http://www.examiner.com/article/an-alternative-to-transcendental-meditation
http://www.nsrusa.org/who.php
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Psychological_Inventory
http://www.chopra.com/ccl-meditation/21dmc/mantra.html
http://www.finerminds.com/spirituality/mantras-for-meditation/
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/d/deepak_chopra.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-chopra/meditation-myths_b_2823629.html
https://www.google.com/search?q=David+Spector&oq=David+Spector&aqs=chrome..69i57&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#q=david+spector+natural+stress+relief
http://www.advaitameditation.org/courses-activities/meditation-offerings.php
http://www.russillpaul.com/articles/article/1162814/14980.htm
consciousness ranger
Friday, April 4, 2014
Monday, February 24, 2014
NY TIMES Editorial
Hiding the Truth About Factory Farms
Published: April 26, 2011
A supermarket shopper buying hamburger, eggs or milk has every reason, and every right, to wonder how they were produced. The answer, in industrial agriculture, is “behind closed doors,” and that’s how the industry wants to keep it. In at least three states — Iowa, Florida, and Minnesota — legislation is moving ahead that would make undercover investigations in factory farms, especially filming and photography, a crime. The legislation has only one purpose: to hide factory-farming conditions from a public that is beginning to think seriously about animal rights and the way food is produced.
These bills share common features. Their definition of agriculture is overly broad; they include puppy mills, for instance. They treat undercover investigators and whistle-blowers as if they were “agro-terrorists,” determined to harm livestock or damage facilities. They would criminalize reporting on crop production as well. And they are supported by the big guns of industrial agriculture: Monsanto, the Farm Bureau, the associations that represent pork producers, dairy farmers and cattlemen, as well as poultry, soybean, and corn growers.
Exposing the workings of the livestock industry has been an undercover activity since Upton Sinclair’s day. Nearly every major improvement in the welfare of agricultural animals, as well as some notable improvements in food safety, has come about because someone exposed the conditions in which they live and die. Factory farming confines animals in highly crowded, unnatural and often unsanitary conditions. We need to know more about what goes on behind those closed doors, not less.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Brain WAVES, brain tuning, biofeedback
http://www.finerminds.com/mind-power/brain-waves/
http://www.medwow.com/used-eeg-unit-equipment/104.med
http://www.smarterway.com/FAQs.html
http://www.smarterway.com/Initial-Evaluation.html
http://www.smarterway.com/SelfRegulation.html
emWave Personal Stress Reliever http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BDUUwlTlUE
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
http://www.excelatlife.com/articles/cbterrors.htm
http://www.excelatlife.com/questionnaires/cognitive_styles/items.htm
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
agreed.
LSD The Problem-Solving Drug.
Stafford, P. G., and Golightly, B. H. (1967).
New York: Award Books.
...For if man is to cope with his new found physical and biological power and responsibility, there must be an abrupt and decisive revision of human psychology. The motives that have made human history a chronicle of bloodshed and brutality will otherwise certainly and shortly lead to the annihilation of the species. The psychedelics offer the hope that we are on the threshold of a new renaissance in which man's view of himself will undergo dramatic change. Alienated and encapsulated, he has become trapped by his history in outmoded institutions which disfigure him with the creed of original sin; corrupt him with fear of economic insecurity; dement him with the delusion that mass murder is an inevitable outcome of his nature; debase him to believe that butchery in the name of the state is a sacred duty, and leave him so crippled that he is afraid to seek self-understanding or to love and trust himself, his neighbor, or his God. (Duncan B. Blewett, introduction, pages 18-19)
Stafford, P. G., and Golightly, B. H. (1967).
New York: Award Books.
...For if man is to cope with his new found physical and biological power and responsibility, there must be an abrupt and decisive revision of human psychology. The motives that have made human history a chronicle of bloodshed and brutality will otherwise certainly and shortly lead to the annihilation of the species. The psychedelics offer the hope that we are on the threshold of a new renaissance in which man's view of himself will undergo dramatic change. Alienated and encapsulated, he has become trapped by his history in outmoded institutions which disfigure him with the creed of original sin; corrupt him with fear of economic insecurity; dement him with the delusion that mass murder is an inevitable outcome of his nature; debase him to believe that butchery in the name of the state is a sacred duty, and leave him so crippled that he is afraid to seek self-understanding or to love and trust himself, his neighbor, or his God. (Duncan B. Blewett, introduction, pages 18-19)
"advice"
A Path with Heart: A Guide Through the Perils and Promises of Spiritual Life.
Kornfield, Jack. (1993).
New York: Bantam.
Meditation: Reflecting On Your Attitude Toward Altered States
What is your relationship to unusual and altered states in meditation? As you read about these experiences, notice which ones touch you, notice where you are attracted or what reminds you of past experiences. How do you meet such experiences when they arise? Are you attached and proud of them? Do you keep trying to repeat them as a mark of your progress or success? Have you gotten stuck trying to make them return over and over again? How much wisdom have you brought to them? Are they a source of entanglement or a source of freedom for you? Do you sense them as beneficial and healing, or are they frightening? Just as you can misuse these states through attachment, you can also misuse them by avoiding them and trying to stop them. If this is the case, how could your meditation deepen if you opened to them? Let yourself sense the gifts they can bring, gifts of inspiration, new perspectives, insight, healing, or extraordinary faith. Be aware of what perspective and teaching you follow, for guidance in these matters. If you feel a wise perspective is lacking, where could you find it? How could you best honor these realms and use them for your benefit? [page 134]
Kornfield, Jack. (1993).
New York: Bantam.
Meditation: Reflecting On Your Attitude Toward Altered States
What is your relationship to unusual and altered states in meditation? As you read about these experiences, notice which ones touch you, notice where you are attracted or what reminds you of past experiences. How do you meet such experiences when they arise? Are you attached and proud of them? Do you keep trying to repeat them as a mark of your progress or success? Have you gotten stuck trying to make them return over and over again? How much wisdom have you brought to them? Are they a source of entanglement or a source of freedom for you? Do you sense them as beneficial and healing, or are they frightening? Just as you can misuse these states through attachment, you can also misuse them by avoiding them and trying to stop them. If this is the case, how could your meditation deepen if you opened to them? Let yourself sense the gifts they can bring, gifts of inspiration, new perspectives, insight, healing, or extraordinary faith. Be aware of what perspective and teaching you follow, for guidance in these matters. If you feel a wise perspective is lacking, where could you find it? How could you best honor these realms and use them for your benefit? [page 134]
Thursday, March 21, 2013
more references
http://omtimes.com/2013/03/strengthen-your-inner-light/
http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/meditation?auto_login_attempted=true&page=1
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