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Archive for March, 2009

Born to Believe

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Born to Believe
By Andrey Newberg, M.D. and Mark Robert Waldman

a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson
 
Andrey Newberg, MD, is an associate professor in the Departments of Radiology and Psychiatry at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and he is an adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Religious studies. He is Board-certified in internal medicine, nuclear medicine, and nuclear cardiology.

Mark Robert Waldman is an associate fellow at the Center for Spirituality and the Mind at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of nine books, and anthologies on personal relationships, dreamwork, creativity, literature, and writing.

Prayer, meditation, speaking in tongues, whirling dervishes, flying yogis: all human beings, from time immemorial have had a need to believe in something in order to survive.  The question is: WHY?  The main reason is that we must be able to tell ourselves and believe that tomorrow will be a better day.  We need hope, which springs from faith.

This book gets at the truth of hope and faith. Near the beginning, the authors write: “In the neurosciences, we strive to define our terms as accurately as possible so that, at the very least, other scientists will understand us. Unfortunately, subjective experiences such as feelings, values, and meaningfulness are difficult to define because they mean different things to different people.”

This book presents traditional approaches to belief, such as perception versus cognition and social consensus versus emotional value. The chapter that I found very interesting, “Transcendence and the Human Brain,” is about nuns, Buddhists, and the reality of spiritual beliefs.

One of the authors writes in exciting detail about brain studies on transcendence: “For many years, I have been investigating transcendent experiences like those reported by Bucke. Many religious traditions describe them, as do thousands of intelligent individuals. Over the past five years, I have had a chance to examine some of these experiences in our university there and measure neurobiologically what is happening to the brain as they occur.”

If someone has a deep conviction, whether it be legitimized by reasoning or based on an illusion from the brain, it doesn’t matter as long as the person believes it is real. The example of a person with a strong belief is contagious and attractive. But belief can go too far, leading to fanaticism.

A person can become a fanatic and try to persuade those around him to embrace his belief. Someone in power, or the process of grabbing power, whether in the religious or the political domain (or both at once), can use unusual persuasion to force people to submit to repression and tyranny through a fanatic belief.  We’ve seen this in history. We see it now in countries and religions all around the world.

Popular beliefs that take hold remind me of this old saying: “Tell me who your associates are, and I’ll tell you who YOU are” (like “birds of a feather flock together”).  Not only do our thoughts and the way we live, all contribute to our moral constitution, but we are also described by the company we keep, the environments we choose, the clubs we join, the churches of our devotion, and the people we admire who share our convictions.

It is a given that our thoughts, impressions, and way of believing form an aura around us as an individual, a kind of energetic center. So it follows that an even bigger energy center will form and emanate from a group of individuals with a similar belief. This group energy is the basis for many spiritually transcendent experiences. It can be very powerful!

From the chapter, “Creating New Spiritual Realities,” the authors write: “For most religious practitioners, meditation and prayer are designed to reinforce basic tenets and beliefs of the group; and the ongoing activity in the frontal lobes plays an essential role in maintaining and strengthening these beliefs.”

What seems certain is that we humans are hard-wired to believe something.  It is human nature to strive for the spiritual enlightenment experience, however one defines that.  The need to believe in something greater than ourselves is natural, universal, and often passionate. Belief comes from a group experience or the transcendent experience.

Readers will find techniques in this book to develop their own personal power. This study demonstrates having a strong faith is one of the best and surest allies to success.  Faith can change us from a leaf in the wind of fate to the captain of our boat, using the winds of fate to our advantage and to chart our own destiny. Faith can bring us satisfaction, enlightenment, and happiness, evolving us intellectually and morally.

“Born to Believe” traces the path to understanding in such a fascinating process, that it is guaranteed to make the reader think about the subject in a new way. I highly recommend this book to believers and non-believers alike.  There is something for everyone here.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry.  Office in Washington DC.  To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published. 

The Tree That Talked

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

The Tree That Talked
By Jenny Smedley

 
a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

Jenny Smedley, columnist and writer, has been a guest speaker on hundreds of radio and TV shows worldwide. She is the author of Past Life Angels and Soul’s don’t lie. Her new book, The Tree That Talked, is beautiful.

Whenever trees are the subject, they evoke the most beautiful and majestic images in our minds.  Trees are the essential part of the overall grand beauty of nature in general. They also stir within our emotional responses, feelings of wisdom and protection. Spiritually, trees are in perpetual ascension toward the heavens. As vertical beings, they are the symbol of upright morals and steadfastness.

