July/August 2005 Conscious Media
In Review
The Translucent Revolution
by Arjuna Ardagh.
New World Library. 2005, $16.95
This
extraordinary book is based on 170 in-depth interviews with leading
spiritual figures, like Eckhart Tolle, Byron Katie, Ram Dass, Jean Houston,
Barbara Marx Hubbard, Robert Rabbin and Neale Donald Walsch. It is a
fascinating and comprehensive report on contemporary spirituality, full
of detailed information, valuable insights useful techniques, and great
wisdom.
He describes the growing phenomenon emerging around the world - a gentle
but profound revolution in human consciousness. It is something that
has been experienced directly by millions of everyday people from all
walks of life and the numbers continue to multiply exponentially. The
breakthroughs they have experienced are startlingly similar and are
marked by a new sense of well-being, increased joy in life, diminished
fear, and a natural impulse to serve and contribute to the world in
a real way.
For more than a decade, author Arjuna Ardagh has studied this worldwide
advance in human consciousness marked by what he calls "translucents"
-- individuals who have undergone a spiritual awakening deeply enough
that it has permanently transformed their relationship to themselves
and to reality while allowing them to remain involved in ordinary life.
The Translucent Revolution draws on the author's dialogues with
thousands of writers, teachers, and workshop participants around the
world who have been touched by a radical awakening, and whose lives
emanate translucence. Ardagh blends observation, anecdote, and research,
including commentaries from leading pioneers in the field of human consciousness
to offer simple, concrete strategies for cultivating a translucent way
of life. The Translucent Revolution offers a blueprint for positive
change and an optimistic perspective on these uncertain times.
The Quantum Doctor: a physicist's guide to health and healing
by Amit Goswami, Ph.D.
Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2005, $15.95
We
currently stand on the threshold of a medical renaissance, according
to quantum physicist Amit Goswami. He is author of the groundbreaking
book, The Visionary Window: A Quantum Physicist's Guide to Enlightenment,
and has again broken barrier concepts with his new book. In The Quantum
Doctor Goswami sees this renaissance coming about through a shift towards
Integral Medicine, which examines the meaning of disease and healing.
In order for the new paradigm to experience such a shift, the art and
work of healing must be based on consciousness, first and foremost,
for, according to Goswami, consciousness comes first. "Everything,
including matter, is a possibility of consciousness." His "science
within consciousness" model resolves the separation of mind and
body, conventional and alternative medicine, and even some of the paradoxes
within quantum physics. Integral Medicine, he maintains, unifies all
forms of medicine, including conventional Western Medicine, or allopathy.
The book discusses theories, data, concepts of healing, methodologies,
techniques of alternative healing, and explores spontaneous healing
and even the economic factors of well being and medicine. It includes
basic lessons in quantum physics that are simple to understand, and
this understanding is vital to using the book. Goswami discusses the
five bodies of consciousness, the levels of disease, the concept of
the ageless body, and the evolution toward such a goal. His book also
asserts that illness may be an opportunity or entry point toward such
evolution. This work is the closest that science has come to explaining
transformation or alchemy in terms of physics. Ten years in the making,
Goswami says his work is just getting started, but the ideas, concepts
and applications found in the book could greatly benefit patients now,
especially if the book found its way to every physician's desk.
-- Kerri Buckley
The Gift of Change: Spiritual Guidance for a Radically New Life
by Marianne Williamson,
HarperCollins, 2004. $21.95
This
is an inspirational book for our troubled times. Written with spiritual
immediacy and power, it recognizes our despair over the insane course
away from love that the world seems to be taking. At the same time it
encourages us to heal by inspiring us to remember this paradox: we are
already the miraculous beings that we're destined to become,
each moment being an extraordinary opportunity to embody our spiritual
magnitude.
The gravity of the challenge to make this a better world for our children
and ourselves is not glossed over. The privilege of and responsibility
for change are gently but firmly laid in our laps. Change can either
be personal or global; it's the way in which we make change that is
significant. Whether to identify with the world or to go deeper into
the stillness of our souls: how can we effect real change? We have a
choice.
Whichever choice we make, our work will be made simpler by using the
ten bridges of transformation Williamson offers. Building on reflections
in her previous book, A Course in Miracles, her insights are
full of good sense. Applicable to everyday circumstances, they provide
opportunities for renewal.
Williamson uses anecdotes and humor to help us toward wisdom. We need
to know when to change something and when to leave it alone. She also
shows us that by living in the reality that we are all one, we have
the power and ability to transform the world from the inside out.
