Sunday, September 27, 2009

~ It Acts Like Love ~
It acts like love---music,
it reaches toward the face, touches it, and tries to let you know
His promise: that all will be okay.

It acts like love---music, and
tells the feet, "You do not have to be so burdened."

My body is covered with wounds
this world made,

but I still longed to kiss Him, even when God said,

"Could you also kiss the hand that caused
each scar,

for you will not find me until
you do."

It does that---music---helps us
to forgive.


From Love Poems From God
Translated by Daniel Ladinsky



Rabia (717-801 AD), sometimes called Rabia of Basra or Rabia al Basri, was born to a poor family in Basra in what is now Iraq. Her parents died of famine and she was sold into slavery.

The story is told that her master one night woke up and saw a light shining above her head while she was praying. Stunned, he freed her the next morning.

Rabia chose a solitary life of prayer, living much of her life in desert seclusion.

Her fame as a holy woman spread and people began to journey to her retreat, to ask advice, to study, to learn.

Today she is greatly revered by devout Muslims and mystics throughout the world.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Forgiveness of sins

Tashlich is a ritual that traditionally takes place on the first day of Rosh HaShanah. Jews traditionally go to the ocean or a stream to pray and throw bread crumbs into the water. Symbolically, the fish devour their sins. Occasionally, people ask what kind of bread          crumbs should be thrown. 
Here are a suggestions for bread for specific sins and misbehaviors:

For ordinary sins - White Bread
For erotic sins - French Bread
For particularly dark sins - Pumpernickel
For complex sins - Multi-Grain
For twisted sins - Pretzels
For tasteless sins -Rice Cakes
For sins committed in haste - Matzoh
For sins of chutzpah - Fresh Bread
For substance abuse - Stoned Wheat
For use of heavy drugs - Poppy Seed
For petty larceny - Stollen

For committing auto theft - Caraway
For ill-temperedness - Sourdough
For silliness, eccentricity - Nut Bread
For not giving full value - Shortbread
For jingoism, chauvinism - Yankee Doodles
For excessive irony - Rye Bread
For unnecessary chances - Hero Bread
For telling bad jokes/puns - Corn Bread
For war-mongering - Kaiser Rolls
For dressing immodestly - Tarts
For causing injury to others -Tortes
For lechery and promiscuity - Hot Buns
For promiscuity with gentiles - Hot Cross Buns

For racist attitudes - Crackers
For sophisticated racism - Ritz Crackers
For being holier than thou - Bagels
For abrasiveness - Grits
For dropping in without notice - Popovers
For over-eating - Stuffing
For impetuosity - Quick Bread
For indecent photography - Cheesecake
For raising your voice too often - Challah
For pride and egotism - Puff Pastry
For being overly smothering - Angel Food Cake
For laziness - Any long loaf
For trashing the environment – Dumplings


Thanks to Slim Russell and Ellen Sokolow for posting this on the Sacred Fire Community listserv.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Oneness

"Students achieving Oneness will move on to Twoness." 
~~Woody Allen
And, of course, there’s the Dalai Lama’s reply to what kind of hot dog he wanted in NYC: “Make me One with everything.”

So, what should we understand about "Oneness"?



There is a common thread of unity that runs through the teachings of the great thinkers. Seldom will you find a respected teacher who teaches duality when it comes to our approach to the Divine.


It’s hard to escape duality here on this lovely blue-green planet with its seemingly built-in dual modes of heat-cold, night-day, good-evil, male-female, pain-pleasure, health-illness, and birth-death. Duality is all-pervasive; it is present in everything around us. 

But it’s the split between mind and body that delays the healing process and perpetuates our journey in duality. It’s a constant discipline to live in a non-dual state of mind where we experience the Unity that I believe exists on some ‘levels’. Perhaps in the higher, finer spiritual realms, things are more harmonious.

Some teachers refer to the Earth as a school house where we chose (past tense) to come to learn our remaining ‘lessons’ that will lead us to more ‘graduated’ level, maybe to Perfection. Jesus and the Ascended Masters teach us that we can achieve Perfection while in this very embodiment, right now. All it takes is continual awareness of the energy flowing non-stop from the Higher realms. I understand that if we’re unaware of It, or could care less about it, then it still flows, but doesn’t stick to us.


St. Germain says:
The easy way to see and feel Perfection is to qualify every thought and feeling going forth with Perfection.”


Jesus says (through St. Paul):
Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus.     1 Thessalonians 5:16-18


And in Jesus' own words:

“Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.”

I've always thought that it's almost an insult to God to think of myself as striving toward perfection. Ah, the good nuns of my childhood only taught what they themselves were led to believe. And the messages of being humble and striving for perfection are, on the surface, dualistically opposite.

I now know that it's not impossible to make this commitment to ourselves to burst through the veils of the ‘outer world’ and live in this en-Lightened world of the Spirit. We carry an awareness of our Higher Divine Self (actually, the Christ) that is always immediately above us during our day of waiting for traffic lights, walking in the woods, sitting in staff meetings, or cooking dinner. 


I forget mine often, but when I do recall this Presence, I immediately feel a surge of heightened energy that is filled with indescribable Love and Peace. This Light that we can direct downward through the crown (top of the head) is always available to us. 






This “Magic Presence” looks like this:

http://www.saintgermainfoundation.org/body2.htm


We need only be 'conscious' of this Presence and desire it wholeheartedly.      


There is a story of a Buddhist disciple who asked his/her teacher how they should proceed along the path of enlightenment. The teacher said:

“Come to me when you desire wisdom like a man whose hair is on fire desires water.”


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

A new kind of thought

Lately, I catch myself having a new kind of thought: “How would that thought look in print, going out to, who knows? thousands? hundreds? or the ten or so people who check in on this blog?”  So I jot it down anyway -- happy at least that I’m writing again. I must have 10-12 blank notebooks (I buy them to feed a fetish I have about having blank notebooks around), only two of them filled, and the rest -- partially filled. Now, with this blog, I can read stuff I’ve written - or copied/quoted from what others have written - and scroll its contents. 
Is writing a spiritual exercise? It may be if the in-spir-ation comes from the spirit. What then is the “spirit”?
Some dictionary definitions:
The vital principle or animating force within living beings 
• A supernatural being or essence: The soul, considered as   departing from the body of a person at death 
• Incorporeal consciousness (consciousness is important here); 
• any incorporeal supernatural being that can become visible (or audible) to human beings
• The part of a human associated with the mind, will, and feelings (all very important in spiritual practices like meditation)
• a fundamental emotional and activating principle determining one's character

But the one that I like is:
“The term "Spirit" translates the Hebrew word ruah, which, in its primary sense, means breath, air, wind. (The Greek word is pneuma)  So, inspiration means to have spirit breathed into one. And so, on some level, to be inspired to do something creative is to be infused with spirit. 
From Genesis 2:7 the LORD God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being. 
        And so I continue on my search for “The Spirit” and to pursue any inspiration to write.