Thursday, May 28, 2015

Magic

Tonight, as I was driving my teenage son home he began to tell me how trapped and restricted he feels. He is in the middle of very important exams at the moment and so I told him that it won't last and that he will soon be free again. But he went on to tell me that he feels like it will never end because after he leaves school he will go to university and then to work and so he will always feel trapped. Like a typical parent, I told him that life is like that, everyone has to do it and that he would get used to it - the same things my parents told me. He reacted with frustration, as I'm sure I did too at his age when I was trying to come to terms with this great transition from childhood to adulthood. He said that that was like telling someone to get used to having a splinter in their foot. You can get used to the pain but you'll never be able to run. He said he wished that it could be like Skyrim, his computer game, where life is an adventure in a world full of magic. A place where you explore undiscovered lands, fight enemies, discover treasure, and where there is always something new and exciting around the next corner.  My answer was another typical, responsible parent answer, "Well, you can't spend your whole life playing computer games." He replied to my comment with even more irritation saying of course he didn't want to spend his life playing computer games but that he felt like there was nothing to look forward to in adult life.

His disillusionment took me back to my own years as a young adult when I started working. The feeling of, "Is this it? Is this all there is?" And a vision of years of work and very little play stretching far into the future. The joy and excitement, the feeling that anything could happen seemed to ebb away under the weight of routine and boring, repetitive and, for me, meaningless tasks. Work that required little intelligence and even less creativity. There was no need for an imagination in this world of 'grown-ups'. It was a world of flatness and deadness, of hollow-eyed ghosts floating around grey offices, dreaming of retirement and the chance to live again.

School is supposed to prepare us for this and in many ways it does. The end of primary school signals the end of childhood, the end of play and the end of the imagination. All of these should be left behind as we enter secondary school and undergo a relentless preparation for our entry into the world of work. It is there that we are taught 'facts' about the world within the context of subjects that are presented as unrelated. We are not encouraged to look at the big picture or to question the incompleteness of the information or why we need to learn it at all. It is there that our world views are shaped and, thanks to a system of testing, marking and praise (if we are lucky), we learn our value, or lack thereof, which in turn forms our expectations of what we might achieve when we step out into the world. Within a very narrow band of definitions school teaches us how much or how little we are worth to society. What we are not told is that those definitions are designed to judge, not our creativity, imagination or critical thinking, but our willingness to conform, to follow instructions and not question authority. Creativity and imagination are not rewarded, except in the arts to which few schools give real importance in their curricula.

It's small wonder then that many of my students tell me that they do not have an imagination when I ask them to use it. Some look at me incredulously as though I were asking them to juggle oranges or do a backflip. On rare occasions, my request that they imagine a scene or act a role is so alien to them that they refuse point blank and I have had to resort to a plan B. With others they make the effort to try the activity and surprise themselves when their creativity begins to flow. It makes me happy to see the sparkle in their eyes as they play. But it disturbs me that education systems seem to be turning out individuals that have lost the wonder and fascination they had as children and replaced it with a closed materialist view of the world and a programmed disbelief of the existence of anything that does not fit into the 'finiteness' of Newton's scientific laws.

It is because of this worldview that we often hear the words 'anomaly' and 'coincidence' which should have no place in the 'there's-an-explanation-for-everything reality' we're sold by the mainstream science community. Things that fall outside the sphere of established scientific norms are ignored and thrown into the metaphorical filing cabinet of awkward, unexplainable events that disprove the rule. Only those scientists truly worthy of the title have the courage to seek the truth and advance their discipline beyond the confines of the dusty status quo. Scientists such as Rupert Sheldrake, with his research into morphic resonance and the subtle communication between human beings and animals, and Bruce Lipton, who has popularised the study of epigenetics and the effect of thought on genes in his book, The Biology of Belief. These are two who are pushing the frontiers to reveal more and to bring forth the understanding that anomalies might not be so anomalous if science is allowed to expand and to evolve beyond its current accepted boundaries. When this happens, and I have no doubt that it is happening despite resistance from 'the old guard', the anomalies will be explained by humanity's new understanding of its world.

