β
A false sense of security is the only kind there is.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
If you don't know who you are, anyone can name you.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Run towards the roar,β the old people used to tell the young ones. When faced with great danger and when people panic and seek a false sense of safety, run towards the roaring and go where you fear to go. For only in facing your fears can you find some safety and a way through. When the world rattles and the end seems near, go towards the roar.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Timing can be everything and wisdom requires the patience to wait as well as the courage to leap when the time becomes right.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
When a person becomes aware of their genius and they live it and they give generously from it, they change the world, they affect the world. And when they depart everyone knows something is missing.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Becoming a genuine individual requires learning the oppositions within oneself. Those who fail or refuse to face the oppositions within have no choice but to find enemies to project upon. Enemy simply means a "not-friend;" unless a person deals with the not-friend within they require enemies around them.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
If we want the world to change, the healing of culture and greater balance in nature, it has to start inside the human soul.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Each life involves an essential errand; not simply the task of survival, but a life-mission embedded in the soul from the beginning.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Liberation happens each time we become conscious of the contents of the soul.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
The genius inside a person wants activity. Itβs connected to the stars; itβs connected to a spark and it wants to burn and it wants to make and it wants to create and it has gifts to give. That is the nature of inner genius.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
The ship is always off course. Anybody who sails knows that. Sailing is being off course and correcting. That gives a sense of what life is about.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
A true pilgrimage requires letting go of the very things most people try to hold onto. In seeking after what the soul desires, we become pilgrims with no home but the path the soul would have us follow.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
In the end, what we fear will not go away, for it indicates what we must go through in order to awaken, become more genuine, and live more fully. The problem is that we tend to be most afraid of what our own souls require of us. Often our deepest fear is that we might become who we are intended to be, who we already are at our core. For becoming who we truly are requires the greatest amount of change.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
In these dark and uncertain times, there can be great value in imagining a bit of star in each human soul.
Not just that it gives some hope for humanity at a time when manβs inhumanity to man seems ever on the increase; but also because it points to an inner brightness
that can light the way
in dark times.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
We may be closest to hearing the call when we feel most alone or in trouble, for genius hides behind the wound and one of the greatest wounds in life is to not know who we are intended to be or what we are supposed to serve in life.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Inside each one of us there is a mostly hidden, mostly golden, mostly eternal image or aspect of being, similar to the gold that is buried in the earth. We are the earthlings, the children of the earth, and therefore we are a replica, in a sense, of the earth itself. One of the ideas that is important is: As above, so below. As outside, so within.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Our job is not to comprehend or control everything, but to learn which story we are in and which of the many things calling out in the world is calling to us. Our job is to be fully alive in the life we have, to pick up the invisible thread of our own story and follow where it leads. Our job is to find the thread of our own dream and live it all the way to the end.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Mythic imagination can break the spell of time and open us to a level of life that remains timeless. Myth is not about what happened in past times; myth is about what happens to people all of the time.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
The real treasure of life, the one difficult to find and hard to attain, is never far from us. Thatβs an unwritten rule on this earth. What we desperately desire and need most is buried in the recesses of our innermost being all along. This is the open secret found in many traditions and told in many ways. Yet it remains a secret
because trusting in oneself remains one of the hardest things to do in life.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
The real education is when you awaken and nourish and guide the inner spirit, this inner genius. The community grows from the giving of the gifts of the people in it, which is really giving from the genius.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
To be purposeful is not to be goal oriented, but to seek to reconnect to the source of one's life.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Whether we know it or not, our lives are acts of imagination and the world is continually re-imagined through us.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Set within the seed of the soul is not jut a fleeting image or a vague pattern but a lifelong story enfolded within, waiting to be cracked open and lived all the way out.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
An old Celtic proverb boldly places death right at the center of life. βDeath is the middle of a long life,β they used to say. Ancient people did things like that; they put death at the center instead of casting it out of sight and leaving such an important subject until the last possible moment. Of course, they lived close to nature and couldnβt help but see how the forest grew from fallen trees and how death seemed to replenish life from fallen members. Only the unwise and the overly fearful think that death is the blind enemy of life.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
There is a greater will, a greater need and purpose hidden within each life, and there is an inner law that knows best how each must live and that is worth stealing for; itβs worth dying for, and worth living for as well.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Something deep in the human soul awakens as things fall apart. Something in the soul knows that everything in this world can become lost. And something in the soul knows how to survive periods of devastation, disorientation and loss. Descent and falling is the way of the soul from its beginning. We each fell from the womb of life when the waters of the inner sea broke and it came time for us to breathe on our own.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Myth and nature are the two great garments of the world, with nature being the living green garment that covers the planet and myth being the multidimensional, many-colored fabric that continually weaves human culture.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