Trees have the universal symbolism of life itself, as in “the tree of life,” which is a tradition in so many global cultures across the world - even in ancient times.  There is good reason for this.  As you may know, trees outlive everything else.  Some current species recently have been proven to live to astonishing ages of tens of thousands of years.  Tree species, now extinct, may have lived even longer than that. 

Going beyond the symbolism of the tree of life, some cultures, both ancient and current, consider trees sacred.  Druids are the best known culture to revere trees, but many other cultures have held the tree in a position of high esteem, and many today still do.  It’s easy to imagine why this is true when we think of the grandiose trees such as the Giant Sequoias in northern California and some of the tree species that live thousands of years such as those found in New Zealand and other parts of the world.

Likewise, the color green, largely represented by trees, symbolizes life, health, and even prosperity.  We all learned in grammar school about how trees breathe in carbon dioxide and convert it into oxygen as all green plants do, but trees are the most important.  They give us oxygen on the largest scale to provide for animal life.  Without tress on this lovely planet Earth, we literally could not breathe, could not live. Along with their ability to provide vast amounts of oxygen, they also “clean” the air of a major source of the planet’s pollution by using the carbon dioxide to make oxygen. It’s a perfect relationship that we and other animal life have with trees.

The tree is an important symbol not just of life, but also significantly representing life, death, and reincarnation. This is found in many spiritual beliefs, including Christianity. Perhaps this came from the olive tree, which can apparently die for many years, even decades, for example during droughts, and then spring to life again when the conditions are right.  Some trees can be pruned, and the apparently dead twiggy branches stuck in the ground sprout life. There are many amazing facts about the life cycles of trees, so life and rebirth are founded in truth.
Jenny Smedley writes with such love for trees and about her spiritual connection to them. For her, as for many cultures, the strength and protection elements of trees represent not just the symbolisms already discussed, but also the entire cosmos. For her, the upright, circular trunk is like Earth, and the ethereal leaves that disperse through the skies, like the other galaxies.  Here’s a sample of part of a picturesque description of an oak that she writes:

“The oak tree was well into its prime in the year of 1896.  It was two hundred and nine years old and one hundred and forty feet high. It had a mighty girth that would have taken several men to encircle it.  It was a king among the undergrowth of brambles and fern that had now sprouted around it, and the mulch from its fallen leaves over the years had prevented anything growing too close to be able to steal water or nutrients from it.  One day it could have a forest around it, too.  By now, the tree had a massive canopy, which provided dappled shade for any animal that sought it.”

There is an old Celtic ritual for how to regain harmony in your life by “communing” with a tree.  First, choose a tree that you like.  Then talk to it, out loud or by using your intuition only, touch it as if it were an old friend, then walk clockwise around it three times.  It’s also recommended to chant, out loud or silently, an invocation dedicated to the spiritual light that imbues everything.

Trees are the nobility of nature. When I read this book, I was overcome by an optimistic sense of eternal life.  The descriptions carried me away by the evocative beauty of trees.  It also touched me deep in my heart as it will yours.  I highly recommend this book.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. Office in Washington DC. To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Let’s Talk Intuition

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Let’s Talk Intuition:
101 Powerful Insights to Transform Your Life Today and Forever
By Darlene Pitts
a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson
 
Darlene Pitts is an intuition consultant and has taught many people how to use their intuition, to improve and take control of their lives. Her teachings show how each of us receives intuitive messages each day. She is the author of Discover Your Intuition and Let’s Talk Intuition.

The author of this book believes as I do: that everyone possesses the power of intuition - that we are all born with this talent. This talent should be considered the sixth sense, but if this is true, then why aren’t we all psychic? Why aren’t we all, at the very least, acting on our hunches?

 Have any of the following things happened to you?  Then you’ll discover why:

“You feel an urge to visit or call someone; you hear a phone ring before it rings; people, places, and objects boost or drain your energy; Jokes prove prophetic and guesses reveal information”

Intuition is NOT the opposite of rational thinking.  (That’s one of the most common non-religious rebuttals to the “reality” of intuition.) A natural component of critical thought, intuition enhances and complements rational thinking.  Have you ever wondered how you “knew” something that you had not been taught, and that you did not get through ordinary intellectual methods? That’s intuition too. So we actually use our intuition even when oblivious of it.

