331 Immovable Peace

Ee e m htp Nkht Aha U,

Come I in peace Spiritual Warriors. 331 Immovable Peace.

Daily quotes, reflection, life study. Mdw U Hrw (Words of the Day) and Mdw U Sekhem (Words of Energy).

331 is three khpr u (scarab beetles) joined at the center. Each is cultivating the energy that is within and outside itself.

3 - mind, body and soul. 3 - Khpr, Ra, Tem. 1 - All is All


This is the immovable peace which permeates through every being and circumstance in All things.

Ankh Udja Seneb r Akht Aha u,

Life Vitality Health to all Spiritual Warriors,

DjaDja N Medjay (331)


24 February 2010

Ulimwengo Day 19



Dear Spiritual Warriors,

Every is going accordingly, the mental barriers are showing themselves along with the physical need for healing in areas of the body. Receiving beautiful information from my brethren around me and dropping off excess 'weight'. You know what I mean right? You know weight.....the things that hold the heart down and impede flow......oh c'mon you know right!!!!! The things that we allow our minds to digest thinking that we are being kind for listening or the lack including the weight that does not help us with resilience. I remember something I learned in a workshop with HeruNkhet (information given by HeruNkhet from one of his amazing workshops):

Hysteresis

The laws of physics state that in order for change to occur, there must be applied pressure. Just like getting into physical shape requires that you challenge your heart, lungs and muscles in order for them to become more efficient and perform better, in order to get into financial shape you must challenge yourself to consistently practice a new and often significantly different thought process and behavior.
Sometimes it baffles us why we can create short term success and find ourselves back in the same predicament or worse off than where we started. This also can be explained by a simple physics concept called hysteresis. Hysteresis is the tendency for materials to snap back to their original shape once the pressure being applied is removed.
In order for permanent change to occur, a force must be applied that is strong enough to exceed the elastic limits of the old conditioning of your mind or body. This means that you must go beyond the boundaries of your experiential level. You must push beyond your point of discomfort and fear.

His explanation is well-composed and right on point. For this reason I recognize by placing a great amount of pressure to to be able to hold this posture for an hour, will help propel me forward. Our minds are trained to think and experience that it is normal to except that some things are out our reach.....why? Without placing blame on our distant cousins who's cosmic tuning deals with an aggressive attitude against nature, it is important to see that it is our responsible to extend our arms well past what we have been trained to recognize as acceptable.
What is acceptable anyway when it comes to striving to grow and embody the spirit of our ancestors and the energy of the cosmos?
Take a look at this symbol:



This is KA.....Say it....KA!!!!

Doesn't that sound like something powerful (unless you saying it like you prefer to stay in the bed and sleep it off b/c you feel the world is against you). The closest translation in english is spirit.

Spirit-
spirit (n.) Look up spirit at Dictionary.com
c.1250, "animating or vital principle in man and animals," from O.Fr. espirit, from L. spiritus "soul, courage, vigor, breath," related to spirare "to breathe," from PIE *(s)peis- "to blow" (cf. O.C.S. pisto "to play on the flute"). Original usage in Eng. mainly from passages in Vulgate, where the L. word translates Gk. pneuma and Heb. ruah. Distinction between "soul" and "spirit" (as "seat of emotions") became current in Christian terminology (e.g. Gk. psykhe vs. pneuma, L. anima vs. spiritus) but "is without significance for earlier periods" [Buck]. L. spiritus, usually in classical L. "breath," replaces animus in the sense "spirit" in the imperial period and appears in Christian writings as the usual equivalent of Gk. pneuma. Meaning "supernatural being" is attested from c.1300 (see ghost); that of "essential principle of something" (in a non-theological sense, e.g. Spirit of St. Louis) is attested from 1690, common after 1800. Plural form spirits "volatile substance" is an alchemical idea, first attested 1610; sense narrowed to "strong alcoholic liquor" by 1678. This also is the sense in spirit level (1768).
That word went through a whole lot to get where is at today and I am taken all over the place without any grounding. Another thing that I always found interesting is how much people spend time on defining something that they are a part of. Its like looking at my arm and giving it a million different meanings, displaying it at an art gallery and referring to it as if it is separate from my body......instead of just moving it for what I need it to do.

