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| Link | Quote | Stars | Tags | Author |
| a778c0f | Success is neither something that we have nor something that we do. It is the automatic consequence of what we are. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 1365bfd | The realization of Absolute Reality and Truth is the greatest gift that one can be to the world and all humanity. Spiritual work, in its essence, is therefore a selfless service and surrender to the Will of God. As one's awareness increases, the power of that field of consciousness increases exponentially--and that, in and of itself, accomplishes more than all effort or attempts at relieving the suffering of the world. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| a90fc1f | Exceptional subjective experiences of truth, which are the province of the mystic who affects all mankind by sending forth spiritual energy into the collective consciousness, are not understandable by the majority of mankind and are therefore of limited meaning except to other spiritual seekers. This led to an effort to be ordinary, because just being ordinary in itself is an expression of Divinity; the truth of one's real self can be disco.. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| af138fd | It was clear that all pain and suffering arises solely from the ego and not from God. This truth was silently communicated to the minds of the patients. This was the mental block in another mute catatonic who had not spoken in many years. The Self said to him through mind, "You're blaming God for what your ego has done to you." He jumped off the floor and began to speak, much to the shock of the nurse who witnessed the incident." | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 623b83a | Because the experience of time stops, there is no apprehension or regret, no pain or anticipation; the source of joy is unending and ever present. With no beginning or ending, there is no loss or grief or desire. Nothing needs to be done; everything is already perfect and complete | David R. Hawkins | ||
| c5c49a7 | when we support life, life supports us in return. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| e402eb1 | As evolution progressed, the capacity of learning, called 'intelligence', arose as a consequence of trial and error, which is a process that is operationally required for survival. The process of trial and error then accumulates as data and memory. This accrues as the long and experiential time continuum that sorts events into 'then' and 'now'. The present self 'is', and the former self 'was', and, in truth, that which 'was' is not identica.. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| db2b249 | The source of joy of spiritual endeavor stems from the work itself and is not dependent on outcomes or the achievement of goals. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| ac409f0 | It completely includes everything in its total Oneness so that all things are interconnected and in communication and harmony by means of awareness and by sharing the basic quality of the essence of existence itself. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 5b83a85 | A hypertrophied superego can be the source of excessive guilt or scrupulosity, or it can be projected onto others, which justifies vindictiveness in extreme forms as revenge against the 'evil' enemy. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 072ffd0 | The state of Enlightenment is totally complete in its bliss, such that one would never leave it except to share the gift that was given out of a total surrender of love to God and to one's fellow human beings. That Dr. Hawkins would re-enter the world of logic and language in order to share a "map" with us so that we might also complete our destiny speaks volumes of his selfless love for humanity." | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 6805987 | It is helpful to have the willingness to accept whatever is being expressed on the physical level, to look within our own consciousness to see what is being brought to our attention, and to see that whatever is occurring in our life is happening in order to come up to be healed. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| bb47246 | For example, to disassemble anger may require the willingness to surrender the pride that underlies that anger, which in turn depends on surrendering a desire. This means surrendering the fear that energized the desire, which again is related to the undoing of imaginary loss, and so forth. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 36ad4b2 | Can we make a successful comeback if we've really blown it? Of course we can. There are a lot of successful businesspeople who have earned and lost multiple fortunes in their lifetimes. We all have different learning styles. Some people only find out where the manholes are by falling into them. That's their style of learning things, and there's nothing wrong with it. At least when they get it that way, they get it permanently. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| db51af1 | mind" is the processing unit with which the ego is identified." | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 784af52 | From an analysis of its origins and dynamics, it can be summarized that guilt is but another form of egotism in which error is inflated instead of being relinquished to a higher power. God is not a sadist, so self-degradation or self-punishment serves neither God nor one's fellowman. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| a5d0f1d | just watch without evaluating, investing worth in, or editorializing, commenting, and having preferences about what is witnessed. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 35ad1d0 | Letting go involves being aware of a feeling, letting it come up, staying with it, and letting it run its course without wanting to make it different or do anything about it. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| b2a48c8 | Generosity is the willingness to share your life with others. It's a gift to people to allow them to love you. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 297176d | All of life is revealed to be a pulsating symphony of interplaying energies: "The mutual dependence and interpenetration of all things is observable as one leaves duality. Oneness is central to all of" | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 25bfdf0 | love is more powerful than hatred; truth sets us free; forgiveness liberates both sides; unconditional love heals; courage empowers; and the essence of Divinity/Reality is peace. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 7eeb437 | It is important to differentiate nonattachment from detachment. Detachment indicates withdrawal as well as negation, leading to indifference, which in itself is a defense against the fear of attachment. Progressive detachment leads to ennui, flatness, and a decrease in aliveness and the joy of existence. If followed consistently, detachment as the pathway of negation leads eventually to the Void, which is often misunderstood to represent En.. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 7399c22 | Feelings come and go, and eventually you realize that you are not your feelings, but that the real "you" is merely witnessing them. You stop identifying with them. The "you" that is observing and is aware of what is happening always stays the same. As you become more and more aware of the changeless witness within, you begin to identify with that level of consciousness. You become progressively primarily the witness rather than the experien.. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 4feef57 | one can let go of the egoistic illusion that spiritual progress is difficult and that one has to do it all alone. On the contrary, illusions of lack disappear and powerful energies now help to sustain one's progress, which is now accompanied by the pleasure of increased self-esteem, and the world magically begins to appear to be a friendly and helpful place. | David R. Hawkins | ||
| 3071ea5 | so Enki tells Atrahasis to build a boat, instructing him about | Karen Armstrong | ||
| f93e4a4 | Sherwood, Franklin Roosevelt's speechwriter and biographer, wrote that although Churchill's "consumption of alcohol... continued at quite regular intervals through most of his waking hours," it did so "without visible effect on his health or mental processes. Anyone who suggested he became befuddled with drink obviously never had to become involved in an argument with him on some factual problem late at night...." Churchill's drinking habit.. | William Manchester | ||
| 50cb9bd | The Jap," as MacArthur called the enemy--nearly everyone else called Japanese "Nips," short for "Dai Nippon," the" -- | William Manchester | ||
| e59c227 | If I knew what was true, I'd be willing to sweat and strive for it, and maybe even to die for it to the tune of bugle blasts. But so far, I have not found it, | William Manchester | ||
| 93155ed | Some 4,887 miles to the east of him, north of the | William Manchester | ||
| a5b0890 | The key to successful extramarital sex, therefore, was discretion. Mrs. Patrick Campbell, perhaps the most outspoken woman in polite society, said dryly: "It doesn't matter what you do in the bedroom, as long as you don't do it in the street and frighten the horses."43" | William Manchester | ||
| de89b8e | It was Churchill who called John Foster Dulles "the only bull who brings his own china shop with him," and who coined the progression, "dull, duller, Dulles." | William Manchester | ||
| bb1c67e | oceanography, meteorology, and upper-atmosphere physics, | William Manchester | ||
| 10d037d | Byron wrote his shortest and most eloquent poem as a testament to a titled woman who had taken leave of her husband for a nine-month romp with him: Caroline Lamb, Goddamn. | William Manchester | ||
| 910767f | Of an MP who strung together phrases of jargon, Churchill said, "He can best be described as one of those orators who, before they get up, do not know what they're going to say; when they are speaking, do not know what they are saying; and when they have sat down, do not know what they have said." | william manchester | ||
| 00c0285 | bouffant coiffures. | William R. Manchester | ||
| dc2be9e | I like to live in the past. I don't think people are going to get much fun in the future | William Manchester | ||
| ff98ca1 | outline his frontier demands, Stalin | William R. Manchester | ||
| f9f048f | the essence of American journalism is vulgarity divested of truth. | William Manchester | ||
| 4246a43 | He believed that of all languages English was was incomparably superior. On his tongue it was. | William Manchester | ||
| bdc6e4d | Mussolini, completely misreading the situation, | William R. Manchester | ||
| 984d0e4 | councils of war breed timidity and defeatism. | William Manchester | ||
| 2dbbe20 | There are two approaches to the study of macroscopic physics. Historically the oldest approach, developed mainly in the first half of the 19th century by such men as Carnot, Clausius, William Thomson (the later Lord Kelvin), Robert Mayer and Joule, is that of classical thermodynamics. | Franz Mandl | ||
| f4b88cd | There are two approaches to the study of macroscopic physics. Historically the oldest approach, developed mainly in the first half of the 19th century by such men as Carnot, Clausius, William Thomson (the later Lord Kelvin), Robert Mayer and Joule, is that of classical thermodynamics. This is based on a small number of basic principles--the laws of thermodynamics--which are deductions from and generalizations of a large body of experiments .. | Franz Mandl | ||
| 54ab778 | Yes, the moon elf was very different. But so were arrow and bow, and yet they worked together to become more than what either might be alone. | Elaine Cunningham |