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In a few days, The Voice Finals videos (with English translations) will be ready!
But, in the meantime, Ed’s getting restless
(waiting for the translators to finish) …
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Posted in creativity, fun, inspiration, life, music, people, smile
Tagged Ed Saugstad, freedom, happiness, hope, music, soul, Yoann Freget
http://edsaugstad.com/YoannFreget/TheVoice2013-Semifinals.html
Shri Mataji (Nirmala Srivastava), founder of Sahaja Yoga meditation, once told sahaja yogi Matt Malley, former bass player of the world famous Counting Crows band, that if he puts his attention on the kundalinis of the audience, it’s much better than just focusing on one’s own performance. He often tried it, finding that his eyes would become cool and his heart filled with love, ‘watching’ everyone’s pure spirits. Giving creatively to an audience from your heart can have amazing results. What the world needs now, is love, sweet love.
Van Morrison on alert, creative mental silence:
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Posted in alert mental silence, creativity, enlightenment, happiness, heart, humanity, inspiration, Kundalini, life, love, music, smile, spirituality
Tagged alert mental silence, hope, inspiration, kundalini, love, singing, The Voice, Van Morrison, Yoann Freget
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It’s been ages since I wrote anything besides quick smileys in emails and Facebook comments. A dark and distressing winter lies back between me and the completion of my novel last year. This blog has faded with neglect in those internal snowdrifts. Even the beginning of spring brought no respite from the penetrating cold. But now, as if by some secret orchestration, the first beams of 2013’s warmth and a new inner sunniness are suddenly arriving simultaneously.
It began last night with a dream.
I dreamt we were living in a future post-greed era in which powerful
corporations and religious and political organizations had become curious matters of history. People lived in harmony with grassroots means. The world was not however primitive, as many practical tools were developed through advanced technology, but these were devices of the highest quality of craftsmanship produced for decades of daily use, not solely to turn over a profit. Unlimited energy and communication were free and universally available. Individuals could feel the fulfilling beauty of their own selves, and the same in others, so there was no more violence based on ideologies or standards of living.
When I woke up, that life seemed so sensible and easily, naturally attainable, that I felt like a child on a holiday morning who wants to quickly go wake up all its friends to play. Then I remembered the present state of our world. Surprisingly, I was not discouraged. If there’s one thing I’ve learnt in this life, it’s that for every plunge into hopeless darkness there is an equally intense spring up into light. Or, to put it as literally as possible, at the same time that human beings swing to the furthest left and right extremes on the pendulum of indulgence and suffering, the more our deepest, sincerest collective desire to know absolute goodness opens
the central spiral of enlightenment. Of course, there’s much more to it than that, including a specific, built in mechanism that propels us into that higher state of understanding, as I’ve experienced daily in moments of meditation most of my life, but that basic principle is constantly at work. We reap what we sow, but pain often causes us to take firm hold of the helm of our ship to deliberately, through our renewed desire and focus, steer our life in a better direction. And that’s usually when a person discovers that wonderful link to reality within.
I’m not so naive as to expect everyone to get this, certainly not all those tyrannosaurs reincarnated as humans, bent only on a thrill and a kill, but most people surely can. Maybe the world’s human population will reduce some day when the animals go back to incarnating only as animals (replenishing all those dwindling species?) allowing those of us remaining to advance in more subtle ways.
So, now before I ramble off onto even more unpredictable trails of evolutionary speculation, allow me to bid you a very good day or night. May your trials be deep, and your achievements high.
