Kindred Soulzs – Soul Therapy

Known by different names and discovered in different parts of the world all holistic alternative energy therapies originate from One Source. coque iphone pas cher They are like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that compliment and fit in with each other perfectly to complete a beautiful picture meant to guide and propel a soul on its life path with healing and insights so it can serve its life purpose. All these therapies work in conjunction and harmony with conventional or natural medical treatments and remedies including but not limited to surgery, drugs, psychological or any other method of alternative care. coque iphone Out of a plethora of soul therapies available today Kindred Soulzs® integrates some as intuitively guided to assist on your spiritual journey by working on physical, mental, coque iphone 6 emotional, coque iphone 8 spiritual and karmic levels to help you blossom into your true magnificence. coque iphone xs max In preparation for the sessions please wear comfortable, coque iphone 2019 season appropriate clothes and avoid using perfumes as senses are usually heightened during a session. coque iphone xr All sessions are done fully clothed.

unplug meditation

Unplug Meditation is a guided-meditation studio that offers 30- and 45-minute drop-in classes in a clean, modern and calming atmosphere. coque iphone Our inspirational guides will effortlessly move you in and out of your meditation. coque iphone xr All you need to do is sit back and relax. Take a break from busy lives, hectic schedules and never-ending demands. Our mission is to be your remedy. Once will change your day and more will change your life. Makeover guru makes over meditation in new L.A. studio Los Angeles, CA (April 8, 2014) — A peaceful haven is emerging in a surprising location. As drivers whiz past concrete buildings on Wilshire Boulevard in West L.A., they speed by an oasis of calm they’d be delighted to discover. Hidden next to a courtyard, with a bamboo garden and 15-foot water fountain, is the perfect place to take a grown-up time-out. Starting April 15, 2014, unplug meditation will provide a serene studio where you can take a break from traffic, devices, kids and bosses, morning, noon and night. coque iphone 8 Suze Yalof Schwartz, whom the New York Times called “the fairy godmother” of makeovers, is now making over meditation. The busy mom and fashion editor was looking for a place to meditate but couldn’t find anything that fit her fast-paced life and high-end taste. She tried all the venues at which you could possibly meditate in Los Angeles, but instead of tuning into her breath, she cast her editor’s eye on all the things she could make better, from the spaces to the classes to the instructors. coque iphone 8 Yalof Schwartz wanted to merge soul with science, and balance the best of both. So she took over a dark, grey, head-hunting office and transformed it into a contemporary, clean, light studio for meditation. And she set classes for 30- and 45-minute intervals, so busy people could drop in, tune out the world and tune into themselves. “Can you meditate at home?” Yalof Schwartz asks. “Absolutely. Do I wish could? I could, but I don’t. I’m much better when I’m guided. And frankly, it’s a lot easier.” Yalof Schwartz wants to disprove the most common meditation myth: I can’t meditate because I think too much. acheter coque iphone en ligne The truth is everyone thinks too much and everyone can meditate. coque iphone pas cher It’s all about learning how to deal with those thoughts and move back to your focus point. “I’ve yet to meet anyone who has been able to stop thinking,” she says. unplug medition is a space for people who want to try out meditation and learn that they actually can do it. But it is also a great space for experienced meditators to get away from the world and be guided by exceptional teachers who understand real people. “Meditation has a host of scientifically proven benefits, yet so few people know how to do it,” Yalof Schwartz says. “I want to show everyone just how easy it is to learn, and how great it is for your mind, body and soul.” Opening April 15th, unplug meditation, 12401 Wilshire Boulevard, Studio 101, will offer daily classes at all hours, including lunchtime “quickies.” Clients can drop in and pay $20 per-class, purchase packages of 10 or 20 classes, or buy unlimited monthly memberships. Class descriptions, schedule, prices and the benefits of meditation can be found at www.unplugmeditation.com.

