Wed, Sep 19, 2012
Dear White Buffalo (Calf Woman),
bowing down sacred ground
had to share today
singing in the aspens the chance came to sing to a pair of does
they did not run off but stopped and listened for a spell
till i was finished then around the next corner was a dozen more
again i stopped and there was two little ones in the group
i sang to them and the little ones walked towards me
and it felt good to watch their curiosity over me
what an experience.
opening the reality by beginning the vibrations
next
spoke with some homeless men tonight
Don and Ron twins again, third set of day.
i revealed how we may walk away from money next month
(
brotherhood the new coin of giving and receiving)
i visited them in their campsite in mountains
we are brothers true looking for relief from the mess
Loving I bow
Grandmother Upon the Hill
gray child of the rainbow clan
grandmotheruponthehill.blogspot.com
Tuesday, Sep 25, 2012
Grandmother Upon the Hill,
Thank you for your lovely story. The twins show us the soul and the flesh. United we are holy beings, harmonizing the streams.
Today is Yom Kippur, the very day of the holiest union. The twins show
us the galaxies, how they intertwine with their twin sun, just like us.
To be an expression of the great cosmos is indeed a wonder. Sharing your
heart towards brotherhood, when the coin shall be giving and receiving,
is much to be desired. I bless you along your path to help heal others
with your great stories, Grandmother Upon the Hill.
Your devoted grandchild, White Buffalo Calf Woman your Twin Deer Mother
elder crystal child,
alightfromwithin.org, Rainbow Warriors of Prophecy
There are those who acquire their world in “a single moment”-- in a
single, timeless instant that molds the future and redefines the past. This is the Great Present.
Moment (the Great Present)
based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe

When
Elazar ben Durdaia (a notorious sinner) found that all his appeals for
assistance had been turned down, he said: “It all depends entirely on
myself.” He placed his head between his knees and wept until his soul
departed from him. A voice from heaven then announced: “Rabbi Elazar ben
Durdaia is destined for life in the world to come!”
Hearing this, Rabbi [Judah HaNassi] wept: “There are those who acquire
their world in many years, and there are those who acquire their world
in a single moment.”
Talmud, Avodah Zarah 17a
In this world of ours, more is less and less is more.
Quantitatively, the earth is but a tiny speck in a vast universe; in
significance, it is the focus of G-d’s creation. Of the earth itself,
inanimate matter constitutes virtually all of its mass, only a minute
fraction of which are living cells. Plant life is more plentiful than
animal life, and animals far more numerous than humans. Within the human
being, the head, seat of man’s most sophisticated faculties, is smaller
than the torso or limbs. In a word, the greater the quality, the lesser
the quantity.
The same is true of man’s most precious resource: time. Quality
time--time that is most optimally and fulfillingly utilized--comprises
but a quantitative fraction of the time we consume. How many minutes of
each day do we spend on truly meaningful things? The bulk of our hours
are taken up with earning a living, sleeping, eating, and fulfilling a
host of social and other obligations--worthy pursuits them all, but
secondary to the purpose of our lives.

The
very structure of time, as designed by its Creator, follows the “less
is more” model. There are six mundane workdays, leading to a single day
of spirit and tranquility. Yom Kippur--the “Sabbath of Sabbaths” whose
twenty-six hours bring us in touch with our deepest, most essential
self--occupies less than 0.3 percent of the year. Everything we do takes
time, but the greater the quality of our endeavor, the less the
quantity of time it consumes.
The most potent of human deeds is teshuvah--our ability to rectify and
sublimate past wrongdoing by returning to the timeless, inviolable core
of self which was never tainted by sin in the first place. And teshuvah
is the least “time-consuming” of events: the essence of teshuvah is a
single wrench of self, a single flash of regret and resolve. “There are
those who acquire their world in many years,” says the Talmud, building
it brick by brick with the conventional tools of achievement. Then there
are those who acquire their world in “a single moment”--in a single,
timeless instant that molds the future and redefines the past.
Courtesy of MeaningfulLife.com and
http://www.chabad.org/holidays/JewishNewYear/template_cdo/aid/4559/jewish/Moment.htm
Ghost Walk (Sing, Dance, Gather) with us (where you are) each New Moon.
From the darkness we arise a heavenly child.
(2014, solar and lunar calender align, January 1, a cycle of renewal)
Rainbow Warriors of Prophecy 
Pray With Elders around the World
Here
I stand to make it Man, the place inside our hearts. Can you feel the
rushing waves, the sounds of love's embrace. I gift to you my heart this
day, to hold you close to me. There I stand to heal all Man, because
it's time for us to swim, heavenly will has bent. I bow and bless you in
the winds, across the portals of time. There we sail to know the
whale/wail, to learn of gifts to begin.