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dancing/today

Posted on Mar 5th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria

"TODAY

I
Do not
Want to step so quickly
Over a beautiful line on Beloved's palm
As I move through the earth's
Marketplace
Today.

I do not want to touch any object in this world
Without my eyes testifying to the truth
That everything is
My Beloved.

Something has happened
To my understanding of existence
That now makes my heart always full of wonder
And kindness.

I do not
Want to step so quickly
Over this sacred place on Beloved's body
That is right beneath my
Own foot

As I
Dance with
Precious life
Today."

~Hafiz

~"as I dance with precious life today".. oh, yes! each
moment today, a dance celebrating precious life! ..
what kind of worry can weigh us down when we know this
joy? let's, just this once? throw off the coat of how
could they? what should I do? if they only would.. and
put on those dancin' shoes.. every step.. every
turn.. every breath.. so precious.. what is there to
do but dance?

~dharma grandmother
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"pLEASE alert you have been tagged by me"

Posted on Mar 6th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria

owais : Be good, Do good
Sent about 19 hours ago

by owais


" pLEASE alert you have been tagged by me.


Caution -victoriajee you have been tagged by, for further information please do read my posted blog entry today. May this my short n quick note to you blend with my well-wishes shall bestow upon you dear friend, Good Evening . . ."

I THANK OWAIS FOR INVITING ME TO PLAY TAG  :-D

OK, friends, I'm sure we all know the drill by now--here are 6 of my quirky habits & now I am dying to read 6 of yours !  YOU are: xoxograce, tara, earthdweller, ascended mouse, ant, clare --sorry, I can't rememeber how to hyperlink you all in BLUE--but , hey everybody, go read their blogs, anyway !



Altho it's NEVER my habit, er...intention, to dwell too long in the mind, here are some recently developed quirks I have observed which seem to describe where I am at habit-wise these daZe--->


1)  I spend more waking hours on-line than in-life. I am wondering lately if this could become pathological or just seasonal?

2)  Since discovering raw foods, I exist on a diet of liquid "smoothies" & munch on gojiberries, nuts & seeds throughout the day. I am wondering lately if this could become unhealthy?

3)  I seem to have developed a total aversion to television and loud music.  I am wondering lately if I this is a symptom of " old-fogey " behavior ?

4) I love to go moongazing on moon-lit nights instead of going to bed.  I am wondering lately how come I'm flourishing on only 5hrs of sleep?

5) Only recently, I seem to prefer the company of the trees in my garden to the conversations of those who dwell in my house. I am wondering lately if this is becoming anti-social behaviour ?

6) But mostly, all I can do is float & dance . . .


ONELOVE salutations to ALL !

victoria
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something born in me

Posted on Mar 6th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria


found @ http://handsofalchemy.blogspot.com/  --amazing ART & videos !




Something born in me


Something very old

like the gray stone or the gray cloud

Something that puts light in my eyes

Something that sees light in yours


Something older than myself

But born anew inside me

Something very old

Like the brown earth

Or the blue heavens


Like rain upon the earth

In the season when coloured leaves

rain upon the earth

And now this -

As my heart trembles

I am laughing out loud


Mud *
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What will tomorrow bring?

Posted on Mar 6th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for March 06, 2008:

Tomorrow will bring another chance for me to create a brand new day --just like I did today & yesterday & every day before that. . . perfect creative freedom chosing to see ONELOVING possibilities in everything !
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How do, or can, we create?

Posted on Mar 7th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for March 07, 2008:

Bnauman-neonspiral

. . . by surrendering to the mystery behind each Breath

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Whose smile makes you happiest?

Posted on Mar 7th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for August 31, 2007:

Img_3939-1
. . .no contest !

(Happy Birthday, Eloise ! )
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Tagged with: QaR, smile, joy, delight, happiness

Y O U

Posted on Mar 9th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria


This I is nothing

without YOU--

a gray rag

in a bucket

But:

run it up

into the huge wind

of YOU--

a pennant am I

a seven colored flag.


