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This is the weblog of
Raymond Powers.
Here I will be sharing what I find of import, humor, concern, inspiration and on the transformational edge
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A Quote:
Kids: they dance before they learn there is anything that isn't music. --William Stafford
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Raymond lives in Ojai, where the time now is:
03:29AM
Unique Readers:
Primarily
Public Domain
Everything I've written here, except my copyrighted
essays, poetry, lyrics, and music is hereby placed in the public
domain. The quotes from other people's writings, and the pictures
used might or might not be copyrighted, but are considered fair
use. Thus the license here would best be described as:
Primarily Public
Domain.
Please ask permission if there is any question in
regards to public domain usage.
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Syndication:
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Wander-Lust
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| Tuesday, January 13, 2004 | |
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13 Jan 2004 @ 16:41
I was inspired and moved by Ming's blog entry about his personal journey and "coming to balance' in the "New Age".
I feel similar. As I become more related and "embodied" all the paranormal, metaphysical, multi-dimensional, intergalactic holographic experiences become a foundation rather than the focus in my life. The "real" challenge of communicating, intimacy, expressing life purpose, navigating the cultural precepts and earth rules becomes my intent; to learn to fully dwell here, now, so I can know love, so I can give love without preconceptions, expectations, fantasies.
Thank you Flemming for sharing your heart.
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| Tuesday, December 30, 2003 | |
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30 Dec 2003 @ 21:32
Symptoms of Inner Peace
by Saskia Davis
Be on the lookout for symptoms of inner peace. The hearts of a great many have already been exposed to inner peace and it is possible that people everywhere could come down with it in epidemic proportions. This could pose a serious threat to what has, up to now, been a fairly stable condition of conflict in the world.
Some signs and symptoms of inner peace:
*A tendency to think and act spontaneously rather than on fears based on past experiences.
*Unmistakable ability to enjoy each moment.
*A loss of interest in judging other people.
*A loss of interest in judging self.
*A loss of interest in interpreting the actions of others.
*A loss of interest in conflict.
*A loss of the ability to worry. (This is a very serious symptom.)
*Frequent, overwhelming episodes of appreciation.
*Contented feeling of connectedness with others and nature.
*Frequent attacks of smiling.
*An increasing tendency to let things happen rather than make them happen.
*An increased susceptibility to the love extended by others as well as the uncontrollable urge to extend it.
WARNING:
If you have some or all of the above symptoms, please be advised that your condition of inner peace may be so far advanced as to not be curable. If you are exposed to anyone exhibiting any of these symptoms, remain exposed only at your own risk. More >
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| Wednesday, November 5, 2003 | |
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5 Nov 2003 @ 08:49
Presidential Candidate Dennis Kucinich To Give Keynote Address and Receive “Heart of Humanity” Award at Peace Sunday at Agape Spiritual Center, Sunday November 23rd
What: Dennis Kucinich to Give Keynote Address and receive “Heart of Humanity” Award at Annual Multi-Denominational Event
When: November 23rd, 2:30 pm – 9 pm
Where: Agape International Spiritual Center, 5700 Buckingham Parkway, Culver City
2004 Presidential Candidate Dennis Kucinich will be the keynote speaker at the annual Peace Sunday event in Los Angeles. Noted for his proactive stance on Peace, he courageously led the Progressive Caucus in the House of Representatives, resulting in 126 Representatives voting against Bush’s Iraq invasion. He is also well known for his platform plank of starting a cabinet level Department of Peace.
The first candidate to come out as an outspoken critic of Bush’s war policies Kucinich has been hailed as the Peace Candidate by the many activist groups. He has been awarded the 2003 Gandhi Peace Award putting him in the league of noted Peacemakers including Eleanor Roosevelt, Daniel Ellsberg, and Cesar Chavez. At Peace Sunday, he will receive their “Heart of Humanity” Award that has been given to such notables as Dr. Robert Muller, of the United Nations, and the Dalai Lama.
Peace Sunday is an annual event with a dynamite program, music, a moving ceremony in which different religions all light a candle under one roof in the name of peace; workshops, seminars, booths and tables for different organizations and religions to bring their information and delights to sell.
