BEFORE
Friday, January 29, 2016
POWER OUTAGE OR OUT OF POWER
We put so such faith in things of the outer. People, jobs,
money. These things, if we allow them, can hold us hostage by the amount of
power we grant them. Technology is another “god” that we’ve chosen to worship,
pray to, and as a result, fall prey to. We’ll do anything; embrace anyone or
anything to keep from looking to our inner spirits as our source of power.
We’re always convinced that something or someone else knows better or holds the
key or provides an answer better than our own inner, still small voice.
Could it be because that voice or inner prompting isn’t a
visible manifestation and since we can’t see it we assume that it can’t
possibly be valid? Yet we fail to realize that everything physical originally
began in the realm of the invisible. Either as an idea, concept or an
unmanifested entity.
Can it also be that we don’t believe that we possess the
power necessary to assist us in our endeavors or trials? To illumine us in our
“dark nights of the soul”? We question and doubt the extent of our power
entirely forgetting that we are “perpetual creation machines” endowed with an
infinite inexhaustible amount of power to create whatever reality we so choose.
Why then are we so quick to feel and be rendered powerless?
Perhaps it’s the temporal quality associated with creation. A certain amount of
time is required to bring something from the formless into the formed. Another
necessary ingredient would be mental perseverance or tenacity. One must stay
focused on the goal or course and not doubt or faint in the pursuit of the manifestation
or attempt at creation. This requires mental, emotional and sometimes physical
vigilance.
Unlike masters or avatars such as Jesus who were able to
instantly turn water into wine or multiply the loaves and fishes, we require
time, focus and persistence in order to create. However, as Jesus said “These
works I do, but greater works than these shall you do”.
Realizing that we have this innate power, what causes a
“power failure”? I believe doubt and fear can cause our spiritual conduits to
short and blow out the generator of creation.
One of the definitions of doubt is to be double minded. In
other words, to go back and forth or faint in your belief about something or
someone. It is said that fear is the opposite of love which is the most
cohesive power in the universe. When doubt and fear combine, they will quite
naturally unravel the spiritual coils required to power the generator of
creation.
How can we therefore go about repairing the blown fuses and
circuits created by fear and doubt? By realizing that where we place our
thoughts and beliefs we place our power.
I believe at no other time in history have there been more methods of short circuiting our power. We place our faith in the news and views espoused by people, their machines and devices, their money and the influence bestowed upon them by us. We watch TV; use the Internet, cell phones, the entertainment industry in all forms to frighten and to reinforce the negative ideas produced by these entities. We forget that all of this is temporary and will crumble into the “nothingness from whence came”.
Any power we bestow upon the physical will eventually die
out because it is only an emanation or reflection of the original true power or
Source. The Invisible, Inexhaustible, Creative Power Source that is within each
one of us if we would believe. But our beliefs and faith must be rooted on the
positive, fruitful aspects of creation.
When we place our
thoughts so, our power increases and cannot help but produce after its own
kind.
Friday, January 15, 2016
SIMON WINCHESTER'S
"PACIFIC"
Simon Winchester’s “Pacific” is an extraordinary book providing an insightful, and informative examination of the region, people and
cultures surrounding and affected by the largest body of water on the planet.
It contains histories of everything from the
creation of the thirty eighth parallel identifying the division between North
and South Korea, the invention of the transistor radio and subsequent creation of
electronics giant, Sony Corporation to the evolution of the surfboard.
This fascinating narrative paints glorious panoramas
of natural wonders and natural catastrophes while also revealing some of the
inglorious bastards associated with many of the surrounding countries and
cultures.
Winchester is successful in corralling the wealth of
material about this oceanic behemoth. He chose a scattering of happenings each
of which, to him, seemed to betoken some greater trend, and which might tell in
microcosm a larger truth about the Pacific than the moments themselves suggest.
After scouring newspapers, history books, databases
and academic papers, he was “buried under a blizzard of possibilities”.
He decides to begin his journey on January 1, 1950,
which the scientific community designated as the “Year Zero”. “The choice of
this date was scientifically elegant, logical and precise for reasons having to
do with radio-carbon dating.
Winchester saw this date as the most appropriate,
the dividing line between purity and impurity. For nearly all the carbon-14
dating pollution that was sent up into the skies and that created the concept
of “present” and “before present (BP)…came as the result of explosions that
occurred in the Pacific.
In the end, he chose ten singular events. He began
“with the acceptance of a singular and distasteful reality: that the Pacific…
is in fact…an atomic ocean. It’s where most of the world’s thermonuclear
weapons have been tested.
Included in his narrative is the story of Bikini
Island and of the hydrogen bombs tested there. He relates the tale of the
arrogant, reckless scientists and power hungry, political administrations that
influenced the nuclear testing, obliterating and displacing the lives of the
people of Bikini.
He goes on to relate story after story illustrating
how the surrounding islands, indigenous people, historic and current cultures,
colonial powers and the sea itself is the most turbulent in the world.
“The Pacific Ocean is in serious environmental
peril, ringed with nations undergoing immense internal change, is unimaginably
busy with commerce, has come to be at the forefront of science and self
discovery and is an expanse of sea that should be central to all our thoughts.
This book is an account of the modern Pacific: a
pillar of hope on which for good or ill, we might construct humanity’s future.
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