[FairfieldLife] ME, s(h)ort of??
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHT1nAX46dM
[FairfieldLife] Love this!
Two adventurers swapping stories... [https://fbcdn-sphotos-f-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/524734_101516248\ 98619796_752644711_n.jpg]
[FairfieldLife] g-Tummo!
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0058244
[FairfieldLife] Re: A TM poster boy's eulogy for Margaret Thatcher
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, PaliGap compost1uk@... wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@ wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, PaliGap compost1uk@ wrote: -- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@ wrote: Well now you have. It refers of course to the way the brain unifies sense data into a coherent picture of the world as a theatre that we are witnessing but when you look inside the brain, no such theatre exists. It's all a clever bit of wiring and sleight of hand. Or mind. Damn clever that. Very damn clever. For wires. Who (or what) is fooled by the sleight? Why, more wires of course! Not turtles all the way down? Could be turtles. I'm guessing gloopy stuff made out of whirly bits.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Hi Carol, I always played slow pitch so I doubt I could even hit one of those fast pitches! I don't know what a rollie bat is but my Grandad played sandlot baseball so I guess it's in my genes. Speaking of which, the name of the Bruce Lipton movie is also Biology of Belief. The public library showed it here a few years ago. I remember some research about putting a few skin cells from a person in a petrie dish. When that person heard their spouse say I love you, even in the next room, their skin cells changed. Very cool stuff. Anyway, here's a question: if we were to find some cells of Copernicus, could we say I love you to them and would that benefit Copernicus? Another kind of time travel maybe. From: Carol jchwe...@gmail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 9:14 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@... wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8. In 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools. That was very cool. I only played basketball in high school because there was no softball. Half way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting. Then in college I minored in Modern Dance. Half way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles. But not so much because we were both working full time. Oh wait! Yeah, one season the company I worked for sponsored a women's softball team. We didn't win a championship but that season we were the only team to beat the very tough champions from the previous year. We won by one run and it was exciting right down to the final out.  Your post from Hearthmath was very interesting. I'd seen a Bruce Lipton movie once that had a lot about them in it. Plus I have their book. And I'm also familiar with Dr. Emoto's work on water crystals. We are definitely living in very cool times. From: Carol jchwelch@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 11:27 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Hey Share... Yes, he did enjoy it. It was a small camp so there were lots of one-on-one interactions with the pros. The other pro player whom I couldn't recall previously was Bobby Jones. Son played basketball and baseball through high school. He has now switched to P-90X and backpacking. :) Did you play basketball through high school or beyond? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Lefty Driesel! Now that's a name from the distant past. Wasn't he a bit flamboyant? Actually I remember better the name Tom Nugent, UM football coach because his daughter went to the same high school I did. Carol, it sounds like your son had a great opportunity with that David Thompson camp. Do you remember if he enjoyed it? Does he still play basketball? I don't (-: From: laughinggull108 no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  So you were a Terrapin, huh, with good ol' Lefty Driesell? I was a Tarheel during the Dean Smith era and when games were played in Carmichael Auditorium. We'd line up all night for tickets to a game. NC State had Thompson, Burleson, and Towe; we had McAdoo, Kupchak, Waddell, and Hoffman; and you guys had Davis, Lucas, and Boyle. What a time that was for ACC basketball! Yes, last night's game was exciting and everything a final should be. Very
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
I think it's what we used to call Indian Ball http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/July-2008/What-the-Is-Indian-Ball/ --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@... wrote: Hi Carol, I always played slow pitch so I doubt I could even hit one of those fast pitches! I don't know what a rollie bat is but my Grandad played sandlot baseball so I guess it's in my genes. Speaking of which, the name of the Bruce Lipton movie is also Biology of Belief. The public library showed it here a few years ago. I remember some research about putting a few skin cells from a person in a petrie dish. When that person heard their spouse say I love you, even in the next room, their skin cells changed. Very cool stuff. Anyway, here's a question: if we were to find some cells of Copernicus, could we say I love you to them and would that benefit Copernicus? Another kind of time travel maybe. From: Carol jchwelch@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 9:14 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8.àIn 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools.àThat was very cool.àI only played basketball in high school because there was no softball.àHalf way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting.àThen in college I minored in Modern Dance.àHalf way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles.àBut not so much because we were both working full time.àOh wait!àYeah, one season the company I worked for sponsored a women's softball team.àWe didn't win a championship but that season we were the only team to beat the very tough champions from the previous year.àWe won by one run and it was exciting right down to the final out.ààYour post from Hearthmath was very interesting.àI'd seen a Bruce Lipton movie once that had a lot about them in it.àPlus I have their book.àAnd I'm also familiar with Dr. Emoto's work on water crystals.àWe are definitely living in very cool times.àFrom: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 11:27 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! àHey Share... Yes, he did enjoy it. It was a small camp so there were lots of one-on-one interactions with the pros. The other pro player whom I couldn't recall previously was Bobby Jones. Son played basketball and baseball through high school. He has now switched to P-90X and backpacking. :) Did you play basketball through high school or beyond? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Lefty Driesel!ÃâàNow that's a name from the distant past.ÃâàWasn't he a bit flamboyant?ÃâàActually I remember better the name Tom Nugent, UM football coach because his daughter went to the same high school I did.ÃâàCarol, it sounds like your son had a great opportunity with that David Thompson camp.ÃâàDo you remember if he enjoyed it?ÃâàDoes he still play basketball?ÃâàI don't (-: From: laughinggull108 no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! ÃâàSo you were a Terrapin, huh, with good ol' Lefty Driesell? I was a Tarheel
[FairfieldLife] Pathetic!
I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Not sure how to respond to that. ;) Becoming a favorite anything makes me a bit nervous. Ha. That said, thank you Curtis. BTW, from what I've seen, I count you as an artist. Yuppers. *twothumbsup* --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltablues@... wrote: You are becoming my favorite poster. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Carol jchwelch@ wrote: Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8. In 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools. That was very cool. I only played basketball in high school because there was no softball. Half way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting. Then in college I minored in Modern Dance. Half way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles. But not so much because we were both working full time. Oh wait! Yeah, one season the company I worked for sponsored a women's softball team. We didn't win a championship but that season we were the only team to beat the very tough champions from the previous year. We won by one run and it was exciting right down to the final out.  Your post from Hearthmath was very interesting. I'd seen a Bruce Lipton movie once that had a lot about them in it. Plus I have their book. And I'm also familiar with Dr. Emoto's work on water crystals. We are definitely living in very cool times. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 11:27 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Hey Share... Yes, he did enjoy it. It was a small camp so there were lots of one-on-one interactions with the pros. The other pro player whom I couldn't recall previously was Bobby Jones. Son played basketball and baseball through high school. He has now switched to P-90X and backpacking. :) Did you play basketball through high school or beyond? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Lefty Driesel!àNow that's a name from the distant past.àWasn't he a bit flamboyant?àActually I remember better the name Tom Nugent, UM football coach because his daughter went to the same high school I did.àCarol, it sounds like your son had a great opportunity with that David Thompson camp.àDo you remember if he enjoyed it?àDoes he still play basketball?àI don't (-: From: laughinggull108 no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! àSo you were a Terrapin, huh, with good ol' Lefty Driesell? I was a Tarheel during the Dean Smith era and when games were played in Carmichael Auditorium. We'd line up all night for tickets to a game. NC State had Thompson, Burleson, and Towe; we had McAdoo, Kupchak, Waddell, and Hoffman; and you guys had Davis, Lucas, and Boyle. What a time that was for ACC basketball! Yes, last night's game was exciting and everything a final should be. Very enjoyable but I stayed up way past my bedtime! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Oh God, laughinggull now I feel nostalgic.ÃâàAnd old!ÃâàI remember 40 years ago when I was married and attending Univ of Maryland, we'd watch ACC basketball which I loved.ÃâàOne of my
[FairfieldLife] Proof of Heaven - for Emily
Hey Emily, I have finished the book and I enjoyed it. I would characterize 'Proof of Heaven' as a big book within a little book. On one level it is a little book, it is merely one man's experience of a place, a reality that he believes was true. What he reveals about his experience is lovely in the extreme; it is very personal and I would love most aspects of what he saw and perceived to be true. The big part of the book for me is that it has permanently instilled in me a vision and a hope for what could be waiting for me after death. I believe Eben to be a courageous man who, in the male-dominated medical profession, has put himself forward for what he knows to be probable ridicule in his peers' eyes. It is very evident from his writing that his NDE is the one most substantial event in his life and because of what it has done for him personally, on all levels, he feels it vital to communicate his 'findings' while in his coma to the world. That is how positive and life altering his coma experience was, let alone the very near to dying he came with a very rare disease for someone his age. Then there is, of course, the 'miracle' of complete recovery from virtual brain death as more proof to him that he was 'chosen' to have this NDE and recovery in order to spread a message of hope and happiness for people. Plus, being a learned man in the area of the brain and its functioning, its physical makeup and how disease or health manifests as well as knowledge gained through years practicing and studying within in his profession, his opinions and scientific evidence give more clout to dispel the notion his NDE was merely a vision or brain-originating hallucination. He gives strong evidence for why it could not be that but was the EXPERIENCE OF PURE CONSCIOUSNESS unsullied by brain function or memory or projection. I also found that in his description of the various 'strata' of those worlds he visited after falling into his deep coma that they resonated with some part of me. The worm's eye view was something I felt I had some knowledge of as well as the infinite bliss and love of the deeper places, the places even closer to God. I felt in his descriptions a tickling of some deeper memory for me of some truth there so I take his NDE very seriously. Thanks for recommending the book, it was a worthwhile read and maybe as close as we can come to a scientifically backed up explanation for what might possibly exist, for some or for all, after dropping the body. No matter what, it is a lovely idea or vision to hold in one's awareness while we still clamber about this planet in the body we currently possess.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Cougar purr!
