Special Speech


November 1, 2008

Everybody Hurts

Filed under: Psychology Parlor — admin @ 11:56 pm

Love and life are funny things that often bewilder us, creating feelings within our body that are not really caused by any physical injury. Take heartbreak for example. Heartbreak is not a pain caused by a physical injury to the heart. The pain we feel is an emotionally generated pain, triggered in part by our mind based upon an experience. And what about that chemistry that jazzed the both of you when you met? Then wonder, “what more?”

Just as suddenly as the juices got jazzed you find yourself running, laughing, playing, and enjoying a budding relationship. You can’t believe you could be so lucky! You think about this miracle that came into your life throughout each day. You feel the energy in your body inspiring your life. You feel so alive! You know all of this though and realize you have to get through each day, keeping balance and perspective so you don’t neglect other areas of your life. Too bad about that really, it would be great to just walk off into the sunset and not have to worry about the realities of life for awhile. “Give us some time” I’d say, knowing that in time we’ll both come back to the planet looking to explore other avenues of our lives. Let’s get back to reality though.

Now, I can only speak for myself and others like me. I don’t fall in love to just walk away. Yet, too often, that is what we are required to do. As compatible as a relationship might feel or seem, timing could be everything. Someone’s distortion could have their values out of whack. Knowing the inner-qualities of each other, you could have even been certain that you’d never be dropped for material reasons. This love, this woman, or this man, is deeper than that. It’s there, in all the journals, in every conversation, in the eyes, and the vision for the future. Then life shows up and serves some humble pie.

Bad things happen to good people all the time. Someone is struck ill with a serious illness and before long the retirement savings are gone. The recovery can take months or even years, if at all - for some. The physical toll can be too great for some people to handle. The emotional stamina required to endure the trials may be to costly to another. The financial strain may threaten a required sense of security for others. For the person it is all happening to, it can have profound and life-changing impact.

Deep loss is experienced as an old identity passes away and a new identity comes into being. Death and birth, experiences equally bound in both pleasure and pain. Not just a physical death, a psychological death. Not just a physical birth, a metaphysical birth. Some people end up lost in the bottom of a bottle while others stab out the misery with a needle; both scenarios leading to more misery and death. These are just examples, the scenarios are limitless. Some recover, some don’t. Death isn’t the only thing that can kill you.

In spite of what we see on the streets and played out in the drama of each others’ lives, miracles still happen all the time. These miracles happen even through the loss and in spite of loss. Someone may truly be gone forever and yet, someone else is saved as a result. An illness could miraculously disappear, leaving no trace of ever having been there. Financial ruin could bring two closer together, empowering and strengthening beyond what each could do individually. Important changes in society could come about as lives are radically changed through tribulation.

Too often judgment is heard spilling from lips of those who don’t know or are arrogant. If you’ve ever fallen, why would you laugh at another who has fallen? You remember what it was like. You understand the pain and even the embarrassment you felt. You remember the judgment others threw in your face. Everybody hurts, sometimes. Judgment, ridicule, laughter, and self-righteousness are uncomfortable disguises of your own frailty. Bad things happen to good people all the time. It could happen to you. This is uncomfortable to admit. It recognizes your powerlessness to control every aspect of living your physical life on earth. You only control your response, reaction, your attitude.

As for the hurt that comes with the human experience, the shift in perspective can view the emotional pain as a good thing. The ache in the heart chakra is a blessing of your aliveness. It affirms your divine capacity to love another being. The ache that comes with the turmoil of disappointments affirms your love of self. The ache that comes with betrayal in society affirms your connection and love to your fellow beings. You are a divine creature living in a physical world. Lifting the veil, seeing your own inner-spirit, you will experience and observe and learn to be with the aching emotions. Make that your challenge - to ‘be with’ the pain and witness it as a good experience. Shift your perspective to see that your spiritual being is embracing each experience and will rise above each experience.

This brings me full-circle, right back to heartbreak. Don’t run away from love. Don’t run away from loving another. Run away from fear. Run away from doubt. There is power in love and it is the only thing that you have in life that cannot be taken away. Health: Who knows when, if, what, or why, but you could be hit. Money: That balance sheet is all over the place and depends a lot on other circumstances that may be beyond your control. And what will you give up for that? Too many look for the bling without really seeing the stars. If you’re wondering where to look, try deep into the eyes of another.

