satsang with mooji – live satsang

http://mooji.org/livesatsang/

 

Mooji Live is broadcasting live video on Sunday Satsang. x

Sunday SatsangLIVE Sunday SatsangSunday, November 23rd, 2014 at 10:00 AM EST onmooji-liveSunday Satsang with Sri Mooji is broadcast live from Mooji Sangha Bhavan, Portugal. You can tune in here at 3pm Lisbon time on Sunday afternoon whenever Sri Mooji is sharing Satsang.Watch Event

 

Tom Campbell – Buddha at the Gas Pump Interview – YouTube

Published on Nov 16, 2014Also see http://batgap.com/tom-campbell/In February of 2003, Tom published the My Big TOE trilogy MBT which represents the results and conclusions of his scientific exploration of the nature of existence. This overarching model of reality, mind, and consciousness explains the paranormal as well as the normal, places spirituality within a scientific context, solves a host of scientific paradoxes and provides direction for those wishing to personally experience an expanded awareness of All That Is. The MBT reality model explains metaphysics, spirituality, love, and human purpose at the most fundamental level, provides a complete theory of consciousness, and solves the outstanding fundamental physics problems of our time, deriving both relativity theory and quantum mechanics from first principles – something traditional physics cannot yet do. As a logic-based work of science, My Big TOE has no basis in belief, dogma, or any unusual assumptions. My Big TOE – The Complete Trilogyprinted version My Big TOE – Free version on Google Books Tom’s website: my-big-toe.com Tom’s YouTube channelInterview recorded 11/14/2014.

via Tom Campbell – Buddha at the Gas Pump Interview – YouTube.

28% of Men and 40% of Women – Stefan Molyneux

Published on Nov 16, 2014

What is currently impacting approximately four out of ten Americans – or 92 million people?

28% of men, 40% of women and 39% of youth simply don’t want a job.

Over ninety-two million Americans age sixteen and older are no longer participating in the labor force – meaning they’re not currently employed or actively searching for work. This is the highest amount of individuals opting out of employment in thirty-six years.

Approximately one out of every six American men in their prime working years – 25 to 54 years old – does not have a job. 

Only 47% of working-age Americans have full-time jobs. 

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate for latino Americans is 142% that of white Americans. The unemployment rate for black americans is 215% that of white Americans. The black unemployment rate hasn’t been this high in over five years. Asian Americans are 17% more likely to be employed than white Americans.

The unemployment rate for those over twenty years old is 13% higher for women than it is for men.

The last few years are the only back-to-back years on record when the number of Americans taking food stamps has outnumbered the amount of women working full-time year-round.

Over seven million Americans are employed as involuntary part-time workers due to their hours being cut, or simply being unable to find full time employment.

Approximately one out of every four involuntary part-time workers is living below the poverty line.

One out of every ten jobs is filled by a temp agency. 

According to a recent survey, 60 percent of unemployed Americans claim that looking for work has been harder than expected – while 47 percent of unemployed Americans have “completely given up” looking for a job.

36 percent of Americans have not saved a dime for retirement including 69% of all 18-29 year olds and 14% of people 65 and older. What is going to happen to them?

An astonishing 76 percent of all Americans are living paycheck to paycheck. 22% of the people surveyed had savings of less than $100 to cover a possible emergency, while 46% had less than $800. What happens to these people if and when that emergency happens? 

Over half of all working Americans make less than $30,000 a year – and almost a quarter shockingly make seventy-four hundred dollars or less per year. 

In February 2014, the Bureau of Labor Statistics found that only 32.9 percent of youths aged 16 to 19 were working or actively looking for a job; this is the lowest record since the bureau started tracking the data in 1948. 

Compared to the general population, 18 to 29 year olds are twice as likely to be unemployed.

Unemployment rates for recent college graduates increased by about 160% between 2008 and 2010. Young people without a high school diploma had 33% unemployment in 2010. 

37 percent of college graduates are in jobs requiring a high-school diploma or less. Over two million college graduates with at least a bachelor’s degree level education are working in retail sales, as cashiers, waiters/waitresses, as stock clerks or – as janitors. 