The Lion Man. Probably not in the Dome (-: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxPaUUaxGlM From: salyavin808 fintlewoodle...@mail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 1:23 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Cougar purr! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson mjackson74@... wrote: Maybe we can get Nabby, Feste, and SeventhRay to try it and see if the TM in them will make the bobcats happy and not attack Now *that's* science! How about it guys? Put your money where your mouth is. From: salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 1:30 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Cougar purr!  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson mjackson74@ wrote: I guarantee you if you ever get in the wilderness and hear one of those not big cats screech when you are in the woods and not close to a place of safety you will be thinking of it as a shore nuff Big Cat - even be it a bob cat or lynx the same applies - if you ever hear the cry at night especially it is most disconcerting. You can't just take these littl'uns a ball of wool to play with huh? I remember being out in the desert in Israel one night when a pack of wolves in the next valley started howling. Blood really can run cold From: salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 12:51 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Cougar purr!  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, card cardemaister@ wrote: Been trying to break in my tube amp (Bugera Vintage 22, by Behringer, Germany?) by listening radio etc through it! (No-one could stand my playing guitar through it, LOL!) Bought it (about USD 300) just to make sure that my impression of tube amps being much more to my taste than solid state amps was right... Am quite pleased with the results, especially as to the bass sounds! It seems to me any day soon the 12 inch all-round speaker may sound like a cougar purr: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8YIT_q7Fcc I'm going to be interestingly pedantic here. The cougar (or puma or mountain lion) isn't a Big Cat. Sure, it's a BIG cat but to join the actual Big Cats (lions, tigers, leopards) it would have to have a different shaped hyoid bone in its throat. Because of this bone, proper Big Cats can roar you see, while little ones - like your puma and tibbles - can only screech. How do I remember this stuff? PS Valves rule!
Re: [FairfieldLife] Fun: Italian Hugs!
Well Mike I'm hoping to hug all my family members in a few weeks and they do live just across the Bay from Perdue chicken country: it takes a tough man to make a tender chicken. Maybe I should use one of those painters masks, esp on the 4 plane trips? From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 8:44 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fun: Italian Hugs! Share... no way was I just *kidding around*. Of course bird flu could be passed via a hug. Your face is right in someone else's face. I think Love Birds do a lot of hugging and ahem... other things as well.;) From: Share Long sharelon...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2013 7:34 AM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fun: Italian Hugs! Mike, are you kidding around? Can bird flu be passed on via a hug? Last but not least, do birds hug each other?! From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 8:44 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Fun: Italian Hugs! But.. but... what if they had bird flu? From: Dick Mays dickm...@lisco.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 2:38 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Fun: Italian Hugs! Heart-warming 4-minute video! Click below to watch this video made in Sondrio , Italy . If you're not smiling by the end, tell me where to send the flowers. http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=hN8CKwdosjE Enjoy! Music is marvelous!
Re: [FairfieldLife] Proof of Heaven - for Emily
Nice piece of writing Ann - I just read it too. Try Dying to be Me by Anita Moorjani if you have a mind to - I loved it. From: Ann awoelfleba...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 9:58 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Proof of Heaven - for Emily Hey Emily, I have finished the book and I enjoyed it. I would characterize 'Proof of Heaven' as a big book within a little book. On one level it is a little book, it is merely one man's experience of a place, a reality that he believes was true. What he reveals about his experience is lovely in the extreme; it is very personal and I would love most aspects of what he saw and perceived to be true. The big part of the book for me is that it has permanently instilled in me a vision and a hope for what could be waiting for me after death. I believe Eben to be a courageous man who, in the male-dominated medical profession, has put himself forward for what he knows to be probable ridicule in his peers' eyes. It is very evident from his writing that his NDE is the one most substantial event in his life and because of what it has done for him personally, on all levels, he feels it vital to communicate his 'findings' while in his coma to the world. That is how positive and life altering his coma experience was, let alone the very near to dying he came with a very rare disease for someone his age. Then there is, of course, the 'miracle' of complete recovery from virtual brain death as more proof to him that he was 'chosen' to have this NDE and recovery in order to spread a message of hope and happiness for people. Plus, being a learned man in the area of the brain and its functioning, its physical makeup and how disease or health manifests as well as knowledge gained through years practicing and studying within in his profession, his opinions and scientific evidence give more clout to dispel the notion his NDE was merely a vision or brain-originating hallucination. He gives strong evidence for why it could not be that but was the EXPERIENCE OF PURE CONSCIOUSNESS unsullied by brain function or memory or projection. I also found that in his description of the various 'strata' of those worlds he visited after falling into his deep coma that they resonated with some part of me. The worm's eye view was something I felt I had some knowledge of as well as the infinite bliss and love of the deeper places, the places even closer to God. I felt in his descriptions a tickling of some deeper memory for me of some truth there so I take his NDE very seriously. Thanks for recommending the book, it was a worthwhile read and maybe as close as we can come to a scientifically backed up explanation for what might possibly exist, for some or for all, after dropping the body. No matter what, it is a lovely idea or vision to hold in one's awareness while we still clamber about this planet in the body we currently possess.
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Seventhray...it is Indian Ball. I don't recall ever learning about that. Thank you. Share...fascinating about cellular memory/response and the skin cells. Do you know if this experiment was duplicated? I wonder if any responses are dependent on other factors such as individual's constitution or how much time the cells are detached from the body. This brings to mind Donna Eden's book on Energy Medicine and one of her accounts regarding an amputated finger. I'd have to look up the details now, but it seems their was communication between the finger and the hand from which it was amputated. I know energy medicine is controversial and some (most?) scientists tout it as pseudo science. One day maybe we will have the mechanisms for more reliable hard data. Regardless, once a person experiences something, it's difficult for one to deny that experience and remain stable. I mean, to deny it can produce a cognitive dissonance which can eventually be detrimental to one's well being. I think of one of Audubon's quotes: When the bird and the book disagree, always believe the bird. [But I'd take out the word always. ;) ] I posted in another FFL thread about Paul Pearsall. I think I posted about his interviews with organ transplant patients and the cellular memory transferred to the patient. Patients (at least at the time the book was written) could not know who their donors were for one year; yet, the patients had picked up words and/or memories and/or certain behaviors and tastes that the patient didn't have previous to receiving their new organ. Come to learn a year later, that those changes coincided with their donors' memories/tastes/words/etc. Life sure is complex and rich. I was updating my poetry archive last night. It was fun reading through poems I've penned in the last 4 years. One piece reminded me of how so much life surrounds us every moment of every day; life is everywhere. And the seeds of life...such an abundance of seeds. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, seventhray27 steve.sundur@... wrote: I think it's what we used to call Indian Ball http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/July-2008/What-the-Is-Indian-Ball/ --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I always played slow pitch so I doubt I could even hit one of those fast pitches! I don't know what a rollie bat is but my Grandad played sandlot baseball so I guess it's in my genes. Speaking of which, the name of the Bruce Lipton movie is also Biology of Belief. The public library showed it here a few years ago. I remember some research about putting a few skin cells from a person in a petrie dish. When that person heard their spouse say I love you, even in the next room, their skin cells changed. Very cool stuff. Anyway, here's a question: if we were to find some cells of Copernicus, could we say I love you to them and would that benefit Copernicus? Another kind of time travel maybe. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 9:14 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8.àIn 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools.àThat was very cool.àI only played basketball in high school because there was no softball.àHalf way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting.àThen in college I minored in Modern Dance.àHalf way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles.àBut not so
[FairfieldLife] Re: Proof of Heaven - for Emily
Just ordered Proof of Heaven from Amazon. Thanks for the review Ann! ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson mjackson74@... wrote: Nice piece of writing Ann - I just read it too. Try Dying to be Me by Anita Moorjani if you have a mind to - I loved it. From: Ann awoelflebater@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 9:58 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Proof of Heaven - for Emily  Hey Emily, I have finished the book and I enjoyed it. I would characterize 'Proof of Heaven' as a big book within a little book. On one level it is a little book, it is merely one man's experience of a place, a reality that he believes was true. What he reveals about his experience is lovely in the extreme; it is very personal and I would love most aspects of what he saw and perceived to be true. The big part of the book for me is that it has permanently instilled in me a vision and a hope for what could be waiting for me after death. I believe Eben to be a courageous man who, in the male-dominated medical profession, has put himself forward for what he knows to be probable ridicule in his peers' eyes. It is very evident from his writing that his NDE is the one most substantial event in his life and because of what it has done for him personally, on all levels, he feels it vital to communicate his 'findings' while in his coma to the world. That is how positive and life altering his coma experience was, let alone the very near to dying he came with a very rare disease for someone his age. Then there is, of course, the 'miracle' of complete recovery from virtual brain death as more proof to him that he was 'chosen' to have this NDE and recovery in order to spread a message of hope and happiness for people. Plus, being a learned man in the area of the brain and its functioning, its physical makeup and how disease or health manifests as well as knowledge gained through years practicing and studying within in his profession, his opinions and scientific evidence give more clout to dispel the notion his NDE was merely a vision or brain-originating hallucination. He gives strong evidence for why it could not be that but was the EXPERIENCE OF PURE CONSCIOUSNESS unsullied by brain function or memory or projection. I also found that in his description of the various 'strata' of those worlds he visited after falling into his deep coma that they resonated with some part of me. The worm's eye view was something I felt I had some knowledge of as well as the infinite bliss and love of the deeper places, the places even closer to God. I felt in his descriptions a tickling of some deeper memory for me of some truth there so I take his NDE very seriously. Thanks for recommending the book, it was a worthwhile read and maybe as close as we can come to a scientifically backed up explanation for what might possibly exist, for some or for all, after dropping the body. No matter what, it is a lovely idea or vision to hold in one's awareness while we still clamber about this planet in the body we currently possess.