The author explains the many benefits of opening ourselves to our intuition.  She says that you can discover how to:

  • Increase your finances and make right decisions
  • Improve your personal relationships
  • Time management
  • Find what you love doing
  • Select proper foods to eat
  • Locate missing loved ones and lost objects

Sadly, while some people are able nurture their intuitive talents, this is not the norm. We are taught to suppress our intuition, so most of us remain unaware of it - or we ignore it. Our modern society teaches us from an early age that “psychic” powers, such as intuition, aren’t real. It’s characterized as a con perpetrated on us by fake clairvoyants. (Of course, fake clairvoyants and con people do exist, a fact of life which is used erroneously as “proof.”)

Another negative connotation that is commonly associated with intuition – in order to dismiss it – is superstition. These negative messages bombard us constantly. Some religions classify intuition as evil (or as something coming from the devil). The author reminds us that intuition is a gift from the cosmos that we humans have been given along with our other senses and talents.

Intuition is a very positive and valuable form of subconscious awareness. Intuition has always played an important and even life-saving role in our day-to-day affairs since the beginning of time.

The author writes about how our mind becomes a kind of cosmic radio, both sender and receiver, with many stations. All around us, there are many other kinds of energy waves or vibrations: chemical, electrical, sound, light, magnetic, etc. When we pay attention to our intuition, “…we tune our radio knob (our mind) to precisely the frequency we want and screen out the others. Or, we send precise wave lengths with our thoughts and intentions that carry the associated kinds of energy vibrations. To divine [use intuition] is thus the opposite of chaos.”

Healing is another way to reveal intuition. The authorwrites:  “We know that vibrations, frequencies, waves, and energies have a recordable effect, some good and some bad, on us and our environment. For example, when music heals, healing occurs on a cellular level through vibrations. There is a demonstrated shift in brain waves [from alpha to beta], which are associated with feelings of inner peace and well-being.”

A section that particularly interested me was the connection between intuition and the white light.  The author writes:  “Some people can see white light around others just before they make their transition to the afterlife.” 

If you think that you don’t have any intuition, take heart.  We all have it – it’s just been hidden.  In this book, you’ll learn how to cultivate your intuition. I highly recommend this book.

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. Office in Washington DC.  To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Find Serenity in the Midst of Routine

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Find Serenity in the Midst of Routine
By Dr. Stewart Bitkoff

a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

Dr. Stewart Bitkoff had a long daily commute in New York City-area traffic for most of his thirty-year career as a specialist in therapeutic recreation and psychiatric rehabilitation.

What is the usual reaction that we have these days when we are confronted with the myriad challenges of life and with stressful situations? We lose our cool, we get upset, and sometimes we explode… worse, we lose our spiritual balance. There’s got to be a better way to deal with life.

This little bedside book has some clear-cut remedies for these over-the-top reactions. Who wouldn’t like to be able to stay calm and clear-headed no matter what we face? Imagine that there is a wave of energy all around us that brings calm from the cosmos to our lives. This calm is a gift from the cosmos to us that makes our lives seem full of possibilities while restoring our spiritual balance.

A chapter called, “In the Moment,” was one of the parts that spoke to me personally. The author writes: “Some mornings, the monotony of the drive [to work] and the routine or working each day makes me weary. I began thinking about all my problems, and I am trapped. This is the snare of yesterday and of expectation; it is no longer living in the moment.

When I am at one with the moment, I am able to soar free. Part of my mind fixes on the routine and repetition of the drive; another part is able to sing the song of freedom. The problems of yesterday and the expectation of the day’s events are jailers. They are yesterday’s reality and not the possibility of today. They are not the moment. Only by living IN THE MOMENT can I begin to operate outside of the confines of time and space.”

That chapter summarizes a good philosophy of life. We all need to be reminded of that spark of the Divine that is within all of us. One of the best ways to do that is to be present in the moment. Easier said than done. But studies have shown enormous benefits for people who practice being present in the moment, through whatever methods they prefer to achieve it (such as through meditation). We all know of the health benefits, such as lowered blood pressure, less stress hormones, more feelings of joy etc. But there are spiritual benefits as well. When we integrate our spiritual practices into our daily lives, we can touch that depth, that strength of the Divine that is within us. We can ride that wave of calm energy that is flowing all around us any time we want.