The main program between 3 and 5 (music and seating begin at 2:20) will be followed by a wonderful array of seminars and workshops and of tables and booths of information and delights for sale. Some of the workshop leaders are Hector Aristizabal with his amazing "theater of the oppressed", Cynthia Bissonnette and Stephen Pike with their presentation of "Downloading Personal and Planetary Peace."
Albert Cohen and Gary Herbertson will arrange a panel on Peace with the earth, and Patrick Harbula and Lisa Garr will have a panel on the importance of good news media. Richard Grossman, Kabbalah Bach and Florence Riggs will give us an experience of healing power, and Kristal Parks, who is a major activist that has spent a year in jail - much of it in solitary confinement - for walking her talk, will show us how we take care of what we love.
One of the most important and historic voices in America, Danny Sheehan, will take us through the worldviews and how they relate to today’s issues and their relevance, how they fit into history and determine where we are going. Stephan Longfellow Fiske will present "The Path of the Peace-maker." Dr. Linda Groff, Theodore Clark and many other brilliant presenters will be with us also. It should be a fabulous day for all of us to come together to learn about, celebrate, and wage PEACE!!
All this for $20 in advance or $25 at the door. Make checks payable to PEACE SUNDAY and mail to Peace Sunday at PO Box 661401 Los Angeles, CA 90066-9201. For credit cards, call 323 655 6612 or 818 888 6004 and for information or exhibit spaces call 310 391 5735.
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| Sunday, September 28, 2003 | |
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28 Sep 2003 @ 01:00
Best Photos Of The Year
My friend David Joyce sent me this link and comments.
Take a minute to look at these photos....if you haven't seen them , you owe it to yourself to check them out. Just go to this site....
What a wonderful world.....strike that.....UNIVERSE!! More >
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28 Sep 2003 @ 00:35
Buddhist Monk Completes Seven-Year Run
By KENJI HALL, Associated Press Writer
Fri Sep 19, 1:49 PM ET
TOKYO - A Buddhist priest dubbed the "marathon monk" has completed an ancient running ritual in the remote Japanese mountains that took seven years and covered a distance equivalent to a trip round the globe, wearing only a flowing white robe and flimsy straw sandals.
The 44-year-old monk, Genshin Fujinami, returned Thursday from his 24,800-mile spiritual journey in the Hiei mountains, a range of five peaks that rise above the ancient capital of Kyoto.
Dressed in his handmade sandals and robe, with a straw raincoat draped over his head, Fujinami was greeted at the end of his journey by a crowd of worshippers, who knelt to receive his blessings, said an official at Enryakuji Hoshuin, the temple that is guardian of the grueling tradition.
"I entrusted everything to God. I am satisfied," Fujinami was quoted as saying.
Since 1885, only 46 other so-called "marathon monks" of the Tendai sect have survived the ritual, which dates to the 8th century and is believed to be a path to enlightenment, according to temple officials. The last monk to complete it returned in 1994.
A few have done it twice; many more have not lived to finish. Traditionally, any monk, or gyoja, who can't continue to the end must take his own live, either by hanging or disembowelment.
A rigorous regimen dictates that in each of the journey's first three years, the pilgrim must rise at midnight for 100 consecutive days to pray, run along an 18-mile trail around Mount Hiei — stopping 250 times to pray along the way. He can carry only candles, a prayer book and a sack of vegetarian food.
In the next two years, he has to extend his runs to 200 days.
In the winter, the pilgrim runner takes a break and spends the days doing temple chores.
His most difficult trial, however, comes during the fifth year when he must sit and chant mantras for nine days without food, water or sleep, in a trial called "doiri," or "entering the temple."
In the sixth year, he walks 37.5 miles every day for 100 days. And in the seventh, he goes 52.5 miles for 100 days and then 18 miles for another 100 days, before returning to the temple, located in Otsu city, about 234 miles southwest of Tokyo. More >
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| Thursday, August 7, 2003 | |
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7 Aug 2003 @ 09:50
I'm reading a book called Love and Awakening by John Wellwood
Some of you may be familiar with this or his other books.
It'a deep inspirational look on how to create and maintain a conscious relationship, soul to soul, remaining present in conflict or in peace. It's not a "how to" book but an insightful guide as to how we function as human beings in relationship.
