|
Divine Offering
| I have just created a CD with two breathing exercises to help you
"Come Home to Self"
Curious about what I can do for you? As a subscriber, you are welcome to a:
Free Guided Meditation & Healing Consultation!
|
|
| In learning the skill of refocusing on your true nature, you will slowly and gently undermine all past events and traumas.
|
|
|
Greetings!
Welcome to all beings walking the path of Truth.
~Silvija
|
Am I What I Think I Am?
|
 The statement, "I think, therefore I am" is credited to the philosopher Renee Descartes and argues, that because thought cannot be separated from a being, that being is proven to exist. Is this true? Everyday, we live our lives in slavery to the dictates of the mind and senses.
Let's start with the senses and how they operate. If I touch something, where is that touch perceived? It is the nerves that sense the object, but then this raw sensation is translated and judged in the mind. The mind immediately searches for the characteristics of the identified object. Is it soft or hard, do I like it or not, is it safe or dangerous? Following the trail of this perception, where am I justifying the information just received? The mind is the rationalizer of all the senses: judging, categorizing in a milliseconds, it sustains our belief of our body, our mind and our world.
Click Here to Read "Am I What I Think I Am?"
|
Ease or Dis-ease?
|
I see in my own life that it is very easy to be in the space without limitation when my ideas have no energy behind them -- when I accept them as they are. On the other hand, when I have some investment in an idea, it seems so much more difficult, like a ping pong ball being batted back and forth between the paddles. On a day of ease, it is easy to observe my own perception in amusement. I will witness a moment, such as leaving my car to be fitted with new winter tires at the wrong store, and find it humorous. Indeed, to be amused to notice which thought or assumption made that possible. AH YES! Click Here to Read "Ease or Dis-ease?"
|
|
|
Buddha had gathered together with his disciples one morning,  when a man came up to him.
"Does God exist?" he asked.
After lunch, another man came up to him.
"Does God exist?" he asked.
"No, he doesn't," said Buddha.
Later that afternoon, a third man asked the same question: "Does God exist?"
"That's for you to decide," replied Buddha.
|
|
|
|
|