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. I think what he is trying to say is that my original songs move him so deeply that I have transcended art. He is encouraging me to embrace the fact that I am really a scientist of the blues. Of course I appreciate his compliment, but I am a little uncomfortable with over-the-top fans. Thanks. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Carol jchwelch@... wrote: Not sure how to respond to that. ;) Becoming a favorite anything makes me a bit nervous. Ha. That said, thank you Curtis. BTW, from what I've seen, I count you as an artist. Yuppers. *twothumbsup* --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltablues@ wrote: You are becoming my favorite poster. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Carol jchwelch@ wrote: Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8. In 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools. That was very cool. I only played basketball in high school because there was no softball. Half way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting. Then in college I minored in Modern Dance. Half way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles. But not so much because we were both working full time. Oh wait! Yeah, one season the company I worked for sponsored a women's softball team. We didn't win a championship but that season we were the only team to beat the very tough champions from the previous year. We won by one run and it was exciting right down to the final out.  Your post from Hearthmath was very interesting. I'd seen a Bruce Lipton movie once that had a lot about them in it. Plus I have their book. And I'm also familiar with Dr. Emoto's work on water crystals. We are definitely living in very cool times. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 11:27 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Hey Share... Yes, he did enjoy it. It was a small camp so there were lots of one-on-one interactions with the pros. The other pro player whom I couldn't recall previously was Bobby Jones. Son played basketball and baseball through high school. He has now switched to P-90X and backpacking. :) Did you play basketball through high school or beyond? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Lefty Driesel!àNow that's a name from the distant past.àWasn't he a bit flamboyant?àActually I remember better the name Tom Nugent, UM football coach because his daughter went to the same high school I did.àCarol, it sounds like your son had a great opportunity with that David Thompson camp.àDo you remember if he enjoyed it?àDoes he still play basketball?àI don't (-: From: laughinggull108 no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! àSo you were a Terrapin, huh, with good ol' Lefty Driesell? I was a Tarheel during the Dean Smith era and when games were played in Carmichael Auditorium. We'd line up all night for tickets to a game. NC State had Thompson, Burleson, and Towe; we had McAdoo, Kupchak, Waddell, and Hoffman; and
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Carol, I'm pretty sure it was HeartMath research that Lipton was talking about but don't remember if they duplicated it. Their website might have more info. A LOT of research is cited in the documentary, a lot of teachers interviewed. And my memory is faulty. Anyway, because of my interest in EFT I've heard of Eden's book. Though having written that, I realize that maybe EFT tapping could be considered a bit of a bridge between energy work and acupuncture which has a longer tradition. I have 20 notebooks from having been in a women's writing group for periods of time. I had begun transferring them to my computer. But the temptation to edit comes up and so they remain in paper form for now. And yes, it is wonderful to read some of the previous writing. Thanks, I really like the Audubon quote and how you'd change it. You got me thinking about what it means to experience something. So many levels of experiencing can be present in a moment: the sensory for sure, but also any memories the sensory might be evoking on either the mental or energetic level. See my PS below for an example of this. For sure it's a gift to be human. PS to Steve and Carol: for some reason your comments about Indian ball brought to mind cricket a game which I've only seen in movies: Becoming Jane and Bend It Like Beckham. I've heard that one game of cricket can go on for hours and hours! From: Carol jchwe...@gmail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 9:26 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! Seventhray...it is Indian Ball. I don't recall ever learning about that. Thank you. Share...fascinating about cellular memory/response and the skin cells. Do you know if this experiment was duplicated? I wonder if any responses are dependent on other factors such as individual's constitution or how much time the cells are detached from the body. This brings to mind Donna Eden's book on Energy Medicine and one of her accounts regarding an amputated finger. I'd have to look up the details now, but it seems their was communication between the finger and the hand from which it was amputated. I know energy medicine is controversial and some (most?) scientists tout it as pseudo science. One day maybe we will have the mechanisms for more reliable hard data. Regardless, once a person experiences something, it's difficult for one to deny that experience and remain stable. I mean, to deny it can produce a cognitive dissonance which can eventually be detrimental to one's well being. I think of one of Audubon's quotes: When the bird and the book disagree, always believe the bird. [But I'd take out the word always. ;) ] I posted in another FFL thread about Paul Pearsall. I think I posted about his interviews with organ transplant patients and the cellular memory transferred to the patient. Patients (at least at the time the book was written) could not know who their donors were for one year; yet, the patients had picked up words and/or memories and/or certain behaviors and tastes that the patient didn't have previous to receiving their new organ. Come to learn a year later, that those changes coincided with their donors' memories/tastes/words/etc. Life sure is complex and rich. I was updating my poetry archive last night. It was fun reading through poems I've penned in the last 4 years. One piece reminded me of how so much life surrounds us every moment of every day; life is everywhere. And the seeds of life...such an abundance of seeds. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, seventhray27 steve.sundur@... wrote: I think it's what we used to call Indian Ball http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/July-2008/What-the-Is-Indian-Ball/ --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I always played slow pitch so I doubt I could even hit one of those fast pitches! I don't know what a rollie bat is but my Grandad played sandlot baseball so I guess it's in my genes. Speaking of which, the name of the Bruce Lipton movie is also Biology of Belief. The public library showed it here a few years ago. I remember some research about putting a few skin cells from a person in a petrie dish. When that person heard their spouse say I love you, even in the next room, their skin cells changed. Very cool stuff. Anyway, here's a question: if we were to find some cells of Copernicus, could we say I love you to them and would that benefit Copernicus? Another kind of time travel maybe. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 9:14 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltablues@... wrote: Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. I'm always puzzled by him characterizing Mississippi delta blues as hillbilly music. To my thinking, that label would only apply to bluegrass and country.