There's some great excerpts on Amazon. More >
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| Friday, August 1, 2003 | |
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1 Aug 2003 @ 23:25
Dalai Lama Misses sex, Shoots Guns
By Ruth Gledhill
July 29, 2003
The Dalai Lama has admitted that, in a lifetime dedicated to celibacy and non-violence, he has missed out on sex and that he shoots at hawks in anger.
Asked in an interview what experiences he had missed that ordinary people had not, he pointed towards his groin and laughed, saying: "I obviously missed this."
He was not sorry, however: "For monks and nuns, the practice of celibacy is not just a rule. Our target is to try and reduce negative emotions. Sexual desire and attachment are enjoyable, but act as a basis to anger, hatred and jealousy."
He was not convinced that he would have made a good father, admitting to having a bad temper. That temper led him to aim his air rifle at hawks, he told Conrad Kiechel, international editorial director of Reader's Digest.
"I feed birds, peaceful birds. I'm non-violent, but if a hawk comes when I'm feeding birds, I lose my temper and get my air rifle." He did not shoot to kill, "only to scare the hawks".
Speaking in Dharamsala, India, where he has lived since China put down a Tibetan uprising against communist rule, he admitted to having enjoyed spending time with Mao Zedong.
"At official dinners he made me sit beside him and treated me like his son, sometimes feeding me with his chopsticks.
"I was afraid that since he coughed so much I would catch something. He was no doubt a great revolutionary, but at the same time, his behaviour was often that of a peasant."
He said there was a softening towards Tibet by the current Chinese regime. More >
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| Saturday, July 26, 2003 | |
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26 Jul 2003 @ 23:43
Costumes: ergonomic, frivolous and meaningful. More >
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26 Jul 2003 @ 12:25
In Quiet Moments
In quiet moments,
when stillness becomes my world,
I stand inside myself,
I stand beside myself.
Present and lost,
In loves magnificence,
Bequethed with the freedom that wisdom brings.
Sanctity caresses every breath,
Every gesture,
Every word,
In quiet moments.
I revel and shake,
The mystery that lives in my bones,
Since before the earth was formed.
Before the first whisper of the moon’s
sacred marriage to the sun.
Sometimes these secrets explode within me,
This vessel turns from steel to gold,
And I lose myself, I lose myself
In this familiar wine.
Yet deep inside I know,
I must pass this drink,
I drink so that all may be drunkards
when Spirit shines,
When Spirit shines,
In Quiet Moments.
More >
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| Monday, July 21, 2003 | |
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21 Jul 2003 @ 12:21
More from the collection of Letecia and myself.
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| Friday, July 18, 2003 | |
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18 Jul 2003 @ 13:42
More from the collection of Leteia and Raymond.
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| Thursday, July 17, 2003 | |
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17 Jul 2003 @ 18:39
A picture (or several) can be worth a million words.
Periodically I'll being posting some that Letecia and I have collected. Hope they stir your juices whatever your taste may be.. More >
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| Saturday, July 12, 2003 | |
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12 Jul 2003 @ 14:21
Here is the site to watch the trailer and see what the film looks like
The Whale Rider
Here is the synopsis: In a small New Zealand coastal village, Maori claim descent from Paikea, the Whale Rider. In every generation for more than 1000 years, a male heir born to the Chief succeeds to the title. The time is now. The Chief's eldest son, Porourangi, fathers twins - a boy and a girl. But the boy and his mother die in childbirth. The surviving girl is named Pai. Grief-stricken, her father leaves her to be raised by her grandparents. Koro, her grandfather who is the Chief, refuses to acknowledge Pai as the inheritor of the tradition and claims she is of no use to him. But her grandmother, Flowers, sees more than a broken line, she sees a child in desperate need of love. And Koro learns to love the child. When Pai's father, Porourangi, now a feted international artist, returns home after twelve years, Koro hopes everything is resolved and Porourangi will to accept destiny and become his successor. But Porourangi has no intention of becoming Chief. He has moved away from his people both physically and emotionally. After a bitter argument with Koro he leaves, suggesting to Pai that she come with him. She starts the journey but quickly returns, claiming her grandfather needs her. Koro is blinded by prejudice and even Flowers cannot convince him that Pai is the natural heir. The old Chief is convinced that the tribe's misfortunes began at Pai's birth and calls for his people to bring their 12-year-old boys to him for training. He is certain that through a gruelling process of teaching the ancient chants, tribal lore and warrior techniques, the future leader of their tribe will be revealed to him. Meanwhile, deep within the ocean, a massive herd of whales is responding, drawn towards Pai and their twin destinies. When the whales become stranded on the beach, Koro is sure this signals an apocalyptic end to his tribe. Until one person prepares to make the ultimate sacrifice to save the people.
