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Comment on: Photo 'a piece of mind'
s so that we have more freedom of choice in our everyday actions, more power to create the future, to become the author of our own story. Another way to put it is that MINDSIGHT is the basic skill that underlies  everything we mean when we speak of having social and emotional  intelligence.  MINDSIGHT - our ability to look within and perceive the mind - to reflect on our experience - is every bit as essential to our well-being. MINDSIGHT IS our seventh sense. …
Added by Michael Grove at 10:05 on May 10, 2013
Blog Post: The Great Squeeze: Surviving the Human Project

Added by Michael Grove at 11:56 on March 27, 2010
Blog Post: 7 things that affect your vibration frequency ...

Added by Michael Grove at 12:55 on February 16, 2020
Comment on: Blog Post 'AT this MOST CRITICAL juncture'
st Peter Saunders, professor emeritus at the University of Sussex, “seek nothing less than hegemony for their moral values and beliefs”. This requires the unconditional surrender of adversaries and the criminalisation of those who dare to oppose. It’s a war of attrition through relentless assaults on popular consciousness by masters of subversion. Their goal, according to Prof Saunders, is “eroding the ideals of independent thought, self-reliance and personal responsibility and replacing them with the language of thought-crime, group rights and equal outcomes”. This is modern Britain, where a foreign-born paedophile cannot be put on a plane back to Pakistan but traditional Christians are arrested for disobliging comments on homosexuality — a triumph of intolerance over faith. After 13 years of the Brown Terror, during which reckless state borrowing and out-of-control consumer debt masked economic and social failure, the Coalition is trying to reverse a pernicious tide of grievance culture and something-for-nothing expectations. George Osborne claims: “We are reducing welfare entitlements, imposing new conditionality on benefits and capping overall awards.” That, at least, is the aim, but an insurgency of human-rights lawyers, grandstanding bishops and professional do-gooders is defending every ditch. Only this month, a Romanian living in the UK, who claims to make a living selling the Big Issue, but qualifies for more than £25,500 a year in benefits, was told by a court that she was not receiving enough. Despite objections from the local council, she was awarded an additional annual housing allowance of £2,600. Chancellor, please take note. Do not conclude, however, that the immigrants are to blame for this mess. Who among us faced with a choice between penury in a Bucharest rat-hole and £500 a week in handouts plus a subsidised home would not be on the train to London? The only surprise is that so few are already here. What’s more, the influx of foreign workers is forcing us to confront a problem which those seeking to blame high levels of unemployment entirely on public-spending cuts would rather ignore. Why does London have the highest rate of youth joblessness in the country when so many services in the capital are underpinned by newcomers? Last week, Pret a Manger, which pays above minimum wage, admitted to the London Evening Standard that only 19 per cent of its payroll is British (in London the figure is far lower). Are we really saying that our education system is so poor and work ethic so diminished that Britain can no longer produce staff suitable for a sandwich shop? That is the conclusion of many business folk to whom I put this question, though they prefer sanitised phrases such as a “deficit of lifestyle skills” instead of the less euphemistic “welfare addiction”. Given that 70 per cent of Britain’s state-educated pupils do not even take GCSE history, never mind pass it, one can bet confidently that the majority of young people trying to enter a difficult jobs market will never encounter the Churchill question: what kind of people do others think we are? Perhaps that’s a good thing. The answer is deeply discomfiting. 'Jeff Randall Live’ is broadcast Monday-Thursday at 7pm on Sky News. …
Added by Michael Grove at 10:41 on January 30, 2012
Comment on: Blog Post 'ACTION of Tai Chi'
y and secondary education, one will not be able to follow the courses at university level. To learn taijiquan one has to begin from the elementary and gradually progress to the advanced stage, level by level in a systematic manner. If one goes against this principle thinking he could take a quick way out, he will not succeed. The whole progress of learning taijiquan, from the beginning to achieving success consists of five stages or five levels of martial/combat skill (kung fu). There are objective standards for each level of kung fu. The highest is achieved in the fifth level. In order to master Taijiquan you must begin with the most fundamental steps, and systematically work up to the advanced levels, slowly building up your knowledge and technique as you go. This book explains the five levels of Taijiquan from complete beginner to highest level practitioner. Presenting a word for word translation, with commentary, of Grandmaster Chen Xiaowang's original Chinese text, Master Jan Silberstorff provides detailed guidance through each of the five levels. Readers will learn how to assess their current Taiijiquan ability and identify exactly what is needed to reach the next level and ultimately the highest goal - the perfection of Taiji, or reaching a complete state of being. This is an accessible and motivational book for all Taijiquan students and practitioners, as well as anyone wishing to gain a deeper understanding of the ancient art of Taijiquan. "ONLY together, [as merchants of LOVE ] , can our starlight help us find our way, in this cosmic soup of choices and beauty."                                                                                                                         Janie Hedrick …
Added by Michael Grove at 9:53 on December 25, 2012
Blog Post: Chief executives are suffering from an ...

information…

Added by Michael Grove at 5:47 on June 24, 2015
Blog Post: re Everything is imagined. [posted above]

Here are two extracts from my book The Milk Is White plus a comment relating to the book The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying.…

Added by Ian Gardner at 22:36 on April 15, 2018
Blog Post: I CAN ONLY JUST IMAGINE ...

 that the copius…

Added by Michael Grove at 8:26 on September 1, 2020
Blog Post: HOW to SAVE the WORLD ...

Added by Michael Grove at 12:11 on August 3, 2013
Blog Post: Personal RESPONSIBILITY




Added by Michael Grove at 12:39 on March 27, 2010
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