Not sure about these but hope your own work out well
Traditional New Years’ Resolutions fall into the category of behavior that I call “control mechanisms.”
Resolutions like going to the gym more often or losing 20 pounds are
based on trying to control the feeling that “there’s something wrong
with me being just as I am.” This feeling, called Learned Distress, is what your brain uses to automatically generate the negative moments of your life. Learned Distress doesn’t take kindly to being controlled.
Sometimes the control mechanism out and out fails. You just can’t get
out of bed early enough to make it to the gym before work. Oh, well.
Or, if you’re particularly good at controlling it, Learned Distress
also can be sneaky and find another way “out.” Maybe you’re three weeks
into your gym routine when you slip on the ice and injure your back.
There goes your resolution!
Or, your learned distress might even find an entirely different
aspect of your life within which to express itself. If the feeling is
“there’s something wrong with how I look,” you might have something go
wrong with some other aspect of your appearance or your significant other might start complaining that you don’t know how to dress well.
You might guess correctly, then, that New Years’ resolutions are not
something I recommend to my clients. However, there is a type of
resolution you could craft based on an element of Quanta Change that
will work with your brain’s automatic generating force, instead of trying to control it.
First, you should know that the part of your brain that stores Learned Distress only deals with how you feel about
being yourself. It isn’t capable of rational thought. And, this part of
your brain, your sense of self, deals only with two simple kinds of
feeling—”It’s good being me exactly as I am,” and, “There’s something
wrong with me being exactly as I am.” Every feeling you have and every
moment of your life, positive or negative, can be traced back to one of
these two basic kinds of feelings.
So, when you craft a control-style resolution, you’re really reinforcing the “something wrong with me” feeling.
Your brain recharges while you sleep with the feelings you experience
every day. When you resolve to go to the gym more often to keep this
negative feeling under control, your brain actually recharges with it at
night, and you wake up the next day with just a tad bit more of the feeling that “there’s really something wrong with my body”—the exact opposite of what you were going for!
So, if you’re going to make a New Year’s resolution, I recommend
making one that reinforces the positive way you would like to feel.
Maybe something like, “I feel good in my own skin for the first time
in my life.” Or, if the change you want to see has to do with
relationships, “When I’m with others, I feel so comfortable being just
who I am and I really know that I matter.” Or, if it has to do with
finding bigger ways to serve others,
“It feels so good to have found my unique way of making the world a
better place and to see the good rippling outward!” You might visualize
these outcomes as if they had already happened, letting yourself feel
the joy of how different it is to be you in this new way. This helps
your brain experience the feeling you want it to recharge with when
you’re asleep.
I hope you’ll give this a try and report back to let me know how it worked for you. Wishing you a joyous new year!
Not sure I agree with all these, but interesting ................
This
past year, 2012, was an eventful year. We had another Olympics, a U.S.
presidential election, the warmest year on record, and lived through the
Mayan apocalypse. However, many things did not occur that many of the
trend seers predicted, especially dramatic events that made the boldest
predictions.
As we enter 2013, time itself seems to be speeding up or condensing
to make the potential for dramatic events more likely. Tipping points
appear to have been breached on many fronts, and what waits on the other
side is difficult to know.
But let’s break out the crystal ball here and make some bold predictions for 2013.
These predictions weren’t acquired by some esoteric powers to see the
future; rather they’re derived from riding the current wave of
information and guessing where that flow may lead. They may seem bold to
some, while the most aware readers may recognize them as foregone
conclusions.
So without further ado, here are our top 10 predictions for 2013:
1. Stock market decline: Many
economic forecasters have been predicting a stock market crash every
year since the financial crisis of 2008. Yet, it has remained strong and
even hit a 3-year high in September, 2012. There are many false reasons
for this strength that don’t have to do with real economic growth;
devalued dollars, cheap money for Wall Street banks, corporations
hoarding cash and investments, etc. It’s a false bull market. That is
why we feel comfortable predicting a significant decline in the stock
market during 2013.
The real economy has been papered over for decades, but the numbers in the false economy can no longer dam the wave of reality. Endless quantitative easing, a quadrillion in world derivatives,
over-extended personal debt, lowest ever percentage of the population
working, and increased social burden of record food stamps and other
programs will finally burst the dam in 2013.
The Baltic Dry index, which is believed to be the best indicator of our consumer economy, suffered a dramatic loss in December. Some say a new recession is already here and the stock market will soon reflect that with a crash in 2013. Look for the Dow Jones to dip below the 10K mark (around 30% or more) next year. 2. Precious metals rise over 50%: Using the same data points as the previous prediction, we predict gold and silver to rise at least 50%.
As the mass exodus from the stock market and other paper investments
takes place, individual and institutional investors will start a new
gold rush. Indeed, this is already happening. Central banks around the world are snatching up new gold and moving to secure their foreign gold, while investment titans like George Soros have been increasing their positions where they previously denounced gold as a viable investment. 3. Schools start to install body scanners: Since
these recent shootings actually resulted in horrific deaths of innocent
people including children, the public is scared enough to accept just
about anything. So we predict naked body scanners will begin to appear in schools and
other public venues in 2013. There are several reasons for this
prediction. The public is clamoring for protection and many inner-city
schools already have metal detectors, so the upgrade will be acceptable
if not preferred in suburban areas.