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@... wrote: I've heard that one game of cricket can go on for hours and hours! Five days for a proper international match. Then again, the golfers at the Masters will be playing for four days. But you will at least have a result. Very often a five day cricket match will end in a draw. Five or so hours with a break for tea and cakes is par for the course for a friendly match between pub teams.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
cardemaister: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos... Some people say the best drum solos are by Buddy Rich or Gene Krupa. The greatest rock drum solo was probably Ginger Baker on 'Toad'. My vote would be Ginger Baker on 'Do What You Like' - using the wood beaters on a 5/4 solo on the end of the studio version. But, check out the Baker live performance with Blind Faith (at 2:59) and the live Baker performance at Royal Albert Hall, January 1970 (at 4:23). Go figure. Ginger Baker: http://youtu.be/SSZgFYy5eLI Blind Faith: http://youtu.be/LyRWboKYqyE Royal Albert Hall: http://youtu.be/28LRjajxGmA Classic Rock Drum Solos: http://youtu.be/zJ77aAExQHY Hannah Ford Improv Drum Solo: http://youtu.be/WvdiJYGf2JU
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
-- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@... wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltablues@ wrote: Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. I'm always puzzled by him characterizing Mississippi delta blues as hillbilly music. To my thinking, that label would only apply to bluegrass and country. Yours is the more common distinction. The music of the hillbilly is shaped by Irish and Scottish folk music rather than black culture. They are almost direct opposites musically. I think he is using it as a euphemism for I don't like you. Growing up in the blues I made stronger distinctions between African American based blues and the white blues of say Hank Williams. In my recent research I am finding that there was more of a crossover between white and black cultures in music than I had realized, especially cowboy music. Black bluesmen were as crazy about cowboys as everyone else. When Alan Lomax went to record Muddy Waters before he went to Chicago in 1941 he knew more cowboy songs than blues songs! Alan only recorded his blues songs in that session which is kind of too bad. Tommy Johnson yodeled in his 1928 recording. I don't feel much affinity with the twang in their voices but the themes of the blues sure zoom forth in this song by Jimmy Davis who had a number one hit in '40 followed by Gene Autry's number one hit with the same song in '41. But check out the first verse for all the blues. Gene started with the chorus in his version, and it changes the blues vibe of the song completely. I play this in old folks homes, they love it. The other night, dear, As I lay sleeping I dreamed I held you in my arms. When I awoke, dear, I was mistaken And I hung my head and cried. You are my sunshine, My only sunshine. You make me happy When skies are grey. You'll never know, dear, How much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away. I'll always love you And make you happy If you will only say the same But if you leave me To love another You'll regret it all some day; You are my sunshine, My only sunshine. You make me happy When skies are grey. You'll never know, dear, How much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away. You told me once, dear You really loved me And no one else could come between But now you've left me And love another You have shattered all my dreams; You are my sunshine, My only sunshine. You make me happy When skies are grey. You'll never know, dear, How much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, card cardemaister@... wrote: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: You're kidding! I thought that was great, really spirited. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
There was also a version where at some point, someone would lay the bat down, and someone else would roll the ball in, and if it hit the bat and bounced up, and you were able to catch the ball on the bounce, you won that round,or got some points. But I can't remember the name of that game. So, when you say roller ball that also comes to mind. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Carol jchwelch@... wrote: Seventhray...it is Indian Ball. I don't recall ever learning about that. Thank you. Share...fascinating about cellular memory/response and the skin cells. Do you know if this experiment was duplicated? I wonder if any responses are dependent on other factors such as individual's constitution or how much time the cells are detached from the body. This brings to mind Donna Eden's book on Energy Medicine and one of her accounts regarding an amputated finger. I'd have to look up the details now, but it seems their was communication between the finger and the hand from which it was amputated. I know energy medicine is controversial and some (most?) scientists tout it as pseudo science. One day maybe we will have the mechanisms for more reliable hard data. Regardless, once a person experiences something, it's difficult for one to deny that experience and remain stable. I mean, to deny it can produce a cognitive dissonance which can eventually be detrimental to one's well being. I think of one of Audubon's quotes: When the bird and the book disagree, always believe the bird. [But I'd take out the word always. ;) ] I posted in another FFL thread about Paul Pearsall. I think I posted about his interviews with organ transplant patients and the cellular memory transferred to the patient. Patients (at least at the time the book was written) could not know who their donors were for one year; yet, the patients had picked up words and/or memories and/or certain behaviors and tastes that the patient didn't have previous to receiving their new organ. Come to learn a year later, that those changes coincided with their donors' memories/tastes/words/etc. Life sure is complex and rich. I was updating my poetry archive last night. It was fun reading through poems I've penned in the last 4 years. One piece reminded me of how so much life surrounds us every moment of every day; life is everywhere. And the seeds of life...such an abundance of seeds. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, seventhray27 steve.sundur@ wrote: I think it's what we used to call Indian Ball http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/July-2008/What-the-Is-Indian-Ball/ --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I always played slow pitch so I doubt I could even hit one of those fast pitches! I don't know what a rollie bat is but my Grandad played sandlot baseball so I guess it's in my genes. Speaking of which, the name of the Bruce Lipton movie is also Biology of Belief. The public library showed it here a few years ago. I remember some research about putting a few skin cells from a person in a petrie dish. When that person heard their spouse say I love you, even in the next room, their skin cells changed. Very cool stuff. Anyway, here's a question: if we were to find some cells of Copernicus, could we say I love you to them and would that benefit Copernicus? Another kind of time travel maybe. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 9:14 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long
[FairfieldLife] Re: .00001% total harmonic distortion
salyavin What sort of stuff do you play Willy? I can picture you with maraccas. This is funny - I don't listen to recorded music that much anymore, but I've always been a jazz fan. Austin is the live music capitol of the world. Go figure. http://www.austin360.com/ Sometimes I like to play 'World Turning' on vinyl (from 'Rumours' by Fleetwood Mac, their first album with Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham), on the Yamaha system out back - we love the Mick Fleetwood drum solo with the volume turned about half way up. Christine McVie is very powerful on on this tune - a collaboration with Buckingham. Don't try this at home with your headphones. LoL! Fleetwood Mac 'World Turning' http://youtu.be/NL84jPY829I Fleetwood Mac, Rumours - Vinyl LP: http://tinyurl.com/d6caq84 'Making Rumours: The Inside Story of the Classic Fleetwood Mac Album' by Ken Caillat Wiley, 2012 http://tinyurl.com/dy7z8yv http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleetwood_Mac I think you should post a video of you dancing... It's all about the Polka. Dancing is real big around here. I recently took dancing lessons at the university by joining a folk dance group to learn world dancing. We really like the two-step around here, 2/4. Polka music and dancing the two-step is sort of like a the 'polska', which has a 3/4 beat; a Swedish dance style, but the Polka dance is apparently from Polish roots. Polka music has very popular ane over time evolved into Ragtime dances, Rockabilly and Cajunta music styles. Further south, polka music began to sound a lot like Cajun music. My favorite is the 'Beer Barrel Polka'. LoL! Polka Swing Two Step: http://youtu.be/gyTXIzQEvCs Texas Saturday Night: http://youtu.be/zj1JCUKD9XM
[FairfieldLife] Google Fiber
'Google Fiber Expands TV, Internet to Austin, Texas' http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7
[FairfieldLife] CONSPIRACY FOR KIDS: Great youtube
CONSPIRACY FOR KIDS: Great youtube http://worldpeaceassociation.com/2013/04/12/conspiracy-for-kids-great-youtube/
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos... salyavin: You're kidding! I thought that was great, really spirited. According to my granddaughter, folks our age don't have any idea what's going on in popular music these days because we grew up in the MTV generation and we don't get out much. Go figure. The Faceless - The Eidolon Reality - Lyle Cooper: http://youtu.be/nTrGIZqbfiM
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)
Since your consciousness is connected throughout time broadcast messages about current times back to yourself in the past. ;-) On 04/11/2013 12:54 PM, John wrote: According to Patanjali, a yogi can see the future and the past through his consciousness alone. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@... wrote: Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'Time Machine' that can predict the future Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions An Iranian scientist has claimed to have invented a 'time machine' that can predict the future of any individual with a 98 per cent accuracy. Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions, The Telegraph reported. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9985757/Irani\ an-scientist-claims-to-have-invented-time-machine.html According to a Fars news agency report, Mr Razeghi, 27, claims the machine uses algorithms to produce a print-out of the details of any individual's life between five and eight years into their future. Mr Razeghi, quoted in the Telegraph, said: My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you. Razeghi is the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Invention and reportedly has another 179 inventions registered in his name. He claims the invention could help the government predict military conflict and forecast fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil prices. According to Mr Razeghi his latest project has been criticised by his friends and family for trying to play God. Iranian authorities are keen to showcase the technological prowess of the country but have been criticised in recent months for allegedly faking pictures of a new jet fighter flying over mountains. Prior to that the government was accused of also faking claims that it successfully sent a monkey into space when before and after pictures appeared to show a markedly different animal. Click here for article with inevitable picture of a Delorean: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-cl\ aims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.h\ tml http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-c\ laims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.\ html
Re: [FairfieldLife] Google Fiber
On 04/12/2013 08:54 AM, Richard J. Williams wrote: 'Google Fiber Expands TV, Internet to Austin, Texas' http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7 You definitely need more fiber, Willy. :-D
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@... wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltablues@ wrote: Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. I'm always puzzled by him characterizing Mississippi delta blues as hillbilly music. To my thinking, that label would only apply to bluegrass and country. Nabby's German. The only street musicians they have in his country are those godawful oompah Tuba bands that everyone else in the world characterizes as fart music. :-)
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)
hi noozguru, I do love the topic of time travel! How about this: maybe our future, and supposedly more developed selves, are broadcasting back to our current selves right now! I've also experienced that finding old photos can be a prompt to send attention back to myself in a previous time of this life. Kind of to give myself a helping hand. What do you think? I've mentioned before that I love the Ray Bradbury chilling story about time travel: A Sound of Thunder. http://www.lasalle.edu/~didio/courses/hon462/hon462_assets/sound_of_thunder.htm From: Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 11:08 AM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of) Since your consciousness is connected throughout time broadcast messages about current times back to yourself in the past. ;-) On 04/11/2013 12:54 PM, John wrote: According to Patanjali, a yogi can see the future and the past through his consciousness alone. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@... wrote: Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'Time Machine' that can predict the future Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions An Iranian scientist has claimed to have invented a 'time machine' that can predict the future of any individual with a 98 per cent accuracy. Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions, The Telegraph reported. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9985757/Irani\ an-scientist-claims-to-have-invented-time-machine.html According to a Fars news agency report, Mr Razeghi, 27, claims the machine uses algorithms to produce a print-out of the details of any individual's life between five and eight years into their future. Mr Razeghi, quoted in the Telegraph, said: My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you. Razeghi is the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Invention and reportedly has another 179 inventions registered in his name. He claims the invention could help the government predict military conflict and forecast fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil prices. According to Mr Razeghi his latest project has been criticised by his friends and family for trying to play God. Iranian authorities are keen to showcase the technological prowess of the country but have been criticised in recent months for allegedly faking pictures of a new jet fighter flying over mountains. Prior to that the government was accused of also faking claims that it successfully sent a monkey into space when before and after pictures appeared to show a markedly different animal. Click here for article with inevitable picture of a Delorean: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-cl\ aims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.h\ tml http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-c\ laims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.\ html
Re: [FairfieldLife] Pathetic!