By seeking and tapping into this “wave” of calm energy, you will see positive results in your life. This is one sure way to begin to manifest more positive effects overall. We become more positive ourselves, and this attracts more positive events and people into our circle. We will also evolve spiritually and achieve higher planes of consciousness. Whatever we think and feel, wherever we put our energies and our attention, this is what we also attract for ourselves. That’s the Universal Law of Attraction.

If we put a lot of energy into negative things or think about negative things a lot, then we will attract the negative to us. Worry falls into this category. We all know that frantic worrying serves no practical purpose, achieves no positive effect… but it does have a negative effect on our body, very obviously. It also has a negative effect emotionally and spiritually. Why worry when we can instead be present in the moment and create a more positive future?

If we are present in the moment and concentrate on what is really important, the present moment – not what has already happened, and not what might happen, but what IS – then we can live fully. We can concentrate more on the positive things that we wish to manifest for ourselves, and that aids in manifesting them. It’s the first step toward a more balanced, more positive life.

This human life is meant to be spiritual lessons that we learn, so it’s up to us to make these lessons mean more and have the desired outcome. Being present in the moment cultivates an attitude of patience, which is an essential for living well. Patience is also a great way to relieve the stress of daily life, We all know that we can get more out of our lives, but sometimes, we just aren’t sure how to begin. This book is a very good guide for that positive approach.

This is the kind of book that I consider a little treasure that I will want to reread and to keep by the bedside for evening meditation readings. Whenever I’ve had a stressful day, I think that this book will help me concentrate on the Divine principles that have helped me to channel my personal energies into the more positive energies. This is how I can remember to connect with the cosmos to that infinite light, to that infinite calm, for balance, and for peace.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. Office in Washington DC. To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Good-bye Mom, I’ll Always Love You

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Goodbye Mom. I’ll Always Love You
~ An Interactive Keepsake Journal for children whose mothers have died and adults who want to help them.

Pamela L. Chubbuck Ph.D
Interview and Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

MCW:  This book touched me. What motivated you to write this book?

PC:  I have been involved in assisting people with the process they go through around death and dying for over 35 years. In the early 1970s I was a counselor/educator at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington DC and helped family deal with death as well as taught medical students about death and dying. I have long known that people need help dealing with death and through that job I learned a lot and discovered I was very good at helping with this difficult life issue.

Six years ago the wife of one of my best friends was in a car accident. Their 11 year old daughter, I’ll call Susan, is my special friend too. I learned that Mom was on a respirator and not expected to recover. I immediately flew out to be with them and to assist as best I could with their shock, grief, and the decision making I knew they would soon face.

It was a wrenching experience for the family and I felt honored and humbled to be part of their deep process.

When I left, I looked for books that would continue to help Susan and her father. I discovered that either the books were very narrowly religious or psychological in content lacking a wider spiritual base. Susan was being brought up to think for herself and have an expansive view of life. She needed something different, something that spoke to her psychological, physical, and spiritual needs. So I sat down and wrote her a letter. I later realized that many kids need help in getting through the death process and that letter to Susan became the basis of Goodbye Mom. I’ll Always Love You.

MCW: For a child to lose a mother is truly an emotional tragedy. You give some really great suggestions for healing. Tell me about the results you have seen from your advice. 

PC:  Everything I do is holistic in nature. The suggestions in my book show the integrative approach that I believe is necessary for true healing to occur. I speak to the child and to the care giver in terms that include the body, emotions, mind and spirit and suggest ways to work on all the known levels of being. When the entire human spectrum is addressed properly healing occurs. The results for children using this approach are excellent. It works for adults addressing death and other traumatic life experiences as well. Children using this approach are able to eventually become healthy. That is to feel their feelings, feel OK about themselves, and grow up to be open loving adults. The contrast is that kids and adults, who do not take an integrative approach to healing from traumatic events in childhood, continue to have difficulty into adulthood. This difficulty may take the shape of physical illness, depression, anxiety, anger, and other neurotic, behaviors.

MCW:  Death is an intricate subject for adults. As the ultimate mystery, it’s impossible to truly understand. Is talking about death to children harmful in any way to them?