-- zorrobueno via advaita to zen
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history of a day

Posted on Mar 10th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria


Porcelain...jpg (36.1 KB), From_the_...mid (23.3 KB)

 


 

The Inner History of a
Day

 

No one knew the name of this
day;
Born quietly from deepest night,
It hid its face in
light,
Demanded nothing for itself,
Opened out to offer each of us
A
field of brightness that traveled ahead,
Providing in time, ground to hold
our footsteps
And the light of thought to show the way.

 

The mind of the day draws no
attention;
It dwells within the silence with elegance
To create a space
for all our words,
Drawing us to listen inward and outward.

 

We seldom notice how each
day is a holy place
Where the eucharist of the ordinary
happens,
Transforming our broken fragments
Into an eternal continuity that
keeps us.

 

Somewhere in us a dignity
presides
That is more gracious than the smallness
That fuels us with fear
and force,
A dignity that trusts the form a day takes.

 

So a the end of this day, we
give thanks
For being betrothed to the unknown
And for the secret
work
Through which the mind of the day
And wisdom of the soul become
one.

 

~ John O'Donohue
~

 

(To Bless the Space Between
Us)

thanks to Joe Riley




 
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for the Rumi freaks. . .

Posted on Mar 11th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
Embracing the Mystery


Lovin' this COLEMAN BARKS live interpretation of Rumi & here is a bit of Bio. . .

Coleman Barks was born and raised in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and was educated at the University of North Carolina and the University of California at Berkeley. He taught poetry and creative writing at the University of Georgia for thirty years. He is the author of numerous Rumi translations and has been a student of Sufism since 1977. His work with Rumi was the subject of an hour-long segment in Bill Moyers's Language of Life series on PBS, and he is a featured poet and translator in Bill Moyers's poetry special, "Fooling with Words." Coleman Barks is the father of two grown children and the grandfather of four. He lives in Athens, Georgia.

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What have you been taking for granted?

Posted on Mar 11th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for March 11, 2008:

Poetry by RUMI -- Only Breath



. . .still way too many in- & out-breaths !     ---------->
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moderation ?

Posted on Mar 12th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria


The essay below is by the late Neil Millar, from his 1981 book Shards of Light:

Moderation in Some Things

I have no moderate views on moderation. When it means tolerance and patience, I honor it
recklessly. When it means the moderate effort that produces mediocrity, I detest it.

"Moderation in all things" is a creed that binds our highest impulses as tightly as our lower ones
-- a restriction which produces mediocre lives in a mediocre society. Humanity deserves -- and is
-- vastly better than that.

My respect for humanity is immoderate. We are born into a world of mental earthquakes and
hurricanes; and we're subjected to pressures that no one should be required to bear. Day after day
our world tells us how small we are, how feeble, prosaic, tired, stupid -- and yet we walk bravely,
poetically, energetically, even wisely. In spite of mankind's pettiness and cruelties, lusts and
lunacies, we are magnificent.

Civilization, that tumultuous unfinished work of art, is built on sacrifices which moderation would
neither make nor require. Sill and sublime, civilization exists because countless people have
dedicated their thinking to it. This thinking has no known counterpart in the universe; therefore I
believe that humanity is not just magnificent: it is uniquely magnificent.

Most of us, most of the time, are a credit to humanity, a fact which is inexplicable by human
reasoning. Where does our astonishing quality come from?

Where does our astonishing tolerance for mediocrity come from? what we are, in general, is
marvelous. What we do is often marvelous. What we tolerate is often venal, fatuous, or tenth-rate.
I think such toleration is charity run to seed.

Of course this little essay of mine may be once more mediocrity to tolerate; but if so,that is
because I have not succeeded in writing a great essay. I aim high enough. My aspirations are wholly
immoderate. If I don't achieve them -- well, I would rather aim high and fail, than aim low and
succeed. Besides: I have inherited the ages; why should I not aspire toward greatness? Why should I
despair if I miss my aim? There are always more splendors to pursue tomorrow.

So I shall go on trying to write greatly, regardless of the risks. This is the safest course. In
all the arts, nothing is more dangerous than the refusal to take risks.

Great art is miracle and exultation. The artist has grasped the wind or nailed the thunder down. Or
he has smiled at a rock and the rock has laughed. Or she has cupped a sorrow in her hands, warmed
it, and let it fly away. This kind of magic dies in the common sense of moderation.