When a situation feels like a matter of life and death the deep self is close at hand and it already carries inner medicine and its own life remedy.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Education at a deep level means to βlead outβ what is trying to be born from within. The job of a true teacher is to help awaken the inner pupil that has its own way of being and unique way of perceiving
the world.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
All meaningful change requires a genuine surrender. Yet, to surrender does not simply mean to give up; more to give up oneβs usual self and allow something other to enter and redeem the lesser sense of self. In surrendering, we fall to the bottom of our arguments and seek to touch the origin of our lives again. Only then can we see as we were meant to see, from the depth of the psyche where the genius resides, where the seeds of wisdom and purpose were planted before we were born.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Fate and destiny are close woven within us and near them can be found the true genius of our lives.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
At critical junctures, outer trouble and the inner need to grow conspire to set each of us on a path of awakening and initiation.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Water of Life:Initiation and the Tempering of the Soul)
β
The wound in one person can become the door through which everyone can find the center of life again.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Life roars at us when it wants or needs us to change. Ultimately, change means trans formation, a shifting from one form to another that involves the magic of creation. The trouble with entrenched oppositions is that each side becomes increasingly one-sided and single minded and unable to grow or meaningfully change. In the blindness of fear and the willfulness of abstract beliefs, people forget or reject the unseen yet essential unity that underlies all the oppositions in life.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Mentoring is an archetypal activity that has timeless elements which can connect us to the universal ground where nature renews itself and culture becomes reimagined. Youth and elder meet where the pressure of the future meets the presence of the past. Old and young are opposites that secretly identify with each other; for neither fits well into the mainstream of life.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Once a person falls in the fields of love, all the rules are already broken; the lover becomes open an exalted in ways that transcend the local issues as well as the commonly held beliefs. Love, like genuine devotion, will find a way. Where duty becomes replaced with love, a greater and deeper faith will blossom forth.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Whatβs secretly in the water
of modern culture is that people
enter the world empty.
Thatβs a very dangerous idea,
because if everybodyβs empty
than other people can get us
to do whatever they want
because thereβs nothing
in us to stand against it.
But if we came to do
something thatβs meaningful,
that involves giving and
making the world a more
beautiful, healthy, lively place,
then you become a difficult person
to move around and manipulate.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
The hardest thing in life may be to learn to truly trust that there is something noble and generative in ourselves. This is a greater sense of the notion of believing in our self; to truly believe in oneself means to uncover the inner core of imagination and authenticity that can also be called the genius within us. When we connect to the inner resident of the soul, we also learn how we are woven to the Soul of the World.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
The New Year is not something before us, it is something hidden within us trying to find the light. Donβt wait for the right gift to be given to you. Look inside instead and find the Holy message
trying to be opened.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
At critical moments the veil between the little-self and the deep self thins and a meaningful self-adjustment becomes possible. If a person does not become paralyzed with fear or frozen in hatred, the wise self hidden within will rise to the occasion.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Whereas literalists and fundamentalists tend to choose one pole of any dilemma or opposition, whereas modern political parties and religious groups tend towards demonizing each other, the creative individual must be born again and again in the crucible created by the tension between opposing instincts, conflicted feelings, and contrasting ideas.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Living myth is about the experience of the waters parting again in the here and now. As a critical moment opens before us the spirit of life and genius of the soul speaks to us and through us. What was about to crush us suddenly parts before us and we shoot forward with the sudden vitality of life, fueled by the living imagination needed to survive.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Human beings long for connection, and our sense of usefulness derives from the feeling of connectedness. When we are connected β to our own purpose, to the community around us, and to our spiritual wisdom β we are able to live and act with authentic effectiveness.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
In seeking after what the soul desires we become pilgrims with no home but the path the soul would have us follow.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Every mistake is a new style.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
A genuine education must somehow serve the wings of spirit and imagination that each child brings to life.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Healing is a revolutionary act and we are here to awaken to the true nature of our own souls and the gifts we have to give to the world.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
The problem in most situations is not a lack of calling; but a fear of responding to the call.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
The purpose of conflict is to create.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Some might ask whether the path is before us or within us. The answer is: Yes. We are both driven from within by our resident spirit and something outside calls forth the genius within us.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Hearing a story awakens the mythic story living in each of us. It places us in a βmythic conditionβ that reconnects us to the core imagination and living story at the center of our soul. Being touched by myth carries us to the center where the world is always ending and always beginning again.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Amidst the rush and confusion of modern life something old and wise is trying to catch up with us. Whereas simple knowledge tends to divide things, genuine wisdom tends to make meaningful unity possible.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Long ago, Margaret Mead, the world-famous anthropologist, noted that we should "never underestimate the power of a small group with dedication to change the world; it is, in fact, the only thing that does.
β
β
Michael J. Marquardt
β
What is most lacking in the modern world of duplications and facsimiles, of endless information and intentional misinformation, is the authenticity that makes life truly meaningful and spiritually rewarding.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
To become nobody but your true self and to struggle against the tide of sameness and the false security of simply fitting in is a fight worth having. To become oneself by contributing oneβs native gifts and talents to this troubled world: that is the job to keep applying for and a work worth spending an entire life doing.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
A certain kind of courage is required to follow what truly calls to us; why else would so many choose to live within false certainties and pretensions of security? If genuine treasures were easy to find this world would be a different place. If the path of dreams were easy to walk or predictable to follow many more would go that route. The truth is that most prefer the safer paths in life even if they know that their souls are called another way.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
If a man does not know the wounds of his own soul, he can deny not just his own pain, but also be unmoved by the suffering of other people. More than that, he will tend to put his wound onto others. He may only be able to see the wound that secretly troubles him when he forcefully projects it into someone else, in forms of abuse or violence.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
When it comes to the human soul, the real battle is the struggle to truly become oneself. Not the self that others might want us to be, not even the self that we might wish to be; but the deep self and inner soul trying to awaken at critical crossroads in each life.
β
β
Michael Meade (Awakening the Soul: A Deep Response to a Troubled World)
β
The second adventure involves the divine spark hidden in each soul and the dark times require that the inner light of soul be found again. Perhaps there is no greater time to awaken to the adventure the soul
would have us live and become agents of the divine in
this world.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Something ancient in us bends us toward the origins of the whole thing. We either drown in the splits and confusions of our lives, or we surrender to something greater than ourselves. The water of our deepest troubles is also the water of our own solution. In surrender, we descend down to the bottom of it and back to the beginning of it; down into what is divided in order to get back to the wholeness before the split. Healing, health, wealth, wholeness: all hail from the same roots. To heal is to make whole again; wholeness is what all healing seeks and what alone can truly unify our spirit.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
The only choice once your world has been torn apart is to find your genius and live with that. βNormalβ is out of the question. The healing for veterans, or anyone going through great tragedy, is finding your natural spirit and your genius that was waiting to be found. That can now become the cohering principle in your life. The idea of patching someone up and back into normal when theyβve had extremely abnormal experiences is a misunderstanding.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Our deepest longings and the question of who we are intended to be cuts us in half, dividing us within ourselves. At critical stages and significant moments in the course of life, we sink with the weight of our own questions; we drown in our own psyche in order to reach a subtle ground that secretly sustains our every breath. In that sense, all separations, splits, and conflicts are evidence of a unity we long to find, both individually and collectively.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
The human soul is a living paradoxβneither a predetermined personality nor a completely open possibility. The point in this life is not simply to βbecome somebody,β but to become who we were each intended to be when we first entered this world. For each of us has the most to give and contributes most meaningfully when we become who we were intended to be from the beginning. That is the inside story and the hidden message that has been etched upon each soul.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
As many old teachings suggest, bringing forth that which is in our nature will save us, while failing to bring forth our genuine nature
will doom us. The real risk in this life has always been that of becoming oneself amidst the uncertainties of existence. As an Irish poet once said, 'a false sense of security is the only kind there is.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
The old idea is that when tragedy strikes or when an obstacle blocks us, there are only two possibilities. We either become a smaller person or we become a bigger person. If itβs a real life change you cannot come out the same. So therefore, youβre either going to come out smaller or you are going to rise up and ultimately come out of it a bigger person.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Unless a person learns of the sacred intentions in their own life it will be difficult for them to understand the sacred presence in all of life.