PC:  I like that you call death the ultimate mystery. It certainly is a mystery and I think that children can be invited to participate in the open pondering of that mystery at an early age. The first moment an infant notices a dead ant for example, or that most birds fly except the one he sees dead on the ground, starts the child’s unconscious dialogue about life and death. It is good to begin to help make that dialogue conscious early on so it is simply part of the cycle we know as life and death. Later small children are exposed to hundreds of deaths on television and movies. I think children should be shielded from seeing and hearing violence and death on television because that can be harmful in many ways. It is frightening, unreal, confusing, sometimes horrifying. It creates a distortion. Death in it’s reality of every day life, is something we all must face sooner or later. Children have much more consciousness about these “unknowable” things than most of us realize. That is why I stress that children should always be asked - what you think happened to your mom when she died? Where do you think she is she now? There is never any harm talking to a child about death in a loving, kind, open hearted way that is age appropriate. You must obviously talk to a 5 year old differently that you talk to a 15 year old.

 MCW:  You speak about when the mother dies and the father must become mother, too, while still grieving. Is it difficult for children, who are naturally intuitively, to know that the father is also in pain? What are your suggestions for that?

PC:  A father can never be father and mother too. A father can never take the place of a mother. He should not try. He must just be himself. However we know that a father suddenly taking on full emotional and physical responsibility for his child/ren is under a lot of strain, especially if he has just lost his wife and lover. Most children will know that Dad is sad, hurting and having a hard time even if unconsciously. It may frighten the child more if Dad tries to hide it by putting up a false front and not talking about his own feelings. Dad and child should share their grief.

MCW:  After the death of the mother, the child may become angry at the whole world and even rebellious, creating consequences and behavior patterns that can affect his or her adult personality. What are your suggestions for this situation?

PC:  Be real and kind with the child. Don’t make up stories to gloss over death, but tell stores about death that will be useful. Help the child open up. Tell your child how you felt when your mother died…or grandmother. If you have yet to experience death of a parent tell what you imagine you will feel when your mother dies. Or father, friends. Ask what the child thinks and feels and keep the conversation going for years. For as long as the child seems to need - and that could over a lifetime. Don’t pretend that no one is angry or tell kids not to be angry – or that anger is bad. Anger is a human emotion and must be acknowledged and dealt with. If children are allowed to express their anger appropriately they do not have to hold it in where it will smolder until it finally bursts into flames and burns down the house. Sometimes literally! Get professional help for yourself and your child when needed.

MCW:  Personal question: Do you believe in reincarnation?

PC:  “The Great Mystery is too vast for the human mind to comprehend.” My father said that often. He was very much against any kind of religious dogma and one of the most spiritual men I have known. That said - I am conscious of what seem like memories of past lives.

MCW:  Give me an example of a child who has lost his or her mother and who has had a constructive grieving experience.

PC:  Forest, (not his real name) was left without his mother at age 8. His father and grandparents were very open with him both in explaining his mother’s illness and her impending death to him. They encouraged him to talk about his thoughts and feelings both before and after his mother passed on. They hugged, shared their grief, cried together sometimes and knew that anger was a natural part of grieving. The family took my advice and created a ritual that they continued for several months and then each year to commemorate Forest’s Mom.
Years later when Forest’s dad re-married they still held a ceremony for his biological mother each year. His step mother did not try to take the place of his mother but did love him well. Forest grew to be an open, happy college student who loved sports and got good grades. He is still sad sometimes about his mother’s death but that does not stop him from living a good well balanced life.

What if you or someone you know did not have a healthy grieving experience? It may never be too late to move through old stuck held energy about the death of a mother. A women I’ll call Pat, came to me at age 35 with serious physical manifestations of suppressed grief that had taken her to the hospital on several occasions. Pat’s mother died when Pat was 12. Pat’s family never talked about Mom’s death and did not allow Pat to grieve. After just a few sessions of expressing deep grief and anger all of her physical symptoms disappeared.

MCW: Death for me is transition. How do you describe death in all its complexity?

PC:  Death is certainly a transition, but a transition from what to what? Death, like life is a great adventure. I can’t describe death in all its complexity because it is a Great Mystery. I think like religion – which tries to sometimes explain death with stories, metaphors, and myths, death is a conversation that one must have with oneself throughout life. Or lives perhaps. Religion is a search for truth. It is not being told what to think as truth and then trying to get others to believe it too. That is dogma. True religion is the wholehearted, perhaps fervent, continuation of the search.

