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We who have committed to a spiritual path are the lucky ones who have opened our consciousness to admit and acknowledge that we are more than skin and bones, more than a separate entity among billions of separate entities and objects. Why are people held back by fear of the most miraculous transformation possible? Jim Giorgi
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Attuning Oneself to the Music of the Divine
2010.08.10 19:11:15

About a year and a half ago, during the early months of my giving dharma talks at the Buddha Center on Second Life (the online virtual world in which you may create a whole other “life” for yourself in cyberspace), one of the frequent participants at my talks was a Second Life avatar named “India Susa”.  In conversations we had both during and after the dharma talks, I found her to be a very great-hearted, insightful, and compassionate lady, and always enjoyed our exchanges.  After several months, she notified all of her Second Life friends that real-life responsibilities were requiring more time than they had previously, and decided that she needed to reduce drastically the amount of time she was spending online in her virtual identity.  I missed her attendance at my talks and also our conversations, but feeling as I did that real-life is always the priority, I understood and endorsed her decision.

A few days ago, in a different virtual venue (Facebook), I received a message and a friend request from one Tina Martin from England, who addressed me in her message by my Second Life sobriquet, DoKwang.  When I looked at the bottom of the message, I found that Tina (who likes to be called by her full Christian name, Christina) had added after her name “a.k.a. India Susa”.  Getting a message out of the blue from an old friend, even if a “virtual” one, brought a smile to my face.

Christina was writing to me about an insight she had apropos to the “formula” that I have described for entering a state of mindfulness (Mindfulness is as simple as “A-B-C”).  In that formula, “A” stands for Attention to all the sensory phenomena in one’s present moment experience, “B” stands for breathing, and “C” stands for corporal, or body, awareness, awareness of one’s “inner” or energy body.  I go on to say that when one can shift one’s attention away from thought and emotion dominated consciousness and focus on “A-B-C”, that then leads to “D”, dissolving the boundaries between “inside” and “outside”, which then creates “E” or a state of “enlightenment.”  When I formulated this sequence, I marveled at how neatly all of the first 5 letters of the alphabet fell into place in sequence to produce this very simple but helpful spiritual “equation”.  But Christina/India, with her marvelous insight, took this equation even further and added a new dimension to it, making it, in my opinion, even more comprehensive and powerful. 

I will let Christina’s words speak for themselves.

Her first message to me reads:

Dear Dok,

Last Christmas, my husband bought me a new (musical) keyboard, and recently, I have been finding the time to refresh my memory of the chords and scales that I had learnt some years ago.

This renewed interest in musical arrangement has coincided with reading (at your recommendation) the book `A Course In Miracles`(ACIM).

Having attended some of your talks in Second Life, and also enjoyed some of the material on your web site (including the `ABC` of mindfulness), it occurred to me, to share with you, that if there were but two more letters after "E" for enlightenment, we would have a full A-G musical scale!!

The reference to ACIM is not without relevance here, because, in keeping with the books` message, my suggestion would be to add "F" for forgiveness and "G" for God ..

A full scale brings us back to "A" once more,(musically speaking), which perhaps (on a loop) would then equate to Atonement, and perhaps the permanent and lasting state that we seek?

yours kindly...

Tina (a.k.a. India Susa)

My reply to Christina reads as follows:

 

Dear Christina,

Of course I remember you and am so happy that you wrote with this wonderful insight. Being steeped in music myself, I find your analogy very inspiring, since, next to breathing, music, sound, harmony, is probably the most powerful modality for aligning oneself with the primordial divine vibration that surrounds and permeate us and is along with light, the energetic core of our being.

Since you had attended my earlier dharma talks, I'm sure that you only heard me mentioning "A-B-C". It was only about half a year ago, when I began expanding that guided meditation so that I could transcribe it and offer it it written form for people to use that it struck me that, when I got to the part about "dissolving" the boundaries between inside and outside that "dissolving" began with the letter "D”. And when I thought that, that "dissolution" of the boundary was the gateway to liberation, it was a short conceptual leap to seeing that I had all of the first 5 letters of the alphabet there in order...wow! So that's when I added the "D" and "E" to the equation (and felt that I was being quite clever in making it work out so neatly!). But your addition from a musical perspective is marvelous, and, as you say, actually rounds out the entire musical scale...making us whole, complete and "in tune" with the good vibration of all the Universe. I love the analogy and would love to share it on my blog, if you would permit me to do so. If you would, I would want to credit you, of course, and want to know if you would prefer to be mentioned by your second life or real life name.

Coincidentally, or perhaps synchronistically, yesterday I was "poking around" my new macbook computer and found that in the program "garage band", which is essentially a virtual recording studio, they have actual lessons that will teach one how to play either piano or guitar. I clicked on the first piano lesson (I took several years of lessons in my youth) just out of curiosity and watched the instructor demonstrate where the notes of the scale were on the keyboard, starting from middle C on up. So perhaps on some level, I was anticipating your insight. Ah, the connections are all around us, just need to be quiet and that beautiful music comes through loud and clear.

All blessings to you and your husband, Tina, and may your musical endeavors bring you great joy and satisfaction.

Namaste,

Jim/DoKwang

 

 

Christina’s reply to my message reads as follows:

 

Dear Dok,

yes.. I too have been considering that the keyboard scale starts with middle C .. perhaps then we would end on a "B" for beginning!!?? I absolutely want you to share the info... .. please use my real life name.. you can call me your real life friend. I like to use my birth name of Christina for such important matters, although the credit is immaterial to me.. unless you make a fortune from it of course! LOL

May all of our real life and virtual life relationships be equally as harmonious and enriching as this new friendship has become for me.  Thank you, Christina.

