The Peace of Wild Things

BY Wendell Berry

When despair for the world grows in me

and I wake in the night at the least sound

in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,

I go and lie down where the wood drake

rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.

I come into the peace of wild things

who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief.

I come into the presence of still water.

And I feel above me the day-blind stars

waiting with their light.

For a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

 
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[video=youtube;Xpjg6Aheqfg]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xpjg6Aheqfg[/video]
 
[video=youtube;Xpjg6Aheqfg]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xpjg6Aheqfg[/video]

Very interesting!
That jives with the general theory of what shadow people are…in-between dimensions or inter-dimensional beings.
It makes me wonder too, how out of body experiences fit in to a “brane” universe…are you still confined to the brane or is it like an NDE where people feel they leave our own dimension altogether.
I wonder if things like psilocybin do actually open these doors of perception as many believe they do, or is it all just a product of our psyche?
Maybe they let you see past the “brane”?
 


“Sit down before fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconceived notion,
follow humbly wherever and to whatever abysses nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
I have only begun to learn content and peace of mind since I have resolved at all risks to do this.”

Thomas Henry Huxley, Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley - Volume 1
 
[MENTION=14193]camomile[/MENTION]

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Peace XVIII

by Khalil Gibran

The tempest calmed after bending the branches of the trees and leaning heavily upon the grain in the field.
The stars appeared as broken remnants of lightning, but now silence prevailed over all, as if Nature's war had never been fought.

At that hour a young woman entered her chamber and knelt by her bed sobbing bitterly.
Her heart flamed with agony but she could finally open her lips and say, "Oh Lord, bring him home safely to me. I have exhausted my tears and can offer no more, oh Lord, full of love and mercy. My patience is drained and calamity is seeking possession of my heart. Save him, oh Lord, from the iron paws of War; deliver him from such unmerciful Death, for he is weak, governed by the strong. Oh Lord, save my beloved, who is Thine own son, from the foe, who is Thy foe. Keep him from the forced pathway to Death's door; let him see me, or come and take me to him."

Quietly a young man entered.
His head was wrapped in bandage soaked with escaping life.

He approached her with a greeting of tears and laughter, then took her hand and placed against it his flaming lips.
And with a voice with bespoke past sorrow, and joy of union, and uncertainty of her reaction, he said, "Fear me not, for I am the object of your plea. Be glad, for Peace has carried me back safely to you, and humanity has restored what greed essayed to take from us. Be not sad, but smile, my beloved. Do not express bewilderment, for Love has power that dispels Death; charm that conquers the enemy. I am your one. Think me not a specter emerging from the House of Death to visit your Home of Beauty. "

"Do not be frightened, for I am now Truth, spared from swords and fire to reveal to the people the triumph of Love over War.
I am Word uttering introduction to the play of happiness and peace."

Then the young man became speechless and his tears spoke the language of the heart; and the angels of Joy hovered about that dwelling, and the two hearts restored the singleness which had been taken from them.

At dawn the two stood in the middle of the field contemplating the beauty of Nature injured by the tempest.
After a deep and comforting silence, the soldier said to his sweetheart, "Look at the Darkness, giving birth to the Sun."
 
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"Life is a long lesson in humility."


~ James M Barrie
 
Fuck Columbus Day!!

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Fuck Columbus Day!!

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I've said it before, I'll say it again. I do not understand the minds of people that willingly take advantage of other people. Fuck those people!

Maybe, I'm bitter, because people that do not usually take advantage of others, even they will take advantage of me.
 
I've said it before, I'll say it again. I do not understand the minds of people that willingly take advantage of other people. Fuck those people!

Maybe, I'm bitter, because people that do not usually take advantage of others, even they will take advantage of me.

I think just about every INFJ have felt someone has really taken advantage of them at some point in their lives.
Yeah, I agree, fuck anyone that steps on the backs of others to get ahead.
And we can try to do our part with the things we buy and consume to not support goods or services where people are taken advantage of…but that is really difficult and expensive to do, so I just do what I can in that regard, when I can…which isn’t always, but at least I’m aware of the impact I’m making and trying.
 