---------------------------------------------------
Whale Rider, the South Pacific Pictures-produced feature film, has won the AGF People's Choice Award at the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival
345 films screened over the 10-day festival and Whale Rider, which had its world debut in Toronto, was voted the favorite of the festival audiences, known worldwide for their enthusiasm and love of cinema.
Whale Rider joins an exclusive list of influential films - the last four winners of the People's Choice Award were Amelie; Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon; American Beauty and Life Is Beautiful . Runners-up for this year's People's Choice Award were Bend It Like Beckham and Michael Moore's Bowling For Columbine.
Producer John Barnett says the Toronto audiences were captivated by the film, its young star Keisha Castle-Hughes and director Niki Caro.
"We are so thrilled to win this award - it is voted by audiences, so it has real validity and the Toronto audience were the first anywhere to see the film," says Barnett.
Directed by Niki Caro (Memory and Desire), Whale Rider is based on the novel by acclaimed New Zealand writer Witi Ihimaera (The Matriarch, Tangi). It stars newcomer Keisha Castle-Hughes, Rawiri Paratene, Vicky Haughton, and Cliff Curtis (Training Day, Blow and Once Were Warriors).
Whale Rider is represented internationally by London-based sales agent, The Works, and represented in New Zealand and Australia by Buena Vista International. BVI will release Whale Rider in New Zealand next year.
Whale Rider is produced for South Pacific Pictures, ApolloMedia and Pandora Film by Tim Sanders; John Barnett; and Frank Hübner of ApolloMedia. Executive Producers are Bill Gavin and Linda Goldstein Knowlton. Author Witi Ihimaera is also Associate Producer.
The film tells the story of a young girl's fight to prove her love, her leadership and her destiny, and is shot on location in Whangara, on the East Coast.
Whale Rider is the first film to receive funding from the New Zealand Government's new Film Production Fund. Other investors in the film are ApolloMedia in Germany, Filmstiftung NRW, The New Zealand Film Commission and NZ on Air.
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| Thursday, July 10, 2003 | |
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10 Jul 2003 @ 17:55
Johnny Mercer Foundation's Website Accentuates the Positive
The Johnny Mercer Foundation has launched a Web site that aims to introduce a whole new generation to the songs and tradition of Johnny Mercer and other greats such as Irving Berlin, Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter and Duke Ellington. The site highlights Mercer's prolific songwriting contributions and the nonprofit organization's dedication to preserving the nation's rich history of songs. By devoting a significant portion of its resources to charitable programs targeted at children, the organization reflects Mercer's love of kids and lifetime of generosity.
In keeping with their mission, the Foundation recently launched the "Accentuate The Positive" educational program to introduce thousands of elementary school children to the Great American Songbook through LyricNOTES, a 32-page student activity guide. LyricNOTES enables teachers to take kids aged 8-12 on creative journey by explaining how a song is born, how music and lyrics are conceived and written, and how songs of any generation reflect our passions and ideals. The Web site offers a free sample of the guide and encourages teachers to request copies for their classrooms.
Margaret Whiting, President of the Foundation's Board, notes that, "The new Web site enables us to reflect on Johnny's songwriting accomplishments and reach a vast audience that is interested in preserving the Great American Songbook. Introducing these songs to our children and grandchildren enables them to understand their heritage and claim these ageless songs as their own."
The foundation's initiatives also include:
An alliance with the famed Sundance Film institute to present a yearly seminar focused on the interpretation of American Popular songs and how they are reflected in the music, film, theater and television of today.
Support for St. Louis Women, A Blues Ballet, a production based on the Johnny Mercer and Harold Arlen score. The production features the Dance Theater of Harlem and has its world premier July 8th, 2003 at Lincoln Center in New York City.
