Earth and wonder of the Cosmos first and foremost. A brisk wind blowing through the mountains, glinting sunlight on the Seine, the dance of ritual fire, the changing landscape, the starry night sky. I also see how climate change affects my world and my people in burnt-out forests, dry riverbeds, giant dust storms and early snowstorms. I see my children, my family and my friends and they fill me with love and hope. I hear exotic rhythms, I see radiant colors, I smell fragrant cheeses and baking breads, I hug myself in scratchy warm wool, I taste delicious Italian gelato! I remember new and unexpected experiences. I see old wounds healed and integrated. And the most wonderful thing I feel is hope - hope of changing the world as I see my sisters and brothers gathering around the world to stand up for freedom and a new peaceful vision of Life here on Earth.


While many of you might see something different from what I'm seeing, this is a very Taurean inventory of the beauty life holds in store for us. Stewardship of the Land, loyalty and love of family/friends, sensuality, and a sustainable future are hallmarks of a Taurean's strength and endurance. While the Sun moves through Scorpio, the Earth slowly sinks into sleep in the Northern hemisphere and dreams of the future. (yes I know my southern friends are waking up to Springtime! Joy for both of us, since I love Winter.) Our Mother Earth takes a time out to rest. Are you resting enough? With the seasonal shift in light that comes on cross-quarter holidays such as Samhain/Halloween and the end of DST in the United States, people are exhausted and need to remember to rest. That's definitely a Taurean trait!

Our Collective Taurus Full Moon Experience


Scorpio by Cathy Pagano/Kepler


This 2nd full moon after the Autumn Equinox urges us to form collectives, working with others to create change within and without. Once the Sun moves into the second half of the zodiac, from Libra to Pisces, we gather together in collectives to sustain life through the cold and the dark. Like ancient tribes, we gather together to sustain each other during the hard winter months. In Libra, the idea of cooperation and partnership is generated. In Scorpio, we are forced to look at the emotional issues that arise as a result of those partnerships and tribes.

So it makes sense that we look outside to the collective this month and see how this full moon plays out in the culture. The Occupy movement is a wonderful example of how this energy is manifesting just before the arrival of the first of the 7 Pluto/Uranus squares next year. The Occupy movement is only six weeks old and it is growing like a miraculous hero/hera (Uranus in Aries), bringing in supporters across the world. The ideal (Neptune in Aquarius on America's natal Moon) is to stand in our truth (Libra) before power (Pluto in Capricorn) and demand justice (Saturn in Libra). Any astrologer could have told you that the hippies would be back playing drums during the demonstrations -- after all, the 60s are back.

Now with Scorpio energy in play, we are seeing both the strength and the weakness that each group must face. When the darker energies arise, how do we handle them? On the plus side, Occupy Oakland shut down the port for a day. We are building coalitions that will work together toward common goals. There has been plenty of debate about the "demands' of the Occupy movement, but it's easy to read. People want change -- not the false promises of politicians but real, observable change in an economic and political system that no longer works. We're educated and conscious enough to get it right this time but we have to stay peaceful, we have to stay united and we have to be courageous. Innovation and imagination blossom in these situations and issues become interesting problems to be solved rather than hurdles to overcome.

That's why we have to face the reality of Scorpio's death and transformation, both within and without. Only the strength of Taurus and Scorpio combined can see us through the darkness of Death into the light of new Life.

The Scorpionic dark side of the quest for real freedom is beginning to manifest -- the violence that is the "other way' - to "fight' for freedom as all oppressed peoples have done against tyranny. That's why I like the fact that people are "occupying' things instead of "fighting' things. We are putting our bodies on the line by standing up for our beliefs, not fighting for them, which is the old way. We cannot stop war with other wars. We stop wars by facing Death and not fighting. Already the Occupy groups are de-crying the use of violence in Oakland and standing in their truth. "We will do this peacefully. We will not go away. We will win, for we are the 99% of people in the world. We've been taught about freedom, and now we really want it."

Violence begets violence. The Scorpio energies bubble with that kind of raw, volcanic violence. We can choose that way, but we will only recreate a violent world or an angry life. Or we can learn to walk calmly over that lava flow of destructive fire -- firewalking at its best! If we want a new world, we have to birth it with labor -- which might include the pain of channeling the fire instead of letting it consume you -- with love, with determination, with hope and with vision. A new Aeon, the Child of the Woman in Revelations, is being birthed now within so many people. These are the testing times, when we let go of the last bit of ego-darkness -- a fake darkness fraught with unfounded fears and unexplained terror -- and allow the healing darkness of Feminine Spirit to fill us. To rest in the Mother is a gift, not a punishment.

Scorpio initiates emotional release and transformation within the psyche if we are ready for it. This means releasing old, ugly hurtful emotions and fears that live in our unconscious and which get activated when we're with other people. I know many people are ready for it. Just as the Occupy movement is establishing new ways of living and making decisions communally, each one of us is doing the same within our own groups. We are growing together, and any emotional distrust, fear of betrayal and loss of love will be felt by others. Instead of hiding our feelings, we can listen to and understand them. Then choose what to do about them. Ignoring or repressing our darker side isn't the answer. The answer is to understand what those feelings are and to find ways to ease their pain without giving in to them. We need to get down to the truth of our Being and not be afraid to BE who we are meant to be.

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

IN PRAISE OF THE EXUBERANT



And as you stand there

Sunshining all over our Rain Parade

Voice cheering

Toes tapping

Eyes dancing



Let us now praise you.



You, the mango-coconut in our vanilla world.

You, the red balloon in our blue sky.

You, the hooray-for-your-new-job (or hooray-for-your-engagement or hooray-for-your-wedding or hooray-for-your-new-baby or hooray-for-your-divorce) party-throwing friend.



Your door is always open

And don't think we don't take advantage of it.



Your heart is always open

And don't think we don't take advantage of it.



You have a particular kind of bravery:

The not-being-afraid-of-feelings kind of brave

The stand-up-and-be-counted kind of brave

The jump-off-the-high-dive (again) (naked) kind of brave.



We always know when you're in the audience, because

We recognize your laugh.



And as you sit us down and give us your full-beam attention and as you ask us for every detail of our latest adventure (how do you always lead us to the conclusion that our life is an adventure?) and as we, flattered by your unwavering, bright-eyed gaze, end up going on and on and on and on, we have to mentally waft away the annoying, fluttering thought,

"Yes, but: Who takes care of you?"



Because we know that underneath the nonstop carnival there is a lot of

Damn hard work and that some of

Your sparkle

Is the glitter from the parts that got

Broken.



We've seen you fall and get right back up and assumed that it must not have been that much of a

Tumble but the truth is that

You alone have the

Strength to Rise.



And so it is from you we learn that while we may not always

Feel happy

We can always feel

Joy.



And as you Gush and Exclaim and Twist and Shout and Wiggle with pleasure and Yelp and Hoot and Swear out loud and Burst into tears and Rush in and Hug and Holler across the room in a way that some might think of as

Embarrassing, we

Bask in your fearless conviction that

No human experience is unlovable.



Thank you for that.



So let's break out the

Sequins and the feather boas and

Have dessert first and

Grin at strangers and

Let's do the Hokey-Pokey and really

Put our Whole Self in

And order one more bottle because it's so nice to all be together



Under the Abundant Sun.



© 2009 Samantha Bennett