                   ————————————————————————————-

“Goodbye Mom I’ll Always Love You, is integrative, soul-filled, spiritual psychology at its best. A long time leader in the holistic field and a true healer, Pam generously shares her clear, open hearted wisdom and leads you and your child step by step through the most painful terrain. Absolutely, share this book with the bereaved kids you love!”~ Candace Pert PhD, Author of Molecules of Emotion and Everything You Need to Know to Feel Go(o)d, Chief Science Officer, Rapid Laboratories

Pamela Chubbuck PhD, Ordained Interfaith Minister, is an internationally known psychotherapist with over 35 years of experience working with individuals and families, including kids whose mothers died. Pam trains psychotherapists internationally, is director of Core Energetics South, and maintains a private practice in Holistic Psychotherapy in Atlanta Metro area. Visit www.GoodbyeMomBook.org Call Pam at 770-388-0086

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. Office in Washington DC. To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Free Ralph: An Evolutionary Fable

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Free Ralph: An Evolutionary Fable
by Stephen Wing  

a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

Stephen Wing gave up a 12 years career as a hitchhiker in 1990 when he met his wife, Dawn Aura, and settled in Atlanta. He now works as a newsletter editor and recycling coordinator at New Leaf Distributing Co., a wholesale distributor of metaphysical and holistic literature. He is a senior editor of New Leaf’s magazine Evolve!

A lifelong writer, he is the author of Four-Wheeler & Two Leffed: Poems. Wing has served a variety of causes as a writer, editor, and activist. Some current projects are “Earth Poetry with Stephen Wing”, an ecologically themed poetry presentation: Gaia-Love Graffiti, a collection of original bumper stickers www.GaiaLoveGraffiti.com and interfaith celebration of the Solstices and Equinoxes in Atlanta. In 2006 he became a cancer survivor and celebrated his fiftieth birthday.

His book is truly an original subject, and reading it will give you a new take on the situation of CHIMPANZEES. This talented author has given us a fresh look at the monkey and in doing so, has helped us get to know the monkey better.

In the third chapter, The Granddaddy Tree, there was a passage about family relationships.

“Kimbu climbed the long narrow ladder behind his daddy, feeling familiar excitement swell inside. He longed to scoot past Daddy and clamber up the ladder first. He knew he could reach the tiny platform at the top much faster than Daddy could. But the few times he had tried, Daddy had firmly grasped the rope tied to his safety harness and lowered him all the way to the safety net below. Kumbu had learned. Up here, Daddy was the boss. Down below it was his Mommy, with her careful system of rewards and punishments. But all of Mommy’s discipline, he realized, was only preparing him for the excitement he felt up in the lofty peak of the Big Top…..”

As you can see from the passage above, the author demonstrates an advanced sense of empathy with these animals. He writes deftly about how these animals feel, how they live, and how they communicate. The surprising part is how much, the author reveals, they have a similar structure to human socialization! It makes it easier to appreciate how they could be our ancient ancestors in the evolutionary design.

This book also brings to mind all of the long-held, culturally divers, and noble symbolism associated with the monkey and the great apes. The chimpanzee is in the family of the great apes, yet smaller than a gorilla. The chimpanzee is noted for its intelligence.

Right along with that is their reputation for being quite quick-witted, physically agile, and clever to a fault. Because of this comic ability, the monkeys and apes have been thought by some philosophers to represent the consciousness that is dissipated, and a lack of serious thought, a kind of irresponsible frivolity.

 However, in most ancient spiritual traditions, the monkeys and apes are revered as sacred, as having the highest evolved souls of the animal world. This is still apparent in many middle-eastern and eastern spiritual traditions.

In the eastern cultures, the monkey king finally attains the state of being of a Buddha. The symbolism there is that of wisdom and detachment. There is even the belief that the monkey symbolizes man’s errant belief that he is spiritually superior. Thus, historically, the monkey and the ape can represent demons and gods. Perhaps the most telling about ourselves is the way today, some people perceive the monkeys and apes as a caricature of us humans, but to them, it’s not flattering. It presents us as an image to escape: brutish, lascivious, lawless, base-instinct animal. Yet nothing could be further from the truth in the society of monkeys and apes.

There is strict social order like laws, there is relational commitment, there is considerable intelligence, and there is love among them and from them to us. Most of the behavior is not at all brutish but well thought out, actions with obvious deliberations on the merits. These are just a few of the kinds of things that the author discovers in his observation of the chimpanzees.