Other Web site features consist of a retrospective of Johnny Mercer's career, information about the Foundation's other charitable activities and a donation interface. For those interested in researching all of Johnny Mercer's songs the site includes a comprehensive database with song titles, dates, publishing acknowledgements, copyright details, composer listings and production information.
The Johnny Mercer Foundation is based in New York City and supports numerous charitable organizations through private donations and royalties from the vast catalog of Johnny Mercer songs such as Hooray For Hollywood, Moon River, Accentuate The Positive, Skylark, You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby, Days Of Wine And Roses, Blues In The Night, Come Rain Or Come Shine, I Remember You and Jeepers Creepers.
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| Wednesday, July 9, 2003 | |
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| Monday, June 16, 2003 | |
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16 Jun 2003 @ 09:59
These quotes were at the bottom of an email I received from my friend Robert Frey.
Banish the word struggle from your attitude and your vocabulary. All that you do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration. "We are the ones we've been waiting for..." Hopi elders
'When the power of love becomes more important than the love of power' ....then there will be peace." Jimmy Hendrix:
"To handle yourself, use your head
To handle others, use your heart"
Peace is not the absence of conflict, but the active, compassionate expression of the presence of Spirit.
"Violence is the language of the inarticulate." Rev. Michael Beckwith 2/2/03
"Your only business is to find happiness and to help others find happiness."
~ Buddha
Love is what's in the room with you at Christmas if you stop opening presents and listen. -- Bobby, age 5
When you love somebody, your eyelashes go up and down
and little stars come out of you. -- Karen, age 7
If you want to learn to love better, you should start with a friend who you hate. -- Nikka, age 6 More >
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16 Jun 2003 @ 00:21
Autistic Children and Paul McCartney Inspires 9-Year-Old To Write Book About Love and World Healing
Sandpoint, ID —A nine-year-old girl, asked by parents to help entertain a group of learning disabled children, was inspired by her assignment to write a children’s book about love, friendship, and healing. The publisher of The Tlytiettlym Tree will direct profits from the sale of the book to fly the author, and a theatrical cast of classmates, to cities across America to entertain, uplift, and educate families with autistic children.
The title of the book, The Tlytiettlym Tree (Tetrahedron Press, 2003; 1-888-508-4787), is an acronym gleaned by Sandpoint, Idaho, Waldorf School fourth grader, Alena Horowitz, while contemplating the lyrics of Paul McCartney’s song “The End.” She heard the former Beatle perform the song the night following her “babysitting” assignment. It ends with the famous line, “The love you take is equal to the love you make.” Thus, the acronym “Tlytiettlym” (pronounced Tly-tital-um) was born.
The 64-page hardcover, illustrated in full color by Alena and her art teacher, Mary De La Fuente, encourages children to develop friendships beyond their usual social “clicks.” Two competing groups of children here are forced by nature to collaborate in search of a “treasure.” A secreted map leads the grade-schoolers to a magical tree that bears the fruits of all the earth. Harvesting the fruit requires love and even more collaboration. The children bring the fruit to their village where miraculous healings begin to occur in everyone who eats the tasty bounty.
The Tlytiettlym Tree ($14.95; ISBN: 0-923550-42-9) is currently available from the publisher, Tetrahedron Publishing Group (1-800-336-9266) and expected in bookstores across North America by mid-August. Wholesalers include Ingram and Baker & Taylor. Bulk and premium purchases may be ordered at additional discount by contacting Healthy World Distributing at 1-888-508-4787 or Healthy World Distributing .
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| Tuesday, April 1, 2003 | |
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1 Apr 2003 @ 09:32
Ideas are the most powerful thing on the planet. --
David Crosby More >
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1 Apr 2003 @ 09:10
The Lovers
will drink wine night and day.
They will drink until they can
tear away the veils of intellect and
melt away the layers of shame and modesty.
When in Love,
body, mind, heart and soul don't even exist.
Become this,
fall in Love,
and you will not be separated again.
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Love rests on no foundation.
It is an endless ocean,
with no beginning or end.
Imagine,
a suspended ocean,
riding on a cushion of ancient secrets.