Now is the time to be faithful to the unchanging principles of love,
gratitude, forgiveness, and compassion, and wonder at beauty. This is
our gift of change.
--Marta Freundlich
The Energy Medicine Kit
by Donna Eden
Sounds True, 2005, $29.95
Donna Eden, probably the formost authority on the bodys energy
system, invites you to learn the unspoken language of your body to boost
your energy levels, address many specific health problems, and foster
your overall health. The powerful "Daily Energy Practice"
combines simple movements, pressure point massage, and breathwork to
create a reservoir of "vital life force" that you can draw
upon throughout the day.
This beautifully conceived and packaged kit is a great companion to
Donna Eden's Energy Medicine book but it can also be used on its own,
as a shortcut to the most useful techniques. The Energy Medicine Kit
comes complete with: A 28-page booklet that teaches you the fundamentals
of energy medicine and points you to specific exercises on the DVD and
CD; 43 photo-illustrated Energy Medicine Cards; a DVD that demonstrates
the methods of energy medicine and teaches you 15 restorative exercises;
an audio CD that guides you through 21 more techniques for specific
conditions, and a one-inch cut glass crystal on a cord with instructions
for spinning it over your meridian endpoints and chakras in order to
give yourself a quick, effective balancing of your major energy systems.
Stillness Speaks: 50 Inspiration Cards
by Eckhart Tolle
New World Library 2004, $17.95
Sometimes
its good to have new information in small bits, so we can focus
on them more easily. Every card in this deck showcases a profoundly
simple truth, easily worth chewing on over a few days or a week. When
you shuffle through them, looking for an inspirational thought, the
right one always seems to end up in your hand. The box lid comes up
to hold one chosen card at a time, so you can showcase a particular
thought if you like. Its perfect for a short morning meditation,
or adding a special touch to a sacred space somewhere in your house.
-- Sarah Saito
Embracing Your Power Woman: Coming of Age in the Second Half of
Life
by Barbara Wilder,
Wild Ox Press, $19.95, 2005
This
book surprised me, I have to confess. The title intrigued me, but I
expected the typical self help book for women, complete with "Theyre
not hot flashes, theyre power surges," cheerleading tips.
What I found, instead, was a multi-layered 12 week plan for gently examining
ones teenage years and briefly thinking about various reasons
those dreams or ideas might have been thwarted, set aside or gotten
detoured. It goes on with ideas to clarify dreams or goals and how to
help yourself get there. Barbara likens the transition into the second
half of a womans life to Inannas descent into the underworld
and into a fetid darkness, rotting on a meat hook. This descent and
dark period is seen as a pat necessary to the eventual ascent as a more
powerful and dynamic woman, or, a downward spiral of labor and pain
that ends in a birth of a "new" or different self.
I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in transitions,
regardless of their biological age.
--Alaina Zipp
Homes That Heal
by Athena Thompson
New Society Publishers 2004, $26.95
So
you know all about the concept of your outer reality reflecting your
inner one, and vice-versa, and youre looking for a living space
that supports this outlook. Perhaps youre planning to remodel
what you have, or you are ready to start building from the ground up.
No matter which category you find yourself in, this book has a lot
to offer. There are numerous practical suggestions and resources for
living, remodeling, and products that support an environmentally-friendly
lifestyle. Anyone who struggles with mold or other home-based allergies
will also find a lot of excellent information here.
This book is also vital preparation for anyone who is planning to design
their own home. Thompson first shows how many design features in todays
home are not particularly healthy, from attached garages to home office
design. Then she explains simple but very effective ways, from placement
to building materials, that will change or safe-guard your design before
building. The index section is also full of resources worth checking
out. In fact, this book has so much to offer that you should probably
get two copies so youll have one handy when your friends want
to borrow.
-- Sarah Saito
The Phaselock Code : Through Time, Death and Reality, The Metaphysical
Adventures of the Man Who Fell Off Everest
by Roger Hart
Paraview/Pocket Books, 2003, $14.00.
The
Phaselock Code is the story of a seeker and an extraordinary adventurer.
By the age of nineteen he had visited every continent but one, exploring
polar icecaps, tangled jungles and snow clad mountains. At twenty he
had a glacier in Antarctica named after him. I would imagine that if
Roger Hart had lived 200 years ago he would have been a buccaneer on
the high seas. Instead, the cosmic winds blowing through the sixties
landed him in India as a research physicist. He soon became a student
of yoga and metaphysics, trying to find explanations for the many paranormal
experiences he had been having since a near death experience on Mt.
Everest, where he was on intimate terms with Mother Nature at her wildest.