Next, the body scanner companies who lobby the government need
more customers, and they usually get what they want. And, finally, the
authorities love to remove our rights in the name of security, making
this move a no-brainer. 4. European Union announces central Treasury: The
Eurozone debt crisis will once again flare up particularly within the
PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain), as well as in new
countries. Instead of resorting to constantly increasing their “rescue
fund” to bail out ailing European nations, the European Central Bank announced unlimited bond purchasing of
any member state in need this September. This action of issuing new
debt-based money for the sole purpose of buying debt has become known as
quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve. The EU has repeatedly
stated the need to form a central Treasury that
has the power to collect direct taxes from member states, essentially
turning the Eurozone into the United States of Europe. Look for this to
come into reality in 2013 with possibly the first EU president elected
as well. 5. Marijuana legalization sweeps America and the world: After Colorado and Washington voters proved
it can be done, marijuana legalization is an idea whose time has
finally come. No amount of fear mongering or lies will stop its
liberation now. Although 15 states have decriminalized marijuana possession, along with 18 states with legal medical cannabis,
this past election will be viewed as the tipping point in the
full-scale legalization of weed. The ripple effects are already
traveling quickly as at least 7 more states are considering legalization. Meanwhile, Mexico is reconsidering its war on weed and Uruguay is
already designing its regulatory rules for legalization, which will
make it the first country with full legalization. Expect 2013 and
beyond for marijuana legalization to be a foregone conclusion with
anyone standing in the way looking extremely foolish. 6. Major cyber attack hits America: All governments
and many large corporations want to put more controls on the Internet.
However, the general population does not want to see their beloved
Internet change, so there must be an event that sways the public to
believe that Internet “security” is a priority. This can’t just be some
minor attack that hits a small business sector. It would have to be
something that inflicts pain on the public; perhaps an extended Internet
outage or electric grid crash that’s blamed on cyber terrorists would
do the trick.
Many officials have been predicting a cyber 9/11 or “Pearl Harbor”
event for some time, claiming it’s not a matter of if but when. That
“when” will be 2013. Major antivirus companies such as McAfee are also
warning of just such an event in 2013, labeled Project Blitzkrieg.
And just like prior to 9/11, there is freedom-crushing legislation
sitting on the shelf just waiting to be enacted if a cyber version of
9/11 were to take place.
The level playing field of information on the Internet poses a huge
threat to all regimes and their puppet media corporations around the
world. They can’t wait much longer before putting a stop to the free
flow of information; therefore, this attack will be a classic false flag operation. Mark it down, this will happen in 2013. 7. Syria’s Assad is toppled: Many pundits predicted
this would have happened already, but without a NATO no-fly zone (aka
massive air strikes on Assad in a Libya-style destruction) the ragtag
rebels have proven to be no match for the Syrian government thus far.
However, we have seen that when there is full-scale commitment by
NATO, as with Libya, it’s virtually guaranteed. Since the West has
increased their support of the Jihadist rebels with training, arms,
money, and Patriot missiles in Turkey, their commitment is clear.
Furthermore, the UN has warned of sectarian genocide, and U.S. officials have clearly stated the ultimate line in the sand: Assad’s use of chemical weapons. As if on cue, PressTV and Fars News are reporting that
militants have indeed used chemical weapons. Whether or not this
particular event is confirmed, expect it to happen at some point in 2013
to be spun as justification to take out the Assad regime — it’s been in
the cards for years. 8. West attacks Iran, starts WW3: The toppling of
Syria will leave Iran as the only nation in the Middle East not
controlled by the West. Besides having vast oil reserves, Iran also has
the last strategic public central bank not run by the international
banking cartel – and they want it. It is the endgame written about by many think tanks.
The war with Iran has
been years in the making and has already technically begun with
crippling economic sanctions and strategic military bases surrounding
it. Indeed, World War 3 already began as well when America invaded
Afghanistan and Iraq, but this decade-plus-long war is about to get much
more intense. Additionally, the establishment will need a distraction
from the economic crisis of 2013, and only a large new war will
effectively serve that purpose.
The West has been goading Iran into an attack for years to justify
further aggression. Iran, to their credit, has failed to take the bait.
But once Syria falls, the full force of pressure will become too much
for Iran to bear and they’ll be forced to defend themselves. The West
will portray it as aggression against them and launch their attack. The
question will be how other super powers like China and Russia react to
this aggression against their ally? 9. Food and oil prices break records, again: This
might have the highest guarantee of coming true, since it is
mathematically impossible for it not to in an era of unlimited money
creation, expanding conflicts in oil regions, and record demand but
unstable climates for food production. Some food and commodity prices
set new record highs in 2012, while oil is still chasing its 2008 high
of $147/bbl.
First, let’s look at oil since it is also a major contributor to the
price of food. Oil will have conflicting price pressures in 2013. There
will be reduced demand due to a sharp economic downturn, but that will
be more than offset by the devalued petrodollar and the fallout of
regional conflicts. We predict oil will soar past its previous high to
over $150/bbl.
This high price of oil will cause food prices to rise significantly
since industrial agriculture is utterly dependent on oil from plowing,
fertilizing, pesticides, harvesting, processing, to transport. Couple
this very real cost to the rush away from stocks into more tangible
assets like commodities that are also traded in rapidly devaluing
dollars. This speculation will lead to much higher food prices. Throw in
more extreme weather, and we have a recipe for a major food crisis.
Food will hit new all-time highs in 2013.
Average citizens will spend a much higher percentage of their
salaries on food in 2013 which will put further pressure on the rest of
economic output. Most extremely, a large portion of the population may
realize starvation for the first time in their lives. Certainly, we can
expect food stamp usage to explode even faster than it has in the last
five years.
On the upside, bulk food will be one of the best investments for 2013. 10. More extreme weather and earth changes: Extreme
weather appears to be the new norm. In 2012 we saw the warmest year on
record, record droughts in America’s bread basket, and an odd super
storm Hurricane Sandy which still has thousands without power more than
two months later. However, the jury is still out on what’s causing our
extreme weather. Since the climates appear to be changing on all of the celestial bodies in our solar system, it seems unlikely that increased CO2 is the primary cause of climate change.
Many experts point to the rapidly shifting North Pole and the sun’s
awakening to a new solar maximum as major contributors to our changing
climate. And speaking of celestial weather, two great comets will appear in 2013 close to Earth whose impact on our weather, if any, is impossible to predict. Additionally, it appears that the Ring of Fire is awakening with increased earthquake and volcanic activity.
For 2013, we predict more super storms starting with winter storms that will now be named for the first time, and an even bigger increase in earthquake activity, and more devastating crop damage.
Many of these predictions seem negative and scary, but with awareness
of their possible outcomes, one can prepare and position themselves to
survive and even thrive under conditions which might seem horrific. It
is also never to late to reach out to your local community by sharing
information in a positive way, and encourage discussion of strategies
for enhancing local resistance to larger global events.