On 04/12/2013 05:50 AM, card wrote: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/ Drums solos are mostly bullshit anyway. You just play stuff the audience wants to see not necessarily hear. It's mainly drumnastics or a gymnastic approach to drumming. It would be interesting to hear what this drummer would play if he wasn't concerned about impressing the audience.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: On 04/12/2013 05:50 AM, card wrote: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/ Drums solos are mostly bullshit anyway. You just play stuff the audience wants to see not necessarily hear. It's mainly drumnastics or a gymnastic approach to drumming. It would be interesting to hear what this drummer would play if he wasn't concerned about impressing the audience. I think audiences appreciate it as a reprieve from the even more dreaded bass solo.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)
You've raised a good question there. It would seem that one needs a special siddhi for that kind of communication, if it's possible at all. On another note, I'm reading a jyotish book right now that mentioned a technique for determining your previous lives. That's done by taking the position of Jupiter in your chart and regressing it back to the previous house. So, that altered lagna would represent your previous life. With this technique, you can regress back to many lifetimes at will. :) --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: Since your consciousness is connected throughout time broadcast messages about current times back to yourself in the past. ;-) On 04/11/2013 12:54 PM, John wrote: According to Patanjali, a yogi can see the future and the past through his consciousness alone. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@ wrote: Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'Time Machine' that can predict the future Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions An Iranian scientist has claimed to have invented a 'time machine' that can predict the future of any individual with a 98 per cent accuracy. Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions, The Telegraph reported. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9985757/Irani\ an-scientist-claims-to-have-invented-time-machine.html According to a Fars news agency report, Mr Razeghi, 27, claims the machine uses algorithms to produce a print-out of the details of any individual's life between five and eight years into their future. Mr Razeghi, quoted in the Telegraph, said: My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you. Razeghi is the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Invention and reportedly has another 179 inventions registered in his name. He claims the invention could help the government predict military conflict and forecast fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil prices. According to Mr Razeghi his latest project has been criticised by his friends and family for trying to play God. Iranian authorities are keen to showcase the technological prowess of the country but have been criticised in recent months for allegedly faking pictures of a new jet fighter flying over mountains. Prior to that the government was accused of also faking claims that it successfully sent a monkey into space when before and after pictures appeared to show a markedly different animal. Click here for article with inevitable picture of a Delorean: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-cl\ aims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.h\ tml http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-c\ laims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.\ html
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: On 04/12/2013 05:50 AM, card wrote: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/ Drums solos are mostly bullshit anyway. You just play stuff the audience wants to see not necessarily hear. It's mainly drumnastics or a gymnastic approach to drumming. It would be interesting to hear what this drummer would play if he wasn't concerned about impressing the audience. Rat Scabies, the drummer with The Damned, used to set fire to his kit and try and beat the flames out, with varying degrees of success. That's gotta be a first. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfiTcvniJcc What a great live band, I must have seen them 20 times and lived to tell the tale!
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. curtisdeltablues: The music of the hillbilly is shaped by Irish and Scottish folk music rather than black culture. ... Maybe so; there is a close relationship between blues and country music of the 1920s. They say the first Rock 'n Roll song was 'Blue Suede Shoes' which was recorded on December 1955 by Carl Perkins. One of my favorite performers from the early days is John Fogerty. The Old Man Down The Road - John Fogerty; Centerfield at Austin City Limits Music Festival in Austin, TX on September 27, 2008: http://youtu.be/VtTNK5HZ84A John Fogerty, The Old Man down the Road Austin City Limits 2004: http://youtu.be/4Lf0pQoRgFQ Creole, Cajun, and Zydeco music gave rise to Cajunta music. As a result, the music integrated waltz, shuffles, two-steps, blues, rock and roll, and other dance music forms of the era. Today, zydeco integrates genres such as RB, soul, brass band, reggae, hip hop, ska, rock, Afro-Caribbean and other styles, in addition to the traditional forms. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zydeco Interesting reading: 'Dissonant Identities: The Rock'n'Roll Scene in Austin, Texas' by Barry Shank Wesleyan, 1994 'Texas Tornado: The Times and Music of Doug Sahm' by Jan Reid University of Texas Press, 2010
[FairfieldLife] Re: Google Fiber
Bhairitu: You definitely need more fiber, Willy. :-D So, I wonder when you're going to get up to speed. LoL! 'Google Fiber Expands TV, Internet to Austin, Texas' http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7 http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7
[FairfieldLife] Re: .00001% total harmonic distortion
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Richard J. Williams richard@... wrote: salyavin What sort of stuff do you play Willy? I can picture you with maraccas. This is funny - I don't listen to recorded music that much anymore, but I've always been a jazz fan. Austin is the live music capitol of the world. Go figure. http://www.austin360.com/ Sometimes I like to play 'World Turning' on vinyl (from 'Rumours' by Fleetwood Mac, their first album with Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham), on the Yamaha system out back - we love the Mick Fleetwood drum solo with the volume turned about half way up. Christine McVie is very powerful on on this tune - a collaboration with Buckingham. Don't try this at home with your headphones. LoL! I can't, I dropped a desk on them today and sliced through the cable. Doh! Half way through Life during wartime by the Talking Heads too. Quite spoiled my afternoon. Shielded cables cost a fortune, such is life Fleetwood Mac 'World Turning' http://youtu.be/NL84jPY829I Fleetwood Mac, Rumours - Vinyl LP: http://tinyurl.com/d6caq84 'Making Rumours: The Inside Story of the Classic Fleetwood Mac Album' by Ken Caillat Wiley, 2012 http://tinyurl.com/dy7z8yv http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleetwood_Mac It's a great album but I've never bought a copy even though I appreciate the songs and the especially the singing. I usually rely on girlfriends to have a copy of it. They can always rely on me for Black Sabbath and Jethro Tull of course I think you should post a video of you dancing... It's all about the Polka. Dancing is real big around here. I recently took dancing lessons at the university by joining a folk dance group to learn world dancing. We really like the two-step around here, 2/4. Polka music and dancing the two-step is sort of like a the 'polska', which has a 3/4 beat; a Swedish dance style, but the Polka dance is apparently from Polish roots. Polka music has very popular ane over time evolved into Ragtime dances, Rockabilly and Cajunta music styles. Further south, polka music began to sound a lot like Cajun music. My favorite is the 'Beer Barrel Polka'. LoL! Polka Swing Two Step: http://youtu.be/gyTXIzQEvCs Texas Saturday Night: http://youtu.be/zj1JCUKD9XM
[FairfieldLife] Re: Drones in Your Backyard
martyboi: I already own a small remote-controlled helicopter with a built in video recorder. $80 dollars from Fry's Electronics. A fairly fun toy. It's a new kind of war - we need to be ready for it - get your drones now, before it's too late. There's probably already a terrorist under your bed! Thank God, we have a president that is a determined leader in the war on terrorism. The Silence of the Drones? It is hard to explain to them why those drones don't somehow find their way to Bashar al-Assad's bunker. We do anti- terrorism. Wars of rescue are not an American specialty nowadays. Fouad Ajami, Bloomberg: http://tinyurl.com/d47kqxl
[FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@... wrote: hi noozguru, I do love the topic of time travel! How about this: maybe our future, and supposedly more developed selves, are broadcasting back to our current selves right now! I've also experienced that finding old photos can be a prompt to send attention back to myself in a previous time of this life. Kind of to give myself a helping hand. What do you think? Only you know if it worked. I've mentioned before that I love the Ray Bradbury chilling story about time travel: A Sound of Thunder. http://www.lasalle.edu/~didio/courses/hon462/hon462_assets/sound_of_thunder.htm From: Bhairitu noozguru@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 11:08 AM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)  Since your consciousness is connected throughout time broadcast messages about current times back to yourself in the past. ;-) On 04/11/2013 12:54 PM, John wrote: According to Patanjali, a yogi can see the future and the past through his consciousness alone. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@ wrote: Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'Time Machine' that can predict the future Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions An Iranian scientist has claimed to have invented a 'time machine' that can predict the future of any individual with a 98 per cent accuracy. Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions, The Telegraph reported. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9985757/Irani\ an-scientist-claims-to-have-invented-time-machine.html According to a Fars news agency report, Mr Razeghi, 27, claims the machine uses algorithms to produce a print-out of the details of any individual's life between five and eight years into their future. Mr Razeghi, quoted in the Telegraph, said: My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you. Razeghi is the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Invention and reportedly has another 179 inventions registered in his name. He claims the invention could help the government predict military conflict and forecast fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil prices. According to Mr Razeghi his latest project has been criticised by his friends and family for trying to play God. Iranian authorities are keen to showcase the technological prowess of the country but have been criticised in recent months for allegedly faking pictures of a new jet fighter flying over mountains. Prior to that the government was accused of also faking claims that it successfully sent a monkey into space when before and after pictures appeared to show a markedly different animal. Click here for article with inevitable picture of a Delorean: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-cl\ aims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.h\ tml http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-c\ laims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.\ html
[FairfieldLife] New Terrence Malick film: To the Wonder
Barry, Have you seen it yet? I adored Tree of Life and am waiting for a theater to get this one in.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Google Fiber
On 04/12/2013 10:27 AM, Richard J. Williams wrote: Bhairitu: You definitely need more fiber, Willy. :-D So, I wonder when you're going to get up to speed. LoL! Up to speed for what? I already have fiber cable. And rumor was this town was also considered by Google but now that would piss off ATT. If we had a visionary city council the city could have laid the fiber and leased it back to broadband providers thus paying for it. Instead we have a bunch real estate lunkheads basically only interested in passing stuff to benefit their pet projects. Can we say corrupt? 'Google Fiber Expands TV, Internet to Austin, Texas' http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7 http://tinyurl.com/ccgadh7
[FairfieldLife] Re: New Terrence Malick film: To the Wonder
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan wayback71@... wrote: Barry, Have you seen it yet? I adored Tree of Life and am waiting for a theater to get this one in. Zooming along on the train at 300+ kilometers per hour, on my way back to the Netherlands, connected to Wifi and chatting with one of my housemates real-time in another window (ah, the wonders of the modern world), I have to say that I am *not* one of the people waiting with 'bated breath for the next Terrence Malick epic. I *loathed* Tree Of Life. All hat, no cattle. That is (IMO, of course...all appreciation or non-appreciation of a film is opinion), it was all visuals, no content. I won't willingly go out of my way to subject myself to another of his films again unless Roger Ebert gives it a thumbs-up. Oooops. Guess I'm gonna miss this one. :-)
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Will LBS soon publish the words of Guru DEV? Some stand ready 2 assist him in that!!