In the meantime, we can look upon the unexplained events in our lives with wonder and see their unpredictability through an adventurer's eyes. When synchronicity happens and we are in the right place at the right time, or we know something is going to happen before it does, or we say the same thing at the same time as someone else, we could say it's magic. When we walk in nature and sense how ancient the Earth is, how many have walked before us, feel profound reverence and waves of love and gratitude for her, that's magic. And when you look into another's eyes and know you've known them forever, that's deep magic. This is what I told my son. And as he began to disagree, I reminded him of our own little bit of magic that happened to us when we were in Cannes for my cousin's wedding several years ago. We had left our apartment to take a walk around the town when the heavens opened and we were caught, unprepared, outside in a thunder storm and torrential rain. We ran for shelter and stood in a shop doorway as the wind blew the rain into our faces. I said to my son, "I wish we had an umbrella!" At that exact moment, down the deserted street, a very large, open, multi-coloured umbrella rolled gracefully towards us, blown by the wind, slowing as it came alongside us so that I was able to take hold of the handle, which I did, and then we walked, smiling, back to the apartment.









Monday, May 11, 2015

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Flashback

In around 1985 I was walking home one night in the rain. I remember the cars and the road glistening in the street light. I remember stopping as I had a strong feeling that something had changed. The colour of the cars seemed more vivid, the lines were sharper, everything looked more beautiful although it was all very ordinary. I knew that there had been a shift and I could feel it. A different energy - lighter, faster, freer. I responded to it with excitement and anticipation because I knew it was a good sign. A sign that we had changed course.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Being authentic - going deeper

A post I read on Facebook today titled, The Unstoppable Awakening of Humanity - Symptoms of the Shift, catalyzed me into reposting the article with my own comment in which I shared some information that I have held secret and close to my heart for as long as I can remember. It only remained up for about ten minutes before I took it down again because I decided that I would rather share the information here, where it is more likely to be read by individuals who stumble across it synchronistically, meaning that they are vibrationally matched to it and open to receiving the part of its message that is meant for them.

The writer, Zen Gardner, lists the signs that he believes confirm that a global awakening of humanity is happening. By awakening he implies that humanity is asleep, which is a metaphor for the state of unconsciousness in which most people appear to exist. The passive, obedient and unquestioning way people live, struggling to make ends meet, paying taxes and dying without ever really knowing why they were here. Others "lead lives of quiet desperation" (Thoreau), knowing there is something missing but never able to find it. Some turn to drink or drugs in a desperate bid to escape from the dreary drudgery of life in menial jobs with low pay and no stimulation for their intellect and creativity. They are hopeless and apathetic, powerless and victimised. They watch the television and live vicariously through programmes about people living rich and glamorous lives that they fear they will never experience. The TV shapes their belief systems: their world view, their value system, their definition of who they are and their relative worth to that of others. They are fooled into believing they have the ability to effect change at election time when they are offered the illusion of choice. They opt for right, left or centre but when the dust settles they see different faces making different promises but their lives are just the same. For the majority, things appear to get slightly better before they inevitably get much worse, as even those lucky enough to have a job find that it doesn't cover the ever increasing cost of living. They are so busy working to put food on the table that they never stop to question why things are the way they are. With their heads down and noses to the grindstone, they are unable or unwilling to take a broader view. They have enough of their own problems, they don't have the energy for the problems of the world. But Zen Gardner believes this is changing, and so do I.

For as long as I can remember I have had a feeling that I had a job to do. The feeling comes from deep inside me and never goes away. Throughout my childhood and young adult years I felt it but didn't know what it was. I only knew I felt a deep love for the Earth, and great pain when I began realising what humankind was doing to her. I couldn't understand why, when I had been raised to respect those in government as being wise and paternal figures serving the greater good, they were allowing such short-sighted greed to wreck our precious planet. Around that time, my boyfriend and I became one more statistic when the housing bubble burst in 1990. We lost our home but even though my respect for those in authority was disintegrating, I still believed them when they said they were "at the mercy of market forces". As the popular expression goes, I still believed in cock-up rather than conspiracy. But that view was set to change.

At this time, I was very stressed and getting a lot of migraines. I was also very disillusioned with life and swore I would never have children as I saw no future for them. My boyfriend and I moved into a small flat and just after that I saw an interview with David Icke on the television. A former footballer, TV presenter and politician, he was being ridiculed by the interviewer, Terry Wogan, for the things he was saying. The audience was laughing but I wasn't. The things he was saying made perfect sense to me. Suddenly, I wasn't alone anymore. Here was someone validating all the thoughts and intuitions I had kept to myself for fear of being laughed at or belittled. A person who was saying that everything was energy and that we are all one. And here was someone else who cared as much if not more than me about the state of the world. I felt a deep respect for this man facing so much humiliation in order to tell the nation the truth. From that moment on, a weight lifted from my shoulders and I began to feel hopeful and happy again because, if he felt the way I did, there must be more of us.

