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When Change is Constant, How Do We Cope?

There have been many disasters, natural or man-made, of late that we as average citizens may feel like we have no control over. We seem to be buffeted around by the winds of change or by the winds of some blizzard.  Some of us may feel shaken by the most recent financial sector collapse or by the earthquakes that seem to be increasing in frequency. How do we navigate the roiling waters of a flood or the waves of unending bad news?

The fact is, there is no place that can’t be struck by a disaster.  And no matter what we would like to believe, there is no job that is guaranteed nor is there a marriage immune to change.  Relationships shift, companies and people die.  Nothing stays the same.  Change is the constant in life and it seems that the rate of change is increasing exponentially.  We know that man’s knowledge now is doubling every 8 years. It feels like we are being overloaded with information.  How much is really important and how much is actually trivia?

So how do we keep up? How do we cope?

One way of dealing with all the changes is actually by slowing down. You heard me right – it’s not about speeding up your processing of information or doing things quicker in the hopes of getting more done, but about reversing the trend and going slow.

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A Reminder of Another Reality - Haiti's Children at Risk from Human Traffickers

While watching the news regarding Haiti’s devastation from its recent earthquake, I found certain reports even more disturbing than the huge numbers of people dead, missing or injured.  Not only are the Haitian people subject to loss of home and family due to the quake, but their children are now prey to human traffickers.  You would think that there would be some lines that even those people would not cross.

Some people are trying to kidnap Haitian children across state lines supposedly for purposes of adoption, claiming these children are orphans when that clearly isn’t the case.

Other traffickers, of course, have even worse intentions.

Human trafficking is just another word for slavery  After all our history regarding slavery, you would think by now, in the year 2010, that slavery would no longer be a reality in our world.  It’s not a reality that we want to think about because slavery is part of the world’s economic machine that we’re still a part of.  Our choices as to what we buy and what companies we support directly affect other lives around the world, especially the lives of children.

FreetheSlaves.net’s definition of slavery is being “forced to work without pay under threat of violence and unable to walk away.” It reports:

  • an estimated 27 million people are enslaved globally, more than at any other time previously;
  • thousands annually trafficked in America in over 90 cities; around 17,000 by some estimates and up to 50,000 according to the CIA, either from abroad or affecting US citizens or residents as forced labor or sexual servitude;
  • the global market value is over $9.5 billion annually, according to Mark Taylor, senior coordinator for the State Department’s Office to Monitor;
  • victims are often women and children;
  • the majority are in India and African countries;
  • slaves work in agriculture, homes, mines, restaurants, brothels, or wherever traffickers can employ them; they’re cheap, plentiful, disposable, and replaceable.

Products made in China’s textiles factories use bonded labor, as do cocoa plantations around the world.  Fish from the Philippines and woven rugs from Pakistan, India and China are also notorious for forced child labor.

So what can we do besides writing to our politicians?  You can write to the companies to persuade them that the bad publicity is not worth the cheaper cost. And you can vote with your pocket books. Think before you buy, and find out where a product is coming from – why exactly is it so cheap?  The cost is being cut from somewhere, and it frequently comes from the people making the product.  Sweatshop workers may be paid pennies, if they’re paid at all, for an item that is then sold for $29.95 in the United States.

You can also join us for Sound Meditation on March 1st and Angel Meditation on March 15th. My plan for these classes is to focus our intention towards healing these children and changing their situation.  I am also going to donate half the proceeds of both classes to Save the Children Fund for Haiti. Please bring as many people as you can to these meditations so that we can really make a shift for these kids.

As we move into the second decade of the 21st Century, we should do everything possible to make sure that  slavery is in the past and no longer part of our present reality.  We need to become conscious of our actions so that our actions are not part of the problem but part of the solution.

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James Arthur Ray: when spiritual integrity clashes with capitalism

I can imagine that if one is selected to be apart of a huge commercial movie success like The Secret that it would be tempting to maximize the commercial advantages that present themselves. It must have been very hard for James Arthur Ray to turn away from the type of money that people were willing to pay to attend his 5-day seminar in Sedona, Arizona because of his notoriety.

Unfortunately for Ray, 3 people died and 19 people were injured during one of these events. Now questions are coming up about his character, his responsibility for the incident and the resulting deaths, and his ignorance of the spiritual and practical issues of running a traditional Indian sweat lodge.  He is now subject to a homicide investigation,  probably liability lawsuits from the grieving families, really bad media coverage regarding his lack of concern for the people in the sweat lodge, and most probably a downward demand for his seminars and books.

Life can be tough when the balloon bursts – especially after becoming a pinnacle of success as James Arthur Ray had.

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