X-Men star dismisses photoshopping speculation...
On Graham Norton tonight, really lovely man.
14:48, Monday, 31 December 2012
Hugh Jackman has dismissed speculation that he was photoshopped for an official image from The Wolverine.
Rumours had begun to spread that the picture was digitally altered to make the Aussie actor look buffer.
But Hugh insists his impressive physique was down to hard work and nothing else.
Appearing on The Jeff Probst Show, Jackman said: "That's all me, man."
The X-Men star said he was peeved at the suggestion
it was a fake, saying: "Because it was brutal getting there. And by the
way, I asked the company if they could just... you're spending millions
on special effects, just help me out. I want to eat pizza and drink
beer. And they said no."
He added: "For that kind of body, I had to go up in weight, big, lift big and heavy, then strip down."
Hugh recently revealed that The Wolverine - which is scheduled for release on 26 July 2013 - will feature a cameo by one of his former co-stars.
Tigers Making a Comeback in Parts of Asia
Strong government actions helping the big cat, scientists say.
The Indochinese tiger (pictured) is a subspecies growing in number.
Tigers are making a comeback, thanks to strong government initiatives in India, Thailand, and Russia, scientists announced this week.
Joe Walston, executive director for Asia Programs at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), praised the three countries for taking action to protect their tiger populations. The animals are endangered globally. (See tiger pictures.)
There
are six remaining subspecies of tiger that live in 13 Asian countries—a
habitat that's reduced by 93 percent from their historic range.
"There
are a number of factors that are necessary for tigers to come back, but
without true government commitment, there will not be any success,"
Walston said. Taking Steps to Save Tigers
In
India's Nagarahole and Bandipur National Parks, for example, a
combination of strict antipoaching patrols, surveillance, voluntary
relocation of people away from tiger habitats, and scientific monitoring
have helped the big cats rebound to the point where they have saturated
the two national parks.
This success is only possible because the Indian state of Karnataka is dedicated to conserving tigers, Walston said. (Learn about National Geographic's Big Cats Initiative.)
In
Russia, government officials are drafting a new law that makes the
transport, sale, and possession of endangered animals a criminal offense
rather than just a civil crime. This closes a loophole that currently
allows poachers to claim they found endangered species like tigers
already dead.
Russia also recently announced that it was creating a
new corridor for safe tiger passage called the Central Ussuri Wildlife
Refuge, which would link tiger breeding strongholds in Russia and China.
(Related blog: "Protecting Russia's Last Siberian Tigers.")
Corridors
"allow tigers to move between different areas to breed and connect up,"
Walston explained. "This makes for larger, more robust, and genetically
healthy populations."
In Thailand, enforcement and antipoaching
patrols have been beefed up in the Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary.
In 2011 the government busted a notorious poaching ring, and this year
the gang leaders were given prison sentences of up to five years—the
most severe prison sentences for wildlife poaching in Thailand's
history. Since the gang's capture, there have been no known tiger or
elephant poaching incidents in the park. (Read about a live tiger cub that was found in luggage in Thailand.)
What's
more, "Thailand last year had a poaching problem, and instead of
ignoring it, the government recognized the problem and hired 60 new
rangers," Walston said. Tigers Can Bounce Back
But
these three success stories are rare bright spots for the endangered
species, whose numbers continue to hover at all-time lows worldwide due
to the combined threats of poaching, loss of prey, and habitat
destruction.
Conservationists estimate that only 3,200 tigers exist in the wild. (See a National Geographic magazine interactive of big cats in danger.)
Even
so, Walston said the successes in India, Thailand, and Russia prove
that tigers are not doomed—and he hopes other countries will take
notice.
"This is not a species that is on an inevitable decline ... They are coming back in some places," he said.
Walston also pointed out that saving tigers has other benefits.
"When
we conserve tigers, we're actually conserving a whole host of species
that are maybe not as charismatic or iconic but are equally valuable—and
equally threatened," he said.
Let’s look before that. Let’s look at time, love, the human condition and God. But quickly, no fluff.
Time is not a straight line, but more like a labyrinth.
~ Tomas Transtromer
Yet, we will persist in looking at the rascal as a straight line.
Love with each other, with any given situation, sometimes starts with
simply accepting this premise, with dropping our expectations for what’s
next and being available to the flood of life force in the present
moment. Infinity is here, but I tend to look away toward one minute from
now.
Life happens too fast for you to ever think about it. If you could
just persuade people of this, but they insist on amassing information.
~ Kurt Vonnegut
Heresy! What about the unexamined life? Yeah yeah, but what about a
freedom inside the idea that we will never figure it out? Vonnegut is
no stranger to the breakthrough idea. In Slaughterhouse Five,
he kindly offers us a view of human beings from fourth-dimensional life
forms. He claims they see us as a long thin thing, with an infant at
one end, and an old crone at the other. How do you like that one?
Time is but a stream I go a-fishing in.
~ Thoreau
I see in this a note to take it easy, go lightly and enjoy. It
reminds me to stay on the lookout for moments that really shine, but to
look with ease, like going fishing (before that became an act of
cruelty) or seeing an evening sky with my woman. The moments that might
mean nada to my agenda-driven pattern brain today might be the moments I wind up writing to you about tomorrow.
I love that, it makes me want to not know. Sometimes I’m
over-enslaved, if that’s the word I’m after, to this brain, to thinking,
to forming opinions. Meditation helps that, maybe I need to sit more.
Just because I’m so horribly conditioned to accept
everybody else’s values, and just because I like applause and people to
rave about me, doesn’t make it right. I’m ashamed of it. I’m sick of it.
I’m sick of not having the courage to be an absolute nobody.
~ J.D. Salinger, “Franny and Zooey”
I was listening to Esther Hicks this morning and she was talking
about letting the opinions of others drive us. It is really the water I
swim in sometimes. I want to be free of that, free from the tyranny of
the peanut gallery, this coming year. If you never read another book,
read Franny and Zooey. In fact, even if you do read other books. I’m serious.
