Channel name was changed to «🔊 @DeepTheShadowbag • To Be With, Recognize, & Care For All That Dwells Within • Intuitive, Deep The Shadowbag • IPR •••»
🔊 And • @DeepTheShadowbag • To Be With, Recognize, & Care For All That Dwells Within • Intuitive, Deep The Shadowbag • IPR ••• t.me/DeepTheShadowbag/4
You -- 😨 -- Yes, YOU CAN STOP human trafficking in your communities. 😮 Ask me how.
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New URL! www.intuitivepublicradio.network/p/aac ✨💖✨
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' Having your basic needs met is suicide prevention. Read that again. -Dr. Jen ' • facebook.com/share/p/SWQpa9fNTNjXM4P3 • t.me/DeepTheShadowbag/6
Elen Chouvarda shares this image, and a quote from Arny:
"We must be able to identify all the parts in a system and allow them to speak. All the parts in a group, even those we do not like or believe to be useless, must be present and supported."
⇛ Arnold Mindell
facebook.com/share/2GWiFgUx37pUewzx
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"We must be able to identify all the parts in a system and allow them to speak. All the parts in a group, even those we do not like or believe to be useless, must be present and supported."
⇛ Arnold Mindell
facebook.com/share/2GWiFgUx37pUewzx
t.me/IntuitiveEmergent/2770
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/12286
Forwarded from 🔊 @DarkMatterMemo • Memos Make Matter • Dark Matter (All-Beings) Sisterhood • RPI •••
Excerpted from the Editor's Note in Mother Night by Kurt Vonnegut,
' The title of the book is Campbell’s. It is taken from a speech by Mephistopheles in Goethe’s Faust.
As translated by Carlyle F. MacIntyre (New Directions, 1941), the speech is this:
"I am a part of the part that at first was all, part of the darkness that gave birth to light, that supercilious light which now disputes with Mother Night her ancient rank and space, and yet can not succeed; no matter how it struggles, it sticks to matter and can’t get free. Light flows from substance, makes it beautiful; solids can check its path, so I hope it won’t be long till light and the world’s stuff are destroyed together."
The dedication of the book is Campbell’s too. Of the dedication, Campbell wrote this in a chapter he later discarded:
"Before seeing what sort of a book I was going to have here, I wrote the dedication—'To Mata Hari.' She whored in the interest of espionage, and so did I.
Now that I’ve seen some of the book, I would prefer to dedicate it to someone less exotic, less fantastic, more contemporary—less of a creature of silent film.
I would prefer to dedicate it to one familiar person, male or female, widely known to have done evil while saying to himself, 'A very good me, the real me, a me made in heaven, is hidden deep inside.'
I can think of many examples, could rattle them off after the fashion of a Gilbert and Sullivan patter song. But there is no single name to which I might aptly dedicate this book— unless it would be my own.
Let me honor myself in that fashion, then:
This book is rededicated to Howard W. Campbell, Jr., a man who served evil too openly and good too secretly, the crime of his times."
KURT VONNEGUT, JR. '
t.me/DarkMatterMemo/1508
' The title of the book is Campbell’s. It is taken from a speech by Mephistopheles in Goethe’s Faust.
As translated by Carlyle F. MacIntyre (New Directions, 1941), the speech is this:
"I am a part of the part that at first was all, part of the darkness that gave birth to light, that supercilious light which now disputes with Mother Night her ancient rank and space, and yet can not succeed; no matter how it struggles, it sticks to matter and can’t get free. Light flows from substance, makes it beautiful; solids can check its path, so I hope it won’t be long till light and the world’s stuff are destroyed together."
The dedication of the book is Campbell’s too. Of the dedication, Campbell wrote this in a chapter he later discarded:
"Before seeing what sort of a book I was going to have here, I wrote the dedication—'To Mata Hari.' She whored in the interest of espionage, and so did I.
Now that I’ve seen some of the book, I would prefer to dedicate it to someone less exotic, less fantastic, more contemporary—less of a creature of silent film.
I would prefer to dedicate it to one familiar person, male or female, widely known to have done evil while saying to himself, 'A very good me, the real me, a me made in heaven, is hidden deep inside.'
I can think of many examples, could rattle them off after the fashion of a Gilbert and Sullivan patter song. But there is no single name to which I might aptly dedicate this book— unless it would be my own.
Let me honor myself in that fashion, then:
This book is rededicated to Howard W. Campbell, Jr., a man who served evil too openly and good too secretly, the crime of his times."
KURT VONNEGUT, JR. '
t.me/DarkMatterMemo/1508
' Breathes there the man, with soul so dead,
Who never to himself hath said,
“This is my own, my native land!”
Whose heart hath ne’er within him burn’d
As home his footsteps he hath turn’d
From wandering on a foreign strand? '
—Sir Walter Scott
Who never to himself hath said,
“This is my own, my native land!”
Whose heart hath ne’er within him burn’d
As home his footsteps he hath turn’d
From wandering on a foreign strand? '
—Sir Walter Scott
' Deck: Dark Goddess Tarot
Spread: Card of the Day
Date: Wed Sep 25 07:02:41 EDT 2024
Today's Card
Hag of Air ~ Dhumavati (Upright)
Hindu Widow Goddess
What appears unlucky becomes something sacred.