However, when I look at I see and feel something that awakens something inside. The infinite appears to be in reach as long as I know the channel and the degree to stretch my arms in and towards. I heard people say that especially for the times we are that connection and focus are essential, however they have always been essential. In fact, those things were first nature!!!! Second nature was to state that those things are essential. What I mean is that do and be in the know rather than know you need to do it and sit around trying to figure out how. When we research something that we know little about and we apply we are doing, do not get this confused with trying:

TRY-

1.
to attempt to do or accomplish: Try it before you say it's simple.
2.
to test the effect or result of (often fol. by out): to try a new method; to try a recipe out.
3.
to endeavor to evaluate by experiment or experience: to try a new field; to try a new book.
4.
to test the quality, value, fitness, accuracy, etc., of: Will you try a spoonful of this and tell me what you think of it?
5.
Law. to examine and determine judicially, as a cause; determine judicially the guilt or innocence of (a person).
6.
to put to a severe test; subject to strain, as of endurance, patience, affliction, or trouble; tax: to try one's patience.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME trien to try (a legal case)
And IF YOU FEEL AND KNOW THAT THE GOT THIS
TRADITION FROM US

????
YA IRIE????

Or this



NOW ON TO THE STORY






1, 10. Try, attempt, endeavor, strive all mean to put forth an effort toward a specific end. Try is the most often used and most general term: to try to decipher a message; to try hard to succeed. Attempt, often interchangeable with try, sometimes suggests the possibility of failure and is often used in reference to more serious or important matters: to attempt to formulate a new theory of motion. Endeavor emphasizes serious and continued exertion of effort, sometimes aimed at dutiful or socially appropriate behavior: to endeavor to fulfill one's obligations. Strive, stresses persistent, vigorous, even strenuous effort, often in the face of obstacles: to strive to overcome a handicap(this part is good)

Excuse me but that sucks!!!! I mean really sucks any potential for success......Now let's see what BT Express had to say.....

Oooooo
Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)

Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied

People know just what they'd like to do
Whatever it is you got it as long it pleases you
Make it last as long as you can
When your through it's up to you to try it again

Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied

Everybody knows what they'd like to do
Whatever it is, do it, as long as it pleases you
Just take some time and relax your mind
Then do it, do it, do it 'till you're satisfied

Go on and do it, now
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it now, do it 'til you're satisfied

Then you hawler oh, oh-ho, oh-ho, oh
I'm satisfied, I'm satisfied
Then you hawler oh, wooo-hooooo, hoooo-ooooo

Woooooo
Go on and do it
Do it,(do it slow) do it slow 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Got to do it (Just do it some more)
Go on and do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied

Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
(Whatever it is)
Got to do it
Do it, do it 'til you're satisfied
Go on and do it, girl
(Do it slow)
Got to do it
(Whatever it is)
Got to do it good
(Just do it some more)
Do it until you're satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
I'm satisfied
Go on and do it, ya

That's what I am talking about!!!! And notice the feeling you get
when you look at the them.....creativity!!!!! I hear a lot of talk about what we should be doing and how we are blinded to the truth, how he did this and that to keep us unaware......sounds like when I was a teen

We talk a lot about being cultural and don't take the time to research certain words that may not give good currency to our utterance.....so don't be blessing me....that still sounds like the old medieval church

The problem of definition of the word "blessing" is that it is not a direct translation from the Greek. The word "blessing" is a borrowed word which has attained its present day meaning by reason of long usage, rather than by etymological accuracy.

From the World Book Dictionary:

1a. "to consecrate (a thing) by religious rite, formula, or prayer" e.g., "the bishop blessed the new church"

1b. "to make holy or sacred." e.g., "And God blessed the 7th day and sanctified it", Gen. 2:3

2. "to ask God's favor for; to commend to God's favor or protection", e.g., "God bless mommy...daddy"

3. "to wish good for; to feel grateful to"

4. "to make happy or fortunate"

5. "to praise, to glorify, to call holy"

6. "to guard or protect from evil", e.g. "God bless this house"

7. "to make the sign of the Cross over; to ward off evil"

Question: Why was the English word "blessing" chosen to represent (eulogeitos).

The answer is found in Oxford English Dictionary (OED) -> one of the world's greatest detective books.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

OED: to bless

1. "to make sacred; to hallow (something)".

"The word "bless" is from the Old Teutonic (German) bletsian, from heathen blood sacrifices. German: das Blut. English: blood.

"The meaning, then, was `to mark (or affect in some way) with blood (or a sacrificial animal)'.

"The sense development of the word `bless' was greatly influenced by its having been chosen (in the early English church ceremonies) to translate the Latin (benedicere) and the Greek (eulogeitos)."
Origin:
bef. 950; ME blessen, OE blētsian, blēdsian to consecrate, orig. with blood, earlier *blōdisōian (blōd blood + -isō- derivational suffix + -ian v. suffix) Put that stuff in an IV!!!!! Its not like you're doing it to show the relation between you and the creator b/c the creator you deal with is jealous and picky!!!! And yes there seems to be that the origin of this came from Africa some how, however, just b/c it does doesn't mean you do it. THAT'S IT FOR ME RIGHT NOW GOTTA GO TO THE INTERNSHIP

I leave you with my Ulimwengo posture for this rising

Ankh Udja Seneb,

Djadja

http://3-3-1.blogspot.com/




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