July 2009


More lyrics that can be interpreted through a spiritual lens:

Link on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S38-mjy5NtA

Do you dream, that the world will know your name?
So tell me your name (tell me your name)
Do you care, about all the little things or anything at all? (or anything at all)
I wanna feel, all the chemicals inside I wanna feel (I wanna feel)
I want a sunburn, just to know that I’m alive
To know I’m alive (to know I’m alive)

Don’t tell me if I’m dying, ’cause I don’t wanna know
If I can’t see the sun, maybe I should go
Don’t wake me ’cause I’m dreaming, of angels on the moon
Where everyone you know, never leaves too soon

Do you believe, in the day that you were born?
Tell me, do you believe? (do you believe)
And do you know, that every day’s
The first of the rest of your life?

Don’t tell me if I’m dying, ’cause I don’t wanna know
If I can’t see the sun, maybe I should go
Don’t wake me ’cause I’m dreaming, of angels on the moon
Where everyone you know, never leaves too soon

This is to one last day in the shadows
And to know a brother’s love
This is to New York City angels
And the rivers of our blood
This is to all of us, to all of us

So don’t tell me if I’m dying, ’cause I don’t wanna know
If I can’t see the sun, maybe I should go
Don’t wake me cause I’m dreaming, of angels on the moon
Where everyone you know, never leaves too soon

Yeah, you can tell me all your thoughts
‘Bout the stars that fill polluted skies
And show me where you run to
When no one’s left to take your side
But don’t tell me where the road ends
‘Cause I just don’t wanna know,
No I don’t wanna know

Don’t tell me if I’m dying
Don’t tell me if I’m dying

As spiritual people, we march to beat of our own drummer.  We reject the trappings of man’s religion.  We doubt ourselves and the things we believe.  Because we are different, the world can be brutal to us.  It tries to mold us into something that doesn’t fit who we are.  We have to learn to find solace in things that don’t damage who we are.  We have to learn to heal the damage that has been done to us.

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Link on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtqwL-ZPhAA

Read the lyrics from the Dixie Chicks “The Long Way Around” from a spiritual perspective.

My friends from high school
Married their high school boyfriends
Moved into houses
In the same ZIP codes where their parents lived

But I
I could never follow
No I
I could never follow

I hit the highway
In a pink RV with stars on the ceiling
Lived like a gypsy
Six strong hands on the steering wheel

I’ve been a long time gone now
Maybe someday, someday I’m gonna settle down
But I’ve always found my way somehow

By takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around
Takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around

I met the queen of whatever
Drank with the Irish and smoked with the hippies
Moved with the shakers
Wouldn’t kiss all the asses that they told me to

No I
I could never follow
No I
I could never follow

It’s been two long years now
Since the top of the world came crashing down
And I’m gettin’ it back on the road now

But I’m takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around
I’m takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around

Oh, I just take my time I won’t lay down
And take the long way ’round

Well, I fought with a stranger and I met myself
I opened my mouth and I hurt myself
It can get pretty lonely when you show yourself
Guess I could have made it easier on myself

But I
I could never follow
No I
I could never follow

Well I never seem to do it like anybody else
Maybe someday, someday I’m gonna settle down
If you ever want to find me I can still be found

Takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around
Takin’ the long way
Takin’ the long way around

Sometimes the things that are done to us are so brutal we have to fight back.

Also from the Dixie Chicks, also from the Album “Taking the Long Way Around” is the song “Not Ready to Make Nice.”

Although I don’t think we should get mad.  That doesn’t help the evolution of our soul.  They can’t help who they are.  But remember, we forgive but we don’t forget.

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Link on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dblAC5uLb8

Forgive, sounds good
Forget, I’m not sure I could
They say time heals everything
But I’m still waiting

I’m through with doubt
There’s nothing left for me to figure out
I’ve paid a price
And I’ll keep paying

I’m not ready to make nice
I’m not ready to back down
I’m still mad as hell and
I don’t have time to go round and round and round
It’s too late to make it right
I probably wouldn’t if I could
‘Cause I’m mad as hell
Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should

I know you said
Can’t you just get over it
It turned my whole world around
And I kind of like it

I made my bed and I sleep like a baby
With no regrets and I don’t mind sayin’
It’s a sad sad story when a mother will teach her
Daughter that she ought to hate a perfect stranger
And how in the world can the words that I said
Send somebody so over the edge
That they’d write me a letter
Sayin’ that I better shut up and sing
Or my life will be over

I’m not ready to make nice
I’m not ready to back down
I’m still mad as hell and
I don’t have time to go round and round and round
It’s too late to make it right
I probably wouldn’t if I could
‘Cause I’m mad as hell
Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should

I’m not ready to make nice
I’m not ready to back down
I’m still mad as hell and
I don’t have time to go round and round and round
It’s too late to make it right
I probably wouldn’t if I could
‘Cause I’m mad as hell
Can’t bring myself to do what it is you think I should

Forgive, sounds good
Forget, I’m not sure I could
They say time heals everything
But I’m still waiting

The Earth is a living organism, often called Gaia.  You could say, that in a way, humanity is the nervous sytem of this collective.  If we dramatically improve the heath of a large number of individuals in the collective, the collective will improve.