All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.
~J.R.R. Tolkien
This seems so appropriate right now: we have these choices. We have
our intersections of available actions. What more could we ask of life?
It is ours to choose, and every action defines us, right? Tolkein
created one of the finest pieces of writing out there, and even as he
gave each of his characters the gift of their individual choices, to us
he bestowed the joy and sorrow of watching, and learning, from the
consequences.
Now is the time to know that all that you do is sacred…
Now is the time for you to deeply compute the impossibility that there
is anything but grace.
~ Hafiz
God I love Hafiz. If his life’s work were condensed in
this quote, nothing would be lost. Hafiz is truly a distiller of divine
energy, and there is no comment from me that could improve this
sentiment. All we need do is bask in the grace. Hafiz will heal you. The Gift is the best poetry book ever for people like me, who hurt with wanting a life closer to the divine.
Not a month went by without the building of a new bowling
alley; they were building them on every vacant lot, so many bowling
alleys that it was horrible to ponder the meaning of it.
~Hunter S Thompson, “The Rum Diary“
No justification exists for including this except that this happens
to be the book I’m reading right now, and it simply made me laugh out
loud. Maybe this: read. Read and then read another one. There’s
something magic that happens when we stop and read—and it heals, really.
Comment on this one if you read it, it is such a gem. Don’t worry, I
know you won’t comment.
There is no end. There is no beginning. There is only the infinite passion of life.
~ Federico Fellini
That is the crux of it, isn’t it? We either love and rush into what
life offers at any given moment, or we quake in fear, and cower.
Passion, when applied, obfuscates all error. (That one is mine! I like
it!)
Passion, when applied, obfuscates all error.
~ Karl Saliter
What I think Saliter is trying to say here is that all is forgiven, you are so beautiful,
this incarnation is an unthinkably vast gift, and there is nothing
wrong. Let’s wear it like a loose cozy shirt this year, and throw that
love all over the place.
Ed: Lynn H.
Revealed - the 'alien space cathedral' built in New Mexico desert by Tom Cruise’s Scientology church
Secret New Mexico base is built to withstand a nuclear attack
It reportedly holds the original texts of Scientology founder L Ron Hubbard
Scientologists reportedly believe in sinister extraterrestrial emperor Xenu
But church leaders routinely deny this or any talk of aliens
BBC reporter John Sweeney investigated site for new book
By
Daniel Miller PUBLISHED:
11:05, 31 December 2012
|
UPDATED:
17:04, 31 December 2012
These giant symbols etched into
the desert are a welcoming message to aliens from Tom Cruise's deeply
secretive church of Scientology. The
religion, which believes a sinister extraterrestrial being called Xenu
brought billions of people to earth in spaceships similar to DC8
airliners, operates a giant underground base hidden deep within the New
Mexico desert. BBC
reporter John Sweeney, who famously clashed with Scientologists during a
Panorama report in 2007, travelled to the site dubbed Scientology's
'alien space cathedral', to research a new book.
Welcome to earth: The huge symbol etched into
the desert in New Mexico next to the Scientology base dubbed the 'alien
space cathedral'
The strange symbols sit on top of a rock formation in New Mexico where the
church of Scientology has built an enormous underground bunker
Hidden some 30 miles from the
nearest town, the base is reportedly home to a huge underground bunker,
built in the 1980's and strong enough to withstand a nuclear holocaust.
Deep inside its vaults sealed
within titanium caskets, are the original texts of founder L Ron Hubbard
on gold discs - the religion's most sacred scriptures. A report in the Sunnewspaper tells how Sweeney visited the site, known as Trementina Base, and interviewed former members of the church of Scientology for the new book Church of Fear. Mr
Sweeney,who the church has previously described as 'a bigot, a liar and
psychotic' said: 'I'd alway wanted to visit Trementina because when you
go to the church they always deny this talk of Xenu and space aliens. 'When I spoke to Kirsty Alley and Juliette Lewis in 2007 and asked them 'who is Xenu?' they'd say "John, you're crazy". 'But
if I'm wrong about the church believing in aliens, then why have they
built these giant symbols in the middle of the desert that can only be
seen from outer space? 'I think there is something very strange about a church which builds an enormous cathedral but then hides it away from everyone. 'What
concerns me is that Scientology says it wants religious status in the
UK. But our rules state religions must be open and honest about their
beliefs and I think these are good rules. 'This
place is physical proof that they do believe in aliens. I'd like to see
Tom Cruise and John Travolta explain why they hide this from people.' The
symbols, which consist of two interlinking circles with diamonds in the
centre, are reportedly there to guide Scientologists returning to earth
after fleeing to outer space to escape armageddon.
Follower: Hollywood superstar Tom Cruise, left,
has been a Scientologist since the early 1990s and, right, Scientology
leader David Miscavige, addresses the crowd during the opening of a
new church in London
Mr
Sweeney was accompanied by a former Scientologist Marc Headley, who
claims to have been 'audited' by Cruise and then beaten up by the
church’s leader David Miscavige - incidents which the church strongly
deny. After travelling
many miles along a dirt road, the pair made it as far as a set of huge
steel gates guarded by two security cameras, where they were turned
away. He writes: 'I press an
intercom button. A voice says “Hello” in what sounds like a
Scandinavian accent. I announce that I’m John Sweeney and ask nicely for
a tour. 'We are not
invited in and the intercom simply spouts white noise. We drive back to
civilisation, wondering what kind of religion builds a space alien
cathedral underground.' The reporter claims he received two
mysterious phone calls to his hotel room at 1am that night for which he
believes Scientologists were responsible. Mr
Headley, who was brought up inside the church from the age of six, has
written the book Blown For Good: Inside the Dark Curtain of Scientology. In
it he reveals how the church's E-meter devices, which are used to
measure the static electric field around a person, cost just $40 to make
but are sold for $4,000 (£2,400). And church leaders reccomend everyone
should have two in case one breaks. In
a piece published in the Mail earlier this year Mr Sweeney recounted
the incident in 2007 when he lost his temper at two Scientologists who
had been trailing him across America.
