---Definitely, I agree: ("this is the job of a Yogi"):
http://members.aol.com/PaulEC2/yogi.html


 In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "R.G." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  (snip)
> > > A key ingredient to the rain-bringing ceremony:
> > >
> > > "It may take some time, but rain will come since we did this 
> ceremony
> > > in good faith and without selfish motive."
> > 
> > Does rain generally have motives when it comes?
> > I didn't think water could think.
> > 
> > Sal
>  (snip)
> Does water think?
> It is not the water that creates the storm.
> More directly, storms and the rain comes from the friction of air, 
> creating a force in sanskrit called Indra, having to do with 
> electicity, magnetism and clearing out negative, stuck energies.
> 
> Therefore, it has been known, that a prayer to Indra, or the 
praising 
> of Indra, will bring rain in due time.
> The motivation is purely to attract Indra to the dry area.
> To work with the laws of nature, and help to balance the earth.
> That is the job of a yogi.
>


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