All souls have drowned in it,
and now dwell there.
One drop of that ocean is hope,
and the rest is fear.
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Love came,
and became like blood in my body.
It rushed through my veins and
encircled my heart.
Everywhere I looked,
I saw one thing.
The Beloved's name written
on my limbs,
on my left palm,
on my forehead,
on the back of my neck,
on my right big toe…
Oh, my friend,
all that you see of me
is just a shell,
and the rest belongs to the Beloved.
Poems from Rumi Network More >
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| Sunday, March 30, 2003 | |
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30 Mar 2003 @ 16:43
This is from James Twyman. He is an internationally renowned author and “Peace Troubadour” who has a reputation for drawing millions of people together in prayer to influence events of world crisis. In 1995 he had an experience in the mountains of Croatia that led to his best-selling book “Emissary of Light,” called “the second coming of the Celestine Prophesy” by Variety Magazine. His six books have been translated into over a dozen languages, and his cd’s are distributed around the world.
James has been invited by world leaders to countries like Iraq, Northern Ireland, Israel, South Africa and Serbia to offer his insights on peace and perform the “Peace Concert,” often while conflicts have raged in those countries. He has performed twice at the United Nations in New York, as well as the US Capitol and the US Pentagon. His peace projects, including the "Cloth of Many Colors", have inspired millions of people around the world.
His letter reads:
Last weekend 600 people gathered on the Big Island of Hawaii to listen to the messages of peace from several of the Psychic Children we have been working with over the past year. I believe it was one of the most profound
experiences any of us have ever had, and the Children themselves were overjoyed with the opportunity. In fact, during a panel discussion on Sunday, they presented their idea of a world wide prayer vigil that they believe would have a profound effect on the current crisis in Iraq. Its simplicity and wisdom is overwhelming, and the fact that the idea comes from children makes it irresistible.
They want to call this:
A Prayer Vigil for George Bush
They explained that there is so much energy against President Bush that we are not helping him make decisions for the highest good of every person on the planet. The more we focus on what we don't like, the more it increases. They suggest that we See him as God would, and focus on the Light in the President, thereby amplifying the Light. The children believe that if hundreds of thousands of people do this at the same moment, then the effect on his consciousness would be profound. I have to agree.
Therefore, we have decided to conduct an emergency "Great Experiment IV" and are asking all the Spiritual Peacemakers around the world to join us in this important project.
Here are the details:
April 1, 2003, 11 AM New York time, 8 AM California Time (determine your own time zone based on this) Hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people, will join together for fifteen minutes as one mind and pray for President
Bush (and all those who influence his decision making) to make all his decisions based on the highest good of all beings on earth. The Children suggested that we begin by imagining him as a little boy, and use our energy to empower his heart. They say that the boy is still within him, though he is very afraid. He doesn't need to be attacked for what he is doing, but loved, not for his actions, but for the Truth within him. We call this: "Seeing as God Sees and Loving as God Loves." If possible, gather with other people during this vigil, and please pass this E-mail on to as many people as you can to help spread the word.
Hundreds of people will be joining together in Washington, DC to anchor these important prayers. We are in the process of securing a permit for a location as close to the White House as possible, and will have children present a section of the "Children's Cloth of Many Colors" at the White House that same day. (The Children's Cloth of Many Colors is over one-third of a mile long, and is made up of pieces of cloth that have been infused with the energy of peace from tens of thousands of children from around the world. It came from the original "Cloth of Many Colors" peace project I started in 1999 which has been presented at the UN in New York, the US Capitol, the Pentagon, and many other places around the world.) If you live in the Washington area and would like to join the group praying near the White House, send an E-mail. You will receive a reply as soon as the location has been secured.
The Children wanted me to stress that this has nothing to do with agreeing or disagreeing with President Bush in regard to the war in Iraq. They say that in order to be Spiritual Peacemakers we must release our judgment and focus only on the higher good. George Bush has the power to effect the lives of so many people, and we pray that he will do so with compassion and peace. The intention of this vigil is to break down the walls of fear and increase the love in his heart. It is the gift of the children. Please join us.
Once again, April 1, 11 AM EST, fifteen minutes sending George Bush all the love you have in your heart. And tell the whole world. More >
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