Posts Tagged ‘Meditation’

Begin 2012 with Peace and Harmony

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

“Meditation is mental training. Meditation is a profound psychological technique to stop wrong conceptions and to start the correct way of thinking that leads to peace, happiness, and harmony.”  -Lama Zopa Rinoche, How To Be Happy, p. 7-8.

“The purpose of meditation is to stop thinking for a time, wait for the fog of thoughts to thin, and glimpse the spirit within.”  -Deepak Chopra, The Spontaneous Fulfillment of Desire, p. 170.

“Meditation is the art of opening to each moment with calm awareness.”   -Victor N. Davich, The Best Guide to Meditation, p. 31.

“Detailed analysis showed meditation produced important cardiovascular, cortical, hormonal, and metabolic benefits, along with several positive behavioral effects and significant beneficial alterations of interior experience, perception, and self-image.”  -Victor N. Davich, The Best Guide to Meditation, p. 28.

Beginners Meditation Class in Lexington, Kentucky, The first Thursday of each month, 2012,  from 6:00 – 7:30 P.M. Email: luannhamon@kyhypnosis.com. For more information see ” classes” at kyhypnosis.com.

Using the Relaxed State of Mind to Make Positive Change

Monday, October 3rd, 2011

“Going into an altered state is nothing weird. You do it all the time.

The question is whether you use the altered state to produce change.”

-Richard Bandler and John Grinder, Frogs into Princes, Meditation For Beginners by Stephanie Clement, Ph.D, p. 65

“The human mind can discipline the body, can set goals for itself,

can somehow comprehend its own

potentiality and move resolutely forward.

-Norman Cousins,

Living Meditations from Principle to Practice by C. Alexander Simpkins, Ph.D. & Annellen M. Simpkins, Ph.D., p. 93

“See first with the mind,

then with the eyes,

and finally with the body and limbs.

-Yagyu, Japanese swordsman

Living Meditation from Principle to Practice, by C. Alexander Simpkins, Ph.D. & Annellen M. Simpkins, Ph.D., p. 121

“Know your own mind. Train yourself to think what you wish to think;

be what you wish to be.”

-Ernest Holmes, The Science of MInd, Meditation For Beginners, p. 33

Calming The Mind

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

“Meditation’s calm
The sweet incense it brings
Restores us to peaceful
Inner wellsprings
Helps us shed all cares
Cools and soothes the soul
Clears the mind
Makes us whole.”
C. Alexander Simpkins

“Prayer is like talking to God,
meditation is a way of listening to God.”
Edgar Cayce, The Divine Within

“Thoughtful action to establish order. Meditation is nothing other than a relaxation technique with various larger purposes.”  Andrew Weil

“Breath and consciousness become pure. It is exactly like muddy water left to stand in a glass. Little by little, the sediment sinks to the bottom and the water becomes pure.”  Taisen Deshimaru

“When thine eye is single thy whole body also is full of light.”  Jesus of Nazareth

To Know Yourself

Friday, August 13th, 2010

“He who would know the world

seek first

within his being’s depth;

He who would truly

know himself

develop interest in the world.”

Rudolf Steiner

How to Know Higher Worlds

Change Your Thoughts and Change Your Life

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

“To accept the innate godlike power of our Spiritual Self is very frightening to the ego mind, and we will often fight for the viewpoint that various things are impossible and that our powers are limited. Such power is actually the opposite of the ego, which feels its boundary to be of the body. But remember that our ego has no power beyond that which we give it, and in the moments we come to this full realization, then the ego will cease to exist, or at least for that moment will loose its primary place in our thoughts. By recognizing our own potential divinity, we will loose nothing but our mistaken sense of littleness, the feeling of being out of control of our lives, and our fears and suffering in relationships.”  Henry Grayson, PH.D, Mindful Loving, page 85.

“The connection between our thoughts and our lives is inseparable. The degree to which our thoughts are out of control is the degree to which our lives and our relationships feel out of control. Just as we can easily understand that an athlete or musician cannot perform well if his thoughts are out of control-that is, not focused-so it is true in every arena of our lives. A person with angry thoughts is likely to be an angry person. A person who houses fear thoughts is likely to be a frightened person; and, as we saw above, this often attracts like a powerful force field what he is afraid of into his life. A person with a disorganized mind is likely to be disorganized in his life. A person with hopeless, judgmental, guilty, or powerless thoughts is likely to be depressed. And on it goes, all affecting how our relationships progress.”  Henry Grayson, PH.D., Mindful Loving, page 85.

“What we need to experience, and what we can experience, is a saner and gentler state of mind. This experience is not found in something outside of us…We must work with our minds, with our abilities, in order to have peaceful, rich minds.”  Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche, Transforming Mental Afflictions and Other Selected Teachings.

Looking For Truth

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Photo taken by Robin Hamon at a Japenese Garden in KY.

Ten thousand flowers in spring, the moon in autumn,
a cool breeze in summer, snow in winter.
If your mind isn’t clouded by unnecessary things,
this is the best season of your life.”
Wu-Men (1183-1260)

Between living and dreaming
there is a third thing.
Guess it.
Antonio Machado (1875-1939)

Gratitude To The Unknown Instructors
What they undertook to do
They brought to pass;
All things hang like a drop of dew
Upon a blade of grass.
Y.B. Yeats (1865-1939)

If you look for the truth outside yourself,
it gets farther and farther away.
Today, walking alone,
I meet him everywhere I step.
He is the same as me,
yet I am not him.
Only if you understand it in this way
will you merge with the way things are.
Tung-Shan (807-869)

Psalm 131
My mind is not noisy with desires, Lord,
and my heart has satisfied its longing.
I do not care about religion
or anything that is not you.
I have soothed and quieted my soul,
like a child at its mother’s breast.
My soul is as peaceful as a child
sleeping in its mother’s arms.
The Book of Psalms, The Bible
(8th? or 3rd? Century B.C.E.)

