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"all you need is love..."

Posted on Apr 3rd, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
George Harrison - Gopala Krishna


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Blessing....

Posted on Apr 7th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Poem: "Beannacht"


A BLESSING FOR EQUILIBRIUM.
BY JOHN O’DONOHUE, from

 ‘Benedictus – A Book of Blessings’

Like the joy of the sea coming home to shore,
May the music of laughter break through your soul.

As the wind wants to make everything dance,
May your gravity be lightened by grace.

Like the freedom of the monastery bell,
May clarity of mind make your eyes smile.

As water takes whatever shape it is in,
So free may you be about who you become.

As silence smiles on the other side of what’s said,
May a sense of irony give you perspective.

As time remains free of all that it frames,
May fear or worry never put you in chains.

May your prayer of listening deepen enough
To hear in the distance the laughter of God.

 .
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for Love of the Wuff!

Posted on Apr 15th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
OBwuffBeach

littleBuddha copy



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in the forest of your Soul..

Posted on Apr 16th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Eire in May


may the earth bless you
  in the forest of your
  soul...

       may you anchor in the green of 
interconnectedness and gratefully acknowledge,
         you are never
      alone
    
may holiness embrace you like a van gogh
Sun
      and  light the candles of
 global consciousness..

may you breathe in the divine of Peace
 and Harvest an 
infinite love 
for this One precious 
moment.... 

    om namo bhagavate vasudevaya
         tess owens
warriorHeart


Lorenna McKennit The Mummers Dance






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the Sun of Spiritual Consciousness

Posted on Apr 20th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Gayatri mantra

oṃ bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ 
tát savitúr váreniyaṃ 
bhárgo devásya dhīmahi 
dhíyo yó naḥ pracodáyāt

we meditate upon the radiant Divine Light 
of that adorable Sun of Spiritual Consciousness; 
May it awaken our intuitional consciousness

this moment


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"before I was named, I belonged to you...."

Posted on Apr 21st, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
"Nowhere my Beloved, will world be but within us" Rilke

Ninth Duino Elegy
(excerpt for Earth Day)

 

Praise the world to the angel: leave the unsayable aside.
Your exalted feelings do not move her.
In the universe, where she feels feelings, you are a beginner.
Therefore show her what is ordinary, what has been
shaped from generation to generation, shaped by hand and eye.
Tell her of things.  she will stand still in astonishment,
the way you stood by the ropemaker in Rome
or beside the potter on the Nile.
Show her how happy a thing can be, how innocent and ours,
how even a lament takes pure form,
serves as a thing, dies as a thing,
while the violin, blessing it, fades.

 

And the things, even as they pass,
understand that we praise them.
Transient, they are trusting us
to save them - us, the most transient of all.
As if they wanted in our invisible hearts
to be transformed
into - oh, endlessly - into us.

 

Earth, isn't this what you want?  To arise in us, invisible?
Is it not your dream, to enter us so wholly
there's nothing left outside us to see?
What, if not transformation,
is your deepest purpose?  Earth, my love,
I want that too.  Believe me,
no more of your springtimes are needed
to win me over - even one flower
is more than enough.  Before I was named
I belonged to you.  I seek no other law
but yours, and know I can trust
the death you will bring.

 ~ Rainer Maria Rilke ~


sittingwithCompassion


The Earth as Buddha, 
The Earth as Dharma,
The Earth as Sangha



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made from this Earth....

Posted on Apr 22nd, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Severn Suzuki speaking at UN Earth Summit 1992


http://www.thegreatwarming.com/localhero-interviewsevernsuzuki.html
http://www.davidsuzuki.org/NatureChallenge/


The way we see the world shapes the way we treat it. If a mountain is a deity, not a pile of ore; if a river is one of the veins of the land, not potential irrigation water; if a forest is a sacred grove, not timber; if other species are our biological kin, not resources; or if the planet is our mother, not an opportunity - then we will treat each one with greater respect. That is the challenge, to look at the world from a different perspective. (From A David Suzuki Collection)
earthinspace


Nobel Peace Prize Winner Wangari Maathai Pulls out of Olympic Torch Relay

April 9, 2008
Dar es Salaam, Thursday, April 10, 2008

In celebration of the “Green” Olympics in Beijing, I agreed to be a torch bearer to honor and support the athletes of the world who demonstrate the triumph of the human spirit. 

With respect to the upcoming Beijing Olympics, I have been aware of the environmental challenges China has faced as a fast growing economy that is largely dependent on fossil fuels. Some of the environmental initiatives taken by China to comply with the spirit of a “green Olympics” such as planting trees and controlling pollution have been commendable. 