 



Tags: music of the spheres | attunement | divine music | music | A-B-C of Mindfulness

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The Lord's Prayer: The Perfect Prayer
2010.08.01 03:17:17

The Perfect Prayer

The Lord’s Prayer: An Interpretation for Modern Times

by Jim Giorgi

 

the-lords-prayer-aramaicThe Lord’s Prayer is the perfect, complete statement of existence, of how the universe and all creation “is” and “works”.  It may be understood in the following manner:

“Our” means Universal, of everyone and everything, of “All That Is”, and not just of an individual or isolated group.

“Father” means Creator or Source.  “Mother” or “Parent” could also have been used, but remember that in Jesus’ time it was a patriarchal society.  “Father” means the conscious, loving source energy that is the matrix out of which the entire universe, material and nonmaterial, is created.

“Who art in Heaven” means that this creative source energy exists as the pure spirit of potential creation.  In other spiritual traditions it is termed “emptiness” or “the “void”.



Tags: lordsprayer | prayer | the Our Father | Kingdom of Heaven

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The Rise and Fall of the Dysfunctional Ego
2010.07.29 20:21:51

The Rise and Fall of the Dysfunctional Ego: How the Continuum Concept nipped a Childhood Neurosis in the Bud:

by Jim Giorgi

I have a very dear friend who is a Kiwi.  No, I don’t mean he’s a small, odd-looking flightless bird or a fuzzy, juicy green-fleshed fruit.  Richard was born and raised in New Zealand.  I met Richard during an extended trip to Maui in 1996, where he was studying to become a Feldenkrais (a form of bodywork) practitioner, and we have been friends since.  At the time he was a professional musician, a tympanist (kettledrum player) in the Auckland Philharmonia. In 1998, the Philharmonia hired a new concertmaster, a French-Canadian violinist (and what a marvelous musician she is) from Montreal named Marcelle.  Richard’s and Marcelle’s professional relationship in the orchestra grew into a friendship and very quickly from there they realized they were meant for each other.



Tags: relocation stress | continuum concept

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BrightPathway Blog Archive
  1. by Jim Giorgi

    I want to share with you my story of The Gift of the Katana as a way to demonstrate what I am teaching you about the Power of Intention.

    I held an aikido seminar at my dojo in Ft. Lauderdale over the weekend.  My teacher came down from NY and a lot of visitors were there from other Nihon Goshin Aikido dojos, including Dave, a black belt from the NGA dojo in Georgia, whom I have taught whenever I was there for seminars over the past 9 years.  On Monday I taught my usual aikido class and Dave, who was still in the area, attended.  After class he came over to me.

    "I have something for you," he said.


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    I recently reminisced about the unusual tale of how I was awarded one of the most coveted symbols of advanced athletic prowess at Spellman-the varsity pin.  My homeroom during freshman year was 1F, in room 108, and Brother Brian (Kelly) was our homeroom teacher (and also our Biology and Religion teacher as well).  Those of you who remember me will recall that I was about as far from the athletic type as one could get.  My elementary school, St. Benedict's, had no athletic program at all, and so for the first 8 years of my education, physical education of any kind was nonexistent.  My parents were not "sports-minded" and did not encourage me to join local sports teams of any kind.  So I had no experience with competitive sports.  One activity I did enjoy through my youth, though, was swimming.  When I got to Spellman in the Fall of 1967, I figured that it would be a good thing to "round out" my program by including some athletic activity, and since swimming was something that I had at least some familiarity with, I decided to join the Swimming Team.

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    © The Estate of Tina ModottiI have worked with very young children since 1982, as a psychological consultant to preschool programs.  My job was to evaluate preschool-age children (between the ages of two and a half to 5 years) who were suspected by their parents, or pediatricians, or other early childhood intervention organizations, of having significant developmental delays. 

    Based upon the results of my evaluations, I would determine if the child was sufficiently delayed or disrupted in his or her intellectual, emotional or behavioral development to warrant placement in a special education preschool program.  When my evaluation was complete, I wrote a report, shared the results with the child’s parents or guardians, and made recommendations as to what types of remedial interventions the child required. 

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  9. by Jim Giorgi

     

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    by Jim Giorgi

    I have a very dear friend who is a Kiwi.  No, I don’t mean he’s a small, odd-looking flightless bird or a fuzzy, juicy green-fleshed fruit.  Richard was born and raised in New Zealand.  I met Richard during an extended trip to Maui in 1996, where he was studying to become a Feldenkrais (a form of bodywork) practitioner, and we have been friends since.  At the time he was a professional musician, a tympanist (kettledrum player) in the Auckland Philharmonia. In 1998, the Philharmonia hired a new concertmaster, a French-Canadian violinist (and what a marvelous musician she is) from Montreal named Marcelle.  Richard’s and Marcelle’s professional relationship in the orchestra grew into a friendship and very quickly from there they realized they were meant for each other.


    read more >>>
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    by Jim Giorgi

     

    the-lords-prayer-aramaicThe Lord’s Prayer is the perfect, complete statement of existence, of how the universe and all creation “is” and “works”.  It may be understood in the following manner:

    “Our” means Universal, of everyone and everything, of “All That Is”, and not just of an individual or isolated group.

    “Father” means Creator or Source.  “Mother” or “Parent” could also have been used, but remember that in Jesus’ time it was a patriarchal society.  “Father” means the conscious, loving source energy that is the matrix out of which the entire universe, material and nonmaterial, is created.

    “Who art in Heaven” means that this creative source energy exists as the pure spirit of potential creation.  In other spiritual traditions it is termed “emptiness” or “the “void”.


    read more >>>

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