🙂
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Posted in 2013, alert mental silence, enlightenment, fulfillment, happiness, hope, humanity, joy, Kundalini, life, well-being
Tagged 2013, dream, meditation, Sahaja Yoga meditaion, springtime, utopia
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Posted in enlightenment, grace, hope, humanity, Kundalini, life, love, meditation, mother, people, spirituality, thoughtless awareness, well-being, yoga
Tagged ShriMataji.org
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2011/01/14/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-9/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2010/12/14/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-8/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2009/09/30/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-7/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2009/02/24/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-6/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2008/06/22/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-5/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2008/05/09/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-4/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2008/04/14/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-3/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2008/03/14/and-you-think-you’re-having-a-bad-day-2/
https://edwardsaugstad.com/2008/03/01/and-you-think-youre-having-a-bad-day-1/
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Posted in friendship, fun, heart, life, love, smile, well-being
Tagged forever young, friendship, laughter
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😉
And here was my fun birthday beginning (around midnight last Saturday) with:
http://www.reverbnation.com/ruslanpashynskyi
and
http://www.wienersaengerknaben.at/about_us/organization
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Posted in creativity, fun, gadzooks!, inspiration, life, music, smile, well-being
Tagged drumming, Ed Saugstad, fun, Gerald Wirth, HandSonic, Ruslan Pashynskyi, Vienna Boys Choir
Posted in 2013, art, creativity, fun, grace, inspiration, life, nature, smile, Uncategorized
Tagged Austria, book illustrations, Brigitte Saugstad, ceramic art, Edward Saugstad, Gmunden, Oakee Doakee, Sir Ed Word
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~click on the image to zoom in on the fun~
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Posted in art, creativity, fun, Ganesha, life
Tagged Austria, Brigitte Saugstad, Cafe Blanda, ceramic art, Eichgraben, Oakee Doakee, Sir Ed Word
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This is for you, if you’re not looking forward to another year on Earth.
For what it’s worth, you are loved.
Hold on.
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Posted in 2013, courage, forgiveness, freedom, friendship, hope, life, love, togetherness, well-being
Posted in Christmas, film, friendship, fun, happiness, holiday, life, love, smile, togetherness
Tagged Christmas, Hugh Grant, love, Love Actually, Prime Minister, smile
I’ve just returned from three-and-a-half months in the shadow lands. (Sorry for the lack of blog posts, but my literary lights were dimmed.) At the beginning of September, after weeks of amazing emotional revelations ranging from euphoria to utter despair, I got physically sick and didn’t really recover until now, four days before Christmas 2012, and the very day that the Mayan calendar runs out — whatever that historic milestone may prove to imply. There were three or four days (and intensely dark, suffocating nights) in which I was convinced that my time on Earth was almost over, and that I had reached a humiliating and unexpectedly sudden demise. After three decades of daily yoga meditation I never get sick any more, but it seems I still had some deeper, traumatic issues to work out before the unprecedented personal and collective events of 2013.
In the ancient language of Sanskrit, Maya means illusion. Not only has mankind marched steadily into the most morally confused time of our evolution, but the point of highest spiritual opportunity as well. Somewhere behind all the mumbo-jumbo about cosmic cataclysm and last chances, there lies the simple truth that we have all been on a very long journey, and it’s high time to harvest the fruits of that struggle.
Not long ago there were two buddies who used to get together in a Cambridge pub once a week to discuss life and literature. One was a booming evangelist, the other a more soft-spoken Christian. It seems that they both had a subtle, inner connection to reality that expressed itself very differently through each. J.R.R. Tolkien considered the bible the greatest epic tale ever told, but chose to only hint at the image of Jesus Christ — archetype of the greatest of kings who fell and rose again in supreme benevolence — in his now classic novel series, The Lord of the Rings. C.S. Lewis on the other hand (often to Tolkien’s displeasure) would shout his admiration for the Son of God from the rooftops, especially after his kundalini suddenly rose up his spine while he rode a Cambridge public bus to work one morning, causing him to write Surprised by Joy. He also praised the Divine, albeit without naming names, in his (also now classic) children’s series, The Chronicles of Narnia.
The other morning I woke up after hearing myself say, in a dream, “I wonder how well Narnian vegetables would sell in our local market”. (This was a few days after I woke up to a Voice that softly reassured me that, “His love for you is unlimited. It just flows,” which I understood to refer to Jesus … or Aslan?) C.S. Lewis had an uncanny knack of being able to accurately describe the attributes and effects of divinity and the shadowy lack of it, which we sometimes call evil. Bearing that in mind, I’ve come to pay special interest to the end of the adventures in Narnia, when paradise is overrun by destructive shadow, and a magical door appears in the midst of danger and chaos, leading to a new, somehow better, more colorful, wider, higher Narnia.
It was the unicorn who summed up what everyone was feeling. He stamped his right fore-hoof on the ground and neighed and then cried:
“I have come home at last! This is my real country! I belong here. This land I have been looking for all my life, though I never knew it till now. The reason why we loved the old Narnia is that it sometimes looked a little like this. Come farther up, come farther in!”