These beautiful, sentient animals represent a kind of freedom, intelligence, and physical vitality. We are discovering day by day just how smart and affectionate they are. Affection is linked with spirituality as we experience it. As you read this fascinating book, you will discover and better understand the message that he author is conveying here. There is a very spiritual connection between man and nature, between man and animals. Perhaps the deepest spiritual relationship exists between man and monkey.

At the end of the book, suggestions about “How to Help the Chimpanzees” includes a list of some good Web sites to visit. I recommend this book to all readers, especially those who love nature and animals. This is the kind of book that you will want to read more than once.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry.  Office in Washington DC.  To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330. 
 
Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Miraculous Health

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Miraculous Health
By Dr. Rick Levy   

a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

It is a pleasure to recommend this book about health and the miraculous connection to keeping good health. The talented author, Dr. Rick Levy, has a writing style that is very accessible. You would think that you’re merely having a casual conversation with him about the issues of general health and specific causes of maladies.

Basically, everything about our health boils down to our attitude towards the subject. Personally, I found this book quite valuable because it demonstrates how everything is connected, and how intimate and direct the connection is especially in the great pyramid of life, our mind, body, and spirit and in a larger sense, because everything is connected, like a group of links in energy chains. We must constantly keep the chain from becoming tangled. As suffering accumulates over the course of our life, it causes the knots that make roadblocks for us. So we weed out the knots and keep the connections sorted out and smooth.

The author makes this point clearly in plain English in the five parts of the book.

For example, in a Part Two. Self Analysis, the author wants us to see how important this step is in our process. He has us consider questions about our lives such as: Where are you right now? Then he continues to describe how our lives impact us but our attitudes about these conditions are the key: The process I describe here will help you understand. The major twists and turns of your life, how they’ve affected you, how you’ve reacted to them, and the extent to which they’ve confined or liberated you [affect your health]. How well you’ve fared so far relative to your expectations [and] the major themes threading through your experience, and what they imply about who you are and where you’re going also affect your health in major ways. And while we cannot control the events in our life, we can control our reaction to these events, our processing of them, take a positive turn to it, and learn from it all.

The author believes that diseases arise for the most part from emotions that we allow to permeate us. A common example is when we have too much stress, we know that it will cause us to have physical problems. So, in general, by having a positive and constructive attitude, we can succeed in maintaining our body in good health.
 In a Part Three: Treatment, the author writes about the ways to apply conscious attitudes:
Conscious Attitude 1: “I like it, I’m doing it.” If you take that attitude, you’ll succeed every time.

Conscious Attitude 2: “I disagree with it.” This will obviously kick you right out of hypnosis.

Conscious Attitude 3: “I’m neutral about it.” This won’t work either. This is the type of attitude you take when you’re overweight and you say to yourself, Oh gee, I guess maybe that broccoli and cauliflower diet could work for me.

Conscious Attitude 4: This is the one you have to watch out for. The attitude is, “I like it, I’m gonna try it, or I like it, I hope it’s gonna work.” Such an attitude will result in sure failure every time because trying and hoping are not enough. Trying and hoping introduce a little bit of doubt or fear to the mind. Think about your success with the mind-body methods instead of failure.

Many other spiritual disciplines have the same philosophy and promote the same types of methods for productive attitudes and constructive thoughts, which produce good health, physically, mentally, and spiritually. This author puts it in a much easier way to understand than most other methods. If you prefer a more direct approach in a tone and style that is conversational and easily understood, then this is the practical guide for you to get started right now in improving your health on all levels.

With the different levels of health, you also have different ways to perceive and interpret the events of life: intellectually and rationally; sensibly and pragmatically; and idealistically and instinctually. The part of the book about learning to know ourselves provides the deepest and richest exercise.

“Know thyself” is perhaps the greatest joy and the greatest power. Without that self-knowledge, we cannot grasp the wheel and guide our lives with confidence along the path that we are meant to take. Without self-knowledge, we can’t even know what direction to take. So while Part Two is titled Self Analysis, we are led to self understanding. This aspect is the secret that is revealed throughout the book, and this is the source that we use to tap into that positive attitude that we want for good health.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

 Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 28 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. Office in Washington DC. To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330.

Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 
Click here to link to Oracle 20/20 where article is published.