Of all the arts, none is greater than friendship. That glorious and immoderate bonding is not
tethered to its own convenience; it plunges or soars. It feels most blessed when it blesses most.
No task is too menial for its high pride, no goal too lofty for its royal humility. Its essence is
never common sense.

In general, I admire common sense. It restrains and balances; it allows the human world to work
more or less predictably, more of less efficiently, against heavy odds. It establishes every
establishment -- and ultimately traduces every tradition; and these are no small accomplishments.
But it also urges us to conform to the norm and accept the unacceptable. If love makes the world go
round, common sense makes the world go square.

Square is not a bad thing to be, if one is two-dimensional. It means predictable on all sides,
stable, but with no depth. It means something less than full humanity; it means moderation in all
things.

Some things are ruined by moderation. Compassion is one of them; let it have no boundaries. Honesty
is a second quality in which moderation should never come to flower; and purity is a third. A
moderate purity is impurity; a moderate honesty includes dishonesty. Moderate compassion belongs in
institutions rather than in families; and humanity is a family,not an institution.

Lastly, in the ultimate affections -- love of sheer goodness, of the perfect, the divine --
moderation is deadly. "I know thy works," says the Book of Revelation, "that thou art neither cold
nor hot; I would that thou wert cold or hot." In those immaculate and shadowless passions, I pray
that I may never be lukewarm.

In lesser matters, however, let me judge moderation soberly, by its effects.

And then let me loathe it or live it.

From SHARDS OF LIGHT: Fables, Essays, Sonnets & Humor, by Neil Millar. Foursquare Press, Cambridge
MA, 1981 [out of print, but still found online thru used book lists such as http://www.abebooks.com
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walking eagle

Posted on Mar 13th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
Bush_defeated_resigns
BUSH MEETS W/AMERICAN INDIAN NATION REC'S INDIAN NAME (12 March 2008)

President Bush was invited to address a major gathering of the American Indian Nation last weekend in Arizona. He spoke for almost an hour on his future plans for increasing every Native American's present standard of living. He referred to his career as Governor of Texas, how he had signed "YES" 1,237 times for every Indian issue that came to his desk for approval. Although the President was vague on the details of his plan, he seemed most enthusiastic about his future ideas for helping his "red brothers". At the conclusion of his speech, the Tribes presented the President with a plaque inscribed with his new Indian name - Walking Eagle. The proud President then departed in his motorcade, waving to the crowds. A news reporter later inquired to the group of chiefs of how they come to select the new name given to the President. They explained that Walking Eagle is the name given to a bird so full of shit it can no longer fly.


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microcredit

Posted on Mar 15th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This message is available online at http://www.WantToKnow.info/051023microcredit

Dear friends,

Without donating a penny, you can help end poverty in a very real way. Investing in microcredit or microfinance is not a donation or charity. Like other investments, the money is always yours. You even earn a small amount of interest. Yet for every $1,000 you invest, you can end poverty for several entire families in the developing world every year. That is why the United Nations declared 2005 to be the International Year of Microcredit and why the founders of the microcredit movement were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. Major media articles have sung the praises of microcredit, also known as microfinance and microlending:


New York Times: Tiny Loans Make a Big Difference in Lives of Poor
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/29/technology/29venture.html

USA Today/Associated Press: Microcredit pioneers win Nobel Peace Prize
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-10-13-norway-nobel_x.htm

Wall Street Journal: A new way to do well by doing good
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06005/633114.stm

BusinessWeek: Microfinance funds lift poor entrepreneurs—and benefit investors
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_19/b3932134_mz070.htm

The Economist: Microcredit in India, High finance benefits the poor
http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_id=2413549


How Microcredit Works

Example 1. Mariate Banda runs a small beauty shop in Zambia near the South Luangwa National Park. Visitors to the park flock through her town, but few tourists venture into her shop, as it lacks the modern hair dryers travelers expect. Her small income makes saving difficult. "My life's ambition is to have my own equipment" she says—even one modern hairdryer for tourists (see photo & description of Mariate in the Sept 2005 issue of National Geographic, p. 120). Using your investment through the growing international microcredit movement, Mariate takes out a microloan of $100—small by western standards, but more than enough to pay for a modern hairdryer in Zambia. With the increased tourist traffic to her shop, Mariate pays back her loan within a year. Once the loan is repaid, she has now greatly increased her income and can afford to keep her children in school, give them good medical care, and build her business further. You pulled this family out of poverty!

