Quote of the Day – January 21 2012

“Loving knowledge, understanding what knowledge is is a whole different thing than gaining knowledge.”
— Michael Tsarion

He goes on to say that gaining knowledge for specific needs is easy. I can relate to this quite a bit. I love gaining knowledge, learning new things, new factoids, pieces of the puzzle. I may put things together in strange ways connecting sky to grass to stars in a mosaic like way but even then i can learn from patterns that emerge or at least keep myself and occasionally others amused. These days, amusement feels like a much needed commodity.

a little doggerel for tonight:

One needs no excuse for seducing the muse
Self expressions the proof and we’re raising the roof
beyond limits we move doing things that we love
creating the existence we crave with persistence.

Namaste, G

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Om Fields by G A Rosenberg

Quote of the Day – November 30 2011

“We have forgotten that our sovereign duty is to leave the world in a better condition than when we each entered it”
–Michael Tsarion

 

In Atlanta GA, after a day of enjoyable flights both of fancy and in the air but somewhere 3 hours if not the whole day seems to have vanished. Still, saw a beautiful crimson sunset as we were flying into Minneapolis and some really nice reflections on what it means to own and take responsibility for our lives and some great meditation letting thoughts, images songs pop in and out, then landing and meeting with friends, all in all a pretty excellent travel experience. I plan to write more tomorrow when internal and external times and rhythms catch up a bit
Namaste,
GAR

 

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Starseed by G A Rosenbergt

Quote of the Day – November 18 2011

“Man is the world and the world is man. Nature is the self and the self is nature. A natural religion is a human religion. Consciousness, of one sort or another, is shared by everything living here and now in the creation, from the neutron star to the subatomic particle. Nothing is dead. Nothing is inanimate. A thing lives, and has an everlasting relationship with everything else. Man is not alone in the creation and does not require remote invisible voices behind the clouds or in the dark places beneath the earth to instruct or waylay him. Man is his own student and teacher and his prestigious school is nature, the House of Life. Nothing is missing in the life of a man who has nature as his mentor.”
–Michael Tsarion, Irish Origins of Civilization

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Cubic Space 4 by G A Rosenberg