How It's Always Now

Written by Saleem Rana


How do we feelrepparttar fullness of life itself?

We have to go underneathrepparttar 122173 busy mind. And go into that deep sense of being itself. Here we find love, inspiration, and our own free spirit.

In your field of consciousness, there is a deep sense of eternal, timeless awareness. It is an inner silence. The psychology of well being originates here.

Yetrepparttar 122174 silence is full. It has an amplitude and dimension to it. It is a vast power, a benign power, a power of complete and utter love. It has an undefinable quality that cannot be described. A quiet philosophy of God and life emerge here.

This isrepparttar 122175 oneness that is common to all human beings. It isrepparttar 122176 infinite unity beneathrepparttar 122177 surface of phenomena. You realize your intimate relationship with everything.

Something resides within us, an expansive loveliness, a growing lovingness, an indispensable sense of what is happening now.

Things change in our lives. We see phenomena pass before us and it appears to change us. But beneath it all is a constancy of consciousness.

From this quantum field, consciousness encountersrepparttar 122178 fullness of life. This timeless factor, this being, knows onlyrepparttar 122179 now. Past and future are fictions, blips of memory, but underneath it all isrepparttar 122180 continuum ofrepparttar 122181 now.

Shift Happens

Written by White Feather


Are you tired of hearing about "the shift;" this big shift in consciousness we are supposedly going through right now? Are you tired of hearing about it and now want to actually see and experience it? If this big shift is really occurring, then why does so much of life still seemrepparttar same?

Our brains can be a lot like a computer. For purposes of speed, our personal computers have what is known as caches. This is storage of allrepparttar 122172 web-pages you regularly visit. So that sites come up fast,repparttar 122173 cached version of a page will come up at times.

Our brains are a lot like that, too. Let's say that we walk by a certain building practically every day. At first, we look at it and imprint it on our memories, but after time we stop paying attention to it and instead of actually looking atrepparttar 122174 building we now just see a cached version ofrepparttar 122175 building which is a composite of allrepparttar 122176 imprinting we had donerepparttar 122177 first times we consciously looked at it. Likerepparttar 122178 computers, our brains do this forrepparttar 122179 matter of speed and economy.

We do this even with people who are a regular part of our lives. Spending time with someone over long stretches of time, we build composite images of them and we routinely see those images instead of any updated versions. We build a cache of default images that our brains can use very quickly and what happens is we get out ofrepparttar 122180 habit of actually looking and seeing and imprinting.

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