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Non-Fiction -
How To
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Tuesday, 04 May 2010 22:38 |
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Except from Writing the Divine: How to Use Channeling for Soul Growth & Healing, by Sara Wiseman
Chapter Three: An unexpected receiving
My first experience with channeling:
By the time I received The 33 Divine Lessons from Constance, I’d been practicing channeled writing for some time. But the first time it happened, it almost knocked my socks off. It all started in the summer of 2004—on the very morning that I moved into my new home as the first step of divorce. You’ve heard of hitting bottom? I’d long past hit bottom and was hurtling into the abyss. After 18 years of marriage and four kids, this was an unbelievably painful process that involved loading everything deemed “mine” from the family home into a rickety rental truck. Two burly movers, mouths dark with tobacco and reeking of beer and sweat, were there to did the heavy lifting. I spent that morning in a state of numbness and disbelief, watching the movers haul things out my old house and dolly boxes into the gaping yaw of my new house. One mover even had the audacity to ask me out when “he was done working.” “I’m moving here!” I felt like shouting. “I’m getting divorced here!” I wanted to scream, but I was too tired, too fragile, too heartbroken. I simply shook my head. No. After the movers left, I stood with my meager furniture in disarray, stacks of unmarked, unidentified boxes, black plastic trash bags stuffed full of toys and clothes after I’d run out of boxes, beds not only unmade but without mattresses (the kids and I would sleep on the floor tonight,) everything piled in the wrong room. Complete chaos. Absolute pain. Regardless of how I felt, I knew it was crucial to create some semblance of order before the kids came home from school—but I didn’t know how to begin. The knife or scissors I needed to open all these boxes was packed in one of the boxes—but which one? As I stood shakily in the living room, trying to get a grip on my roiling emotions, I looked out the front window and saw a man walking along the sidewalk. To my surprise, he headed up my driveway, and began climbing the steps to my front door. He’s in sales, I thought ungraciously—I certainly wasn’t going to let him in. Yet this man didn’t ring the doorbell or knock. Instead, he stood there patiently, hovering outside the front door. And finally, as I stood in the living room not breathing, hoping and praying he’d go away, he opened the door and stepped inside. Let me explain. He did not "open" the door in the same physical way that you or I or another human being might. I did not “see” him as a physical person exactly, even though I could easily describe what he looked like. Back then, I didn't even know enough to recognize him as a spiritual entity. But there he was, as clearly as anyone might be—my sense of him was overwhelming. I was pretty sure he wasn’t a ghost. He wasn’t a trickster, either. For although I knew very little about this kind of thing, having spent the last decades of my life at kids’ soccer games, not séances, I knew enough to understand this “being” was the real thing—I just didn’t know what kind of real thing he was. This “being” walked or floated or moved across the floor of my living room, and it was then that I met my spirit guide, Hajam, for the first time. He was a dark, slender Indian or Asian man, much smaller than me. He looked like a guru might, but without all the drapery and turbans. He looked like a guru, I might add—except at that time, I didn’t know about gurus. I knew about angels, of course, and Jesus, and God the Father and the Holy Spirit—my Judeo-Christian upbringing had made sure of that—but this “being” had no wings. No halo. Nary a beard or pair of sandals in sight! I dropped onto the sofa, partly for fear my legs might buckle underneath me, and he sat near my shoulder. To further clarify, Hajam didn’t exactly “sit” either, but sort of hovered patiently near me, until it dawned on me that he was going to say something.
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 04 May 2010 23:39 |
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Non-Fiction -
Biography
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Written by Webmaster
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Friday, 12 March 2010 12:55 |
Journeys Home: Stories from Grandmother's Lap by Nancy BurnettExcerpt
 Journeys Home When we’re born we live just over the threshold from nonexistence, just days, then months from being a glimmer in God’s eye. I wish I could tell my amazing story of life before life. I would report all the nuances leading to my birth, all factors determining to whom I would be born, when, where, and most critical of all, why. Some philosophers might say a soul negotiates with our Creator to enter a specific life to work out human-centered life lessons. Others may argue the Creator decides everything—without input from the developing soul—to work out Divine intentions. I believe in paradox, in the “both-and,” the probably unknowable, the partly unrecognizable, the wholly mysterious origins both cosmic and earthy of every single soul. I believe in the partially negotiable, partly non-negotiable predilections of life. I accept that the “to whoms” dictate the “whens” and the “wheres” because regardless of who chooses them, the parents are already here. On the other hand, the “whys” bug me no end. I’ve spent every year since leaving my “participation mystique”—the years of childhood innocence—trying to figure even one logical reason for my existence to offset the purely irrational: “I’m here because I’m here.” My momma—not a philosopher—once declared me an accident as in, “both my children were accidents.” My mind plays with her announcement and creates an image of Momma stumping her toe and me popping out like spit gum. One day, walking back to her apartment from the grocery store carrying ingredients to bake a cake—a box of eggs, flour, milk, sugar, and baking powder—Momma runs into a sprinkling rain. She adjusts her grocery sack to one side and holds her other arm up using her clutch to shield her bangs from the rain. Totally distracted with this protective maneuver she doesn’t see the tree root pushed up through old broken cement. Her left toe catches under the knotty root pulling her off balance. Her right foot steps wildly into the air as she tries to catch herself, but instead she comes down on its side. Her right elbow splays out while she simultaneously raises it trying to keep hold of the sack. Her left foot remains stuck under the root and down she goes, mouth opening wide into an “oweee”. The contents of the sack briefly fly into the air along her fall trajectory and then crash to the ground. Eggs crack; flour and sugar bags burst open; the milk jug breaks and spills; baking soda pops its top, and all descends into a mushy puddle inside the opened sack fallen under her chin. Last but not least her gum spews from her puckered lips and lands in the middle of all that mess. My imagining grows wilder. I see Momma lying still, huddled on the ground and collapsed in shock across a cosmic moment—what seems forever but lasts only a few real seconds—before trying to regain composure. But, lightning flashes and thunder cracks as rain pours. Breathless, she hears a squeaky utterance through the pelting rain, and something catches her eye: a tiny movement inside the sack. She carefully peeks inside. Low and behold: a tiny baby has been born of this accident—bone of her cracked knee, breath of her squeal, fat of her eggs. “It’s a girl,” a voice announces above her. And what a surprise—new life brought forth by an accident. A great Cosmic Intention opened a tiny slit in the gossamer veil, lightning struck at exactly the spot where the spilled cake ingredients landed, charging the gum (a catalyst no doubt!) with electricity that stirred atoms to light speed. A tiny soul slid down the thunder’s vibrating wave, fell into the batter, and instantly baked into a little fleshy human bread girl.
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Last Updated on Friday, 12 March 2010 12:59 |
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