Lee Down - EzineArticles Expert Author

Lee Down is a professionally trained Spiritual Life Coach committed to the development of the human spirit. His vocation and business, One Man Can Human Capital Development has evolved from human resources, to career and life coaching until the inspired writing, also available on his site, paved a new path into the realms of Spirit. Discover power, passion, and purpose. Enjoy abundance, love and fulfillment.

Safari Living

Filed under: Adventures — admin @ 11:32 pm

Safari Living

It was Thursday, time to go. I had to leave the lovely confines of my luxury hotel, where I had been staying for the last few weeks, while doing research for a upcoming article on a tribe living about 300 miles north of where I sit right now. I got my truck gassed up, and have some extra fuel just in case it takes longer for me to get there. I leave at five in morning,air still brisk from the long cold night, but I need to get a move on, if I am to beat the extreme heat that the day will most certainly bring. The drive will take about five or six hours, depending on the road conditions. There have been some reports of some carjacking along this path so I need to be swift, and not stop. I leave my hotel, hit the road, with dust in my trail, I’m excited to see what sights will pop up along the way. About an hour or so down the long bumpy dirt road I see a dead caribou in the road, so I decide to check it out. This one looks fresh, as the buzzards have not yet torn it apart. As I approach the dead animal, it becomes apparent to me that this was not road kill or dinner for the lions. This animal had been shot. Poachers no doubt. They are common in these parts, and sometimes just kill the poor animals for the fun of it. What a waste of life. Back on the road, I record my findings on my digital voice recorder. I like to keep a good record of my happenings; it makes for good writing later. I have been on the road now for two hours and the plains look the same as they did an hour ago. It seems like I have been driving on a treadmill. Then I hear a sound like my tires blown out. I start to slow down so I can check it out, but then catch a glimpse of something in my review mirror. A truck coming up fast behind me. Another gun shot blast rattles the air. The poachers! They’re back and after me. I step on the gas just as I feel an extreme heat blaring down on my shoulder. This unfortunately was no heat. My adrenaline was racing so fast that I didn’t really notice that I had been shot! Well as I slump over my steering wheel, I remember whatI did wrong. I had stopped. Taking record of the poachers was my fatal…

The Fantastic World of Digital Versatile Disc Players and Recorders

Filed under: Events + Entertainment — admin @ 11:09 am

DVD recorders are capable of being used with a digital telly to tape your best sci-fi programmes and videos in addition to see pre-recorded news programmes. Amazing picture & audio quality, although the video recording facility means that they are by a long way more costly than DVD players & besides they can also be harder to understand than Video Cassette Recorders (VCRs). The choice of recordable formats available could easily also add to the confusion. Find amazing prices on Sony DVD Recorders at Sound and Vision. Visit the website.

Having the right connections linking your DVD recorder & your telly & stereo systems can certainly make a great deal of difference to the quality of the sound & picture.

A handful of DVD connections to think about:

S-video connection: This is the next best thing to component video and is a choice for all Digital Versatile Disc Players that don’t have component output & also tellies that do not contain component input. You may possibly require another separate cable in spite of the image difference should ought to be absolutely worth it.

SCART leads: A traditional sort of DVD connection found in the UK is the SCART lead. This transmits both audio & image signals. SCART connections are very widespread on Digital Versatile Disc players & more up-to-date tellies. Gold coated SCART leads supply a substantially improved connection. A SCART connection will without a doubt give you a significantly better picture than S-Video can and is close to component benchmark. SCART cables aren’t as a rule included with players. You may perhaps be expected to shell out something like £25.

Audio connectors: Digital Versatile Disc players, principally the more luxurious models, can have oodles of audio outputs. Outputs are expected to include phono, digital coaxial & digital optical. If you are attempting to connect to a separate hi fi player this could possibly be by far a very useful feature.

Progressive scan is the hottest word in the DVD recorder industry & whereas significantly more classy recorders include it, it can not in reality be used unless you have a digital television. With it your program can be refreshed 60 times per second which makes for an astonishing more or less flicker less image & is far greater to anything that is provided by the alternative interlaced scanning products.