Nevertheless, I have grappled with the contentious issues surrounding the Olympics and which are being raised daily by human rights and environmental activists. I am sensitive on the need to demonstrate our commitment to the issues of human rights and the environment. Here in Africa we have benefited greatly from the solidarity of the international community when we most needed it. Without such solidarity at the international level our own political crisis would likely have degenerated into unmanageable levels.

These Olympics have focused the world’s attention on the political and humanitarian crises in Darfur, Tibet and Burma. However, such challenges are also being faced in many other corners of the world. In Kenya, we are faced with a political and humanitarian crisis that is in great need of the solidarity of the international community, and without which the State could easily collapse. Just a week ago, my own efforts to bring about a more just and fair representation in the cabinet was met with teargas and gross violations of our fundamental rights of assembly and expression. Closer to home are the untold trials and tribulations of the people of Darfur, which the world seems to have forgotten. In all of these issues China can make a difference and that is what the world is urging them to do. 

I am troubled that these Olympics, rather than being a unifying movement, have become most divisive. Therefore, while acknowledging the extraordinary honor of having been asked to participate in the Olympic relay, I deeply regret that as a Nobel Peace Laureate, I shall not participate as a torch bearer in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on Sunday 13th April, 2008. 

------------------------------------------

Wangari Maathai founded the Green Belt Movement in 1977 - a grassroots environmental organization which has assisted women and their families in planting more than 40 million trees across Kenya. Since this time she has campaigned tirelessly for democracy, human rights and environmental conservation. In 2004, Wangari Maathai was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, recognizing that for peace there needs to be sustainable and equitable distribution of resources. She is the Goodwill Ambassador for Congo Forest Basin and a member of the Nobel Women's Initiative. 

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the Soloist... Disabled and Disposed in Los Angeles

Posted on Apr 25th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
nathaniel ayers

Homeless Violinist, Journalist Forge Unlikely Friendship

Listen Now [39 min 29 sec] 

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89819987

News & Notes , April 22, 2008 · Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez was strolling through the city when he saw a homeless man playing classical violin. His name, Lopez discovered, is Nathaniel Ayers. And, in addition to musical talent, Nathaniel has schizophrenia.

Lopez talks with Farai Chideya about his friendship with Ayers and how he captured it in his new book,The Soloist: A Lost Dream, an Unlikely Friendship, and the Redemptive Power of Music

20037512

 

A musician of the streets

Nathaniel Ayers' struggle is a window onto the lives of thousands.

January 3, 2006

READERS OF THE TIMES HAVE watched Nathaniel Ayers — musician, schizophrenic, street dweller — creep for eight months toward a better life under the empathetic eye of columnist Steve Lopez. Ayers' is a hard case, mired in decades of sporadically treated mental illness, cemented by habit to a patch of sidewalk at the mouth of a tunnel in downtown Los Angeles. He also is the public's window into the promise and difficulties of a new approach in California to cases like his, offering assistance for the whole person rather than treatment for a disease. For the first time in years, thanks to a 2004 ballot initiative, public health agencies will have enough funds to seek out people like Ayers rather than limit who can be helped.

What Lopez pulled together on Ayers' behalf — a cadre of patient caseworkers, a freshly painted apartment with supportive services, a reconnection with professional classical musicians, encouragement to resume treatment for his mental illness — has not pulled Ayers off the street. He still sleeps on the sidewalk, believing that the spirit of Beethoven will protect him. But Ayers' view of himself is changing; his connection to a community may be taking hold.

Before this violinist of the streets caught a curious newspaperman's eye, Ayers seemed beyond help, to himself and the public health system. He couldn't keep appointments, and he spurned medication or other treatment. Many such people end up in jail, the state's biggest single repository for the mentally ill.

20037504

A new year, a new start

Now, with a dedicated tax bringing in more than $700 million a year statewide for mental health services, thousands more people have a chance at better-tailored assistance.

The help will not wipe away the complex hell of Los Angeles' skid row, but expanded programs to help people off the streets would separate predators from their most helpless prey, giving law enforcement a moral clarity it now lacks.

Voters in November 2004 passed Proposition 63, the Mental Health Services Act, adding an extra 1% to the income tax of those making $1 million or more per year. Such dedicated taxes are a poor way to legislate, yet backers saw no likelihood of getting the hundreds of millions of dollars needed to properly treat the state's indigent mentally ill from the state Legislature.