Richard, a friend of mine who has very good experiences says that maya is a covering, then it's a transparent veil. But finally it's actually a ladder, a means to fullest realization. Also, if consciousness is the only reality, then how can everything else be an appearance? Aren't the sense also consciousness? I'm having a little deja vu as in we've had this discussion before but Maharishi says that at the deepest level of reality, Purusha IS Prakriti. Finally, my oft quoted favorite from the Veda: Brahman says, My indestructible maya. From: Richard J. Williams rich...@rwilliams.us To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 4, 2013 9:45 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Will LBS soon publish the words of Guru DEV? Some stand ready 2 assist him in that!! Share Long: What do you think it means when he says that the mind...will withdraw from samsara on its own? The POV of Adwaita, according to the Adwaita Tradition of Shankaracharya, is 'consciousness is the only reality', everything else is an appearance based on the senses. According to the founder of Adwaita in India, Adwaita is the realization that things and events are an *illusion*; and the *dispelling of illusion* by a process of experiential yogic transcendental meditation. Gaudapada: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaudapada In the Adwaita realization, the witness, Purusha, the Transcendental Person, stands all by Itself as the Self in Pure Consciousness *isolated* from the prakriti. Adwaita is based on pure monism: there is One reality, all the perceptions are appearance only. GD taught that 'Brahman is Light; it needs no other light for illumination'. The difference is the same as the difference between rice and paddy. Remove the skin of the paddy and it is rice. Similarly, remove the covering of Maya, and the Jiva will become Brahman. - SBS Will LBS soon publish the words of Guru DEV? In reality, the aim of life is to stop the mind from involvement with this world. If one engages in the spiritual practice of Bhagavan and in thinking and speaking about Him, the mind will start dwelling on Him, and after some time, it will withdraw from samsara on its own. - Swami Brahmananda Saraswati http://www.paulmason.info/gurudev/gurudev.htm 'Rocks Are Melting' The Everyday Teachings of Swami Brahmananda Saraswati [Jagadguru Shankaracharya, Jyotir Math, Himalayas, 1941-53] Translation Edited and Annotation by Cynthia A. Humes Edited and Introduction by L. B. Shriver Compiled by Rameswar Tiwari Clear River Press, 2001 http://tinyurl.com/6nl5ml
[FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Does Austin have a music scene? Only kidding, SRV forever! Great clips, one of the great rock vocalists. I don't know where I would place the first Rock N' Roll song but it would be a white guy for me. The term, as I'm sure you know is a blues euphemism, and plenty of guys were speeding up the blues into a recognizable rock styles in the 40's like Howlin Wolf and Muddy. Blues plus Rockabilly = Elvis's formula Blues plus Skiffle = early Beatles Here is my pick for the first real Rock 'N roller: Sister Rosetta Tharp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KWB_1OBWskU There is a fantastic documentary on her on the PBS app She rocked! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Richard J. Williams richard@... wrote: Oh you must be referring to Nabbie's comments. curtisdeltablues: The music of the hillbilly is shaped by Irish and Scottish folk music rather than black culture. ... Maybe so; there is a close relationship between blues and country music of the 1920s. They say the first Rock 'n Roll song was 'Blue Suede Shoes' which was recorded on December 1955 by Carl Perkins. One of my favorite performers from the early days is John Fogerty. The Old Man Down The Road - John Fogerty; Centerfield at Austin City Limits Music Festival in Austin, TX on September 27, 2008: http://youtu.be/VtTNK5HZ84A John Fogerty, The Old Man down the Road Austin City Limits 2004: http://youtu.be/4Lf0pQoRgFQ Creole, Cajun, and Zydeco music gave rise to Cajunta music. As a result, the music integrated waltz, shuffles, two-steps, blues, rock and roll, and other dance music forms of the era. Today, zydeco integrates genres such as RB, soul, brass band, reggae, hip hop, ska, rock, Afro-Caribbean and other styles, in addition to the traditional forms. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zydeco Interesting reading: 'Dissonant Identities: The Rock'n'Roll Scene in Austin, Texas' by Barry Shank Wesleyan, 1994 'Texas Tornado: The Times and Music of Doug Sahm' by Jan Reid University of Texas Press, 2010
[FairfieldLife] Re: New Terrence Malick film: To the Wonder
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@... wrote: (snip) I *loathed* Tree Of Life. All hat, no cattle. That is (IMO, of course...all appreciation or non-appreciation of a film is opinion), it was all visuals, no content. I won't willingly go out of my way to subject myself to another of his films again unless Roger Ebert gives it a thumbs-up. Oooops. Guess I'm gonna miss this one. :-) http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/to-the-wonder-2013 Three-and-a-half stars. Ooopsie indeed.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: New Terrence Malick film: To the Wonder
On 04/12/2013 10:58 AM, turquoiseb wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan wayback71@... wrote: Barry, Have you seen it yet? I adored Tree of Life and am waiting for a theater to get this one in. Zooming along on the train at 300+ kilometers per hour, on my way back to the Netherlands, connected to Wifi and chatting with one of my housemates real-time in another window (ah, the wonders of the modern world), I have to say that I am *not* one of the people waiting with 'bated breath for the next Terrence Malick epic. I *loathed* Tree Of Life. All hat, no cattle. That is (IMO, of course...all appreciation or non-appreciation of a film is opinion), it was all visuals, no content. I won't willingly go out of my way to subject myself to another of his films again unless Roger Ebert gives it a thumbs-up. Oooops. Guess I'm gonna miss this one. :-) With Ben Affleck it might well be hit or miss. And is there really a guy named Terence Malick or is it really the name of a production company? He's known as the most reclusive director ever to the extent that some filmmakers think there is no such guy (and don't rely on Wikipedia for the answer). Watching the extras on New World it was the cinematographer directing.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
On 04/12/2013 10:00 AM, curtisdeltablues wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: On 04/12/2013 05:50 AM, card wrote: I've seen Japanese teen age girls play more impressive drum solos than this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIQj6EVTT94 Especially his time keeping sucks big time, so to speak... :/ Drums solos are mostly bullshit anyway. You just play stuff the audience wants to see not necessarily hear. It's mainly drumnastics or a gymnastic approach to drumming. It would be interesting to hear what this drummer would play if he wasn't concerned about impressing the audience. I think audiences appreciate it as a reprieve from the even more dreaded bass solo. The last live bass soloist I saw was Victor Wooten and no dread there (he might have been wearing dreadnoughts though).