BBC reporter John Sweeney, who famously clashed with Scientologists
during a Panorama report in 2007, travelled to the Trementina while
researching a new book
He said: 'Five years ago, I
spent weeks at the centre of the church’s attention. Private
investigators who, I believe, were working for the church chased me
around the streets of Los Angeles, invaded my hotel at midnight and put
me under surveillance. Strangers spied on my wedding and knocked on the
doors of my neighbours. 'In the end, I lost it on camera, doing a good impression of an exploding tomato. 'In
the 21st century, everyone has a right to believe in anything, or
nothing. But not everything that claims to be a religion is a religion.
It could be, for example, a brain-washing cult. 'For
a start, a religion must be honest about what it believes in.
Scientologists believe in a space alien satan called Xenu — but if you
ask them, their spokesmen deny it.' Mailonline has contacted the church of Scientology's headquarters in London but they have so far declined to comment. John
Sweeney's book, The Church of Fear — Inside the Weird World of
Scientology, is published on January 7 by Silvertail Books, paperback
£12.99 and ebook £3.99.
“Dogs have given us their absolute all. We are the center of their
universe. We are the focus of their love and faith and trust. They serve
us in return for scraps. It is without a doubt the best deal man has
ever made. ” ~ Roger Caras
“Some of our greatest historical and artistic treasures we place
with curators in museums; others we take for walks.” ~ Roger Caras
Jennifer Spesia will
complete her PhD in Psychology in 2013 and currently lives and works in
beautiful Fort Myers, Florida. Jennifer is a long-time student of
Eastern spiritual traditions, a meditator, a Returned Peace Corps
Volunteer (Cote d’Ivoire, West Africa), a yoga-teacher-in-training, a
human companion to two amazing dogs, a world traveler, a philosopher, a
seeker and an eternal student.
"I've
seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the
shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the
Tannhauser gate. All those moments will be lost in time... like tears in
rain..." -Roy Batty http://bit.ly/Blade-Runner-30th-Collectors-Edition
One of my favourite films of all time, must have seen it at least 8 times.
No one can go back, but everyone can go forward.
And tomorrow, when the sun rises, all you have to say to yourselves is:
I am going to think of this day as the first day of my life.
I will look on the members of my family with surprise and amazement,
glad to discover that they are by my side, silently sharing tha little
understood thing called love.
I will pass a beggar, who will ask me for money.
I might give it to him or I might walk past thinking that he will only
spend it on drink, and as I do, I will hear his insults and know that it
is simply his way of communicating with me.
I will pass someone trying to destroy a bridge.
I might try to stop him or I might realise that he is doing it because
he has no one waiting for him on the other side and this is his way of
trying to fend off his own loneliness.
Instead of noting down things I’m unlikely to forget, I will write a poem.
Even if I have never written one before and even if I never do so again,
I will at least know that I once had the courage to put my feelings
into words.
I will keep smiling, because it pleases me to know that people think I
am mad. My smile is my way of saying: ‘You can destroy my body, but not
my soul.’
If it’s sunny tomorrow, I want to look at the sun properly for the first time.
If it’s cloudy, I want to watch to see in which direction the clouds are
going. I always think that I don’t have time or don’t pay enough
attention. Tomorrow, though, I will concentrate on the direction taken
by the clouds or on the sun’s rays and the shadows they create.
Above my head exists a sky about which all humanity, over thousands of years, has woven a series of reasonable explanations.
Well, I will forget everything I learned about the stars and they
will be transformed once more into angels or children or whatever I feel
like believing at that moment.
For the first time, I will smile without feeling guilty, because joy is not a sin.
For the first time, I will avoid anything that makes me suffer, because suffering is not a virtue.
I am living this day as if it were my first and, while it lasts, I will discover things that I did not even know were there.
Even though I have walked past the same places countless times before
and said ‘Good morning’ to the same people, today’s ‘Good morning’ will
be different. It will not be a mere polite formula, but a form of
blessing.
And if I’m alone when the night falls, I will go over to window, look
up at the sky and feel certain that loneliness is a lie, because the
Universe is there to keep me company.
And then I will have lived each hour of my day as if it were a
constant surprise to me, to this ‘I’, who was not created by my father
or my mother or by school, but by everything I have experienced up until
now, and which I suddenly forgot in order to discover it all anew.
And even if this is to be my last day on Earth, I will enjoy it to
the full, because I will live it with the innocence of a child, as if I
were doing everything for the first time.
Interesting information
Sunday, 30 December 2012
Full Moon 28th December 2012, last of the year
January 2013 Horoscope for Food Lovers
Astrologer Rebecca Gordon offers monthly readings—and recipes for results
Capricorn
(December 22–January 19)
A grand lineup of stars in Capricorn suggests it's time to reevaluate
the old M.O.'s in favor of new and more purposeful routines. The theme
now is restructuring, and your sun sign, Capricorn, rules the bones and
teeth (body structure). Indulge in calcium-rich foods such as fish, bok
choy, and turnip greens to strengthen your body as well as reinforce
your inner purpose as you rebuild from a place of integrity. As your
planetary ruler, Saturn sends a helping hand near January 17. Dinner
with an old pal or mentor will bring sound insight to your ears, so take
time to reconnect and listen. Recipe to try:Salmon Bulgogi with Bok Choy and Mushrooms
Aquarius
(January 20–February 18)
A full moon on January 27 will shine a bright light on your most
intimate relationships as clarity and conviction replace any past
uncertainties. Lucidity can be yours with a clean diet rich in
manganese, a mineral that supports the brain and nervous system.
Hazelnuts, pecans, and pine nuts are great sources. If your relationship
seems to break down on this full moon, parting ways will ultimately be
the best step for moving forward. An already-strong partnership will
step through this threshold and become that much more. Single?