Of the twenty fastest growing occupations in America, only four require a Bachelor’s degree or better, while ten don’t even require a high school diploma. 

Half of all college graduates – two years out of school – are still financially dependent on their parents. 16% of those surveyed reporting living on their own as unimportant to them. 

Median household income, when adjusted for inflation, is approximately $53,000, which is about 7% lower than it was in 2000. 

The number of foreign-born individuals holding jobs in the United States has hit a recorded high of 24,639,000. 

Sources: http://www.fdrurl.com/jobsandunemploy…

Jill Bolte Taylor’s stroke of insight – YouTube

http://www.ted.com Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke. As it happened — as she felt her brain functions slip away one by one, speech, movement, understanding — she studied and remembered every moment. This is a powerful story about how our brains define us and connect us to the world and to one another.

 

Sometimes You Just Have To Say Good Bye – Ben Kim

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Dr. Ben Kim’s Natural Health Newsletter

November 13, 2014

Dear Reader,

Just a brief note today to share a realization I made almost 20 years ago as an intern in Chicago:

http://drbenkim.com/sometimes-you-just-have-to-say-good-bye.htm

Author Bryant McGill calls saying good bye in certain situations “strategic disengagement” that benefits you AND the person who isn’t seeking peace. 

By mindfully choosing not to engage in conflict with people who are too toxic to understand how destructive they are being to themselves and those they are trying to engage in combat, we preserve us and them.

On a personal note, I made the decision to keep a family member at arm’s length a couple of years ago after many years of suffering because of this person’s volatility, and in choosing “polite and friendly but not close,” my health and relationship with this person have both improved tremendously. 

Sometimes, we really do have to say good bye to find that space where we can breathe freely and smile again.

 Wishing you a safe weekend ahead,

 Ben Kim 

 Thought of the Moment:

A person who wants peace will look to restore peace.

Someone who is looking to be angry will stay angry and try to keep you engaged in conflict. 

http://drbenkim.com

3035 Appleby Line, #25003, Burlington, ON  L7M 0V8

Sometimes You Just Have To Say Good Bye.

Canadian Terror Attacks: What You Need to Know! – Stefan Molyneux

Soldier, 24, shot dead by Muslim convert Michael Zehaf-Bibeau who opened fire on Canadian Parliament in terrifying attack that left capital on lockdown. Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, was shot dead after opening fire at Parliament Hill. He was born in Quebec but reportedly recently converted to Islam and had his passport seized after being designated a ‘high-risk traveler’. He shot reserve soldier Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial before running inside Parliament and exchanging gunfire with guards. Heroic Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers shot him dead. Police initially said there were multiple gunmen and at a press conference, they would not rule out other suspects. Witness accounts of a suspect include descriptions of him as short with long hair, overweight, wearing a dark jacket and ‘Arabic scarf’. What is the history behind the recent attack on Canada’s Parliament by reported Muslim convert Michael Zehaf-Bibeau? Why do these attacks happen? How can we stop them? Stefan Molyneux, host of Freedomain Radio, breaks down the deep history behind religious terrorism, and the relationship between ISIS, the war on terror, and modern terrorism.

203-512-2161 – James Altucher

203-512-2161
by James Altucher

Claudia is a little upset at me. She doesn’t like when I give out my phone number.

“You’re going to get too many calls,” she said.

Ok, but I want people to text me with questions for our “Ask Altucher” podcasts. But sometimes I pick up the call.

Last night I got a call from someone going through a divorce and his family and his friends were taking her side. He was miserable about it. He loved his family but they were always angry.

“I’d rather be a janitor in another state,” he said, “then have the job I have now here and have them all arguing with me all the time.”

You know what job he had? He was the mayor of his small town. But he was miserable.

“You have to take a break from them,” I said. “What would you rather do: get your life together or let your friends and family slowly strangle you to death.”

When the plane is going down, the instinct is to put the oxygen mask on your baby. But you have to put the mask on yourself first.

“I would put the mask on my baby,” he told me.

“Then you both will die.”

If everyone is dragging you down, then you have to take a break from them.

