Whispers from Grace

 
“Listen. Can you hear the voice of wisdom whispering in the silence?”- Shani

“Listen. Can you hear the voice of wisdom whispering in the silence?”

- Shani

 
 

The following passage captures perfectly what it means to listen to the stillness (or silence) and captures perfectly the intention for our time together:

Sacred Silence
- By Richard Rohr, The Centre for Contemplation and Action

Most of us who live in a capitalist culture, where everything is about competing and comparing, will find contemplation extremely counterintuitive. How do we grasp something as empty, as harmless, as seemingly fruitless as the practice of silence?

Silence needs to be understood in a larger way than simply a lack of audible noise. Whenever emptiness—what seems like empty space or absence of sound—becomes its own kind of fullness with its own kind of sweet voice, we have just experienced sacred silence.

When religious folks limit their focus in prayer to external technique and formula, the soul remains largely untouched and unchanged. Too much emphasis on what I call “social prayer” or wordy prayer feeds our egos and gives us far too much to argue about. How can we truly pray when we are preoccupied with formula and perfection of technique?

If we can see silence as the ground of all words and the birth of all words, then when we speak, our words will be calmer and well-chosen. Our thoughts will be non-judgmental. Our actions will have greater integrity and impact.

When we recognize something as beautiful, that knowledge partly emerges from the silence around it. It may be why we are quiet in art galleries and symphony halls.

As one author I read years ago said, silence is the net below the tightrope walker. We are walking, trying to find the right words to explain our experience and the right actions to match our values. Silence is that safety net that allows us to fall; it admits, as poets often do, that no words or deeds will ever be perfectly right or sufficient. A regular practice of contemplation helps us trust that silence will uphold us, receive our mistakes, and give us the courage to learn and grow.


 

As Richard Rohr so beautifully expresses, at the heart of all spiritual traditions is the recognition that we are One with all of life - that there is no separation. 

Together let us embrace the art of listening to the silence…
and hearing the wisdom that transcends all words!


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When you don’t cover up the world with words and labels, a sense of the miraculous returns to your life that was lost a long time ago when humanity, instead of using thought, became possessed by thoughts. A depth returns to your life. Things regain their newness, their freshness. And the greatest miracle is the experiencing of your essential self as prior to any words, thoughts, mental labels, and images. For this to happen, you need to disentangle your sense of I, of Beingness, from all the things it has become mixed up with, that is to say identified with. That disentanglement is what this book is all about.”
- Eckhart Tolle, “A New Earth”


The Ho’oponopono Forgiveness Ritual

This ancient Hawaiin forgiveness ritual proceeds from an understanding of the unity of everything in the world, which is true even though we feel ourselves to be separate. Because everything influences everything else, we contribute to harmony if we discover our share in disharmony and enter instead into the healing process of directing the following four sentences to a person or situation (can be spoken or said silently):

I am sorry
Please forgive me
I love you
Thank you


 

On Grace…

 
 

“Grace is the constant love that animates, permeates and balances everything and everyone. When we bring awareness and gratitude to Grace, it awakens balances, and resolves even the unresolvable.”

- Pamela Wilson


“We need a return to grace. We are all fighting hard battles, and we need all the help we can get. Yet we’ve lost sight of grace, which for so long was an essential, treasured quality, and which ought to be at the heart of how we interact, how we inhabit our bodies and the world around us. Life in the twenty-first century is often rushed, clumsy, and frustrating. We’re distracted and we let the door slam on the person behind us, we trip over curbs as we’re texting, we’re running late, we fail to notice. Our bent postures show us the unfeeling habits we’ve fallen into. We’ve given into gravity. We’ve forgotten how to move through life with grace.”*
- Excerpt from “The Art of Grace” by Sarah L. Kaufmann


* We are here to remember - welcome to our journey! 💗

 

"Qi": Mysterious, Illusive and Omnipresent

When people ask me what Qigong is, I generally give them a very simple answer: “Qi means life force energy and Gong means the flow of or practice of; so Qigong means the practice of flowing life force energy. Though this simple definition is accurate it fails to fully capture the essence and mystery of Qigong. To fully understand Qigong one must experience it.

 
“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.”- Albert Einstein

“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.”

- Albert Einstein

 

Embracing the illusive, the unknown and the unseen “qi” is an essential part of the practice of qigong. In my experience, words inevitably fall short of fully describing what qi is how qigong works. Nonetheless, there is great value in hearing how qigong masters define qi…

 
It is our qi that holds us together, animates us and makes us who we really are. It is our true self, the source of consciousness, awareness and life. Without it nothing lives. When our invisible life force signal, qi, is in orderly action, life thrives and well-being abounds.
— Master Waysun Liao

 
 
Qi is energy in any and all of its guises and forms. It is the electricity that lights up a room or emblazons the sky. It is the electromagnetism that envelops Earth. It is the crisp vitality you feel after a good night’s sleep on the first day of your vacation. It regulates the unconscious activity of internal and external organs that you never notice until the activity is somehow impeded. It is manifested in the love you feel for the kind and caring, the hatred you feel for the wicked and cruel. Desire, floating, pity, envy, joy...all are expressions of qi.
— "Qi Energy for Heath and Healing", by Mallory Fromm, Ph.D

 
 
Qi can be most simply understood as your physical breath that exists when you are born and disappears when you die. This breath links the different energies of life and it can be defined as the basic energy of all living things on this planet.
— "Earth Qi Gong for Women , Awaken Your Inner Healing Power" - by Tina Chunna Zhang

 
 
Qi is the life energy one senses in nature. When we appreciate the beauty of animals, fish, birds, flowers, trees, mountains, the deep ocean and floating clouds, we are sensing their qi and feeling an intuitive unity with them.
— "The Way of Qigong - The Art and Science of Chinese Energy Healing", by Kenneth S. Cohen

 
 
Before the advent of quantum physics, the Chinese had formulated that all things are composed of energy particles that are constantly spiralling in space, connecting and influencing each other throughout the Universe. They called this dynamic life force energy, “qi”.
— "Women's Qigong for Health & Longevity" , by Deborah Davis. Lac, MAOM

 
 
The word qi is a word that seems to transcend definition going beyond words into the realm of experience. Qi is defined as the basis of life. According to Chinese culture, all living things require qi; in Western terms, qi is defined as vital energy. Qi theory is a cosmic theory that states that because human beings and all living things on our planet were produced from the qi in the universe, so each part of the human body is related to the movements in the universe. The Taoist symbol of yin and yang vividly depicts the movement of all things in the universe, from the energy within our own bodies to the expanses of the solar system. Similar theories permeate cultures worldwide.
— "A Woman's Qigong Guide - Empowerment Through Movement, Diet, and Herbs" , by Yanling Lee Johnson
 

Be totally empty,
embrace the tranquility of peace.
Watch the workings of all creation,
observe how endings become beginnings.

All creatures in the universe
return to the point where they began.
Returning to the source is tranquility
meaning submitting to what is and what is to be.
— "The Tao Te Ching", by Lao Tse