Conversation will quickly turn to flirtation, so get out and mingle! Recipe to try:Toasted Hazelnut Salad with Dried Cranberries and Hazelnut Vinaigrette
Pisces
(February 19–March 20)
You are known for your deep compassion and selfless giving, but you
sometimes find yourself running on empty. Keep your body's immune system
functioning smoothly with zinc-rich foods such as pumpkin seeds, sesame
seeds, and salmon. As a new moon enlivens the social sector of your
chart, you may consider connecting more with like-minded people—maybe
through a humanitarian organization or a meet-up that will enrich and
inspire you. New and dear friends will emerge from such a genuine
experience. While Jupiter warms up the home sector of your chart, take
advantage of these good vibes with cheer, candles, and good company. Recipe to try:Pan-Seared Salmon with Pumpkin Seed-Cilantro Pesto
Aries
(March 21–April 19)
A mighty lineup of stars will crown your chart this month as all eyes
turn to you and your bustling career. Out of work? Not for long, though
you must refine your direction as well as your nutritional regimen. This
kind of focus will be vital as you are on the precipice of a more
expansive future, and foods high in folic acid such as asparagus and
nuts are especially important. A new Moon on January 11 will swing open
the doors to your professional dreams, although first you must
crystallize your intentions. Business talks will go exceptionally well
on January 4 as lucky Jupiter expands your scope of vision and action
Mars propels you forward like a rocket. Recipe to try:Roasted Asparagus with Brazil Nuts
Taurus
(April 20–May 20)
Being ruled by Venus, you are a natural-born connoisseur of gourmet
delicacies, wine, music, and perfume. Mid-month, Venus will cozy up to
an intense Pluto and Saturn, setting the stage for a serious wintery
romance or even an exotic vacation. If staying local, dinner parties
will be divine the weekend of January 18 while the moon passes through
sensuous Taurus. Stimulate your sensual side (and digestive tract) with
foods such as ginger and cayenne that are arousing as well as healthy. Recipe to try:Vietnamese Chicken Salad
Gemini
(May 21–June 20)
Thanks to lucky Jupiter brightening up Gemini, you can strike gold with
your mere optimism and intentionality. Since you're an air sign, it will
be essential to stay down-to-earth, and root vegetables—especially
those high in vitamins A and C, like carrots and parsnips—will help you
stay grounded in reality and maintain perspective. The world is
beginning to take you more seriously because you have begun to see
yourself that way. Whether it's meeting a potential investor, going for a
job, or applying for a grant, resources are nearby, so inquire with
poise. The new moon of January 11 will swing open the doors of
opportunity and by January 27, you will seal the deal. January 22 will
be a prime day for meetings and innovations. Recipe to try:Caramelized Spiced Carrots
Cancer
(June 21–July 22)
Life will sweeten as the planetary holding pattern that tied up home,
relationship, and career will finally begin to dissolve. Although you
have been through a lot, you have also become much wiser and stronger
over the past few years. Cleansing, diuretic foods like parsley and
celery will be a good complement to your current life station as you
move forward, namely in the relationship sector. A new moon on January
11 heralds a new era of love for you. You have done much self-reflection
and are more emotionally prepared than ever before. Sparks will fly
January 19, a stellar date night. Already committed? Renew your vows
with splendor. Recipe to try:Apple and Celery Salad with Peanuts
Leo
(July 23–August 22)
Health and body will come first this month as the planets seem to be
gathering restlessly in the daily routine sector of your chart. They are
ready to move, so leap onto the mat, bicycle, or dance floor and enjoy
it wholeheartedly. Begin a new nutritional regimen with healthy servings
of seeds and citrus fruits to provide a fresh burst of energy. Wait
until the new moon of January 11 to initiate your health resolutions,
and witness your new healthy routine transform not only your body but
your entire life. Recipe to try:Clementine Jicama Salad
Virgo
(August 23–September 22)
You are by nature diligent and hardworking—you have no qualms about
putting in the extra hours to ensure excellence. January, though,
shouldn't be business as usual. In fact, there is an area of your chart
that is blossoming: the love sector. Romance—even just the possibility
of it—makes grownups giddy, so play up your youthfulness with foods high
in monounsaturated fats and iron, such as Marcona almonds and avocados.
Allow the heart to lead the way with the new moon on January 11.
Attached? A romantic weekend getaway mid-month looks divine.
Conversations will flow seamlessly and deeper connections can be made on
January 6, 16, 17, and 25. Recipe to try:Spiced Marcona Almonds
Libra
(September 23–October 22)
The foundations of your life—namely, your home and work space—may be in
need of a little TLC or even a total 180. Luckily, Venus will sweep
through the home sector of your chart to help you with all the right
finishing touches and new additions. Whether you have outgrown your
current place or are in need of a renovation that reflects the new and
improved you, know that environmental upgrades bring professional
growth. Incorporating root vegetables—sunchoke, turnip, and particularly
burdock with its purifying and healing properties—into your diet will
help you consider your foundations more thoughtfully. If you're on the
lookout for a new home or addition, lucky days will be January 16 and
17. Recipe to try:Sunchoke Soup with Pumpkin Seeds
Scorpio
(October 23–November 21)
You've garnered a few vital lessons on organization and
authority—namely, how to yield power wisely—as your planetary ruler
Pluto has picked up a few tricks from structured Saturn. The transition
probably hasn't been easy and it's likely that you've taken on
challenging responsibilities and are working many late nights. Eating
fibrous foods such as kale, lentils, and sweet potatoes, drinking plenty
of fresh water, and taking long walks will help you process all of
life's monumental changes. All of your hard work will pay off with the
promise of future rewards—a handshake, a contract, important meeting—by
the full moon on January 27. You've certainly earned it! Recipe to try:Red Lentils and Kale with Miso
Sagittarius
(November 22–December 21)
Your big ideas have been brewing for quite a while now and the time has
come to give them wings to fly. Strengthening minerals found in sea
veggies—kombu, kelp, wakame, arame—will help you power up for take-off
this month. With a new moon illuminating your house of income and
manifestation, you will now hold the power to transform a hobby into a
small business or step up to a more lofty position at work. The stars
indicate increased earnings along with a greater sense of fulfillment at
the end of the day. Ask yourself what you really want, and define your
true vision with clear intention the week of January 11. Recipe to try:Seaweed Salad
'I always suffered from OCD but my new dog has cured me': Gok Wan on how a pet changed his life
His condition forced him to select around 20 outfits every Sunday for the week ahead and some days he changed clothes five times
Rex
Peeling off a looped grey cashmere scarf and tightly fitting
blackroll neck, Gok Wan logs the details of his fifth outfit ofthe day
on his computer.