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“I try to come out here in the mornings before work.
I know what it’s like to be hungry and not have a voice.

I grew up 50 years ago in the housing projects of London.
We didn’t starve, but a lot of times we had nothing for dinner but beans, or maybe some ham on toast.

So I went to bed hungry a lot.
And when you’re a kid, you don’t really have a say in the matter.

So I feed the animals because they can’t really tell you if they’re hungry.
I’m not changing the fucking world.

But it’s better than not doing it.”
 
One of my power animals...
Ravens Can Spot a Cheater And Won't Trust Them

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Ravens have shown complex cooperative abilities previously only seen in a handful of mammalian (and one fish) species.
However, collaborations only happen when two ravens trust each other.

Birds that have misbehaved by taking more than their fair share are subsequently shunned, an even rarer show of animal intelligence.

Dr Jorg Massen of the University of Vienna tested whether pairs of ravens could cooperate for food.

A platform, carrying two pieces of cheese, was placed outside a cage with string threaded through attached loops.

Caged ravens could swing the platform close enough to reach the cheese by pulling on the string.

However, this required both ends of the string to be pulled simultaneously.
If one raven pulled the string alone it would unthread, depriving them both of cheese.

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Only by working together could the ravens pull the platform towards them.

In Scientific Reports Massen and co-authors reveal that from 600 trials using different self-selected combinations of birds there were 397 successes (66.2%). Every raven got some cheese, but some combinations worked far better than others.

Ravens apparently really like cheese, and the most dominant birds monopolized the platform, rather than getting equal time.
Massen repeated the process, this time giving each bird an equal go, both at the platform and in all the possible partnerships.

Despite potential learning from the first trials, success was much lower, just 27.3%, when birds were assigned their partners.
Of 36 possible pairings, 15 never worked together successfully.

In line with previous studies, the one consistently important predictor of success was “inter-individual tolerance”, the capacity for two raven to get along.
The second round of trials found some patterns that had not been observed when the birds self-selected.

Male-female pairs worked much better than male-male pairs, with female-female combinations in between.
Birds further apart on the dominance hierarchy worked together better than those that were close together.

The novel part of Massen's findings was the way the ravens responded to cheaters.
Although the cheese was placed so that each bird could get one piece, sometimes a fast-moving individual would eat both pieces before the other could get its share.

Birds that had been on the receiving end of such bad behavior usually refused to cooperate with the offender again.

"Such a sophisticated way of keeping your partner in check has previously only been shown in humans and chimpanzees, and is a complete novelty among birds" Massen said in a statement.

The miscreants were not sorry, however.
On the rare occasions they were given another chance they were “even more likely to cheat again,” the authors note, “suggesting that if they had learned anything, then it was how to cheat.”

Despite being able to learn the value of a good partner, the ravens didn't seem to grasp the importance of checking what a potential partner was doing at the time.

Sometimes one bird was presented with the string while the other had only just been allowed into the far end of the cage.
Most ravens unthreaded the string before assistance arrived, matching a similar lack of observation from their even more impressively accomplished fellow corvids, New Caledonian crows.
 
Sigh..... I miss [MENTION=1871]muir[/MENTION].

Did you see this about Graham Hancock? Academia flat out refuses to engage with him even while encourages it. Can it get any more absurd???

[h=1]Graham Hancock is The Devil[/h] October 12, 2015 12:34 pm·

Dr. Jon Epstein
Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice
Greensboro College
graham hancock is the devil

As a sociology and criminal justice professor I have heard more than my fair share of conspiracy theories. This has always been true; the subject matter of my discipline often touches on issues that the more paranoid find appealing. But it has become routine since 9/11. I can now expect to hear about some type of conspiracy, cover-up, or otherwise nefarious activity at least several times a week, ranging from the ridiculous (The Reptilians, a race of humanoid reptiles who are the secret rulers of the Earth, spring immediately to mind) to the extremely unlikely (The “Government” is secretly watching you…an idea most often expressed to me by meth addicts) to the outright racist (The Islamic Center is actually a training camp for ISIS run by the Zionist Occupational Government who control the media to keep people stupid. Yes, I really had that conversation.). My experience with these topics has left me very skeptical, and my training as a sociologist provides me with the insight to understand why the overwhelming majority of these “theories” are simply incorrect. No matter how paranoid you are, it is very unlikely that anyone is plotting against you, at least on an institutional level. Recently, however, I discovered that sometimes, at least, it’s true.


