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Archive for creative

Oct
06

Richness of Life

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As abruptly as summer hit, it left, with daytime temps dropping from 90s to high 40. The catalpa across the street has been shedding leaves at a steady rate, altho most of the deciduous are barely starting to shed. The lavender up the street smells wonderful, and the blue jays are temporarily back. Kat is in New Jersey for about a month, so Arrow and I are batching it.

Last week before she left, Kat asked for a stone with this engraving:

All bets are off…

Anything is possible.

That got me to thinking of how rich this life is with potential. Any given moment presents a multitude of options, cloaked only by our habits of this lifetime, and our willingness to select and activate a new option.

Our souls are filled with other/alternate lifetimes that have learned many talents… many abilities. Most of these are available now, if we choose to activate them. Do you wish to be more open and loving? Do automatic writing? Converse with your soul? Be a healer? Levitate objects?

Choose your new path. Select or design a meditation that takes you beyond your mental/physical self… say to the center of the universe. [I imagine myself in deep space, with the glory of the universe around me.] There, set your intention to remember how to do whatever you have chosen. Make that intention clear and concise. Then return with the knowledge that your choice has been activated. Allow the memory of how to achieve your goal to come in its’ own timing. Have no expectations of how this may occur. Just remember, when working with your soul…

All bets are off…

Anything is possible.

Categories : Meditations
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Sep
29

Forgotten Feelings

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“Most of us have forgotten what it’s like to really feel. We know what anger, frustration, anxiety, stress, hysteria, jealousy, boredom, happiness, excitement, and embarrassment is. These are but a few of our human emotions. But they are not feelings. They are more like agitated states of mind. To feel is to move and to dance to the rhythms of our heart. To feel our lives, every inch of it, is to experience the divine. From the agony to the ecstasy, it’s all an expression of what is holy within. Our heart is the chalice that holds the sacred elixir of life. To drink deeply of its wisdom and its achingly beautiful grace, is to know God.”

and

“This is where many of us fear to tread. We think we won’t survive our feelings, our power, our worthiness. But we will. It is written. It is our destiny. The world of duality, the only one most of us have ever known, is coming to an end. And it’s ending in our minds. No, the earth is not going to explode and disappear. It is ending through the power of our minds to create something else. Something based on new beliefs about what and who we are. Something that feels more like oneness and unity, and less like fear and separation. As we move into this new awareness, like magic, our eyes will begin to see a new world. It is here the ancient prophecy of old telling of a new world, a new people, will come to light. It is US. It is WE. We are emerging from the chrysalis of transformation to a freedom beyond our wildest imagination… “

The entire article is here, and Heather Fraser’s site here.

Categories : Life
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Sep
23

Roviat’s new clothes

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Arrow and I have been busy the past few days with the site redesign. I liked the old colors, and may convert this theme to them as we find time. Everything is still here… I think it might be more accessible in this style. I also converted to the Feedburner feed; it appears to be working, plus it has the option for posts to be sent as emails, if you prefer that option. Still, if you are not getting your feeds, let me know…. or if things don’t appear right in your browser. I had some trouble with Firefox displaying correctly, but think we’ve got that straightened out.

There are still a few more changes to make, a few sidebar widgets to get sorted out, and a new contact page. Any suggestions welcome, of course.

Arrow’s self assigned part in this [which he fulfilled admirably] was to allow me no more than 2 hours of computer time between dog games or walks. That is his way of making sure I keep my head clear.

Categories : Uncategorized
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Jul
19

Beginnings

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[This story I wrote in 1983, in Tasmania, for a contest the Australian Broadcasting Commission was having. Each week, some of the stories were read over the air.]

The night had been long. Once, when the contractions were still far apart, we wandered outside arm-in-arm to stand under the forest trees. Starlight had filtered through their branches, and the moon just edging above the eastern mountains had flooded our valley in silver. The nightlife had accepted our presence and resumed their chatter. Down on the lake, geese called, almost quietly, to each other. The rustlings in the bush were our friends, who occasionally visited the cabin if a window or door was left ajar. I savoured the crispness of the night air.

As we stood leaning against each other, I could not help but begin to relax, though the knot in my stomach would not  completely dissolve. As an owl screeched in the distance we had slowly picked our way back to the cabin.

But now….she was so tiny, this little one. I untangled the cord from her body, and placed her face down on Shona’s belly. Elation was slowly filtering through me as I carried on with the aftermath of the birth. I heard it also in Shona’s voice as she crooned softly to the newborn, her fingers massaging gently the infant back.

As I worked, I was aware of many things quite clearly without giving my direct attention to them; Zamphir’s pan pipes from the stereo–Shona’s favorite background music; the three scented candles—now almost stubs—burning on the bedside table; the merry crackle of pine logs from the fireplace; dawn sun warming the wall to my left; the smell of jasmine and new birth; of the absence now, of any tension in the room; of the shared warmth and quiet amazement that had taken its place.

So very tiny. I lifted the sleeping little body and immersed it slowly int he basin. She smiled then, as I sponged her, and her eyes opened. For moments then, Sharon Rose studied the movements of her hands, obviously enjoying her new life. Her eyes drooped, and finishing her bath, I dried her and took her, wrapped in the towel to sit on the side of the bed. Again, little eyes opened. This time they looked directly into mine with an openness I’d not have thought possible. Then, with great deliberateness, she turned her head to study Shone.

From the bushes beyond the window, an early morning songfest erupted.

Winner ‘Story of the Week’ prize.

Winner 3rd Grand Final Prize.

Published with other winners by the ABC in the booklet “The Story Teller.”

When I wrote it, it felt like it was a true story… that it had actually happened to me in another lifetime, or different dimension.  It still feels that way, altho some of the details I’m certain came from this life….

Categories : Stories
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