Zen and the Art of Falling in Love - by Brenda Shoshanna
Anyone else reading this? I've found it quite remarkable, and conjoined with a new (ahem, long-distance) love interest it sure feels like the closest in the years since adolescence I've ever been to being both true to myself, and unconditional in my transmission of love. [Hot damn it's good to be back!]
Not scientific in the least - there have been WAY too many variables changing in my life over the past two weeks to quantify anything concretely... but the impact each change has had feels remarkable, appears to infect the quantum field around me, and energize with more positivity than my vessel is designed to contain.... so now I get to share too! Thanks, thanks, and thanks.
Namaste,
K.
Anyone else reading this? I've found it quite remarkable, and conjoined with a new (ahem, long-distance) love interest it sure feels like the closest in the years since adolescence I've ever been to being both true to myself, and unconditional in my transmission of love. [Hot damn it's good to be back!]
Not scientific in the least - there have been WAY too many variables changing in my life over the past two weeks to quantify anything concretely... but the impact each change has had feels remarkable, appears to infect the quantum field around me, and energize with more positivity than my vessel is designed to contain.... so now I get to share too! Thanks, thanks, and thanks.
Namaste,
K.
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Re: Zen and the Art of Falling in Love
Thu, January 10, 2008 - 3:05 PMI have not read this but will look into it. Most books I have on Zen ,anything have a different approach to thinking that is helpful.