Phaselock refers to experiments on the interconnectedness
of the universe, where changes in one part, create instantaneous changes
in the rest of the universe. Hart delves into an exploration of thought,
probability and the nature of consciousness all interwoven with
riveting accounts of his mountaineering experiences. Harts journey
makes a fascinating read.
A former research professor in the College of Ocean and Atmospheric
Sciences at Oregon State University, Hart currently lives on the Oregon
coast.
--Miriam Knight
Straight From The Horses Mouth, How To Talk To Animals and
Get Answers
by Amelia Kinkade,
New World Library, 2001 (hardcover), 2005 (newly published in paperback),
$14.95.
If you want to be able to believe that only SOME very special people
are psychic or can talk with animals, stop reading. If you want to be
able to believe that magical and psychic powers are not only innate,
but require no further work on your part to hone them, stop reading
this review and dont read this book.
Ive loved this book from the first moment I read it in 2001.
Coincidentally, that was right after I entered a life-altering, multi-year
Wiccan training program. The book Straight From The Horses
Mouth grabbed me by making the same distinction that my magic teachers
made between raw talent (in this case, magical or psychic) and the ability
to use the talent masterfully after practice. In this book, Amelia Kinkade
provides clear exercises, demonstrates sensitivity to animals and their
emotional states and speaks with touching frankness about the positive
and negative parts of opening yourself to connection with animals, emotions,
and Spirit.
Amelia recounts stories of animals that are sarcastic, loving, pissy,
angry and frisky. At one time, I thought that the words of animals and
Spirit might be only "deeply serious thoughts." Contrary to
that, over the years, Ive been visited by power animals and a
Spirit that that tease me, cajole me, laugh at me and push me to get
off my butt. (P.S. on that note, the story titled Nuts in chapter 4
is worth reading even if you do nothing else) At times, some peoples
reactions and the voice of disbelief in me have challenged the messages
Ive received, with: "oh, come on, youre making it up!"
There is always a faint pull to listen to that voice, instilled from
society, the "them," that says, "it isnt true,
it just cant be, you cant be doing this." Unquestionably
following that naysaying voice, though, is a slippery slope that can
ultimately lead one to feel isolated, hopeless and stuck. This voice
also says, "good girls and boys do/dont do this," "you
dont deserve to be treated well (or you do deserve to be treated
badly),"and a million other phrases that keep people "in line,"
and not happy, feisty and strong. Fighting against that negativity can
take many forms, including drawing new connections, taking leaps of
faith and speaking your own truth.
As Ive told you, I love this book. Ive checked it out of
the library more than 10 times in the years that it has been in print.
(Ok, I was also too cheap to buy it.) One day in mid-April, I thought
about the book and idly thought of how fun it would be if the book showed
up at the editors house when I selected books to review and I
got my own copy, even though it was obviously not new. The next day,
in perusing my selection, the book caught my eye, in paperback. Did
I conjure it? Did I psychically sense that the book was waiting for
me? I cant explain the specifics of it, and luckily, I dont
need to. More than anything, what this story proves to me is the principle
of this book which I will explain by quoting one of my magic teachers,
Falcon River, "You know. You can and you do know."
--Alaina Zipp
The Book of Ceremonies: A Native Way of Honoring and Living the
Sacred
by Gabriel Horn, art by Carises Horn
2005, New World Library, $14.95
The Book of Ceremonies: A Native Way of Honoring and Living the
Sacred is a quirky little work that will probably not connect with
the average New Age reader. Its a small book physically and small
in scope: a collection of short pieces, all intended as expressions
of reverence for the beauty, power, and sacredness of life and its journey.
Topics include birth, death, divorce, healing, marriage, pregnancy,
and visions.
Written by Gabriel Horn in the style and spirit of traditional Native
American literature, this is a contemporary effort with some undeniably
modern references like "apartments," "cetaceans,"
and "Chernobyl which this reader found discordant.
Ultimately, The Book of Ceremonies is a feeling book,
a mood book. Its like a little art film, where the action
takes place in some unusual, out-of-the-way place and things are just
a little bit strange. Like such films, this book should please devotees,
including fans of the authors previous books, aficionados of Native
American lore, and students of ritual. Enhanced by the tasteful and
effective pen-and-ink drawings by the authors son, its a
pretty book, making it an easy and leisurely (if still not terribly
compelling) read.