These days, I know there are many of us and the numbers are growing every day. The internet has been indispensable in the sharing of information, ideas, love and support among people of like minds and hearts. People are talking about so many things; some I resonate with, some I don't and some that make me laugh and smile because they are so incredible, especially the extraterrestrial info. I am developing a good intuition for what is truth and what is lies. I am also aware of disinformation, where real events are mixed with fabrication. Like many others, I can see straight through the false flag operations and manufactured wars that are coming ever more frequently as the controllers try to perpetuate fear as the dominant vibration on the planet. They know if we are in fear we are easy to control and they stir that up in any way they can, through turning us against each other: nationality against nationality, race against race, creed against creed, male against female, rich against poor, left against right and so on. But I'm smiling now as I say that people are seeing through that too, more and more every day, yawning, stretching ...

Waking people up. Prodding them, poking them, talking to them, challenging them, listening to them, stimulating them, arguing with them, loving them. This has been my work, for as long as I can remember. It's what I came here for and I know that now. It's taken me a long time to realise it and even longer to admit it to myself. I was doing it even when I didn't know what I was doing. I did it at work, at the pub on a Saturday night, at parties and raves, at school, college and university, at festivals, at the bus stop... everywhere. The impulse is always there, a feeling that I have a job to do. When my boyfriend asked me to go and live off-grid with him I said no. I knew I had to live and work among 'normal' or conventional people. People who are still asleep, plugged into the matrix: the fake reality. People who, by still believing in the "system", are helping to perpetuate its existence. By running away to the countryside, I felt like I would be abandoning them. I had to try to help them remember who they are. Not tell them who they are. There's no evangelism in my work. My intention is to give them a gentle push (if I'm honest, with some it has been more of a shove ;)) in the right direction. When I was younger, I was more insistent which sometimes caused resistance in the other person. Nowadays, I relax and allow the encounter to unfold in the way it is meant to. I am not the architect of this process. I am its vehicle. If I go into my ego, which like everyone else I do from time to time when my vibration falls and I lose my connection, I know that it's not helping anyone. I'm not better that anyone else, nor am I less than anyone else. I simply chose to come here at this time to do this work.  I am not the only one. There are so many that people have labels such as "lightworker", "starseed", "indigo". I don't like labels as this feeds into the "us and them" mentality and the ego. I have always felt different to others but that is because I remember a little bit more than they do. But I am not separate from them. We are all one and I'm still remembering too. My encounters with others are not one way. So many people have taught me and helped me to grow and evolve. Others have healed me when I was in pain. Then there is the one who stirs the currents so profoundly that you know you will never be the same again.

Who is the architect? For me, the architect is the source of everything, the energy of pure intelligence and love, from where we all came and to where we shall all return.

What I want with all my heart is for enough of humanity to wake up so that we reach a critical mass and the game will be is up (more power in the present tense). Humanity literally stops playing ball with the controllers. We stop cooperating and refuse to do what they want. We see through the manipulation and all the lies, stop going off to fight their wars and bailing out their private banks. We  refuse to eat their toxic food and take their poisonous medicines. We release the long-suppressed free energy technologies and refuse to continue raping the planet. We clean up the oceans and stop ill-treating the animals. We build eco-homes and farm sustainably and in harmony with the Earth. We reorient the education system towards developing personal talents instead of turning out slaves to economic growth. We remember that we can heal ourselves through forgotten energy medicine techniques - some of which we haven't forgotten, such as acupuncture ... and hugs! There is more but I have to go to bed.

Goodnight and love to all ... and kisses :)







Links:

http://wakeup-world.com/2014/10/02/the-unstoppable-awakening-of-humanity-symptoms-of-the-shift/
Walden, Henry David Thoreau
David Icke talking about the Wogan interview

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Le Bouvier



If you would like to know more about this song, I recommend reading the information written by the person who originally posted it on YouTube, Hans-André Stamm.