[FairfieldLife] Re: New Terrence Malick film: To the Wonder
This is reported to be not as good as Tree of Life. And the females in this one apparently do alot of that twirling about and looking at the sky that Jessica Chastain did in Tree of Life. So that makes me a bit uneasy. For me, Tree of Life had tons of content (loss of innocence, coming of age, father/sons especially in the 50's, how a person feels when they give up dreams of work, dealing with the loss of a child or sibling, seeing death or scarring of a playmate - a peer, how psiritual views change as one matures). There was a good deal of extraneous stuff in the movie, too. Malick takes his time, which can be annoying, but somehow that slow pace seems right for the issues he deals with. But Tree of Life was one of those movies that felt really different for different people. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@... wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan wayback71@ wrote: Barry, Have you seen it yet? I adored Tree of Life and am waiting for a theater to get this one in. Zooming along on the train at 300+ kilometers per hour, on my way back to the Netherlands, connected to Wifi and chatting with one of my housemates real-time in another window (ah, the wonders of the modern world), I have to say that I am *not* one of the people waiting with 'bated breath for the next Terrence Malick epic. I *loathed* Tree Of Life. All hat, no cattle. That is (IMO, of course...all appreciation or non-appreciation of a film is opinion), it was all visuals, no content. I won't willingly go out of my way to subject myself to another of his films again unless Roger Ebert gives it a thumbs-up. Oooops. Guess I'm gonna miss this one. :-)
[FairfieldLife] A little Hafiz
Ever since happiness heard your name, it has been running through the streets trying to find you. Poems of Hafiz For a day, just for one day, Talk about that which disturbs no one And bring some peace into your Beautiful eyes. What we speak becomes the house we live in. I caught the happy virus last night When I was out singing beneath the stars. It is remarkably contagious - So kiss me. This place where you are right now, God circled on a map for you. For I have learned that every heart will get What it prays for Most. Fear is the cheapest room in the house. I would like to see you living In better conditions. This is the kind of Friend You are - Without making me realize My soul's anguished history, You slip into my house at night, And while I am sleeping, You silently carry off All my suffering and sordid past In Your beautiful Hands. This sky where we live is no place to lose your wings so love, love, love.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: I think audiences appreciate it as a reprieve from the even more dreaded bass solo. The last live bass soloist I saw was Victor Wooten and no dread there (he might have been wearing dreadnoughts though). Do you mean dreadlocks? Yeah, I love bass too, just an old joke. Here is a nice example of turning the joke upside down: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZDaHEBTAtM
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Pathetic!
On 04/12/2013 01:06 PM, curtisdeltablues wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote: I think audiences appreciate it as a reprieve from the even more dreaded bass solo. The last live bass soloist I saw was Victor Wooten and no dread there (he might have been wearing dreadnoughts though). Yeah, dreadlocks though I thought I'd also heard them referred to as dreadnoughts. Maybe that was a joke too. And working a gig with Gary Peacock rather spoiled me.
Re: [FairfieldLife] A little Hafiz
Thank you so much for this sweet way to end the posting week. From: Dick Mays dickm...@lisco.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 2:44 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] A little Hafiz Ever since happiness heard your name, it has been running through the streets trying to find you. Poems of Hafiz For a day, just for one day, Talk about that which disturbs no one And bring some peace into your Beautiful eyes. What we speak becomes the house we live in. I caught the happy virus last night When I was out singing beneath the stars. It is remarkably contagious - So kiss me. This place where you are right now, God circled on a map for you. For I have learned that every heart will get What it prays for Most. Fear is the cheapest room in the house. I would like to see you living In better conditions. This is the kind of Friend You are - Without making me realize My soul's anguished history, You slip into my house at night, And while I am sleeping, You silently carry off All my suffering and sordid past In Your beautiful Hands. This sky where we live is no place to lose your wings so love, love, love.
[FairfieldLife] Blues vs Hillbilly Music
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb no_reply@... wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley j_alexander_stanley@ wrote: I'm always puzzled by him characterizing Mississippi delta blues as hillbilly music. To my thinking, that label would only apply to bluegrass and country. You got it mixed up somewhere Alex. I know very well the difference between blues and Hillbilly music from the Appalachian mountains and elsewhere or rough versions of bluegrass. My point, from years ago, was that his style of singing, or howling if you like, gives me the same shudder as listening to those hillbillies who are masters in the art of non-singing. Are we clear now ? :-)
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of)
In 1968 I had a vision about fascism in 40 years. Never thought much about it but look what happened over the last decade! Also had a vision of the Chinese invading and now China pretty much owns the US. On 04/12/2013 09:51 AM, Share Long wrote: hi noozguru, I do love the topic of time travel! How about this: maybe our future, and supposedly more developed selves, are broadcasting back to our current selves right now! I've also experienced that finding old photos can be a prompt to send attention back to myself in a previous time of this life. Kind of to give myself a helping hand. What do you think? I've mentioned before that I love the Ray Bradbury chilling story about time travel: A Sound of Thunder. http://www.lasalle.edu/~didio/courses/hon462/hon462_assets/sound_of_thunder.htm From: Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 11:08 AM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Iran Invents Time Travel (sort of) Since your consciousness is connected throughout time broadcast messages about current times back to yourself in the past. ;-) On 04/11/2013 12:54 PM, John wrote: According to Patanjali, a yogi can see the future and the past through his consciousness alone. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, salyavin808 fintlewoodlewix@... wrote: Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'Time Machine' that can predict the future Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions An Iranian scientist has claimed to have invented a 'time machine' that can predict the future of any individual with a 98 per cent accuracy. Serial inventor Ali Razeghi registered The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine with Iran's state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions, The Telegraph reported. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/9985757/Irani\ an-scientist-claims-to-have-invented-time-machine.html According to a Fars news agency report, Mr Razeghi, 27, claims the machine uses algorithms to produce a print-out of the details of any individual's life between five and eight years into their future. Mr Razeghi, quoted in the Telegraph, said: My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you. Razeghi is the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Invention and reportedly has another 179 inventions registered in his name. He claims the invention could help the government predict military conflict and forecast fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil prices. According to Mr Razeghi his latest project has been criticised by his friends and family for trying to play God. Iranian authorities are keen to showcase the technological prowess of the country but have been criticised in recent months for allegedly faking pictures of a new jet fighter flying over mountains. Prior to that the government was accused of also faking claims that it successfully sent a monkey into space when before and after pictures appeared to show a markedly different animal. Click here for article with inevitable picture of a Delorean: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-cl\ aims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.h\ tml http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iranian-scientist-c\ laims-to-have-invented-time-machine-that-can-predict-the-future-8568147.\ html
[FairfieldLife] Tory Burch in India
fashion designer Tory Burch, 2009: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/33/Tory_Burch_in_India.JPG
[FairfieldLife] Brooklyn
Brooklyn Decker, actress, model: http://www.imdb.com/media/rm1057600256/nm2395937
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
On Apr 12, 2013, at 8:11 AM, PaliGap compost...@yahoo.co.uk wrote: --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@... wrote: I've heard that one game of cricket can go on for hours and hours! Five days for a proper international match. Then again, the golfers at the Masters will be playing for four days. But you will at least have a result. Very often a five day cricket match will end in a draw. Five or so hours with a break for tea and cakes is par for the course for a friendly match between pub teams. Hey how about T20 - do you watch IPL? There aren't many English players around this season - of course KP's injured, he was in Delhi the other day cheering his team - I saw Eoin Morgan playing.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!