Example 2. Working 10 to 12 hours six days a week, 36-year-old Supratno drives a pedicab (bicycle taxi with three wheels) in the suburbs of Jakarta, Indonesia. As over 50% of his daily income goes to pay rental fees to the large syndicate which monopolizes pedicab rentals in Jakarta, he barely ekes out a living for his family of four. His daily income averages about US $4 per day, which is only enough to put rice and vegetables on the table for his family twice a day. He cannot afford to pay the small fees for administration and mandatory school uniforms to send his children to public school. Taking out a microcredit loan of $200 from money you invested, Supratno buys his own pedicab for the first time in his life. As all income now goes directly to him, his daily income is more than doubled. Within a year, he pays back the $200 loan and can now afford to send his children to school and give them three good meals every day. You pulled this family out of poverty!

The microcredit process is actually a little more involved than described above. Business plans are required to be submitted to a volunteer cooperative and loans are made in increments, but you get the picture. Your loan of $1,000 for one year can literally pull several entire families out of poverty for good in the developing world. The interest you receive on your microcredit investment is low—generally up to four percent—but you have the satisfaction of knowing that for every $1,000 invested, you have helped several families every year to pull out of poverty and live a much better life! I'd say that's a pretty good return on your investment.

When I first heard about microcredit back in 1999, I was very excited. As a part-time interpreter for the US Department of State and a part-time nurse, my work provided no retirement benefits, so I had diligently been investing a percentage of my income in order to be able to retire at a reasonable age. I had saved over $100,000 towards my retirement at the time and was interested in finding better ways to invest this money.


Socially Responsible Investing and Microcredit

For many years prior I had practiced socially responsible investing (SRI), where both the investor's financial needs and an investment’s impact on society are considered. With SRI, I had the high returns of Wall Street on my investments while knowing that my money was not being used to promote socially damaging concerns such as alcohol, tobacco, gambling, weapons, and sweat shops. For more on SRI, click here.

With microcredit, I realized I would be giving up the high returns I had been getting with SRI. Yet knowing that every $1,000 dollars I invested would help to pull several families out of poverty every year, I was more than happy to settle for a 2% return. Within a few years, I had every penny possible invested in microcredit. So though I'm only getting a modest (but very secure) financial return on my retirement investments, I'm now helping hundreds of families every year to pull out of poverty!

Addressing the International Year of Microcredit, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stated, "Microfinance has proved its value as a weapon against poverty and hunger. It really can change peoples’ lives for the better—especially the lives of those who need it most. With access to microfinance, [the poor] can move beyond day-to-day survival towards planning for the future. They can break the vicious circle of poverty. Microfinance is not charity. It is a way to extend the same rights and services to low-income households that are available to everyone else. It grows productive enterprises and allows communities to prosper. Let us use this International Year of Microcredit to put millions of families on the path to prosperity."

For the official website of the International Year of Microcredit, see http://www.yearofmicrocredit.org. Also referred to as "community investing," you can learn more about transferring your savings and investments to microfinance by clicking here. For detailed information on specific microcredit organizations and more, see the community investment database at http://www.communityinvestingcenterdb.org. Download a free 24-page guide to microcredit and community investing by clicking here. And note that these investments are not influenced by market fluctuations.

Many organizations specialize in microcredit investments. Most require a minimum investment of $1,000 or more. For a table of respected microcredit organizations: click here. Calvert Foundation has worked best for me, as they have a great track record and channel their investments into numerous respected microcredit organizations worldwide. Calvert also allows you to choose in which region you want to invest. I have all of my money invested internationally because $1,000 goes a lot further in the developing world than it does in industrialized countries. If you are interested, see the Calvert Foundation website or call 800-248-0337. For those outside of North America, see http://www.oikocredit.org. To make loan as small as even $25, see http://www.kiva.org.