Three Causes of Spiritual Illness

hank-wessellmen-booksThree Causes of Spiritual Illness by Hank Wesselman, PhD. As we pass through life on the physical plane, things happen. We contract flus and colds and viruses, and we sustain physical injuries, like falling off our bikes as children or experiencing sports injuries. As adults, we may throw our back out or experience a serious car accident, in the process, acquiring bruises, cuts, sprains, infections, lacerations, and sometimes broken bones. Some of us may also experience serious illnesses of an internal nature like cancer or hepatitis, heart disease or multiple sclerosis. Eventually we pass through old age and the progressive infirmity and death of the physical body. coque iphone 8 These are the givens–they are all to be expected as part of what it means to be an embodied, living being. But these are all effects, and what the shaman is primarily interested in is the cause. coque iphone outlet Watch a video of Hank discussing the three causes of spiritual illness:

Cause and Effect In looking through the shamanic healer’s eyes, the ultimate causes of virtually all illness are to be found within the imaginal realms–in those same regions from which illness derives its initial power to affect us adversely. Because of this, it is not enough to simply suppress the effects of illness with medication on the physical plane and hope for the best. For true healing to occur, the causes of the illness must be addressed. From the shaman’s perspective, there are three classic causes of illness, and interestingly, they are not microbes or bacteria or viruses. coque iphone 7 Rather, they are negative internal states that appear within us in response to negative or traumatic life experiences. The first among these is disharmony. Disharmony Disharmony is what we experience when life suddenly loses its meaning or when we have lost an important connection to life. Let’s take the case of an elderly couple who have had a long marriage, and suddenly one of them dies. They may not have had a perfect relationship, yet there is a deep bond between them because of all they have shared together. The survivor may go into crisis upon the loss of their mate, and within a short time, he or she may come down with something medically challenging, like cancer. Suddenly, they’re gone too. That’s disharmony. The state of disharmony that we experience in response to such life situations causes a diminishment of our personal power. This can happen in a subtle manner on the one hand, or in a catastrophic, life-shaking way on the other like losing your job, and in the process losing your livelihood. When we experience disempowerment, or “power loss,” it affects our energetic matrix, rendering us vulnerable to illness. Fear The second classic cause of illness is fear. A person who is walking around with a chronic sense of fear gnawing away at them is doubly vulnerable to illness because their anxiety aggressively and progressively diminishes their sense of well-being, and this, in turn, affects their feeling of being safe in the world. This sense of well-being is the base upon which our personal health system stands. When this foundation is affected negatively, it diminishes the ability of our immune system to function. And when our immune system goes down, we’re in trouble. It’s not too difficult to see that there is a feedback mechanism at work here. Fear, and the anxiety it creates, produces disharmony. In the same breath, disharmony generates fear, and if the two of them are working together, it doubly affects the protective mantle of the body’s immune system, as well as the energetic matrix. Illness is the inevitable result.

It is no surprise to Western medical practitioners that disharmony and fear can manifest themselves in diseases that are recognizable to science. Almost 500 years ago, the Renaissance physician Paracelsus observed that “the fear of disease is more dangerous than the disease itself.” This brings us to consider the third classic cause of illness–the phenomenon known to indigenous healers as soul loss. Soul Loss Among the traditionals, soul loss is regarded as the most serious diagnosis and the major cause of premature death and serious illness, yet curiously, it’s not even mentioned in our Western medical textbooks. The closest acknowledged context is “He/she has lost the will to live”. In Western society, soul loss is most easily understood as damage to a person’s life essence, a phenomenon that usually occurs in response to trauma. When the trauma are severe, this may result in a fragmentation of that person’s soul cluster, with the shattered soul parts dissociating, fleeing an intolerable situation. In overwhelming circumstances, these soul parts may not return.

The causes of soul loss can be many and varied. There may be traumatic perinatal issues that happen around the child’s birth experience such as arriving into life only to discover that they are not wanted, or that they are the wrong gender—they’ve come in as a girl when everyone was hoping for a boy. Soul loss can also occur when a child is mercilessly bullied or teased at home or at school, day after day, or when a young person is molested by the one who is supposed to be caring for them. When someone has been raped or assaulted, has suffered a shocking betrayal, a bitter divorce, a traumatic abortion, a terrible car accident, or even a serious surgery, soul loss is assured. Many of the young men and women who were sent to war in Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait, Viet Nam, Korea and beyond, came home personally damaged because they had suffered terrible soul loss. Our medical specialists labeled their disorders as post-traumatic stress syndrome, but they had little to offer these “walking wounded” in terms of true healing, and many who survived are still deeply traumatized at the soul level by what happened to them in war. Symptoms of Soul Loss Soul loss is easily recognizable if you know what you’re looking for. Here’s a checklist of some of the classic symptoms: • feelings of being fragmented, of not being all here. • blocked memory–an inability to remember parts of one’s life. • an inability to feel love or receive love from another. coque iphone 8 • emotional remoteness. • a sudden onset of apathy or listlessness. • a lack of initiative or enthusiasm. • a lack of joy. • a failure to thrive. • an inability to make decisions. • an inability to discriminate. • chronic negativity. • addictions. • suicidal tendencies. • melancholy or despair. vente de coque iphone • chronic depression. Perhaps the most common symptom of soul loss is depression. In the early 1990s, Time magazine did a cover story on depression in America that revealed 60 million Americans were taking anti-depressant drugs on a daily basis, representing about 30% of our population. Today that number is closer to 80 million, representing about 40% of society at large, and sometimes that number jumps in response to a national trauma. On the Friday following 9/11, a television newscast revealed that 7 out of 10 Americans polled were experiencing significant depression in response to the tragedy, an indicator of soul loss on a national scale. coque iphone 8 Although the term “soul loss” is not familiar to most Westerners, examples of it are expressed daily in our language and descriptions of personal hardships. Media interviews and news reports include individuals’ comments such as “I lost a part of myself when that (trauma) happened” and “I have not been the same since.” When discussing soul loss with inquiring individuals, most everyone has a sense of having lost a “part” of themselves at some time in life, yet virtually no one has the awareness that the missing part(s) could be recovered. They can. About Dr. Hank Wesselman Research paleoanthropologist Hank Wesselman is one of those rare cutting edge scientists who truly walks between the worlds. A native New Yorker, he has spent much of his life living and working among traditional tribal peoples, primarily in Africa and Polynesia. He served in the US Peace Corps in the 1960’s, living among people of the Yoruba Tribe in Western Nigeria for two years. It was there that he first became interested in indigenous spiritual wisdom. Since 1971, he has conducted research with an international group of scientists, exploring eastern Africa’s Great Rift Valley in search of answers to the mystery of human origins. During this time, he has worked alongside such worthies as Dr. Don Johanson, Lucy’s discoverer; Professor Tim White, whose expeditions have been featured in several TIME magazine cover stories, as well as members of the famous Leakey family. He is one of the primary investigators involved in the discovery of the “Ardi” sites (Ardiptithecus ramidus) in Ethiopia–recently revealed to be the famous missing link between humans and apes that Charles Darwin predicted would be found in Africa. Hank’s research is involved with the paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the sites (4-6 million years old) at the time they were laid down. Hank is also a shamanic student, practitioner and teacher, now in the 28th year of his apprenticeship. In addition to his scientific papers and monographs, his books include his autobiographical trilogy: SPIRITWALKER: MESSAGES FROM THE FUTURE (Bantam, 1995), MEDICINEMAKER: MYSTIC ENCOUNTERS ON THE SHAMAN’S PATH (Bantam, 1998), and VISIONSEEKER: SHARED WISDOM FROM THE PLACE OF REFUGE (Hay House, 2001). These unusual books are focused upon a series of altered state experiences that began spontaneously out in the bush of Africa and document his investigations into a hidden reality that most of us have heard about, but few have experienced directly. In his explorations of these inner worlds, Hank may have also provided us with a glimpse into the possible evolutionary future of humanity. Combining the sober objectivity of a trained scientist with a mystic’s passionate search for deeper understanding, his books also contain revelations of the generally secret teachings of the Hawaiian kahunas. His smaller teaching books include THE JOURNEY TO THE SACRED GARDEN: A GUIDE TO TRAVELING IN THE SPIRITUAL REALMS (Hay House 2003) and SPIRIT MEDICINE: HEALING IN THE SACRED REALMS (Hay House, 2004) co-authored with his wife Jill Kuykendall. Hank is the co-author with Sandra Ingerman of the award-winning book Awakening to the Spirit World, voted the best Body-Mind-Spirit book of 2010 by the Independent Publishers Association. His most recent book is The Bowl of Light: Ancestral Wisdom from a Hawaiian Shaman, a compilation of his mystical talks with the Hawaiian Elder and kahuna Hale Makua over the last eight years of his life. Larry Dossey MD has described Hank Wesselman as an expert guide who fully realizes that he is playing with scientific and spiritual dynamite. Hank currently lives on the Kona coast of Hawai’i island with his family, where they are involved in sustainable food production on their farm in Honaunau. He continues to write and to teach workshops across the country and abroad.

Third Eye in the Soul – Manly P. Hall

by Manly P. Hall

While the mind and emotions are burdened with the tremendous pressures resulting from external experiences ill digested within the personality, it is impossible to achieve the state of internal quietude which is necessary before the eye of the soul can be opened. What the soul requires primarily is a complete relaxation of the self from all intensities, pressures, remembrances, and all occurrences by which the inner life is disturbed. It is often quite possible to mentally achieve a cleansing of the life, but if the emotional pressures are not also regenerated, the achievement is not complete. What we need, therefore, for the development of the inner faculty of sight is a perfect quietude of the mind, the emotions, and the body itself.

This quietude comes in various ways—some by way of acceptance. Experiences we have rebelled against can be transformed into acceptances. We can forget the circumstances and remember only the lessons that we learned. We can in many cases analyze, if we wish, how the most difficult happenings in our lives have been the most beneficial in terms of internal growth.

One by one we need to transform every negative emotion into a positive spiritual acceptance of experiences. We have to, therefore, enter what has been sometimes referred to as a continual remembering of the Divine. It is not a particular prayer at a particular time, but it is to live forever in the presence of the Divine Purpose for things. The essential foundation of this gives rise to what we call mysticism. Mysticism is actually the heart doctrine. It is the individual growing not by expanding the mental faculties but using these faculties primarily to sustain the quietude of the heart.

The heart, because of its intense inner nature, has always been considered a symbol of love. It has been associated with natural affections, with gentleness, kindness, consideration, forgiveness, and for practically all purposes it is a symbol of complete internal peace. Peace is not in this case the result of an escape or of rejecting the difficulties of life. With the opening of the third eye, peace is the realization that we are forever in the presence of divine peace. Peace is not something we have to invent or struggle after. Rather, it is a state of natural existence when we have made peace with ourselves, when we have achieved a natural sympathy and a proper union of the parts and fragments of the personality which are so often in continuous conflict—the gradual sustaining of internal humility, a quiet acceptance of life, a desire to grow through service, a realization that we are all servants and grow most rapidly when serving the causes for life’s experiences.

The simplest form of these services is that we take the symbolic aspect and serve the normal boundaries of relationship such as family and intimate associates and expand our desire for service out of the natural environment with which we are familiar into the great environment which is dominated by the Divine Love which serves all things great and small, every form of life being benefited thereby. As we grow we become servants of this internal light and seek in every way at our command to serve the Divine Purpose and in this way permit the Divine Purpose to flow unimpeded through
our own natures.

~Excerpted from Manly P Hall Lecture #271 – “The Third Eye in the Soul.”