-- Paul Laurence
Love Yourself, "joy-filled affirmations to inspire,
encourage and comfort
a Deck of 54 affirmation cards,
by Cheryl Rainfeld,
2005, $9.99
I
have to share a secret. I am a counselor and a big part of my job is
cheerleading, pointing out the positives to people who are often stuck
in seeing the negatives. Ive used positive sayings and chants,
unconsciously and consciously to help myself survive situations a number
of times. So, the secret confession is this-a small part of me thinks
that affirmations are cheesy and it pictures lovable Stuart Smalley
from the old Saturday Night Live scene mouthing his affirmations somewhat
pathetically to the mirror.
Despite my conflicted feelings about affirmations, I really did enjoy
Cheryl Rainfields affirmation card deck. While most cards I have
seen in the past tend to have only words or ethereal pictures (relaxing,
but somewhat abstract or hard to identify with), these cards are hand-drawn
and display pictures of real-looking women-old, thin, fat, multi-ethnic
and female. These cards are two sided, with one sides affirmation
in the first person, the other in the third person; i.e., "I am__,"
"You are_." I instantly thought of how some people would have
a hard time immediately using the first person and so could "graduate"
into it, if they liked. Reading the deck or just picking cards randomly
made me feel, well, affirmed. I conducted a small non-scientific survey
among acquaintances, and they unanimously agreed that these cards felt
"different," than the usual ones, and they almost all had
small, self-satisfied smiles on their faces after viewing them. So go
ahead, affirm yourself! The author also has a website (cherylrainfield.com)
that includes online affirmation cards, e-cards and links for teen and
adult writers.
--Alaina Zipp
One Small Step Can Change Your Life, The Kaizen Way
by Robert Maurer, PhD
Workman Publishing, 2004, $16.95
Is there anyone who doesnt want to change their life in some
way? Just the fact that you are reading this review could possibly mean
that you might be at least be open to thinking about some changes in
your life. The kaizen way refers to a Japanese practice of making the
smallest steps possible, and in that way, short-circuiting the physical
and emotional fear response that the idea or practice of major change
begins. By small steps (one example is a woman who owns a treadmill
wanting to incorporate exercise in her life beginning with a few days
of drinking her breakfast coffee in full view of the treadmill) one
can prep a mind and spirit for infinitesimal changes that may lead to
major changes. Not only did I find this book helpful personally, but
I read most of its short chapters while sitting at my home computer
waiting for my computer to boot up, i.e., in one to two minute increments.
--Alaina Zipp
Saint Ralph
Saint Ralph is a story about a precocious ninth grade Catholic school
boy who is told that only a miracle can save his comatose mother's life,
so he sets out to make one happen. Ralph, awesomely played by young
newcomer Adam Butcher, latches on to a chance remark by his teacher
and track coach, Father Hibbert (Campbell Scott), that his winning the
Boston Marathon would be "a miracle," and undertakes a single-minded,
if unconventional training program. Impressed by his resolve, Father
Hibbert, trains the boy through his triumphant win at a local race and
prepares him for the marathon, despite opposition from his superior,
Father Fitzpatrick (Gordon Pinsent).
This bittersweet comedy from Samuel Goldwyn Films, was beautifully
crafted by former Detroit Marathon winner (85), writer/director
Michael McGowan. Its Canadian cast delivers uniformly superb performances.
The film has echoes of Brighton Beach Memoirs and Chariots of Fire,
but comes out engagingly fresh, funny and very poignant (take your tissues).
It premiered at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival to rave
reviews and opens in Portland and Seattle in August. Dont miss
it! [Rated PG-13]
--Miriam Knight
CD: La Kahena
Cheb i Sabbah
Six Degrees Records, $16.98 (WM enhanced)
It
is no surprise that La Kahena has been the No. 1 download on iTunes
since its release in May, 2005. This exuberant celebration of life through
the music of the Maghreb stirs body and soul. Cheb i Sabbah has made
a career out of blending music from all over the world into kaleidoscopic,
dance-floor mixes. He returns to his Algerian roots to bring the mystical
Sufi spirit to life with his musical textures and orchestrations.
Sufi music is the spiritual trance music of the Gnawa tribes. Gnawa
master Brahim Elbelkani conveys the spirit of sub-Saharan African mystic
healers, originally brought to Morocco as slaves. Michal Cohen, a Jewish
singer of Yemenite descent, shares a song based on a spiritual poem
by Shalom Shabazi, the 16th century Yemenite Jewish mystic. The result
is the creation of some entirely new forms of music from traditional
voices of the Maghreb region in northwest Africa.
In La Kahena, Cheb i Sabbah ends up with a wonderful synthesis of voices,
musical textures, and totally amazing rhythms, and I defy anyone to
sit still while listening to them. www.sixdegreesrecords.com
--Miriam Knight