Hey - LG's too !!! On Apr 11, 2013, at 8:24 PM, curtisdeltablues curtisdeltabl...@yahoo.com wrote: You are becoming my favorite poster. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Carol jchwelch@... wrote: Women's softball pitchers are fun to watch. I never played softball much except in a few sandlot games. I played lots of sandlot rollie bat. Did ya'll play rollie bat? I wonder if kids still play that...or was it a 60s and 70s thing. Sixties thing...like running through the pesticide when the bug spray truck would drive through the hood. It's amazing we aren't more messed up. Ha. I'm not familiar with the movie you are referring to; what is the name of it? I googled Bruce Lipton. I recall hearing about his book Biology of Belief. But I haven't read it. It may behoove me to put it on my list. I have read Norman Cousins' book Head First: The Biology of Hope which I found intriguing. But it is dated compared to what is out there now. I enjoyed Candace Pert's book Molecules of Emotion. I really enjoyed reading about her story as a woman in a man's field in the 60s ... I think it was the 60s. I'm more than skeptical of Emoto's claims, the little bit I've heard/read about them. But then, people were also skeptical of Copernicus in his day. ** --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Hi Carol, I played basketball and softball, second base, in grades 5, 6, 7, 8. In 8th grade we won the DC Metro championship for Catholic grade schools. That was very cool. I only played basketball in high school because there was no softball. Half way through we switched to partial full court play which was interesting. Then in college I minored in Modern Dance. Half way through I got married and we used to play tennis doubles. But not so much because we were both working full time. Oh wait! Yeah, one season the company I worked for sponsored a women's softball team. We didn't win a championship but that season we were the only team to beat the very tough champions from the previous year. We won by one run and it was exciting right down to the final out. Your post from Hearthmath was very interesting. I'd seen a Bruce Lipton movie once that had a lot about them in it. Plus I have their book. And I'm also familiar with Dr. Emoto's work on water crystals. We are definitely living in very cool times. From: Carol jchwelch@ To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2013 11:27 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight! Hey Share... Yes, he did enjoy it. It was a small camp so there were lots of one-on-one interactions with the pros. The other pro player whom I couldn't recall previously was Bobby Jones. Son played basketball and baseball through high school. He has now switched to P-90X and backpacking. :) Did you play basketball through high school or beyond? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Lefty Driesel! Now that's a name from the distant past. Wasn't he a bit flamboyant? Actually I remember better the name Tom Nugent, UM football coach because his daughter went to the same high school I did. Carol, it sounds like your son had a great opportunity with that David Thompson camp. Do you remember if he enjoyed it? Does he still play basketball? I don't (-: From: laughinggull108 no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Tonight!  So you were a Terrapin, huh, with good ol' Lefty Driesell? I was a Tarheel during the Dean Smith era and when games were played in Carmichael Auditorium. We'd line up all night for tickets to a game. NC State had Thompson, Burleson, and Towe; we had McAdoo, Kupchak, Waddell, and Hoffman; and you guys had Davis, Lucas, and Boyle. What a time that was for ACC basketball! Yes, last night's game was exciting and everything a final should be. Very enjoyable but I stayed up way past my bedtime! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Share Long sharelong60@ wrote: Oh God, laughinggull now I feel nostalgic. And old! I remember 40 years ago when I was married and attending Univ of Maryland, we'd watch ACC basketball which I loved. One of my favorite players was David Thompson who played either for UNC or NC State. The way he could float up to the rim of the basket! Poetry in motion IMO. John correctly predicted Louisville as the winner but
[FairfieldLife] Post Count Sat 13-Apr-13 00:15:03 UTC
Fairfield Life Post Counter === Start Date (UTC): 04/06/13 00:00:00 End Date (UTC): 04/13/13 00:00:00 670 messages as of (UTC) 04/12/13 22:25:04 50 seventhray27 49 authfriend 49 Share Long 42 curtisdeltablues 40 Ravi Chivukula 38 Bhairitu 34 salyavin808 32 Ann 31 card 28 turquoiseb 27 Richard J. Williams 24 sparaig 24 Michael Jackson 21 Robin Carlsen 21 Buck 20 John 18 laughinggull108 14 Carol 13 feste37 12 nablusoss1008 12 merudanda 10 Emily Reyn 7 Yifu 7 Xenophaneros Anartaxius 7 Dick Mays 6 Rick Archer 6 Mike Dixon 6 Alex Stanley 4 PaliGap 4 Duveyoung 3 Susan 2 merlin 2 emilymae.reyn 2 Jason 2 Goddess Ninmah 1 wleed3 1 raunchydog 1 azgrey Posters: 38 Saturday Morning 00:00 UTC Rollover Times = Daylight Saving Time (Summer): US Friday evening: PDT 5 PM - MDT 6 PM - CDT 7 PM - EDT 8 PM Europe Saturday: BST 1 AM CEST 2 AM EEST 3 AM Standard Time (Winter): US Friday evening: PST 4 PM - MST 5 PM - CST 6 PM - EST 7 PM Europe Saturday: GMT 12 AM CET 1 AM EET 2 AM For more information on Time Zones: www.worldtimezone.com
[FairfieldLife] The Centrifuge Brain Project
Gravity is a mistake! http://vimeo.com/58293017 About 6-1/2 minutes, worth every second. A brilliant piece of filmmaking.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Proof of Heaven - for Emily
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson mjackson74@... wrote: Nice piece of writing Ann - I just read it too. Try Dying to be Me by Anita Moorjani if you have a mind to - I loved it. Thanks for the recommendation. I have an iPad and will order it tonight. I love the instant gratification when it comes to being able to order books online like that and download them immediately. I thought I would miss the feel of the paper and the book in my hand more when reading from a tablet screen (iPad) plus I feel veyy guilty about not buying from my local bookstores (I always try to buy from independent bookstores, being an little independent shop owner myself). Now I can continue to obsess on death and dying more than I usually do by reading a second book on it. Hopefully ' Dying to be Me' will be uplifting. I tend to get rather Woody Allenish about illness and death. I need all the uplift I can get. From: Ann awoelflebater@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, April 12, 2013 9:58 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Proof of Heaven - for Emily  Hey Emily, I have finished the book and I enjoyed it. I would characterize 'Proof of Heaven' as a big book within a little book. On one level it is a little book, it is merely one man's experience of a place, a reality that he believes was true. What he reveals about his experience is lovely in the extreme; it is very personal and I would love most aspects of what he saw and perceived to be true. The big part of the book for me is that it has permanently instilled in me a vision and a hope for what could be waiting for me after death. I believe Eben to be a courageous man who, in the male-dominated medical profession, has put himself forward for what he knows to be probable ridicule in his peers' eyes. It is very evident from his writing that his NDE is the one most substantial event in his life and because of what it has done for him personally, on all levels, he feels it vital to communicate his 'findings' while in his coma to the world. That is how positive and life altering his coma experience was, let alone the very near to dying he came with a very rare disease for someone his age. Then there is, of course, the 'miracle' of complete recovery from virtual brain death as more proof to him that he was 'chosen' to have this NDE and recovery in order to spread a message of hope and happiness for people. Plus, being a learned man in the area of the brain and its functioning, its physical makeup and how disease or health manifests as well as knowledge gained through years practicing and studying within in his profession, his opinions and scientific evidence give more clout to dispel the notion his NDE was merely a vision or brain-originating hallucination. He gives strong evidence for why it could not be that but was the EXPERIENCE OF PURE CONSCIOUSNESS unsullied by brain function or memory or projection. I also found that in his description of the various 'strata' of those worlds he visited after falling into his deep coma that they resonated with some part of me. The worm's eye view was something I felt I had some knowledge of as well as the infinite bliss and love of the deeper places, the places even closer to God. I felt in his descriptions a tickling of some deeper memory for me of some truth there so I take his NDE very seriously. Thanks for recommending the book, it was a worthwhile read and maybe as close as we can come to a scientifically backed up explanation for what might possibly exist, for some or for all, after dropping the body. No matter what, it is a lovely idea or vision to hold in one's awareness while we still clamber about this planet in the body we currently possess.
[FairfieldLife] For True Cat Lovers Only
Now, you tell me if you could have one of these in your house, to pet and cuddle. If so, you are a better person (or at least a stronger one) than me. Welcome to the world of hairless cats. And I know there are a lot of cat lovers here.They just make me want to cover them up with a knitted sweater or something. Poor little things. On second thought, I would want one, just so I could let it know it is loved despite its appearance. Did humans breed these or do they occur naturally? Surely not. (The nose on the bottom photo looks like the same one the Straw Man has in the Wizard of Oz.)
[FairfieldLife] Re: The Centrifuge Brain Project
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, authfriend authfriend@... wrote: Gravity is a mistake! http://vimeo.com/58293017 About 6-1/2 minutes, worth every second. A brilliant piece of filmmaking. This is hilarious. Talk about NDE's if, in fact these rides exist, which seems to be perfectly ludicrous. It took me a while to realize this was a spoof. Really well done. That first ride is gorgeous though, with all the people on swings on multi-levels. Very other-worldly.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Patanjali as a Quantum Physicist
Here's another take on this subject from Yogi Shanti Desai. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sr5JLi73i0 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, John jr_esq@... wrote: Many of his thoughts in the Yoga Sutras can be related to the ideas in quantum physics today. In sutra III.45, he stated: Thence results the manifestation of the powers, such as atomization et cetera, perfection of the body and indestructibility of its constituents. Specifically, animan pertains the miniaturization of the body. But it could also cover the siddhi to see parts of the body, such as the details of the retina in the eyes. This specific siddhi is the prime example that the universe is based on consciousness. Even the dimensions of space and time are based on consciousness. If this is so, the higher dimensions theorized in physics are not curbed and hidden within space-time. Rather, these dimensions are the various vibrations relating to the states of consciousness in the human experience. In other words, the common experiences of waking, sleeping, and dreaming are part of the higher vibrations of the space-time continuum. In effect, all of nature, even a rock, experiences a form of waking, sleeping and dreaming. Ultimately, however, only the human physiology can experience Unity Consciousness. As such, it's fascinating to contemplate that the human being is the culmination of creation in the universe.
[FairfieldLife] For MJ
I'm about halfway through 'Dying To Be Me'. So far so good. Emily, you might want to pick this one up. I'll let you know when I get this finished Michael.
[FairfieldLife] God and Buddha
A conversation between Deepak Chopra and Robert Thurman. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD_dZ4pc3vA