Love and Immortality

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Love and Immortality: The Long Journey of My Heart
by William Pillow

a Book Review by Marie-Claire Wilson

William Pillow was educated as a pharmacist, served in the USAF Medical Service Corps, and worked for a fortune 500 company for thirty four years.

He has written an edited texbooks and articles for professional journals and trade periodicals. He also wrote Grave Convictions and knows how to get up close and personal with the subject matter in a most intriguing way fully engaging the readers.

One of my favorite chapters In Love and Immortality was the chapter entitled “Karma. “Some researchers spoke of a process called karma that occurs as the result of human interaction over all incarnations. It was said that a soul acquires some kinds of debits or credits in each lifetime as a result of the impact of its human host on other person’s lives. This seems to presume that the soul is held somewhat responsible for its host’s behavior towards others and to acknowledge the soul’s limitations in controlling its host’s behavior.” Karma is linked to the universal spiritual principle that everything and everyone is connected. Karma philosophy further holds that there is no such thing as coincidence and that everything happens for a reason, a reason that is ultimately working toward the good of the goal of our existence as a humans.

The author writes about research that may confirm something a lot of us already know: “Many researchers have now demonstrated that a focused thought or intention can affect a variety of objects of that intention, ranging from the molecular structure of water to the health of a plant or person, as measured by specialized scientific instruments [as cited by Mc Taggart 2007]. It was also shown that this was accompanied by, and as if caused by, a measurable stream of energy from the source of the intention. Dr Gary Schwartz (2007) even believed that love is both energy and a conscious intention.

When we are overwhelmed by the assault of negative thoughts, it could be the result of someone else (or more than one person) with negative thoughts and intentions having to do with us. Two things: it’s best to ignore this negative energy so as not to give it any importance, and to overcome the negative with our own positive thoughts and intentions.

It’s also good to remember that when someone is sending out bad thoughts, even when directed to a particular object or person, a significant amount of that negative energy will be prayed outward in all directions. (Think of a light that you turn on to be able to read a book, and how some of that light is cast out into a room or area.) This is why there is inexplicable negative energy hanging about occasionally. This is also why it is important to emphasize the positive in this life, and to send out positive intentions and thoughts, to increase the positive energy available and to overcome the negative.
 As humans, we are not perfect. We need to be reminded of our spiritual paths to show us how to return to them when we stray. Suffering is a fact of life. But suffering is caused by our own actions; we bring it on ourselves. Often, we continue to plow ahead in the wrong direction, the one that makes us suffer more, sometimes blind to the facts, sometimes in full knowledge that what we are doing is not working, or that we are not making the best choices. Sometimes we cannot find a better way, other times we don’t care. Often we do not see the help that is offered - we are simply too tired to change. But then sometimes, we become enlightened; and even if the enlightenment itself doesn’t last, the experience of it will guide us forever as a bright memory and a beacon of hope.

We are all learning and we are all searching for the Divine, whether it is the connection to the Divine, including the answers to all those unanswerable questions such as the title of this book evokes. None of this is trivial even though it is ordinary in the sense that these are the circumstances of everyone’s psychic life here, no matter the culture, age, or economic level.

The author made me contemplate ancient human riddles: Why are we here on Earth? Where did we come from? Is there a greater purpose of each of us? What and where is heaven? William Pillow asked himself these questions and many others when his wife became ill. Love and Immortality is an autobiographical love story with a scientific and metaphysical discussion about death, God, our souls, the spirit world, and reincarnation. It also discusses the implications of how we live our lives based on love, eternity, and spirituality. The author talks about how important it is to focus on the moment, and to live and to appreciate every minute as it passes. Everything is temporary except love.

This book is an excellent spiritual guidebook. One of the most profound ideas put forth in this book is that love is eternal. Love can never be prevented from entering the human heart, and it will be shared and it will increase, that is the cosmic law of love. We affirm what we believe with our hearts, not with our minds. Love is the ultimate cosmic mystery. I really enjoyed reading this book and I highly recommend it.

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire

Marie-Claire Wilson, author of The Spiritual Tarot: The Keys to The Divine Temple, is a bilingual writer and poet. She has been a practicing medium for 26 years using direct clairvoyance, the Tarot, numerology and palmistry. To make an appointment for a phone reading call toll-free: 1-877-847-7330.

Click here to visit my web site   www.marie-claire.tv

 

Click here to link to Oracle 20-20 where article is published.