He then takes out another ensemble from his colour co-ordinated wardrobe, ready for morning.
Tomorrow’s
dark grey sheer-knit sweater and black skinny jeans have been selected
to match his black Mercedes convertible – he wears mostly dark colours
for this reason.
Such was the routine for 38-year-old Gok as he battled with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
The
condition forced him to select around 20 outfits every Sunday for the
week ahead and some days he changed clothes five times.
Until a special lady came into his life – his French bulldog, Dolly Albertine Dishcloth.
Dolly
is the unlikely saviour of the style guru, who believes she has helped
cure his addiction to order by messing up his plush apartment.
“She’s changed my life,” he says, proudly. “I’ve learnt to relax.
"Dolly has really helped me – it’s amazing what she can do.
"Now there’s dog hair everywhere. I could never have done it years ago, it just wouldn’t have been an option.”
Previously,
his disorder was not just a fashion fetish which saw him constantly
changing outfits, it also prevented him letting friends visit him in his
own home.
Leicester-born Gok says: “I suffered quite severely with it when I was younger.
"It was a labour of love, because even though I hated it, I sort of enjoyed being OCD.
“Hygiene
was a massive problem. It was difficult to have people round because of
causing mess, sitting on the sofa and stuff like that.
“I was also OCD with work. I’d find it hard to do a piece to camera and not get it right first time.
"I’d beat myself up if I went on a gameshow and I felt like I didn’t do a good job.
“I’ve got better, I have to say, thanks to Dolly.
"I’ve
reduced my working hours during the day, and now I don’t feel like I’m
letting anyone down if I don’t work as many hours as I possibly can.
“I’ve
had to focus on the projects I’m doing. I try not to book ahead,
whereas 18 months ago I was booked 18 months down the line.”
WENN
As thanks, he treats his pooch to epic levels of pampering.
He says: “She’s literally the most spoilt canine in the world.
"She’s got a doggy passport, a doggy wardrobe and more toys than I ever could imagine.
“Where I live, there is a dog boutique – every time I go for a walk I lose a few hundred quid.”
Born
to English mother Myra, and Chinese father, chef John Tung Shing, Gok
has previously credited an eagerness to provide for his parents as a
driving force behind his ambitious nature.
The couple helped him through his struggle with obesity as a teenager, when Gok ballooned to 21 stone.
Dad John even joined him on food series Gok Cooks Chinese earlier this year.
And he often takes his parents to celebrity events, including the National Book Awards the evening prior to our chat.
“Can you hear my dad snoring in the background?” he giggles.
“Dolly’s snoring, too. It’s like a retirement home.”
Workaholic
Gok releases an underwear line and a Specsavers range every year while
producing four fashion collections for Sainsbury’s.
He also has a
beauty range for Boots and continues to write books and host TV shows,
with his most recent project adding dating advice to his CV.
At one point, he was doing 101 hours most weeks.
But his career suffered a setback this year after he slipped a disc while exercising in March.
After
the first two discectomy operations, Gok suffered an inflamed nerve
canal in his spine, leading to a further seven procedures.
The recovery period gave him a chance to reflect on his plans for the future.
He admits: “I had a few realisations. One, I’m not going to be as agile any more and also I have to take things easier.
"My work addiction has to take a bit of a slide. I can’t do as much as I used to, which is hard because I love working.
“That
was why I got Dolly – to come home to something, or someone, and not be
so much about work. I had a tendency to say ‘yes’ to everything.”
He
has also decided to focus on his next goal – becoming a dad – setting a
time limit of seven years to find the right man with whom to start a
family.
“I desperately want to be a dad,” he says. “I definitely would like to have children before I’m 45.
"It
feels like a good age. For the last four years, I decided I wasn’t
going to have children. But over the last 12 months, I’ve had time to
think.
“It’s something I want to do, but I’m worried about my
fathering skills, being in the right relationship, and could I do it in
the world that I’m in? Would it be feasible?”
He adds: “Being gay
and having children – I know it would make headlines and people would
want to discuss it and have an opinion.
"But it’s something I want to do, it’s just how I’m going to go about it.”
And he believes it will be easier thanks to Elton John and David Furnish having surrogate two-year-old son Zachary.
He says: “What Elton and David did was incredible. It showed it was possible.
"It’s
important same sex couples should absolutely have the same rights
having children. An equal marriage bill needs to be passed.”
Coy
Gok meanwhile, hints that Dolly is the closest thing he has to a
partner: “I’ve got no room for a boy, I’ve got a woman in my life!”
Yet he dishes out dating advice in his new show.
In
upcoming Channel 4 series, Gok’s Style Secrets, he becomes “wingman”,
matchmaker and agony uncle for women in need of a dating overhaul.
But, he admits, he relies on his own friends to bag him a fella.
He says: “When it comes to me dating and flirting, I need my wingman.
"We all do it for our friends. If your friend likes someone in a bar you put in a good word.”
Unfortunately, Gok’s pals have a tough job of vetting his love interests.
“It’s hard when you’re famous – you have a different set of parameters,” he explains.
“Trust is a huge part. It’s a hectic world I live in. If I drag someone into it I want them to come into my world for me.”
WENN
And the fashionista is tight lipped about his love life.
He
giggles: “It’s been a fun year! The moment I start discussing a person,
it stops being so special. It’s just to make sure I keep that spice.
“I can never work it out when I’m in a relationship – let alone if I was trying to discuss it.”
However, he’s a lot better at dissecting other people’s love lives.
In the new series, he coaches women on dating etiquette as well as style.
Inevitably, he finds himself dishing out advice to his celeb pals, too.