… “The farther up and the farther in you go, the bigger everything gets. The inside is larger than the outside.”
Lucy looked hard at the garden and saw that it was not really a garden at all but a whole world, with its own rivers and woods and sea and mountains. But they were not strange: she knew them all.
“I see,” she said. “This is still Narnia, and, more real and more beautiful than the Narnia down below, just as it was more real and more beautiful than the Narnia outside the Stable door! I see … world within world, Narnia within Narnia …”
“Yes,” said Mr. Tumnus, “like an onion: except that as you go in and in, each circle is larger than the last.”
And Lucy looked this way and that and soon found that a new and beautiful thing had happened to her. Whatever she looked at, however far away it might be, once she had fixed her eyes steadily on it, became quite clear and close as if she were looking through a telescope. She could see the whole southern desert and beyond it the great city of Tashbaan: to eastward she could see castle Cair Paravel on the edge of the sea and the very window of the room that had once been her own. And far out to sea she could discover the islands, island after island to the end of the world, and, beyond the end, the huge mountain which they had called Aslan’s country. But now she saw that it was part of a great chain of mountains which ringed round the whole world. In front of her it seemed to come quite close. Then she looked to her left and saw what she took to be a great bank of brightly-colored cloud, cut off from them by a gap. But she looked harder and saw that it was not a cloud at all but a real land. And when she had fixed her eyes on one particular spot of it, she at once cried out, “Peter! Edmund! Come and look! Come quickly.” And they came and looked, for their eyes also had become like hers.
“Why!” exclaimed Peter. “It’s England. And that’s the house itself — Professor Kirk’s old home in the country where all our adventures began!”
“I thought that house had been destroyed,” said Edmund.
“So it was,” said Tumnus the Faun. “But you are now looking at the England within England, the real England just as this is the real Narnia. And in that inner England no good thing is destroyed.” (The Last Battle, by C.S. Lewis)
It has now been clinically proven that the state of alert mental silence produces an ideal equilibrium throughout the human organism. This state is so powerful that it can naturally correct any healable ailment in us, and remove causes such as anxiety. The effects on society are not yet documented, but it’s easy to foresee a harmonious collective environment free from the violence and suffering that has come to be synonymous with so-called civilization. Anyone who has clearly experienced this state may have noticed the light, soothing flow of energy (kundalini) that passes up the spine and out through the limbic area of the brain, referred to long ago in Sanskrit as the Sahasrara Chakra, or the thousand-petal portal to the Kingdom of Heaven. This integrating connection was called yoga, meaning union.
There’s a lot of talk at the moment about divine councils and portals and what-not, that tend to turn most of us off to the possibility that each of us is able to reach a transcendent state of deep peace and understanding about our existence. Actually, meditation is the least complicated of all things we can reach and benefit from, needing no explanation and thought-producing concepts. I would just like to express my feeling here that our jolly old Cambridge professor may have unconsciously been describing the transformation of human consciousness with his magical door to a better world — a liberating passageway that allows us to see and feel life as it really is: beautiful and fulfilling. A very real state that enables us to perpetually improve ourselves and our planet, instead of destroying them.
I took the liberty this morning of consulting the I Ching about the spiritual state of mankind in 2013. It said that examples should be set by those who are wise and brave, revealing the deepest spiritual connection (meditation) that can be shared by all:
‘Thus a hidden spiritual power emanates from them, influencing others without their being aware of how it happens.’
The hexagram Kuan represents an observation tower. Those who sit on top of it can see far and be seen by all. Amazingly, the individual line that was selected for detailed reference was the top one — that very position of highest perception:
‘Contemplation of his life. The superior man is without blame. Here in the
highest place everything that is personal, related to the ego, is excluded. The picture is that of a sage who stands outside the affairs of the world. Liberated from his ego, he contemplates the laws of life and so realizes that knowing how to become free of blame is the highest good.’ ‘He has not yet forgotten the world and is therefore still concerned with its affairs.’
(It has been said that the ultimate time of Judgement is when every human being will have the clear inner perception to look within and judge — understand and correct — themselves.)
The I Ching then pointed out, with hexagram Pi / Holding Together, that just as water will always flow to a collective meeting place, human beings will gather with like human beings.