“But they supported me for years,” he said, “how can I take a break from them now?”

“You’re going through something painful. A divorce. Why let people stick the knife in even further? You need to wait until the knife is out of your body first.”

I’m not sure I convinced him.

One time someone wrote me and said, “I’m practicing everything you say. Physical health, emotional, writing down ideas every day, feeling gratitude. But then I go out Friday night drinking with my friends and they laugh at me and trash all my ideas.”

I had one suggestion: “Stay at home on Friday night.” But I never heard from him again.

One time I was pretending to be a respiratory therapist in a hospital in Cleveland. Long story but a doctor got me in there and got me credentials. I was actually walking old people around the hallways until they were so out of breath I had to return them to their beds. They smelled.

I didn’t do any tracheotomies but it didn’t look that hard. I would’ve done one if asked.

I’ve watched doctors do it. You find the Adam’s apple. Go about a half inch lower, use a pocket knife to cut the skin open, and stick in a straw very quickly before they suffocate. If you put it in the wrong spot they die. Don’t try this at home. You’re not a professional like me.

At some point in our lives we have to start preparing for a good death. Just like for most of our lives we prepare for a good life.

For a long time I had a bad life and I was preparing for a bad death. Even the day seemed like a nightmare. And the nights were long. Me sitting. Me walking all night trying to make eye contact with strange women. Me starving for affection.

I saw what a bad death looked like. Nobody could breathe. They would suffocate in their beds, alone, nobody to care for them. One by one they’re all going to stop breathing. You too.

How do you prepare for a good death?

I think we live in four dimensions at the same time.

The physical world, where we can get stabbed in the heart and bleed. The emotional world, where we can get stabbed in the heart and cry.

The mental world, where we can get stabbed in the head and get demented. And the spiritual world where we get stuck living in the past, filled with regret and anxiety.

Stress is the knife of the emotional world. Stress leads to inflammation of the cells (again, I’m a doctor).

The major causes of death in the US: heart attacks, cancer, strokes, Alzheimers – all caused by inflammation. And then diseases caused by smoking. Don’t smoke.

If all you do is work on ways to reduce stress, avoid time travel (obsessing on past and future), and of course, don’t smoke, then you will start preparing for a good death.

Everyone wraps themselves in their dramas: their friends, their family, their divorces, their failures. We build up a mythology of our misery. The pantheon of people who “did this to us”.

Can you take a break from that for today? Just today please. And then maybe tomorrow. If you can’t, then text me why.

Because the truth is:

Nobody did anything to you.

Except your mother.

 

Tom Campbell: Fireside Chat with MBT Forum Sept 2014 Pt 1 – YouTube

Published on Oct 5, 2014

Tom Campbell answers questions from his My Big TOE forum members on various subjects involving our reality and consciousness from the viewpoint of his theory, philosophy, and experience.

Some of the topics covered in the segment are:
Working with the Chakra metaphor and other tools.
The being level vs the intellectual level in relation to food habits.
Meditation vs concentration.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hbrs5Tak_HI&list=UUYwlraEwuFB4ZqASowjoM0g

Live Satsang with Sri Mooji invitation

Beloved,

We are pleased to invite you to join the broadcast of Sunday Satsang with Sri Mooji LIVE from MOOJI SANGHA BHAVAN Sunday, 19 October [updated 10/18] at 15:00 3pm Lisbon time, 9am CST. Sri Mooji is very happy to be sharing Satsang with you in this way.You can join the broadcast on mooji.org/livesatsang. Please write to broadcasts@mooji.org for support with the broadcast. The live broadcast of Sunday Satsang is now on a new channel:new.livestream.com/mooji-live/sundaysatsang

http://www.mooji.org/livesatsang/

Complete video will be available shortly after the live broadcast.

BUDDHA MEANS NO IDENTITY 2/3 Trafalgar Pigeons MOOJI IN LONDON – YouTube

Uploaded on Nov 20, 2008

The famous story of Banning Pigeons Feeding in Trafalgar Square…Mooji Brixton 16 Nov 08 S2

Mooji continues to blow me away: