Archive: January 2014

As Luna waxes to full in Cancer (tomorrow) it's a good time to reflect upon how your inner child can be better supported - such as regular sharing circles, play dates, massages, counselling session, baths, early nights, home cooked nutritious food at regular times & hugs.  Moon in Cancer is also a good time to be truly grateful for our vulnerabilities... For often our special abilities arise as coping strategies in response to the unmet needs of our inner child. For example, if you didn't feel safe you may've learned to 'read' other people & intuit their needs or if you grew up with a lack of faith in your caregivers to meet your needs you may have become a high functioning adult who's great at organizing everything & everyone driven unconsciously by an anxiety that nothing will be done right if you don't attend to every detail. Just like the grain of sand that irritates the shellfish that creates the pearl, our childhood wounds are the catalyst for the pearls of wisdom that become our legacy we share with the world. So love your wound by acknowledging it exists. (We all have wounds, human frailty is universal & it's part of the ride when one incarnates.) When we acknowledge our wound we can better share our gifts in a way that honours our core needs.   The artist of this painting is: http://susanschroder.com/ Blessings on your day, Tanishka

“We’re here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise why else even be here?”
~ Steve Jobs

Good morning friends! Since I began blogging this year, I’ve changed my method for writing. In the past, I’d write immediately after catching the sunrise.  This lent itself to a certain level of stress, as some days I just didn’t feel like writing.

Now, all I have to do is catch the sunrise.  And even that can hold a challenge, as this morning, I was exhausted from a very challenging villa turnover … That, coupled with the full moon, did not lend itself to a good night’s sleep. read more

Riches begin in the form of thought and faith removes limitations.”
  ~ Napoleon Hill

It’s a beautiful still morning here on St. Thomas today.  The Christmas winds have “slowed down”, allowing me to slow down too, and spend some time contemplating on my morning bench.

As we continue on with Think and Grow Rich, to end the chapter on our second principle of success –  faith in our abilities – Hill tells the story of the United States Steel Corporation. read more

“All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think we become.”
  ~ Buddha.

Following the first Principle of Success, Desire, we are introduced to the 2nd Principle of Success: Faith in Our Ability.

I personally found this chapter fascinating.  I re-read it a number of times, getting a little something different each time, including noticing that Buddha and Napoleon Hill seem to be preaching from the same scripture 😉

Napoleon Hill expresses Buddha’s most widely quoted tenant this way:  “You are what you are because of the dominating thoughts that you permit to occupy your mind.  There are no limitations to the mind except those we acknowledge.” read more

“Whatever the mind of man can conceive and believe, it can achieve.”
  ~ Napoleon Hill

I just about missed this gorgeous sunrise … I could hear the rain, but then that little voice in my head said just get up and look anyway!  What a perfect picture to accompany today’s topic:  Nature as Bridge-Builder.   Believe, friends !!

As a fitting climax to his chapter on the power of desire, Napoleon Hill tells a very personal story:  One of his own son, who was born without any sign of ears. read more

“No more effort is required to aim high in life, to demand abundance and prosperity, than is required to accept misery and poverty.”
  ~ Napoleon Hill

The 1st Principle of Success:  Desire

In order for us to succeed, we must be willing to dream big, have full belief in our ability to achieve, and allow ourselves no possible way of retreat.

If we always pull up and go where the going seems easier, we will not succeed.  We must be willing to back our plans with persistence – a persistence which does not recognize failure. Thomas Edison is a shining example, failing more than 10,000 times before inventing the lightbulb.  He stood by his dream until finally he was driven to the discovery of the genius that slept within his brain. read more

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