‘Holding together calls for a central figure around whom other persons may unite. To become a center of influence holding people together is a grave matter and fraught with great responsibility. It requires greatness of spirit, consistency and strength. Therefore let one who wishes to gather others together ask whether he/she is equal to the undertaking, for anyone attempting the task without a real calling for it only makes confusion worse than if no union at all had taken place. But when there is a real rallying point, those who at first are hesitant or uncertain gradually come in of their own accord. Late-comers must suffer the consequences, for in holding together the question of the right time is also important. Relationships are formed and firmly established according to definite inner laws. Common experience strengthen these ties, and one who comes too late to share in these basic (inner) experiences must suffer for it if, as a straggler, he/she finds the door locked. If one has recognized the necessity for union and does not feel strong enough to function as the center, it is one’s duty to become a member of some other organic fellowship.’ (I Ching ~ The Book of Changes, translated by Richard Wilhelm and Cary F. Baynes)
This may sound quite black-and-white, but the inner evolution of each of us is determined simply by our desires. It’s not unimaginable that the nature of that stream of wishes will ultimately carry us toward the opportunity to attain a higher, lighter state of wellbeing; or into a meaningless dead-end. We’ve been blessed with freedom to choose our way and our destination. No one can be forced to strive for liberating collective consciousness.
May the delicious, enlightening vegetables and fruits of the new Narnia nourish us in the upcoming Harvest.
Wishing you and yours a very merry Christmas and joyous New (kind of) Year,
Edword
****************************************************
AWAKENING
(author unknown)
In a mother’s belly there were two babies. One asks the other:
“Do you believe in life after birth?”
“Of course! Something must exist after birth. Maybe we are here because we need to prepare for what we will become later.”
“Ridiculous! There is no life after birth! How do you think this life would be?”
“I don’t know, but surely there will be more light than there is here. Maybe we will walk on our own two feet and we can feed ourselves through our mouths!”
“That is absurd! Walking is impossible. And eat through our mouths? How ridiculous! The umbilical chord is how we are fed. Let me tell you something: There can’t be life after birth. The umbilical chord is too short.”
“Well I believe there must be something. And it could be just a little bit different than what we are used to here.”
“But nobody has ever returned from the other side after birth. Birth is the end of life. All in all, life is nothing more than a stressful existence in the dark that does not lead to anything.”
“Well, I don’t know how it will exactly be after birth, but surely we will see Mother and she will take care of us.”
“Mother? You believe in Mother? And where do you think she is?”
“Where? All around us! We live inside her and through her. Without her this whole world would not exist!”
“Well I don’t believe it! I have never seen Mother so, logically, she does not exist.”
“Yes but sometimes when we are very silent, we can hear her singing or feel how she caresses our world. You know, I think there is a real life waiting for us, and that right now we are just preparing ourselves for it.”
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Posted in 2012, 2013, alert mental silence, blogging, Christmas, courage, enlightenment, freedom, friendship, fulfillment, grace, hope, humanity, I Ching, joy, Kundalini, life, love, meditation, peace, silence, smile, spirituality, synchronicity, togetherness, well-being, wisdom, yoga
Tagged 2012, 2013, C.S. Lewis, Christmas, enlightenment, I Ching, joy, kundalini, meditation, mental silence, Narnia, Tolkien, yoga
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Here was an evening of outstanding creativity and inspiration,
a moment of surprising light
in dark times …
Every age has its greatest discovery.
The greatest of all is inside of us.
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Posted in 2012, alert mental silence, courage, creativity, enlightenment, freedom, friendship, fun, hope, inspiration, joy, life, love, meditation, music, party, smile, spirituality, synchronicity, togetherness, well-being
Tagged generosity, hope, joy, music, Paris, Sahaja Yoga Meditation, Shri Mataji, youth
November 10, 2012 in freedom, friendship, fun, happiness, hope, inspiration, life, love, smile, togetherness, well-being
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~18 minutes of pure fun~
😀
(this is not a Roland advertisement)
don’t miss the beginning of the mini dance party at the end…
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(if you visited during these five hours of the first day of this posting, you might see yourself here …)
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Posted in 2012, alert mental silence, creativity, freedom, heart, inspiration, life, music, party, random, smile, technology, well-being
Tagged creativity, drumming, Ed Saugstad, HandSonic, music, rhythm, Roland
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You know the scene at the end of Back to the Future when the geeky dad is transformed into a cool dude, and the boxes of his new adventure novel are delivered to their home? … I feel a bit like that today!