He says: “It might be something as small as: ‘Shall I do up the button on my jacket?’ Jack Whitehall asked me that.
“And Jimmy Carr said to me: ‘Do you want to come over for dinner? Or better still, come over and cook?’
"It’s weird, because if you had an accountant friend you wouldn’t meet them for a drink and ask for accountancy advice.”
Not that Gok minds – he chuckles, admitting he relishes the opportunity to swoop in and take over.
He says: “I feel really arrogant saying this, but it’s not difficult to take control of someone else’s life.
“The one thing I’ve learnt is before you entertain the idea of dating, you’ve got to understand who you are and what you want.”
For the moment, though, it’s Dolly who seems closer to finding love – as Gok’s started taking her on “doggy dates”.
“She gets calls from her friends Buffy and Vera,” he chuckles.
“We all go out on dates so the dogs can let off steam. It’s cute!”
The Healing Power of Dogs
Canines bring comfort to Newtown survivors and others in crisis.
Libby, one of several golden retriever therapy dogs, visits with 2-year-old Lily Willinger of Newtown, Conn.
One boy confided in the gentle-faced golden
retriever about exactly what happened in his classroom at Sandy Hook
Elementary School that day—which his parents said was more than he'd
been able to share with them. A little girl who hadn't spoken since the
shootings finally started talking to her mother again after petting one
of the "comfort dogs." Groups of teenagers began to open up and discuss
their fear and grief with each other as they sat on the floor together,
all stroking the same animal.
The dogs are therapy
dogs—professional comforters that were brought to Newtown, Connecticut,
almost immediately after the horrific shootings on December 14 that left
20 young children and 6 staff members dead.
Tim Hetzner, leader of the Lutheran Church Charities (LCC) K9 Comfort Dogs
team, traveled to Newtown with nine specially trained golden retrievers
and their volunteer handlers from the Addison, Illinois-based group.
Using
a local Lutheran church as their base, the K9 teams have spent the past
few days visiting schools, churches, activity centers, and private
homes in the community. They only go where they're invited and are
careful to let people approach the dogs instead of vice versa, in case
anyone is afraid of or allergic to the animals. Counselors With Fur
The response to the dogs has been overwhelmingly positive, according to Hetzner.
"A
lot of times, kids talk directly to the dog," he said. "They're kind of
like counselors with fur. They have excellent listening skills, and
they demonstrate unconditional love. They don't judge you or talk back."
The
dogs are also used to reassure victims of natural disasters—most
recently, Superstorm Sandy—and to brighten the days of nursing home
patients. Hetzner said he got the idea after seeing how well students
responded to therapy dogs in the wake of a 2008 school shooting at
Northern Illinois University. Now, in addition to the core of 15 that
make up LCC's K9 Comfort Dogs team, the group has deployed about 20
other dogs to be based in schools and churches that apply for them.
The
human volunteers' main job is to make sure the dogs don't get burned
out, which means taking a break to play ball or nap after about two
hours of work. Although some handlers have a background in counseling or
pastoral care, "the biggest part of their training is just learning to
be quiet," Hetzner said.
"I think that's a common mistake people
make in crisis situations—feeling obligated to give some sort of answer
or advice, when really, those who are hurting just need to express
themselves." The Human-Canine Bond
Why does petting a dog make us feel better? It's not just because they're cute, says Brian Hare, director of Duke University's Canine Cognition Center.
The
human-canine bond goes back thousands of years. Dogs descend from
wolves and have been attracted to humans ever since we began living in
settlements—a source of tasty garbage. That created an advantage for
wolves to live near humans, and since it tended to be the less
aggressive wolves that could do this more effectively, they essentially
self-domesticated over time, according to Hare.
(Read more about the evolutionary history of dogs in the February 2012 National Geographic magazine cover story, "How To Build a Dog.")
Part
of what makes dogs special is that they are one of the only species
that does not generally exhibit xenophobia, meaning fear of strangers,
says Hare.
"We've done research on this, and what we've found is
that not only are most dogs totally not xenophobic, they're actually
xenophilic—they love strangers!" Hare said. "That's one way in which you could say dogs are 'better' than people. We're not always that welcoming." People also benefit from interacting with canines. Simply petting a dog can decrease levels of stress hormones, regulate breathing, and lower blood pressure. Research also has shown that petting releases oxytocin, a hormone associated with bonding and affection, in both the dog and the human. Do Dogs Have Empathy?
In situations like the Newtown shootings, it makes a lot of sense that dogs would be an effective form of comfort, says psychologist Debbie Custance of Goldsmiths College, University of London.
"Dogs are social creatures that respond to us quite sensitively, and they seem to respond to our emotions," she said.
Custance recently led a study to see whether dogs demonstrated empathy. She asked volunteers to either pretend to cry, or just "hum in a weird way." Would the dogs notice the difference?
"The
response was extraordinary," she said. Nearly all of the dogs came over
to nuzzle or lick the crying person, whether it was the owner or a
stranger, while they paid little attention when people were merely
humming.
"We're not saying this is definitive evidence that dogs
have empathy—but I can certainly understand why people would think they
do, at least," Custance said.
Other animals can also be useful in what's known as "animal-assisted therapy." The national organization Pet Partners
has 11,000 registered teams of volunteer handlers and animals that
visit nursing homes, hospitals, schools, and victims of tragedy and
disaster. Although most of the teams use dogs, some involve horses,
cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, birds, and even barnyard animals like pigs
and chickens.
The presence of an animal can help facilitate a
discussion with human counselors or simply provide wordless emotional
release, said Rachel Wright, director of Pet Partners' therapy animal
program. The group plans to deploy several teams of therapy dogs to
Newtown in the near future, working closely with agencies that are
already present in the community, she said.
To some, the idea of
sending a dog to a grieving person might seem too simplistic. But
Custance says that very simplicity is part of what makes the connection
between humans and canines so powerful.
"When humans show us
affection, it's quite a complicated thing that involves expectations and
judgments," she said. "But with a dog, it's a very uncomplicated,
nonchallenging interaction with no consequences. And if you've been
through a hard time, it's lovely to have that."