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about me
Who am I?
I AM and am not the unknowable vast and mysterious infinite beauty of a starry night I am and am not just another human doing my best to live my life on this beautiful planet during these crazy times. I am and am not the stories of my past. I AM one with all that is and I often forget that My life has been a quest, a hero's journey to discover and express my soul's purpose, my unique gift to life. I am a dreamer, who too often believes what I experience as being "real" I have earned the right to call myself a Wilderness Rites of Passage Guide, a Leave No Trace Trainer, and a SpiritWeavers Circle guide with The Center for Creative Intent
You are not connected to green
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Thousands of years ago, the Toltec were known throughout southern Mexico as women and men of knowledge. Anthropologists have spoken of the Toltec as a nation or a race. But the Toltec were scientists and artists who formed a society to explore and conserve the spiritual knowledge and practices of the ancient ones. It may seem peculiar that they combined the secular with the sacred, but the Toltec considered science and spirit to be the same since all energy, whether material or ethereal, is d...
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Tue, September 2, 2008 - 7:31 PM
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'To trust in the force that moves the universe is faith. Faith isn't blind, it's visionary. Faith is believing that the universe is on our side and that the universe knows what it's doing. Faith is a psychological awareness of an unfolding force for good, constantly at work in all dimensions. Our attempts to direct this force only interferes with it. Our willingness to relax into it allows it to work on our behalf. Without faith, we're frantically trying to control what it is not our business...
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Tue, April 8, 2008 - 9:54 PM
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"Hold the sadness and pain of samsara in your heart and at the same time the power and vision of the Great Eastern Sun. Then the warrior can make a proper cup of tea.
Wed, April 2, 2008 - 7:26 PM
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Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
When Aldo Leopold gazed into the "fierce green fire dying" in the eyes of a female wolf he had just killed in 1949, he had a revelation: "There was something new to me in those eyes." "I was young then, full of trigger-itch; I thought that because few wolves meant more deer, that no wolves would mean hunters' paradise," he wrote. "But after seeing the green fire die, I sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view."
Tue, March 25, 2008 - 12:35 PM
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