From http://www.healthinsurance.org/blog/2009/05/11/the-needs-of-the-many/

It is perhaps appropriate, following the triumphant relaunch of the Star Trek franchise by director J.J. Abrams, to recall one of the most famous lines from the early movies. Spock was lying, dying, in some sort of glass tube, having exposed himself to a massive dose of radiation in order to save the ship. He explains to Kirk, “Sometimes the needs of the many, outweigh the needs of the few … or the one.”

I thought of this as I opened the healthinsurance.org mailbox this weekend. I got a note, probably from someone in the insurance industry, that read like many others we’ve received:

“You are in the insurance business and you are supporting the Obama plan. You have lost your mind. Get ready for 6 month waiting lists for the most basic CT/MRI’s etc. You get old,,?… you die. Rationing is more cost effective and letting you die will make room for a younger more productive resident.

“Get off of it. Dopebama is ruining this country and idiots like you are helping bring us down. Sheesh.. brain dead !”

People are scared of change. Yet change is the nature of things. America sees its share of change all the time as industries we’ve grown up with adapt or go out of business. Who a generation ago would have thought that Detroit would now be producing so few cars? Cell phones and VOIP are erasing the landlines that were the arteries of the once-powerful telephone industry. Things change, and our health care system is no different.

Actually, our healthcare system is long overdue for change. America is the only industrialized nation (my, isn’t that phrase even seeming quaint) where its citizens are one major illness away from bankruptcy. And even when we don’t go broke, we spend more on health care than the citizens of any other country – 30 percent more than the citizens of the next largest spender, Switzerland.

Think our health care is so good it’s worth paying more? With the exception of some standout places such as the Mayo Clinic, perhaps not. If you have a child, there are 36 countries where your child has a better chance of surviving until age five, including all those countries with government-run health care. In child mortality, the USA ranks down there with Estonia and Poland. Your child is twice as likely to live past age five in a Scandinavian country.

Will America’s costly health care system let you live a longer life? Sorry, wrong again. There are 44 countries with longer life expectancies than the USA. Even Canada, which critics of health care reform like to demonize, get a couple more years on Earth than us.

Speaking of Canada, back in 1970, before it created national health insurance, it spent about the same 7+ percent of national GNP on health care that the U.S. did. Since that time, that percentage has crept to just over nine-and-a-half while the U.S. percentage has leapt to nearly 15 percent. And remember that Canada covers every single citizen while 45 million Americans have no health insurance.

People are scared of change, because they are scared of the unknown, whether it’s something as inconsequential as the reboot of a 40-year-old beloved television franchise or important like reform of our health care system. Paramount Studios, the corporate owners of Star Trek, hired a visionary director and gave him the space he needed to work in (no pun intended), and despite the nattering anxieties of fanboys, Abrams did boldly go further than others had gone before, keeping what worked but infusing new energy and ideas to catapult the series into the future.

We citizens also hired a visionary director when we elected Barack Obama last fall – and now, we need to give him the space to operate within. As the president said yesterday, health care “is not a luxury that can be postponed, but a necessity that cannot wait.” It’s far more important to meets people’s needs rather than to protect the interests of health care and health insurance industries as our e-mail writer above cries.

Health care is a massive problem, and it will take massive changes to make it work for all. The less bold the action, the less chance for meaningful change. Mammals replaced dinosaurs. Democracy replaced monarchies. Hybrids are replacing gas cars, which will in turn be replaced by electric. Change is natural, and it’s time for our system of delivering health care to evolve.

Let’s make the changes we need, so we can all live long and prosper.

Day 4: What is the babbler and how does it affect your meditations?

link on YouTube: The Babbler

Benefits of meditaiton include health and inner peace. A better benefit is non-thought.

link on YouTube: The Real Meaning of Non-Thought

link on YouTube: 7 Essential Elements of Meditation

My previous blog with mostly the same information: 7 Essential Pieces of a Great Meditation Practice

Some seekers say we all have the answers inside of us.  This is my response…

link on YouTube: The Answers Inside of You

From Incandescent Bulbs Return to the Cutting Edge.

SANTA ROSA, Calif. — When Congress passed a new energy law two years ago, obituaries were written for the incandescent light bulb. The law set tough efficiency standards, due to take effect in 2012, that no traditional incandescent bulb on the market could meet, and a century-old technology that helped create the modern world seemed to be doomed.

But as it turns out, the obituaries were premature.

Researchers across the country have been racing to breathe new life into Thomas Edison’s light bulb, a pursuit that accelerated with the new legislation. Amid that footrace, one company is already marketing limited quantities of incandescent bulbs that meet the 2012 standard, and researchers are promising a wave of innovative products in the next few years.

Indeed, the incandescent bulb is turning into a case study of the way government mandates can spur innovation. (emphasis added)

“There’s a massive misperception that incandescents are going away quickly,” said Chris Calwell, a researcher with Ecos Consulting who studies the bulb market. “There have been more incandescent innovations in the last three years than in the last two decades.”