March 19, 2009
A Story of Profound Personal Transformation
It is not often I share a personal story on this blog. In the last 8 years I have experienced a great deal of tragedy. In this time I lost my house and all of my belongings to a house fire. I lost my father two months later to a rapid onset of pancreatic cancer. In 2006 I experienced a series of tragedies and unfortunate events. As part of this ongoing stressI contracted a very painful, serious and for many months, undiagnosed illness, which among other things resulted in having my gallbladder being removed in December. This didn't fix the problem, but it was their best guess at the time. Did I mention pain? Yes, chronic pain that completely debilitated me, resulting in a total loss of income, and a half-dozen visits to the emergency room bent over in total agony. I am only now recovering, thanks in part to adopting a very healthy diet and lifestyle, and a exercising a profound level of acceptance and love for myself and those around me.
The story below is for those who need to hear that profound personal transformation is possible for anyone, right now if you are willing to open your heart.
I came across this story a few weeks ago in a book I was reading while deeply detoxing in a far-infrared sauna at my local acupuncturist's office. It touched me so deeply, that I wept quietly but deeply amidst the profuse and cleansing sweat while in the sauna. The story is from The New Holistic Health Handbook, and it's a passage from a chapter by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross titled, Death Does Not Exist.
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The story below is for those who need to hear that profound personal transformation is possible for anyone, right now if you are willing to open your heart.
I came across this story a few weeks ago in a book I was reading while deeply detoxing in a far-infrared sauna at my local acupuncturist's office. It touched me so deeply, that I wept quietly but deeply amidst the profuse and cleansing sweat while in the sauna. The story is from The New Holistic Health Handbook, and it's a passage from a chapter by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross titled, Death Does Not Exist.
Read More...
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Sorry to hear about your personal troubles. My own troubles, though not currently so severe, are financial in character. Devoting oneself to art and not starving is a helluva trick to pull off. I'm bookmarking the quote from Kubler-Ross partly because she says there that we should do what we love against all odds, and I need to be reminded of this.
I've missed your presence from futurehi.net, and am glad to have discovered this blog. I want to thank you for turning me on to Robert Anton Wilson and to Terence McKenna, to whose recorded speeches I have since been listening online. What a fascinating talker! UPverse productions sounds really interesting, and I hope to see new material appear on the website there.
Delicate locale keep up your good work.
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