The Enlightened Heart, An Anthology of Sacred Poetry, Edited by Stephen Mitchell.

Prepare the Mind for Creating The Life You Want

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

“The noblest employment of the mind of man is the study of the works of his creator.”  Unto Thee I Grant

“The light of the creator shines in the light of you.”  Douglas De Long, Ancient Teachings For Beginners, page 97.

“Metaphors won’t get you to a place where you can love the mind; you have to find the actual experience of peace and calmness on your own. The secret for doing that is to free the mind. When it is free, the mind settles down. It gives up its restlessness and becomes a channel for peace. This is a counterintuitive solution because nobody would say that a wild elephant or monkey can be tamed by setting it free. They’d say that the freed animal would only run wilder, yet this secret is based on actual experience: The animal is “wild” because we try to confine and control it. At a deeper level lies complete orderliness. Here, thoughts and impulses flow in harmony with what is right and best for each person.”  Deepak Chopra, M.D.,  The Book of Secrets, Unlocking the Hidden Dimensions of Your Life, page 82.

Finding Solitude

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Photo taken by Nicole Wolcott.

“As in the tale, (Sealskin, Soulskin – page 257), if we establish a regular practice of intentional solitude, we invite a conversation between ourselves and the wild soul that comes near to our shore. We do this not only just to ‘be near’ the wild and soulful nature, but as in the metaphysical tradition since time out of mind, the purpose of this union is for us to ask questions, and for the soul to advise.” page 293

“This means using one’s mind to summon the soul-self. Everyone has at least one familiar state of mind in which to effect this kind of solitude. For myself, solitude is rather  like a folded up forest that I carry with me everywhere and unfurl around myself when I have need. I sit at the feet of the great old trees of my childhood. From that vantage point, I ask my questions, receive my answers, then coalesce my woodland back down to the size of a love note till next time. The experience is immediate, brief, informative.” page 293

“After a period of time, the cumulative effect of intentional solitude begins to act like a vital respiratory system, a natural rhythm of adding knowledge, making minute adjustments, and deleting the unusable over and over again… Over time, as you practice, you will find yourself designing your own queries to the soul. Sometimes you may have only one question. Other times you may have none whatsoever and just wish to rest on the rock near the soul, breathing together.” page 295

Clarissa Pinkola Estes, Ph.D., Women Who Run With The Wolves, Myths And Stories Of The Wild Woman Archetype.

Having Trouble Creating Love In Your Life? Allow Hypnosis to Assist You In Removing The Barriers.

Sunday, February 14th, 2010
Photo taken by Nicole Wolcott

Photo taken by Nicole Wolcott

“The spiritual relationship is a common state of mind, where both give errors gladly to correction, that both may happily be healed as one.’ “   A Course In Miracles

“Most of our energy goes into upholding our universe. If we were capable of losing some of our importance, two extraordinary things would happen to us. One, we would free our energy from trying to maintain the illusion of grandeur, and two, we would provide ourselves with enough energy to catch a glimpse of the actual grandeur of the universe.  Carlos Castaneda

“One hallmark of wholeness is the ability to love yourself. In the realm of love, a paradox exists: you can effectively love others only when you can love yourself. If you cannot love yourself, you will try to fill the void of your own lack of self-love with the love of others. You will tend to demand from others, what you cannot give yourself. This demand places an unfair burden on those around you. It makes you a bottomless pit; no matter how much love they give, it is never enough.” The same problem exists if you try to give love to other people who do not love themselves. You will turn yourself inside out loving them, but it will not help. We all must learn to give ourselves the love we want. Then other people can love us and it will feel satisfying because it is not filling a void. It becomes love dancing with itself.”  Gay Hendricks, Ph.D., & Kathlyn Hendricks, Ph.D., Conscious Loving, page 90 & 91.

“Yet we all know how much our minds are filled with judging thoughts, fear thoughts, and other thoughts that not only disturb our inner peace, but also seriously undermine loving relationships. Therefore we need a tool to help us be more effective in our thought monitoring and meditation is such a tool, for it is essentially a practice session on being an objective witness to our thoughts and then consciously returning our minds to focus on a place of our choosing, such as mantra or breath.”  Henry Grayson, Ph.D., Mindful Loving, page 244.

Meditation

Friday, February 5th, 2010
Photo taken by Nicole Wolcott

Photo taken by Nicole Wolcott

“When we cling to thoughts and memories, we are clinging to what cannot be grasped. When we touch these phantoms and let them go, we may discover a space, a break in the chatter, a glimpse of open sky. This is our birthright-the wisdom with which we were born, the vast unfolding display of primordial richness, primordial openness, primordial wisdom itself. When one thought has ended and another has not yet begun, we can rest in that space.”  Pema Chodron, Comfortable With Uncertainty, page 142

“Take some time to be present. Breathe and be here now. Be in the silence of your heart. Let your thoughts come and go until the space between them opens. Let your feelings of anxiety, boredom, frustration come and go until a softness comes into your heart, a patience with yourself, a forgiveness that rides in and out on each breath.   Let peace come into your heart, all by itself. As you allow space to be there, feel the  presence that comes in. That is the spirit of God, call it what you will. Now there is only love; there are only blessings.”  Paul Ferrini, Reflections of The Christ Mind, page 131

“You know that God is your instant, constant , and abundant supply. When you ’seek first the Kingdom,’ you meditate deeply on the Truth of your oneness with God. You enter a higher dimension in thought…”  Eric Bitterworth, Discover The Power Within You, page 133