Dhumavati is the Hindu smoke goddess, the widow goddess. Covered in ash, she dresses in rags gleaned from the cremation grounds. There is a time when she lives with the god Shiva in the Himalayas. She is hungry and asks him for food. When he refuses, she swallows him and widows herself. The widow has a difficult, disrespected social position among her people, but the hunger of the goddess is only satisfied by eating the god who contains the entire world.
Dhumavati is assertive and determined to go her own contrary way. She is associated with the ugly aspects of reality, with hunger, thirst, and need. She represents all that is inauspicious. She is Shakti without Shiva, the goddess without god, a strange figure in the well-paired world of the Hindu. She sits in a cart without a horse, as a widow is thought to have nowhere to go.
Dhumavati is worshipped by widows and bachelors, by people who renounce the world, and by sorcerers and witches. Her companions are the unlucky, unclean, carrion and garbage eating crows, the symbols of black magic and dark forces. She is especially knowledgeable in the use of spells for the ending of things, for death and separation. Her tool is the winnowing basket. With this she separates what is necessary from what is not, what is nourishing from what is deceiving, what is true from what is false. She sees through the smoke of outer forms to comprehend the inner essence. She has the power to take what appears unlucky, sanctify it, and turn it into a blessing.
For Dhumavati is in truth a wisdom goddess. When the seeker overcomes distaste at her ugliness and fear of her misfortune, the goddess becomes a divine teacher who reveals the secrets to obtaining ultimate knowledge beyond all illusion.
When Dhumavati appears:
It is easy to count blessings that everyone recognizes, not so easy when fortune appears contrary. Look for opportunities to change your perceptions. When something you took as given you now see to be untrue, create a different definition in its place.
Find the hidden blessings in the situation. Claim a weakness as a badge of courage. Set yourself free through acceptance of what is imperfect or strange.
Build a fire big enough to burn something that represents a trauma from your past. Be naked, pure, alone, and focused. Watch the object burn, watch its form become smoke. Smoke can twist around, it can linger or dissipate. Inhale anything you want to keep of the experience. Exhale all you are ready to see gone. If it is necessary, ask for justice on your behalf. Entrust the matter into the hands of the goddess, and be done.
Pay attention when crows speak. When you hear them, consider what human illusion they are mocking. Laugh with them when you can. Find crow feathers & set them around your home for luck. '
Presented by Dark Goddess Tarot app from The Fool's Dog.
t.me/DeepTheShadowbag/11
Spread: Card of the Day
Date: Wed Sep 25 07:02:41 EDT 2024
Today's Card
Hag of Air ~ Dhumavati (Upright)
Hindu Widow Goddess
What appears unlucky becomes something sacred.
Dhumavati is the Hindu smoke goddess, the widow goddess. Covered in ash, she dresses in rags gleaned from the cremation grounds. There is a time when she lives with the god Shiva in the Himalayas. She is hungry and asks him for food. When he refuses, she swallows him and widows herself. The widow has a difficult, disrespected social position among her people, but the hunger of the goddess is only satisfied by eating the god who contains the entire world.
Dhumavati is assertive and determined to go her own contrary way. She is associated with the ugly aspects of reality, with hunger, thirst, and need. She represents all that is inauspicious. She is Shakti without Shiva, the goddess without god, a strange figure in the well-paired world of the Hindu. She sits in a cart without a horse, as a widow is thought to have nowhere to go.
Dhumavati is worshipped by widows and bachelors, by people who renounce the world, and by sorcerers and witches. Her companions are the unlucky, unclean, carrion and garbage eating crows, the symbols of black magic and dark forces. She is especially knowledgeable in the use of spells for the ending of things, for death and separation. Her tool is the winnowing basket. With this she separates what is necessary from what is not, what is nourishing from what is deceiving, what is true from what is false. She sees through the smoke of outer forms to comprehend the inner essence. She has the power to take what appears unlucky, sanctify it, and turn it into a blessing.
For Dhumavati is in truth a wisdom goddess. When the seeker overcomes distaste at her ugliness and fear of her misfortune, the goddess becomes a divine teacher who reveals the secrets to obtaining ultimate knowledge beyond all illusion.
When Dhumavati appears:
It is easy to count blessings that everyone recognizes, not so easy when fortune appears contrary. Look for opportunities to change your perceptions. When something you took as given you now see to be untrue, create a different definition in its place.
Find the hidden blessings in the situation. Claim a weakness as a badge of courage. Set yourself free through acceptance of what is imperfect or strange.
Build a fire big enough to burn something that represents a trauma from your past. Be naked, pure, alone, and focused. Watch the object burn, watch its form become smoke. Smoke can twist around, it can linger or dissipate. Inhale anything you want to keep of the experience. Exhale all you are ready to see gone. If it is necessary, ask for justice on your behalf. Entrust the matter into the hands of the goddess, and be done.
Pay attention when crows speak. When you hear them, consider what human illusion they are mocking. Laugh with them when you can. Find crow feathers & set them around your home for luck. '
Presented by Dark Goddess Tarot app from The Fool's Dog.
t.me/DeepTheShadowbag/11