stay tuned …
(official public release soon to be announced …)
Thousands of years ago, when cavemen still roamed the rest of the world, kingdoms and advanced technology thrived in the mysterious East. The oldest surviving story on Earth tells of a king who was forced to banish his beloved son to the wilderness. This noble heir to the throne is believed by some to have been a benevolent deity incarnated in human form, who came to teach mankind the highest qualities of selfless love. But our science could find no evidence of the fantastic events of that lost culture, when men and beasts spoke with each other and demons stole flying machines from the gods. There was no proof until a little boy from modern times stumbled back through the thick curtain of time, into the most thrilling period of prehistory, to participate in events that would shape the entire human race. At last, we know the truth….
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Posted in books, enlightenment, India, life, smile, writing
Tagged adventure, children's books, India, novel, Oakee Doakee, Ramayana, writing, young readers
(more about the benefits of Sahaja Yoga Meditation)
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(and click the photo to see an article from New York City)
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Posted in alert mental silence, freedom, happiness, health, hope, life, meditation, peace, science, thoughtless awareness, well-being
Tagged happiness, heath, meditation, peace, Sahaja Yoga Meditation, science, well-being, yoga
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Posted in alert mental silence, happiness, health, life, meditation, thoughtless awareness, well-being, yoga
Tagged hope, meditation, mental silence, peace, Sahaja Yoga Meditation, stress, well-being
Posted in alert mental silence, birthday, Christmas, drugs, enlightenment, freedom, friendship, fulfillment, grace, happiness, health, hope, humanity, I Ching, joy, life, meditation, peace, smile, spirituality, thoughtless awareness, well-being, yoga
Tagged 1982, birthday, Christmas, enlightenment, joy, mental silence, North Delta, self-realization, thoughtless awareness, Vancouver
Posted in freedom, gadzooks!, inspiration, life, music, random, smile, well-being
~(CLICK in between the blue and the yellow Easter eggs)~
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(and be sure to check out the video and the link underneath it at the page bottom)
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Posted in alert mental silence, Easter, enlightenment, freedom, fulfillment, grace, happiness, hope, India, Kundalini, life, meditation, peace, spirituality, thoughtless awareness, wisdom, yoga
(I just finished writing a two hundred page novel about a little boy who journeys back in time to ancient India — now I’ll go work on the drawings, steeped in that magical atmosphere)
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Posted in enlightenment, holiday, India, inspiration, life, smile, spirituality
Tagged culture, enlightenment, India, kundalini, spirituality
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I arrived on this planet — in the wild West — when Elvis was King, and hamburgers, beer and cigarettes were the source of inner happiness.
It’s been a long, uphill struggle, sometimes fun, and sometimes miserably hopeless. But when I look inside myself right now, I feel peace and gratitude.
It’s not over yet.
Luckily, I believe in happy endings.
Thank you for being here now, on my birthday.
Not to sound cliché,
But as an Aquarian,
I’m allowed to say
I actually love you all!
Best wishes,
Eddie
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Posted in alert mental silence, enlightenment, humanity, Kundalini, life, synchronicity, well-being
Tagged cool candle, cool check, freedom, kundalini, peace, self-realization
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Love is that self-perpetuating force which renews everything, forever replenishing hope with spontaneous, living miracles. There will never be a scarcity of inspiring sunrises (illuminating clean air), budding roses (genetically unmodified), baby giggles (untainted by pornography), mirthful leg-pulling among friends (transcending racial prejudice), or generous helping hands in moments of need, as long as that precious force is allowed to thrive on Earth.
As soon as all the scales of malice and discontent have fallen away from human hearts, we will find out how good life can truly be.
Best wishes for you and yours in this historic year of inner transformation,
Edward Saugstad
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Posted in 2012, forgiveness, freedom, friendship, fulfillment, heart, hope, humanity, innocence, life, love, peace
Tagged 2012, common sense, generosity, humanity, inner transformation, life, love, patience
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I would begin 2012 here by remembering someone special, known simply and affectionately as Mother by millions, who helped to make our world a better place for all of us to live in. We all move forward united by that which is forever indestructible: the spirit of love.
Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi
21 March 1923 ~ 23 February 2011
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In Thailand, Buddhist monks have started taking to Sahaja Meditation to get spiritually deeper. The natural state of alert, mental silence that’s easily achieved with this method is proving useful in all walks of life. Here’s how it’s becoming popular in New York City high schools:
and with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder sufferers in Australia:
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Posted in enlightenment, health, Kundalini, life, meditation, mental silence, peace, school, smile, spirituality, Uncategorized, well-being
Tagged Buddhist monks, Sahaja Meditation, students, Thailand
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Posted in Christmas, friendship, heart, holiday, hope, humanity, joy, life, love, peace, smile, synchronicity
Tagged always, Christmas, communication, family, good will, humanity, love, oneness, social networking, togetherness
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In a way, commercial slogans can be funny — even congenial. But in excess, bombarding our daily trains of thought and unconscious desires, they can be a handicapping burden.
That reminds me, look what I happened to find in a cave while out mountain hiking the other day!
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Posted in health, humanity, life, random, well-being
Tagged common sense, consumerism, slogans
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It’s never easy losing loved ones (I’ve lost both my parents, Eric and May, as well as my lifetime spiritual teacher, Shri Mataji, in the last couple of years — as told here further down the home page), but sometimes, when the pain has subsided, it’s inspiring to come across unexpected glimpses into special forgotten moments with them. Here’s a recently discovered video that I didn’t even know existed, in which my father happily appears out of the misty past one very special day in 1983. I’ve posted the video here in its entirety because the meditation public program presented is valuable for anyone seeking inner tranquility and balance.
And below is my short image-compilation decorating a song (in praise of the universal, nurturing Mother) written and composed by Shri Mataji — rendered here by the bass player of a famous European gothic-rock band with some friends. (Another version is by the Vienna Boys Choir)
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Posted in enlightenment, hope, inspiration, Kundalini, life, meditation, mental silence, music, spirituality
Tagged 1983, Eric Saugstad, May Saugstad, rebirth, Sahaja Meditation, Shri Mataji, Vancouver
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😉
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Posted in creativity, freedom, gadzooks!, inspiration, life, music, random, smile, Uncategorized, well-being
Tagged creativity, doodle, drum, music, Saugstad
In 1995 I was intending to buy a typewriter to start writing stories, but someone told me to get a computer instead, because you can delete your mistakes. They suggested I contact a mutual friend who had computer experience. It turned out (happily!) that he was one of the relatively few Mac users in Austria at that time (there was one small Mac repair/retail shop in the whole of Austria then). I ordered a Powerbook 150 (with 240 MB — not GB — hard drive! 4 MB RAM, and tiny black and white screen) from the USA. It was the beginning of a priceless creative relationship which is still improving and expanding today. I’ve since upgraded my hardware every four or five years (my second Powerbook enabled me to taste —in color! — the early fruits of the World Wide Web) and got my first iPod in 2002, before they became universally popular. (And I’ve had my @mac — now @me — email address and web services for ten years running, which I can now even access from my ‘iPhone’.)
PC users argue that there’s nothing special about Macs, but it comes down to a simple preference based on the user’s inclination to work more with the left or right side of the brain. A mechanical (dryer) user will find Windows just fine, thank you very much; but a more artistic (wetter) user will enjoy the fun/intuitive/elegant style of Macs much more, smiling occasionally down upon the sarcastic PC fan.
We’ve come a long way along the road of creative communication. Let’s hope there may be many more Steve Jobs’ out here among the creative generation of babies and youngsters growing up in our midst.
Happy trails, Steve.
Best wishes, Ed
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Posted in Apple, creativity, genius, inspiration, life, people, technology, writing
Tagged Apple, creativity, mac, Steve Jobs
Posted in art, blogging, books, creativity, freedom, genius, heart, hope, inspiration, life, music, writing
Tagged creativity, genius, hope
🙂
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Posted in enlightenment, freedom, fulfillment, Kundalini, life, meditation, mental silence, peace, spirituality, Uncategorized, well-being, yoga
Tagged kundalini awakening, meditation, mental silence, peace
Had a blast on the weekend here in Vienna! Here’s my compilation of Ossi, Boris, Andreas, Michi, Deepak, and Petra’s video/photo material.