β
β
Michael Meade (The World Behind The World: Living at the Ends of Time)
β
There is a poem at the heart of things and a mythic story in the heart of each of us.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Our answer, our opportunity, our chance to change the world has to come from the poetry that is already written on the walls of the soul.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
We are wrapped around a mystery to which we were drawn before we were born.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
A community best serves itself when it truly serves the awakening of the unique story trying to come to life through each person born.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Where reason fails and logic stumbles, myth waits to open paths of imagination and understanding.
β
β
Michael Meade (Awakening the Soul: A Deep Response to a Troubled World)
β
The home we are looking for in this world is within us all along. The lost home that we are seeking is ourselves; it is the story we carry within our soul.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
If we want the world to change, it has to start inside the human soul.
β
β
Michael Meade
β
Myths are intended to break the spell of time and release us from the immediate pressures and limitations of daily life.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Soul is found where life deepens us, where meaning calls to us, where trouble deters us, wherever and however we slow down in the midst of the rushing and racing at the surface level of life.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
The thread that ties us to the center is the hidden cord of the heart, it is the thread of genius that can connect the mind with the heart, that allows the mind to feel and reveals the thought set within the heart.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Each soul lives on the verge of remembering the forgotten agreement and original dream that it carries; yet each moment can be another point when the dream of life becomes lost again. Each meaningful step we take on the path of life involves some tension between the needs of the common world and the dreams of the soul. This inherent tension can stop us in our tracks, yet can also be the source of vital energy needed for the soul to grow. Each time we remember a piece of why we came to life we pull the seeds of eternity farther into the world of time. The inner seed keeps trying to sprout, but often our fate must place us in a crossroads or nail us to a cross before we pay proper attention to it.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
What good is a dream that doesnβt test the mettle of the dreamer? What good is a path that doesnβt carry us to the edge of our capacity and then beyond that place? A true calling involves a great exposure before it can become a genuine refuge.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Searching outside oneself for what can only be found within can lead to a life lived in the wrong direction and sacrifices made for the wrong reasons. People can wind up alienated from themselves even if they achieve lofty goals set by others.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Everyone who enters the world comes in with hidden gold, it's called your natural gifts. The job of a person is to find the hidden gold and give it. It turns out that when you give it you get more than when you hold on to it, that's the economy of the soul.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Light Inside Dark Times)
β
Many people believe that eliminating the apparent causes of fear will eliminate it, but fear, like beauty, is part of the world. The fear of fear results in the growth of terror as well as a loss of the beauty and wonder of the world. By fearing fear, we create the room for terror and panic to grow. People become blinded by fear, driven by anxieties, and increasingly ruled by phobias and obsessions. When we fail to recognize how fear works in the world, we become ruled by it. The point is not to become paralyzed with foreboding or be caught in the panic that can grip the collective and cause people to run blindly in the wrong direction. The point is to willingly go where most fear to go, to follow where the fear might lead and face the ways that the world roars at us.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
One of the open secrets of life on earth is that the answer to lifeβs burning question has been inscribed in oneβs soul all along. The soul is a kind of ancient vessel that holds the exact knowledge we seek and need to find our way in life. Each life is a pilgrimage intended to arrive at the center of the pilgrimβs soul. From that vantage point, the issue is not whether we managed to choose the right god or the only way to live righteously; such notions fail to recognize the inborn intimacy each soul already has with the divine.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
The divine is at the edge of our awareness and vision, but it is also within us as the first seeker found when all seemed lost completely. In order to find the dream of life again, we must first find the way that the dream exists within our own souls. We may be daunted by the surfacing of all the dilemmas and trouble of this troubled world, but the deep self and soul within us already knows how we are intended to swim in the blessed turmoil of the waters of life. For humans exist to bring meaning to the surface of life and awareness to the dream of existence.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
