I listened to a piece about Choprawell this morning on Morning Joe. Apparently, Deepak Chopra and his children are making the rounds of the news and talk shows to promote their new YouTube endeavor. Of course, I spent the next couple of hours listening to a dozen of the Choprawell video postings.
Many are worth talking about here, but the piece on the purpose of life and living your karma was of particular interest to me because of my late-in-life career change. I continually feel that I have to justify it to myself, especially when many of my friends, including my husband, are retiring. I am having trouble with the concept of retiring because I am following my karma.
What am I talking about? What is all of this karma nonsense? I've excerpted from Chopra's purpose of life YouTube, below.
What is the Purpose of Life? What is Karma?
Your Karma is your higher purpose
The higher purpose of all life is
to reach enlightenment and total freedom from conditioning
To reach our Karma
we exist to fulfill our unique talents and abilities
By fulfilling our unique talents
we fit into the unique ecosystem
like a piece of a jigsaw puzzle
where no pieces are missing
When we fit into the ecosystem
we feel joy
and lose track of time
When we fulfill our unique purpose in life
we serve
Our purpose is
to feel an alignment with our Karma
serve the ecosystem
and experience wholeness
Our larger purpose is
to reach enlightenment
which is unity consciousness
our true identity
When we learn how
to be
to love
to create
to serve
and ultimately to exercise subtle intention
in choices
and awareness
we become the evolutionary parts of the universe
and find our true mortality
from Deepak Chopra
Because I grew up in the Baptist tradition and because many in my family and many of my friends find similar wholeness through their Christian beliefs, I also found Chopra's piece on beliefs worth mentioning and linking here: What is Belief and How Does It Shape Reality? Even before I was aware of Chopra and Eastern philosophy, I felt this way about beliefs: that they are limiting. This piece reiterates and speaks more eloquently about beliefs as limiting one's reality.
Reality is the whole realm of possibilities. When we decide to believe in any one concept as reality, we limit or cut off so many possibilities for awareness and achieving happiness, our karma, and enlightenment.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Ground bees?
Ground bees? Nope. Yellow jackets. |
Through the loop |
About that time I spied Ken marching back toward the hole with a gas can. I jumped up to stop him just in the nick of time, just after reading that one should NOT POUR GASOLINE into the hole. Kerosene maybe, but BY ALL MEANS not gas. AND not during the day when they are active. Although several sites shouted back at me to not pour gas into the nest, none explained why. Research for another day. But never mind. I came back to the computer to Google up yellow jackets .edu, with the .edu added so that my results would provide some more credible information than just any old blog.
Herewith I provide you that more credible information so that you don't have to believe this humble blogger. How about a fact sheet posted by Mark Moran of Island Creek Elementary School in Alexandria? At his site I learned that "Eastern Yellow Jackets are probably the best-known wasps in Virginia, as well as the least-liked. This is most likely because yellow jackets are responsible for about one half of all insect stings." Of course! Visitors to Colonial Williamsburg encounter these babies around trash cans on Duke of Gloucester Street all the time. Everybody around here has a story about being stung by a wasp in Colonial Williamsburg. I wince every time I remember my sweet little 3-year-old daughter sitting out on Market Square drinking her Sprite when, . . . Her Dad raced around looking for someone with a cigar or cigarette because he'd heard that tobacco drew out the sting. Anyway, you can download a coloring page or an up-close view of a yellow jack on the Fairfax County school's web page. Good job, Mark!
I found a page on the Penn State site with information about management. I was glad to find out what the Extension Service had to say about pouring down the wasp hole after reading about everything from kerosene to hot water with Dawn dish washing detergent to lit tiki torches. At night, of course. So here's what Penn State Extension has to say:
"Eastern yellowjackets can be considered a beneficial insect because they reduce populations of unwanted insects such as earwigs and caterpillars. Therefore, unless the nests are located close [off] an entrance to a building, in the ground of a lawn that is mowed, or in any area where the public is likely to encounter them, the nests can be ignored."
Okay, well here's where it's a problem for me, you know. They said what I felt in my heart. I'm a card-carrying treehugger. And as an admirer of Eastern philosophy I know that yellow jackets are sentient beings. All life is interconnected. So can we just leave them alone? Maybe not. I forgot to tell you that the reason my husband found the nest has to do with a leak in our basement. Funny, but we hear the water trickling down the basement wall during rainstorms just about where the wasps are nesting and that's why we looked there. We really have to fix the leak, especially after 5.5 inches of rain the other day flooded the garage and my husband's man cave again.
So, let's read on. What else, Penn State Extension?
Vespula maculifrons (Duke.edu) |
One more reference, this one from Duke with some cool close-up photos, as above.
I think we're going to try the hot water down the hole method tonight. You know, insecticide.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
On Awareness
I have just returned from 6 weeks of summer school and practicum experience at James Madison University, as required by their master's program in speech-language pathology. In readings and in practice, I have thought about the dictum of Rhea Paul and others to create in the child an awareness of their language.
Between the demanding summer now past and what I sense will be a demanding fall, I have 4 weeks to adjust and realign. I am reading Coming to Our Senses: Healing Ourselves and the World through Mindfulness, by Jon Kabat-Zinn. Mindfulness meditation is a skill I plan to hone as I acknowledge what is (climate change, species decline, politics, over consumption, etc.) and live in the learning and doing moment.
And so, awareness. I live in awareness and I help children become more aware. Kabat-Zinn includes a chapter on awareness and I quote from it some pieces I want to remember:
"Awareness is immanent . . . but it is camouflaged, like a shy animal. It usually requires some degree of effort and stillness if not stealth even to catch a glimpse of it . . . You have to be alert, curious, motivated to see it. With awareness, you have to be willing to let the knowing of it come to you, to invite it in, silently and skillfully in the midst of whatever you are thinking or experiencing. . .
". . . This willingness to embrace what is and then work with it takes great courage, and presence of mind."
Between the demanding summer now past and what I sense will be a demanding fall, I have 4 weeks to adjust and realign. I am reading Coming to Our Senses: Healing Ourselves and the World through Mindfulness, by Jon Kabat-Zinn. Mindfulness meditation is a skill I plan to hone as I acknowledge what is (climate change, species decline, politics, over consumption, etc.) and live in the learning and doing moment.
And so, awareness. I live in awareness and I help children become more aware. Kabat-Zinn includes a chapter on awareness and I quote from it some pieces I want to remember:
"Awareness is immanent . . . but it is camouflaged, like a shy animal. It usually requires some degree of effort and stillness if not stealth even to catch a glimpse of it . . . You have to be alert, curious, motivated to see it. With awareness, you have to be willing to let the knowing of it come to you, to invite it in, silently and skillfully in the midst of whatever you are thinking or experiencing. . .
". . . This willingness to embrace what is and then work with it takes great courage, and presence of mind."
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