Modern Man in Search of a Soul


Modern Man in Search of a Soul
by C.G. Jung

Considered by many to be one of the most important books in the field of psychology, Modern Man in Search of a Soul is a comprehensive introduction to the thought of Carl Gustav Jung. In this book, Jung examines some of the most contested and crucial areas in the field of analytical psychology, including dream analysis, the primitive unconscious, and the relationship between psychology and religion. Additionally, Jung looks at the differences between his theories and those of Sigmund Freud, providing a valuable basis for anyone interested in the fundamentals of psychoanalysis.

Depth Psychology Alliance

Depth Psychology Alliance vision is to make Depth Psychology universally accessible and to foster meaningful insight into the human psyche and the collective soul. Integral to this vision is the spirit of service. We aspire to serve as a source of warmth, replenishment, and interconnectivity in the ongoing process of tending to soul.

Depth Psychology Alliance mission is to serve all individuals and organizations who are passionate about the power of Depth Psychology; to cultivate a dynamic global gathering place for EXPOSURE to as well as the EXPLORATION and EXCHANGE of 1) the ideas, principles and practices of the various depth psychologies, 2) new and existing resources, while at the same time 3) encouraging opportunities to connect and dialogue with like minded others.

 

Hermes as The Guide of Souls

Hermes as The Guide of Souls and New Beginnings
Nancy Swift Furlotti

Sampling the beauty and the breadth and depth of this new website, Hermes comes to mind as the perfect embodiment of its energy and force behind it. He is that winged god who brings his caduceus, the staff entwined with two snakes, to bear on the unexplored opposites in our psyche, mediating and acting as messenger in the empty spaces that need light. The snakes represent poison and healing. As the Guide of Souls he conjures up the new creation. He is an androgynous god, representing the archetypal energy of challenge and change; the energizing force that sets off our curiosity and our imagination that entices us onto our inner journey of self-exploration.

How do we know this Hermes? He plays outside the boundaries, poking us to think beyond our safe ordered lives. He is of the underworld, born in a cave, comfortable traveling between the inner and outer of our lives. Hermes is the bridging element in between, the god of the middle and empty spaces, the crossroads where four-cornered herms are raised in his honor. He is the journeyman we run into on our path of life. Meeting and finding through luck or theft are related to his connection to happiness and fortune, accidental happenings. As the thief on the path, he is a skilled highwayman and flattering deceiver who prowls in the dark, as in one’s dreams or nightmares. Love and riches are two themes Hermes sings about. Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory, is a favorite along with her daughters, the Muses. He is connected to the Fates as well. Through them, the deep and eternal nature of life is remembered as the cosmic ground of all existence.

Through his prodding, thievery, and trickery Hermes guides the process of individuation. This is a Jungian term referring to our inner soul’s journey that is unique to each one of us. On this path, we move away from established collective dictates of how to be, how to act, how to feel and instead find our own way. It is a movement from persona to soul. Our personalities are a mix of opposites and multiplicities containing both masculine and feminine, for example. The goal of individuation is to become conscious of these many pairs of opposites, resulting in the experience of transcending the old and welcoming in the new attitude, new behavior, or new symbol that is born from within. This is the essence of change that occurs over and over again in our lives leading us towards wholeness and a greater sense of fulfillment.

For a man the soul is feminine, whereas for a woman the soul is masculine. Because of these counter-valences, we tend to project these opposing inner parts of ourselves onto our real life partners, resulting in the many conflicts and confusions we experience in our relationships. It is here the soup gets stirred. As the fire of Hermes turns up the flame, we are in for change. Woe to the person who ignores Hermes! If you fight the call or merely ignore it, the fire will blow out and you will be left in a regressed, inflexible life. If his beaconing is not heeded, the need for change can end up in symptoms of conflict and depression, anxiety, or somatic illnesses. This invisible god is quite determined, so it behooves us all to listen with our inner ear for his murmurings leading us to our soul and to the deep ground of our being.