Something watches over us and we know it when we follow the little voice inside or heed the warning or inspiration that arrives as if on wings. We need the intermediaries that keep us close to the spirit of life, to the wonders of nature and to the subtleties of our own inner nature.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
If the way to the center were easy to findβif it were capable of being captured in doctrines or were subject to human controlβit would not be the genuine way. If the path that opens the heart and the mind could be found by simple belief, all the true believers would be opening the doors and windows of their hearts with gestures of true compassion. They would readily understand the common threads in the words βJesus was right,β βMoses led me along,β and βMohammed opened doors in my heart.β When the great way opens even for a moment the path between mind and heart widens. The heart begins to find the thought of unity buried within it and the mind begins to see subtleties that were impossible to grasp just a minute before. Finding the great way requires a willingness to surrender again and again, not simply a zeal for bowing oneβs head in the same old way.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
Wisdom can reveal the light hidden in dark times; but it requires that we face the darkness in ourselves. People may desire pearls of wisdom, yet most are unwilling to descend to the depths where the pearls wait to be found. Wisdom involves a necessary descent into the depths of life, for that alone can produce βlived knowledgeβ and a unified vision.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
In order to understand the conditions we are in, we must place ourselves not in the mainstream of life but in the timeless stream of myth. As the fabric of life loosens, the veil between this world of hard facts and the otherworld of great imagination also becomes thinner and more permeable. Just as time seems to be running out, timeless things try to slip back into human awareness.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
Fear is an old word that derives from the same roots that give us βfare,β as in βthoroughfare.β Although it often causes people to run away from troubling situations, at a deeper level, fear means βto go through it.β The hidden purpose of fear involves bringing us closer to natural instincts for survival, but also for awakening inner resources and sharpening our intelligence when faced with true danger and the basic need to change.
β
β
Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
β
The issue is not simply one of needing to save the world, but also of needing to solve the problem of the loss of soul throughout the modern world. Part of what has been lost in the reckless rushing of modernity is the sense that each life has an authentic interior that shelters important emotions as well as inherent purpose, and that the dignity of existence includes a necessary instinct to unfold the unique story woven inside each living soul.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
β
[ Dr. Lois Jolyon West was cleared at Top Secret for his work on MKULTRA. ]
Dr. Michael Persinger [235], another FSMF Board Member, is the author of a paper entitled βElicitation of 'Childhood Memories' in Hypnosis-Like Settings Is Associated With Complex Partial Epileptic-Like Signs For Women But Not for Men: the False Memory Syndrome.β In the paper Perceptual and Motor Skills,In the paper, Dr. Persinger writes:
On the day of the experiment each subject (not more than two were tested per day) was asked to sit quietly in an acoustic chamber and was told that the procedure was an experiment in relaxation. The subject wore goggles and a modified motorcycle helmet through which 10-milligauss (1 microTesla) magnetic fields were applied through the temporal plane. Except for a weak red (photographic developing) light, the room was dark. Dr. Persinger's research on the ability of magnetic fields to facilitate the creation of false memories and altered states of consciousness is apparently funded by the Defense Intelligence Agency through the project cryptonym SLEEPING BEAUTY. Freedom of Information Act requests concerning SLEEPING BEAUTY with a number of different intelligence agencies including the CIA and DEA has yielded denial that such a program exists. Certainly, such work would be of direct interest to BLUEBIRD, ARTICHOKE, MKULTRA and other non-lethal weapons programs. Schnabel [280] lists Dr. Persinger as an Interview Source in his book on remote viewing operations conducted under Stargate, Grill Flame and other cryptonyms at Fort Meade and on contract to the Stanford Research Institute. Schnabel states (p. 220) that, βAs one of the Pentagon's top scientists, Vorona was privy to some of the strangest, most secret research projects ever conceived. Grill Flame was just one. Another was code-named Sleeping Beauty; it was a Defense Department study of remote microwave mind-influencing techniques ... [...]
It appears from Schnabel's well-documented investigations that Sleeping Beauty is a real, but still classified mind control program. Schnabel [280] lists Dr. West as an Interview Source and says that West was a, βMember of medical oversight board for Science Applications International Corp. remote-viewing research in early 1990s.
β
β
Colin A. Ross (The CIA Doctors: Human Rights Violations by American Psychiatrists)
β
In the end, as at the beginning, the divine turns out to be most interested in the unique life of the individual soul. Thatβs what was meant by the old idea that βinside people is where god learns.β This is not a religious notion, but more of a spiritual insight. For this conversation god is simply the shortest way to refer to the divine. When a unique life becomes fully livedeveryone involved learns something and it becomes clear that god was involved all along.