I have had a good life, and I have been privileged to socialize, and in some cases strike up friendships, with many extraordinary people. Among them are writers who concern themselves with the origins of civilization, an area that I have had an interest in for most of my career and which I actively research. Two such writers, geologist Robert Schoch and author Graham Hancock, have expressed to me at different times that they believed that there was a concerted effort on the part of the mainstream archaeological establishment to discredit them. While I consider both men my friends, I really didn’t believe them. I didn’t have any doubt that both men had been subject to intense criticism, condemnation, and scrutiny from members of the archaeological community; that was, after all, a matter of public record. But the idea that they had been “blacklisted” struck me as a bit over the top and melodramatic.


In 2013 Hancock accepted my invitation to speak at Greensboro College and presented his preliminary research for what would become his book Magicians of The Gods. His talk was very well attended and stirred up a great deal of debate on campus, and we agreed that when the book was finished he would return to campus to provide an update. Magicians of the Gods is scheduled for an early November release, and as promised Hancock plans on returning to Greensboro on Nov. 23 to hold a free public lecture. To try to “up the ante,” my department suggested to him that instead of the usual question-and-answer period following his talk, we provide a more traditionally academic event by having a panel of academic experts from fields related to his work (archaeology, history, anthropology, the sciences) engage in a discussion of his work with him. It was our thinking that given the criticisms leveled at him by some academic professionals, finding participants who could expressly point out the issues his work presents and engage in a professional dialogue could be of significant value for both the participants and the community members in the audience. To his credit, Hancock enthusiastically supported – indeed, welcomed — the idea, but again he brought up his belief that there were forces at play in the academic community, and in archaeology specifically, that were intent on discrediting him, which might make finding a panel problematic.


Undaunted, I sent an email to a number of major professional archaeology associations, asking for recommendations of qualified individuals who might be interested in participating. I received about a dozen responses, all of which called Hancock a “fraud” and me a traitor for inviting him to speak. These responses that I received were both telling and disappointing and say a great deal about the lack of confidence and oddly dissonant elitism of archaeology as an academic discipline, not to mention the field’s apparent lack of confidence in the general public’s intellectual abilities to recognize the difference between truth and quackery. The most troubling response I received was from an elected chief executive of one of the largest and most influential associations of professional archaeologists in the United States, who was referred to me by another international professional association that shares overlapping memberships. Because their response was more or less identical to the others, with the exception that this one had been sent with the implied weight of “official authority” — and that exception is an important one — I thought I would let it speak for itself:
“I actually had never heard of Graham before — I had to look him up online. … He certainly is not known in my circles. Of course, anyone who makes sensational claims tends to get publicity — the more sensational the claims, the more publicity they get. … This sort of thing makes a mockery of archaeology, which is in fact a scientific endeavor. … You are free to educate your students in any way you see fit, but if you are presenting your friend as any sort of authority in archaeology, you are doing them and the discipline of archaeology a great disservice. … I have worked hard to become a professional archaeologist, and I therefore have enough respect for other disciplines to refrain from claiming expertise in them. I hope others would display similar respect for my discipline. …”**
The level of intellectual dishonesty embedded in this note is staggering. In more than 30 years as an academic and researcher I can honestly say I have never seen anything that approached the level of hubris it expresses. While it is clear that the writer is passionate in defending the discipline of archaeology, it is equally clear that what is at stake here, ultimately, is intellectual turf. However, if defending a paradigm makes treachery necessary, it may be a good time to do some soul searching.
graham hancock is the devil