Now that the money is flowing, mental health advocates who wrote and backed the Mental Health Services Act must implement a tidal change in the culture of public mental health.

The money is being divided between state and county programs, targeting such groups as disturbed young children, hardened street dwellers and the isolated elderly. A state oversight board led by Darryl Steinberg, the former state legislator who was the driving force behind Proposition 63, is assessing county plans. Eventually, most of the money is to be spent through counties; the work is daunting, and success won't be immediate.

One of the models for the new culture is the Village in Long Beach. It is run by the Mental Health Assn. of Los Angeles, a nonprofit whose leaders were instrumental in writing Proposition 63. The Village's teams of social workers, psychiatrists and counselors offer menus of housing, employment and treatment options to severely mentally ill adults and to disturbed young people who have had their first brushes with the law. Its "members" suffer from schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or depression, sometimes in combination with addiction.

It's a costly approach when compared with sporadic visits to a county mental health clinic. A Village client's tab averages about $18,000 a year. But more of them end up recovering, housed and employed or on Social Security disability income, which defrays housing and treatment costs. Because the ill help define their own treatment, they are better able to stick to it, say proponents.

Such programs seem a little less costly when compared with the thousands of dollars in emergency-room treatment racked up by the indigent when their untreated illnesses reach a crisis state. Or the cost of jailing the mentally ill for offenses both petty and grave. There's also the human cost of ignoring the mentally ill, as so often happens now. It can be seen in the bodies regularly found on skid row at dawn — four of them on one recent day, lost people killed by disease or an overdose.

Another admirable model is the meticulous conversion of an old downtown L.A. hotel, the St. George, by the Skid Row Housing Trust. It offers big-windowed rooms, along with on-site counseling, psychiatric services, addiction programs and a staff nurse. It boasts a large communal kitchen, laundry facility and a comfortable lounge equipped with computers. The St. George staff seeks out and serves the hardest cases — the mentally ill, the HIV-positive and addicted who are chronically homeless.

Now, due to the explicit requirements of Proposition 63, this comprehensive approach is becoming the law. Families of the mentally ill are part of the planning, along with businesses and law enforcement.

Ultimately, success will depend on whether large bureaucratic cultures, including the L.A. County Department of Mental Health, can transform themselves, shedding outdated rules and states of mind. It will depend on thorough state oversight and assessment of programs vying for funds. It will depend on public education that encourages the mentally ill and their families, in culturally effective ways, to seek help quickly rather than tough it out. It will depend on the cooperation of other government bodies.

The attention being paid to skid row and homelessness by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the City Council is encouraging; last month, Villaraigosa announced federal funding that will bring the city's housing trust fund to $100 million for this year. Yet the city, with its housing funds, and the county, which will control treatment funds, soon must develop better ways to work together to combine shelter and supportive services.

Beyond one man's story

Thanks to Steve Lopez, we all now know the story of one classically trained musician lost to schizophrenia who is slowly, erratically trying to pull back from the brink. We can grasp how hard Ayers' struggle will remain. But what if he had been helped more persistently before years on the streets hardened his illness and his suspicions? Recent research hints that he might have been more able to cope with ordinary life, if not cured.

Pulling together lives before they descend to the streets or to prison is the ultimate goal of Proposition 63. We hope the people and agencies handed this task in the new year are up to it.

20037511

Steve Lopez's 5-part series was sparked by his friendship with Nathaniel Anthony Ayers, a homeless musician with schizophrenia who sleeps each night on one of skid row's most dangerous streets. Lopez has chronicled Ayers' life on the streets in his columns, listed here:http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lopez-skidrow-nathaniel-series,0,1456093.special




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only Breath...

Posted on Apr 28th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Poetry by RUMI -- Only Breath


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Cry of the Snow Lion...a documentary on Tibet

Posted on Apr 29th, 2008 by hrtScholar : with one Heart... hrtScholar
Cry of the Snow Lion;a documentary on Tibet
::link to hokai's blog, where you can watch or
http://hokai.info/2008/04/cry-of-snow-lion.html
Cry of a Snow Lion is a 2002 documentary on the
history of Tibetan tragedy
Time 1 hour 43 minutes.
As he says:
Hokai says "Spread the word!"


may holiness embrace you like a van gogh
Sun
      and  light the candles of
 global consciousness..
with loving intention, I bow
tess owens
heartChakra

for as long as space endures
and for as long as living beings remain,
until then may I too abide
to dispel the misery of the world.

shantideva
healing the universe

this is a Getty Image

Imagine




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