β
β
Michael Meade (Fate and Destiny, The Two Agreements of the Soul)
β
If we meet a myth with our lives and deepest concerns, the mythic oracles speak directly to us. Myths are oracular in the sense that each person can receive a message or an insight that relates to their life circumstances. The point has never been to βbelieveβ in myths or to simply accept what others have said they mean. The key issue with mythic images is to let them speak to us, wherever and whenever we find ourselves seeking guidance, permission, or understanding.
β
β
Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
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As people used to say, βWhat the heart loves is the cure.β The cure for healing the wounds and conflicts between faiths and systems of belief involves awakening to the unique ways that each heart carries devotion and love. When followed far enough, simple belief can transform into wisdom; raw passions can become a greater compassion that trusts what resides in oneβs heart and even in the hearts of others. Until the heart opens and the eyes begin to see there is always the danger of blindness and narrowness and the tendency to hold onto narrow ways of being.
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Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
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Slow' and 'down' are modes of the soul; they are connective modes, ways of keeping connected to oneself and to oneβs environment. 'Slowing downwards' refers to more than simply moving slowly, it means growing down towards the roots of oneβs being. Instead of outward growth and upward climb, life at times must turn inward and downward in order to grow in other ways. There is a shift to the vertical down that re-turns us to root memories, root metaphors, and timeless things that shape our lives from within. Slowing downwards creates opportunities to dwell more deeply in oneβs life, for the home we are looking for in this world is within us all along. The lost home that we are seeking is ourselves; it is the story we carry within our soul.
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Michael Meade (Why the World Doesn't End: Tales of Renewal in Times of Loss)
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Each person carries a hidden poetic unity that reflects the mysterious continuity of the Soul of the World. In the depths of the soul, we are each an old soul able to survive the troubles of the world and contribute to its healing and renewal. The key to what we miss and secretly long for is hidden within us. Medicine men and healers of all kinds from cultures around the world have used various techniques to not only βhealβ the soul, but also to restore individuals to their proper place in the world and in their culture. To heal means to βmake whole,β and when we feel whole we are in touch with the whole world. When in touch with our underlying soul, we are naturally in touch with nature and the Soul of the World. We are the missing ingredient in the solutions needed for all that ails us, if we but awaken to the nature of our own souls.
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Michael Meade (Awakening the Soul: A Deep Response to a Troubled World)
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As the years have gone by Lake Powell has continued to silt up, losing more than 100,000 acre-feet per year at last count, and hydrologists believeβas Abbey didβthat silting will eventually lead to a pool of mud, not water. Michael Kellett is the program director of the Glen Canyon Institute, which was founded in 1996 with the help of David Brower with the goal of one day witnessing the Colorado flowing freely through the old Glen Canyon. At a time when western dams are actually being decommissioned so that rivers can flow, experts are wondering whether it is really viable to have two enormous evaporative and silting reservoirs, Powell and Mead. Kellett wrote in the summer of 2012: The trends of the last decade have dramatically changed the situation. Rising public water demand, relentless drought, and climate change have significantly reduced the flow of the Colorado River from that of the past century. Scientific studies have predicted that this situation will continue. Lake Powell reservoir, and Lake Mead reservoir downstream, are half empty. Most scientists believe that there will never again be enough water to fill both reservoirs. Which had led to proposals like the Fill Lake Mead First project, the idea being to keep the downstream reservoir, Mead, full while releasing the upstream Glen Canyon. In other words, for the first time Abbeyβs wild fantasies are being considered as serious policy.
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David Gessner (All The Wild That Remains: Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and the American West)
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Never believe that a few caring people canβt change the world. For, indeed, thatβs all who ever haveβ β Margaret Mead
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Michael Stutman (The Ultimate Book of Inspiring Quotes for Kids)
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In mythic terms, the earth is a place of mystery and wonder where life always hangs by a thread and
all the events of history are loosely stitched upon the endless loom of eternity. Secretly, we are each tied to the divine.
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Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
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Sometimes, the greatest safety can be found in taking the right risk. Whether it be an individual, a community or a country, when faced with tragedy or fearful uncertainty, we either become bigger and enter life more fully, or else we accept a diminished life and resign ourselves to a smaller way of being.
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Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)
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To awaken to the living dream within oneβs life and
remain awake in a world trying to lull everyone to sleep involves repeated struggle, yet also presents something truly worth fighting for.
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Michael Meade (The Genius Myth)