Divine
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Divine
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Yogi Tea, run mostly here in Oregon, is an herbal tea designed for a particular mood or health enhancement, such as:
Detox Super Antioxidant Perfect Energy Positive Energy Stress Relief Calming …you get the idea. In my recent preparation of a cup of Ginger, I tore open the package, stewed the teabag in hot water, and read the inspirational message on the tiny paper tab. “Our intuition comes from innocence.” Of course, this is true. This is what Jesus meant, when he said that we should be as innocent as children. This is what Buddha meant, when he said we should strive for beginner’s mind. This is what all the great teachers mean, when they tell us to be free. Innocence does not mean naïve. Some of the most worldly people remain innocent. To be innocent is to be free and clear from all the negative self talk and anger and fear and pain that so often trap us. To be innocent is to show up open to the world, with our hearts full of hope. And in this openness, in our willingness to be led by a Universe of dazzling love, we intuit all we need to know. Much love, SARA P.S. Check our out September Course of the Month: Understand That You Are Enough. We were delighted to spy a young deer around the bar where our two very old llamas and two goats live.
They make up a small herd, and they wander the forests and meadows here, eating the blackberries and grasses to contentment. The deer was a surprise: a young deer, on its own, is never a good sign. It means the mother is gone, or dead. A deer of that age can’t survive well alone, even out here in this space that’s becoming increasingly more suburban with every year. So we were happy to find it sheltering with the herd; never actually in the barn, but looking on from a distance. We put out extra food, and hoped it would stay. A few days later, the deer was gone. A few days later, we found the skeleton, in the lower field, where the coyotes roam. It’s very sad to see such a young, beautiful animal come to such an end. It’s difficult to think of it: what happened and why, and all the circumstances that occurred that resulted in the young deer to be alone, without its mother, and the deer to be in that open field, in the pall of night, when the coyotes were traveling through. Life has these pieces of sadness. I don’t even want to think too much about the deer, because I will slip into other lifetimes where I saw this or was this, witness or deer or coyote, and it will send me into a well of pain. Saying, "it’s nature's way" doesn't help me with this. It's just pain, and loss, and such a shame. What could have been, now won’t be. I guess… I guess I’m glad I saw the young deer. I’m glad we sheltered it, at least for a few days, and welcomed it and gave it food, and saw its beauty and its vulnerability, and loved it. Now that I know what happened, I wondered… should we have tried to keep it, or hold it with us? But that wasn’t its destiny as deer. It’s a wild creature, not meant for a barn. I often find this whole Universe is beyond understanding. Nothing is random, I know. Which makes it even harder to understand the things that happen that are so sad, so ugly, so hard. In this life, we’re here be part of, and to appreciate. We're here to witness and to remember. And sometimes, when things are sad and confusing, tragic and unspeakable, we can’t do more than just show up and love. Much love, SARA We sometimes joke that we have OCD, when we’re being particularly fussy about objects or stuff or things.
My OCD kicked in, we say as we rearrange something on our desk. I’ve got OCD, we say as we clean something. It’s OCD, we say as we move something from one part of the room to another. Now of course, clinical OCD is a real issue, and people who have it suffer. I’ve known several, and it is a tough road. Yet many of us who are sensitive also experience some aspects of OCD, such as being extremely aware of the objects around us. For example, if someone you live with moves a chair from one spot to another in the room, it’s something most people might not notice, or even care about. But for the sensitive person, this shift will be registered immediately: you will sense the change in the energy of the room, a disturbance in the force, so to speak. If you need to have things just so, as many highly sensitive people do, understand that it is not about being fussy or picky or weird or a perfectionist. It’s about needing the energy in your surroundings to be a vibrational match to you.; to be a match to your personal frequency, to the layer or level of energy you’re usually in. It’s a kind of vibrational resonance, and to the sensitive person, everything… and by this I mean everything… plays a part. The chair, the book, the pen, the paper, the way the desk is centered between the window, the temperature in the room, the sounds outside. If something is off. you’re going to notice it. And if you can change it, you probably will. And if you can’t, you’ll notice it and name it and work around it. Every object holds energy. We, the animate, are not more energetic than the inanimate. It’s all energy. And if you’re sensitive, you feel and notice it all. Much love, SARA P.S. It's time to sign up for small group training Fall 2016. |
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May 2024
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About Sara
Sara Wiseman is an intuitive, channel and spiritual teacher. The founder of Intuition University, she's taught hundreds of thousands of students via her books, courses and training. |