Even if you don't have much money, consider investing just $1,000 as a way of knowing you are helping other families to pull out of debt. If you have an investment portfolio, consider putting 10% or more into microcredit as a way of playing your part in creating a more fair and just world for all. If your investments are tied up in 401(k)s or other tax-deductible instruments, call 800-248-0337 to learn about ways you can transfer these funds to microcredit. By investing whatever amount feels right to each of us, we can and will build a brighter future for ourselves and all who share our world. Thanks for caring, and you have a great day!

With very best wishes for a transformed world,
Fred Burks for this website and the PEERS Team
Former language interpreter for Presidents Bush and Clinton

P.S. For an excellent financial planning handbook focused on socially responsible investing and microcredit: http://www.coopamerica.org/pubs/fph/index.cfm. And to move your checking and savings accounts from profit oriented banks to membership run credit unions, click here and here. As I am very passionate about ending poverty through microcredit, feel free to contact me with any questions by clicking here.

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breaking the spell

Posted on Mar 17th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
NISARGADATTA--Breaking the Spell



From "I Am That" -

NM: The main point to grasp is that you have projected onto yourself
a world of your own imagination, based on memories, on desires and
fears, and that you have imprisoned yourself in it. Break the spell
and be free.

Q: How does one break the spell?

NM: Assert your independence in thought and action. After all, all
hangs on your faith in yourself, on the conviction that what you see
and hear, think and feel is real. Why not question your faith? No
doubt, this world is painted by you on the screen of consciousness
and is entirely your own private world. Only your sense 'I am',
though in the world, is not of the world. By no effort of logic or
imagination can you change the 'I am' into 'I am not'. In the very
denial of your being you assert it.

NM: Once you realise that the world is your own projection, you are
free of it. You need not free yourself of a world that does not
exist, except in your own imagination! However is the picture,
beautiful or ugly, you are painting it and you are not bound by it.
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the self we share

Posted on Mar 17th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria

The Self We Share

Thirst is angry with water. Hunger bitter
with bread.The cave wants nothing to do

with the sun. This is dumb, the self-
defeating way we've been. A gold mine is

calling us into its temple. Instead, we
bend and keep picking up rocks from the

ground. Every thing has a shine like gold,
but we should turn to the source! The

origin is what we truly are. I add a little
vinegar to the honey I give. The bite of

scolding makes ecstasy more familiar. But
look, fish, you're already in the ocean:

just swimming there makes you friends with
glory. What are these grudges about? You

are Benjamin. Joseph has put a gold cup
in your grain sack and accused you of being

a thief. Now he draws you aside and says,
"You are my brother. I am a prayer. You're

the amen." We move in eternal regions, yet
worry about property here. This is the

prayer of each: You are the source of my
life. You separate essence from mud. You

honor my soul. You bring rivers from the
mountain springs. You brighten my eyes. The

wine you offer takes me out of myself into
the self we share. Doing that is religion.

- Rumi. . .translated by Coleman Barks
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Tibet-what can we do ?

Posted on Mar 17th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive!  

Re: Tibet - what can we do?

victoria said 43 minutes ago:

When wondering what can we do , I am reminded of the fantastic Holodynamics approach of Vernon Woolf… here is an inspiring video where he talks about his past experiences in mediating and healing international conflicts.

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I support the 6 Point Peace Plan for Tibet

Posted on Mar 18th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
show all posts in this thread
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s-h-h-h-h-h. . .sugarbabies ?

Posted on Mar 19th, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
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What have you learned from having your heart broken?

Posted on Mar 21st, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for March 21, 2008:

I've learned the hard way that the pain of a broken heart, like every other pain, comes from the ego attachment of trying to own & attain my identity from something outside myself--in this case another person. "He is mine. . .forever" (yeah, right !). Just the perfect amount of pain has taught me to realize the futility of "exclusive relationships" --one can never own or change another person-- we can only love EVERYONE unconditionally, at a joyfully deeper & more inclusive level in each present moment.
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Tagged with: QaR, heartbreak, lessons, love, life

superbrain yoga !

Posted on Mar 23rd, 2008 by victoria : B* R* E* A* T* H* E, you are Alive! victoria
 
 
 
 

Buy the book at Amazon.com!

 

 

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