Watch out! Changes are coming!
This is what I believe is going to happen. So many people, scientists, spiritual leaders are speaking about a transformation that is about to come. Lilou Mace from Juicy Living interviews Barbara Marx Hubbard, who has been called the Mother of Invention by Neale Donald Walsch. Barbara says we are going through a birthing process as part of the evolutionary development. Birthing can be a beautiful thing, but it is also hard work for both the mother and the baby. Listen to Barbara’s ideas, and take just one message for yourself!
The Emotion of Jealousy
I love the way David Deida describes jealousy.
He says, “This feeling of jealousy is a useful sign. Feel it fully. Part of you hates them for having what you don’t. Part of you justifies that you are better off without it. Part of you feels inferior for not having it. Part of you tries to feel superior by not needing it.”
He says jealousy is like false hope, because even when we get the things we want so much, we are not satisfied. We want more. But what Deida says is that what we really want is openness, to be open as love.
I often catch myself feeling jealous and I know it’s not nice to be jealous of my friends’ ‘stuff’ or ‘loving relationship’ or ‘lucky situation’ because instead of me sharing the happiness with them, I am busy with being unhappy with myself. By Deida I am encouraged to “feel it fully” and take it as a sign of not being totally open as love.
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A Little Writing About Hungary…
…that I found a few days ago. Apparently “Hungarians do things their own way”
Enjoy!
“There is something irrepressibly individual about Hungary. This comes from a national identity – Magyars isolated among Germanic and Slav races – and the lavish legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Proud of this sense of identity, which survived the attempts of communism to wipe it out, the Hungarians do things their own way. Their language is one of the most complex in Europe, as is the range of grape varieties planted in their vineyards; varieties which cannot be found elsewhere. For example, these are the people who brought us the Tokaji wine, the likes of which cannot be found anywhere else in the world. Hungary was already producing wines under Roman rule and has maintained a good winemaking tradition ever since, with a few interruptions while under Turkish occupation. Tokaji wines were being sold in Europe as far back as the 17th century and their reputation grew under Austrian rule.”
Source: Larousse Encyclopedia of Wine
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