One of the first things you learn in an undergraduate logic course is that ad hominem arguments are an obvious sign of intellectual deceit. It is simply not possible to make an informed, critical, and fair assessment of a writer’s entire body of work without ever having read a single word. Additionally, I do not allow my students to consider a perfunctory Google search to be an adequate way of critically considering any topic, let alone one that results in the kind of denigration expressed above, and it is absolutely inappropriate for an academic “scientist” to do so.
Hancock identifies himself as an investigative journalist who reports on prehistory. He has on numerous occasions tried to make clear that he is NOT an archaeologist or a scientist. He has done this in writing, in interviews, and on television. I can’t think of another writer who has gone to greater lengths to explain what it is that they are not. The actual truth of the matter is that the idea that Hancock fancies himself a scientist/archaeologist originated and continues to be perpetuated by archaeologists as a way to then discredit him and discount his work as “pseudoscience.”
The notion that archaeology is “in fact a scientific endeavor” is also not exactly “a fact.” The fact is that the most vocal opposition to the idea of archaeology as a science originates from within archaeology itself, from those who see the discipline as the clearinghouse for a number of interrelated activities, some more scientific than others, and with very little in the way of an overarching theoretical orientation. That is a HUGE problem for any discipline claiming to be a science.


I must admit, however, that I am troubled to discover that archaeology as an institution is being put at risk simply by asking a reporter to give a lecture. I had no idea that the foundations of the discipline were that tenuous. It is certainly a good thing that my discipline of sociology has a firmer grasp because I am subjected to the relentless yammering nonsense of self-proclaimed “experts” every single day of my life. The difference, of course, is that in the case of sociology what is being babbled about are living, breathing human beings; the discussion thus has a certain urgency and immediacy not present in archaeology. Unlike the archaeologists, however, we welcome the challenge and, rather than trying to silence those who may misspeak on our behalf, we provide them a forum, ask hard questions, and educate others in the process. These things, after all, are what science and public debate are for, aren’t they?
[SUP][/SUP] *Hancock earned an honors degree in sociology from Durham University in the UK, where he studied with Stanley Cohen, author of the classic book in the sociology of deviance Folk Devils and Moral Panics. That book, interestingly, provides a very useful way in which to understand Hancock’s relationship to mainstream archaeology. In Cohen’s framework, and for archaeology, Graham Hancock IS the devil.
** I have removed any information from the original Email that could point to its author. I have no desire to engage in personal or professional attacks on anyone, as it is my opinion that the larger issue is with archaeology as a discipline, and not archaeologists as individuals.
On November 23rd, 2015 at 7:30pm,the Greensboro College Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice Presents: Graham Hancock: Magicians of the Gods. (Lecture/Panel Discussion). You can learn more about this event HERE.
 
...and it just gets weirder and weirder....:lol:

[video=youtube;IV4IjHz2yIo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=19&v=IV4IjHz2yIo[/video]
 

The first step down the mindful path is the hardest
because it includes the negative inertia against the step we’re not taking
down the path of habitual patterns.
So take heart
stand tall
breath deep
and take a leap into the unknown fresh air
of true kindness toward oneself."


~Waylon Lewis
 
...and it just gets weirder and weirder....:lol:

[video=youtube;IV4IjHz2yIo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=19&v=IV4IjHz2yIo[/video]

He is a strange man isn’t he?
All the set-up and staged things he does to make himself look impressive to his people.
I really liked the archeological artifacts HE discovered in the Black Sea I think it was….or riding horses without his shirt…ahahaha.
 
10 Signs Your Energy Field & Chakras are Out of Whack.

“When your chakras are aligned, you have the most direct access to Source, however you may define Source (within yourself, outside yourself, or both simultaneously).

Just as you hold a glass under the tap so it can be filled, we align with Source by facing into it, turning our attention toward it, and opening our ‘vessel’ in the most direct way possible to receive whatever we are seeking (or whatever Source has in mind).

Aligning with Source should be a regular part of your practice whenever you’re focused on manifestation.”


