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When you're feeling down and out, When your mind is filled with doubt, And you don't know what life's about, Go within or go without. Based on a foundational tenet from Conversations with God, "If you do not go within, you go without," these four lines from Annie Sims' first inspirational song found their way into Neale Donald Walsch's CD player . . . and into his heart. Walsch has trained Annie ever since and now calls her his "teacher of teachers," as she has not only embraced the profoundly life-changing ideas of CWG--she has embodied them. In Wisdom that Works, Annie shares how she applies the wisdom of Conversations with God to her everyday life, and shows us how we can too.
Recovering from a life ordeal--be it the death of a loved one, a divorce, loss of a job, or a serious physical injury or sickness--can sometimes result in personal and spiritual growth. When it does, Dr. Frank Pasciuti calls the transformative experience a "Chrysalis Crisis." If properly managed, these kinds of crises can result in increased physical, emotional, intellectual, social, and moral development. Using stories from his clients and his personal life, Dr. Pasciuti shows how a Chrysalis Crisis can prompt growth in ten key areas of human functioning. It can awaken our very real capacity for psychic abilities and deeply enhance our spiritual lives. This book offers a model of human development that enables everyone--not just those in crises--to transform their lives, and create for themselves an increased sense of peace, happiness, and well-being.
Tap into the protective powers of your guardian angel with this advice.
Are medical miracles real and is there a spiritual reason they occur? Is there a place for euthanasia in the mind of the spirital seeker? Can participating in open-heart surgery and dissecting cadavers tell a medical student anything about the soul? Is there an intersection between spirituality and physicality where the two become one? Let's get more direct with our questions. Is there a place for God in the system of modern Western medicine? Should metaphysical/spiritual principles be part of the medical school curriculum? Is keeping patients alive an appropriate top priority for doctors?The answer to of the above questions is yes. Is it possible that human beings are more than simply biological creatures, physical entities with a highly developed mind? Could it be that we are also (or even primarily) spiritual entities? If so, could "healing" involve more than "fixing" the body and treating the mind, but also engaging the Source from which many believe we have emerged? These are not inconsequential questions. Neither are the answers found here.
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