Hope to see you at the next event 🙂
a guaranteed stress-reliever~♥~
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Posted in art, creativity, genius, inspiration, life, meditation, mental silence, music, people, spirituality, well-being
Tagged art, culture, festival, music, Sahaja Meditation, Vienna
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My wife had the great honor of being invited to exhibit some of her new works in the English Garden of the historic Heldenberg site in Lower Austria. (And I had the challenging honor of transporting and carrying the massive things around! … less to do with ‘self-help’ than ‘husbandslave-help’ … but I do so love to see her happy.) 😉
They’ll be on public display there until October, where, no doubt, bus loads of tourists will be enjoying their special cool vibrations throughout the summer.
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… And here’s a recent opening evening in Vienna (click on the photo)
Posted in art, creativity, life
Tagged art, Austria, ceramic, cool vibrations, Heldenberg
Spontaneous greetings once again live from Starbucks beside Vienna’s grand Opera House!
…….https://edwardsaugstad.com/2010/11/05/vienna-old-and-young/…….
Spring has sprung and hopefully you’re enjoying the welcome warm up (for my fellow-NorthHemispherians), and the simultaneous cool down (down on the other side). As for all those in the middle (the Equatorians), hope you’re enjoying the accustomed heat.
A lot’s been happening lately … more on that shortly.
Till then, here’s something to leave you with a ‘lasting’ impression:
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Why the modern, one-sided approach to medicine is not wholesome and healing.
‘The Art of Medicine’: Paying attention to the bipartite brain
“What I am going to say will appal many right-thinking scientists….”
“… We need both types of attention (left and right brain). But their relation is not symmetrical. Several different lines of argument converge to show that the right hemisphere is aware of, and understands, more than the left: but the left is more able to articulate and use what it knows. The right hemisphere grounds what then gets to be processed, at an intermediate level, by the left hemisphere, before returning to the right hemisphere for integration into the rest of what we know, in order to make sense of it….”
“… Medical education needs urgently to be brought back to the humanities out of
which it once arose. Doctors are likely to be effective in proportion to the degree that they are able to see the broader context in which the complaint brought before them lies—nothing less than the whole world of the patient in front of them. I remember with chagrin how, on “take”, the wards would fill with patients who had chest pain or abdominal pain, the majority sent home without a diagnosis. No-one thought of—possibly, it occurs to me now, no-one even knew how to—sit down with them and ask about their lives.”
“Don’t get me wrong: detailed scientific knowledge is hugely important. We rely on such minute information to inform the bigger picture. But it is a necessary, not sufficient, condition, of being a good physician. Without a way of understanding and interpreting it at a deeper level, more detailed knowledge will achieve precisely nothing, and will lead us ultimately to let our patients down. It will close our reality down into what we imagine to be certain, where an appropriate awareness of the limitations of our knowledge would have liberated us and our patients into a world much richer than we can suspect.”
~ Iain McGilchrist
for the whole two page article, see:
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Although many (busy, important or insecure) people have found the Facebook phenomena a waste of time or even threating, I’ve always seen it for it’s true value: bringing humanity closer together. It’s amazing that intentions and feelings, like kindness and love, can actually be transmitted and enjoyed through an electronic, digital medium. For me, Facebook has always been, first and foremost, a huge, sunny party-house where we can meet up with old friends and make new ones — a worldwide house where every room, every minute of the day and night, can bring social surprises as well as meaningful bonding.
F.A.C.E.B.O.O.K.=
Friends All Convene Enthusiastically Because Of Our (common) Kinship/Kundalini.
FRIEND:
Origin: old English frēond, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vriend and German Freund, from an Indo-European root meaning ‘to love,’ shared by the word free.
“There is none so blind as he who will not Facebook.” 😉
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Posted in friendship, heart, hope, humanity, life, love
Tagged Facebook, friendship, humanity, love, social networking, world peace
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This is a very special moment which I will share here.
I have no words to describe its profound significance and the deep emotions it has generated.
With love, Ed
http://www.freemeditation.com/news/2011/02/26/shri-mataji-nirmala-devi-a-truly-remarkable-path/
H. H. Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi
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