~ Anodea Judith and Lion Goodman, Creating on Purpose

The other day I was visiting with some friends and we were talking about chakras and manifesting, when their 10-year-old son, who was listening to the conversation, interrupted us with this:

“I don’t believe in any of that stuff. What you see is what you see. I just file all of that crazy stuff in my mind as Feng Shui.”
And I have to say, this little speech was pretty cute, coming at us from a face covered in freckles.

But here is the interesting thing—whether we believe in the reality of energy fields and chakras or we don’t believe in the reality of energy fields and chakras, we are affected by their the reality just the same.

Of course, the concepts of energy fields and chakras are pretty intangible and elusive to many of us, and this is normal.
But perhaps it is normal because we’re so caught up with the next iPhone we’re going to purchase or the most recent post on our Facebook wall that we’re missing what is literally right in front of our faces.

And we’re missing it because we lack the skills, motivation and, more importantly, belief.
But we all know that belief does not make something real or not real.

I can’t believe gravity to be real or not real.
I can’t believe the wifi connecting me to the internet is real or not real.

There are a lot of things we can’t see that we can’t use belief to make exist or not exist.

But belief does give us a choice.

We can feel powerless.
We can feel like there’s nothing we can do to effect change in our lives.

Or we can become curious and start investigating what some healthy choices might be in the area of energetic and chakra hygiene.
Truly, the choice is up to each of us.

So, below I am offering 10 signs that can point to the fact that our energy fields and chakras could use some extra love and attention.

1. Feeling overwhelmed easily.

2. Having difficulty making small decisions.

3. Having difficulty having enough money.

4. Having difficulty securing housing.

5. Feeling unsatisfied in relationships.

6. Exhaustion.

7. Finding it impossible to believe in anything.

8. Being uninterested in sex, having fun or creativity.

9. Feeling anxious, stressed or depressed.

10. Not knowing what to do in life.


Yes, these are all very common symptoms.
And this isn’t surprising to me because when our energy field is spread out way too far from our body what happens is that we take in too much information.

This is the true meaning of attention overload.

Many times when I have a session with a client their energy field isn’t even in the room.
Imagine walking around town taking in information from everything going on in the entire city block you’re walking down, or the entire office building you work in.

This would be maddening.
And many people do find their daily experiences to be maddening, overwhelming and more than they feel they can handle.

And the simple exercise of pulling in our energy fields closer to our bodies can mitigate some of these negative feelings and sensations.
It does take some practice and intention to learn how to work with our energy field in this way, but I believe it is possible for everyone.

And then there are our chakras.
Our information center processors.

The chakras channel information in and out of our systems.
If the chakras are blocked then we have to make all of the decisions on our own without the support of these powerful movers and shakers.

And this can be very difficult.
And exhausting.

And can make it feel like we’re putting in a lot effort into our lives for little result.

Just like the quote at the beginning of the article says.

When the chakras are aligned the glass fills easily.

When the chakras are aligned what we want becomes clear and getting it becomes easy.

I have had this experience happen in my own life many times.
But of course, I have also had the opposite experience of nothing working out.

We all have.
I have been exhausted, overwhelmed and felt like my life is never going to come together the way I want it to.

And actually, I couldn’t even figure out how I wanted it to come together.

This isn’t a sign of failure.

It’s just a sign that we’re human.
And it just means normal human stuff is happening to us.

But when we’re open to working with the energy field and chakras we have many tools at our disposal to move towards towards health, healing and opportunity.

And all it takes is intention.
The intention to care that our energy field and chakras are healthy and supporting us.

Because the external world is simply a reflection of our internal world.
And the internal world gets knocked around daily by the circumstances that occur in the external world.

Life is a delicate dance of internal alignment and external circumstances.
And some of this dance is in our control and some of it isn’t.

But here is what I know.
The dance goes much smoother if we can just choose to go right to the middle of the dance floor and boogie our hearts out.

And while were in the middle of the dance floor of our life we can send some love and healing to our energy field and chakras.




[video=youtube;hfpneGLtJDE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hfpneGLtJDE[/video]​
 
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