Dear Dan,
It is not too surprising. One of my friends is a Chinese doctor who lives in
Beijing, he's just published a book in Chinese regarding illness and emotions.
He cures people mainly by his fingers. By mapping a person's main internal
organ functions with Yi Ching, he can accurately point out what diseases the
person has or will have. And interestingly illness usually appears as energy
knots (also as muscle knots) that can be detected around stomach areas.
He further classifies those knots into hurt, anger, anxiety knots etc. When he
push his fingers onto those knots, he can tell by their location, size and
shape who are related (emotional hurts - caused by a man or woman, family
members or not) and what time it has happened. For example, those people who
were born during the Cultural Revolution usually have fear knots in their body.
Those knots are caused by emotions, if unresolved, will transform into physical
illness later on.
Regards
Fung
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
----原始訊息----
寄件人: danbcohen@xxxxxxx
日期: 30/10/2009 11:09
收件者: <ConstellationTalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
副本: <ahfung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
主旨: [ConstellationTalk] Chopstick Standing Straight Up in a Bowl of Water
A bit of background, followed by a question...
I recently led a Constellation at a large group event. One of the
participants wrote me afterwards:
"I loved the experience I had at the end, of that golden column of light,
energy and strength pouring down from the ancestors, that seemed to be
saying "look to us for your strength - we are here supporting this work with
all our love and power." I still feel filled with that energy."
A few days later, she sent me another message.
"My Chinese doctor was putting acupuncture needles in me the Tuesday after
you were with us. Out of the blue, as I lay on the table, he started
telling me stories about the folk medicine his mother practiced when he was
sick as a young child...like if he had a tummy ache, she put a bowl of water
on his stomach with chopsticks standing upright. She'd say something like,
"If this is Uncle Jenshing, please move on now..."; apparently searching for
which ancestor had chronic ailments that matched the boy's symptoms...if it
was the Uncle, the chopsticks would magically stay standing upright in the
water. He said, 'Wow, I've never talked about these stories before, I don't
know why I'm telling you these old stories now.' I told him it was
synchronistic to what I'd been engaged in and reading about for the last few
days..."
I wrote her back, "Once you step through the back of the wardrobe, all sorts
of surprising things open up. The connection you made to the ancestors -
being bathed in that golden light - stays with you. The Chinese doctor
attunes to it and tells you stories he never would dare mention to lo faan
otherwise.
I asked a Chinese doctor who is working on a book about bridging the Chinese
and Western minds about this. He wrote:
"My work is an attempt to decipher such phenomena. Rupert Sheldrake's
Morphic Resonance comes in very handy. The work of William Tiller at
Stanford is highly pertinent here. 21st century quantum physics is a
reputable ally.
"Placing the rice bowl on the sick stomach activates the 'digestive DNA
tract' in the collective memory of the family. The chopsticks are like
antennae --- their lying or standing position are 'No' or 'Yes' indicators.
Something like a pendulum. In this case, the standing chopsticks defy the
known laws of classical physics.
"The theoretical explanation is very simple, just a stretch of the educated
imagination. Uncle Jenshing could be the next Nobel laureate for physics, in
abstentia. Would like to read his 'Conversation with Issac Newton.'"
The question: Is something that seems so utterly impossible to the Western
mind really so simple for the Chinese mind to grasp and accept? Are there
other cultures within our CT community where communicating with ancestors
routinely produces phenomena that appear to violate the principles of
Newton's physics?
Personally, as the months go by, I am finding that the experiences in the
Constellations I lead appear to be the stuff of spiritualism - talking and
listening to the dead. This is not how I describe myself, but it appears to
be a more fitting description than psychological constructs such as
"conscience" or spiritual terms such as "energy."
Stories like this test my insistence that I am not communicating with the
souls of the dead.
I'll be interested in reading about what others are thinking, feeling, and
doing in this regard.
Dan
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
-->
-->
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]